9/20/17 - Signs From Heaven? (Kenny Fries & Jenn Hyman join Glenn)

1h 53m
7.1magnitude earthquake devastates Mexico ...Political imprisonment...Venezuela needs a miracle that in the end will save us all...Freedom is costly ...UN Speech: President Trump was right about Venezuela ...Progressive power and control ...’In The Province of The Gods’ author Kenny Fries joins the show from Germany...America's 'education industry' game plan is failing ...Human slavery and organ trafficking industry is alive and well ...Be an abolitionist ...Another heroic story from 'Operation Underground Railroad'...OurRescue.org ...Please pray for Puerto Rico

The Glenn Beck Program with Glenn Beck, Pat Gray, Stu Burguiere and Jeff Fisher, Weekdays 9a–12pm ET on TheBlaze Radio
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Listen and follow along

Transcript

The Blaze Radio Network

on demand

Love Courage Truth Glenn Beck

This was a sound in Mexico City yesterday

as the ground began to shake violently

explosions and buildings falling down.

The capital experienced a 7.1 magnitude earthquake.

It was prolonged and it was violent.

As of this morning, rescuers are still working to dig people out from under the rubble.

Here's what we know today: 240 people have been reported dead, but there will be many more.

The number is expected to rise.

More than 40 buildings have already collapsed, including at least two schools.

In

a strange turn of events, what made yesterday so weird and jarring was that many Mexicans had attended memorial services earlier that morning.

They had been to church

because they were marking the 32nd anniversary of the 1985 earthquake that killed 10,000.

This earthquake also came less than two weeks after an 8.1 magnitude that killed 91 people and destroyed thousands of homes.

Mexico City is one of the greatest cities, I believe, in the Western Hemisphere.

It is...

It's a clean New York.

It is a great cultural city.

And in the rubble, we saw something else.

We saw the strength of the human spirit.

We saw neighbor helping neighbor, a community coming together.

And in the coming days, we'll see what makes America great yet again.

We will see Americans reaching deep and helping their neighbor.

Because no matter what we say, there is never a wall around our hearts.

Yesterday what we saw in Mexico was a nation moved to action

when everybody focused on what really mattered most: each other.

For two countries that are throwing the war of words back and forth with our politicians,

it was interesting to watch yesterday and see,

in the end, we're not all that different.

It's Wednesday, September 20th.

You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.

There's so much going on in the world that sometimes I'm overwhelmed and I don't even know where to begin.

I try to find the stories that will make a difference, that actually matter.

And the only thing that really matters are those stories of people.

I read a letter to the American people,

and it was really a plea.

But most people didn't read it, never heard it, didn't share it.

I thought it was powerful.

A story of a guy who could be just like you.

When I stretched out my arms, I could touch the two opposite walls.

The door was blocked with black garbage bags, leaving the room in total darkness.

There was rotten, worm-infested food on the floor alongside scraps of clothing covered in feces.

For a while, it felt as though I had been buried alive.

It was a year before, while I was going to speak at a news conference.

I was going to share my political thoughts when I was interrupted by 10 or 15 undercover secret police vehicles.

A couple dozen armed agents came in and they tied my hands and covered my head with a black cloth.

I was then locked in a cell without light or any kind of ventilation.

I was denied any communication with the outside world, and I could speak with my lawyers only when I was taken to court.

This went on for 10 days, and after then, I was transferred to an administrative office inside the jail.

It was there for the next seven months.

I slept on a mat on the floor.

Three months ago, the prosecutor in my case closed the investigation.

He established that I wasn't guilty of any crimes.

I had faced a trumped-up charge of possession of explosives.

This meant that there are no active judicial proceedings against me.

I'm just simply being held hostage in violation of the Constitution.

Political imprisonment has been the punishment for daring to dream of a democratic society free of communism and open to the global community.

We just want what so many other people around the world take for granted.

Free elections, good governance, free expression, judicial independence, personal security, and a modicum of economic liberty.

But an armed minority has managed to impose a regime of fear and corruption and blood.

My case is evidence of that.

I know I'm here for a just cause.

My sacrifice and that of others like me will change millions millions of lives.

Today, 93% of citizens in my country can't afford food.

Because of food shortages that are the fault of our corrupt and brutal government, nearly three-quarters of our citizens say they have lost an average of about 17 pounds in the last few months.

I don't want to think of a father's horror when his baby dies from a fever or something as simple as diarrhea that could have easily been treated if he just had access to simple medicine.

I'm in prison, so this stops happening.

That conviction gives me strength.

My generation has made freedom its goal.

I want to ask the people of the United States and the world to please stand by our side.

I have finally been moved to a cell with a bed, though one with no windows.

I can see the sun only an hour per week.

I'm 32, and I've been a democratic activist for 12 years.

I have two children, eight and five, who are my sun and moon.

I have a wife who I love and who now has to carry the burden of being married to a political prisoner.

I write to you from my cell.

in the dungeons of the Venezuelan secret police.

I will do everything in my power to keep resisting in prison.

I'll keep dreaming of going home to sleep in a clean bed surrounded by my family.

I'll keep dreaming of the day in which we all take to the streets to celebrate our freedom.

These are the words of Jan Goycoche.

He wrote these words from his prison cell in Caracas, Venezuela, a vivid reminder that freedom is costly, and we are foolish when we take it for granted.

Today, as we get busy and think about other things, I would ask that you would pray for Jan and his family.

Pray for the good people of Venezuela, because they're just ahead of us.

They need a miracle, the same miracle that in the end will save us all.

My letter comes from a real political prisoner in Venezuela.

It was published as an op-ed in the New York Times.

We're going to post it at Glenbeck.com here.

We'll also tweet it from at World of Stew if you want to read it.

Donald Trump gave a great speech yesterday

at the United Nations.

Maybe the best part of that being

his commentary on Venezuela, talking about how they, it's not about how socialism was implemented incorrectly, it was that it was implemented faithfully.

That's the problem that's gone on there.

So, we're going to have more on that coming up.

So, let me take you to Colorado Springs, Colorado.

You know, as the world is suffering with earthquakes, while parts of our own country are bracing for

the effects of yet another hurricane, while Puerto Rico is under siege today.

Venezuela, people have political prisoners.

What is it that so many of our citizens, I mean, we're really, we are grotesque.

We're really grotesque on the things that we are complaining about and the things that we are doing because I have a right.

Let me take you to Colorado Springs.

The Budd family.

The Budd family

has been spending the last couple of weeks trying to find somebody in their neighborhood that they have dubbed the Mad Pooper.

Kathy Budd says

her kids first caught sight of this woman.

She appears to be in her mid-30s, maybe, 20s, 30s.

She is athletically built.

They have a picture of her from behind

as she was running away.

She's a jogger, and she is running and jogging around the neighborhood.

And

the Budd children

look out the front window and scream, mom.

And here was this woman, mid-squat, pants down, unashamed.

And the kids say, mom, there's a lady taking a poop in our front yard.

Come on.

No, they're not.

No, they're not.

Mom.

And mom comes and says, oh, my.

She opens up the door and she says, hey,

what are you doing?

She says, oh, sorry.

Pull your pants up and runs away.

How else are you going to respond to that question?

Right.

Okay.

This was the first time that someone had caught her doing it.

She has been doing

this now for the last seven weeks.

They don't know if she has just moved into the neighborhood.

They don't know.

Is that a problem?

proof she is?

Yeah.

Yesterday, they caught her.

Yesterday, again,

she changed up her routine a little bit because she knew she was being watched.

There are public restrooms.

You know, it's Colorado Springs.

They're public restrooms right there.

CVS has caught her out in their front, you know, the median there, just taking a crap.

It's something she enjoys.

Apparently, you don't think it's a...

you know, like a lot of people enjoy different things, you know, different strokes for different folks.

No, uh uh no.

So the the Bud family has put a sign up in the yard that says, please, I'm begging you, please stop.

Please stop what?

Pooping in our front yard like a dog.

I think the sign needs to be more specific.

Yeah.

It needs to say, please stop pooping all humans.

Do you really need to say that no human Do you really particularly

need to say that?

See, this is the problem.

This is the problem.

In Venezuela, I am not kidding you,

they are starving and people are going out.

Families are going out at night and they are hunting dogs and cats so they have something to eat.

And what are we doing?

We're having to chase people from crapping in our front lawn.

It's, I mean, I used to go for a walk.

We used to walk our dogs in this neighborhood, and it's a nice little suburban neighborhood where we used to live.

And this one house, because a lot of people would walk their dogs past this house, and obviously that would become a problem.

I guess dogs, not humans, but dogs would poop on this particular lawn.

So they decided to put up a sign.

And the sign said,

it was a, you know, a circle with the cross through it, the slash through it.

And it just, and it had a picture of a dog taking a poop.

Yes.

So now, instead of occasionally having a piece of poop in their front yard, they have a picture of a dog pooping in their front yard all the time.

This does not seem like you've solved the issue.

Yeah.

Well, you know, I mean, I'm expecting a little dog poop, and I'm expecting to catch a dog once in a while pooping in my front yard, which I don't want.

And if you would do, if you're doing that and you're walking your dog, please pick up the poop.

Here was a quote from, I think it was a guy at CVS.

He said, I saw her.

Now listen,

listen to this.

I saw her,

and honestly, I thought she was going to pick it up after and put it in a bag,

but she didn't.

That's the problem here?

That's where you're starting with, and she didn't pick it up.

No, she pulled her pants down and took a crap in the middle of the street, man.

You know, I know there's, there, there are people, and we have to get into this later today.

There are people that believe that September 23rd may be the day of the rapture.

I'd like to remind you that no man knows, but...

And I'm not all down with the rapture thing, unfortunately.

Gosh,

I hope I'm not wrong on that.

