'Turning Back To Revolution?' - 4/3/18
If you thought Facebook was bad, do you know what Google knows about you?...Google knows you better than you know yourself... ‘the burden is on us,’ but do you have time to check privacy on every single app?...relinquishing all responsibility to everybody, everything, now Google...Don't worry: Google and Facebook have user privacy 'in mind'?...the Pentagon and Amazon working together ...It's 1984 and our TVs are watching us...Attention, parents... ‘Get it out of your house'?...it’s impossible to live a ‘normal life’ without technology…there is no such thing as 'off the grid' anymore ...Vicious attacker Laura Ingraham is now a victim and David Hogg is a vicious sexist?
Hour 2
The left's masks are off...Remember the days when hardcore radicals actually tried to hide their extremist past?... now, it’s bragging rights?...the media may have forgotten about the hate from the past, but we haven't ...radical means for the radical ends? ...Embracing The Fourth Turning?...Generation Truth, where are you? ... Words of wisdom from the late great David Bowie? ... ‘never work for other people at what you do’ when it comes to art…It's the 1960s all over again...what the older generation needs to teach the younger… ‘embrace millennials’…life was a lot harder 50 years ago...wealth is evil and greed is good...'Hello, my name is Glenn, and I am a hoarder'...The rat with the fuse in its butt?
Hour 3
In the age of reason… was JFK's love life ‘legendary’?...CNN’s warped obsession with adultery...HNN: The Hypocrisy News Network...Loitering in Central Park with a baggie? ...Glenn introduces the rat?...Reaching out and saving Christians around the world...Please pray and please donate to The Nazarene Fund... TheNazareneFund.org ...FLASHBACK: Glenn’s ‘wildly extreme’ comments on Fox News?…Everyone has a right to call the president a racist ...defending free speech even when you despise it ...gutting our Constitution and harvesting its organs? ...Happy 70th Birthday Israel ...Stu is gearing up for his 'ultra' marathon?
The Glenn Beck Program with Glenn Beck and Stu Burguiere, Weekdays 9am–12pm ET on TheBlaze Radio
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Transcript
The Blaze Radio Network
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love
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Glenn Beck All right
Let's face facts on a couple of things first of all Google is the ultimate big brother Facebook is the current scapegoat for all of our paranoia about technology and privacy and data collection and social media, but that is really only coming to the masses because of politics.
That's it.
They're just the first megatech company to have something go wrong in a big way and have it go wrong in a big way revolving around politics, but they're not going to be the last.
And if you think Facebook is bad, have you checked out what Google is up to?
Google knows and stores an insane amount of information about you that you probably don't know about.
One of the most alarming is that it constantly tracks your location and travel times between locations Google logs your hobbies your career your gender your age your interests your possible income and even your possible weight easy there Google
Google also knows all of your YouTube history which means they have a pretty good idea of your religious and political leanings.
They also have your emails, even the deleted ones.
The good news,
if you can say there's good news in this situation, is that you can log into your Google account and view your personal data and tracking history, and supposedly even delete things you don't want King Google to keep in their filing cabinet in the dungeon.
You can even download it as one giant file.
Just don't try to print it.
because it will be several million pages on you.
A spokesperson for Google told NBC that they should be aware of their online privacy choices and review them regularly.
Right, right.
And it's true, the burden is on us to track down what every tech company knows in stores about you and figure out how to turn it off.
The problem is, do you have time to do that for every app?
Yeah, me neither.
The director of the nonprofit Center for Digital Democracy in Washington says Google has built a global commercial surveillance machine that rivals what the NSA or other intelligence agencies can gather in order to become the leading global
digital advertising company.
Some say handing over our personal data by the bucket load is the price we pay for free web services.
You can make that case.
The problem is, Google has the world over a barrel at this point.
What are we going to do?
Stop Googling stuff?
Nothing.
It's Tuesday, April 3rd.
This is the Glenn Beck program.
It's not going to happen.
Did you say that they could detect your weight?
Shut up.
You are fat.
That's not a good.
That's not something I want
my Alexa yelling at me as I walk by.
Did you see the article in the New York Times about this, by the way?
I want to hear your opinion on this because
some of this is nuts.
This is stuff that they've actually filed for because everyone has these scare, like, these weird visions of what might happen with this technology, right?
You don't, who knows what it's going to be.
These are things that they've actually already filed for.
Each company has, and this is talking about Google and Amazon.
Each company has filed patent applications, many of them still under consideration, that
outline an array of possibilities for how devices like these could monitor what users say and do.
Because a lot of people are freaked out that it's recording you all the time.
And they say, no,
no, it's not.
It's not doing that.
You have to say, hey, Alexa, or hey, Google, or whatever it is.
And I'm.
Sorry about that.
Yeah, sorry about everybody in America.
22% of Americans, by the way, now have these devices in their homes already.
So, and this is pretty.
We already gave them our fingerprints.
Remember in the, ah, I remember when I was young and naive, and I said, I'll never give fingerprints.
You don't give fingerprints.
You don't, how
The government wants a collection of all of our fingerprints.
Apple has it now.
Oh, yeah, but that saved you a good half second.
I know.
And now we gave it away.
We're giving all of our information away.
We're giving all of the private conversations we have with our spouses and with our families.
We're just giving it away.
And by the way, I have the iPhone X.
I can't believe the ancient times that used to be putting my fingerprint on this thing.
Now it's just my face, and it saves me, you know, know, a good
quarter of a second.
Do you like it?
I love it.
Yes.
I cannot believe I can do it.
Whatever you're about to tell me, I will tell you how it's going to be packaged and how it's going to be used and how you're going to say, I can't live without it.
This is why I bring it to you.
Yes.
Here we go.
Amazon, in one set of patent applications, has a quote, voice sniffer algorithm.
It could be used on an array of devices like tablets, e-book readers, and it would analyze audio audio in real time when he hears words like love, bought, or dislike.
Absolutely.
A diagram included with the application illustrates how a phone call between two friends could result in one receiving an offer for the San Diego Zoo and the other seeing an ad for a wine of the month membership.
So let me tell you, let me show you this.
And
this is why
I've got to write this book because it's been in my mind for a long time and I can explain it and it will all make sense to you when you see it in its totality.
It sounds crazy, but it won't be crazy in 10 years.
Imagine you're having a conversation and you're just talking to a friend.
They're over at your house and you're talking about dream vacations.
Oh, I would love, love to go to Hawaii.
Wouldn't that be great?
Yeah, yeah.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
You're talking about all of this and you say in there, but I can't afford it.
I can't do this.
I can't do that.
Blah, blah, blah.
Google's listened to all of this.
It's heard.
It separates you from your friend.
Now,
tomorrow morning, when you get up, Google says to you,
it's not going to throw an ad your way.
It's going to say, hey, Stu.
I heard you were talking to Glenn last night and you said you'd love to go to Hawaii, but you couldn't afford it.
I've been working tonight and I found some really great prices.
You can use Airbnb, which you and Lisa would really like.
There'd be room for the kids.
And if you take this flight, you can actually save a ton of money.
I've already checked your banking account and I know what bills you have, but I can find a way to spread this payment out for you so it really doesn't cost you anything.
You want to go?
That's what's coming.
Like it's a good, it's actually someone with knowledge of your finances,
knowledge of your preferences that is going to be convincing in an argument about it.
Correct.
Okay, so,
so, so, let me, let me go a step further.
There is a hotel.
Um, it is the best hotel.
It's voted one of the best hotels in the world.
It is always one or two in the Western Hemisphere, and it's the peninsula of Beverly Hills.
I've stayed at the peninsula of Beverly Hills, and it's worth every single penny that you pay for this experience if you are going if you are going
you know for you want to do anniversary or something and you want to go to a great hotel
there's no hotel I've ever stayed like this
what they do is they have a meeting and this is all documented it's in it's in magazines that you should read I mean it's incredible what they do
they have a meeting in the morning and they have it at like four or or five o'clock in the morning and the general manager comes in and says, okay, here's who's coming in and here's who's leaving today.
And they have photos of all of your kids.
They have photos of you.
They have photos of your family.
They have photos of your friends.
They have complete records of everything that you ordered and did.
And if you've stayed there before
and you've stayed there more than once, they'll see if there was any pattern.
For instance, I would go and I would have a bowl of strawberries before I would go to bed.
And I stayed there, this is years ago, I stayed there a couple of times and I ordered a bowl of strawberries before I went to bed as a dessert.
Well, I left, I had meetings, I came back, and lo and behold, without me ordering, there was a bowl of strawberries there.
And I'm like, oh my gosh.
They remembered when I went there one time with my family.
They opened the door of the cab, and my son was the first to get out.
And my son, he he'd been there once once one night like two years before they opened up the door and the doorman the guy who's just opening up the cab he looked at rafe and said master rafe welcome back i was like holy
cow and they do this they have to know because people come and they come with their mistresses And so in part of that meeting is, okay, he was here last week, but he was here with his mistress.
This year, or this week, he's back, but he's with his wife.
So the last time you saw him was four months ago.
Holy crap.
I mean, it's insane, but this is what they do, you know, without electronics.
This is what you pay lots of money for if you're wealthy.
People stay there because it's total service that you don't have to think.
Google and Amazon are going to be able to do that for you for free in your own life.
It will notice the patterns and it will just make those things happen for you.
Now, how is that bad?
People are going to like it.
They are going to love it
to not care about the privacy stuff.
