'Do The Right Thing and Resist' - 5/3/18

1h 54m
Hour 1
There's an app for that?...Illegal Immigration...George Soros-funded technology to protect illegal immigrants....helps those in America illegally to avoid getting deported...United We Dream = also funded by your tax dollars ...Hillary Clinton admits that being a ‘capitalist’ probably hurt her during the 2016 election because so many Democrats are socialists...There's a 'head tax' showdown going on in Seattle ...Rudy to the rescue...kinda, sorta?...much more solid legal ground ...Founder and president of the Preemptive Love Coalition Jeremy Courtney reports live from Iraq...The Nazarene Fund partner update...Syrian civil war?... ‘we can't bomb our way to peace’...Drunk News with Glenn Beck...assault with a potato peeler?

Hour 2
Airplane food comedy of our day?...Comic Rob Schneider's words of wisdom about good jokes…don’t just automatically use Trump for your go-to comedy...Addicted to outrage...cutting the funny out of everything ...Happy 'World Press Freedom Day' with Joel Simon, executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists...America should be a beacon of press freedom...but it's not...when government determines what is and isn't 'fake news' ...Dave Rubin: ‘They will come for’ even liberals

Hour 3
NRA codes of social responsibility? ...What's a Greater Leap of Faith: God or the Multiverse?...with author and physics professor Brian Keating...what is the 'multiverse' theory?...think soap bubbles ...President Trump nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize by House Republicans...New Book: ‘Losing the Nobel Prize: A Story of Cosmology, Ambition, and Perils of Science's Highest Honor’ ...Clueless in Seattle?...Amazon issues threat over Seattle head-tax...Nudge, Shove, Shoot?...Union calls for people to never use 'self-check out' at the grocery store?...progressives ‘demonize’ everything that makes your life more convenient
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Runtime: 1h 54m

Transcript

Speaker 1 The Blaze Radio Network

Speaker 1 on demand

Speaker 1 Love Courage

Speaker 1 Truth

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck

Speaker 1 Are you or a member of your family an illegal immigrant?

Speaker 1 Is ice hot on your trail?

Speaker 1 Maybe you've just crossed the border illegally and you're not quite sure where the safest place to evade the cops are. Well, fear no more because now Apple has a new app for that.

Speaker 1 The app is called Notify. It's described as a quote tool to protect immigrants living in the U.S.
illegally by utilizing high-tech and online social communications, end quote. Okay, so I'm

Speaker 1 okay.

Speaker 1 If an illegal immigrant is about to get arrested crossing the border or inside the United States, all they have to do is click on the app, click one button, and an emergency plan of action initiates.

Speaker 1 Lawyers and family members are notified and a predetermined plan executes. Another feature coming to the app soon is a heat map that shows where the arrests are being made.

Speaker 1 That way you can avoid those areas and stay hidden. This is fantastic.

Speaker 1 It actually sounds like it should be illegal, but you can download the app right now from both Google and Apple App Stores.

Speaker 1 So now how does

Speaker 1 something that helps you evade

Speaker 1 the authorities get approved by both Google and Apple?

Speaker 1 Well, may I just point out it probably has a little something to do with

Speaker 1 money.

Speaker 1 It's always interesting to follow the money.

Speaker 1 So who is the organization behind this app?

Speaker 1 Well, it's a group named United We Dream.

Speaker 1 And United We Dream is a group that has 400,000 members.

Speaker 1 And their stated goal is to, quote, embrace the common struggle of all people of color and stand up against racism, colonialism, colorism, and xenophobia.

Speaker 1 Now, a list of some of their biggest projects, DACA, the DREAM Educational Empowerment Program, the Education Not Deportation Project,

Speaker 1 and this one has to be the most random on the list, the Queer Undocumented Immigrant Project.

Speaker 1 I guess they have that one in there so they can just check every single box on the social justice wish list.

Speaker 1 Anyway, back to the money. United We Dream.

Speaker 1 Now who formed that?

Speaker 1 Well, it was formed in 2008 as the initiative by a group called the National Immigration Law Center, which turns out that they actually have two rich sugar daddies.

Speaker 1 The first one isn't going to surprise you.

Speaker 1 It's George Soros.

Speaker 1 The second one might surprise you.

Speaker 1 Uncle Sam.

Speaker 1 According to the Judicial Watch, the U.S. government actually funded this group with over $200,000 tax dollars in federal grant money.

Speaker 1 And both groups, United We Dream and its parent company, list George Soros Open Society Foundation as its key financial backer.

Speaker 1 The progressives' radical agenda to fundamentally transform the United States is being handled with George Soros as usual, but now your tax dollars. We can't fund a wall.
You know why?

Speaker 1 Because we're already funding an app that is helping illegal immigrants stay hidden.

Speaker 1 It's Thursday, May 3rd. This is the Glenn Beck program.
So So

Speaker 1 I want to get to

Speaker 1 the Rudy Giuliani stuff here in just a second. But Stu, I would like to actually start with Little Game.
All right. Okay, tell me what these things have in common.
Okay? You ready?

Speaker 1 Mitch McConnell, the Supreme Court,

Speaker 1 the invisible state.

Speaker 1 I have more. Fathers, husbands, boyfriends, male bosses.

Speaker 1 Democratic documentary makers,

Speaker 1 voter suppression, Benghazi investigators, women protesters, Matt Lauer,

Speaker 1 the Republican Party,

Speaker 1 the media, Steve Bannon and Breitbart,

Speaker 1 the Democratic Party.

Speaker 1 Is it time for me to guess? Well, I have more.

Speaker 1 Do you want to take a guess? No, not yet. Campaign Finance.

Speaker 1 Netflix. Facebook.
Twitter,

Speaker 1 content farms in Macedonia.

Speaker 1 Is it time?

Speaker 1 I have more, but I mean, you want to take a guess?

Speaker 1 I do have a guess.

Speaker 1 Things that can be described by words.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 You can't describe those things? That's not what I'm looking for.

Speaker 1 Television executives. Misogynists.

Speaker 1 These all have one thing in common. Misogynists.
People wanting change.

Speaker 1 Bernie Sanders supporters. Bernie Sanders himself.
The New York Times.

Speaker 1 Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 White women. Anti-American forces.
The Electoral College.

Speaker 1 Everyone who just assumes.

Speaker 1 Barack Obama. The Russians.
WikiLeaks. Low Information Voters.

Speaker 1 bad polling numbers. Anything yet?

Speaker 1 You've listed all of them. James Comey, FBI, Vladimir Putin.

Speaker 1 And the last one. Let's see if I have it.

Speaker 1 I did the invisible state, right?

Speaker 1 And the last one,

Speaker 1 capitalism.

Speaker 1 All things available on Earth? All things Hillary Clinton has said was what caused her to lose the election.

Speaker 1 So I was right. All things available on earth.
The latest is capitalism. Have you heard what she said? Oh, my gosh.

Speaker 1 This is, do we have the audio, Sarah, of Hillary Clinton yesterday giving an interview where she said,

Speaker 1 because I was said I was a capitalist is the reason why I lost. Listen.

Speaker 1 You may be the only presidential candidate since World War II that actually had to stand up and say, I am a capitalist.

Speaker 1 And you did.

Speaker 1 Did it hurt you? Probably. I mean, you know,

Speaker 1 it's hard to know. But I mean, if you're in the Iowa caucuses and 41% of Democrats are socialists or self-described socialists, and I'm asked, are you a capitalist?

Speaker 1 And I say, yes, but with appropriate regulation and appropriate

Speaker 1 accountability,

Speaker 1 you know, that probably gets lost. And though, oh, my gosh, she's a capitalist.

Speaker 1 Wow, what an admission. What an admission.
Oh, my gosh. 41% of Democrats in the Iowa caucus are self-described socialists.
What an admission.

Speaker 1 The mask comes off and they say, they'll just come out and say, yes, I'm a socialist because this system doesn't work. There it is.
There it is.

Speaker 1 I mean, and that, did you see how easily that came off the table? Yes. That was not a, that was not a stat she needed to look up.
That was not something she wasn't,

Speaker 1 which she was unfamiliar with. That is her realizing that half of her party identify themselves as socialists.

Speaker 1 But we were crazy conspiracy freaks for saying that. We were hateful.
We were hateful. If you remember with Barack Obama, it was racist to say he was a socialist,

Speaker 1 which never made any sense. Yes.

Speaker 1 That is a fascinating admission. First of all, she didn't lose to Bernie Sanders in the election.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 why she thinks this hurt her so much,

Speaker 1 I don't know why. I mean, Donald Trump won the election, if you remember, and he pretty much is clear that he's a capitalist.

Speaker 1 He is Mr. Capitalism.
Right.

Speaker 1 And then on the other side, just to admit that that portion. That's phenomenal.
That's phenomenal. And, you know, even the question is, can you play it again?

Speaker 1 Listen to the question. What an odd question to ask.

Speaker 1 You may be the only presidential candidate since World War II that actually had to stand up and say, I am a capitalist.

Speaker 1 And you did.

Speaker 1 Did it hurt you probably

Speaker 1 i mean you know it's who asks that question

Speaker 1 who asks that question

Speaker 1 unless you were kind of a socialist yourself you know what i mean or unless you at least recognize that the democratic party is almost all socialist now

Speaker 1 who asked that question i don't know would you ever would you ever think of asking somebody do you think that

Speaker 1 You know, when she said or anyone said that they were a capitalist in America, that that hurt them? That's a pretty weird question.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, the only thing I can think of is if I was looking to see where it happened, it happened at the Values Leadership Summit. Yeah.

Speaker 1 Which I was thinking if it was she was doing yet another one of her speeches to some gigantic bank, right? Yeah. That would make sense as a question, potentially.

Speaker 1 But yeah, I mean, the values leadership summit, you know, I don't know why you'd ask that question unless, you know. One of your values is socialism.
Yeah, I mean,

Speaker 1 I guess. I mean, you know, he may think that it's so obvious that we're all capitalists, right?

Speaker 1 Why aren't, of course, we're all capitalists, and you're the only person who actually had to say it because there were socialists coming against you, right? Could be that sort of construct.

Speaker 1 Regardless, it's still an amazing

Speaker 1 moment. Absolutely amazing.
I mean, that's half your party. I know.

Speaker 1 So the media today is focusing on this so-called mistake that Rudy Giuliani made. Rudy DuGiuliani did not make a mistake last night.
That's interesting. I didn't think so either.

Speaker 1 He did not make a mistake. They keep saying that, oh, he let something slip.
No, he didn't. No, he didn't.
No, he did. On better legal ground.
No, he didn't.

Speaker 1 He put the president on more solid legal ground. Okay, so we're going to get into that here in a second, but you're going to hear all about Rudy Giuliani today from the media.

Speaker 1 You're not going to hear,

Speaker 1 again, not a mistake, just an honest admission that 41%

Speaker 1 of the Democratic caucus in Iowa are self-described socialists

Speaker 1 and the Democratic Party is masquerading as a pro-American, pro-Constitution, pro-reasonable capitalist party. They're not.
They are the socialist party.