And then I'm left here and I'm like, oh, crap.

Anyway,

September 23rd, people are saying, this is it.

This is the signs in the heavens and everything.

This is the end.

I don't think it is, but I will tell you this.

You know,

I'm going to look for the sign of people pooping in your front yard as, you know, maybe men's hearts fail them.

Maybe, you know,

women's sphincter muscles fail them and they just have to do that.

I'm not sure.

But I will tell you this, with the earthquake and the hurricanes, if you haven't gotten the idea that your life could change in a heartbeat and it's wise to be prepared so you can just stop worrying about things,

I don't know what it's going to take to get this message.

You can't prepare for everything, but there are a few things that you can do.

When it comes to a crisis, there's one thing that cuts across all of it, and that is you're going to need to have food, whether whether it's for you or somebody else, maybe somebody in your neighborhood, somebody in your town, somebody in your state.

Actually, having an emergency food supply is a lifesaver.

Ask our friends in Houston and in Florida.

Ask people in Mexico.

Boy, you know, there's no food

on the shelves in Mexico for probably a couple of days at least.

My Patriot Supply has food storage for you.

Get their 70-serving survival food food kit for only $67.

Healthy food that lasts up to 25 years.

For less than a dollar per serving, you'll get breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

You were in Puerto Rico today.

I can guarantee you you're not running to the store.

There's nothing on the shelves today.

Call 800-977-0542 or order online at preparewigglen.com.

A Prepared America is a strong America.

And that's my Patriot Supply's mission.

1-800-977-0542 or preparewithglen.com.

Glenn back.

Glenn back.

Category 4.

Maria is hitting Puerto Rico.

This is the sound of it right now.

Donald Trump has just declared Puerto Rico a disaster area, and

they are now saying that Puerto Rico may be uninhabitable for weeks, if not months, after this.

I mean, holy cow.

I mean, I can see why people are saying September 23rd is, you know, maybe.

I mean, as I pointed out yesterday,

you know, the book of Revelation is not going to be as scary as if this is

if this is the,

you know, these are the signs.

I mean, yeah, it's bad, but it's not what I thought the book of Revelation's bad would be, right?

So, I mean, it's kind of like

anybody.

If, if people have disappeared on, you know, Saturday on the 23rd in the rapture, you'd be like, okay, well, I mean, maybe the rest of it's not going to be as bad.

Maybe it's just been hyped.

Maybe it's like one of those movies that everybody said, oh, no, it's the greatest.

And you went there and you're like, you wrecked it because it was good, but you built it up too far.

I believe yesterday on the show, though, you said, well, you know, the only thing we're missing is earthquakes.

And then

I think you should shut up.

That's what I think.

You know what we're missing?

Chocolate cake.

Ooh, there we go.

Let's see if that shows up.

Maybe it'll just appear.

The Mexican earthquake

is just.

Have you ever been to Mexico City?

I have not.

I was just there four or five weeks ago.

It is.

It is truly one of the greatest cities, I think, in the world.

It is a beautiful city, Huge.

I don't even know how many millions of people, 25 million people.

It's up in the mountains.

It's just not what you think of.

When you think of Mexico, you're just like, I don't know, it's the beach or whatever.

It's up in the mountains.

It's cool.

It's beautiful

and

clean.

uber, uber clean.

The parks and the streets and everything are just so clean.

That is surprising to hear.

That was not my impression.

8.85 million in the actual city, in the greater area, 21.3 million.

I mean, and they're talking.

It's a giant city.

They're like, oh, well, there's

a couple hundred people are dead, and we expect that number to rise.

Yeah, it's going to rise a lot.

Do you remember?

I don't know if you're old enough to remember 1985.

Do you remember?

Because the anniversary of that Mexico City earthquake that killed 10,000 people, the anniversary was yesterday.

And this is the second earthquake.

What was it?

500 miles away?

Yeah, there's an 8.1.

Yeah.

Right.

And then this was a 7.1.

Yes.

So really devastating.

And, you know, like

no cities can handle stuff like this.

You know, the further you get into the poorer areas, the worse it gets.

And we're going to see that with a hurricane now, too.

Glenn back.

This is the Glendeth program.

With everything going on in the world, there are a few things that will actually change your life that we should pay attention to.

And one of them is the Graham-Cassidy bill.

This is the Republicans,

what some are saying, the last shot of getting anything done on a repeal and replace Obamacare.

It is starting to shape up, and it looks like it has a chance of passage.

First, let's explain what it is.

So

let me give you a couple headlines.

Reason.com, libertarian angle.

Obamacare repeal is dead.

Here come the bailouts.

Now, Vox from the left says, I've covered the GOP repeal plan since day one.

Graham Cassidy is the most radical.

Don't you push me into Lindsey Graham's arms.

Don't do it.

So what does this thing actually do?

It's basically, if you want to get a real quick summary, it's basically a federalist version of Obamacare.

It is not a repeal of Obamacare.

It is a federalist version of Obamacare.

Which means a state version of Obamacare, which is exactly what we were arguing for.

If Massachusetts wants to do Obamacare, they could do it.

If Texas says, no, there's a better way, let Texas do it.

So that would have been okay back then, but that's not what this is now.

No, because all the money is still coming in.

So the federal, all the money from Obamacare, largely, still goes to the federal government.

And then it is distributed through block grants to the states to do what they want with.

So, you would have a situation where your conservative state would probably do a much better job with this if you're a conservative, where a liberal state can do all the liberal things that they want.

And what they're doing is they're taking the states that all the money that's going to the states now and dividing it up, what I would argue, is more equitably.

Like, right now, if you have $100 in Obamacare money that's split up between California and Texas, right now it's, let's say, $75 go to California, $25 go to Texas.

What they're going to do is split that up and make it $50-50.

That's a really generic way of explaining what it is.

The reason for a really bad idea, I'm okay.

Yeah,

again, I think this is another situation where it's better than Obamacare, but it's still Obamacare.

You will be able to get rid of the individual mandate.

However, states could pass that on their own.

I don't have a problem.

If the state wants to do it, the state can do whatever it wants.

I personally think it's unconstitutional, as I know you do, at least from the federal side.

But right, you're right.

It's much better the smaller government you get to.

Yes.

Now, the reason why this is in such a rush is because the Republicans have 10 days to do this.

The reconciliation process, which basically means you only have to get 51 votes instead of 60, that expires on September 30th by rule because you can only do it once per fiscal year.

So they have to get it done by September 30th, which means that the House won't be able to change it.

There will be no negotiation between them.

Oh, what a surprise.

Yeah.

So it's kind of convenient.

Yeah.

Well, yeah.

So if this happens, they're going to use reconciliation in 2018 for the tax bill.

That's why they need to get this done in the next 10 days.

And that's why it's such a panic.

So

how does the vote look?

41 pretty much on board for sure.

All 41 senators have voted for all the Republican Obamacare repeals.

So you're at 41.

There are Heller and Graham.

Graham is one of the co-sponsors.

Heller has said he's on board on this as well.

That gets you to 41.

There are five that are likely to vote yes.

Lamar Alexander, Shelley Morcapado, Shelley Moor Capito, Bob Bob Corker, Tom Cotton, and Rob Portman, which all have very similar names.

I put you at 46 senators.

You probably are definitely not going to get Susan Collins.

You're probably definitely not going to get Lisa Murkowski, though that's not determined yet.

You need to get all four of these in this scenario, which would be Mike Lee, who has not said anything about it yet.

Jerry Moran,

who is probably a yes, although he's complained about the Medicaid cuts, which aren't really cuts, but it's a whole other story.

John McCain, who has voted against these things.

However, his buddy, Lindsey Graham, is the guy behind this one.

So I'm so far counting him.

Lindsey stinking Graham is the author of this.

And then Rand Paul, who has said flat out he's a no on it.

But if he's the determining vote between this thing passing and not, will he hang with that?

My guess is probably he will.

I think there's a small chance of this passing.

There's a better chance of this passing than what we remember them doing with skinny repeal.

Remember that whole thing?

Because that would have had, they've had to negotiate between the House and the Senate, and it never would have gone anywhere.

There's a chance here.

What's the worst thing in it?

Well, there's a lot of bad things in it.

First of all, all the Obamacare money stays.

Obamacare in California could actually go further to the left.

If you're someone who lives in a liberal state, you could actually get hit to the left and go further left of Obamacare.

There are people who are arguing that this actually paves the way

for single payer because what could happen here some say it's a Trojan horse, but it's right there.

It's right there.

So, a state like California could take this money and institute single payer.

They'd have to obviously add some more tax dollars on their side to pay for it, but they could get the federal government to pay for, let's say, three-quarters of single-payer.

So, they make single-payer in California, and they just go for it, go all out.

I have to tell you, if 10 states do that, you've paved the way.

I have to tell you, as long as, and this isn't the world we live in, I don't care if California goes completely flat broke, as long as we make it very clear, we're not bailing your ass out.

Right.

And you know that's true.

And you know that's not the truth.

But that would be fine.

Look, if you want to try something, try it.

If you can make it work,

if we could find a single payer system that actually worked,

which I don't think is possible,

but if it would actually work, I'd be for it.

It doesn't work.

Now, if you can do an experiment in your state and you're not going to drag me down with you, go for it.

But I'm not in on your experiment.

It doesn't work.

Yeah, of course, that's how it winds up going every time.

You wind up bailing them out anyway, and that's the risk here.

We're going to see that with pensions, which is another thing we should get to at some point.

But this is one more thing on this.

The DACA deal with Chuck Schumer.

Remember this with, they talked about this and, you know, they've denied, well, there's not really a deal.

But that whole deal, one of the big arguments for it from Donald Trump's side was to say that you're going to get help now from Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi when it comes to legislation like tax reform or Obamacare.