Everything, you know, we forget that we look and say, oh my gosh, you know, a big flat screen TV.
Well, when the first flat screen TV came out, it was $10,000.
Now you can get them for $300.
The same thing is happening with service.
Services is what really sets the wealthy apart.
You don't have a secretary.
Well, you do now with Google Home.
You don't have somebody that has, you know, that is, that is a Alice from, you know, the Brady bunch that is ordering all the groceries and doing all the shopping and everything.
Yes, you do.
It's Alexa.
Yes, you do.
So all of these things that were only had by the rich,
they're now going down to everyone's level.
If you can afford a Google home, you now will be able to live the life of a very wealthy person.
It's not that yet, obviously.
No, but it will be soon.
It's moving fast.
So it's good.
You're going to want those things.
All right, go ahead.
Okay, so Google also submitted a patent application.
And they own Nest as well.
So they have lots of different ways to look at you.
One application details how audio monitoring could help detect that a child is engaging in mischief by at first using speech patterns to identify a child's presence.
Then it could try to sense movement while listening for whispers or silence, and even a program a smart speaker to provide a verbal warning to your child.
This is, again, this is what they're looking at.
A separate application regarding.
Stop.
You're going to want that.
How many parents?
Every parent says, every parent says, hang on.
I haven't heard the children in a while.
There's always trouble.
It's It's too quiet.
Right?
So you have Google doing that for you and then saying, hey, kids, stop whispering.
I can hear you.
That is now.
And what parent, we have all relinquished our
parental responsibility to the school, to the television, to society.
What's better than this?
This is something that's going to regulate our children and discipline our children and make sure so I can go do the things that I want to do.
And also it's going to, I mean, there's a larger conversation to have here about what it's training your children to be, to accept.
Really?
Right.
Like, where, are they going to care about government monitoring when they grow up?
No.
After that life?
No.
Are they going to, are they going to be shaped into
saying things, for instance, if Google decides that something is politically incorrect?
But you don't in a household believe that that's politically incorrect.
Is Google going to shape your children and say, by the way, kids, most people, I know your family doesn't, but most people believe,
do they believe Google, the all-knowing, the all-seeing, or do they believe mom and dad?
It talks about how they can detect your mood in your home with these patents eventually.
The same application outlines how a device could, quote, quote, recognize a t-shirt on the floor of a user's closet, end quote, bearing Will Smith's face, and combine that with browser history that shows searches for Will Smith to provide a movie recommendation that displays, you seem to like Will Smith.
His new movie is playing at a theater near you.
They're going to look in my closet.
You don't want to look in my closet.
You don't want to look in my closet.
That's not a good place to look.
People's, you don't want eyes in there.
You don't want eyes in there.
Poor Amazon will kill itself.
You already have eyes in your closet.
You already have eyes in your house.
You already have eyes.
I want to gouge my own eyes out when I walk in my closet.
I do too.
I do too.
But those eyes, if you take your phone and you haven't covered your
microphone, you haven't covered your camera on your phone, and you charge it next to your bed,
there are eyes already in your bedroom.
And everything that you do and say while that phone is sitting next to your bed
is recorded.
It has the ability to be heard, has the ability to be seen.
You have the ability to to be the next star in the next famous
knitting film or whatever it is you might be doing in your bedroom.
It's not knitting.
Last part here, they did deny this, of course, Amazon and Google.
They didn't deny that these are their real applications and these are the exact same things that they came up with to do with this technology.
But they did say they filed a number of forward-looking patent applications that explore the full possibilities of new technology.
And Google wants you to know that all of their products are designed with user privacy in mind.
Ah, so that makes me feel completely sure.
Yes, they're going to be looking at the t-shirts on the floor of your closet and combining it with your search history.
God knows where that ends up.
But it's with user privacy in mind.
So don't worry.
By the way, did anybody notice that
the Pentagon has decided to keep all of the Pentagon files
in the new Amazon secure cloud.
Oh,
so the government
is merging a little bit with Amazon and Google.
That's fantastic.
Let me take a minute here to tell you about our sponsor, Filter Buy.
I love this company.
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So he decided to quit his big Wall Street job and bought the business because he didn't want to lose the jobs and he didn't want to lose the history that his grandfather had done.
So he took this business and he saw, okay, so it's outdated now, but if I change it, what can we make?
What could we do?
What could we do here in America and do better than anybody else?
That's why he came up with Filter Buy.
They now employ over 100 people.
All of their air filters
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600 sizes available, including custom options.
You're going to find the right filter for your home or for your business.
You got to change it.
Do business with people who do do business right.
Do business with somebody who cares about the jobs in America and they care about making a better product here in America and getting it to you.
They want to service you.
Go to filterbuy.com.
That's filterbuy.com.
Glenn Back Mercury.
Glenn Back.
I glossed over this one, but but a separate application regarding personalizing content for people while respecting their privacy noted that voices could be used to determine a speaker's mood using the quote volume of the user's voice, detected breathing rate, crying, and so forth.
Also, medical condition based on detected coughing, sneezing, and
so forth.
What the heck are they doing with that?
Okay, so I think there's a couple of things here: the good spin on it.
If somebody is going to be in a domestic dispute, Google will be able to sense it, they'll be able to hear it, and they'll be able to dispatch police.
Okay?
Sure.
So that's good.
Now,
something else.
Why do you have to worry about doctors when it comes to gun control?
Because you'll be able to sense that there's somebody in the household who is depressed.
They'll be able to sense it right away.
So dispatch police.
Make sure there are no arms in in that house.
Oh, my God.
I mean.
You'll be able to save lives, Stu.
You'll be able to save lives.
It's just going to make people not speak, right?
Like, if you know these things are going on, you're not going to express depression or express
worry.
You're just going to...
Like if you're in public, for example,
sometimes if your kids are being bad, people will
get get over here
and then like muffle their voice and not yell at them.
Where at home, they're probably going, get over here right now, right?
Like they're going to change their behavior even in their own homes.
Changing your behavior.
Gee, that sounds like a free state I want to live in.
Glenn back.
Mercury.
This is the Glenbeck program.
I love the tweets that we're getting.
On.
It's not hard.
It's super not hard to, you know,
to protect yourself from Google and Facebook and Amazon.
Oh, is it?
Really?
Yeah, this one came in.
Here's an idea for protecting your privacy.
Don't buy the damn smart speaker.
Exclamation point.
Exclamation point.
Exclamation point.
Get the phone case that shields your phone's RF signals.
It's not that hard, guys.
By the way, I just point out that it was said on Twitter.
Yeah.
So it's possible you have to
print your digital footprint is recorded now on Twitter.
And if you've ever Googled anything, they have millions of pages about you.
Yeah, and I think the point here is not, you know, I mean, I understand that's a good, it's a good point, right?
Like you could obviously protect yourself from the Amazon or Google speaker by not buying it.
But the issue is, even if you do those things and you take all those steps, you're
just playing at the fringes there.
It's like people who talk about global warming.
They're like, oh, well, what I do is I compost.
And
what I try to do is I bicycle once a week to the gym to make sure that I save my you're doing nothing for the environment.
You're doing nothing.
What you're doing is making yourself feel better.
And you're at the very fringes of your environmental impact, you can say to your friends that you've done something.
Well, you can also say to yourself, some people do, I mean, my daughter composts.
And
she, you know, she said, I know this isn't going to make a big difference, but it makes a big difference to me.
I know that's my part.
That's a totally different
thing.
Totally fine.
But the point is that
it's the same thing with technology.
Yeah, you cannot have a device in your home.
Well, there's hundreds of others.
You You know, yes, you cannot.
Your smart TV.
It is watching and recording everything that you watch, and it is sending all of that data out.
If you have a smart TV that also can,
you can also Skype,
it has a lens.
So it's...
It's looking at you and whatever you're doing in the living room.
It can be commandeered.
It can be taken.
It could be listening to you.
I'm not saying that every smart TV is doing this and every smart phone is doing this.
You just have the,
it's there.
It's already there.
And you don't even think about it.
You are completely comfortable.
How many conversations have you had that were sensitive between you and your wife or, you know, you and your lover or whatever it is?
Sensitive.
And you had it with your phone in your hand.
Or your pocket.
Your pocket.
Over and over and over again.
You know, you think about really to get off of this now, and this is why this is a battle that's, I don't know that it's winnable at all.
A, this improves your life quite a bit in every normal circumstance.
It's not winnable.
And B, to get off of it at this point, your Unabomber Shack style life is what you're looking at.
I will tell you this, and Stu is
right.
Is that the word you're looking for?
Because usually that's the word that follows those two other words.
No.
I have to get a little further away from something that is currently ongoing in my life, in my household.
But I will tell you this, and when I talk to you about it, you will understand.
Do not,
do not
think that the PlayStation or Xbox is safe at all.
Do not give your child a phone.
Do not
do it.
It is
more dangerous than you can possibly imagine.
And I speak from experience.
I have firewalls.
I have security.
I have everything that the average person does not have.
Do not
bring those into your world.
Don't do it.
And when I give you the full story, you will understand.
Don't do it.
Please.
You're saying for your kids or you're saying it all in your home?
I'm saying definitely for your kids, but
in your home as well.
I mean,
don't do it.
Don't do it.
Definitely for your kids.
Do not do it.
If you have one, trust me now, get rid of it.
Get it out of your home.
Get it away from your children.
You know, but we know.
Get it out of your house.