Speaker 1 And you're not going to hear anyone report on that.

Speaker 1 Back with the Rudy Giuliani thing in just a second. First, we talked to you a little bit about ZipRecruiter.
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That's ziprecruiter.com/slash back.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck Mercury.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck.

Speaker 1 So glad that you have joined us today. There's so much going on.
I want to get to the Rudy Giuliani thing.

Speaker 1 We also have an update on Seattle that proposed head tax, where they're taxing companies that make over $20 million a year.

Speaker 1 $500 an employee. $500 an employee every year as a head tax.
You won't believe what is happening. There is a showdown happening with Amazon, and it's...
It feels so good.

Speaker 1 Also,

Speaker 1 New York State is weaponizing the regulatory system to go against the NRA. You will be surprised to hear what it is unless you have been been listening to this show because

Speaker 1 it's all happening as we warned it would. Also,

Speaker 1 more on Kanye and Dave Rumid talking about how they're going to come for you next, talking to progressives, if you don't toe the line. We'll give all of that coming up in just a few minutes.

Speaker 1 Let's just go over what happened with Rudy Giuliani last night on the Sean Hannity show. Everybody is saying that he made a mistake.
He didn't make a mistake.

Speaker 1 He put the president in a better position legally last night, and it was made to look impromptu. I think

Speaker 1 he had every intention of saying that.

Speaker 1 If it was a mistake, Rudy Giuliani will be torn apart by the president in Twitter or fired, but he won't be because this is putting the president in a better situation.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and said, you know, Trump kind of tweeted something very legalistic this morning about what Giuliani said. And

Speaker 1 if you don't know campaign finance law, which no one one should

Speaker 1 because it's stupid, but

Speaker 1 if a person makes a giant donation to a candidate, it is a major problem. It's what put Didesh D'Souza in jail.

Speaker 1 And of course, that was a ridiculous, you know,

Speaker 1 but again, it's what the law was, supposedly. So you make a big donation to someone,

Speaker 1 you can't do that. However, The candidate themselves can make large donations to their campaign, right? So

Speaker 1 if you make a large donation to your campaign and it's not disclosed, there's probably a fine involved, maybe.

Speaker 1 If you have someone making a large donation over the legal limit and that comes out, you can go to prison. Okay.
So the idea,

Speaker 1 it's better for Donald Trump to have paid for the for the payment to Snowman Daniels than it is Michael Cohen. um uh paying for it himself.
So, and we've been talking about this for weeks.

Speaker 1 Why do they keep saying that Cohen made this payment? Well, Giuliani has gone in there now, has figured this out, and then he comes out and quote unquote blurts it out on the Sean Hannity show.

Speaker 1 I think what he's doing instead here is

Speaker 1 a smart move to put both the president and Michael Cohen on much more solid legal ground. Because it's much better to have the president come out and say, yes, I lied.
Now, see, this sounds familiar.

Speaker 1 Yes, I lied. But I only did it to protect my wife, Melania.

Speaker 1 I just, I didn't, you know, I just did it for Melania. It's a well-worn path.
It's, it's totally fine and totally acceptable to half of the public, whichever half happens to be in office.

Speaker 1 So that's where he's going. Yes, I lied to you, but it was my own personal business.
It's my own faults, et cetera, et cetera. But I paid for that myself.

Speaker 1 I just didn't want Melania to know, which will keep everybody out of jail. And his supporters will accept, just like the Clinton supporters accepted it at that time.

Speaker 1 Yeah, this is the Bill Clinton precedent. You lie about something until the lie becomes a crime, and then you do some prioritization.

Speaker 1 You have to prioritize whether you want to take a legal beating or a political beating. And so it's, now he has not come out and said that he slept with Stormy Daniels or anything like that yet.

Speaker 1 Though I would not be surprised, that won't happen unless there's a blue dress.

Speaker 1 He'll go down this road and say that it didn't happen until there's a blue dress. And then at that point, he'll change his mind and take a political hit for it, but not a a legal one.

Speaker 1 So that's why I think they're nervous about him talking to you know Mueller, because if he blurts something out there that's not true, he actually can have consequences. So that's a potential issue.

Speaker 1 But Giuliani, we should listen to the clip.

Speaker 1 If you watch the clip, he looks a little disheveled. Rudy has

Speaker 1 added some years to his age

Speaker 1 over time, and he looks a little disheveled. And it feels like he's blurting it out.
He's not. But I don't think so.
I mean, Giuliani's a smart guy. No.

Speaker 1 And this puts, it doesn't just coincidentally put the president of the United States on better legal ground.

Speaker 1 If, if this is a mistake, and it may be, but if it is a mistake, you'll see him get fired in the next few days, or you'll never see him on television again.

Speaker 1 I don't know. Maybe that will happen.
Maybe it won't. But here's the clip from Giuliani with Sean Hannity yesterday.

Speaker 1 That money was not campaign money

Speaker 1 having something to do with paying some Stormy Daniels woman $130,000. I mean, which is going to turn out to be perfectly legal.

Speaker 1 That money was not campaign money. Sorry, I'm giving you a fact now that you don't know.
It's not campaign money. No

Speaker 1 campaign finance violation. So they funneled it through the law firm.

Speaker 1 Funneled through the law firm and the president repaid it.

Speaker 1 Oh, I didn't know. He did.
There's no campaign finance law. Zero.

Speaker 1 So the president... Just like every, Sean? So this decision was made by...

Speaker 1 Everybody was nervous about this from the very beginning. I wasn't.
I knew how much money Donald Trump put into that campaign. I said, $130,000.

Speaker 1 He's going to do a couple of checks for $130,000. When I heard Cohen's retainer of $35,000, when he was doing no work for the president, I said, but that's how he's repaying, that's

Speaker 1 how he's repaying it. With a little profit and a little margin for paying taxes for Michael.

Speaker 1 But do you know the president didn't know about this?

Speaker 1 I believe that's what he said. He didn't know about the specifics of it, as far as I know, but he did know about the general arrangement that Michael would take care of things like this.

Speaker 1 Like, I take care of things like this for my clients. I don't burden them with every single thing that comes along.
That's incredible. That's incredible.

Speaker 1 And makes sense and probably is the way that Donald Trump operates.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, it seems unlikely he didn't know anything about this particular payment. But again, I mean, you know, what does it matter? He can pay.
That is absolutely legal.

Speaker 1 It feels weird, but it's absolutely legal in this society to pay someone to not say things. That is absolutely something that can happen.
It happens all the time in America. Anyway,

Speaker 1 don't listen to the press on this one. Rudy Giuliani was not making an error.
He was putting the president in a better legal position. This is nothing more than political maneuvering yet again.

Speaker 1 Glenn, back.

Speaker 1 Mercury.

Speaker 1 Most people have a really bad experience when selling their home because they hire, you know, like a family member or a friend that is forced on them, and they're too nice to say no.

Speaker 1 This usually ends very badly for everybody involved. Glenn and Tanya decided to start a company called Real Estate Agents I Trust because they personally were frustrated trying to sell their home.

Speaker 1 Home is the biggest investment we ever make, and you got to have rock-solid advice because if you screw up buying or selling your home, it can have financial impacts for many, many years.

Speaker 1 Realestateagents ITrust.com is a network of over 1,200 agents all over America that are rigorously qualified by Glenn's team.

Speaker 1 Their experience, their marketing plans, their character, and the results they get for their clients are the barometers the team uses to ensure the network is made up of only the best agents in America.

Speaker 1 They are also fans of Glenn and share your values. So if you need to sell a house fast and for the most money, or if you're looking to buy, go to RealEstateAgents I Trust.com.

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Speaker 1 This is the Glenn Beck program. You know, George Washington talked about words, not

Speaker 1 sorry, deeds, not words.

Speaker 1 That deeds were so much more important than words. And as a guy who has spent his whole life doing nothing more than babbling a bunch of words, deeds

Speaker 1 have really started to hit me as the only thing that really counts.

Speaker 1 Deeds, not words.

Speaker 1 So we talk about problems all the time, but I want to introduce you to some people that actually are solutions to problems.

Speaker 1 There is a husband and wife. coalition, if you will, that is currently in Syria, and they were just a few miles away from

Speaker 1 the targets of the U.S. bombing and our retaliation response to Syria and to Russia a few weeks ago.

Speaker 1 And they're partners of Mercury One, and right before the bombing happened, they knew they were in the line of fire, and they said, we're just a few miles away from the bombing. Please pray for us.

Speaker 1 Well, as it turns out, the American strike was very surgical, and everybody turned out to be fine. But about a decade ago,

Speaker 1 Jeremy and his wife Jessica, they chose to move to Iraq. Now, who chooses that?

Speaker 1 The country was in absolute chaos. And Jeremy met a little girl who was dying of a heart defect.

Speaker 1 And there were all of these kids that were in the same situation to where they could not, they had no access to any kind of medical care.

Speaker 1 Thousands of people waiting in line for surgeries that their country could no longer provide. That's when they started this organization called the Preemptive Love Coalition.

Speaker 1 And over the next several years, they've done life-saving medical care for thousands of children and hands-on training for medical staff in the countries. They're making a difference.
They're in DOMA.

Speaker 1 They're in the area where the chemical attack happened.

Speaker 1 And we have Jeremy on the phone from Iraq now. Hello, Jeremy.
How are you?

Speaker 2 Hey, Glenn, I'm doing well.

Speaker 1 How are things in Iraq today?

Speaker 2 You know, I guess it depends on what you're comparing it to. I mean, in many ways, it feels like we're out of the fire, but that's actually when the hard work begins.

Speaker 2 Now the media has largely packed up and moved on, and people aren't talking about Iraq anymore. And what we have is just a whole lot of destruction after years of war and fighting ISIS.

Speaker 2 thousands of people, tens of thousands of people still needing to put their lives back together. So, you know, it's not

Speaker 2 all day chaos every day in areas where we are working like it has been over recent years. But

Speaker 2 we still have grave concerns for the people here and what it means to help them get back on their own two feet.

Speaker 1 How concerned are the people in Iraq about what's happening

Speaker 1 with Iran and Israel now? I mean, that looks like that could become a hot war.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I think it depends. You know, anytime we start talking about entire countries' worth of people,

Speaker 2 we

Speaker 2 do best to take the time to be nuanced.

Speaker 2 You know, I've got people here who would be fully on the side of Iran, and then we've got all kinds of friends who would be deathly afraid of Iran and kind of every stripe in between. So

Speaker 1 you were down on the streets after the retaliation, and you saw the same thing. You saw people cheering.

Speaker 1 that

Speaker 1 Assad had shot down all of the missiles, which wasn't true.

Speaker 1 And you also saw friends and neighbors and people doing the opposite, saying, Thank God for Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 Yeah, our team in Syria has really seen all kinds of various reactions. It really just depends on maybe what part of the country you're in.

Speaker 2 It could depend on ideology. It could depend on what you've been through, what you've lived through, and how that shapes your worldview.

Speaker 1 What did your team find at DOMA? Nobody's really been allowed

Speaker 1 in that region with the chemical attack. Did you guys get close enough to the chemical attack to be able to see the results of that and to verify that that actually did happen?