Yeah, right?

Like they'll work with the a little bit.

Listen to this quote from Chuck Schumer when Graham Cassidy comes out, a proposal that the president strongly supports.

After a few weeks of lying dormant, Trump care is back and it's meaner than ever.

While its latest version of Trump care may live under a new name, no matter how how many ways Republicans try to dress it up, this bill is even more dangerous than its predecessors.

Even after dealing with this guy, he not only came out strongly against the proposal, which you can understand, he shouldn't change his principles, right?

He personalized it to Trump.

He took one of Trump's old quotes calling it mean to vilify him even further and called it even more dangerous than all of the predecessors.

Never deal with these people.

They never,

ever, ever will honor what they've said.

17-year-old kid and his girlfriend of eight months.

I've made the news for something that I think that all of us

have gone through, and I'm puzzled by this story.

So

Destiny and her boyfriend,

Kitticone,

live here in Dallas,

and

they were friends, and then they started dating, and

she had texted him.

saying that she was hungry and he said, I'll pick you up later and we'll grab a bite together.

So

he picks her up and right after school, and he says,

You hungry?

And she said, Oh, I just

kill for a burger.

Now he had this

sinking feeling that I think all of us have had.

Any guy has had this,

where

you only have a certain amount of cash

and you don't want to, you don't want to look like you're, you know, you have no money, but you have no money.

And so he says,

he knows that she likes this burger at Chili's, and so they go to Chili's.

They sit down, and

the waiter takes the order.

She orders this burger, and he says, no, I've already eaten.

I'm good.

And she's like, no, come on.

I can't eat by myself.

He's like, no, no, no, I'm good.

You eat.

You're hungry.

So she eats.

She offers him a bite all the way through.

Please have some.

Please, just share.

He's like, no, I'm stuffed.

Well, the truth is, he wasn't stuffed.

He just didn't have enough money for him to eat, and he wanted her to eat.

And he would eat, you know, at home with his box of macaroni and cheese or whatever he chose, because that's what I used to choose because they were 23 cents a box.

This is something that we have,

I think, every guy has done.

Did you do that with Lisa?

Oh, yes, of course.

And if you're going to spend 23 cents, it it should be on powdered cheese.

That's actually a principle I live by.

You know, if you're going to spend $23, it might as well be on powdered cheese.

But anyway, so

here's why this is in the news.

They've been dating now for eight months.

And I don't know, he tweets her, Facebook's her, and says,

you know, that first date, I was actually starving.

And she's like, why didn't you tell me?

We could have, I mean, we could have just gone to the store and just grabbed something cheap and I would have made sandwiches.

And

he said, no,

I wanted you to eat.

I wanted you to have something good.

Now, this is something that I think every guy has done on a date.

Every parent has even done this with your children.

Your children are out and you're doing something or

you are making food at home and you're giving them the best and

you're like, nope, I'm not hungry.

I don't need it.

You need it.

We don't look like we skip meals, but we do.

Right, yes.

This is a story today on BuzzFeed.

And my question is:

has chivalry died to the point to where this is something that people are reading, going, wow, look at that guy.

So notable.

Right.

That now BuzzFeed's actually writing national news stories about it.

Is that possible?

Is it possible that

we live in such a place now that the majority of the people, at least writing,

have never been in that position themselves?

I'm trying to figure why this is a story.

Because this is the way America has always been.

This is the way men have always been.

This is the way, this is what you're supposed to do.

This is not a news story.

I don't know if you have checked to find your name at Equifax to see that that breach that they had at Equifax, if that has affected you.

143 million Americans are affected by it.

The organization that determined credit card numbers

and to see if your credit was good, if they were watching over your credit,

they

had a hack.

143 million Americans, 200,000 consumers with their personal data, the social security number, and their credit card number was accessed.

So once it's out, first of all, if all of that information was stolen for 143 Americans, million Americans, that's half of us, that information was stolen.

It's out, and

there's no putting that genie back in the bottle.

If you haven't been hacked yet, if your identity hasn't been taken yet, it will.

It's only a matter of time.

Somebody's identity is stolen every two seconds.

And here's the difference.

LifeLock will go through and look at a wide range of identity threats.

They don't just look at your credit score like Equifax.

They actually look at everything.

And if there is a problem, there's somebody here in the U.S., a U.S.-based identity restoration specialist that's going to work to fix it.

Now, as we can see, nobody can prevent all identity theft, monitor all transactions at all businesses.

It's not possible.

But LifeLock can see more of the threats than anyone else.

They can see more of the threats to your identity, and they alert you and they step in to help fix it right away.

Go to lifelock.com or call 1-800-LIFELOC.

Use the promo code back.

That's lifelock.com.

Promo code BEC to get 10% off your membership.

LifeLock.com, promo code BECK.

Glenn back.

Glenn back.

I don't know if

you even remember in

September, September 26th, 1983, this is really at the height of the Cold War with the Soviets and the United States.

And we were, you know, calling Moscow the evil empire.

And I remember working in Washington, D.C.

and thinking after they shut down the Soviet the Soviets shut down the Korean airliner,

I'm in the vaporization zone.

I mean, we're going to be hit by a nuke.

On September 26, 1983, Stanislav Petrov.

was sitting in his office and he received a message that told him that five nuclear missiles had been launched from the United States and were on their way, and they had about 20 minutes to launch a counter-attack.

Everything on his screen said, launch now.

All he had to do was

pick up the phone and say, launch.

The sirens went off.

He said, I sat there for a few minutes, I was staring at this big

backlit red screen with the words launch on it.

He said,

everything I had showed me the United States was attacking us.

If I would have picked up the phone, we would have launched.

He said, we had been trained to obey,

not to think.

He said, but there was no rule saying how long we were allowed to think before we reported the strike.

He said, I knew that every second that was passing was taking up valuable time.

He said, but I couldn't move.

He said, I felt like I was sitting on a hot frying pan and I just couldn't move.

Luckily, luckily.

It didn't feel right to him to launch, and he didn't.

The world is probably vastly different because he waited.

It was a bug in the system, and he thought, This is a new system.

I bet this is there's something wrong here.

And he didn't give the order to launch and save the world.

The reason why I bring this story up is because he just passed away at 77.

Glenn back.

Love.

Courage.

Truth.

Glenn back.

So something happened that was, I thought, terrifying during President Trump's speech at the UN yesterday.

It wasn't anything he said, rather, it was the reaction to what he said.

The problem in Venezuela is not that socialism has been poorly implemented, but that socialism has been faithfully implemented.

So he waited for a second,

but they just stared at him.

It was like he was speaking an alien language.

Yesterday, he was waiting for the assembly to stand up or to applaud at that line, but it was so quiet you could have heard a pin drop.

And this is what's scary.

75%

of the UN probably believes, wholeheartedly, that socialism is the answer.

But when a state makes the decision in everything in your life, it's never good.

Venezuela was supposed to be the crown jewel.

It's the progressive paradise.

Everyone in Hollywood praised Venezuela.

Sean Penn, Oliver Stone, Naomi Campbell, Michael Moore, Bernie Sanders, all of them.

In fact, on Bernie Sanders' own website, he claims that if the American dream would be more apt to be realized in Venezuela than in the United States.

So why is it everybody loves Venezuela?

I think probably because

it was a country that had so much promise.

And then when they went and started to really fully embrace socialism entirely, none of us ever lived there.

What does the utopia actually look like?

Inflation nears now one, sorry, 800%.

Basic goods like toilet paper are severely rationed.

The nation with the largest oil reserves in the world has to

import oil and has oil and gasoline shortages.

What's really

so heartbreaking,

the people are struggling for food every single day.

At night, many citizens go on the prowl to hunt for rats, cats, or dogs.

This is what progressives across the world call a paradise.

Misery is the politics.

Ask Bernie Sanders.

The lack of food is a sus,

believe it or not, a sign of success.

You know, it's funny, sometimes American journalists talk about how bad a country is because people are lining up for food.

That's a good thing.

In other countries, people don't line up for food.

The rich get the food and the poor starve to death.

Ask a Venezuelan what it's like to deal with food rationing.

What is it like to stand in line for food, to get turned away, and then have to go dig through the trash in a last-ditch effort to feed your family.

Ask them what it's like to watch their leaders rip up the Constitution and seize even more power and more control.

Power and control, power and control.

In the end, I don't care if it's the Nazis or the Communists.

I don't care if it's the left or the right.

There is another way.

Individual freedom.

Power and control in the end.

That is what the progressive socialist left and right agenda is always all about.

It's Wednesday, September 20th.

You're listening to the Glenn Beck program.

We are changing as a people, and I just want to drop a pin in the map.

And I just want to say we're going over a cliff.

And as I learned from one of the righteous among the nations in Poland a few years ago, and I've shared many times,

the righteous didn't suddenly become righteous.

They just refused to go over the cliff with everyone else.

Don't go over the cliff.

There's a new survey out, and we'll talk about it later, about

how so many

college students are now saying freedom of speech is not that important.

It is.

Societies can go crazy quickly.

In 1923, there was a survey of parents of disabled children.

Would you agree definitely to a painless painless shortcut of your child's life after it's determined by experts that it is incurably stupid?

The results of this survey, this study,

were published in 1925.

73%

of

those adults who had children

said they were willing to have their children killed if they weren't told about it.

Well, what do you think happened in Germany after these kinds of polls started to come out?

And we're headed down the same road.

The stat comes from an amazing op-ed in the New York Times called The Nazis' First Victims Were Disabled.

It comes from Kenny Fries.

He's the author.

of not only that op-ed, but also the book In the Province of the Gods, and he joins us live from Germany.

So, Kenny,

first of all, you were born without bones in your legs?