I can't tell you anything right now.
Get it out of your house.
Get it out of your house.
Strongest terms.
Get it out of your house.
You have no idea
until it's too late or almost too late.
We'll be talking about this more tonight on the Blaze TV.
You can stream it from your smartphone.
Any mobile device.
Make sure you tune in tonight.
But it's a tough.
Even you, as someone who is legitimately has a real situation and something you've been hinting at for a while.
Is it your worst nightmare still?
Oh, sure.
Yeah, sure.
Absolutely.
So do you know anybody who is more secure than me?
No, and that's what's scary.
This goes back to what we're talking about.
You can't do it.
You can't live a normal human American life
and defeat these things right now.
And I don't think it's ever going to, we're never going back to that place.
You want to go to, you know, Comoros off the coast of Madagascar?
Maybe you can do it.
But I mean, I don't know.
I don't know what else.
I don't know where you go.
certainly not here you're not living in a
because i mean look back at unibomber could you do the unibomber thing now i don't mean the package bombing i mean living in the woods i'm sure there's people who are attempting it but every time you need to go get food every time you need to go get basic supplies unless you're whittling your toilet paper from the bark around you
what you're going to be on camera somewhere you're going to be purchasing something you're going to have you're going to be monitored in several different locations if you ever go near civilization and yes there are ways.
I guess
you're going to the leaves for toilet paper, though, to do it.
And most, I'm going to go with it.
Most Americans are not willing to go to that, pay that price.
Look at Eric Rudolph.
Remember him, the terrorist guy who was
trying to run away from
police officers and stuff?
Because what did he blow up an abortion clinic or something?
This is in the 90s.
And he was trying to do the mountain man thing to get away.
And
he did it for a few months and then was eventually caught trying to come down, I think, get food out of a dumpster, if I remember the story correctly.
How long would he last today trying to do that?
Oh, I don't.
I don't think there's any.
I mean, there's cameras in the parks, right?
Like, it's not just,
where do you even go?
I mean, if you are an expert
survivalist, maybe if you're Marcus Luttrell and you've been trained by, you know, Navy SEALs and you can go through these periods, you know, in the woods for a long time, but there's no off-the-grid anymore.
But there's not even, you know, when I talked to Ray Kurzweil and
he said, you know, you'll be able to do anything and think anything and yada, yada, yada.
And I said, no, no, no, no, Ray.
If you have Google and Amazon and they are the source,
why would they ever let someone develop something that could hurt them and their business?
Why?
It absolutely stifles entrepreneurs because before you even have expressed the idea yourself,
you have done Google search, you have done research, it's monitoring your pattern and AI or AGI is going to be able to figure out what you're doing.
And it's going to be monitoring you and thinking along the line because it's going to help you, but it's going to be thinking along the lines the same way.
Boop.
Oh my gosh, he's coming up with a better Google.
Shut you down.
Oh my gosh, he's going to, you know what?
He's on the revolutionary path.
Well, it's funny.
You're gone.
Yeah.
This actually has happened already with, I think it was Facebook, who bought an app that
monitored app usage.
So they purchased this company, and they had all this public data that showed how you use these apps.
And instead of, they stopped, if you think of it, their product was, hey, look at, look at, here's the public data about how people use apps.
And then what they said is, it's no longer public data.
It's now our data.
And as soon as they saw flare-ups with certain apps, hey, this one's increased by 1,000% in the last two weeks, they would go and try to purchase it, realizing it was an up-and-coming thing.
So they'd get it before it really hit.
And they were able to go in and purchase it.
At least this was their plan.
And I think they did actually execute it a couple of times.
And they still own the company.
And that's essentially what you're talking about, except
a very basic version.
Let me go here.
Did you see the news that came out that scientists now have come up with a device?
And it's great for people who can't talk.
So, in other words, let's go back in time and then let's go forward in time.
Let's go back and grab Terry Shivo
and let's take her five years in the future, five years in the future, and put this new device that they have just developed onto Terry Shivo's head.
Everybody says she was in there.
She was in there.
Everybody was supporting her, she's in there.
She knows she just can't communicate.
Okay?
Well, this device reads your mind and then turns it into text
in real time.
So if you're thinking, it is writing down what you're thinking.
thinking.
That's fantastic, right?
People like
Stephen Hawking, he doesn't have to use his eye to type.
He just thinks.
It's like dictating.
It's fantastic for people who cannot speak for some reason or another.
Fantastic.
But wait,
it can read your mind?
How much do you think of that you don't want other people knowing?
You don't want anyone knowing when you're negotiating, when you're bluffing, when you're saying, boy, that dress does make you look fat.
How many things do you think that you do not want to speak out loud?
How many things have you thought of?
Like, it would be easy to grab this.
Man, I could grab this.
And you don't do it, but that is in your head all of a sudden.
Yeah.
You know, Jesus said, if you're looking at somebody and you're committing adultery, you're committing adultery by looking at her and thinking that, okay?
So control your thoughts because your thoughts, you commit to them.
It is the sin to even think, well, that's what this is.
Wait a minute.
Isn't that almost minority report?
Yeah, it's thought crime.
I mean, the Peter Thiel book that came out, we did an interview with the author a couple of weeks ago.
And
in there, when he's talking about how he's going to go after Gawker,
They said has a throwaway line that basically says, oh, you know, we thought of it, I guess a lot of the stuff we came up with was illegal, so we decided not to do it.
And that was a big press story for a few days because he considered, now he didn't really consider it.
Somebody said to him, Look, we could do this.
And now that's illegal.
We can't do it.
Like, that's the throwaway, right?
And he admitted it.
Imagine if they caught that in your subconscious,
you would be immediately prosecuted for it.
I mean, it's, it's, it's, it's a, it's.
But think of how many people it will save.
This is where we're headed, and this is why I've been saying for the last few years: we have to have these moral conversations.
We have to have ethical conversations that are so much bigger than stormy freaking Daniels.
And we better know what's right, what's wrong, what we believe is an intrusion, because all of this stuff is coming, and it's coming wrapped up in pretty bows, and everybody's going to want it.
And when everybody has it, it's then too late if it is misused.
We need to set standards, ethical standards and boundaries now.
Really starts with having a conversation that
I'm not hearing anywhere.
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Glenn back
Mercury.
Glenn back.
So here's the latest on Laura Ingram.
She's not only an abuser, but now she is also a victim.
Villain and victim here in Glenn.
Laura Ingram.
Yes,
what she did to David Hogg was despicable in every way.
The use of the word wine
is the most
reprehensible thing that has ever been done in media.
It's almost like she was making Zyklon B.
Well, not in the basement.
Well, no, that was bear.
That was bear.
Bold the spots.
That's right.
Okay, go ahead.
That's right.
This now,
this is really confusing the left because they want to say she's the worst person on earth because she's a Trump supporter and she's right-wing and she does these things.
And she attacked David Hogg.
So they've got her on the ropes.
However, they also notice that she's a victim of sexism.
Why?
Well, as the Huffington Post lays out in incredible detail,
Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson can say things like that and not get in trouble.
And Laura Ingram is.
So she's not only a vicious attacker of this poor student, but also
a wilting flower of sexism.
Wait, wait, wait.
No, that means that David Hogg
is also a poor child and a vicious
attacker of
women.
Oh my gosh.
This is getting too much.
He's a sexist and
a helpless child, but he's also a vicious sexist at the same time.
The left confuses me.
I don't know.
I don't know how to.
You can't keep up.
Glenn, back.
Mercury.
Truth.
Glenn Beck.
I want to play an amazing piece of audio for you.
It's from Virgie Rollins.
She is the Democratic National Committee's Black Caucus Chairwoman.
She had an announcement to make.
I'm a former Black Panther.
All right.
And when we talk about the movement as a former Black Panther with Angela Davis and Kathleen Cleaver, it was important for us to make people understand
that it was about the movement for us educating us.
Now, here's, it's really amazing, especially if you watch this clip because the camera can't focus on her.
It can't see her.
So it's focused instead on Keith Ellison, a former member of the Nation of of Islam.
But here's what I want to say to you.
Remember the days when hardcore radicals actually tried to hide their extremist past?
When I started outing out President Obama's ties to radicals, his PR team went out in super all-out denial and protect mode?
Do you remember that?
Do you remember me saying to you, one of these days, They're not going to care anymore and the mask is going to come off and they're just going to tell you, yep, I was a communist.
Yep, I was a member of SDS.
Yep, I was a Black Panther.
And you know what?
It's better than what we're doing now.
Here we are, gang.
Imagine how much worse this is going to get.
They're not trying to hide it anymore.
To the contrary, they're now bragging about it in a public forum.
Rollins goes on to talk about, quote, the movement and the, quote, revolution, end quote, as inspired acts that brought forth equality to feed the masses at one point she yelled quote we've got to turn back to the revolution end quote
now it's not surprising that she can say this now in an era where the black panthers have been whitewashed and and completely scrubbed clean to the point to where their radical extremist past is actually looked up to
martin luther king was not involved with the black panthers they were against each other.
Well, I mean, even though they were fighting for equality, right?
They just wanted to feed people, right?
No.
Rollins' declaration of bringing back the revolution sounds eerily similar to what her Black Panther Party was saying back in the 60s when they chanted, quote, the revolution has come.
It's time to pick up the gun.
off the pigs, end quote.