Speaker 2 Well, look, we don't have the expertise to make a definitive claim about whether or not chemical attacks happen. That's just we simply don't have those skills.

Speaker 1 But there were people there. I mean, some people are claiming that that was just all like a you know a Photoshop kind of event that that there was no attack there even

Speaker 2 Well, if I'm being honest, I I'll have to say I still know plenty of people who share that perspective as well I mean it's it's murky Glenn. I mean that's all at best.
That's what anyone can say

Speaker 2 Who doesn't I mean allegedly there's

Speaker 2 There's you know crystal clear damning evidence out there in the intelligence space. I don't have access to that So what I've got is people on the ground and access to real-life humans.
And

Speaker 2 when you do it that way, you get any number of different stories and theories. And

Speaker 2 that's all I'm left with is a really murky stew of different people's perspectives.

Speaker 1 How does the average person, because we're starting this now in the United States, where you don't know what truth is? How does the average person navigate through those waters?

Speaker 1 Do you just, does everybody just become polarized and, you know, on opposite sides and nobody really has the facts? I mean, what is that? What's happening?

Speaker 2 Well, here's how we do it: we begin with the premise that

Speaker 2 every single person has value. Every single person is intrinsically valuable.
Every single person is made in the image of God, as the Christian tradition puts it.

Speaker 2 And when every single person is made in the image of God,

Speaker 2 the facts matter, the truth matters, but how I respond to the person in front of me, whether they are friend or foe,

Speaker 2 doesn't necessarily matter.

Speaker 2 The variance in between how I should regard them is kind of leveled by the simple fact that I regard them as human, that I regard to reduce them to animal or monster, that I refuse to

Speaker 2 fail to regard them as being made in the image of God. And it helps me look inside myself and realize that I've got the propensity for the same kind of evil in me.

Speaker 2 There's just a couple things in my life that I would live through or things that could go wrong, sort of a, but for the grace of God, there go I kind of thing that I have the capacity for this stuff in me too.

Speaker 2 And it helps humble me and keep us pushing forward into these scary situations.

Speaker 1 How do you, how do you reconcile that with the

Speaker 1 face of evil like ISIS?

Speaker 2 Oh, I absolutely believe there's evil. I believe

Speaker 2 ISIS has committed a lot of evil. I believe the force that was in Duma before, the Jaish al-Islam,

Speaker 2 Islamic army, as they call themselves,

Speaker 2 have committed tremendous acts of evil. So it's

Speaker 2 certainly not about denying that or turning a face from that or creating a kind of moral equivalency against that.

Speaker 2 It's more about who I'm trying to be, who we're trying to become.

Speaker 2 than it is about reducing ourselves to, yeah, well, they did this or they did that. I believe in justice.
I believe that people should be be brought to justice.

Speaker 2 I believe there's consequences to actions that we do. I believe that the state has to be involved in some of this stuff.
But for our part as a humanitarian coalition of peacemakers,

Speaker 2 we're just trying to press into the front lines. We're trying to get there first when the bombs are still falling or as soon thereafter as we can and trying to show up on the scene.

Speaker 2 with love because I think that the military solutions absolutely have to be in this equation, but we can't bomb our way to peace. That's not going to get us there.

Speaker 2 And we need more boots on the ground. We need more people showing up in love because that's the only powerful, the only force really powerful enough to transform anything.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Jeremy, I appreciate it.
And I appreciate your partnership and all that you're doing. I know that you're feeding thousands of people every single day.

Speaker 1 Just, I think, what, about

Speaker 1 400 people alone

Speaker 1 were inside the area of

Speaker 1 the latest supposed atrocity,

Speaker 1 the chemical attacks.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 I appreciate all of the risk you and your team are taking and your partnership with Mercury One.

Speaker 1 If you'd like to find out more, you can go to preemptivelove.org, preemptivelove.org, the people who are actually not talking about it, but actually walking the walk, and the nazarenefund.org.

Speaker 1 Thanks so much, Jeremy.

Speaker 1 No.

Speaker 1 You said it's supposed attack, or you're not a skeptic on the

Speaker 1 no, I'm not. I'm not.

Speaker 1 You know, he is a guy on the ground, and he has said, you know, we haven't seen it.

Speaker 1 Yeah, I mean, I think he had a totally fair breakdown of that, right? It is an alleged attack. There's no real way to prove it, obviously.
Yeah. But there's no.
We haven't seen the evidence of it.

Speaker 1 I happen to believe it. Others don't.

Speaker 1 But,

Speaker 1 you you know, it still is alleged until we can see the evidence. I've seen the photographic evidence, but I don't know if I believe my eyes anymore.

Speaker 1 I do in this particular case, but we're entering a time where I don't know what's true or not. Do you?

Speaker 1 I know everything that's true, yes. I actually figured it all out last night.
Did you really? Yeah, I was

Speaker 1 on the borderline. Can I go home? Will you just

Speaker 1 take the show and just explain everything? Yeah. We can be be done we could just call it a day we could call it a career really yeah no i mean uh

Speaker 1 i guess you could call triple eight seven twenty seven back ask any question and i can answer it for you but other than that i don't know what we're doing here all right okay thanks a lot stupid i appreciate it all right 1-800 flowers

Speaker 1 it's hard to find a bigger fan of you than your mom would you say that's true

Speaker 1 Your mom has put up with so much of your crap. I see my son now, and I see the crap he's pulling on his mom.
And I just, I peer around the corner and I just point at him like, I'm on to you.

Speaker 1 And he knows he smiles at times. Other times, he just looks down

Speaker 1 because he's playing the same crap on his mom that I used to play. I mean, it's amazing.
And your mom is your biggest cheerleader. Not this Sunday, but the Sunday after is Mother's Day.

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Speaker 1 Glenn Beck Mercury.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck.

Speaker 1 The Glenn Beck program presents

Speaker 1 drunk news.

Speaker 1 I

Speaker 1 resemble that remark.

Speaker 1 News from

Speaker 1 Dunder

Speaker 1 Firmaline.

Speaker 1 Dunder Fermaline Sheriff Court. Dunder.

Speaker 1 A man ended up behind bars after being found in

Speaker 1 Dunder Mifflin Street with an offensive weapon. Scott Walker is 39 years old at the James Bank Hostel.
James Street, he appeared from

Speaker 1 custody at Dunder

Speaker 1 Millifflin Sheriff's Court. He did admit on Saturday in Appling Crescent, a public place, that he was in possession of an

Speaker 1 object which had a blade or was sharply pointed.

Speaker 1 You have to remember, we're now starting to confiscate all weapons like

Speaker 1 knives

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 1 knives.

Speaker 1 And he had a blade that was sharply pointed, namely a potato, a

Speaker 1 potato peeler.

Speaker 1 Defense solicitor Selena McHay said, her client suffers from significant learning difficulties, which have been lifelong. And he had absolutely no idea that

Speaker 1 a potato peeler was a dangerous weapon. But in all fairness, neither did this reporter.

Speaker 1 This has been another highly intoxicating episode of Drunk News.

Speaker 1 A potato peeler. Guy goes to jail for a potato peeler.
Does make more sense when you say it?

Speaker 1 Yeah, but that's a very dangerous weapon. Have you ever...
Well, it's dangerous to the potatoes.

Speaker 1 Potatoes are the most untrustworthy

Speaker 1 of all of the vegetables and root vegetables. The only ones with eyes.
They have eyes everywhere on all sides. They're watching you all the time.
You have have to sneak up.

Speaker 1 And you have your potato peeler. Your potato peeler, you can use a knife.
But potatoes know what knives are. And so the potato peeler, they're like, oh, that's just not a knife.

Speaker 1 It's actually a very dangerous weapon. It could take your eyes out.

Speaker 1 Joke about this all you want, but imagine if you're the, you know, you're Mr. and Mrs.
Potato Head. And you're seeing a potato peeler.
Imagine the horror film that that is for the potato. Mr.

Speaker 1 Potato Head was not asked for for comment at this time. He is at home resting comfortably with his wife.

Speaker 1 This is what we're getting down to, gang. So they're legitimately arresting people

Speaker 1 who had a potato peeler, putting them in jail. And the defense was, oh, he's a complete imbecile.

Speaker 1 That sucks. It sucks when that's your defense.
I mean, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 We hear that a lot in politics, though. It's kind of the standard line of defense for every politician these days.
Ah, I'm just an idiot. I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 Okay.

Speaker 1 Listen,

Speaker 1 Mike Hyan,

Speaker 1 is this a moron?

Speaker 1 I would accept that. Wouldn't you love to hear that from somebody who was like,

Speaker 1 Judge Roy Moore?

Speaker 1 Of course.

Speaker 1 He's a moron.

Speaker 1 It would be interesting to see that as an approach. It would be effective, I think.

Speaker 1 Hilary Rodham Clinton,

Speaker 1 she didn't make a lot of mistakes. She's just a moron.

Speaker 1 She was, Your Honor, when she was taking all of those things,

Speaker 1 she doesn't break. She's just...

Speaker 1 a moron.

Speaker 1 Works.

Speaker 1 I don't think there's enough...

Speaker 1 The ego cannot be violated in that way for most politicians, though. They can't take that.
Only a moron would say that because this works.

Speaker 1 Put down that potato pillar.

Speaker 1 Glenn, back.

Speaker 1 Mercury.

Speaker 1 Love. Courage.

Speaker 1 Truth.

Speaker 1 Glenn.

Speaker 1 You know, I'm not really sure if anybody paid attention to what is happening in the culture right now and some of the honest things that are being said.

Speaker 1 SNL creator Lauren Michaels has just come out and said that the show lambast Republicans more often because, quote, Democrats tend to take it personally and Republicans think it's funny.

Speaker 1 Well, I don't know if that's true or not because I think we're all losing our sense of humor, but

Speaker 1 But what he's saying here is we can attack the right because the left becomes offended.

Speaker 1 So we'll ridicule the other side.

Speaker 1 I mean, we all have to get over it.

Speaker 1 Jokes about President Trump have become the airplane food

Speaker 1 comedy routine of our day. Can you believe how bad food is on airplanes? I mean, am I right? That's the kind of thing that we're getting down to.
It's a hack comedian.

Speaker 1 You can do it every day. It's really, really easy.

Speaker 1 Now, Rob Schneider, who is not exactly the guy that I would go to, you know, for

Speaker 1 all my comedy advice, but he makes a really good point when he said,

Speaker 1 comedy needs surprise. It has to keep the audience guessing.
It shouldn't be afraid to shock or offend. It should attack the powerful and the arrogant.

Speaker 1 But at the same time, it has to come from a place of inspiration where it made the writer laugh. But if there are ideas of justice, morality, and righteousness, even better.

Speaker 1 But they always have to take a back seat to actually being funny. The loyalty should reside inside the joke, not through some political identity.

Speaker 1 That is the problem right now. Everything that everyone is trying to do is trying to make a point.
And even if you're not trying to make a point, people take it as are.

