FAA Cancels Flights as Dems REFUSE to End Shutdown | Guests: Stephen Limbaugh & Noah Oppenheim | 11/7/25
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Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program.
What an hour it's going to be as we go in hour number one of the podcast.
Speaker 1 We're going to talk about Elon Musk's trillion-dollar payout
Speaker 1 and why that possibly makes sense. But, I mean, does money have a meaning
Speaker 1 at some point at all? Also, the amazing scientist behind the telepathy tapes, we're going to share a conversation that I had with her, give you a preview of the podcast. Monkeys on the loose.
Speaker 1 It looks like it's our last chapter. Gosh darn it.
Speaker 1 And the shutdown.
Speaker 1 We're now shutting down the airports, or at least about 40% is going to be shut down.
Speaker 1 As much as 40% is going to be shut down
Speaker 1 because,
Speaker 1 well, as what was it, the
Speaker 1 Democrats said here,
Speaker 1 the Democrats continue the shutdown, quote, for the sake of the party's brand.
Speaker 1 Wow.
Speaker 1
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Welcome.
Speaker 2 Thank you, Gun. Appreciate that.
Speaker 1
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Well, I meant it with everything in it.
I could tell.
Speaker 1 Yeah, I know. Listen,
Speaker 1 so 10% of the flights in 40 major cities is where we're starting. We could go as high as 40%
Speaker 1 of our flights. In fact,
Speaker 1 we have
Speaker 1 our Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy, actually coming out and saying, you know what?
Speaker 1
The problem is we're not going to have skies that, you know, are unsafe. Sorry.
Can't do it. We'll just shut down the airspace before we have unsafe skies, which I appreciate.
Speaker 1 However, you know, there comes a time when you're like, okay, maybe we should stop this.
Speaker 1 Maybe, Democrats, you should open the government back up.
Speaker 1 At what points do
Speaker 1 people start to lay the blame, you know, at the feet of the Democrats? Do they ever?
Speaker 2 I mean, they should, of course, do do that. They should.
Speaker 2 That does not seem to be happening, you know, with a big thanks to the media, right? I mean, we see this in all different topics.
Speaker 2 What was the stat?
Speaker 2 It was,
Speaker 2 is it 90-something percent? I don't have it in front of me.
Speaker 2 That are favoring, when it comes to talking about the shutdown, for example,
Speaker 2 90%
Speaker 2 of coverage has been favoring Democrats, basically saying that Republicans are the ones responsible for it. And when you look at at that.
Speaker 1
87%. Thank you, 87%.
87%.
Speaker 2 When you look at that and you say, well, this is a strategy potentially that goes right through
Speaker 2 what changed the elections in Virginia. And I would point specifically to the Jay Jones election.
Speaker 2 You know, when you have a good chunk of Northern Virginia that is home and not at work because of government shutdowns, you could keep this into effect through the election, get that election win, and then the Democrats are kind of free now as far as consequences probably to their base.
Speaker 2 They got past this election, they got their wins, and now they could theoretically bail on this. The question is, will Republicans kind of fold and give them this win?
Speaker 2 All this being said, though, if the Republicans are going to be the ones getting blamed for this,
Speaker 2 why bail on the shutdown? I mean,
Speaker 2 what's the point? All these workers are going to wind up getting their money anyway, eventually. So why not hold out and see what happens?
Speaker 2 They're getting no blame from this because the government's shielding them or the media media is shielding them from any consequences.
Speaker 1 Yeah. And, you know, only both on ABC and CBS, only 12% of the reports on either one of those networks mentioned any details on it.
Speaker 1 So they're saying Republicans are shutting the government down and not giving any details. Yeah.
Speaker 1 That's remarkable.
Speaker 2 And think of how clear this is, the path here. This is
Speaker 2 a budget, if you will, because, you know, budgets aren't really budgets anymore. But this is a spending plan that was voted for
Speaker 2 by Democrats. Democrats during the Biden administration voted for this spending plan.
Speaker 2
Republicans were like, all right, we'll just keep it going. Then Democrats came in and stopped it and caused a shutdown.
Why? Because Democrats are saying that they want
Speaker 2 these
Speaker 2 subsidies from Obamacare to continue, despite the fact that Democrats voted for them to end.
Speaker 1 Right. This is
Speaker 1 all these subsidies were just for COVID. And we said at the time, you can't give them and they're not going to take it.
Speaker 1
They're not going to let you take them back. They're not going to stop it.
And that's exactly what they're doing. So they voted for this budget.
Speaker 1 What the Republicans are saying, just leave it alone. Just continue this.
Speaker 1 Just continue the spending as is.
Speaker 1
But those subsidies have expired because that's what you voted for. So those subsidies are gone now.
And the Democrats are saying it's not enough. It's not enough.
Wait, this is your Biden budget.
Speaker 1 This is your Biden budget and it's not good enough. And they're willing to throw our airports and our air transportation system,
Speaker 1
just throw it away. Just throw it away.
Wreck your day.
Speaker 1
If you're planning on travel, I've got lots of travel coming up in the next couple of weeks. And I have to tell everybody now, I'm not sure I'm going to be able to make it.
Well, I mean, we'll see.
Speaker 1
We'll see. Just have to see what's happening with air traffic control.
And this is the beginning of that.
Speaker 1 And it's going to get worse and worse. Can you imagine what Thanksgiving is going to be like?
Speaker 1 These guys have got, they have got
Speaker 1 to stop. They have to stop.
Speaker 1 Democratic Senator Chris Murphy said yesterday his, quote, party's brand could undergo substantial damage if Democrats were to cave and reopen the federal government. Their brand?
Speaker 1 Their brand.
Speaker 1 There will be some pretty substantial damage done to the Democratic brand that has been rehabilitated if on the heels of an election in which the people told us to keep fighting, we immediately stop fighting.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1 he's looking at what happened as a mandate,
Speaker 1 and now it will damage the brand.
Speaker 1
Wow, can somebody not talk? I mean, that's worse than talking just making everything about politics. That's making it about your brand as a party.
It's it's disgusting.
Speaker 1 I can't believe he had the guts to say it out loud, but I'm glad he did. So we all know exactly, you know, where this is coming from.
Speaker 1 Let me look. Some of the other things that are going on.
Speaker 1 Shut down. Meanwhile, do you see Elon Musk's payment?
Speaker 1
His shareholders voted, yeah, give him a trillion dollars. He hits these things, give him a trillion dollars.
I mean, that's absolutely incredible. I mean, I love it.
Incredible.
Speaker 2 The standards are so
Speaker 2 high for Tesla, though. They would have to do so many incredible things for him to get this.
Speaker 2 And of course, like, it all seems ridiculous now, but I will say that is the exact same thing everybody said about Elon Musk's last pay package. Right.
Speaker 2
And he wound up hitting all the goals and getting the money. So good for him.
If he can get it, great.
Speaker 1 So what are some of the things that he has to hit? I'm looking for the story here.
Speaker 1 What are the things he has to hit? I mean, I know that he has to,
Speaker 1 the company has to be worth like $8 trillion.
Speaker 2 I think $8.5 trillion would be
Speaker 2 what it needs to hit, which is obviously really, really high.
Speaker 2 The most expensive company in the world, or the highest value company in the world, is Nvidia, which is, I think, at $5 trillion.
Speaker 1 And that's Nvidia. That's Nvidia.
Speaker 2 It is, yes.
Speaker 1
It's the one making all the chips for all the AI. That's Nvidia at $5 trillion.
Give it to him. If he makes it worth $8 trillion, why wouldn't you give it to him?
Speaker 2 Right.
Speaker 2 First of all, it's a great incentive, right? You're basically saying, hey, if you can hit 85 home runs next year, you can have $100 million. And it's like, well, no one's ever done that, but okay.
Speaker 2 So again, it's a great incentive. And this is a different,
Speaker 2 it's a different way.
Speaker 2 He's a different guy, right? Like we talked a little bit about this before we came on the show. You talked about, was it Rockefeller that...
Speaker 1 So let me tell you the story. Rockefeller,
Speaker 1
when John D. Rockefeller Sr.
died, he's the guy who, you know, built Standard Oil.
Speaker 1
And he built it with partners. By the end, his partners had all gone.
I mean, he owned all of Standard Oil.
Speaker 1 He was the wealthiest man to ever live at the time.
Speaker 1 And when he died, the accountants and the lawyers came to his son and said, Junior, I don't think you understand how much money you have just inherited. And they explained it.
Speaker 1 And I can't remember what book it was that I read read that had all this in. It's a fascinating story on how they approached him and said, look, this is bone-crushing.
Speaker 1 Your family will have the highest GDP over any country on earth in 25 years.
Speaker 1 And they're like, you've got to divest yourself of some of this and just get it under control.
Speaker 1 And that's why he went out and he, you know, gave, what is it, part of the
Speaker 1
Virgin Islands. He bought them up and gave it away.
He, he bought that huge forest on the side of, you know, Jackson Hole and gave it to the government.
Speaker 1 It's why he bought up all of these things and then gave it away because he was trying to get his wealth, you know, somewhere, somewhat manageable.
Speaker 1 And it's still out of control, wealth, still out of control, wealth. And I was asking Stu, you know, at a trillion dollars, and this is what makes you
Speaker 1
Elon Musk unique. At a trillion dollars, at some point, money becomes meaningless.
I mean, we can't even fathom a trillion dollars, you know, what you could do with a trillion dollars.
Speaker 1 You know, how many, how many boats and airplanes and whatever else you need, how many more do you need? How much is enough?
Speaker 1 Except that's looking at it from
Speaker 1 the viewpoint that you only are an entrepreneur because you want to make money.
Speaker 1
And just like Nikola Tesla, Elon Musk is different. He wants to change the world.
He's not doing it for the money. He does it and the money follows.
Speaker 1 And then he takes that money and he plows it back into something even greater. That's totally different.
Speaker 2 Totally different than the old school of versions. And some of that old school was a little bit of a myth, right?
Speaker 2 Like a lot of those people did incredible things for charity and everything else, but they looked at it. Carnegie.
Speaker 1 Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1 Carnegie built libraries in every small community all across the country because he said everyone should have a king's library because you can succeed in this country if you have access to knowledge and books.
Speaker 1 Yeah. I mean,
Speaker 1 the guy was amazing.
Speaker 2
The robber baron arrow is exaggerated in its evils. But still, you know, Musk, I think, is different in that he's constantly trying.
I mean, he's trying to solve paralysis, right?
Speaker 2 He's trying to, he's doing all sorts of things that, you know, he's trying to solve
Speaker 2
the traffic problems in the cities. He's trying to get people, he's trying to stop people from dying in car accidents.
He's trying to literally send humanity to Mars, right? These are the things.
Speaker 2 If he gets the trillion dollars, that's where a lot of this money goes. I mean, if you look back at his history, very early on, when he first became wealthy, he bought a McLaren F1.