Now, if they were talking about actual pigs and they were thinking about taking those pigs and then slicing them up into nice little pieces of ham to feed all the children, that would be one thing.
But those pigs were police officers.
The Black Panthers weren't benevolent?
No.
It's amazing to me how history is so easily forgotten and discarded, but it is another thing to do what is happening now, making terrorists look like they were the great guardians of the people.
This popular black
panther chant is nothing compared to their actual actions.
They were involved in multiple shootouts, shot several police officers, employed ambush tactics and tried to kill police, and armed militants that actually stormed a courthouse and killed a United States judge.
They armed those militants.
They They were even caught torturing and executing one of their own members for suspecting him of being an FBI informant.
Oh yeah, all the while they're making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches for the kids, just like your mother used to.
But it wasn't all about race.
In fact, race, as always, has very little to do with it.
It is just the calling card.
These people were militant Marxists.
Rawlings mentions two people in the same speech, Angela Davis and Kathleen Kathleen Cleaver.
Oh
You mean the two that were both radical Marxists?
Cleaver is now a law professor.
Of course she is.
The way to clean people's image up is to process process them through the radical university system.
She was so radical that she allied with North Korea while she was with the Panthers.
In fact, her daughter was even born there.
If that happened, I'm pretty sure that good old Angela was
there at the time.
Angela Davis was the one that gave guns to a teenager who then went in and shot a federal judge.
Gave guns to teenagers?
My gosh, I thought we were trying to take the guns away from teenagers.
Class warfare, race warfare.
The Black Panthers wanted it all.
The media may have forgotten, forgotten, but we haven't.
I'm going to be doing a block on this on television.
10 minutes on who these people really were,
because we need to remember, because they just dropped the radical means for the radical ends.
But you can guarantee that people like Virgie Rowlands, she hasn't forgotten.
She's now part of the Democratic establishment and leadership.
Democrats.
People who are like my grandfather and many of my relatives who vote Democrat, vote Democratic every single time, just like all of my other relatives that vote Republican every single time.
Democrats, this is not who you are.
You are not radical leftists.
You are not race-baiters.
You are not Keith Ellison that was a member of the Nation of Islam,
who still gets kudos from Louis Farrakhan.
You are not the people who are leading the women's march.
But if you don't stand up now and reject this, if you don't stand up now and say,
I want nothing to do with the Black Panthers.
I want nothing to do with the Nation of Islam.
And I want nothing to do with those people who try to spin
into great healers.
If you don't do it,
you are done for all time.
You cannot rewrite history and re-emerge, not as outsiders, but within mainstream politics, and hope to have any kind of bright future for tomorrow.
Will anyone in the Democratic Party actually
call this out?
It's Tuesday, April 3rd.
This is the Glenn Beck program.
You know, I'm convinced that,
you know, the, you remember the books, Stu,
what was it?
The fourth turning.
And remember, we went through that, and it was my generation that was supposed to tell the old farts, the hippie generation, shut up and sit down.
Your time has passed.
I'm the part of the forgotten generation.
I was the latchkey generation.
And we just kind of had to shoulder everything between our crazy, out-of-control brothers and sisters that were older, or moms and dads, and now
the younger generation.
We don't get, my generation doesn't get its day in the sunlight.
We're the transition.
We're the ones that have to stand here and look at the mess that the last generation just left us.
And we have to stand here and shoulder that and hold that until the next generation gets on their feet enough to be able to say, we've got it and we've got a better plan.
Here we go.
And this is, again, not your theory.
No.
This is a theory from a book.
Yes, the theory from the fourth turning.
And it's a great book, and I believe it to be right.
Oh, so it is your theory.
Well,
if it's
one I embrace.
It's one you embrace.
So you think that, because I mean, you think the
people older than you are, you know, I mean, that's going to be.
The hippies.
The radicals, the hippies, the Nancy Pelosis, the Hillary Clintons.
Right.
Of course, that's only a part, a slice of that generation.
Yeah, I mean, that's not everybody.
And it's not everybody in my generation who feels the way I do.
So it's just that as a group, as a group, they went off the deep end.
There's a reason why the stock market, there's a reason why in 2008 the housing market and the stock market collapsed.
And that is because in the 1990s, the last of the World War II generation, the ones that were always afraid of, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, don't do that.
You don't understand what a real collapse is like.
The ones who lived through it and were scarred by it for life, they were very, very balanced.
And they were like, look, let's not go crazy here.
Those people died, generally speaking, and they were nowhere in Wall Street by the end of the 90s.
And that's when all of this crazy, all this crazy spending, all the crazy derivatives, everything else happened.
Okay.
And that generation was the hippie generation that was doing it's like a free love and we can have everything.
And all right,
that generation has spent us into oblivion and they're taking us off the rails because, quite honestly, when they were in college, they didn't believe in the Constitution in the first place.
Even though the Beatles said, You want to change the Constitution, you might as well change your head.
But don't worry about that.
So, they were caught up in this radical Marxist stuff, and they're still going there.
So this generation, my generation, is the one that has to hold up the younger generation.
It's the one that has to expose the younger generation to the truth and expose them, the younger generation, to the people in my generation and say, look, they're not bad.
They're good.
We need to support them.
We need to teach them.
We need to encourage them.
They're the ones that are going to take us to the right place and develop new ways and new ideas.
That's our job.
That's our job.
And how many of us are doing it?
I'm convinced more and more
that it's not our job to save the nation.
It is our job to teach and raise the next generation because they will do it.
They will save it.
Because we're entering a world where we're not even going to understand it.
I have already become my father and my grandfather that can't figure out the damn remote.
I don't know how to use the remote.
That's because we start to get old.
And as we start to get old, unless you surround yourself with young people and new ideas all the time, you start to go static
because you're just used to it being a certain way.
Well, with everything changing, we're going to get old really fast if we don't stay plugged in.
We're not going to be able to use the tools that are on the horizon.
You know, how many of us at my age still say, can I get a pencil and paper, please?
No.
Nobody, nobody in their 30s.
says that unless you're an artist.
I got to make some notes.
Does anybody have a pencil and paper?
Who says that?
Right.
I mean, the journaling thing has become a trend lately because of that.
It's now like how vinyl became cool for a while, and I guess kind of still is, where, you know, instead of digital music, like it's the same thing.
Like that's now becoming like this little niche industry of journaling.
And everything is, look, that's why composting is coming back.
Composting isn't new.
My mother used to do it.
My grandmother used to do it.
We composted everything.
Okay.
And it wasn't about the environment.
It was just the right thing to do.
And so we just did it.
Then we, then, you know, the generation that is above mine and my generation, we were like, we don't have to do that.
We can do
life is much easier than that.
Better living through pharmaceuticals.
We bought into all of the, you know, 1970 films.
Here's America in the 1990s.
And we were like, whoa, we can't even make the projector work, but it's going to be great.
I'm at the point now when I do have to write something.
If it's like a full size, like of one piece of paper, like my hand hurts because I haven't done it.
When's the last time I freaking wrote with my hands?
You don't do that anymore.
You type.
That's what you do.
And now, now my thumb starts to hurt because maybe I just hurt.
Maybe I'm just in pain.
Maybe that's just the problem.
Maybe you're just getting old.
Yeah, maybe I'm just an old person.
So here's the thing:
Do yourself and do the country a favor.
Encourage the millennials.
Seek out the millennials that are trying to do something.
Seek out the young minds of our country and hold them up.
Do everything you can to hold them up
because
they're the ones that are going to to make this transition.
They're the ones.
And they are.
I had 15 relatives in my house over the weekend.
15.
It was marvelous.
Was it a mistake?
No, it was.
I really actually enjoy because I like my family.
I know it's weird, but I like my family.
But
we were having a great conversation.
And
these are all my nephews.
Okay.
So my nieces and nephews.
So it was all a younger generation.
And
so I spent the holiday weekend with that generation, and they're just starting to have kids and everything else.
And they're all sounding like my grandmother.
All of them are sounding like my grandmother.
They're all saying things like,
you know, we just, we use too much and we have too much stuff.
And they're not talking about society.
They're talking about them.
They're like, I think we can spend our time instead of having a big house that I'm cleaning all of this stuff that means nothing.
It's sitting on a shelf and I never use it.
Why would I collect that?
Why would I need a big house that I'm trying to clean and keep up with everybody?
I'd rather spend that money going and doing something.
I'd rather go spend my money, you know, why do I have so many clothes?
I go through my closet and I've got so much stuff and I don't wear it.
What am I doing?
Well, that sounded like my grandparents.
That's a good thing.
That's returning back to original principles.
And personally, I think that's a really, really good sign.
Let's embrace this generation and help them.
You know, I didn't plan on sharing this, but I found something earlier today that I want to play for you that I think you will.
it kind of goes into this, and I think you'll like it, especially if
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Glenn Beck Mercury.
Glenn Beck.
I found this old audio today from David Bowie, and I wanted to share it with you.
If you're an entrepreneur or a self-made person, I think you'll find it inspiring as well.
Listen.
Never play to the gallery,
I think.
But you never learn that until much later on, I think.
But never work for other people in what you do.
Always...
Always remember that the reason that you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you
felt that if you could manifest it in some way, you would understand more about yourself and how you coexist with the rest of society.
And I...
I think it's terribly dangerous for an artist to fulfill other people's expectations.
I think
they generally produce their worst work when they do that.
And if the other thing I would say is that if you feel safe in the area that you're working in, you're not working in the right area.