Yep.

I was born in 1960, missing fibula in my legs, and spent the first four weeks of my life in an incubator.

People didn't know whether I would be able to walk.

Some thought I

shouldn't be allowed to live, but luckily my parents weren't amongst them.

So, yeah, and then

lived a pretty, you know, normal life.

I was the one of the first kids to be schooled in the mainstream school in Brooklyn, New York in the 1960s.

And I went to college.

And after college, I started to write about my disability experience,

which then much later in 2002 brought me to Japan.

I wanted to look at what another country, a culture very different from our own, looked at how they looked at disability.

So I went to Japan and the result was my new book, In the Province of the Gods.

And I learned some interesting things there, Glenn.

I mean,

I was very surprised when I went to Japan that I was treated more as a foreigner, which I was, than I was as a disabled person, whereas in my own country, in the United States, I was always looked at as different because I was disabled.

So I kind of felt like a foreigner in my own country.

And

I also found out a lot about how

central disability was to Japanese culture

historically at the same time where it was looked at as something shameful.

And you talk about what happened in Germany.

There was a story that happened in Yokohama, Japan in the

early 1970s, where

a mother had a child with

cerebral palsy, and she had numerous children.

And in true Japanese fashion, the husband was away a lot, and she was very overburdened by having the child, and she killed the child.

And though

she was, you know, charged with murder and found guilty, the outcry was so great that

people felt so sorry for her that she really got off without any

prison, you know, any

punishment

for killing her own child.

Kenny,

there was a story that came out in a couple of weeks ago, I think, about Reykjavik, how Reykjavik is becoming a country that will, and it was celebrated,

this first city or country now that will be

Down syndrome-free because they're doing early testing, and most people are aborting these children before they're born.

So, Reykjavik now is Down syndrome-free birth.

And I found that article really disturbing as

a dad of a child of special needs.

My daughter has cerebral palsy.

I wouldn't wish this for my child.

It's difficult.

However,

her life has real meaning and real purpose.

And I don't understand.

We're crossing some spooky lines.

Yep, we are.

And we can't forget that, you know, and as I pointed out in my New York Times article, that

the history

in our own country, in the United States, is not free of these things.

Back in 1927 in the Buck v.

Bell decision, Oliver Wendell Holmes said three generations of imbeciles was enough and it was constitutional to sterilize

disabled people.

So one thing, in our own culture, we used to have what they call the ugly laws where

you were prohibited from being in public if you were disabled, if you looked different, if you looked deformed.

And the last of those laws wasn't rescinded until 1974, Glenn

so you know it's what I because I have never heard I've never heard of the ugly law I mean I know about the human betterment society I know all about the the nastiness of of what we've done with eugenics I think we were in some ways we taught the Germans an awful lot

but when it comes to when it comes to the ugly laws was that one of those laws that just happened to still be on the books like you know you can't tie your horse up at the supermarket and it just wasn't removed or

they started being passed in the 1860s 1870s in various cities across this across the country um some states tried to pass them and they weren't as successful as as cities so they were basically local ordinances um that basically said you can't yeah yeah yeah there's also a case in germany that happened um a couple of decades ago called the frankfurt judgment um where

uh people were went on a holiday you know they booked a holiday and they encountered disabled people on their holiday and they asked to be reimbursed

by their travel agent

because they happened upon these disabled people.

And

they won in court.

Wow.

So

these feelings about disability are prevalent

in a lot of cultures.

I would say probably all cultures.

They just manifest themselves differently.

So can we have an adult conversation here, Kenny?

And this is not popular to do, and it will be taken

and chopped up, but we have to have real conversations because we're dealing with really scary stuff.

As we're looking at healthcare,

the argument is

about we just can't let people die, et cetera, et cetera.

But when a state is in control,

there has not been,

there's too many examples of it just comes down to the money.

And if you can't opt out of that, you know, and the state says, hey, you're not producing enough potatoes.

I got to give this money to somebody else who has a better quality of life and are going to actually put into the system.

And it becomes this horror show versus,

Well, these people can't afford any health care, and so they're just going to die, which is also awful.

I mean, how do you balance those two?

In my mind, I would rather have the chance to opt out or opt in than being stuck in a system where whatever they call and say, I'm sorry, you're done, you're done.

Well, I mean, you know, to go back to, you know, to Japan, I mean, you know, in Japan, I don't know if you know the movie Ballad of Nariyama, where they basically take this small villages in Japan a while back.

They would take their elderly when they were old to just go to the mountain and to basically die alone in the mountain,

which I don't think is a good thing to do either.

Like Logan's run, low-tech.

Yeah, but

the problem, Glenn, is that you...

In a society that disvalues disability, that misunderstands disability, that fears disability, you can't make a true voluntary choice.

If people say that if

somebody, you know,

when I get dementia, if I get Alzheimer's, I don't want to live like that.

It's not a dignified life.

But what are they reacting to?

They're reacting to a fear about the body changing.

And if the disability experience teaches anything, it says it is about the fact that that's what our life is.

Our life is change.

I talk about this in The Province of the Gods because Japan deals with the idea of change, which ultimate change is mortality, that we're all not going to be here after a while.

So it's this fear that I think gets in the way of making a decision of what one would want to do if one was severely disabled,

Alzheimer's, whatever it is.

And I don't think you can make a rational choice in a society that disvalues disability and disabled lives.

So Kenny.

What is dignity?

The only dignity you could have is to die?

I mean, is that dignified?

I don't think that's dignified.

What you're saying, Kenny, is

going counter-culture.

I mean, I agree with you, but it's really going counter-culture

now.

And I, as a libertarian, I don't want to tell you what you have to do,

but we are going into a culture that is wanting to make the decisions for people

and and based on quality of of life.

I don't know where to how do we change this?

How do we restart this human spark?

We look at

why we're afraid of difference and why in this particular case, why are we afraid of disability?

Why are we afraid of mortality?

So why are we?

Do you have a thought on it?

Why are we?

Well,

yeah, I have lots of thoughts on it.

I think we're afraid because

we're all afraid of death.

For example,

I was once on book tour with an anthology called Staring Back that I edited, and a very, very wonderful writer named Susan Despound, who lives in Chicago, was sitting at breakfast minding her own business, and a woman just came over to her and said, I'm so glad you're here.

And Susan looked at her and said like, what?

I'm eating breakfast.

What do you mean I'm so glad I'm here?

And the woman said to her, I'm so glad I'm not you.

Because Susan has a disability.

Yeah.

And this woman had the need to go over and actually say that to Susan.

It wasn't like, you know, she was in conversation with her.

Susan was just minding her own business.

And I think that says, you know, it's the, what's the, I'm Jewish, I'm not Christian.

So what if I say, if I, if I miss it, if I miss up the phrase, therefore the grace of God go on.

Yeah.

If If you look, I mean, throughout history, disability has been looked at through the religious moral model where the disabled person is looked at as either very all totally good, a saint, or evil, a devil.

And then we move to the medical model where the only way to deal with disability is to basically kill it or cure it.

When if you really look at it, the only way disability is really defined by the society that you're in, by the barriers

that are put in your way.

It's really the society that disables people, not the impairment itself in most cases.

I mean, if you ask anybody, you know, what's more difficult being disabled or dealing with the barriers put in your way, they're going to say it's the barriers.

So, I mean, that's, you know,

that's the dilemma we're in.

I hope that we get a chance to speak again.

I thank you so much for your time, but I'd love to have you in and

to have this continuing conversation with you.

It's one I think we desperately need as a society.

Thanks.

It's not just history, too.

If you look at the op-ed from Kenny Freese, he quotes Peter Singer, the chair of ethics at Princeton, saying this, in 2015, I don't want my health insurance premiums to be higher so that infants who can experience zero quality of life have expensive treatments.

Amazing.

His book,

by the way, at World of Stew, you can get the link to the book and his op-ed of the New York Times.

Liberty Safe is not only making great safes, but they make it easy to own one.

Now at LibertySafe.com, you can buy a Liberty Safe at a great price and receive 12 months interest-free payments with zero down and zero APR.

They even offer a Liberty Safe for as low as $20 a month.

I've been working with Liberty Now for seven years, and I have not seen them do deals like this.

And I will tell you, there's nothing like the peace of mind that you get when you have a Liberty Safe.

Do what I did.

Had your safe installed right now in your home with 12 payments interest-free,

12 months of payments interest-free, and as low as $20 a month on proved credit.

So go there now.

It's Liberty Safe.

They're the home of the best-built safes on the planet.

It's LibertySafe.com.

Glenn back.

Glenn back.

You know,

I just have to tell you, I'm so deeply offended, what a surprise, by something that Keith Ellison said

about DACA.

Listen to this.

So this is not someone else's fight.

This is all of our fight.

But some people are in the bullseye, and others of us are not exactly the target.

Therefore, it is our responsibility to stand up, fight, and do the right thing.

And I'm going to tell you right now.

I'm one of them people who believes we should give our neighbors sanctuary.

And if you ask yourself, what would I do if I was a Gentile in 1941, if my Jewish neighbors were under attack

by the Nazis, would I give them sanctuary?

You might be about to find out what you would do.

Will you pass that moral test or will you fail it?

So I just want to show you that Keith Ellison has compared our government, our workers, our president, and everyone else directly to the Nazis.

And beyond that, he has said that those who came here illegally, who we're not putting in gas chambers, we want to send them back home, are akin to the Jews that died in gas chambers.

This is the Glenn Beck program.

Thank you so much for listening today.

We have a lot going on.

There is a hurricane that is now wiping off the face of the earth.

They say that it's going to be uninhabitable for weeks, if not months.

Puerto Rico, we'll give you the update on that.

We had an earthquake yesterday in

Mexico City.