Speaker 2 It's, you know, one of the greatest cars ever built. And he almost killed him and Peter Thiel when they were driving it around and they got in an accident in it.
Speaker 2
And, you know, you look at his pattern since then. It's not about fancy, incredible cars, not about giant mansions.
I mean, he's been living in relatively normal housing. Now,
Speaker 2
he flies around in private jets all the time. He's got a good life.
There's no question. But like, it's just that he does not live the life of a person who is the richest person in the world.
Speaker 2 That's not what he does. He's, I mean, the reports of him recently, it's just been him constantly at work all the time at XAI.
Speaker 2 Like, again, he's back in another one of these stretches where he is not coming home. He's, you know,
Speaker 2 reports are he's staying at work all hours of the day and night to try to get, to try to beat out, you know, his competition when it comes to AI. So that is who the guy is.
Speaker 2 And I think like that's the type of person you want to incentivize to hit these massive goals.
Speaker 2
The goals, by the way, are split into 12 tranches. That you know, there's 12 varieties of this.
The details are hilarious, though. Let me give you some.
Speaker 1
Okay, hang on just a second. Let me take a quick break and then we'll come back on this.
And I don't let me forget, it may not be able to do it today, but I mean, I wrote a what is it, a 12-episode uh
Speaker 1 uh mini-series on Tesla versus Edison, and I did so much research on uh Tesla, it boggles the mind when you see how much Elon Musk is like Nikola Tesla. I mean, it's just, it's mind-boggling.
Speaker 1 He is almost exactly the same guy, working, working, working, working, working, and then just gets sick, has to go to the hospital because he's worked himself almost to death.
Speaker 1
And then he gets out and he works, works, works, and he just never stops. I mean, there's so many parallels between these guys.
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10 seconds and back to the show.
Speaker 1
What does he need all that money for? Well, let me give you this. He's just said that Tesla's likely to build a gigantic chip factory.
He said, like his Giga plant, just much larger.
Speaker 1 We need to be able to build these chips. And if there's going to be any guy who will do it,
Speaker 1 it will be Elon Musk. Anyway,
Speaker 1 here's the 12 things that he has to hit to get the trillion-dollar payout.
Speaker 2 Yeah, so right now, Tesla's worth about $1.5 trillion.
Speaker 2
These things start kicking in at $2 trillion in valuation. So again, that's a 33% increase in their market cap for him to get any of this stuff.
That's pretty impressive.
Speaker 2
Then they have the next nine tranches will be awarded if Tesla's value increases by increments of $500 billion. So each $500 billion in value, he gets more.
That goes all the way up to $6.5 trillion.
Speaker 2 He earns the last two tranches if the market cap rises by increments of $1 trillion each. So it would need to get to $8.5 trillion for him to get the entire thing.
Speaker 2 However, there are more details to it.
Speaker 2 Right now, Tesla's delivered 8 million cars so far. He has other goals
Speaker 2 that are tied to how many they can deliver, which is 20 million. So more than double,
Speaker 2 two and a half times what they've, he'd have to get to two and a half times of what they've delivered so far.
Speaker 2
Then there is 10 million full self-driving subscriptions, which is, you know, your car drives itself. He has to get to 10 million on that.
1 million Optimus robots.
Speaker 2 Now, to remind you, they've delivered zero
Speaker 2 Optimus robots at this point, and they're going to cost a lot of money at the beginning to buy.
Speaker 2 So they have to get to a million, a million robo-taxis in commercial operation is another one of the goals. Which, again, I don't, I mean, I know Waymo has a bunch on the road.
Speaker 2
I don't know how many Tesla has yet. They're just starting that, though, process.
So these are massive goals for the company.
Speaker 2 If he can hit those, he deserves to get a trillion dollars or whatever at the note top price. Let me just.
Speaker 1 It's 20 million cars on the road or 20 million Teslas a year sold?
Speaker 2 It is 20 million vehicle deliveries,
Speaker 2 that particular standard. So they've already delivered eight.
Speaker 1 Okay.
Speaker 1 Because let me give you a perspective of 20 million.
Speaker 1 Honda,
Speaker 1 Honda currently is producing 4 million a year.
Speaker 1
Hyundai, 7 million a year. Ford, 4 million a year.
General Motors, 6 million a year. Volkswagen, 9.5 million.
Toyota is 10.5 million cars a year.
Speaker 1
So to put 20 million cars into perspective, that's twice as much as Toyota builds and delivers every year. Twice as much.
I mean,
Speaker 1 that's a pretty lofty goal. Pretty lofty goal.
Speaker 1 But if there's anybody who can do it, it'd be him.
Speaker 1 And you know what will happen? He'll hit these goals and then they'll have to pay it out and then some socialist will go, that's not right.
Speaker 1 How can you give him that much money and they'll fight it in the courts and he'll end up getting the money and change the world again you know god bless him god bless america all right back in a minute
Speaker 1 this is glenn beck
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Speaker 2 One last monkey on the run.
Speaker 1 One last disease monkey on the road.
Speaker 1 Oh my gosh. You know, it just started just last week.
Speaker 1 A truck overturned on Interstate 59 in Mississippi, and now it is all over.
Speaker 1 From the video from officers' body-worn cameras just a week ago showed a chaotic scene as monkeys escaped their wooden crates.
Speaker 1 After being in a car accident, dashed around the grassy interstate median, some running towards cars and semis right there on the interstate.
Speaker 1 Five monkeys were killed as law officers hunted them in the immediate aftermath of the crash. But we were told they were diseased and there were three on the loose.
Speaker 1
And then we were told they weren't diseased. Then we were told there's none on the loose.
Then we were told there's one on the loose. Then they shot that one.
Speaker 1
And then They found another one on the loose. And we were told, yeah, there's only two on the loose.
And they shot that one. Now, the third monkey that we've always known was on the loose, loose.
Speaker 1 The final fugitive who was just out looking for that one-armed monkey that killed his wife has finally been caught and maybe killed.
Speaker 1 Apparently,
Speaker 1 it was found Wednesday near a home just east of where the truck had wrecked, hiding out.
Speaker 1
Brandy Smith saw the monkey when her dog started barking and the neighbors called 911. I don't know why the neighbors had to call 911.
I don't know why was she harboring the monkey. We don't know.
Speaker 1
We don't know. This may not be the last monkey update.
You never know in today's world.
Speaker 1 Monkeys on the run.
Speaker 1 Disease monkeys on the run.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1 Okay.
Speaker 2 So we got that going for you. I don't believe it.
Speaker 2 I believe like in, you know, maybe on Wednesday or Thursday, we get an update that says, by the way, the last two monkeys have been captured.
Speaker 2 We're just, this is going to keep happening, and we're never going to know what the total number was.
Speaker 1
We got the final one. We just got the final one.
Wait, you just told us the first one was the final one. Then the second one was the final one.
Now the third one is the final one.
Speaker 1 How many diseased monkeys that are not diseased nor on the run are actually diseased and on the run? The world may never know.
Speaker 1 I did a podcast that comes out tomorrow. Are you familiar with with the telepathy tapes, Stu?
Speaker 2
I've heard you talk about it. I've not listened to it myself.
It's a podcast, right?
Speaker 1
You have to watch. You have to listen to it.
It is fascinating. It's all about how
Speaker 1 this doctor, this really amazing,
Speaker 1 well-credentialed doctor who did not believe in telepathy or any of that stuff, just science, science, science, science, science.
Speaker 1 She has this experience when she's young and she just writes about it.
Speaker 1 And she's like, you know, as a doctor, and she talks about it in the podcast, as a doctor, she was at Harvard and she went and she was called into the hospital because there was somebody that needed to be seen for a psych patient.
Speaker 1
And this woman's like, no, she, I'm sorry. She wanted to be released because she said she knew she was fine.
She was not going to have a heart attack.
Speaker 1
And the hospital is like, you're having a heart attack. And she's like, I know how the test results are going to come back.
I'm not having a heart attack. I'm fine.
Speaker 1 And they're like, How do you know what the test results? And she's like, Because I can see the future. And they were like, Okay, you know what? We're going to have you seen by another doctor.
Speaker 1 So they call this doctor in, who does not believe in telepathy or mind reading or, you know, people who can see the future.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1
she goes in and she says, Really? So, so you know, this is the way it's going to come out. She's like, Yeah.
And I can tell you something else. Your husband right now is interviewing for a job.
Speaker 1 He's going to get the one in San Diego.
Speaker 1 And you're also going to have a child in two years.
Speaker 1
And she's like, okay, I don't know about the child, but that's exactly what my husband is doing. And he's talking right now to people in San Diego.
There was no way for her to know this.
Speaker 1
So she just wrote about it. She's like, I'm not saying that I believe.
She's like, this is just weird. How do we as scientists, how should we look at this?
Speaker 1 Because this is outside of what science says is possible.
Speaker 1 Well, she's pilloried and it takes a long time for her to get she loses her license actually
Speaker 1 um and she takes her a while to get her license back and yada yada yada well she follows she follows truth no matter where it leads her she gets a call from somebody um who is a mom who says i think my child can read my mind and she's like okay
Speaker 1 And how do you think that? She's like, I don't know. I just,
Speaker 1 my son is autistic. He's nonverbal.
Speaker 1
And I can't remember what she says he was doing, but the mom was convinced he can read minds. And so she said, we brought him to a therapist.
And the therapist also believes.
Speaker 1 So she calls the therapist and she's like, I can't explain it, but I'm telling you, the kid can read minds. So she goes down and she starts studying this one kid, thinking it's a one-off.
Speaker 1 And she finds out that there are a lot of these nonverbal, autistic kids that are savants and they know things that they shouldn't know. They know history they were never taught.
Speaker 1 They know mathematics they
Speaker 1 have never been taught. And
Speaker 1 so she's gotten them to be able to speak somewhat by using computers and
Speaker 1 pointing at letters, et cetera, et cetera. And she has found that all over the world, there is this class of autistic kids
Speaker 1 that the first thing they say when she says, what do you want people to know about you? And they all say the same thing. I'm not stupid.
Speaker 1
I'm in here. I'm a human being.
Stop talking to me like a baby.
Speaker 1 And then she found out a little something about what's called the hill. Can we play that clip?
Speaker 1 revolving around what she says about the hill. Listen to this.
Speaker 3 So the hill is a concept that I first heard about when I was in Atlanta.
Speaker 3 And I met
Speaker 3 Houston,
Speaker 3 and he's this in his early 20s, you know, this autistic boy that,
Speaker 3
you know, very telepathic with his mother, Katie. And they're in the telepathy tapes.
And
Speaker 3 they were friends with Libby.
Speaker 3 who is a speech therapist, who had an autistic son named John Paul.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 John Paul and Houston both
Speaker 3 said that they went to the hill.
Speaker 3 And their mothers said that they go into their room and they'll, you know, they'll put like pillows over their head or whatever.