Always go a little further into the water than you feel you're capable of being in.
Go a little bit out of your depth, and when you don't feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you're just about in the right place to do something exciting.
This is the Glenn Beck program.
Welcome to the program.
I'm glad you're here.
I want to play this from David Bowie again and then talk a little bit about it.
I found it this morning.
A friend of mine sent it to me,
and it was about never playing to the gallery.
Don't ever, ever play to the gallery.
Don't play to the crowd.
Listen to what he said.
Never play to the gallery.
I think.
But you never learn that until much later on, I think.
But never work for other people in what you do.
Always.
Always remember that the reason that you initially started working was that there was something inside yourself that you
felt that if you could manifest it in some way you would understand more about yourself and how you coexist with the rest of society.
And
I think it's terribly dangerous for an artist to fulfill other people's expectations.
I think they generally produce their worst work when they do that.
And if the other thing I would say is that if you feel safe in the area that you're working in, you're not working in the right area.
Always go a little further into the water than you feel you're capable of being in.
Go a little bit out of your depth.
And when you don't feel that your feet are quite touching the bottom, you're just about in the right place to do something exciting.
And that's the story of the dancing in the dark video.
A tragic chapter in global history.
He did.
He talked about that.
I watched a couple of videos from him today.
He talked about that.
I thought, you know, he said, you know, I thought, hey, this is commercial.
This is where it's at.
He said, boy, was that wrong.
Well, in a way, really, it's an example of what you don't do.
He's describing, don't do the dancing in the dark video.
He is.
And he said, and he said, you don't learn that until too late.
Yeah.
And it's true.
You have to go through that, I think, to actually figure it out.
Yeah, you do.
You do.
You know, I find interesting is,
you know, what was the 1960s?
What was that all about?
That was about the greatest generation
coming home after complete decimation.
I mean, just
I don't think we can really even begin to understand
what the rest of the Western world was like after World War II.
You know, we came back and we started making big, huge cars with tail fins and everything else because we had the factories, we had the resources, we had the money, we had the gold, we had everything.
Europe didn't.
You remember, you know, those three-wheeled little cars that, you know, England made?
Okay, they made those three little cars, the three-wheeled cars for two reasons.
One, the government was out of control.
But two,
they couldn't afford big cars.
They couldn't afford anything of any size
because they were broke.
They were destitute after the war.
And so they didn't really start digging themselves out of that until 60s, 70s, and 80s.
They didn't have the good times that we had in the 50s and the 60s and
up until the 70s.
They didn't have those.
And so
what was the 1960s?
What was that about?
That was about the rejection of what they saw their parents build.
And their parents just wanted to come home and build this idyllic little space that didn't have any horrors in it.
It didn't have what the Soviet Union had.
It didn't have what Europe had just gone through, what Germany had gone through, what Spain was going through.
It was perfect.
It was good.
It was wholesome.
And so the kids knew, well, wait a minute, hang on.
My mom is not like that.
There were problems in my house, but everybody's pretending because they're trying to create this image, and that's not what it is.
And so the kids rejected it,
and that gave us the hippie generation.
And that's what we've been doing.
The hippie generation begat the excess.
So
we have this crunch of the hippies
and the people like Donald Trump.
You know, that's the same generation.
One generation went, no, man, smoked hope, free love, and rock on Marx.
The other went, you are an idiot, and went in to amass wealth and build something.
Okay.
But unlike
the previous generation, when they built something, they wanted to build something that lasts.
They just wanted to build wealth.
So you had wealth is evil and greed is good.
That's the 60s generation.
So now the generation that I'm in
just watched them.
And we were kind of the forgotten generation.
And we just kind of watched them and did our own thing.
But we were always just a little bit behind.
So we begat children who saw that access
and that Marxism.
And some of them are gravitating towards that.
And the Marxism is once again kind of cool because everybody who's living in these homes know there's no meaning here.
It's why people who are younger are starting to feel like, I want to get rid of everything.
I don't want to have all of that stuff.
I don't want to have the life of my parents.
Just like the kids of the 60s did, they didn't want the life of their parents because they knew that was meaningless.
They knew that
it was being hidden by cocktails and Xanax.
And now what's being hidden is being hidden by the drug of Facebook.
It's not perfect.
It's not what it is.
And so people are once again hungry for something real.
You have no desire, because I have, Tanya Tanya and I have talked about this for
probably a year.
Just sell everything.
I got there in the 90s where I was kind of going through a period where I was like, I want to sell absolutely everything
and just
start all over again.
And I feel the same way.
Start all over again, sell it all.
My kids are the ones who are like, yes, dad, do it.
Because we have a garage full of boxes that we haven't opened for like four moves ago.
Get rid of it all.
You have no desire to do that?
No, I do not.
No.
I'm trying to think of, I'm trying to find a desire to do it.
And no, I don't.
I mean, I think there's certainly the decluttering of our lives is something that I think is, generally speaking,
can be a positive at times.
Yeah.
So I don't, I think there's an element of it I kind of agree with, but I mean, I don't, I don't find
material things complicating.
I think sometimes they're enjoyable.
That's not how I base my life on it.
Okay, so I'm not saying material things are bad by any stretch.
You know, that's up to you to decide.
But you don't have a lot of stuff.
Like, we have a lot of stuff that we're like, yeah, and that was given to us by so-and-so.
And
yeah, we never use it.
And it's in a, you know, it's in a closet or it's there, but, but we don't, we don't, you know, we don't, we can't really get rid of it because why?
Because of why.
Well, we never use it.
One thing I should point out is I do live with the Joseph Stalin of decluttering.
So
there's four things in my home right now.
Four.
There's one in one room.
I think there's two in another room.
And then there's one other room.
I think there's one more thing.
But she's selling it.
My wife is very much like, just get rid of it.
You know, she, she, just because she doesn't like clutter, she hates clutter.
I hear the word clutter more than any other word in my home.
Now, I'm much more of the person.
Like, I can't.
You sure she's not calling you a mother?
No, she just says mother clutter, right?
That's what it means, right?
Right.
Um, she, uh, she, I get attached to things.
Like, you know,
there's certain like toys my kids had as they were growing up.
And I just can't get rid of them, you know, because I can just remember, I can look down and see Zach or Ainsley playing with that toy and i'm like i can i cannot get rid of that toy i get like that i can get attached to things she's just like i don't care burn it you know like she just doesn't care um so our house is uh i wouldn't say uh it's certainly not clear of you know she likes her stuff too so i mean it's not it's not clear of material things by any reason by any means but it is uh it's a it's a pretty simplified place i would say see everything in my house i'm the opposite everything in my house i am i've decided i am a hoarder I'm a hoarder.
I'm just, I'm just
not a poor hoarder.
So
rich hoarders are called collectors.
Yes, eccentric collectors.
I got this old piece of paper from 3,000 years ago.
Wow, that's great.
I don't know.
I mean, I am a hoarder.
I've just, I've discovered that I can call myself eccentric.
I can call myself a collector.
I'm a hoarder.
Yeah.
Because everything in my house, everything has a story absolutely everything it's not like i go out and just buy stuff i go look for things that and they may not even be valuable but they have a story behind it yeah and so everything in my life has a story that's i i believe there's a certain this is it doesn't quite apply to you no offense but there's a certain amount of wealth that you one acquires in which that's what you do with it is you just buy stories You're just, you're purchasing a story to tell.
You're like this way when you had, I knew you when you had like $9.
or actually negative much more than nine dollars
and you were still doing this you're you know i i think wealth just makes you good at the things that you are for example you're now a good hoarder You're really good at it.
You have lots of really fancy things that you hoard.
Congratulations.
But it's not really, it's still
a lot of crap.
I mean, I was, I was hoarding it.
Some people were here last night, and they were here for the Mercury Museum.
And we were looking through a bunch of stuff that what are we going to put out?
And what would be interesting to to them and yada, yada, yada.
And so, you know, we get this
just amazing stuff.
And then, you know, we get down to, well, that's the typewriter that, you know,
actually they used to, you know, type the
peace treaty in the Pacific, you know, for World War II.
What the hell am I doing with a typewriter like that?
Who wants that?
Why do I even have that?
How did I even acquire that?
I don't even know.
How did that that happen?
I remember buying it and I remember thinking, that's great.
What the hell was wrong with me?
I have, you ready for this one?
We have a rat.
We have a stuffed rat.
Okay.
It's the ugliest damn thing you've ever seen.
And in the butt of the stuffed rat is a fuse and it was full of C4.
Now we've removed all the C4.
But it was a rat used by the French resistance.
They would put them in the boiler rooms and they would stuff them full of C4,
put a detonating device up their butt,
and then throw them into the coal things to where when they were shoveling coal, the Nazis were shoveling coal in their big industrial plants, they would just pick up the rat and just shovel it into the, and it would blow up.
And so it would stop all of their industry.
Okay, now the guy who came up with that is the guy who
was who
Q
is based on in James Bond movies.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
He's the guy who came up with the
explosive butt rap, a rat.
Okay.
Did he call it that?
Did he call it something?
I don't know.
He probably called it something different.
Okay.
Okay.
Okay.
What are we going to do with a rat?
What are we going to do with a rat?
And you know what I said?
You know what I said last night?
What did you say?
Do we have anything from Q, too?
Because it would be cool if we had something from, you know, James Bond movies, too, so we could tie the rat along with the whatever.
What the hell is wrong with me?
I mean, that is an amazing story.