We'll give you details on how you can help

and wars, rumors of wars.

September 23rd, there's a lot of people that believe that this is talked about in the book of Revelation.

If we have a chance to talk about that, just so you can pack your bags or not,

because September 23rd is

Saturday, and there are a lot of people that are believing, I'm not one of them, but there are a lot of people believing that that is in the book of Revelation, and this is the day of rapture.

What a great day to subscribe to the Belaise because you're probably not going to have to make the payment

for the second month.

You get all of it for free, and then you're gone.

Yeah, because you can get that.

I think there's some sort of intro period.

We're like, where's this deadbeat that promised us the $9.99 a month?

He just left his clothes there on his desk, in his chair, in his office.

All right.

So we have that coming up in a minute.

So

the podcast, How I Built This, is one of my favorites.

Yeah.

And it just, they do interviews with all these people who started these amazing businesses and how they did it.

And the stories are really interesting if you love how these things happen.

There's one

interesting one lately with Jen Hyman.

She's the founder of Rent the Runway.

Did you know Rent the Runway, Glenn?

I have three daughters and a wife.

I'm very well aware of Rent the Runway.

Which I think is actually brilliant.

It's a brilliant idea.

Brilliant idea.

Exactly.

That's an interesting,

it's interesting that you use that because we're going to come back to that, the wording you just used there.

This is Jen Hyman talking about how she was coming up and very early on how she's developing the idea for this business.

Listen.

I had this thesis that we had entered the experience economy and people were getting married later and starting to value experiences like travel over owning things.

And so I had an idea at the time to launch the first honeymoon registry in the world where couples could register for their honeymoons and their friends and family could contribute by, you know, paying for scuba diving or paying for a massage or a hotel night as opposed to buying them pots and pans.

So

as a 22-year-old, I

was really passionate about this idea.

I emailed the president of Starwood and I pitched him on this idea to start a wedding business.

Now, again, that's a brilliant thought, right?

She's 22 years old and she's thinking of the world that way.

Love it.

Really smart.

Now she comes up with Rent the Runway, which if you don't know, she's going to explain kind of what it is here.

It is brilliant.

It is a brilliant idea.

And it also says, and the way she explains this says something so profound about where we are as a society.

Listen.

As her responsible older sister, I was remarking how she should probably wear one of the dresses in her closet again, as opposed to being in credit card debt.

And her response to me was,

you know, everything in my closet is dead to me.

I've been photographed in it.

The photographs are up on Facebook and I need something new.

Oh my gosh.

And, you know, Becky was a 25-year-old, like normal girl who lived in New York.

She wasn't a celebrity, but she was talking about being photographed and not being able to wear something again.

And

it was a light bulb moment for me because I realized I was having a conversation with my sister about the experience of wearing an amazing dress, of walking into a party, feeling self-confident and feeling beautiful.

And that's what she cared about.

And she didn't care about the actual ownership of the items in her closet.

The other thing she cared about was the photograph photograph that would exist after the party that she could post on Facebook and kind of share with everyone she knew how awesome she felt and how confident she felt at that wedding.

I mean, okay, so she is, so here's another reason.

This is why she's successful.

If my sister would have said that to me, all I would have thought, I wouldn't have thought of a business idea.

I would have thought, what the hell is wrong with you?

Exactly.

What is wrong with you?

What is, I would have gone into, well, we're going into an experience economy.

I would have gone to, we are doomed as a people.

Exactly.

That's why she's a success, right?

Right.

She's finding a way.

As we're going to hell, she's like, wait, we can make money on this.

Yeah,

it's exactly right.

So she, again, you use the word brilliant.

I think that's completely applicable here.

This is, these are, these are genius thoughts.

If I could ever think like this in these moments.

Rent the Runway is truly brilliant.

And if you don't know the business model, essentially she solved the problem her sister had by you're able to now rent these ridiculously expensive dresses for one night, and then you send them back.

Right.

And they'll send them to you.

They send you in two different sizes.

So you can make sure the one fits perfectly.

Then you send both of them back.

You have the night with the glamorous thing that, you know, Jennifer Andrews.

And they're literally, you know, they can be up to like $5,000 dresses.

Yeah.

All the best designers.

Right.

And you're renting them instead of buying it once.

And then never, ever wearing it again.

Yeah.

It's so stupid.

It's an amazing, it's a a great idea, right?

Also, to show you how successful they are, they are now the largest dry cleaner in America.

Oh, my gosh.

That's how successful this business is.

But she goes into a conversation later on about

sexual harassment and sexual discrimination against women.

She's a female business owner.

Obviously, this is something that's going to come up, right?

In an interview.

And it was really interesting.

Is it?

I think it is, right?

In today's day and age, I think it is.

It wouldn't be in mine either.

But I mean, that's where this interview interview

interview went.

And she talked about one incident, which was really legitimate, standard, what you'd think about when you thought of sexual harassment towards women.

And she had a real concrete example of that.

But she went further than that one and talked about a more subtle form of it.

And

I thought this was a really interesting lesson about business today and how difficult it's got to be to navigate.

Listen.

The second form of

sexual

harassment slash

gender discrimination is way more subtle and it's way more difficult to prove.

But for instance, overall, I have seen male founders receive, you know, sometimes more mentorship or more

chances to be successful.

They get more

strikes against them before their investors kind of pull the plugs.

And in a lot of cases, women are only given, you know, it's a one strike or you're out as the CEO and founder.

So, hang on, may I just say,

do you hear conservatives bitching about that?

Because that's a conservative's life.

I can't tell you how I was introduced to people, you know, even just this last weekend compared to how what the options were for everyone else.

Because I was a conservative in a room full of liberals because I think differently, not because of my gender.

This happens.

And you can either let it crush you or you can get up off your ass and move on.

Now, again, I thought it was an interesting thing of less opportunity at mentorship.

Just think about that for a second.

She's saying that like, you know, a male is going to look at another male and relate to them and bring them along and give them opportunities.

Now, she tries to illustrate what she means by these subtle forms of a sexual harassment.

Listen.

There was a time early in my career where an investment firm, you know, said to me oh Jen you know you should really meet these other entrepreneurs they're around your your own age they're brilliant you could learn a lot from them they're building incredible companies they're gonna change the world now all of those entrepreneurs were men and they were kind of prefaced as being geniuses brilliant etc

and

This same firm never introduced me in that same way to those same entrepreneurs, even though we were at similar tenure and similar stages in our company.

The irony is a lot of those guys, their businesses, you know, aren't around anymore.

Yeah.

And, you know, I'm the one who's still chugging.

Wait, is that, but wait, is that, is that sexual discrimination or is that you're used to something?

I'm working with somebody day to day.

And I say, oh my gosh, you have to meet all of these brilliant people that I know over here.

I mean, I'm working with you.

Is that discrimination or is that just I'm just used to you and I want to introduce you to these brilliant people that will help you?

And I'm sorry I didn't go out and say I have this really brilliant people.

I'm trying to help you.

Yeah.

I mean, another way of describing a business person saying to one up-and-coming business person, hey, here's a bunch of geniuses you should talk to, is mentorship.

The thing she's saying she doesn't get, and it's a subtle form of sexual harassment, is what that business owner was trying to do.

He was trying to mentor her and bring her into a group of other smart people.

And what he gets for that is later on, years later, in an interview, his efforts are described as sexual harassment.

And you wonder why,

partially, women might get fewer opportunities is because male business owners are terrified of what just happened there.

You know what?

It's not just, it's not just that.

It's not just women.

It is, it's across the spectrum.

And it's why we don't talk to each other.

And quite honestly,

I think, you know, the hierarchy of needs, you know, Maslov's hierarchy of needs.

I think that's been turned upside down, but

there's a different way to look at it.

There's another.

triangle that America has invented and that is sitting on top of that triangle.

And I'm going to share that on tomorrow's broadcast.

When it comes comes to your mortgage, buying or refinancing, you need people that take away the stress in your life and not add any more.

That's why there's American Financing.

The salary-based mortgage consultants at American Financing are dedicated to making sure that you make a smart mortgage decision that aligns with your goals and

your finances.

Banks are selling you something.

They're trying to get you to buy something.

You know, you go into a car dealership, you know that they're motivated to sell that car because they win.

American Financing is not motivated to sell you a certain car or a certain mortgage.

They have no skin in that game.

The skin in the game is that you're doing business with them and they're going to find the right one because they know if they treat you right this time and get you the right mortgage the next time or the time you want to refinance.

or the next time you want to buy a house or the next time a friend says buy a house.

If they treat you right and give you the best deal, that's how they win.

American Financing is now doing a reverse mortgages, which are a good way to increase your monthly cash flow with no mortgage payment while still retaining ownership for your home, but you need the information on to find out if it's right for you.

I want you to call their number 800-906-2440.

That's 1-800-906-2440 or online at AmericanFinancing.net.

American Financing Corporation, NMLS 1-82334, www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org.

Glenn Back

Glenn Back.

Jonathan Dunn, who is

over in Ireland and a listener of this program and has been kind of writing and doing some podcasts with us over the years, happens to be visiting here in the United States and giving giving some speeches and talks around the United States.

Happens to be in our studio today.

Hi, Jonathan.

How are you?

How are you doing, sir?

How are you?

I'm good.

So

first of all,

you have tried to come over and work in the United States.

And which country doesn't want you?

Is it us or is it

Ireland just doesn't want to let you go?

No, I don't meet the visa requirements to get over here.

So I don't meet the educational or the work requirements to get a work visa to come over here to the great state of Texas in America but it is what it is so my dream is dead but my service starts now yeah so here's your dream's not dead it's just on hold it's just on hold it feels dead does it yes you've wanted you because you were a weird kid you've always loved the United States yes and and and that's weird over there is it not oh absolutely um it's so picture yourself as a seven or eight-year-old boy um in Ireland dull boring weather boring climate climate, just seeing the status quo.