Speaker 3 And then they'll go and they'll talk with all of these other non-speaking autistic kids on this hill. And, you know, and it's a, it's a not, the way it was described is it's this non-physical place.
Speaker 3 So it's, it's more,
Speaker 3 in the
Speaker 3
spiritual realm, yeah. And they say it's guarded by angels and that they go there and they're taught by the angels and they teach each other and that it's a lot of fun.
It sounds very blissful and
Speaker 3 peaceful.
Speaker 3 And I thought when I first heard of it, I thought, oh, well, that's really interesting. But, you know, I just thought it because John Paul and Houston knew each other.
Speaker 3 You know,
Speaker 3 the fact that they were both talking about it didn't really mean that much to me.
Speaker 3 But then what happened was that these other individuals in totally different parts of the country started saying, you know, mentioned their kid going to the hill.
Speaker 3 And so then it became obvious that this is a thing.
Speaker 3 And
Speaker 3 if you look at
Speaker 3 spiritual traditions,
Speaker 3 the Eastern spiritual traditions, they talk about a place that sounds just like the hill.
Speaker 3 And it really is a spiritual realm that
Speaker 3 you can go to when you reach a certain
Speaker 1 level of
Speaker 1 spiritual development.
Speaker 3 Yeah.
Speaker 3 And so, you know, and so that's what I think, you know, it's like, in a way, I think that we all come from the hill.
Speaker 1 Okay.
Speaker 3 And what happens is, is as we identify more and more
Speaker 1 with
Speaker 3 this identity
Speaker 3 that, you know, as Diane or Glenn or whoever, it identify with that, we become more and more disconnected from the source that we come from.
Speaker 3 We become, you know, whether you want to say that we become disconnected from God or we become disconnected from, you know, whatever you want to call that, we become disconnected from the divine and we become more and more
Speaker 3 immersed in the minutiae of daily life and thinking about what I want, what I, you know, I think, what I, this, and it's this divisive sort of mentality.
Speaker 3 And so I see it as that we're sort of, we come from the hill.
Speaker 3 And we sort of descend down the hill. And now what we, what we need to do is we need to learn how to climb the hill back up.
Speaker 3 We need to learn how to, and I think that these autistic kids, it's almost like they're our Sherpa guides to the hill.
Speaker 1
It's it is absolutely fascinating. I don't even know what to think about it.
I really don't.
Speaker 1 This is a great introduction to it.
Speaker 1 Autism, I am left with a couple of thoughts. Autism may actually
Speaker 1 be a blessing, not a curse, and we don't understand it.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 whatever it is that she is discovering,
Speaker 1 it will make you reconsider everything you think about. Autism, the brain, ESP, human consciousness, everything,
Speaker 1 everything. I think, and she does too.
Speaker 1 We are so close to
Speaker 1 a fundamental change in the world. We are so close to
Speaker 1 a veil being lifted or the veil is thinning or I don't know what it is, but we are so close to this, we are going to start seeing things that we don't understand.
Speaker 1
And what's great is she is like, look, I'm a scientist. I am not, I'm not a faith person.
I'm not a ESP, you know, card reader. I'm none of that stuff.
I'm a scientist.
Speaker 1
And she's like, I'm only going where the science is leading me. And the science is leading me to some very uncomfortable places.
So I have a choice. And every scientist has this choice.
Speaker 1
Are you going to go there? or are you just going to say, no, no, no, nope, nope, nope. Science has told me it can't be done.
So, but wait, science is now telling you you don't understand it. And
Speaker 1 it's almost exactly like quantum physics. You know, Einstein said, God doesn't play dice.
Speaker 1
Meaning. quantum physics, it doesn't work.
It's not true. Well, we now know.
We have a computer based on quantum computing. We now know it is true.
Speaker 1 So are you going to deny that quantum mechanics is what it is?
Speaker 1 Even though we don't really understand it, are you just going to deny and say, nope, don't even look there? A lot of science is doing that. And in this, we talk about how
Speaker 1 when
Speaker 1 science finally gets, and maybe their arrogance is starting to crumble, but if science can ever understand that science and religion and religion can ever understand that science and religion go hand in hand that if god exists did you know that did you know that the big bang was a was a religious
Speaker 1 explanation for uh
Speaker 1 uh for creation
Speaker 1 before it became the science proof that god didn't exist that came from the religious community going okay well here's how you can explain it Maybe it's this.
Speaker 1 And then science fought against it. And then they were like, okay, okay, okay, okay, let's make that ours and just forget that there has to be somebody that lit that match.
Speaker 1 Did you know that it came from religious side before it came from the science side? Hello.
Speaker 1
Open your mind. And this podcast will do it.
It's available now at Blaze TV and tomorrow, wherever you get your podcast. This is a must listen to.
It's episode 273. Can Autistic Kids Read Mind?
Speaker 1 Read Minds, the doctor from the telepathy tapes, the Glendeck podcast, everywhere, tomorrow, Blaze TV, right now.
Speaker 1 Let me pause and tell you about pre-born. There is a sound you'll never forget the first time you hear your baby's heartbeat.
Speaker 1 It's just a quick, steady rhythm, barely a whisper, but it's enough to change everything.
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And you can't unhear it. That's the sound of life.
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Speaker 1 Do you remember before you had your first child? If you've had a child before you had it, you were terrified, terrified, and you weren't alone. Hopefully, you weren't alone.
Speaker 1 These women are completely alone. There's no one in their life that will say, keep the baby.
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Dial pound250, say the keyword baby, and donate what you can. Pound250, keyword baby, or visit preborn.com/slashbeck.
That's preborn.com/slash beck.
Speaker 1 Teach your kids right.
Speaker 1 Shoot. You know, schools won't do it for you.
Speaker 1 This is Glenn Beck.
Speaker 2 You know, the government does a lot of things to your water. Whether you want that done or not is, you know, should be up to you, right? Like, it shouldn't be something that just kind of happens.
Speaker 2 And, you know, can you trust them to keep your water clean? Can you trust them to make sure that water is pure? I don't trust them with anything. This is why I switched to Cove Pure.
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Speaker 1 So flight reductions are beginning
Speaker 1 at 4%
Speaker 1 today,
Speaker 1 then increase to 6%
Speaker 1 by November 11th, the 13th, 8%.
Speaker 1
And And by November 14th, a full 10% of flights are going to be affected. You're going to see them canceled.
Anchorage, these are the airports that are going to see the reductions.
Speaker 1 Anchorage, Atlanta, Boston, Logan. By the way, when I say Boston, Logan International, what's the first thing that comes to mind, Stu?
Speaker 1 Boston, Logan. Yeah.
Speaker 1 Baltimore, Washington International, BWI, Charlotte, Douglas, Cincinnati, Northern Kentucky, Dallas, Love,
Speaker 1 Ronald Reagan National, Denver, Dallas, Fort Worth, Detroit, Wayne County, Newark, Fort Lauderdale, Honolulu, Houston, Hobby, Washington, Dulles, George Bush, Houston, Intercontinental, Indianapolis, JFK, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, New York, LaGuardia,
Speaker 1 Orlando, Chicago, Memphis, Miami, Minnesota, Oakland, Ontario, that's in California, Chicago, O'Hare, Portland, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Sky Harbor, San Diego, Louisville, Seattle, Tacoma, Louisville, Louisville,
Speaker 1 San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Teterboro, and Tampa International. I mean, what's left? What's left? We can go to Des Moines, but you can't leave, you can't go from Des Moines from a major city.
Speaker 1 I mean, this is really going to start to really hit people hard, especially as we go into the holidays. I hope the Republicans have a strategy because
Speaker 1
Democrats aren't getting the full blame they deserve yet. This is Glenn Beck.
Let me tell you about Patriot Mobile. You know, there is
Speaker 1 amazing. There is a little bit of irony in paying your phone bill every month to companies that are just, you know, spending your money to fight against your values.
Speaker 1 They're funding causes you'd never support, just so you can text your friends about how much you disagree with all those things that they're supporting.
Speaker 1 It's like donating to a candidate you never voted for and then thanking them for taking your money. Patriot Mobile changes all of that.
Speaker 1 They're America's only Christian conservative wireless provider built on the same reliable nation network that the big guys have. And it's a completely different mission.
Speaker 1 They support religious freedom, the sanctity of life, our military, first responders, values that still matter, even if corporate America pretends they don't.
Speaker 1
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Speaker 1
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Call 972-Patriot, 972-Patriot. Use the promo code Beck.
Speaker 1 Get a free month of service at patreonmobile.com slash Beck.
Speaker 1 You're tuning into Candy Crush Music Season with me,
Speaker 1 Jay Devon.
Speaker 1
Sweet. We've had a request from Tiffy to drop the new Thundercat track, Upside Down.
Delicious.
Speaker 1
But you can do more than just listen. Go to Candy CandyCrushUpsideDown.com to swipe and pop the music video.
Play now.
Speaker 1
From November 3rd to December 7th, selected players level 36 plus. Terms apply.
See in-game. Optional in-game purchases.
Speaker 1 Down the road where shadows hide, fill the dark on every side.
Speaker 1 Stand your ground when times get dark.
Speaker 1 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment.
Speaker 1 This is
Speaker 1 the Glenn Beck program.
Speaker 1 Hello, America. I want to talk to you about
Speaker 1 young men. I want to talk to you about
Speaker 1
the times in which we find ourselves and the seasons that are changing. Give me 60 seconds.
We'll get right to it. First, let me tell you about the Burna Launcher.
Here's the thing about safety.
Speaker 1 It's kind of like insurance or a fire extinguisher. You hope you never need it and you really don't want to have to use it, but if that day ever comes, you're going to be very glad you have it.
Speaker 1 That's exactly why the Berna Compact Launcher exists.
Speaker 1 It's a small enough launcher to fit in your bag or your glove box, powerful enough to stop a threat from 60 feet away without ever firing a bullet.
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Speaker 1
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Speaker 1
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Speaker 1 You can go and go there now and try it before you buy it. Find the location of a sportsman's warehouse near you to try it before you buy it at burna byrna.com slash glenn.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1 I want to talk to you here, not as a broadcaster or commentator, but
Speaker 1 as somebody who takes my job as a calling,
Speaker 1 somebody who, and I'm sure you do this in many parts of your life as well,
Speaker 1 you know the serious times we live in, and you're just trying to do the right thing.
Speaker 1 My part of my job is to tell you what's coming over the horizon.
Speaker 1 I want to talk to you
Speaker 1 because I've seen enough, I've seen enough seasons
Speaker 1 and seen the seasons change to recognize when the wind has shifted and something ancient is here. We have now stepped into a new chapter of the fight.
Speaker 1 I don't know if you feel it or know it, but you will if you don't yet.
Speaker 1
We've been in this fight with like the orcs, you know, and they're so crude. They're so obvious.