You just don't need a rat on your shelf to tell it.
I know, right?
But its story is so much better when you have the rat.
It is, it is
the rat.
So I stand in my living room and I'm like, we should get rid of the rat.
We should get rid of the rat.
That's an easy choice for almost everybody, except for me.
All right.
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Glenn Beck Mercury.
Glenn, back.
So, Stu says to me, before we go off the air, you don't need the rat to tell the story.
We go off the air and he said,
Do you have that rat here?
I got to see the rat.
I got to see the rat.
I got to see it now.
Okay.
Where's the rat?
All right.
So that's,
you are playing.
I'm a hoarder.
Hello, my name is Glenn, and I'm a hoarder.
I got it.
Yeah.
You're not helping me.
Well, I mean, look, I would say a good chunk of the value of you as a human being is having these artifacts around.
Is that what it is?
And telling these important stories.
And you better not get rid of any of it.
Right.
Because if you do get rid of it, you're not.
I'm not getting rid of it.
I will.
My personal value.
Yeah, your value as a human being.
I think.
Without these artifacts, who are you?
You're nothing.
Hold it.
You're a giant zilch.
I'm not a shadow in.
Hold on.
No, I'm not talking about getting rid of the artifacts.
I will not give up the rat.
I will not give up the rat.
No, you shouldn't give up the rat.
That's an amazing piece of history.
Isn't that crazy?
That's amazing.
I can't wait to see it.
You have it here.
Yeah, I have it here.
We're sending somebody to get it, and I'll bring in the rat next hour.
So if you happen to be watching on the Blaze TV, you will see the rat with the fuse in its butt.
It's crazy.
It's crazy.
I can't believe that's it.
Almost got, I can't remember the name of it.
It's like Burt or something.
Almost got one of the dummies that we threw out of the airplane
right before
D-Day.
Because
we wanted them to think we were going elsewhere.
And so we dressed all these dummies up, these parachutists, okay?
And we threw these dummies out of the plane to make it look like we were parachuting where we weren't.
They're really, really rare.
We almost, almost had one.
Again,
what are you going to do with the dummy, Mr.
Beck?
I don't know, but I got to see
you.
I got to get this dummy.
Where's the dummy?
Why don't you have it?
You're a failure.
I got the rat.
Glenn Beck.
Mercury.
Love.
Courage.
Truth.
Glenn Beck.
In the age of reason, Thomas Paine wrote this, quote, it's impossible to calculate the moral mischief, if I may so express it, that mental lying has produced in society.
When a man has so far corrupted and prostituted the chastity of his mind as to subscribe his professional belief to things that he doesn't believe, he has prepared himself for the commission of every other crime.
End quote.
I have no idea what that means.
I just thought I'd read it because it sounds smart.
In completely unrelated news, CNN, like many other news networks, has profited immeasurably from the accusatory news segments about President Trump's supposed infidelities.
Reporters and commentators at CNN have turned into media watchdogs at the slightest hint of lurid behavior by President Trump, whether it's true or not.
By the way, I was just watching CNN just a minute ago, and they had Richard Quest on, who didn't, wasn't he arrested for making it with a prostitute or something?
He had some scandal.
I know.
He said, I know, Stu, you said specifically not to say that.
I'm asking the question.
I can't remember what the scandal was, but it was a bad one.
It was a sex scandal, I think.
It was a sex scandal.
It was a bad one.
And nobody at CNN has a problem that he's back.
Why don't you look it up so you can get that scandal right?
CNN enjoyed the bump in the ratings from a recent interview with Playboy Playmate Karen McDougall, who claims to have had an affair with President Trump.
If you turn CNN right now, odds are you're going to see Stormy Daniels, the porn actress who alleges she has an affair with Donald Trump in 2006.
When a 2005 recording of Trump's locker room talk emerged, CNN, like most media outlets, went in all activist mode.
Yet the network's recent advertisement for their original show, American Dynasties, the Kennedys, is glorifying President John F.
Kennedy.
In fact, glorifying John F.
Kennedy's, quote, rampant womanizing, in their words, his legendary love life.
No,
no, he was having an affair.
His legendary love life
did one of these love affairs was it connected to the mob?
I don't know.
I mean, that's infamous.
That's not legendary.
Ben Shapiro wrote in an article yesterday, was JFK's love life really legendary?
In actuality, JFK was an awful person in the bedroom who certainly would have been labeled a sexual predator in this Me Too
moment.
DePauw University professor Jeffrey McCall penned an op-ed for The Hill about the cognitive dissidents at play.
CNN's warped obsession with reporting about supposed adultery demonstrates a larger problem at the once proud, groundbreaking channel.
CNN's focus is not news, but on distracting itself and the nation's news consumers with peripheral and sensational gibberish that
fails to enhance the national dialogue.
In the run-up and the aftermath to the recently passed government spending bill, CNN mentioned McDougall and Daniels more than three times as often as the spending bill.
The spending bill, of course, isn't photogenic, but it impacts citizens way more than a Playboy model.
The network's coverage of President Trump is so prolific that they've neglected much of the news that actually matters.
They undersold it.
In other words, they've neglected truth in order to prove their own narrative.
This is worse than cognitive dissidence.
This is full-fledged hypocrisy.
And as playwright Tennessee Williams famously wrote, the only thing worse than a liar is a liar that's also a hypocrite.
I don't know what that means either, but it sounded good.
It's from Tennessee Williams, and I like Tennessee.
It's Tuesday, April 3rd.
This is the Glenn Beck program.
Hello, Stu.
Hi, Glenn.
It's great to talk to you today, as usual.
It's always a pleasure.
Is it?
No.
No, it is not.
So what is the real story?
Yeah, he was at the park a little late.
Right?
The Central Park is closed from 1 a.m.
to 6 a.m.
And Richard Quest was arrested around 3.40 a.m.
in the park, which is obviously his own.
What was he doing in the park
against the
park at 3 o'clock in the morning.
You cannot.
It's actually closed between 1 and 6.
So that is why.
What was he doing in the park?
He said, initially, stop for loitering, as I said.
You know, that's not right.
Initially.
Initially, stop for loitering.
They did search him.
And what did they find?
The small Ziploc bag for one, which is, you know, there's nothing wrong with that, right?
I mean, Ziploc isn't a guy.
As far as I know, Ziploc bag is a bag.
What was in there Ziploc bag?
What was was there?
What was in there?
It was in it?
Yes.
In the bag.
In the bag.
I mean, you're assuming there was something in the bag.
Yeah, that's how you sometimes Ziploc, they actually come from the factory empty.
He usually wouldn't have made the news story if it was empty.
May have been some methamphetamine.
Okay.
May have been a little bit of that.
It could have been, could have been crackers, but it also may have been methamphetamine.
Beside that, was he doing anything with anybody?
There was a rope.
There was a rope.
There was a rope.
There were people who use ropes for lots of things.
Right.
You know, for example,
climbing a tree.
Climbing a tree.
That would be one use of a rope.
Maybe tying up a bundle of twigs.
Or what are some of the other things that might have happened?
You may have it tied to your genitals.
That might be another one.
That was not the one that I've been in Central Park at 240.
That was not the one that I was thinking.
That was the one he was thinking, though, I guess.
That's okay.
That is the point of this.
All right.
In fact, I've never even thought that.
But he tied up his genitals.
In the park, at Central Park.
In the park.
But look, you're going to go for a run.
Maybe you don't want to have to stop to go go to the bathroom.
You know what I mean?
So maybe this is a way to do that.
Was he doing anything else or was anyone with him?
He was not with anyone.
And this is why I said, don't go on the air with this because I don't remember all the details of the scandal.
Yeah.
And I have to look them up.
Now you've made me look them up.
Yes.
He, apparently, there may have also been
a sex toy
involved.
But I mean, people use toys for lots of reasons.
You know, you never know what
kids have toys.
Why can't adults have toys, right?
Exactly.
Yes.
It was an adult toy.
Was that toy
anywhere?
Yes.
Whatever you're about to say, the answer is yes.
And I don't think we need to say it because people probably have put this together.
So anyway, that's the guy that is currently reporting on CNN, and nobody seems to have a problem with that one.
Well, I look, you know what?
In all honesty, and I think you'd agree with this.
People have issues in their lives.
He had an issue, a really, apparently serious issue.
He had six months of counseling and everything else.
He came back.
There's nothing, there's nothing inherently like it's great.
I hope he's put his life back together, and it seems like he has.
Right.
And I have the same network that yells at sports hosts when they say the word boobs on the air and they spend a month acting as if it's the most tragic, incomprehensible circumstance they can ever even imagine.
That same one is going to have Richard Quest on the air and is also going to have a sex special with Christian Amon Poor.
The worst combination of two things possible.
A sex,
a sex special with Christian Amon Poor.
Makes you want to put a rope around
tusks.
Make sure that it is.
Yeah, right.
No, I got it.
Again, I don't think it's something you need to say.
But there's anything you should take from the segment.
Central Park is closed from 1 to 6.
Don't go in the park at 3.40 a.m.
Got it.
It's not the right time.
Got it.
Actually,
I'd like to take one other thing from this.
Really?
There's another lesson here other than park closing ties.
Yes, yes.
But it's not the one that you think.
It's not the one that you think.
Redemption is real.
Forgiveness is real.
You just have to ask for it.
Right.
But redemption is real.