Speaker 1 For instance, we are so addicted to outrage. It drives me nuts.
This stuff with a poo

Speaker 1 on The Simpsons.

Speaker 1 Can we just recognize who Homer Simpson is?

Speaker 1 Homer Simpson is the laziest guy in the world, or at least Springfield. The laziest guy in Springfield.
How many times, Stu, has he almost vaporized the city of Springfield because... dozens.

Speaker 1 He's constantly threatening his own community with nuclear holocaust. He's drinking all the time.

Speaker 1 He's a terrible father almost all the time. Horrible husband.
Yep.

Speaker 1 He's a white guy.

Speaker 1 Okay. Technically yellow, but yes.

Speaker 1 He's one of those yellow people.

Speaker 1 And I'm not offended by that. No, that's an unbelievable stereotype.
Right. I am not offended by Cletus and all of his toothless kids.
That's a stereotype. Both of those kinds of people exist.

Speaker 1 Can we not laugh at ourself?

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 the nature of comedy is,

Speaker 1 by itself, parody by nature, is divisive. Satire is the weaponization of humor.
It's the tactical fusing of comedy and politics. And it's the tactical use of humor to voice political insurgency.

Speaker 1 We know this.

Speaker 1 You add judgment and attack to humor, and it is inherently negative. Its basis is anger.
But in order to be effective, it also must be funny.

Speaker 1 And we are cutting the funny out of absolutely everything because we're all so angry.

Speaker 1 Not only are left-leading audiences unable to laugh at themselves, you know, as said by Lauren Michaels, they're unable to laugh at a growing list of topics that they've deemed offensive.

Speaker 1 There is a difference between offensive and unfunny. One thing for a person to dislike a joke because they find it unfunny.
But the argument against humor now is it's offensive.

Speaker 1 Well, maybe.

Speaker 1 But you don't have a right to tell me that I don't have the right to offend you.

Speaker 1 Do I have the right to tell you you can't offend me? No.

Speaker 1 I'm offended all the time.

Speaker 1 It's called life.

Speaker 1 But we are in this sea of microaggressions. And it is shutting all voices up.
Somebody is going to get at the top. Do you want me setting the, let me ask the left.

Speaker 1 Do you want me setting the bar and saying what's offensive and what isn't? No.

Speaker 1 And I don't want you setting the bar. So let's agree to disagree.

Speaker 1 If you have the ability to laugh,

Speaker 1 I think that says a lot about you.

Speaker 1 The best thing we can do

Speaker 1 is stop being offended by everything. Smile.
Laugh.

Speaker 1 Mark Twain said, humor is mankind's greatest blessing.

Speaker 1 So today, instead of being offended,

Speaker 1 show the clowns of the world that you're blessed, blessed with a sense of humor.

Speaker 1 It's Thursday, May 3rd. This is the Glenn Beck program.

Speaker 1 Today is World Press Freedom Day.

Speaker 1 We cannot have a free society if the press

Speaker 1 is afraid of challenging those who are in power. Or, dare I say, the press is in bed with those who are in power.
We have no chat of freedom because there will be no one holding anyone responsible.

Speaker 1 We are weaponizing the press both left and right because the left will defend absolutely anything. The right will defend their side on absolutely anything.
We need a free press.

Speaker 1 And there is a movement and has been a movement for a very long time to stifle the voices of the press. It was happening under Obama in different ways.
It's happening again.

Speaker 1 And we must stand for the right of the press. Today is World Press Freedom Day, and Joel Simon is the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists.
Joel, welcome to the program.

Speaker 1 It's great to be on.

Speaker 3 Thanks so much for having me, and happy World Press Freedom Day.

Speaker 1 So

Speaker 1 tell me what your organization does and why it's important.

Speaker 1 Okay, well, let me start with why it's World Press Freedom Day.

Speaker 1 World Press Freedom Day is one of those strange UN declared days.

Speaker 3 And what happened was in 1991, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, there was this brief period of consensus where everyone agreed free press is important. It holds the powerful

Speaker 3 to account.

Speaker 3 It

Speaker 3 creates more representative and democratic societies, and we need to support a free press around the world.

Speaker 3 And so, in that brief period, all the countries of the world came together and declared World Press Freedom Day. I'm not sure it could happen now.
But what do we do?

Speaker 3 So, we defend this basic right around the world. We defend the rights of journalists, particularly those working in repressive and dangerous societies, to report the news without fear of reprisal.

Speaker 3 Journalists shouldn't be killed for reporting the news. They shouldn't go to jail.
They shouldn't be censored. This is a basic human right.

Speaker 3 This is a fundamental right available to all people around the world. We're an organization of journalists, and we defend this right at a global level.

Speaker 1 So do you defend everyone's right, no matter which side they're on?

Speaker 3 We defend everyone's right, no matter which side they're on.

Speaker 3 We believe in a free press.

Speaker 3 We believe that journalists have to be able to report the news, that government shouldn't be able to determine what's news and what's not news, that terrorists and criminals shouldn't be able to determine what's news and what's not news.

Speaker 3 And so we defend the rights of journalists everywhere.

Speaker 1 So tell me what's happening to the right of free press around the world. It is frightening

Speaker 1 is happening.

Speaker 3 It's really terrible what's happening. We're seeing, first of all, last year we recorded a record number of journalists jailed around the world.
262 journalists in jail around the world.

Speaker 3 That's the most we've ever recorded. They're being jailed in places like Turkey, like Egypt, like China.
These are some of the most repressive places around the world. And they're also being killed.

Speaker 3 Glenn, we saw this horrible attack the other day, the suicide bombing carried out by the Islamic State in Kabul. And what they did, this is so insidious and so terrible.
They sent off a small bomb.

Speaker 3 And then when journalists came to cover that explosion,

Speaker 3 they had a bomber who was disguised as a journalist inserted himself in the middle of this group and blew himself up, killed nine journalists. They carried out another attack.

Speaker 3 Later that day, they killed a journalist from the BBC. Now, all of these journalists are Afghans, but they're really reporting for the world.
Five of them work for international news organizations.

Speaker 3 So these are the people who are reporting for all of us. They're the ones who are documenting what's happening in Afghanistan.
It's just outrageous and horrifying.

Speaker 1 These journalists, you should go look at their work.

Speaker 3 They're so talented.

Speaker 2 These are such amazing reporters.

Speaker 1 This is a terrible loss.

Speaker 1 Joel,

Speaker 1 you know,

Speaker 1 I'm very concerned about what's happening in America and in Russia.

Speaker 1 And I think we're finding the same

Speaker 1 kinds of things in the last 10 years that we're at the very infant stages that we now find in Russia. And people don't understand how dangerous it is to be a journalist in Russia.

Speaker 3 So

Speaker 3 that's what happens to you in Russia if you get too close to power.

Speaker 3 But the thing is that we've actually seen a decline in journalists being killed in Russia, and that's because it's become so that the fear has so pervaded the Russian media that we're not seeing that kind of aggressive investigative reporting.

Speaker 3 That's a really bad thing for Russia. That's actually a really bad thing for all of us here

Speaker 3 who care about news around the world because there's just less accountability, less probing reporting, less information, frankly.

Speaker 1 Joel, I

Speaker 1 think, in watching and reading both sides, I read conservative stuff and I read liberal stuff. And I am somebody who enjoys reading things that I don't agree with.

Speaker 1 And I have noticed here in America that both sides are hearing things from their own echo chamber. And there is truth

Speaker 1 that both sides are not aware of. You know what I mean? There's the

Speaker 1 right will report something that happened

Speaker 1 because of the left, and the left won't report it.

Speaker 1 The left media won't report it. And then the same thing with the right.
There's something that has happened because of the right, and the left will report it, but the right never hears it.

Speaker 1 We're in these echo chambers, and I fear that

Speaker 1 I don't see a way out of this, and we're both trying to shut everybody up.

Speaker 1 How do we go the other way?

Speaker 3 I think we have to reaffirm our faith in the First Amendment. I mean, that's really what

Speaker 3 at the heart of our political culture is the First Amendment and the idea that the news media and all media is just an expression of this fundamental right of people expressing their ideas.

Speaker 3 And we can disagree with them. We can call them names.
We can do whatever we want.

Speaker 3 But fundamentally,

Speaker 3 we need to,

Speaker 3 what we're losing in our media culture and in our political culture is

Speaker 3 a sort of tolerance for dissenting views and an openness.

Speaker 3 And that's happening at a global level.

Speaker 1 So, Joel, how are you going to do that when you have universities now that should be the bastion of all free thought having riots

Speaker 1 or counseling sessions after somebody with an opposite opinion shows up on campus. Comedians won't even go play college campuses now.

Speaker 1 I think it's like 51% or 47% of college age students say there are a lot of limits to the First Amendment.

Speaker 3 Well, look, we are a global press freedom organization.

Speaker 3 My fundamental concern is with ensuring that journalists in places like Afghanistan and Mexico and Russia can continue to do their job. I want the U.S.

Speaker 3 to be a beacon of press freedom, of these values and these tolerance. And whenever we fall down, it has a ripple effect around the world.
I mean, let's take fake news, okay?

Speaker 3 Fake news, this concept of fake news, we can argue about it back and forth. People, it's fake news, it's not fake news, whatever.
But you know what's happening?

Speaker 3 Fake news is being criminalized around the world. There's a new law in Malaysia that makes fake news illegal.
In the Philippines,

Speaker 3 in Singapore, in China, in Russia, fake news is becoming criminalized. And journalists who report what governments deem to be fake news are being put in jail.

Speaker 3 And that's a really bad thing. We don't want governments determining what's fake and what's not fake.

Speaker 3 So I really think we have to kind of, I don't have an easy answer to what you're saying.

Speaker 1 No, I know.

Speaker 3 But I think the point is that we need to understand that these debates that we have here have an impact around the world, globally. We set an example.

Speaker 3 And when we fall down, when we don't uphold our old values,

Speaker 3 it is an impact on our society, but it is an even more profound impact, which we may not be aware of, in societies around the world that are battling repression and violence.

Speaker 1 In the days of

Speaker 1 FISA and

Speaker 1 everything that is going on in the world, there is nothing, nothing more important than the freedom to speak and the freedom to report on the news without being shut down.

Speaker 1 Joel Simon from the Committee to Protect Journalists, you can follow him at PressFreedom.

Speaker 1 Also, the pressfreedomtracker.us.

Speaker 1 It's a searchable tool for press freedom violations in the US, and you would be surprised on what you will see.

Speaker 1 PressfreedomTracker.us.

Speaker 1 Thank you so much, Joel. Appreciate it.
Great to be on. Thank you so much.
You bet.

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Speaker 1 Glenn Beck Mercury.

Speaker 1 That's why they're doing this to come.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck.

Speaker 1 You know, we're just talking in the break that

Speaker 1 freedom of speech is really truly on the ropes, and freedom of the press is on the ropes all around the world, but it's happening here as well.