And then you get to transport and go over to Clearwater, Florida.

Warm weather, different climate, beautiful women, great food, great sports.

I was in love from day one.

It's a love affair that hasn't ended.

And it's not just because of the beaches and everything else.

You've actually become a fan of the founders.

Absolutely.

So I fell in love with the country, and that's what started the love affair.

But then as I learned more about your history, I've become absolutely fascinated with the idea of America.

And it's an an idea that the world needs to hear.

And you are

you're I sense this frustration in you in some way

that you have a friend in America that is beating itself up and you're like, what the hell's wrong with you?

Well, it's beating itself up because you're listening to the media and the politicians tell you you suck.

And it's not the case.

So as an Irishman, I have one thing in common with a famous Frenchman.

I don't have many things in common with France, but I share the sentiment of Alexis de Tocqueville.

America is great because Americans are good.

And that's a slam on the rest of the world because the difference about America compared to the world is there are many.

There are many.

You're the exact opposite.

But one of the things is you're about the individual.

So I tell people, when I think of Great Britain, I think of the Queen.

When you think of Iran right now, you think of the Ayatollah.

When you think of North Korea, you think of King Jong-un.

When I think of America, I always think of your people.

And your people have been over here watching and hearing the stories of Houston.

Total devastation.

Yet your people have stood up.

Your people have sacrificed.

Do you think the people

of Ireland wouldn't have done that?

They would have done helped.

They might have helped some points.

But I've heard stories.

I heard and met a man, a wonderful gentleman, and he shared a story of how he hasn't had light and heat in his house for two weeks.

So he hasn't got money.

But yet he has money to put gasoline into drums to bring down to Houston.

Irish people would help people if they had the money spare.

But in Ireland and in Europe, if the choice is I eat or you eat, that's not an equation that you want to hear the answer to.

America time and time again helps each other factually.

You go look at who donates the most time and money.

Factually, America is right there at the top.

It's behind Miramar, which is not really, shouldn't even be counted.

But time and time again, you shared the story earlier on about the dating.

That's the culture.

You choose to help other people.

Your wonderful nation is so wonderful.

Not because of a president, not because of a Congress, not even true to the Constitution.

It's because because of your people.

So let me return the favor.

I read a book about Ireland this week, this summer.

It's How the Irish Saved the Western Civilization.

Have you ever read that?

It's fascinating.

One of the things that I learned is

about the truth on St.

Patrick

and driving the snakes, which didn't happen.

We love our mitzvah.

Before you go home tomorrow, maybe you can come back tomorrow.

I want to ask you the question that I found out out about St.

Patrick.

It is a completely different story, and the world needs to hear that story, not the one that we all go out and just drink our faces off for.

Back in just a second.

Glenn, back.

So, if you're traveling for business a lot, you know that it's not fun.

It's not necessarily a big joy.

There's a lot of things that can happen.

Sometimes people's bare feet come in between your seats and they're sitting on your armrests.

I've seen pictures of it, people.

It's terrible.

Upside.com can make this a lot better.

Look, you're going to have to do business travel.

Why not, number one, save a bunch of money?

Number two, get a free Amazon gift card when you book your travel that you can spend on whatever you want.

For For example, nose plugs because there's bare feet on the armrest near you.

Also, they have these upside navigators that go above and beyond for business travels.

We're talking six-star service, they are accessible anytime 24/7 by voice, chat, email, or message on the upside app, and they'll even reach out to you when they can help.

I'm going to start your six-star treatment right now.

Go to upside.com, use the code BECK, and you're going to get a $100 minimum gift card from Amazon.com.

That's code BEC for $100 minimum gift card, upside.com.

Upside.com, minimum purchase required.

See site for complete details.

Love.

Courage.

Truth.

Glenn Back.

What is the point of diversity?

Seriously.

I mean, diversity for diversity's sake is absolutely meaningless.

For college campuses, the educational system here in America.

Let me rephrase that.

America's educational industry.

Diversity is very meaningful.

Apparently, diversity at American elite colleges, however, is in jeopardy.

According to the New York Times, 15% of American 18-year-olds were black and 22% Hispanic in 2015.

Yet college freshmen at elite colleges were only 6% black and 13%

Hispanic.

And those numbers were lower than they were in 1980.

Now, this is a crisis for progressives.

The New York Times say these colleges need to go above and beyond affirmative action and fix this problem.

We need more than affirmative action.

A Georgetown law professor says elite colleges will only reflect America's overall diversity when colleges blow up the system of admissions.

They even propose that colleges stop using standardized test scores.

I mean, we can't test people.

Do you want these people graduating from colleges like this building airplanes that you're you're going to fly in?

Because I don't.

I like a standard.

Can I see your test scores, please?

We have to stop with a diversity hand-wringing.

Affirmative action is inherently unfair.

And perhaps it started with good intentions.

But like most progressive ideas, it's imploded.

How about an emission system that is simply merit-based?

I don't care about the color of your skin.

I don't care.

I don't care what you you call yourself.

I don't care what gender you, I don't care if you think you're a space alien.

What have you been doing?

Show me your work.

That's it.

Is it too much to ask?

Maybe it's also time to look at how much we're paying for an education.

College is now insanely expensive.

Insanely.

Even though our elite colleges have endowments that are worth billions of dollars, all tax exempt, tuition is more expensive than ever and goes up about 41% in the last few years.

Why?

Because college is big business, and progressivism and affirmative action are all part of the game.

It's Wednesday, September 20th.

You're listening to the Glenn Glenn Beck program.

So, how good do we have it here in America?

Let me just have you answer this question.

Have you ever been so destitute that you actually thought, I wonder how much they'd give me for my kidney?

I can guarantee you that it has been thought of in many places around the world, but not here in America.

I mean, going to a loan shark selling one of your organs on the black market for quick cash.

How much are your organs worth?

How much could you sell your eyes for if you were forced to sell them?

How much could your family get for your heart?

These organs are actually worth a lot more than you thought.

A kidney can fetch $200,000 on the black market.

By the way, 75% of all black market sales, kidneys.

Old-time bestseller, this kidney's got to go.

Corneas,

$24,400.

The heart is only worth $119,000.

Bone marrow, you can sell your bone marrow, $23,000 per gram.

I mean,

I don't know how much marrow is in there, but I might have it.

23,000 a gram, I might have some marrow I could spare from time to time.

The reason why I bring this up is because, hey, I mean, it's insane that there is a price list for organs.

But there's also a problem with organ sales, and especially it's happening in the Middle East.

We were going to announce something with Operation OUR this week, but because they are having some really dicey elections going on right now, and we have to see how the dust settles, they have a referendum going on.

We have to see how the dust settles.

We're putting that on pause for a little while, but we are ready to do something truly remarkable.

Truly remarkable.

But because of what I've I've been working on, I happen to know about the organ sales that are going on.

Did you see the report yesterday, Stu, on the number of slaves that are out now?

Yeah, I mean, what is it?

40.

40.3 million.

40.3 million slaves.

And that's more than the entire history of the old school slave trade that we think was so.

So

this weekend, I was up at the Nantucket Project, and I said, I was talking about slavery.

And I said there are more slavery, more slaves than the entire Western slave trade, the 400 years of Western slave trade alive today

combined.

All of them combined.

400 years, there's

more people alive today in chains than that.

That's an incredible set.

And to back you on that, when you first said it, I was like, oh, geez, where did I get that?

I mean, I didn't believe you.

And so I went and looked it up, and it is actually legitimately a true statistic.

And you're a stat boy, so I know you would have looked it up.

But that's what my daughter said, because she was sitting in the crowd, and she said, nobody believed you on that stat, Dan.

I didn't believe it either.

Yeah.

She said,

you know, people were like, yeah, that can't be true.

And it is true.

And think of that.

What are we doing right now?

We are talking about pulling down

statues.

Because they were for slavery.

And some of them were saying that

the founders were bad because they were silent on slavery, even though most of them weren't.

They were silent on slavery.

And the argument is, wait a minute, you can't judge them 250 years ago.

That slavery was a normal thing back then.

So they had to be wildly forward thinking to be against it.

Okay.

How about today?

We're all clearly against it, right?

We all know slavery is wrong.

Do you know how ISIS is now funding itself?

Because we bombed the direct route of the oil trade.

Do you know one of the main ways they are funding ISIS right now?

The slave trade, and even worse,

kidneys.

They are kidnapping children.

And they are cutting the kidneys and the hearts out of them.

And they are selling them on the black market.

Where are the abolitionists today?

Seriously, where are the abolitionists today?

This is the hardest.

This is the hardest thing.

I watched

a documentary last night, and I'm not recommending that you watch it

because it's called I Am Jane Doe, and it's really,

it's powerful.

It is powerful.

But it's all about the slave trade, and

it's all about America today, and how kids in America are being kidnapped and they are being used in the sex industry against their will.

They are being drugged and beaten and they're actually, believe it or not, the village voice

was the main perpetrator of the sales for this.

Okay, called their back page.

Oh, they were placing ads for

and that's still it's still not taken care of.

It's still not shut down.

And it is, it's remarkable what is going on.

And I thought to myself, I'm watching this.

I'm thinking, nobody's watching this movie.

Nobody is watching this movie because it's too horrific.

And that is the problem that our founders had back 200 and some years ago when

they were upset about it and they wanted to stop it.

Benjamin Franklin was one of the biggest abolitionists, if not the biggest abolitionists of the founding

era.

And

he couldn't get people to listen

because what happened?

It's not affecting me.

It can't be that bad of a problem because most people didn't have slaves.

It can't be that much of a problem.

Well, they did something to deserve it.