They're like, ah, you're like, okay, there's the enemy. All right.
Speaker 1 This enemy has come to us with slogans and hashtags and shallow, really shallow, ridiculous lies.
Speaker 1
But they were the training grounds. They're the warm-ups.
They're child's play. And
Speaker 1 we see things through a glass darkly.
Speaker 1
What we're entering right now is older. It's smarter.
It is hungrier.
Speaker 1 And it's going to claim more of us.
Speaker 1 This is darkness that has learned to wear a smile, a lie that has learned to dress itself in holy robes. And it's going to stand right next to you and go, look at that evil over there.
Speaker 1 It's going to come to you as a friend.
Speaker 1 When Charlie Kirk was assassinated,
Speaker 1 something happened that was miraculous.
Speaker 1 A revival happened.
Speaker 1 It cracked open a sleeping heart in this country, and people began searching again, praying again, talking about God again, standing again. And that leapt borders and languages and generations.
Speaker 1
It was amazing, amazing. A revival is not an awakening.
And I'll tell you the difference, you know, probably on some other show, but that's a very critical difference.
Speaker 1 One just means you talk about God and one says you apply it in everything and every part of your life.
Speaker 1
But that was a bright light that happened when Charlie died. It was amazing to watch.
But remember, whenever light rises, the shadows reorganize and they become darker, more well-defined.
Speaker 1
The darkness that is coming out against us is no longer tripping over itself. I mean, we've thought it was a pretty formidable enemy before.
It's found its feet now.
Speaker 1 And this time, the battle is not going to be fought in the open fields of culture wars, you know, where the lines are clear and the enemy wore the uniform of socialism or, you know, saying things like, a man could be a woman just by declaring it.
Speaker 1
That's stupid. Parents should bow to the experts.
The teacher of the state should be in charge. What?
Speaker 1
The only way to fight racism is with racism. Come on, that doesn't even make sense.
Some are born unforgivable, irredeemable because of what some great, great, great, great, great-grandfather did.
Speaker 1 That's, come on.
Speaker 1 Anger and rage and mobs are the tools of goodness and righteousness. Rage
Speaker 1 is compassion. No, no.
Speaker 1 And as hard as we had to fight those things, those were the easy lies. So lies, so ridiculous, we cannot believe people believe them.
Speaker 1 Yet 30 to 50%, and I think I'm being kind, of our nation, of our brothers, our sisters, our family members, they still fell for it.
Speaker 1 That should terrify us on what's coming next because the low-hanging fruit has already been harvest.
Speaker 1
The next lies are not going to be the stupid ones. They are going to be surgical.
They're going to be personal. They will play on your fears.
Speaker 1 They will strengthen your doubts until your doubt becomes absolute surety.
Speaker 1 And it's not going to be these big, bold forks in the road.
Speaker 1 A man can claim he's a woman and becomes a woman. No, uh-uh-uh-uh.
Speaker 1 These are going to be small doubts, small deviations, small harmless choices, and they're going to build one on top of another.
Speaker 1 And one degree off today on this issue and two degrees off tomorrow on another issue. Small shifts, and you'll barely feel them.
Speaker 1 A quiet compromise disguised as love, a subtle bending of the truth because it's compassionate. A harmless little detour whispered as unity.
Speaker 1 And after a hundred of these little tiny degrees, you and I are going to be waking up facing the opposite direction.
Speaker 1 We will be on the opposite side of where you are today, and yet you will be convinced that you are fighting for the righteous cause you've always been fighting for. This is the way it always happens.
Speaker 1 Look at history.
Speaker 1 It always happens this way. Let me just say this.
Speaker 1 Do you remember when it was really easy for everybody to see how Hitler was the bad guy?
Speaker 1 How many of our youth actually believe now or on the road to believing that he was just misunderstood and we were the bad guys?
Speaker 1 Wow, what?
Speaker 1 This is how the next culling comes and it is a culling. Not in mobs, not in movements.
Speaker 1 One heart, one mind, one believer at a time, quietly led into a fog until they they no longer know which way is up.
Speaker 1 We've been playing a team sport and that's been part of the problem.
Speaker 1 But we've we've felt like they've been coming after us as a team. This is no longer going to be a team sport and it's going to feel very lonely, very, very isolating.
Speaker 1 You're going to feel like maybe you're the only one left still
Speaker 1 sees things clearly, but you are not alone. You never were.
Speaker 1 You never are. The shepherd walks into the valley with his own.
Speaker 1 Let me say something here.
Speaker 1 And maybe I'm only talking to a very small number of the audience now. I don't know.
Speaker 1 But
Speaker 1
I am compelled to say it. Do not lift your voice.
Do not lift your pen, your sword, or your vote
Speaker 1 at all. Do not stand until you've been begging on your knees, begging for God to reveal the truth, begging him to guard your mind, begging him to encircle your home and your heart.
Speaker 1 You know, it's amazing. I have such new understandings of things I've read forever, like the full armor of God.
Speaker 1
It's not a metaphor. It's not poetry.
It is an actual manual for survival today.
Speaker 1 Gird your loins with a belt of truth. What, what?
Speaker 1 Strengthen your core on truth because deception is now in the air that we breathe. The breastplate of righteousness because your heart is the primary target.
Speaker 1 The shield of faith because the darts aren't symbolic anymore. They come disguised as headlines and trends and even pastors.
Speaker 1 The sword of the Spirit, because only his word is sharp enough to cut through all of the fog and the shoes of peace, because the ground ahead is is going to shake.
Speaker 1 Put it on deliberately, purposefully, every single day.
Speaker 1 Because I'm telling you now, the seasons have changed. Everything you think you know now
Speaker 1 is going to turn liquid.
Speaker 1 Everything in front of you, every headline, every influencer, every political friend, God forbid, even me, every new cause, every new emotional appeal, every new treat truth is going to draw you in deeper into the truth or into the oldest trap in human history
Speaker 1 here's a test it's easy you can do every day and you should be asking it multiple times a day if what i'm doing right now if what i'm chasing if what i'm scrolling shouting arguing obsessing over
Speaker 1 If it has no eternal consequence, if it has no eternal meaning, then why am I doing it? Who am I serving by doing it?
Speaker 1
I don't think this chapter is about the Republic alone. The stakes are eternal here.
This fight is going to become deeply personal, and you are... We are all facing an adversary that knows us well.
Speaker 1 And deception that is coming is
Speaker 1 so well designed, you'll marvel at it.
Speaker 1 But the one who guides you, if you're still willing to listen, is still stronger than the hordes of hell.
Speaker 1 I've heard this a million times in my life, and I say it now to you, and I, with full understanding of what it means, put childish things away.
Speaker 1 Stand,
Speaker 1 but only after you kneel.
Speaker 1
You may have felt this already. I hope you have.
The seasons have changed.
Speaker 1 You know, I've been telling you for a while, I'm moving into a new chapter in my life, my career, and I have been tearing myself apart. And I have been so unsettled.
Speaker 1 And there's many reasons for it, but something just,
Speaker 1 and I keep coming to this place where I'm like, oh, I understand it. Oh, my gosh, I'm beginning to understand.
Speaker 1 You know, when I began this journey, I know I didn't understand it.
Speaker 1 But with each passing day, I understand it more deeply now. I know where he is leading me at least.
Speaker 1 I'm telling you today,
Speaker 1 have faith and do exactly what he is asking you to do and prepare.
Speaker 1
There's got to be something in your life that keeps coming to mind that you're like, yeah, I get to that. I got to do that.
I got to be better at that.
Speaker 1
Do it. Do it now.
Do it now.
Speaker 1 The seasons have changed and every single one of us are needed in this battle.
Speaker 1
And this battle that is ahead of us is going to be different and much more serious than the one we have been in. You are needed.
The problem is
Speaker 1 you're needed on both sides.
Speaker 1 Which side are you going to end up being on? I've told you for the last couple of years, you will not make it if you don't have the constant companion of the Holy Spirit. You will not make it.
Speaker 1 I understand that today much deeper than I've ever understood that.
Speaker 1 Let me give you some real stuff here on things that you can do that are easy and and that are not so heady.
Speaker 1 I'll do that here in just a second. First, let me talk to you a little bit about Leaf Filter, our sponsor.
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10 seconds, station ID.
Speaker 1 Let me take you to young men here for a second.
Speaker 1 Let me take you to a story from the New York Post. It was in yesterday's post.
Speaker 1 Two uppercross student athletes from
Speaker 1 Tony Montclair in New Jersey are accused of participating in an ISIS-inspired terror ring, with one of the suspects alleged plotting a
Speaker 1 Boston bombing-style attack.
Speaker 1 Thomas Yamenez-Ghazal and Milo Sedrat, both 19, were arrested on Tuesday, both teens living in $1 million-plus Victorian homes in the manicured New York City suburb.
Speaker 1 The accused yuppie jihadis both grew up in privilege before turning to ISIS.
Speaker 1 Mom of one of the boys is the head of the United Nations Women's Entrepreneurship Program.
Speaker 1 The other boy, his father, is an award-winning Iranian-American poet and a professor at Queens College in New York City.
Speaker 1 Okay.
Speaker 1 So what happened?
Speaker 1
Well, I don't know. I don't know.
Both attended Montclair High School, one of the most prestigious public schools in the region.
Speaker 1 One of them was on the football team. One was, you know, a star on the wrestling team.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 one was just arrested in the airport because he was going over to Turkey and then making his way over to Syria to meet with ISIS and get trained by ISIS.
Speaker 1 When they got into their bedrooms, they found all kinds of stuff that they had been working on
Speaker 1 and planning.
Speaker 1 It's not good.
Speaker 1 How?
Speaker 1 How is this happening?
Speaker 1 Yesterday, I talked to you about socialism and how that's happening. And I can find a road to socialism.
Speaker 1 I can. It's not one I agree with.
Speaker 1
But I can at least understand how people get there. They've seen this corrupt part of our free market system, which is not part of the free market.
It is, you know, that's the crony part of it.
Speaker 1 And they see that and they concentrate on that. And then they see that they've played by the rules and they can't get ahead and they can't buy a house and everything else.
Speaker 1
And you're living in a society that preaches there's no wait for anything. Don't work hard.
You don't have to.
Speaker 1 The world owes you everything. You should have it and you should have it now.
Speaker 1 And our social media teaches us, you know, this distorted view of what success is and happiness and that, you know, everybody seems to have a a private jet now. It's like, it's craziness.
Speaker 1 It's craziness what's going on. But if you're seeped in that and you have a
Speaker 1
school system that is teaching you from kindergarten that your parents are wrong, there's no such thing as truth. Your country is horrible.
It's the bad guy. I can absolutely see.
Speaker 1 how you go to socialism, you want to just disregard this, because the other part of it is you haven't been taught the truth about what the alternative is, what socialism and communism actually is.
Speaker 1 You're not taught that.