Speaker 1 And

Speaker 1 this is something that we should all be paying attention to, is the First Amendment. Your right to speak, your right to assemble, your right to petition,

Speaker 1 your right to a free, unfettered press. Those things are important.
And

Speaker 1 what people do is they try to show, they're doing it really kind of in a way to Kanye now. I mean, he's not a press person.
I like how you're on a first name basis with him. I don't know why.

Speaker 1 So anyway,

Speaker 1 it's what they're doing now. You have to pick on the biggest person, and you shut that person up, and all the sheep behind him are silent.

Speaker 1 It's why they pick on Fox News or Sean Hannity or Rush Limbaugh or me.

Speaker 1 Whenever you're the it person, shut them down because there's a whole bunch of people standing behind going, well, if he can say that, I can. So you got to shut that down.
Right.

Speaker 1 And then if you see a huge figure torn down, you're not going to do it. Oh, my God.
I'd never get away. If he can't get away with that, I definitely can't.
Right.

Speaker 1 I mean, the scary, like, you listen to what he was talking about with Russia,

Speaker 1 where

Speaker 1 he says your killing of journalists is actually down. And normally you take that as a real positive sign.
It's not. It's not.

Speaker 1 They're saying, A, they've killed most of the people who would stand up to Putin anyway. They're already gone.

Speaker 1 And B, there's a whole group of people who would like to stand up to Putin who are saying, if I do do this, I'm going to be dead. So I'm not going to do it.

Speaker 1 And then now there's no need for the Russians to kill as many journalists.

Speaker 1 No, we're not taking on journalists now. Of course not.
You've

Speaker 1 set the bar. Sent the appropriate message.

Speaker 1 You know, that's why he killed people openly in England

Speaker 1 with something that is clearly from Russia. Yeah.
He's sending a message. Yeah, I can get you anywhere in the world.
Was the polonium attack from years ago, the same type of thing.

Speaker 1 Why would you do it and allow it to be basically traceable to Russia? You do it so everyone knows that when you oppose Russia, this could happen to you.

Speaker 1 If they're willing to be that brazen with someone much, well, much, you know, more well-known than you, well, of course they're going to kill you off. No one's even going to notice.

Speaker 1 And that is

Speaker 1 globally, it is.

Speaker 1 you know, cataclysmic levels. Here, it's getting worse.
I have to tell you, how do you define the press? You know, your freedom of speech when it comes to

Speaker 1 Facebook and YouTube. I mean, I have to play something from Dave Rubin I heard yesterday where he said, they're going to come for you.
If you're listening on the left, they're coming for you. Next.

Speaker 1 Glenn, back.

Speaker 1 Mercury.

Speaker 1 This is the Glenn Beth program. You know,

Speaker 1 what's truly remarkable is the way

Speaker 1 Kanye West is being treated in the press. And, you know, again, I'm not a fan of Kanye West.
I just believe in freedom of thought and freedom of speech.

Speaker 1 And last night on television, I went through a list of things that he has said over Twitter. And the vast majority of stuff in a certain given time period,

Speaker 1 I have agreed with.

Speaker 1 And it's very relatively sane and also under control, right? Like he's not hateful about them. He's, I mean, again, this is a limited time period we're focusing on.

Speaker 1 Tell me which the left would disagree with.

Speaker 1 If your friend jumps off a bridge, you don't have to do the same. I don't tell Hillary supporters not to support Hillary.
I love Hillary, too.

Speaker 1 Okay, what's the problem with that? I'm not a Democrat or a Republican. What's the problem with saying that?

Speaker 1 I haven't done enough research on conservatives to call myself one or to be called one. I'm just refusing to be enslaved by monolithic thought.
Great.

Speaker 1 We have freedom of speech in America, but not freedom of thought. True.
The thought police want to suppress freedom of thought. True.
And the left says that about the right.

Speaker 1 The right says that about the left. Constantly bringing up the past keeps you stuck there.

Speaker 1 Yep. That is true.
That's true about everything. How many, Glenn, how many personal life interactions do you have?

Speaker 1 I know I have relatives and friends who have a big incident in their lives, and they always look back at it, and it's always the focus of their life, and it makes it impossible for them to move on.

Speaker 1 It's got nothing to do with slavery.

Speaker 1 Unless they say, if it wasn't for that, I wouldn't have woken up. Right.

Speaker 1 It's either good

Speaker 1 or it crushes you.

Speaker 1 We're being starved, and anyone who starts asking unpopular questions gets demonized. Only free thinkers can change the world.

Speaker 1 What is wrong with this?

Speaker 1 What is wrong with this? Because it's tied to him liking a Republican president. So, Brian Stelter, who I think has just gone off the rails,

Speaker 1 he is, you know, the senior media consultant.

Speaker 1 He attacked Kanye yesterday saying he's a gift to racists.

Speaker 1 Now, Brian, I want to see the article when you said that Kanye was a gift to racist when he said George Bush hates all black people.

Speaker 1 Did you say he was a gift to racists when he was saying that?

Speaker 1 That was probably before his rise to prominence, but yes.

Speaker 1 I know he was in the press. I know he was doing stuff in the press.
He said, West is what he's really doing is

Speaker 1 bolstering the white supremac racist cause. It's backfiring in a really embarrassing and public, even humiliating way.

Speaker 1 You look at the reactions to what Kanye West said on TMZ about slavery, and he's being roundly denounced, widely denounced for what he said.

Speaker 1 Yes, for what he said there, where it appeared to everybody that he said slavery was a choice.

Speaker 1 He didn't even really say it in that context. Even in his initial statement, he didn't really say that.

Speaker 1 If you want to give him zero benefit of the doubt, that's what he said. You give him benefit of the doubt.

Speaker 1 And what he's saying is, you know, you can't be a huge population, bigger than the white population, and

Speaker 1 not overthrow the shackles. after 400 years unless you've been made a slave in your mind.
If you've been made a slave in your mind, you don't overthrow the shackles. And

Speaker 1 his point was, we have to not create new shackles in our mind of the past or of, I'm going to just think this one way. Look at the facts.

Speaker 1 Are those things that you've been taught to think, are they true?

Speaker 1 Do they work? Are they helping you? That is very reasoned. Now, he may have said it in an inartful way, and people have taken it to mean something that that he didn't mean.

Speaker 1 Yes.

Speaker 1 If you want to give him zero benefit of the doubt, which is always what the media does to anybody who has a differing opinion than them, then

Speaker 1 they're going to, you know, then that's fine.

Speaker 1 Shoot him.

Speaker 1 It's a great point, though. Does the guy who believes,

Speaker 1 to pick his worst viewpoint, that the government created AIDS to kill black people, do you really think that person thinks that slavery was a choice?

Speaker 1 I mean, we blatantly know he doesn't actually believe that they were like, yeah, you know what? Those boats look great. Put those chains on me.
That's not what he was saying at all.

Speaker 1 It's blatantly obvious, I think, even from when he said it initially. But again, when you have something that you may not understand, you ask for clarification, you get it, right?

Speaker 1 He clarifies later and spells out exactly what he means. I think we all realize that, you know, Kanye West is not an anti-black activist, right? Can we come to that conclusion? Can we?

Speaker 1 The guy said AIDS was developed to kill the black population. That is a

Speaker 1 right-level sort of viewpoint that you can't be an anti-black activist.

Speaker 1 He's not going to put on a hood.

Speaker 1 Okay, Kanye West, we all knew that as of last week, but now we have to pretend that this guy is the most evil anti-black KKK member of all time because he said he likes Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 I mean, it's just absurd. We all know these things aren't true, and we act as if we don't know them to get our point across for an hour of Twitter retweets.
It's infuriating.

Speaker 1 It is the addiction to outrage. You've been pointing out over and over and over again.
Totally addicted. It's a terrible thing that our society has developed.
It's a terrible habit.

Speaker 1 And it's the type of thing. And it's turning good people into

Speaker 1 really weird

Speaker 1 absolutists.

Speaker 1 Where's the reason? Where's the reason?

Speaker 1 He's now empowering the racist right? What are you talking about?

Speaker 1 Was he empowering the racist left? And if so, where were all of your voices?

Speaker 1 Please,

Speaker 1 it's Kanye West.

Speaker 1 It's Kanye West. And if you take and look at what he is saying in balance, he's saying, think for yourself.

Speaker 1 Is there a better message than think for yourself? I disagree with him on almost everything he says. I think he's most likely doing this just to promote his album.
I don't really care about him.

Speaker 1 I really don't.

Speaker 1 But what he's saying is really important to our society right now, and that is, think for yourself. I honestly think we are moving to a point where that is no longer the American

Speaker 1 gene. Think for yourself.
We are becoming, especially when it comes to thought, a collectivist society where there are two large groups of people who must stay in line. I won't either.

Speaker 1 It's too boring, first of all.

Speaker 1 We can go down a million different rows of why it's terrible for society, but let's start with it's boring.

Speaker 1 And let me just say, once you narrow it down to two, then you'll have to narrow it down to one. Right.
That's what happens. So,

Speaker 1 I mean, you look at just the way the left watch is people step out of line.

Speaker 1 What's Brett Weinstein, the guy who he's at Evergreen State University, says something that's mildly out of step with the left's current new positioning on gender, which is consistent with our scientific understanding for hundreds of years, thousands of years, millions of years.

Speaker 1 And he is attacked and brutalized because of that. Driven out of academia.
And look, we've seen the same thing on the right, too. Let's not deny it doesn't happen there.
It does. You know, it does.

Speaker 1 And the point is,

Speaker 1 you become better when you come up against another person who's well-reasoned and make us a point, even if at times they don't have the backup for it.

Speaker 1 You know, like, I think that was one of the things that I thought was interesting that Kanye West said, which was like, you know what? I don't know. It was just kind of an idea.

Speaker 1 He wasn't saying he thought it out perfectly. He had an idea.
And if you can't bring up an idea without being destroyed, how do you disprove that idea? You know, we talked about this with.

Speaker 1 How do you have new ideas? Right. Every idea starts.
I mean, look at, let me take something that's, you know, completely harmless. The assembly line.
Henry Ford tried it three times.

Speaker 1 Three times. If he would have said, you know what, we should do, we should have things on assembly line.
And everybody said, shut up, shut up, shut up. You are just a monger.
I hate you.

Speaker 1 Shut up, shut up. And he never would have done it.

Speaker 1 We wouldn't be where we are today. Not only did he do it once, it failed.
He then said, I got another idea, the way we can do it. It failed.
Another guy came up to him and said, look, dude.

Speaker 1 I think I have the idea. Henry Ford could have said, shut up.
It's my idea. My idea that's going to make this work.
No, it was somebody else who was saying to him, dude, you're missing the point.

Speaker 1 You have to have that conversation.

Speaker 1 And we are, we're stifling it. And the press has no idea.

Speaker 1 No idea. Brian, you are a media.
You're a...

Speaker 1 I need to make it about Brian.

Speaker 1 He's just, it's just, it's bothering me how certain

Speaker 1 the people are in the media. They have gone from, gee, I wonder why Donald Trump won.
Gee, should we examine ourselves to, we are absolutely right. We know exactly what is going on.

Speaker 1 There's no other kind of thinking. There's no other way you can possibly ever look at this.