And,
you know,
I don't think we need to make a federal case out of absolutely everything that goes wrong in somebody's life, especially if they're trying to make amends for it.
I mean, someone say maybe bringing up his incident from 2008 isn't the exact way we should.
Well, yes.
Okay.
It's not something on him.
It's on the network acting all high and mighty.
I mean, look, these guys,
they are not prudes.
They're not playing the organ in Sunday church.
Okay.
They're not.
Well, look at the Me2 stuff and how many people in the media have been hit by that.
I mean, people who were on your TV day after day after day after day telling you what was right and what was wrong.
You know, many of them have been hit by this stuff.
You know?
So, you
it's not always true.
It's not always the way it's supposed to, you know, the way it's told.
And there is redemption there.
But I mean,
it's another thing to go crazy when someone comes on the air and says boobs or whatever it is and act as if you're above it.
It's a little insulting.
It's a little insulting.
Especially if you've been
in the park at 1 o'clock in the morning.
Or 3.40.
It's actually 1.
You'd be okay because that's borderline.
It closes at 1.
Don't stay at the same time.
Again, I don't think the time of the day.
3.40 a.m.
is not the time to go for a job, for example.
Now, if you're a night time, you know, maybe you work the night shot and that might be the.
Maybe you just were on the streets.
Just stay out of the park and think about it.
I think lodged is probably the time for you.
Anyway,
speaking of that.
Want to see the rat?
Oh, my gosh.
Okay.
All right, so if you were listening last hour, we were talking about, you know, you got to just, I'm a hoarder.
I'm a hoarder.
okay
so now this is uh this is the rat uh
from uh 1942 from lyon france
and it uh it had hair at one point but all of its hair fell out this is a stuffed rat it's a real rat though it's a real rat so it's not like a rat they made to look like
this is a real rat Okay,
it's a real rat.
All of the hair has fallen off.
Right.
It's a big rat.
It's a big rat.
That would be very creeped out if I saw that.
Okay.
So it's a rat.
And they stuffed it.
If you look
in the butt area,
you see that it's a...
It's an interesting tie-in to this previous conversation.
It is, isn't it?
It's purely coincidental.
But anyway, that's a trigger.
And it's stuffed in his butt.
And what they did is they would take these
and take C4
and stuff it inside of the rat, and then they would put the trigger in there, and then they would throw them in the coal bins.
So when the guys were shoveling the
coal into the big burners that were running these factories, the C4 would explode.
And it took them a while, what was causing these things to explode?
And they finally figured out, I found a dead rat that had explosive in it.
Now,
this was, they came up with this rat.
The guy who came up with it is
the inspiration for the James Bond guy that plays Q, the guy who's coming up with all of the weird devices.
Now,
when the Germans, it didn't blow up as much, it didn't do as much damage to the factories as much as it just stressed and pushed the limits.
of the soldiers because they all went out looking for dead rats.
And so they had to take a lot of soldiers off of the line looking for the underground, trying to fight, you know, the allies, and had them look and start doing searches for dead rats.
Well, Q, as he wasn't known then,
Q decides, okay, so they got the rats.
What we need to do is we need to take coal
and we need to take like little brickettes.
We need to cut them open, fill those with C4, and then throw those in.
So they'll be looking for rats, but they're actually shoveling the C4 explosives into the furnace anyway, and they will have no idea what's going on.
And then they probably were,
you know, hammering the soldiers who are missing the rats, right?
Like
the management is the upper echelon is pissed off at the workers who can't find the rats when there's no longer about rats.
Isn't that cool?
It's great.
I mean, you know, that thing is a little bit more difficult.
But this is one of the things that Tanya's like, okay, no, no, no, I don't want this in the house.
A dead rat?
Yeah.
Yeah, no, I honestly looking at you.
I feel like there's a third of a
maybe a 33% chance or so that it just gets up and starts running at me.
Yeah, it's crazy.
Okay, really creepy.
Okay, so talking about just being a collector of stuff, all right.
This.
This is just a little like, what does this describe what you think this looks like or what it is?
It looks almost like a little money clip.
Okay, yeah.
And it says U.S.
on it.
Okay.
It's not a money clip.
It's made to do this.
Okay.
You know what that is?
You know what this was used for?
Clicker, right?
I think I may have heard of this story.
Okay.
So this was a D-Day we gave all of our guys, when we would drop them behind lines,
we would drop them with this.
And instead of saying, you know, Babe Ruth,
baseball
to identify
our side, you just, if you heard something, you would do that.
And then the other person had to do
that.
Okay?
You knew your friends.
The problem with this idea was
this
sounds exactly like a gun cocking.
So you would do this,
and the Germans would cock their weapon, and you'd go, oh, good guys, boom.
And they'd shoot us.
Wow.
So this didn't last very long.
I mean, look, I mean, it's marked U.S.
and everything.
It didn't work very well.
It looks surprisingly new for something that survived World War II.
It's like it really was.
Yeah, probably used once.
Probably used once, unfortunately.
So the rat was a better idea.
I think anytime you can put explosives in rats, it's a good idea.
Just generally speaking.
I'm speaking in generalities here, but I mean, I think typically.
It's It's about Angelina Jolie, isn't it?
Well, that did happen in the documentary movie, of course, Wanted with Angelina Jolie, a classic film.
I don't think anybody saw that, and I don't think anything that Angelina Jolie was in is a classic.
Oh, I totally disagree with this analysis.
I mean, you don't want to get on that.
You don't want to go down that road for sure.
But, I mean, I will say.
I will tell you this.
Tomb Raider, you know, comes out, and I said, Rafe, have you seen the new?
Has he seen the old Tomb Raider?
And he said, no.
And I played the promo for him.
And he's like, that looks horrible.
I almost took him to the doctor because it was like, of course it does.
But look at her.
You're 13 now.
Look at her.
By the way, wanted with Angelina Jolie $134 million in 2008 and another 206 worldwide.
$341 million that movie made.
And it had exploding rats?
It had exploding rats.
I have seen about exploding rats.
Well, it's very, very much not appropriate for children
or me.
Was it based on this?
On these?
Yeah, supposedly it was.
It's not exactly the exact same thing, but yeah, they use...
If I remember the story right, they had wanted to flood the enemy fortress or you know, and so they released like thousands of rats to come in, and they all started exploding.
But yeah, Morgan Freeman was in it.
James McAvoy and Angelina Jolie.
Quality film.
That's good.
Quality film.
Do you get royalties for I do?
All right.
I am a creator.
All right.
We need to
preparedness?
That doesn't come from me.
That comes from FEMA.
Brock Long said that America needed a culture of preparedness if we were going to survive what comes next.
All right, whether that's hurricanes, wildfires, something without warning like an earthquake or power grid attack.
Did you read today about China?
The Pentagon thinks that China may have a kill switch for our military equipment.
Okay, guys,
let's not leak that out.
Okay, if you're worried about it, then just then freak out about it, but do it quietly.
That's not helpful.
We got enough to worry about.
Anyway, how do you prepare?
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Glenn back mercury.
Glenn back.
I don't know if this happened at your Easter dinner table, but at mine, we spoke about the Christians in the Middle East, and we talked about
how shallow our faith is here.
At least I can't speak for you, but
you know how many of us would really
actually face prison or
execution.
beheading for our faith.
How many of us would do that?
How many of us would put our family at risk for that?
We might practice in the home, but never be outspoken.
I want to tell you about a group of
Christians.
There were 95 Christians.
They were in Iran, and they were part of the underground church, which meant for sure imprisonment, but most likely public execution.
They escaped Iran,
but they need your help.
And I want to tell you the story about these remarkable people and what they face.
Something is going on, and we don't know what it is, but something is going on, and we really need your help.
Mike Pence is on this, as is the Nazarene Fund.
We'll talk about it next.
Glenn, back.
Mercury.
You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.
Last weekend, we celebrated Easter as Christians.
Jews marked Passover, commemorating the exodus of the ancient Israelites and their freedom from captivity and enslavement in Egypt.
And Easter is the escape of man from death.
But there is one group of Christians who, just like the ancient children of Israel, fled persecution.
They're unsure of their fate, wondering if they would make it.
They're now wondering if they're going to be returned to the very country that seeks to hold them in bondage.
And we don't know the answer to this story.
Right now, as we speak, there are 95 Iranian Christian refugees living in Austria.
They escaped persecution in Iran.
They
were granted asylum in the United States, were given provisional approval by the U.S.
government in 2017, but last month their
asylum was rejected for some reason.
So now the Austrian government is threatening to deport them back to Iran.
And no one in Austria or the U.S.
government has explained why this is happening.
Mike Pence is on this.
These Christians were members of the underground churches while they were in Iran.
So these are the people that were practicing their faith in secret, and they were bringing people together in secret, just like the early Christians did in the Roman persecutions.
You couldn't announce your faith because you would be persecuted and prosecuted.
But it's worse for these guys now because they escaped.
They're known.
to be people that were running the underground church.
And if they're returned, they face certain imprisonment, persecution, and possibly death.
It's going on right now, and this is very, very serious for these 95 Christians.
Again, it's reported that Mike Pence and various members of Congress are working to rectify this and bring them to the U.S., but nobody can confirm who's responsible for this, what, why the change in position.
But it is going to end up in 95 dead Christians if we don't change it.
The Nazarene Fund is trying to help.
We have have countries that we are contacting, trying to open the door for them.
These guys are not alone.
There are others that are still trying to get out and trying to find homes.