Speaker 1 So I can understand that. The jihadi thing
Speaker 1 is an evil and an ancient evil.
Speaker 1 The grand mufti of Jerusalem is a guy who lived back in the 30s and 40s and
Speaker 1 hated the Jews. In fact, is the guy who started, is it Hamas or Hezbollah? I can't remember which one he started, but he started one of the two.
Speaker 1 And he became a very big fan of Adolf Hitler and
Speaker 1 went to Hitler,
Speaker 1 cozied up to him, lived in Germany for a while, learned all about the death camps, got the plans of Auschwitz because he wanted to build those death camps all over the Middle East.
Speaker 1 There wouldn't be a Jew alive.
Speaker 1 Well, Hitler lost, and so he didn't get his dream come true, and neither did the the Grand Mufti. However, he planted that evil inside the Middle East.
Speaker 1 And this is where, you know, I said years ago, I can tell you right where the next Holocaust is coming from. It's going to come from the Middle East, Grand Mufti,
Speaker 1 Iran. It's where it's all coming from.
Speaker 1
And I know that because I study history, and I can watch the seed jump from one place to another at the end. And that's where it jumped.
That is an ancient evil.
Speaker 1
That is something that is playing on our youth like crazy right now. And we have to be prepared.
So let me prepare them and you next.
Speaker 1 This is Glenn Beck.
Speaker 1 You know what Good Ranchers is bringing back? Real American meat raised right here in the USA.
Speaker 1 Every cut they sell comes from family farms and family ranches all across the U.S., not overseas factories, not packaged in America, no loopholes.
Speaker 1 No matter what, that little stupid flag thing, that should be taken off of our meat. You know, 80, 85% of our meat comes from overseas, and yet it still has that little flag product of the U.S.
Speaker 1 It's not.
Speaker 1 But you do with good ranchers, quality beef, quality chicken, seafood from people who still believe that food and values actually belong at the same table, and that all those farm, all that food, all of that is done here in America, straight to your door, flash frozen and perfectly portioned.
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So, you always are ready to cook with something worth sitting down for. It's more than a box of meat.
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Shop America's best meat. Visit goodranchers.com.
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Speaker 1 If you order before December 1st, use the code Beck, and you're a new subscriber, you're going to get an additional $100 off over over your first three orders, plus free meat for life.
Speaker 1
Promo code Beck, GoodRanchers.com. Goodranchers.com.
Let's get back to the table.
Speaker 2 Head over to Glennbeck.com and get the free email newsletter. Sign up now, Glennbeck.com.
Speaker 1 There's a difference between a revival and an awakening. We're in a revival right now, but that doesn't necessarily lead to anything except, oh, I'm going to relearn those principles.
Speaker 1 But that doesn't mean you apply them in your life, okay? That's an awakening.
Speaker 1
There's been two great awakenings in American history. One brought us the American Revolution.
The second one brought us the Civil War and the freedom of slaves.
Speaker 1 We have a possibility of
Speaker 1 going into a third great awakening, and that's the only thing that will save us. But if you don't know the difference between a revival and awakening,
Speaker 1 let me give you the
Speaker 1 negative print
Speaker 1
of a godly awakening. Our kids right now, they don't have any purpose.
They don't have any meaning. They look at everything and it doesn't, it's not real.
None of it's real. It's money.
It's fame.
Speaker 1 It's, you know, it's ever-changing truths and definitions, and they have no purpose in their life. Okay.
Speaker 1 So they're looking for that because man has to have purpose in his life. Man has to search for meaning.
Speaker 1 So they're searching for meaning and they found a group of people that actually mean something and they're willing to die for it. And it's ISIS.
Speaker 1
And so they're like, you know what? At least these people believe in something. They believe it and they're willing to die for it.
I'm going to stand with them.
Speaker 1 And they put that twisted understanding into action.
Speaker 1 That's the...
Speaker 1
That is a, that's an awakening. It's just an awakening to the dark side.
And that one's already happening.
Speaker 1 It has to happen on the the good side.
Speaker 1 And let me speak directly to young men. Look, you are inheriting a very loud, angry, cynical, and worst of all, spiritually starving and malnourished society.
Speaker 1 And you are being sold a future of cheap pleasures and hollow heroes
Speaker 1 and screens with blue light. that just rob you of your strength one distracted second after another.
Speaker 1 and in the middle of all that noise may i just give you one piece of instruction
Speaker 1 if there is anything virtuous lovely of good report or praiseworthy
Speaker 1 seek those things
Speaker 1 don't admire them don't nod at them seek them hunt them chase them build your life around those things
Speaker 1 a man who will do that a boy a young man who will do that, will become different, noticeably different.
Speaker 1
He will stop letting the culture feed him garbage. He stops applauding the trivial.
He stops laughing at the obscene or cheering for the cruel.
Speaker 1 He will become a curator of real lasting beauty in an age that has forgotten what beauty even looks like.
Speaker 1 When other men are chasing down or holding up cynicism,
Speaker 1 this man holds up hope.
Speaker 1 When everyone around him is chasing dopamine, he chooses discipline.
Speaker 1 When others will blame their circumstance, he'll take responsibility for his own action. When the world worships the shallow, he goes and searches for the deep.
Speaker 1 You want to know what the secret of becoming strong is or becoming trusted or becoming the kind of man that your future wife, your future children, your future nation can depend on. Here it is.
Speaker 1 You become what you seek.
Speaker 1
If you seek trash, you become trash. You seek virtue, you become a man of virtue.
You seek excellence, and your life will begin to shine not loudly, but steadily.
Speaker 1 like the steel glow of a blade being forged. That's who you'll be.
Speaker 1 The world has a plentiful, seemingly never-ending supply of angry boys. We don't need any more addicted boys.
Speaker 1 We don't need any more distracted boys. The world needs men, whole men, clear-eyed men.
Speaker 1 Men whose souls are anchored to something higher than the algorithms, trying to own them.
Speaker 1 Build a life worthy of admiration. Forget about the applause.
Speaker 1
Fill your mind with words that make you wiser. Fill your days with work, hard work that makes you stronger.
Fill your home with beauty that lifts every soul who walks into it.
Speaker 1
Have your home a place where people walk in and go, man, it is so great here. I just love it here.
I don't know what it is about your house. I just love it.
Speaker 1 It's the spirit that's there because you built it.
Speaker 1
You protect it. Protect your integrity like a watchman on the wall.
Don't lie. Don't cheat.
Don't steal.
Speaker 1 And when you fail, and you will,
Speaker 1 stand back up again.
Speaker 1 Because a man who seeks the virtuous is not a man who never fails. He just He just becomes a man who refuses to stay on the ground.
Speaker 1 If you seek things that are lovely and pure, trustworthy, praiseworthy,
Speaker 1 you become the kind of man this age almost never produces. A man whose very existence is a rebuke to the darkness.
Speaker 1 That's your calling.
Speaker 1 That's why you were born.
Speaker 1 Not to be lost,
Speaker 1 not to play video games.
Speaker 1 Not to give up.
Speaker 1 Not to say there is no hope.
Speaker 1 Not to end up in the trash bin of human history because
Speaker 1 you've taken so many drugs, you can't stand up straight anymore.
Speaker 1 You're not destined to be alone.
Speaker 1
You are destined for great things. You are destined to find an amazing woman.
Believe me, I didn't think I would ever find an amazing woman because I didn't think I was worth it.
Speaker 1 I didn't think it was worth it. And until I started understanding how God works, that, yeah, I'm not worth any of the stuff I have.
Speaker 1 When you realize it's all a gift,
Speaker 1 It's all a gift.
Speaker 1 And even if you work your brains out, you may not ever get all the things that you want.
Speaker 1 But you're going to have everything you need.
Speaker 1 Once you realize carefully selecting friends makes a difference.
Speaker 1 My mother used to always say, show me your friends, I'll show you your future.
Speaker 1
It's true. Be careful who you select as friends.
Watch your language. Watch what you're putting into your brain and what's what's coming out of your mouth.
Because the brain is so amazing.
Speaker 1 It's being turned to mush. Did you know that there is
Speaker 1 a new study that just came out? I'll tell you about it next week, maybe.
Speaker 1
New study going out. It is, it's AI and it has access to social media.
And they have found that the AI, the AI
Speaker 1 that is scrolling through social media all day just to keep updated on everything that's going on in social media, it's getting brain mush. It's actually becoming dumber.
Speaker 1 It's becoming less effective.
Speaker 1 That's a machine.
Speaker 1 What do you think this flesh and blood, this thing is going to do?
Speaker 1 We say life is meaningless, and life is the only thing that has any value. And yet, we spend all of our time on things like social media and that has absolutely no value, but we think that's life
Speaker 1 I'm not that smart. I've just lived a long time
Speaker 1 and I've made so many mistakes
Speaker 1 And I decided at one point, I'm going to stop saying it's somebody else's fault. I'm going to start saying, maybe, what did I do to create that? What did I do to attract that?
Speaker 1 Why does this thing keep happening to me? Why is it I always find myself involved with the same kind of people?
Speaker 1 Because,
Speaker 1 Glenn, dummy, it's you.
Speaker 1 What you think,
Speaker 1 it's like it's like think of yourself as a
Speaker 1 as a beacon it's just you're a beacon you're a gps pin
Speaker 1 that is constantly saying here i am here i am here i am here i am except it's transmitting more than just your location it's it's transmitting what you're looking for who you are and it's attracting other dropped pins to you.
Speaker 1
It's saying, I like this. I think this way, I believe these things, I am afraid of these things.
Whatever it is you're thinking, it's constantly putting that out and saying, Here I am.
Speaker 1
Is there anything else like that? Anything else it can reinforce that? Anything else it wants to live like this? Because that's me. Here I am.
Here I am. Here I am.
Speaker 1 That's why you keep finding yourself in exactly the same situations. Nothing will change if nothing changes.
Speaker 1 And the only thing that you can change is you.
Speaker 1 Seek the things
Speaker 1 that have virtue.
Speaker 1 Seek the things that have beauty in music, in in art, in life, in architecture, in clothing, whatever it is. Look for real lasting beauty and value.
Speaker 1
Find the things that are true, truly true, universally true. Find the things that uplift.
Seek those things,
Speaker 1 and you will change your life and your world. Back in a minute.
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Speaker 1 The wise man once said, trust in God and always keep watch on the gate. I don't know about you, but that sounds like a solid plan to me.
Speaker 1 This is Glenn Beck.
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Speaker 1 You know,
Speaker 1 we live in such an incredible time right now. We live in a time where
Speaker 1 Tony and I just moved to this new neighborhood. And
Speaker 1 I said,
Speaker 1 we got to
Speaker 1
stop eating crap. We've got to stop eating crap.
She's like, I know. Last night, it was late.
We were both hungry. We wanted dinner.
And she's like, I found a Taco Bell around the corner.