Speaker 1 You are doing what you accused me of doing.

Speaker 1 Stop it.

Speaker 1 Freedom of thought.

Speaker 1 Let people express ideas. Don't demonize everyone.

Speaker 1 Just because they disagree with you. Here's an idea.
When you show me your vitriolic rants against the government invented AIDS to kill black people

Speaker 1 and your rants on George Bush just hates black people,

Speaker 1 you can then have some credibility to say, look, it's the same kind of rant and the same kind of reaction from all of my esteemed colleagues, we're 100% consistent. You're not.

Speaker 1 Do you think George Bush hates black people and AIDS was created to kill black people? Do you think that might have been speaking to the racist left,

Speaker 1 to the Black Panthers? No, because you guys don't pay attention to that. You don't care about that.
You won't recognize any of that. It's only white people that you should be afraid of.

Speaker 1 Well, and if you remember, we have a very clear example of someone prominent saying in the political context, the AIDS

Speaker 1 was created to kill black people. It was Jeremiah Wright.
And

Speaker 1 when Republicans brought up Jeremiah Wright, hey, here's a guy who, not was it some rapper. This is a guy who was the spiritual leader of the next president of the United States.

Speaker 1 When that was brought up, it was attacked as if you couldn't even acknowledge that someone in his circle believed that.

Speaker 1 I believe, Stu, that at one point we had the research that showed that it was Van Jones and his color of change organization that was in with Kanye West to help promote that thought.

Speaker 1 Yeah, they, if I remember correctly, they were selling t-shirts that said, Yeah,

Speaker 1 and isn't he Van Jones? Isn't he an employee of CNN? Yes, huh?

Speaker 1 That's interesting.

Speaker 1 It is interesting, yes.

Speaker 1 Well, I just wonder. I just wonder.

Speaker 1 Did CNN hold him and his group? They love to uphold Color of Change as this great organization. Weren't they speaking directly to the racists of the left and the black movement?

Speaker 1 The ultra-nationalist or the ultra-racists that want a separate country for black people. And again,

Speaker 1 we were really critical of Jeremiah Wright for saying those things back then. But now that Kanye West is on our side, are we critical of Kanye West saying the AIDS thing? Yes.
Yes.

Speaker 1 We're critical of both of them saying it both times because it's not even close to true. And then we're looking at the things that he has said that are true.
Like,

Speaker 1 We cannot ever be truly free without freedom of expression, without being shouted down and demonized. That's true.
And both sides know that.

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Speaker 1 Glenn Beck Mercury.

Speaker 1 Glenn back.

Speaker 1 We have so much yet to talk about today.

Speaker 1 The state of New York is weaponizing their regulatory powers over the financial institutions to

Speaker 1 crush the NRA and gun dealerships. And

Speaker 1 this is just the beginning. This is just the beginning.
We'll give you that coming up in just a few minutes. I also want to play this piece with Dave Rubin,

Speaker 1 where he is warning he is a former progressive that has kind of opened his eyes and is part of this free thought movement that is really kind of taking and starting a grass fire in California.

Speaker 1 I hate to use that phrase in California, but

Speaker 1 and

Speaker 1 he is warning his fellow progressives. Listen to this.
Why are they all lefties who then say one thing that upsets the left and then they're purged? It will happen. It will come for you.

Speaker 1 I mean, if there's someone that's watching this right now that is a hardcore progressive that's going, man, I hate Frager and Rubin and this is all nonsense. Guess what?

Speaker 1 If you have any spark of individualism in you, if you have anything about you that's interesting or different, they will come to destroy that too. So you can't just sit there and wait.
You cannot.

Speaker 1 This is the great fight of our generation.

Speaker 1 Setting up phenomenal.

Speaker 1 Kanye is living that right now.

Speaker 1 And everyone will live that unless we start to recognize differences and celebrate and protect those differences, especially those differences that make us uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck. Mercury.

Speaker 1 Love. Courage.

Speaker 1 Truth.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck.

Speaker 1 Well, some not surprising news, unless you

Speaker 1 haven't been paying attention. New York has now weaponized the regulatory powers against the NRA.

Speaker 1 This is something that I warned you about, and I believe it was Citigroup, which was the first financial institution that started to fall into line. The next one was Bank of America, Stu.

Speaker 1 Do you remember? Where they just stopped, they started saying, we're not going to offer any financial services to any gun manufacturers that make military assault rifles

Speaker 1 and high-capacity magazines. And I warned you, there is an effort underfoot.
Well, Cuomo has just outlined a directive to the financial regulators, and he is pressuring them to break ties.

Speaker 1 With the NRA. I'm going to quote from the directive.
I am directing the Department of Financial Services to urge insurers and bankers statewide. Well, good thing there's no big banks in New York.

Speaker 1 And bankers statewide to determine whether any relationship they may have with the NRA or similar organizations sends the wrong message to their clients and their communities who often look to them for guidance and support.

Speaker 1 The Department of Financial Services, this is the one that regulates the banking and insurance industries in New York.

Speaker 1 He continued, the department

Speaker 1 encourages its chartered and licensed financial institutions to continue evaluating and managing their risks, including reputational risks that may arise from their dealings with the NRA or similar gun promotion organizations.

Speaker 1 Huh.

Speaker 1 As well as continued assessment of compliance with their own codes of social responsibility, the department encourages regulated institutions to review any relationship they may have with the NRA or any similar gun promotion organization and to take prompt actions to manage these risks and promote public health and safety.

Speaker 1 What is a fascistic regime?

Speaker 1 What is that?

Speaker 1 It is somebody who's at the top that uses the controls of power and government to force their point of view on everyone.

Speaker 1 This is a step towards totalitarianism or fascism in the United States of America. They are now threatening the banks and the insurers.

Speaker 1 They're just reminding them

Speaker 1 to do the right thing.

Speaker 1 May I suggest, America, we have a difference of opinion on what the right thing is.

Speaker 1 But when it comes to fascism and standing up against anyone abusing power to force any point of view,

Speaker 1 I suggest we all do the right thing and resist.

Speaker 1 It's Thursday, May 3rd.

Speaker 1 This is the Glenn Beck program. Wow, targeting districts again.
Wow, look at that. Horrible behavior.

Speaker 1 You know,

Speaker 1 I'm really excited about this.

Speaker 1 There are some really brave people that are willing to stand up and buck the system and not say, I'm right.

Speaker 1 Just say, you know, we should think about this a little more broadly and we should maybe notice that maybe as we're fighting for freedom, we're actually fighting for totalitarianism.

Speaker 1 And both sides are doing it.

Speaker 1 And there is this group of people, this intellectual dark web of people that are standing up in their own place and saying, hey, wait a minute, I'd just like to throw out another opinion.

Speaker 1 And I saw one on Prager University.

Speaker 1 And it is a video called, what's the greater leap of faith, God or the multiverse? And it's from Brian Keating. He is

Speaker 1 the professor of physics at the University of California, San Diego. He is also the author of a new book, Losing the Nobel Prize, which we have to talk to him about.

Speaker 1 But I wanted to get him on and just have him. Here's a guy who is a professor of physics to explain the multiverse, which is an unproven theory.

Speaker 1 And how it relates to people who believe in God. Welcome to the program, Brian.

Speaker 3 Yeah, it's great to be here with you, Glenn. Thank you.

Speaker 1 So this is a great Prager University video. Can you just summarize it a bit?

Speaker 3 Yeah, so there's a boiling, roiling controversy that's pervading the normally stayed academic world of cosmology, of all things.

Speaker 3 And it actually is rekindling a debate that's really gone on for millennia, which is, you know, how did our universe come to be?

Speaker 3 How do we come to find ourselves as conscious beings in a universe that we can attempt to understand?

Speaker 3 And for millennia,

Speaker 3 there was no support for the Genesis 1-1 narrative that suggested that the, you know, the Big Bang or the origin of the universe began at a single point in time.

Speaker 3 Even if you didn't believe it was created by a creator, there was still no evidence that the universe came, you know, had a birthday, shall we say.

Speaker 3 And until 1965, when astronomers were using a special kind of telescope that's an ancestor to the types of telescopes that my group and my students and I build today that saw heat left over from the Big Bang.

Speaker 3 And this was sort of incontrovertible evidence that the universe originated in a fiery, almost explosion-like event unlike anything ever witnessed before or since.

Speaker 3 And before that time, there was literally no physical evidence for an origin event. And so people just naturally believed the universe had been around forever.

Speaker 3 This was the so-called steady state theory, which was held not only by atheists and non-believers, it was held by everybody, including Einstein and Newton, who were devoutly, Newton was devoutly religious, as you know.

Speaker 3 And so the question as to what evidence people that had belief in a singular origin had,

Speaker 3 there was no evidence for them, and yet they believed, and they did so on the basis of faith, and that's fine.

Speaker 3 But at least they admitted it was faith, and they didn't say that, well, we have evidence for that. Nowadays, there's a notion that the universe is not only

Speaker 3 had a beginning, but

Speaker 3 it is not only the only universe.

Speaker 3 And in order to explain the peculiar features of our universe and the improbability of the existence of conscious entities such as ourselves, many of my erudite colleagues have proposed a model which is every bit as revolutionary as the Big Bang might have sounded 55 years ago.

Speaker 3 And this is that the universe that we inhabit is not the only universe.

Speaker 1 And it is a ⁇ the best way I've heard it described is if

Speaker 1 you're giving your kids kids a bath and there's all these soap bubbles in the corner of the bathtub and you kind of pick that up.

Speaker 1 They're all connected to each other, but you can't pass from one bubble to the other or they'll pop.

Speaker 1 But they are just a big collection of bubbles and they're more and less and they kind of come into existence and form new bubbles. And that's what it really is.

Speaker 1 And each bubble is its own separate universe. We're just one of those bubbles in that big handful.
Is that right? Exactly.

Speaker 3 And it's a natural phenomenon that people will have a tendency to be biased towards

Speaker 3 something that would make sense to them.

Speaker 3 And in this case, what's unusual to me is that the scenario that you described is perfectly reasonable from a physicist's point of view, but you at least have to admit that there's currently no evidence for such a proposition.

Speaker 3 And the point that is made in the Prague University video is that

Speaker 3 when the secular scientist is confronted with the question of whether or not to believe in God, as 70% of the most prestigious Academy of Sciences in the world, the National Academy of Sciences in America, they declare themselves not to be agnostic, but to be atheist.

Speaker 3 And in that sense, you have to wonder why are they so quick to believe a theory for which there's no hard, physical, tangible, scientific, method, provable evidence?

Speaker 3 And I claim that in some cases, some of my colleagues are doing so in such a way as to bolster their, you know, their preconceived biases of secularism.

Speaker 3 And it's fine to be secular, Glenn. I'm I'm not complaining.

Speaker 3 You can be a conscientious atheist, and that's fine.

Speaker 3 But I think to say that you're a scientist and you believe in the scientific method, and religious believers in the faithful, like us, that we are somehow foolish because we believe in something on the basis of faith when they have just as much faith.

Speaker 3 I say it takes a fair amount of faith to be an atheist.