Australia has been exceptional with these Christians.
But there is
a whole bunch of these people who will be dead if they return.
And so we are reaching out to our multiple sources in different countries, churches, politicians in multiple countries, pastors, priests, NGOs, everybody.
We are burning up the phone lines, and we've been doing it all weekend.
And I need a couple of things from you.
Please pray for these 95 Christians that something opens up for them so they don't go back to Iran, where they face certain death.
Two, if you're not involved in the Nazarene Fund, I ask that you help us with the Nazarene Fund
because there's a lot of people that are left.
We also have some news.
We've closed down
an organ
harvesting facility.
We'll give you more on this.
It is worse than we thought it was, bigger than we thought it was, but we believe that we can break the neck on this, but we need your help.
Even if it's $5,
please pledge to help these Christians and Christians like them in the Middle East get them to safety.
Thenazarenefund.org.
It's thenazarenefund.org.
We'll keep you informed as this story develops, but please say a prayer for them.
Welcome to the program, Mr.
Pat Gray.
How are you, sir?
I'm good.
That's the first organ harvesting talk I've heard since the Christmas party.
Oh, really?
Yeah, kind of exciting.
Yeah, good.
Thank you.
Well, you know, I try to spice things up a little bit.
It's Easter.
We did it at Christian.
It's at Christmas.
It's time for Easter.
So
that's good.
So every high
holy holiday.
Well, I don't know if you know this, but that's why all of the Easter bunnies that are made of chocolate are hollow because their organs had been harvested.
I didn't know that.
I didn't know that at all.
That explains a lot.
Yeah.
Explains a lot.
Yeah.
So
is anybody else really irritated with this boycott of Laura Ingram show?
Yes.
I'm just really, I mean, over nothing.
Nothing.
Over absolutely nothing.
Nothing.
The word wine is the only thing even approaching anything.
She didn't mock him.
She didn't attack him.
Did you notice that he said yesterday that he is also
not being used by anybody?
He doesn't have anybody behind him.
This is all him.
Yeah.
This is all him.
Oh, dude.
Nonsense.
Come on.
Are you really that stupid?
You have no help?
Sure.
You have no help with that.
Nobody's.
Well, Moveon.org
is openly helping him.
Correct.
And I think he knows that, but also he probably is aware that it looks better for him if it's a grassroots movement.
If it comes off as just the typical left-wing movement, which we all know it is,
you know, it's not going to have its effectiveness.
I was happy to see the Fox statement yesterday, though.
We cannot and will not allow voices to be censored by agenda-driven intimidation efforts.
Look forward to having Laurie Ingram back hosting her program next Monday when she returns from spring vacation.
They never did that for us.
Never did that.
Never did that.
In fact, what did they do?
They leaked information saying we weren't going on vacation.
Right.
They tried to allegedly and tried to make it look like they actually had suspended us when we had email correspondence with them.
Right, Stu, but that's because we wouldn't be under their thumb
and
they were coming up to a negotiation.
Yes, stunningly, they wanted to get into a more advantageous position.
How'd that work out?
It did not work out.
It didn't work out really well, which propagates this kind of stuff.
Later in the article, it says Fox News executives will not comment beyond the statement.
But privately, they believe Ingram's offense does not approach the issues that brought down hosts Bill O'Reilly or Glenn Beck, who both lost their shows after advertisers pulled out.
Beck was fired after advertisers fled his show in response to a number of wildly extreme statements he made.
Remember that.
Including, okay, here's the one they mentioned because it is the most wildly extreme thing.
Yeah.
Including, can you guess?
Former President Obama was a racist.
Now, I remember,
I remember saying, if I could be wrong, but
clarify my memory here.
I believe I said, I don't think that he's a racist.
I think he just has a deep-seated hatred for the white culture.
And during the discussion, you said, I don't know what he is.
I mean, I think he might, but you were just kind of musing aloud.
Yeah.
And you said it several different ways.
And
I was questioning what was happening because he was making statements in his own book like, that's the way white people will do you.
Well, what does that mean exactly?
What does that make you?
Imagine Donald Trump saying, well, that's just the way black people will do you.
That and beyond.
Beyond what he was saying in his book, he had just recently made this statement.
The point I was making was not that my grandmother harbors any racial animosity.
She doesn't, but she is a
typical white person.
Typical white person who
sees somebody on the street that she doesn't know.
There's a reaction that's been bred into her.
Bred into her.
Okay.
Our experience.
So anyone who generalizes, I mean, anybody who generalized an entire race like that of people as being typical anything with something bred into them would have been excoriated as a racist.
But if it was anyone other than Barack Obama, they would have been a racist who was drummed out of their position.
And yet, it is now
nine years later, nine years after the comment on Fox, and they're still bringing it up.
Well, still bringing it up.
But you know what?
Can I tell you in the context here, which is that it is, in all circumstances, wrong to call the president of the United States a racist?
The media would never do that.
They would never accuse a sitting president of such a thing.
Even if you're wondering and musing about it and you're just trying to figure it out,
you can't do, let's say,
thousands of hours of television designated and based solely on proving the point that the president is a racist.
They definitely wouldn't do that.
Well,
we know that they definitely won't even ask the question because they said even the question.
Oh, he's just asking the question.
Yeah, the question,
the racists.
Yes, right.
So that we know that they wouldn't even ask the question, let alone make the statement if it wasn't for the last year and a half where they have been doing that to Donald Trump.
And they've been doing it because they feel they're right.
See, this
is the secret of our republic.
You might think you're right,
but you might be wrong.
The other side might think they're right, but they may be wrong.
You both have the right
to question, especially your government.
It is the First Amendment right.
It is not our right.
It is our duty to question.
But what we're living in now is a world where, depending on who's in office, the other side can't question.
I mean, it's true.
Look at Sinclair, right?
CNN says apples and bananas will tell you the truth.
Truth is important.
And that's perfectly okay.
In fact, praised.
Sinclair, who they see as someone associated with Trump
or a right-wing view of the world, says the same thing, says, has their anchors say the same thing that the CNN commercial says, and it's evil.
Did you see that
they said that it was absolutely fascistic and that no other network would even
do everything was fascistic?
And there was no way any network would have ever done that.
Any other network
CNN is doing it.
They just did it.
And they said they're doing damage because they are questioning the credibility of the media.
What the hell is the fake news stuff about?
Man, what's apples and bananas?
Right, what is that about?
Exactly.
But as you point out, they like the point made by CNN because that is in their worldview.
They don't like it when made by Sinclair.
You know, the same thing.
Hey, we've got a bunch of anchors over a bunch of networks reading this promo about fake news.
Well, they see that as something associated with Trump.
They don't like it.
So that's bad.
The CNN thing was anti-Trump.
When NBC does Green Week and they have a bunch of anchors and actors acting out
in the office in an episode about recycled paper, when that was going on.
Well, everyone at NBC Universal, including the theme park, was required.
Required an edict from above.
That wasn't bad because they agree with that point.
They like that point.
That's why the First Amendment, that's why you must defend free speech when you despise it because they have a right to do that.
They have a right to say that, just like Sinclair has a right to do that.
And you have a right to disagree.
Now, shut up, both of you.
Shut up with the,
I've got to boycott and get them off the air.
No,
both sides have a right to say this.
You have a right to not listen.
At least it used to be that way in America.
But as we've seen the last few years, just not America anymore.
No, they've, it's just not.
It's almost like they've gutted our Constitution and harvest its organs.
Happened again.
Yeah.
Wow.
Wow.
Was that
another high holy day coming up?
That one was for Passover.
I covered it for Easter.
I was covering it for Passover there, too.
All right.
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Glenn Beck Mercury.
Glenn Beck.
You believe that it's 70 years the
State of Israel was founded 70 years.
It's their 70th birthday.
coming up
and on April 26th we're having a dinner here at the Mercury Studios.
I think it's the,
how did I just say that?
Hayoval
organization is putting it on.
It's H-A-Y-O-V-E-L.
You can find out information on it at H-A-Y-O-V-E-L.com slash Israel70.
But it's going to be a dinner, full kosher,
five-star.
They have music, all kinds of different things.
We're going to be really celebrating the miraculous birth of this nation and what that nation has done and its future.
And I am the keynote speaker, and I'm proud to host it here in our studios.
We don't do that very often, but we thought for Israel it would be a nice thing.
If you would like to join us, it is April 26th, and you can get your tickets
at
H-A-Y-O-V-E-L
dot com slash Israel70.
So
do you have your tree up yet?
For 70th?
No, I do not.
I do not.
I do not.
I'm still getting used to it.
I'm getting excited for my new ultra marathon.
I'm going to be doing it soon.
Your ultra marathon.
Yeah, I know you've been following the phenomenal rise of the ultra marathon lately.
Oh, my gosh.
Including this one.
This is probably the one I'm going to do.
It's iconic.
It's one of the most iconic ultras
to
use the lingo of the world I'm in.
Sure.
It goes across the Sahara Desert and it's running for 156 miles,
which is what I'm getting trained for.
I'd like to see by my appearance.
I like to go a little longer than that for me.
The good thing, though, is you only have to pay 4,250 pounds
to enter.
You mean?
So like $6,000, 5,000?
Oh, okay, not actual pounds.
No.
You'll lose that box.
You know, I have another marathon coming up.
You'll be interested in all 32 flavors at Baskin Robinson.
Wow.
Amazing.
That's ultra.