Speaker 1 And I'm like,
Speaker 1 we just said we're not going to eat crap. yeah okay we'll just have a few tacos from taco bell um you know life
Speaker 1 everything is fast food and fat people will tell you as a recovering fat person fat guy screaming to get out of me even fatter than i am um
Speaker 1 Well, but I'm surrounded by fast food.
Speaker 1 Fast food is everywhere.
Speaker 1 The whole culture is fast food. You got to have it now, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Speaker 1 That doesn't mean you have, that means you can either use that as an excuse to be fat, or you can say, I'm not going to do it. The right answer last night was, no, no, we're not going to do that.
Speaker 1
We're not going to do that. But that's the harder, that's the harder way.
And it's going to get faster and faster. I mean, you know,
Speaker 1 dating apps, you, you,
Speaker 1 people are being reduced to a swipe. What does that mean? That means only what you see matters.
Speaker 1 At the same time, we're living
Speaker 1 in a time that unlike any other time, it is always since the beginning of time.
Speaker 1 I'll believe it when I see it.
Speaker 1 Well, you can no longer believe what you see. Your eyes will deceive you.
Speaker 1 And yet, look at what we've done.
Speaker 1 As that is becoming more and more reality,
Speaker 1
we are depending more and more just on our eyes alone. Swipe, swipe, swipe, swipe.
Your eyes are lying to you. Your eyes are deceiving you.
Speaker 1 Your eyes cannot find value. Your eyes cannot,
Speaker 1 that's not real. Most of what you're seeing now is not real.
Speaker 1 Swipe less.
Speaker 1 Swipe less.
Speaker 1 How does somebody, I would hate to have, man, I'd hate to have to find my wife today.
Speaker 1 How do you find that?
Speaker 1 How do you find, because
Speaker 1 to find somebody, it has to be,
Speaker 1 it has to be slowly uncovered. It has to be,
Speaker 1
you know, it's not like, wow, you're hot. Let's go to bed.
That's not it.
Speaker 1 It's conversations.
Speaker 1
It's the tough conversations that you realize, wow, this person is such high quality. This person is so much better than I am.
I'm going to try. What is it going to take to get them to buy into me?
Speaker 1 Because I want to be more like them.
Speaker 1 And hopefully she's thinking the same thing about you.
Speaker 1 I don't, my wife.
Speaker 1 No, she wasn't drunk. I don't know what it was with my wife, but she bought into that.
Speaker 1 And we have been happy ever since.
Speaker 1 Slow down.
Speaker 1 Swipe less.
Speaker 1
Doesn't matter what the culture is. Yes, you're living in a fast food society.
It's your choice to keep eating it or not.
Speaker 1 Pull yourself out of this.
Speaker 1
Look for things that are praiseworthy and lasting and virtuous. Look for those things.
Feel those things. Pray for those things.
Speaker 1 Be hungry for those things and they will come to you.
Speaker 1
Every day somewhere in America, a young woman sits in her clinic staring at an ultrasound screen and for a brief holy moment, time stops. She hears a heartbeat.
She sees that that is life.
Speaker 1
And then that instant, everything changes for her. Sometimes all it takes is that one glimpse for a mom to choose life.
Usually they want to choose life.
Speaker 1 But the 20% that don't after seeing an ultrasound,
Speaker 1 they have another reason.
Speaker 1 There's no one in their life that supports it. They don't have the money to support having a child or whatever it is.
Speaker 1 Pre-born is there to partner with clinics all across the country to not only just provide free ultrasounds, but also counseling to moms in crisis, giving them a chance to see their baby, know the truth, and then...
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Speaker 1 Pound250 keyword baby or go to preborn.com slash glenn preborn.com slash glenn.
Speaker 1 Down the road where shadows hide, feel the dark on every side.
Speaker 1 Stand your ground when times get tight. Gotta face the dark and embrace the fire.
Speaker 1 The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. This is
Speaker 1 the Glenbeck program.
Speaker 1 One of the best books I've read in a very, very long time is On Nuclear War
Speaker 1
by Annie Jacobson. We had Annie on when the book first came out.
And I mean, it's a terrifying book. Absolutely terrifying.
Speaker 1 If you read that book or listen to it narrated by her, it's even more, it's even more frightening when you listen to it narrated from her.
Speaker 1 But if you had any understanding of how unprepared and how
Speaker 1 all this stuff could go down in 15 minutes and the world is over, it's like, do you remember the show when I was a kid called The Day After?
Speaker 1 It changed the world because the world saw that and went, oh, wow,
Speaker 1 we should not do that.
Speaker 1 That's child's play compared to the knowledge and information that we have now. There is
Speaker 1
a show that is on, gosh, what was it? Netflix, I think. House of Dynamite.
I just watched it last weekend. I had to talk to the screenwriter and the guy who produced it.
I mean, it is.
Speaker 1 It's a little frustrating, and I'll explain why. But it is...
Speaker 1 It takes everything that you thought you knew about nuclear war and just kind of turns it upside down and goes, yeah, no, you thought that was bad. This is the way it actually will happen.
Speaker 1 And it's just hair raising.
Speaker 1
We have Noah, believe it or not, Oppenheim is his name. Oppenheimer and Oppenheim.
What a wild coincidence that is. But Noah's on with us.
He's going to talk about this show.
Speaker 1
I want to play a clip from it because it's really must-see. We'll do that here in 60 seconds first.
In Israel right now, there are families still struggling to put life back together.
Speaker 1 Parents are trying to find stability for their children. Grandparents are wondering, you know, how are you going to stay warm this winter, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 1 People who have lost homes and jobs and sometimes hope, you know, but they haven't lost their faith.
Speaker 1 The International Fellowship of Christians and Jews is on the ground every day, bringing help where it's needed.
Speaker 1 They are providing food boxes and heaters and medical care and emergency support to the families and the seniors who need it most and they're helping communities rebuild, supporting first responders and giving comfort to the people who have given everything.
Speaker 1 This is what it means to stand with the Jewish people, not just in words, but in action. The hands that bring light back and push back darkness.
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That's what God says he will do. It's a spiritual stand.
Speaker 1 So call 888-488-IFCJ. 488-888-488-IFCJ or just go to ifcj.org.
Speaker 1 Noah, welcome to the program.
Speaker 4 Thank you so much for having me.
Speaker 1 You bet. I have to tell you, your movie frustrating because
Speaker 1
it ends and I'm like, wait, there should be five more episodes. This should not just be a 90-minute movie.
There's so much more really compelling the way you told the story.
Speaker 1 So congratulations on that. First question, are there going to be sequels?
Speaker 4
Well, first of all, thank you very much. I really appreciate it.
It means a lot coming from you.
Speaker 4 There is no plan for a sequel.
Speaker 4 You know, we wanted the movie to be a provocation in the best sense of the word, you know, a provocation to a larger conversation about this nuclear issue, which I'm so glad to be having with you right now.
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1 Was your primary source the Annie Jacobson book, or was that just one of many? I mean,
Speaker 1 did you go to government sources? How did you get all this information?
Speaker 4 We spoke to a wide variety of people who had worked in places like the White House, the CIA, Strategic Command.
Speaker 4 I had worked as a journalist previously, and so knew folks who had held these kinds of jobs. Catherine Bigelow, who's the director of the movie, had made Hurt Locker, Zero Dark 30.
Speaker 4 So she has extraordinary relationships in the national security world. And obviously there's an incredible body of work that has been done over the past several decades.
Speaker 4 you know, think tank folks, authors, journalists, et cetera.
Speaker 4 And, you know, it's surprising how much a lot of this information is in the public domain in terms of what procedures the government would follow in case of an attack like this.
Speaker 4 And then a lot of it, you know, you can build by talking to sources, you know, much like you would do if you were trying to report out a story or get to the bottom of something.
Speaker 1 You know, it's amazing to me that most presidents don't ever ask for training on this.
Speaker 1 They don't do dry runs. This is,
Speaker 1
you're the one person that could change the whole world in 15 minutes. And you're coming into it.
Most of them are just coming into it absolutely dead cold. If something would happen,
Speaker 1 they don't know how it works. And this is not, I don't know how you would make the decision in that amount of time.
Speaker 4 Yeah, it's, I mean, two of the most terrifying things that we that we zeroed in on early was this question of sole authority and decision time, right?
Speaker 4 So the idea that in the United States we live in a nuclear monarchy, the president of the United States has the sole authority to determine whether these weapons are used.
Speaker 4 It's not like he has to build any kind of consensus with the joint chiefs of staff or take a vote of the cabinet. He has to decide.
Speaker 4 And he has to decide under extraordinary time pressure.
Speaker 4 So, you know, if a missile is launched from the Pacific theater, that part of the world, it's, you know, under 30 minutes to impact on the continental United States.
Speaker 4 If a missile is launched off our coast by a Russian sub, for instance, it would take 10 to 12 minutes.
Speaker 4 So you do have a scenario in which one person has arguably the fate of all mankind in their hands, and they've got a clock ticking.
Speaker 4 And, you know, depending on where they are and what the target is, they're probably running for their life or being evacuated, worrying about their own family.
Speaker 4 And it's all put to them. What do you want to do?
Speaker 4 And if you've, that's not scary enough, the cherry on top is we spoke to people who had worked directly with presidents, directly with secretaries of defense, and we said, how often is the president rehearsing this, practicing for it, preparing?
Speaker 4 And they said never, basically never. Never.
Speaker 4 They get one briefing when they take office where they're introduced to the military aide who we're all familiar with, the guy who follows them around with the suitcase, the nuclear football, if you will.
Speaker 4 The process is explained how that would work.
Speaker 4 And then after that, they never think about it again. And, you know, Ronald Reagan, we were told, was the last president who participated in any kind of live nuclear decision-making exercise.
Speaker 4 And so the guy who has the most responsibility, all the authority, is also arguably the least practiced and prepared of anyone in this whole province.
Speaker 1 It's really, it's terrifying. You know,
Speaker 1 I've talked to President Trump about nuclear capability. And I will tell you, you can say whatever you want about Donald Trump, but the one thing I know he's afraid of is nuclear war.
Speaker 1 That has kept him awake
Speaker 1 night after night.
Speaker 1 He knows,
Speaker 1 like Reagan did and Gorbachev did,
Speaker 1 you start that, you push that button, it's over. It's all over.
Speaker 1 I mean, you hinted at it when you were like, I got, you know,
Speaker 1 if we fly these missiles over this country, what are they going to, are they going to perceive this as a threat?
Speaker 1 You Missiles, Russia, I think in the movie, you've got Russia saying, how do we know you're not going to bomb it? We should just trust you. I mean,
Speaker 1 it's over.
Speaker 4 Yeah. And all of which begs the question, I think,
Speaker 4 for President Trump and for all of our leaders. What do we do about it? How do we solve this problem? We've lived with this threat in the background of all our lives since the dawn of the nuclear age.