Speaker 1 Yeah, and

Speaker 1 I really do think it does. I mean, intelligent design makes sense to me.

Speaker 1 Quantum physics makes no sense to me, but I believe quantum physics is probably on the right direction. I mean, I have no idea when it breaks down.
I haven't tried to understand it.

Speaker 1 It's way beyond me. It doesn't seem to make sense, but that's because everything else breaks down.

Speaker 1 So having a multiverse where there's all these different kinds of options out there and we're playing out every single option seems like science fiction, but I don't know. It might be true.
So

Speaker 3 you will trust

Speaker 3 the knowledge of experts such as myself when it comes to quantum physics, right?

Speaker 3 I won't do brain surgery. I think I'm pretty intelligent, but I won't do brain surgery on myself.

Speaker 3 I'll go to an expert. So

Speaker 3 what always tickles me is that my brilliant colleagues, my brilliant atheists, and I say this with all honesty, I have utmost respect for my colleagues, even if they are secular.

Speaker 3 We get along great and we can have a wonderful conversation over

Speaker 3 a glass of a beverage of our choice.

Speaker 3 But when we do so you know I think it's it's important to realize that they're not subject matter experts when it comes to religion and most of them if they ever did practice religion you know probably gave it up when they were about 13 or so and so they're left with a 13 year old's understanding of of the you know of this immense immense thing you know I know you've written a lot of books and that's wonderful and I just wrote my first and that's the only one I may ever write

Speaker 3 but but you know what they say you know I'd trade and I'm sure you believe this you know if you could trade

Speaker 3 one reader 100 years from now for 100 readers tomorrow, you would do that in a second because it would mean your ideas are timeless. And in the case of something like

Speaker 3 Stephen Hawking, the late great Stephen Hawking, who wrote a book, A Brief History of Time, that book,

Speaker 3 I hope it's not relevant in 100 years because I hope that we've made tremendous scientific progress.

Speaker 3 But if you look at the Bible, the Bible had to speak 30 centuries ago, and it has to speak 30 centuries from now. How many books can do that?

Speaker 3 And so when people and my colleagues, brilliant men and women, when they reject it because

Speaker 3 they erect a straw man and burn it down, that's the problem that I have with them, and that they're so willing to accept the lack of evidence for something which really may never be provable, not even has no evidence now, but may not be physically impossible to prove.

Speaker 3 It's a little bit

Speaker 3 nerve-wracking for me.

Speaker 1 Brian Keating, he is the author of a new book, Losing the Nobel Prize. And I want to talk to him about that book because it's interesting to to see how

Speaker 1 the inner workings of science and the pursuit of the Nobel Prize.

Speaker 1 We'll continue our conversation here in just a second. Let me tell you about our sponsor this half hour.
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Speaker 1 Glenn back

Speaker 1 Mercury.

Speaker 1 Glenn back.

Speaker 1 So today, there's a lot of talk of the possibility of President Trump winning a peace prize, a Nobel Peace Prize,

Speaker 1 because hostages have been released in North Korea. Looks like we're on the right track for peace there.

Speaker 1 A lot of people are poo-pooing this, but he's already accomplished more than Barack Obama did when he got a Nobel Peace Prize for his hopes and aspirations, which I think was kind of a low point for the Nobel Prize.

Speaker 1 But who am I to judge? Brian Keating has just written a book called Losing the Nobel Prize. This is a story of actual science and what the award was actually

Speaker 1 deemed to promote. And it starts with something that you created with your team called bicep.
Can you tell me what bicep is?

Speaker 3 Yeah, bicep is a telescope.

Speaker 3 And like all telescopes, it's also a time machine. So, you know, light travels extremely rapidly.
It's the fastest velocity that anything can possibly reach.

Speaker 3 And yet it's not infinite. So when we look back in space, we're seeing things the way that they were not instantaneously.

Speaker 3 So you remember, or you've seen footage, you're not old enough maybe to remember, but the moon landings, the astronauts would communicate back and forth of radios, and it would take about a second and a half to get to the moon because the moon is a quarter million miles away.

Speaker 3 So that delay is the responsibility of the finite speed of light. So what happens is, and radio waves are just another form of light.

Speaker 3 So what happens is when you look back in space, you're looking back in time.

Speaker 3 What I wanted to do with this telescope and my colleagues and I wanted to do is build a telescope that could look back where there's no moons in the way, there's no sun in the way, there's no planets or stars or galaxies or anything else in our way, and then you could look back theoretically to the beginning of time.

Speaker 3 And if we were to do so, we were told not only would we capture really the birth pangs of the Big Bang, you know, what caused the Big Bang to bang, if you will, but we would also most assuredly receive a Nobel Prize for the efforts.

Speaker 3 And it took us to the very bottom of the world.

Speaker 3 The telescope Bicep, it's an acronym that's not worth getting getting into here, but the acronym really referred to that the job of the telescope was to measure these patterns called curl patterns in this ancient heat left over from the Big Bang called the cosmic microwave background.

Speaker 3 And so if we did that,

Speaker 3 the telescope had to be brought to a very special place. And it was, in this case, it was brought to the very bottom of the world, the South Pole Antarctica.

Speaker 3 And so I describe in the book what it's like to go to the South Pole.

Speaker 3 You know, currently in the South Pole, the entire continent of Antarctica, you know, there's only about 1,000 people in an entire continent, much bigger than the state of Texas.

Speaker 3 And so it's quite a m a forbidding location to go to. And we built it there because the telescope needs to be in a place that's very dry and very cold.

Speaker 3 And the South Pole is very cold, and it's also at 10,000 feet above sea level. So it's very dry and above most of the water vapor in our atmosphere.

Speaker 3 So it made the perfect perch to search for the Big Bang's earliest aftershocks.

Speaker 1 So did you find them?

Speaker 3 We did find them. It's surprising.
When you go out and look for something, oftentimes you find it, even if you're a dispassionate scientist.

Speaker 3 What we didn't know at the time, and we made this big announcement on St.

Speaker 3 Patrick's Day 2014, it was covered above the fold, as they say, in every major newspaper in the world, because it was thought to be as far back in human history, in not human history, in cosmic history, that human beings could ever glimpse.

Speaker 3 And immediately the Nobel whispers began.

Speaker 3 Unfortunately, what turned out to happen is that our discovery

Speaker 3 was sort of mixed with a signal that comes not from the cosmos, not from the Big Bang, but from what's called dust.

Speaker 3 So I know you have kids, I have kids, and a cloud of dust surrounds your kids at all times, at least they do for my boys. And when that is, but it's not the same dust that's in the Milky Way galaxy.

Speaker 3 And this is a special type of dust. This is dust in our galaxy that was produced from the death explosion of a star called a supernova.
And what's so poetic about it is, you know, just like

Speaker 3 the Bible accounts, you know,

Speaker 3 ashes to ashes, dust to dust. So the dust that the Bible poetically and metaphorically speaks of as being the formation of human beings, actually true.

Speaker 3 So there's actually flowing through your veins, your listeners' veins right now, is stardust.

Speaker 3 And it's stardust that was created in the beginning of time when the universe, or not in the beginning of time, when our galaxy produced a star that exploded and spewed forth this iron that now is the hemoglobin inside of your blood.

Speaker 3 So in our bodies flows dust, and in the cosmos does too. And this dust obscured the signal that we were looking looking for.
So we eventually, embarrassingly, had to retract our discovery.

Speaker 3 And our Nobel dreams literally turned to dust.

Speaker 1 Aaron Powell, Jr.: And so your concern about the Nobel Prize is that

Speaker 1 it's become what?

Speaker 3 It's become very politicized, become very vaunted as society's, not just science's ultimate accolade, but on all of society.

Speaker 3 There's nothing as prestigious as a Nobel Prize, which is why there's so much controversy, you know, heaven forbid that Donald Trump would win a Nobel Prize.

Speaker 3 You know, he would join the likes of Yasser Arafat and

Speaker 1 all these other great men.

Speaker 1 Yeah, exactly. So

Speaker 3 I would advise him not to hold his breath because I doubt it's likely. I was asked to nominate the winners of the Nobel Prize two years ago.

Speaker 3 And when I did so, I found out a whole bunch of scary things that the Nobel Prize committee was doing that were really sullying the literal Nobel L-E vision of Alfred Nobel. And it really troubled me.

Speaker 3 So I set out in part, the book is written not only

Speaker 3 to describe the way that my team lost our own Nobel Prize, but that parts of the Nobel Prize and maybe even the Nobel Prize itself needs to be lost because of what it's doing to science and society.

Speaker 3 Wow. Currently, right now, there's a sex scandal rocking the Nobel Prize in literature.
There's a financial crimes investigation unit probing it. They might cancel the Nobel Prizes for tweets orders.

Speaker 1 Wow. I have to tell you, I cannot wait to read the book.
It's called Losing the Nobel Prize. Brian Keating is the author and esteemed scientist that lost the Nobel Prize?

Speaker 1 And you can pick his book up. It's available everywhere now: Losing the Nobel Prize.
Thanks, Brian.

Speaker 1 Glenn Beck, Mercury.

Speaker 1 You're listening to the Glenn Beck program. So, yesterday on the program, we told you about Seattle's new head tax.

Speaker 1 Now, what is a head tax? Well, a head tax is for any company that makes over $20 million a year, and not in profit, but in

Speaker 1 sales, that they generate $20 million or more. That's 586 companies in Seattle.
What they've done is they've said that there is about a $520 tax per employee.

Speaker 1 So if you make over $20 million a year in your company, not profit,

Speaker 1 you just make over $20 million, you now have a new tax. If there's only one of you in that company, it's not so bad.

Speaker 1 It's $500 or $526.

Speaker 1 But if you're a company like Amazon, that's a $21 million

Speaker 1 tax

Speaker 1 every year.

Speaker 1 Now, let's just think of the free market here for a second.

Speaker 1 Who the hell is going to build a big business in Seattle?

Speaker 1 I wouldn't. An insane person? Yeah.
I mean, there's lots of other places we can do it. I mean, why would you do it there?

Speaker 1 Well, you remember when we used to have a studio, one right across the street from Philadelphia.

Speaker 1 And they had a tax, a city wage tax in Philadelphia, and we built it on the other side of the road in Ballachinwood. Called City Line Avenue.
Right.

Speaker 1 And you looked, at least back when we were there, you could drive down that road, and one side of the street had basically no businesses, and the other side of the street had tons and tons of businesses because everyone chose to build their business on the other side of the street and give all the business and all the tax revenue that would come in to

Speaker 1 Ballachinwood. And, you know, does that make any sense? I mean, yeah,

Speaker 1 as a business, it makes a hell of a lot lot of logical sense. Why wouldn't you? And the Seattle's going to find the same thing.
I mean, they've done so many things, the $15 minimum wage, and now

Speaker 1 this tax. Why would you go to Seattle? I want you to listen to it.
I want you to listen to this story. I want you to listen for the arrogance and the stupidity of Seattle.
Okay.

Speaker 1 Seattle City Council considering a new head tax to be imposed on businesses with annual taxable receipts of more than 200 million. I'm sorry, I thought it was 20 million.
200 million.