That's what we think.

But what do they think?

Well, they're not really people like us.

Anything that'll keep you blind.

And so, how do you get that story out?

And we are facing exactly the same issue on trying to get that story out as our founders did at the founding of our country.

The same issue that Abraham Lincoln did.

We have at Mercury One

a letter written by Abraham Lincoln as he is trying to figure out

How do I explain to people that slavery is the wrong?

Now think of that.

How do I explain to people that slavery is wrong?

We now know, we know it's wrong,

and yet we can't bring ourselves to look at it because it is so horrifically ugly.

But I want you to know,

if we really want to change things, not for us, but for our children and grandchildren, we cannot miss this opportunity to be an abolitionist now because they're going to look back and say, Well, your parents and your grandparents and your great-great-grandparents, they were putting up with this.

Where were they then?

Well, they were trying.

Don't be considered an abolitionist in today's world.

Be considered an abolitionist.

Take a strong stand on something that we know

is clearly wrong, and what you do when you stand up against it is clearly right.

Picture three empty boats floating in a harbor, pointed out to sea.

with 60 kids lined up on the shore waiting to board.

One by one, the kids step down into the boats.

One little girl wears a Hello Kitty pajama top and the rest of the kids they seem to be dressed for a party.

Thousands of people passing by see the kids this morning as they make their way through the town but nobody really thought to ask what's happening with all these kids and what party are they going to.

Nobody saw the signs.

Usually the simple act of herding kids through town and unloading them onto a tour boat isn't that impressive.

But if you have the eyes to see, today's journey by boat is a step back in time, loaded with meaning.

These children, just like slaves of the past, have been forced to wear a happy face by their captors, five traffickers, and a cocaine dealer, who stood about 20 yards away, laughing at the group of rich Americans.

The scene lacks whips and shackles of the historic African coast, but make no mistake, this is a slave boat.

The kids here are bought and sold just like they were in the past, a simple commodity.

Once the kids strapped on their little life vest and sat down in the boats, their captains were instructed by the traffickers to launch.

The traffickers and their American buyers follow by speedboat.

And as it goes, the traffickers, perhaps in a a hurry to get their cash, fail to notice the signs of mutiny all around them.

What were those signs?

Four armed Colombian officials dressed as boat captains.

Five Americans snapping cell phone pictures and taking videos like drunk tourists.

A camera-bearing drone circling just a few hundred yards overhead.

And just out of view, three Colombian Navy boats awaiting the signal.

This is Operation Underground Railroad.

But the more poignant signs of mutiny were coming from the kids themselves.

As one slave boat launched, an older girl on board huddled the kids together and prayed, God bring us home safe.

On the second boat, a different girl wore a cut-off t-shirt with an image of Jesus printed on the front.

A Hail Mary to any man, woman, or angel with a conscience and courage.

And today,

praise God, men and angels were listening.

Within 30 minutes of disembarking onto the private island where the kids were preparing to meet their temporary masters, While they waited in one section of the house, on the other side, a deal was being made, cash was being exchanged, and a signal was being given.

Colombian Navy captains in raid gear drove their boats right onto the sand and stormed the beach.

40 kids emancipated.

The rehabilitation and recovery experts were also there trying to help the kids start that long journey to true freedom.

But watching their captors march away in handcuffs at gunpoint was a pretty good start.

As the American undercover operators walked back towards the boats, they heard what sounded like laughter at first.

Then, they realized the laughter had turned to cheers, as if to say,

free at last, free at last.

Thank God Almighty, I'm free at last.

Since first announcing Operation Underground Railroad on the Blaze, you have funded fast, effective missions.

Over 614 trafficking survivors have been rescued and 260 monsters are behind bars.

Slavery must stop now.

If you haven't yet, become an abolitionist and join us at ourrescue.org.

You know how much one home break-in would cost you?

Somebody breaks into your house.

The average is $2,000, and that's what the FBI says the average property loss is just after one burglary.

It could be more.

That's somebody coming in and just grabbing and leaving.

It's important that you protect your home, and you can protect it with SimplySafe home security.

SimplySafe protects every door and every window in your home.

You even get motion sensors and entry sensors.

And their system is completely wireless, so you can set it up for yourself you don't have to drill any holes there's nobody coming into your house and trying to upsell you or anything else and you have the professional alarm monitoring around the clock ready to send the police that is 15 bucks a month one five fifteen bucks a month with simply safe you are sure that your home and your things and your children are protected go to simply safebeck.com get a special 10% discount when you order today or if you want the security system right away visit your local best buy you'll have your home protected by tonight.

It's empowering you to protect yourself and your home.

SimplySafeBack.com.

10% off, simplysafeback.com.

Glenn back.

Glenn back.

Welcome to the program.

So glad that you're here.

Hey,

there's a couple of things.

We have to keep in our prayers.

the people in Puerto Rico.

They are

being devastated right now.

The category 4, it has washed up on shore.

It started earlier today.

The president has declared that is a disaster area.

They say that it will be uninhabitable, uninhabitable

for

weeks, if not months.

Puerto Rico is, I mean, is already on the verge of absolute collapse.

So let's keep them in mind.

Also,

the last number I heard, and there's conflicting numbers, but the last number I heard was 240 people have been killed in the earthquake in Mexico.

You know, that's going a lot higher, a lot higher.

I mean, that's just that you, I mean, almost immediately they had video of buildings collapsing completely.

Two schools collapsed.

I just hope you know some of them got out, but they were talking about dozens and dozens and dozens of children that they know are missing, whether they're alive in the rubble or who knows.

Is there an aftershock coming?

I mean, you know, they had an 8.1 on the southern border of Mexico, what, two weeks ago, now a 7.1.

I believe in 1985,

that was

what was that, was that an 80%?

And that killed, it was, ironically,

the 35th anniversary yesterday of the Mexico City earthquake that caused 10,000 people to die.

And a lot of people had already gone to memorial services to remember their loved ones that had died 35 years later, I mean, earlier.

And then later in the afternoon, they're hit with a 7.1.

It's moments, it's seriously like this that you take a moment and thank God for capitalism because the capitalism we've had and our system has brought us enough freedom to make these disasters when they do hit us much less damaging.

Oh my gosh.

Well, look at the difference between Mexico City in 85 and now.

Glenn, back.

You're listening to the Glenn Bennet program.

Pat Gray from Pat Gray Unchained on the Blaze Radio Network that

is on your name.

I had all of it.

And now it's been unned.

All of it's been unned.

It's all been unned?

Yes.

So,

Pat, what is on your mind today?

Well, I think we're going in the right direction in this country.

And I think you have to agree when an entire Illinois football team of players eight years old and younger takes a knee rather than stand for the national anthem, you know that

it's going swimmingly.

Where, where, where, where, where, where, where did this happen?

Illinois.

Illinois.

And they were eight years old and below?

Yes.

Yeah, and they took a knee.

Seven and eight-year-olds.

The coach says, one of the kids asked me, did I see them protesting and riding in St.

Louis?

The coach said, I said, yes.

And do you know why they're doing it?

Player answered, because black people are getting killed and nobody's going to jail.

I mean, thank you for knowing that.

Thank you for understanding that all black people are being killed and the people who kill them just then

they don't, nothing happens to them.

That's not true.

In fact, in some cases, they're given awards.

No, it's not really true at all.

But there's the perception.

So they, he thought it was a great teaching moment.

And so they talked about Colin Kaepernick, which is interesting because Colin Kempernick doesn't know why Colin Kaepernick is doing what he's doing.

That's very true.

So he circled up the team.

They talked about it.

And they said, well, can we do that?

He said, sure, yeah, you know, as long as you know why you're doing it, I don't have a problem with it.

With that, the whole team of all 25 players turned their back on the flag

and took a knee.

Decide to have a vigorous conversation with the coach.

Here's the coach's quote kind of along those lines.

As long as I have the support of my parents and team, And I'm covered by the First Amendment to peacefully protest and assemble, I'm fine with this.

So apparently

nobody complained.

I mean, can you imagine, you imagine you're taking your kid to

a game and you're sitting there in stands and here comes the Star Spangled Banner and all of a sudden you see your kid take a knee.

I'd go out of my mind.

I would go out on the field.

I'd pull him out of the game immediately.

I would too.

I would go get my kid and I would.

I would walk out on the field during the national anthem, and I would go get my kid, and I would pull him up on his feet

and say, after it was over, we're leaving.

And then we would get into the car and then I would have a discussion later with the coach.

The hell are you doing?

What right do you think you have to teach my children

about this country and what we should be doing?

Do you think my

six-year-old really had an understanding on the ins and outs of what's happening in St.

Louis?

You really think so?

And is a little league football game the proper forum for that kind of nonsense?

It's not.

You know, a guy called into the show yesterday, and I don't even remember what we were talking about at the time, but he said, Pat, you know, I appreciate what you're trying to do, but it's too late.

Just don't worry about it.

It's too late for this country.

And I said, you know, I just can't go there with you.

I can't.

No,

I'm not going to adopt that defeatist attitude by the end of the show i'd adopted that defeatist attitude he's right you know what i throw my hands up it's too late

defeated during the show got defeated during the show with one

stupid story after another it's pretty hard to believe when you got this coach saying what i teach my kids is love integrity honesty fairness respect boundaries And of course, hatred for America.

I don't correct any of their misperceptions about what's going on in this country.

As long as we're not going to teach our children, if we don't teach our children, we are done.

It is too late.

We've got to get a grip on this.

And if you don't homeschool your kids, you've got to at least supplement

what they're hearing when they get home.

How?

Have to.

How?

Sitting around the dinner table and discussing what you learned that day and then correcting the misperceptions, talking about the news that comes on TV.

Hey, when your kids say, I saw what happened in St.