Speaker 4 I am, despite my last name, not related to Oppenheimer.
Speaker 4 But
Speaker 4 we've lived with this dynamite in the walls for so many decades now. And really, since the end of the Cold War, we haven't really talked or thought about it very much.
Speaker 4
It is obviously on President Trump's mind. He does talk about it.
He's talked about trying to build the Golden Dome and a better missile defense system. And I think that
Speaker 4
this... this question of how do we make the world safer.
And it may be part of that is building a better missile defense system.
Speaker 4 It may be that part of it is re-engaging with an arms control and arms reduction process, right?
Speaker 4 I mean, New Start, our last remaining treaty with the Russians that governs the development and proliferation of these weapons is set to expire at the end of the year.
Speaker 4 Maybe we should engage in a process with Russia, with China, to try to dramatically reduce the nuclear stockpile. There are a lot of levers that the president can pull to try to make us all safer.
Speaker 1 So, you know, part of the controversy with your
Speaker 1 movie, which is House of Dynamite, and it's on Netflix,
Speaker 1 part of the controversy, I guess, with the Pentagon is that
Speaker 1 the ground-based missile
Speaker 1 or interceptors and the interceptors, you say it's 60% success.
Speaker 1 I think Annie Jacobson says it's like close to zero. And
Speaker 1 the Pentagon says it's 100%
Speaker 1 every time.
Speaker 1 What do you think it really is? Is it 60?
Speaker 4 So there's a few factors involved here.
Speaker 4 The record of the testing record for this system, which is the ground-based mid-course interceptors,
Speaker 4
is public and it is 61%. They have done a series of tests over the last 25 years.
And if you add up the, you know, the number of successes over the number of failures, it comes to 61%.
Speaker 4 The Pentagon in their memo is trying to say that the last several tests have been successful. The previous ones were not.
Speaker 4 So they say if you only count the most recent ones, it's 100%, which is, of course, impossible.
Speaker 1 That's like saying,
Speaker 4 I made my last two free throws, and so I'm 100% free throw shooter, even though I missed the previous one.
Speaker 1 top four.
Speaker 4
Yeah. So now that being said, they're not wrong in that the system is getting better.
The software is getting better.
Speaker 4 All of it is improving, but it is nowhere close to being able to say it's 100% effective. And part of that also comes down to the conditions under which these tests are undertaken, right?
Speaker 4 If I tell you, you know, Glenn, I'm going to throw a baseball at your head, it's a lot easier for you to brace yourself and be ready and catch that baseball.
Speaker 4 It's, you know, if an attack were to happen in the real world, it's far less likely,
Speaker 4 it's far more complicated to defend against. So
Speaker 4 this, though, is not a debate between us as filmmakers and the Pentagon. It's really a debate between the Pentagon and a much wider community of experts about the efficacy of this system.
Speaker 4 And like I said,
Speaker 4 it's a good conversation to have. Do we want to improve the system? Do we want to try to pour more money into building something like Golden Dose?
Speaker 1 Yes, yes, we do. Yes, we do.
Speaker 1 The one thing that you didn't hit on that was in Annie's book that I thought was fascinating was that the president, when the president has to finally make the decision, he still doesn't know if it's nuclear tipped.
Speaker 1 There could be a conventional weapon
Speaker 1 on a ballistic missile that is being sent by North Korea, let's say. I mean, it would be an incredible waste, but, you know, if we launch before the missile hits, hits,
Speaker 1 we don't even know if that's nuclear. And we would have then started a nuclear war because we're launching nuclear weapons and they didn't.
Speaker 4 I think that one of the things that we're trying to capture in the story that we tell, which is of course a fictional story,
Speaker 4 is the difficulty of making decisions in the fog of war. And that particularly when you have such a tight decision window, when that clock is winding down so rapidly,
Speaker 4 you're going to find yourself being forced to make calls with imperfect and incomplete information.
Speaker 4 And the other thing that is scary is that the system that we built that governs the use of nuclear weapons was designed during the Cold War for a specific purpose.
Speaker 4 It was to make sure that the Soviets believed they could never get away with a first strike, that if they launched missiles at us, the president would be able to fire back so quickly that our decision-making, our command and control apparatus would be able to retaliate.
Speaker 4 And so maintaining that deterrent threat, we needed to make sure that the president could respond and retaliate as quickly and as easily as possible. So that's the world we still live in now.
Speaker 4 And so, you know, again, if one domino falls, there aren't breaks, a lot of breaks built into this. The idea is to make it easy for the president to fire back.
Speaker 4 And so, yeah, I mean, you're right. I mean, mistakes can be made.
Speaker 4
I think it's miraculous, frankly, that, you know, we're all still here. The mistake hasn't been.
It is.
Speaker 1 It really is.
Speaker 1 Noah, Noah Oppenheim, we're talking about the
Speaker 1 show on Netflix called House of Dynamite. If you haven't seen it yet, it's a must-watch.
Speaker 1 It is an absolute thrilling 90 minutes that'll scare the living daylights out of you because you'll be like, that can't be true, right? That's not the way this works.
Speaker 1 Nope, that's exactly the way it works.
Speaker 1 And we're talking about nuclear war. We'll come back for a little bit more here.
Speaker 1 And I want to note, Noah, because I made a decision what I would do, but I think that is what would make me a really bad president, maybe.
Speaker 1 I would love to hear if you guys had a debate internally and decided what you would do if you were the president in that exact situation. We'll come back in just a second.
Speaker 1
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10 seconds station ID.
Speaker 1 From House of Dynamite.
Speaker 6 Approximately three minutes ago, we detected an ICBM over the Pacific. Current flight trajectory is consistent with impact somewhere in the continental United States.
Speaker 1 Have we seen Death Grant Tiber Fortune?
Speaker 1 Is this real?
Speaker 1 Stratcom is asking for launch instructions right now.
Speaker 1 I'm gonna need you to breathe.
Speaker 1 We are talking about hitting a bullet with a bullet. So it's a coin toss? That's a $50 billion advisor.
Speaker 3 Get in the car and just start driving.
Speaker 6 If we do not take steps to neutralize our enemies now,
Speaker 6 we will lose our window to do so.
Speaker 1 If we get this wrong,
Speaker 1 none of us are gonna be alive tomorrow.
Speaker 1 There is no plan B. We didn't hit everything right, right?
Speaker 1 We did everything
Speaker 1 right.
Speaker 1 None of this makes sense.
Speaker 1 Making all these bombs and all these clouds.
Speaker 1 It is.
Speaker 1 It's remarkable.
Speaker 1 House of Dynamite on Netflix.
Speaker 1 I'm talking to the
Speaker 1 screenwriter and the movie maker, Noah Oppenheim.
Speaker 1 Noah,
Speaker 1 there's one part of this I don't understand.
Speaker 1 And maybe this is what would make me a bad president, because I would say I am not striking until that thing hits and we know
Speaker 1 that it's hit and it's blown up one of our cities. And then I'm going to wait and I'm going to say immediately to the world,
Speaker 1 everyone in the world, you isolate and take action against this guy, or I will have no other response. I have no choice than to hit him back.
Speaker 1 But I would take the one hit in order to try to save the whole world. Why can't the president wait why why is it this constant you've got to launch before it hits why
Speaker 4 i don't think that would make you a bad president at all i think that's a perfectly reasonable response um to the situation i think that the counter point
Speaker 4 would be
Speaker 4 the the argument made by um one of our characters,
Speaker 4 one of the generals in Stratcom, who says,
Speaker 4 if you don't, now that the genie is out of the bottle, right? Now that somebody has kind of broken this nuclear stalemate that's existed for the last, you know, 70 years, that
Speaker 4 if we don't, it is now increasingly dangerous increasingly more likely that more met more weapons will be launched our way.
Speaker 4 We've now kind of entered into what they call a spiral of alerts, where because that missile, the one missile is coming towards us, we then raise our level of military readiness, start mobilizing forces.
Speaker 4 As soon as we start mobilizing our various forces around the world, everyone else does too. Now the nuclear genie is in potentially out of the bottle.
Speaker 4 And do we want to wait and see if more missiles are sent our way?
Speaker 4 Or do we want to try to make sure that it stops with this one and take out the other, our enemies' arsenals and command and control systems before they can potentially launch more? I agree with you.
Speaker 4 It's perfectly reasonable to say, I'll take that chance that there are more coming, but I want to see what what happens with this one first somebody else might say don't take that chance what are the odds it's only one let's hit everyone else's missiles while they're still in their silos and their bombers while they're still on the ground and make sure that we limit our losses to just this one city um i think well you once you do that it's over anyway yeah well that you do once you that's the kind of yes i mean that's the that's arguably the insanity of of the nuclear deterrent which is just that once you do the you know it's it's it's we destroy the entire world as a means of defending ourselves.
Speaker 1
Noah, great job. I hope there's a sequel.
I would love to see what the president
Speaker 1
would choose. Noah, Noah Oppenheim, the show is a house of dynamite.
Don't miss a movie on Netflix. House of Dynamite.
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Speaker 1 get a free month of service.
Speaker 2 The torch is coming in January. You can get the details, plus every story we talk about every day at Glennbeck.com.
Speaker 1 This is from the third movement of a symphony that is being written for America's 250th anniversary.
Speaker 1 The composer is a
Speaker 1
classically trained concert pianist. He has written scores for movies and everything else.
And you might recognize his last name. He is the cousin
Speaker 1 of the famous person who has this last name. Welcome to the program, Stephen Limbaugh.
Speaker 1 How are you, Stephen?
Speaker 7 I'm fantastic. I'm coming in clear, I assume.
Speaker 1
Yes, you are. You are.
Okay. This is such.
Speaker 1
You've gone into personal debt, I know, to record this section. And I listened to this section of the symphony.
It's the third movement. It is absolutely heart-wrenching and beautiful, just beautiful.
Speaker 1 What is the tension there? What are you saying in that movement?
Speaker 1 Well, what were you saying? You know, it's funny.
Speaker 7 It's funny because
Speaker 7
you have this momentous occasion coming up next year. Not a whole lot of countries last to 250 years.
Not a whole lot of societies do, right?
Speaker 7 And so it's a big concept to tackle, of course.
Speaker 7 And instead of trying to, I don't know, open up de Tocqueville or, you know, biographies of Washington, I tried to provoke inspiration in myself by asking the question, what is American?
Speaker 7
And I don't try to answer that. I don't try to force an answer, but I just try to use that question to orient myself to receive inspiration from top down.
You know, that's what a composer is.
Speaker 7 They're an antenna of inspiration.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 7 so for this, well, okay, of course, America's history is not all sunshine and rainbows. I mean, we were, we came about in a bloody conflagration of revolution
Speaker 7
in our infancy. And, you know, we had a brutal civil war.
And we've had trials and tribulations.
Speaker 7
You know, our recent politics is incredibly messy and violent, unfortunately. And so the third movement, typically in a symphony, is a slow movement.