Speaker 1 The move would cost Amazon over $20 million at the rate of 26 cents per employee per hour as proposed. So

Speaker 1 per employee per hour times 40 hours times 50 weeks.

Speaker 1 It's about 526.

Speaker 1 This proposal has caused Amazon to halt construction of a huge project in downtown Seattle. Amazon's vice president said, quote, I can confirm that

Speaker 1 pending the outcome of the head tax vote by city council, Amazon has paused all construction planning on our Block 18 project in downtown Seattle and is reevaluating the options to sublease all of the space in our recently leased Rainier Square building.

Speaker 1 More than 45,000 people in Seattle are employed by Amazon. The city hopes to raise $75 million annually with a new tax in order to provide affordable housing and additional services for the homeless.

Speaker 1 Roughly 585 businesses would face this targeted tax. City Council member Shashma Schwant,

Speaker 1 which I swear to you is I think the only way I can pronounce it, I think that I just think it sounds like maybe a Muppet name, but I think it's Shwashma Schwant.

Speaker 1 I would say the last name is Sawant. Schwant.
Sawant. The first name's a little more difficult, but you could go Shama or Kushama.
There's probably like three or four of those letters are silent.

Speaker 1 Yeah. Okay.
So anyway,

Speaker 1 she said the council meeting on Wednesday in response to Amazon's move that it was critical that we not accept this extortion.

Speaker 1 She referred to the tax as pocket change for these businesses and added that Amazon is perfectly capable of paying that, paying double or even four times that amount.

Speaker 1 Now, why in the hell would you ever, you mean, I mean, at least with Woodrow Wilson with the income tax, he said it'll never be over 7%.

Speaker 1 These people are saying they can afford it even four times the amount. If they take this tax now, you think they're going to stop at $526 per employee?

Speaker 1 Another council person in support of the proposal,

Speaker 1 Mike O'Brien, said, I understand Amazon doesn't like it. I'm sure they'd love to go to a city that has no taxes, and maybe they'll find that place.

Speaker 1 Oh my gosh. If I were Amazon, if I were Jeff Bezos today, I would say, pack your crap and let's go.
And here's why.

Speaker 1 The arrogance of Seattle.

Speaker 1 It's a city that is supposed to do right by its people.

Speaker 1 You have one of the biggest employers in all of your city, and you're saying, pack your crap and get out.

Speaker 1 I remember Rainier Square. I grew up there.

Speaker 1 There wasn't always Seattle wasn't always... Seattle is the place that has the first skid row.

Speaker 1 I remember my mother taking me to

Speaker 1 Pike Place Market when they were thinking about tearing it down because it was an eyesore.

Speaker 1 And I remember my mother and my family being pariahs because we thought, you know, the city could, you know, do something, private industry could do something and make things a lot better if you just let private industry do something.

Speaker 1 She used to tell me all the time, can you imagine what this place would be like? I mean, here I am. I'm like eight years old.

Speaker 1 She's walking around Skid Row and Pike Place Market when it was full of thieves and killers. Still kind of is, but in a different way.
Anyway,

Speaker 1 and she had that vision.

Speaker 1 Seattle, don't get so arrogant to think that you can't collapse. You start doing this to companies, you're going to find a ghost town.
Yeah. They will find, think of this, you know what they're doing?

Speaker 1 They're calculating, well, they've got all that money. They've already started construction on their new thing.
Well, let me think.

Speaker 1 And wouldn't that also be pocket change to Amazon? Especially when that is a one-time expense? Let's say they have 20 million. Let's say they have 40 million into it.

Speaker 1 Why not walk away? I could lose 40 million now, or I could lose a minimum of 40 million over the next two years in this tax. And they got me.
Once we move in, We're there.

Speaker 1 Once we build everything out, what do you say we lose the 40 million now? We just walk away. Let's go find a place.
If I were Jeff Bezos, Seattle would be done.

Speaker 1 Done today. If they pass this.
Yeah, if they pass this.

Speaker 1 But I have to tell you, as a business owner, I might not even

Speaker 1 wait for that because they could pass that at any time. They could pass it next year.
And this is the thing.

Speaker 1 When you move all of these jobs in, when you build these facilities, you're making a commitment to the town. You're making a commitment to the city.

Speaker 1 And especially if you have the power of Bezos and Amazon, you see what they're doing around the country with talking, you know, the way they're shopping around their next facility.

Speaker 1 You almost want to guarantee that this stuff's not going to happen after you move in. They suckered them into starting to build this

Speaker 1 facility.

Speaker 1 And then right after they start construction and they're in the middle of doing it and they're spending all this money, they say, oh, by the way, we're going to charge you a lot more.

Speaker 1 What other businesses that okay?

Speaker 1 And if you go, you can't buy a car and you've been driving it around for a month and all of a sudden they say, by the way,

Speaker 1 the payment's going to be $300 more. Sorry.

Speaker 1 That's insanity.

Speaker 1 It's completely unfair to a business trying to

Speaker 1 do something good for the community, right? I mean,

Speaker 1 you think they need

Speaker 1 rich cities around.

Speaker 1 Look at the way the cities around the country are recruiting Amazon. They're bending over backwards in ways that probably aren't right either to lure them into their cities.

Speaker 1 Yeah, but Stu, you can see the mountain today.

Speaker 1 It's so beautiful today. Yeah, it's beautiful, and you can see the mountain maybe 25 days a year.
The rest of the time, it's depressing and rainy.

Speaker 1 I mean, highest suicide rate in the States. Oh, why do you think that is? Because you can never see the beauty because it's always cloudy and rainy.
That's why it's a great place to live.

Speaker 1 Seattle is one of the most beautiful cities,

Speaker 1 naturally.

Speaker 1 The most beautiful city, I think, in America. It is fantastic.

Speaker 1 But I'm sorry,

Speaker 1 I'm not, I've got to run a business. I have responsibility to my shareholders.
I have a responsibility to the teachers fund. All of you socialist teachers, your retirement, that's all in a fund.

Speaker 1 And I can guarantee you, it is highly invested in Amazon.

Speaker 1 So are all you socialist teachers willing to take a hit your retirement fund? You might have to work a few years longer because they're going to pay this huge tax because they can afford it.

Speaker 1 Now, that'll hurt their stock price, but they're being responsible. Are you happy about this with your retirement fund? Think it through.

Speaker 1 Yeah, Seattle is really going after business with the passion of a serial killer. They are meticulous.
They're methodical. They're picking apart any reason to do business in the city.

Speaker 1 Yeah, well, they're just so far left, they are just so far left. Um, listen to this one: I think we're at the place of now shove and almost to shoot.

Speaker 1 Okay, remember, first you have to, you know, you try to convince, then you nudge, then you have to, uh, then you shout, then you have to shove, then you shoot.

Speaker 1 That's the progression of progress when you're when your ideas don't make sense and don't meet the market's needs. Listen to this.
AFL-CIO now demands that people never use the self-serve checkout.

Speaker 1 A growing concern across the globe that automation will lead us to a dystopian future, with robots becoming ubiquitous on every aspect of our life, the marketplace will be filled with cheap goods, but the consuming population can't acquire them because they don't have a job.

Speaker 1 It's a legitimate worry for millions of people, especially when you see the countless videos and news articles about a robot flipping hamburgers, et cetera, et

Speaker 1 And one of the latest doom and gloom alarmists in Wisconsin chapter is the AFL-CIO, which is griping about self-service checkouts.

Speaker 1 It's not convenient for me to help corporations fire workers, they just raise their profits. I stand in line when the line's backed up.
The store calls for more cashiers to the front.

Speaker 1 If we keep doing it, they'll need to hire more people. Never, ever use self-checkout.

Speaker 1 Okay, well,

Speaker 1 this is the beginning of another prediction

Speaker 1 that I have said, because jobs are going to be lost, progressives, you know, the ones who embrace the future

Speaker 1 are going to turn on the future. They're going to turn on the things that make your life easier, make your life faster, make your life better.
Like, I don't know,

Speaker 1 let's think of a couple of things. Self-checkout or Amazon.

Speaker 1 And they'll demonize them because, well, they're taking away jobs. Those jobs are never coming back.
They're not coming back. And we have to get a grip on that right now.

Speaker 1 We have to stop demonizing China and stop demonizing Silicon Valley and progress.

Speaker 1 That is like going back into time. These progressives are the people that would have been saying, you're going to put the horse and buggy business out of business.

Speaker 1 We've got to swear allegiance to the horse and buggy business. Don't ever buy a car, I'm telling you right now, because all these jobs will be lost.
Don't you get a cotton gin? Don't you do it?

Speaker 1 All those jobs will be lost.

Speaker 1 All those slaves will then be free to do other things. Well, what will they do? Well, you know they'll turn on us, so you better keep them busy.
Don't buy a cotton gin.

Speaker 1 Any of this sound progressive to you?

Speaker 1 Progressives always stand in the way of freedom of thought and freedom to progress to the next exciting place.

Speaker 1 AFL-CIO,

Speaker 1 don't use checkout. Why?

Speaker 1 Because they're not taking you forward.

Speaker 1 Seattle,

Speaker 1 better do a tax, because they can afford it they can afford four times that tax and besides amazon it's going to eventually kill a lot of jobs

Speaker 1 look there's no bigger fan of you

Speaker 1 than your mom

Speaker 1 And Mother's Day is not this Sunday. I want to make that really clear because we were thinking about when is Mother's Day? And somebody said Sunday.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, don't panic.

Speaker 1 It's next Sunday, not this Sunday. But you will panic next week when I remind you, it's Sunday.
So take that off your plate right now. Nobody, nobody is your bigger fan than your mother.

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Do it right now. Don't put it off.
This offer is over tonight. So you have to make the call today.

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You click on the radio icon and enter the promo code back. 1-800-FLOWERS.com promo code back 24 for 24.
It offer the offer expires tonight.

Speaker 1 Glenn back Mercury.

Speaker 1 Glenn back.

Speaker 1 You know, the AFL-CIO, this is,

Speaker 1 you know, asking people, don't use self-checkout because it's going to hurt jobs. Do you know who that is? That's not a crazy idea to the left.

Speaker 1 Do you remember when the president said it's these kiosks and these ATM machines that are cutting out jobs? Oh, Obama, yeah. Right?

Speaker 1 Making your life easier.

Speaker 1 Having society progress, having a business make progress, making it easier, letting the free market work it out and say, you know what?

Speaker 1 I think if we put a kiosk up, everybody would like our airline better because there's no lines. And progressives saying, no, no, no, no, no, don't do that.
That's evil.

Speaker 1 It's true. I mean, I think, you know, there's a lot of reasons why Trump beat Hillary Clinton, but Hillary Clinton taking a stand against things like Uber was an underreported one.
Yes.

Speaker 1 I mean, this is the future. People are excited about it.
They love it. And progressives are going to become the anti-future people.

Speaker 1 Mark my word, they are going to be the one that turns on science and turns on technology.

Speaker 1 Glenn, back.

Speaker 1 Mercury.