Louis, what's going on there?

And you can give them the perspective that there are many people who think that all cops are racist.

They're not.

Sometimes they make terrible mistakes.

Sometimes they are racist.

Sometimes they are racist.

And sometimes they might be racist.

But in the vast majority of cases, they're not.

And the vast majority of these cops have been exonerated from any wrongdoing.

And I know people don't like that and they don't like to hear it, but there's also people who are doing hands-up, don't shoot when that never happened in Ferguson.

Yeah.

I mean, plus, talking to a six-year-old, you're not even in the position to explain racism in proper terms.

They can't even, just the gen, I mean, that's why they had the star-bellied sneaches from Dr.

Seuss.

Like, he's trying to explain racism, and he's got to put stars on the belly of sneeches to explain that concept.

This is, you're saying the concept of racism, then you're trying to dissect, you know, national events and misleading these kids in massive ways.

It is so clear now that you have small children.

Star-bellied sneaches.

There's no way 10 years ago you could have made a reference to star-bellied snitches you're exactly right you're exactly right so true you would have mocked us yeah that's true

so now we're sitting here going uh-huh yeah wait until they become teenagers

and you're praying for the star-bellied sneeches to come and kill you

i don't think they were violent creatures no they were they were they were yeah uh Zeus he covered all that up yeah he covered it all up yeah there was a horrible bloodbath yeah wait I thought it was they all came together and understood that it's okay if one has a star on their belly and one does not.

It doesn't matter.

Those are just differences and we can all go together.

Hands up, don't sneach.

That was completely erased.

And then they were all decapitated.

Yeah.

And it turns into like a really like a Hutu and Tootsie situation where they all start killing each other.

Millions dead.

Millions dead.

I'm glad I didn't get to that chapter.

In fact, the Hutu and Tsis actually follow the playbook of star-bellied sneaches.

Really?

Yeah.

I just want you to listen to that.

That's where that came from.

I just want you to listen to that.

Imagine that you had no idea who Dr.

Seuss was,

but you did know who the Hutus and the Sneeches or the Hutus and the Tootsies were.

You would be worried right now about the star-bellied.

That's true.

They kind of sound a little scary.

I would be infuriated by that, though.

Because, I mean, I just had a meeting, speaking of having little kids, I had a

basketball coach meeting last night where I had to go and learn how to not, I guess, I think that I would say the main thrust of the meeting was don't punch the kids in the face if they miss a shot.

Like, they just want to make sure that you're not the crazy parent who's going to go nuts on the sidelines and become this competitive Pat Riley.

So, wait, wait, so you're going to be coaching?

Yes.

I would be coaching the basketball.

And again, like it's, I mean, I already do the baseball thing and we're starting the basketball thing, but that's, I would say, the thrust of the meeting is not necessarily like anything about the coaching.

It's about like, hey, don't be a lunatic parent who thinks this is the final four.

It's not.

Okay.

However,

I remember going through this with my daughter

when she was young at

in Connecticut at a t-ball game, and

they didn't give that

speech to the parents.

And the parents were arguing.

At a t-ball game, the t-ball game.

Where they probably didn't even keep score.

No, they did.

They did.

Everyone continued to to hit the T-ball.

Everyone was not, you were not allowed to grab the ball and tag them out.

So everyone hit the ball, ran around.

Everyone got home.

It was tied eight to eight.

It was a home run every time.

It was a home run every time, tied eight to eight.

And there were parents that actually were arguing about it.

And I turned around and went, It's going to be eight to eight.

That is true.

Because I did the baseball thing last year, and you start just counting in your head, at least, the outs.

Because every once in a while, the ball gets close enough to the base, and the kid actually picks it up or throws it somewhat near the other kid, and the guy running to first base trips, and you get an out, and it's like basically winning the World Series.

Oh,

the stand's empty.

Yeah.

They tear down the fencing.

Yeah, it's a big moment.

Gatorade baths come.

Right.

But I mean, I think honestly, there is no circumstance that I can imagine losing my mind as a parent for a little league kid,

except the one you just described, Pat.

I would lose my

mind on that.

Not on the kid, obviously,

but I mean

afterwards.

And I wouldn't lose my mind on the kid, but there would be a harsh talking to on that one.

You know what?

I don't think I would take it out on my child.

There would be a

there would be a discussion on

I understand,

I understand you thought you were doing good,

but that's a really complex thing.

I mean, if you come down on your kids when they think they're doing good and they've been told by an adult that they're doing good, they're going to have to decide eventually who do they believe, mom and dad, or my fun coach over here.

You know, and as they grow, they're going to start thinking.

So you wouldn't want to come down on your kid at all.

You would want to correct it.

But if they're six or seven years old, they have no idea what they're doing.

None.

The one that's responsible is the coach.

And

I can't believe that in America today, that could happen.

And there isn't a single parent on that little league team on either side that isn't in front of a camera saying, this is outrageous.

I pulled my kid out.

It shows you how out of favor conservative principles are.

No, no, no.

Nobody has them.

No, stop.

Nobody has them.

Stop.

Conservative principles.

American principles.

That's right.

That's not conservative anymore.

This is how out of step anyone who actually believes in America, how out of step you actually are.

Now, if you don't hate America, you can listen to Pat Gray Unleashed or watch it on the Blaze television and radio networks.

And if you don't do it, I'll find you.

If you don't hate America, listen to him.

If you do hate America, watch him.

Right, whatever, whichever way.

Whichever way.

And see the fabulous path he will take today to be completely defeated and give up on America.

That's all coming up on Packer Unleashed after this program on Blaze Radio and TV.

As a gun owner, education is the top priority.

A concealed carry permit

allows you to do a lot of things, but the moment you pull out that gun, it's a different world.

Who is protecting you?

Do you guys remember when we went to Philadelphia and we took the classes and we all had to take the safety course classes and learn to shoot the guns?

Remember that?

And remember the conversation that they had on, look, if you're ever going to pull out your gun, here are the rules, here are the restrictions, here's what you want to make sure, and we were all afraid, like, I'm not going to pull my gun.

I mean, I don't, I don't want to pull my gun because it was so, there were certain things you had to do, otherwise your life is over.

And people who go through that training are the, usually the least likely to pull out their gun in some crazy circumstance because they're the most responsible.

And in some cases, in some states, there's a law that you must try to retreat first.

You have to run away before you can then defend yourself.

It doesn't even make sense in some places.

Just unbelievable.

Here in Texas, thank God that's not the case, but pretty much everywhere else, you're in trouble.

And even in Texas, you have to pull your gun on somebody.

God forbid you have to shoot.

You are in trouble.

The U.S.

Concealed Carry Association knows this, and they would like to send you their free family defense guide.

Now, this is really important.

It covers everything.

All the safety stuff,

all of the things like, you know, how can you

see trouble coming?

How can you detect attackers before they see you?

I can't believe that we have to have a handbook, but you should have this handbook in your house on

what do you do in case of a mass shooting.

I mean, I just don't understand this world, but that's part of it now.

The critical thing is, beyond the 165 pages that you can either read or you can listen to it on their bonus audio version,

they give you the checklist.

that you should have if you own a gun and you want to protect yourself.

But to me, the most important thing is that you look into their insurance because you have health insurance, we have life insurance, we have fire insurance, we have car insurance, we have some people have flood insurance.

I mean, we have insurance for everything but this, but the moment you pull your gun, you're going to need it because somebody, the bad guys, this time wearing a suit and carrying a briefcase and calling themselves attorneys, are coming for you.

Protectandefend.com, the people who will will stand behind you.

Protectandefend.com.

Right now, you can get 100% instant free access to all of the stuff in the guide, and you should read it.

It's protectandefend.com.

Protectandefend.com.

Glenn Beck.

Glenn Beck.

My name is Glenn Beck.

My executive producer is Stu Bregier.

He is also the executive producer of Glenn Beck Television, which airs on the Blaze.

We are

in the process now of doing something that I think you're really going to like,

all chalkboard-based.

But I think in a way, when we get it all said and done, hopefully it's in a way that you've...

you've not seen before and and really explaining the basic things

uh

in a very clear and simple way.

Kind of the stuff that, you know, we're trying to go back to the basics, the things that we know, that we do well, and the things that we know that you could use.

But we were, this week we've been showing you behind the scenes, and it's really quite...

Last night's show, I was watching it last night, and

it was a little uncomfortable at times because it was really,

I mean, it is, you know, reality television.

It was raw and honest.

Yeah, last night was, you know, as we're building up to the new stuff, this was sort of like a behind-the-scenes episode where you're going through and talking about how, what new shows might be on the blaze, specifically talking to Ali and Ali Sucky and Lawrence Jones about their shows that they're working on now.

And, you know, it was kind of in the meetings and dissecting every little bit of their performance and every idea that they had.

There was a time where it was like, you saw me and how I critique people.

Yeah, you're a jerk,

which is interesting.

I don't think people knew that until last night.

Well, you did.

I mean, it is.

I mean, you did kind of cut out the spirit of it.

I mean, I did say, I noticed that there was cut out a lot of the stuff that like, you're on it.

I didn't have that conversation with them, you know, at the beginning.

That's when I thought that they were on it.

I guess that makes it worse.

Yeah, actually,

I thought I made you look a lot better than in real life.

This is the truth did not live here in that episode because I edited out you being a real jerk and just made you kind of a jerk.

Yeah, because that was really as far as I could go.

Yeah.

So, if you ever want to see what it's like to work with me,

boy, unfettered access,

you can watch last night.

So, what tonight is when I was working with the writers?

Yeah, the writers with theblaze.com, which is kind of interesting how that's changing as well.

Yeah, so check it out: theblaze.com/slash TV tonight, five o'clock.

Glenn, back.