Sometimes it's just meant to be beautiful.
Speaker 1 Sometimes it's meant to lament things.
Speaker 7 And so that's what came to me.
Speaker 7 And, you know, it's a feature of this violin solo. And there's also something about, not like other symphonies don't have solos in them, but I've got solos interspersed throughout the work.
Speaker 7 because there is the aspect of individualism and
Speaker 7 one person may be rising to the occasion whenever the stage is set in the right way, historically, let's say. And so, you know, the violin is perfectly suited for that sort of thing.
Speaker 7 And so that's sort of the brief overview. Music is hard to talk about sometimes because it's abstract, right?
Speaker 1 Yeah.
Speaker 1 I tell you, the best music and
Speaker 1 it has to be fascinating as a composer to compose something and then hear people and hear what they read into it
Speaker 1 because they are probably hearing something entirely different than what you had in mind.
Speaker 1 And it must be interesting to listen to people say what it meant to them or what they felt during that because the best music makes you feel.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 1 this third movement,
Speaker 1 I felt the
Speaker 1 I felt the beauty and the longing and the
Speaker 1 sadness and the mourning and you know just all of the emotions that I think people are feeling right now and have felt from the beginning it's both beautiful and tragic at the same time it's just it's wonderful well then then I've done my job thank you
Speaker 7 because
Speaker 7 you know it's in Aristotle's poetics they say in a play or something like that the drama is not happening on stage and the same is with the music with music the drama is actually happening in the hearts of the audience and so my my job is to set that stage.
Speaker 7 So if you felt something and you felt long or whatever it is you felt, then I did my job. You know, the Cardinal Sin, if you said, well, Stephen, I was a little bored.
Speaker 7 Then I need to wrap up and go home.
Speaker 1
That would be bad. That would be bad.
That would be bad.
Speaker 1 So
Speaker 1 you started writing this when? How long ago?
Speaker 7 I started in January, and a friend of mine, Josh Steinman, who's a former Trump administration administration official, said, Stephen, you should do this in public.
Speaker 7
I said, what do you mean, do this in public? That's crazy. I'm going to get ripped to shreds on the internet if I document my process the whole time.
Incredibly, the opposite has been true.
Speaker 7 The community on X has been overwhelmingly supportive and the comments have been positive.
Speaker 7 And so I've got hours and hours of content that I've posted almost weekly about me struggling through melody, struggling through orchestration,
Speaker 7 coming up with problems and musical solutions to things. And so that started in January, and I'm over halfway through the whole thing now.
Speaker 7 And my goal is to be finished by January here in a few months.
Speaker 1 Just so let me cut to the chase here before we continue our conversation.
Speaker 1 You need, I think, $69,000 or $70,000 to complete.
Speaker 1 He's already raised $10,000 at Give Send Go.
Speaker 1
And he needs $60,000 to hire the 75 musicians to do this. Symphony is going to be about 30 minutes in length.
I hope it is performed at the Kennedy Center for the 250.
Speaker 1 And if it's not, if you're not somebody there, is it somewhere there, I'll book your orchestra to play it someplace and we'll we'll do a real nice job at it. But anyway,
Speaker 1
go to givesendgo.com slash A250 Symphony. GiveSendGo.com slash A250 Symphony.
Tanya and I are going to kick in on this too. You've got to be able to complete this.
Speaker 1 And I love the fact that it's coming from the people and not from big grants of the government.
Speaker 7 Oh my gosh, that's incredible.
Speaker 7 I don't know what to say.
Speaker 7 I'm floored right now.
Speaker 7
That's incredible. Yes, I've been in contact with people at the Kennedy Center already.
And
Speaker 7 Ambassador Grinnell said that, you know, told a couple of his guys, get in contact with Stephen Limbaugh, figure out how we can make this happen.
Speaker 7 And the question has just been a financial question about how we can get the musicians hired to do it.
Speaker 7 So that's, thank you, thank you so much for the plug and the offer. That's that's incredibly helpful.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 7 I'm humbled by this. I'm kind of, I'm,
Speaker 1 thank you, Glenn.
Speaker 1 You're welcome. You're welcome, Stephen.
Speaker 1 Can you explain to people who don't
Speaker 1 necessarily ever go to a symphony, why is this music important?
Speaker 7 Gosh, you know, it's all about
Speaker 7 the health of the society, I believe,
Speaker 7 can be measured by the prevalence of their high arts and culture.
Speaker 7 Some of the highest art forms, or some of the highest music is classical music. I would also say jazz is included in that too.
Speaker 7 We have an incredible classical music tradition in this country.
Speaker 7 Now, you know, of course, it's originally European, but in our country, in America, we have composers like Aaron Copeland and Leonard Bernstein and George Gershwin that have written things.
Speaker 7 You know, I posited this question, what is American? I would challenge anybody to go look up Aaron Copeland Rodeo Suite right now.
Speaker 1 Yeah. And immediately you will say, that does not sound French.
Speaker 1
You know, it's so funny. I was having a conversation with somebody.
I had that playing in my office one day. And I said, tell me this could have been written by anybody else other than American.
Speaker 1 And I actually think Gershwin
Speaker 1
Rhapsody in Blue is also the same. That just screams New York City to me.
And America. Absolutely.
Speaker 7 Absolutely. And
Speaker 7 so preserving that tradition and preserving that output of culture that this country has had
Speaker 7 is of the highest importance. And so that's why for next year, that has to be a part of the programming.
Speaker 7 Getting an officer together, hopefully at the Kennedy Center to perform these works, get, you know, do new recordings of them.
Speaker 7 So in 50 years from now, whenever we're getting ready to celebrate 300 years of this country, they will look back at 250 and say, here's what they did at that time.
Speaker 7 And now we've established this wonderful tradition where we honor our great artists of this country.
Speaker 1 Stephen, thank you so much.
Speaker 1 I can't tell you how important I think it is for
Speaker 1 the people who believe in the Constitution, the people who believe that America is not a bad place,
Speaker 1 get into the arts and support the arts.
Speaker 1 We've lost this country beginning with the arts.
Speaker 1 You lose the arts and
Speaker 1 it'll take you into
Speaker 1 really very different places. And
Speaker 1 we need to be able to support the artists that
Speaker 1
believe in America. Just, I don't care if you vote the same way I do.
Can you just believe that America is an okay place?
Speaker 1 Stephen,
Speaker 1
my best of luck to you. Thank you.
And we'll be in touch.
Speaker 7 Absolutely. Thank you so much, Glenn.
Speaker 1 You're welcome. Stephen Limbaugh, if you can support, this is a really worthwhile cause.
Speaker 1 You know, I know this is an especially at a time when, you know, everybody is struggling to put food on the table, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker 1 This is a big ask, but it is really important, especially on the 250.
Speaker 1 You can go to givesendgo.com slash A250 Symphony. He's already put his own money into it, and he's kind of racking up some debt, getting it done.
Speaker 1 GiveSendGo.com slash A250 Symphony, a worthwhile cause. And if the Kennedy Center won't do it, I stand by it.
Speaker 1
We'll hire the orchestra and we'll find a place on the 250 to play this. All right, back in just a second.
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Speaker 1 By the way, the address is givesendgo.com/slash a250 Symphony.
Speaker 1
Let me take you to the podcast that is going to air tomorrow. I have Dr.
Diane Hennessy
Speaker 1
on telepathic accuracy. This is an amazing thing.
She is with the telepathy tapes. She's the host of that.
She is a serious doctor.
Speaker 1 And what she says is that people with autism may actually have a superpower that is going unnoticed. And this will change the way you think of everything.
Speaker 1 Listen to this clip.
Speaker 3 So the story of this girl was that
Speaker 3 her father, who was familiar with the idea of mathematical savants, thought she was a mathematical savant because even though she had
Speaker 3 she she didn't do regular arithmetic, she could solve very complex mathematical problems.
Speaker 3 And so the therapist was working with her in the home one day and her calculator died. And so she used a different means of doing the calculation.
Speaker 3
And this, she used an iPad and it wasn't in this girl's line of vision at all. And it gave the answer in logarithmic notation.
And
Speaker 3 Haley
Speaker 3 spelled on her talker. She had a device where
Speaker 3
it's like a keyboard that then gives you an electronic voice. She typed onto it the logarithmic notation instead.
And, and, and, and the therapist was like,
Speaker 3 wait a minute.
Speaker 3 How did you know that? You know, and
Speaker 3 she said, well, I can, I can see the numerators and denominators in your head. You know, she's basically, I'm reading your mind.
Speaker 3 And then, and then the therapist started asking her questions that she knew the answers to, and she's like blown away.
Speaker 3 And then, then, similarly, a second therapist who was working in the home discovered it through some accidents.
Speaker 1 And
Speaker 3 so when I went there to evaluate them,
Speaker 3 I put a barrier, a visual barrier between the child and the therapist. And I had cameras through
Speaker 3
all over the room. I had them above and on all the walls.
And
Speaker 3 then the cameraman and I were in another room
Speaker 3 getting a feed. you know, from the cameras that we could monitor everything.
Speaker 3 And I had already taken numbers and words and pictures and everything and had randomized them and given them to the therapist as a stack for her to one by one turn over and see what it was and then think it and say to Haley, okay, you know, type, you know, type thing you talk or whatever it is.
Speaker 3 Yeah, yeah. And
Speaker 1
these tests came back, and this is stunning to me. These tests come back 10 out of 10.
You ask 10 questions, you get 10 right answers, right? I mean, if it was
Speaker 3 close, I mean,
Speaker 3 it's between 97, you know, people.
Speaker 1 But if you had,
Speaker 1 if you had 70% right, you would think that would be on the front page of every paper. You have 97% of the time, it's right.
Speaker 1 That's way beyond statistic
Speaker 3
anything. Absolutely.
Absolutely. And that's the reason why.
So
Speaker 3 back up a bit. So, you know, after I got my license back from the medical board, I was determined to do two things.
Speaker 3 And the first thing was I was going to find evidence that would be convincing, okay, to the skeptics.
Speaker 3 And I knew that there was all this evidence that was out there that was, even though it was statistically significant, it wasn't like knock your socks off.
Speaker 3 You know, so let's say if chance is that you get 25%
Speaker 3 of the answers, right, right. And you're scoring at 35%.
Speaker 1 Right.
Speaker 3 I mean, nobody's going to lose sleep over that. Right.
Speaker 1 97% changes you.
Speaker 3 That changes you.
Speaker 1 You don't want to miss this. It's episode 273.
Speaker 1 Really, honestly,
Speaker 1 it'll blow your mind. Episode 273, the podcast, Autistic Kids Can Read Minds from the
Speaker 1 Telepathy Tapes, and you'll find it wherever you get your podcast. Tomorrow, it's everywhere today, available right now at Blazetv.com.
Speaker 1 This is Glenn Beck.