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The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

Released Friday, 5th April 2024
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The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

The White House Just Took Us One Step CLOSER to WWIII with Russia | Guest: Flash Shelton | 4/5/24

Friday, 5th April 2024
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Episode Transcript

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0:00

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0:02

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0:06

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0:40

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with this. roughgreens.com/Beck, R

0:54

U F F greens.com/Beck, 833

0:56

Glenn 33. Do it now.

1:35

Welcome to the fusion of

1:39

entertainment and

1:42

enlightenment. This

1:45

is the Glenn Beck program. Hello

1:50

and welcome to the Glenn Beck program. We're

1:52

so glad that you've joined us. It is

1:55

Friday and the

1:57

good news is from the.

2:00

The people who brought you

2:02

Afghanistan comes World

2:04

War 3. What

2:07

the heck are we doing? We'll

2:10

explain... Well, I can't explain what we're doing, but

2:12

we'll explain what happened yesterday, here in a second.

2:14

First, wouldn't it be great if there was just

2:16

a switch in the back of your head that

2:18

they could flip every night and you'd instantly go

2:21

to sleep? Oh, they're working on

2:23

that switch. Believe

2:25

me. Don't take the switch.

2:27

I have a wife and I'm

2:29

pretty sure that she would flip that switch pretty

2:32

much every time she got tired of

2:35

listening. I would say, hey honey, I'm a... So

2:39

don't push for the switch. Here's the thing. You

2:44

can do this without technology

2:46

or pharmaceuticals. You get

2:48

a healthy night's sleep by

2:50

using Relief Factor Sleep. Relief Factor Sleep

2:52

is 100% drug free. You'll

2:55

get a good night's sleep that you really need

2:58

without feeling like you got hit by a truck

3:00

the next morning. I know

3:02

from experience it works. Tony took some

3:04

just last night. She was

3:06

out. Unleash the power of great sleep

3:08

by calling 800 the number 4... Or

3:11

she was pretending. 1-800 the

3:13

number 4 relief. 1-800

3:15

the number 4 relief relieffactor.com.

3:18

She's always falling asleep

3:20

so quickly. Really, Relief

3:23

Factor does work. She

3:26

passes out the second I walk in the room

3:28

every time. It's really

3:30

working. Alright,

3:32

we have bigger things to talk about. Let's

3:34

talk about World War 3. Shall

3:36

we? Oh. Mmm.

3:39

Stu, tell me what you think of

3:42

this. Cut one. Cut

3:45

one. It's

3:48

a little slow. It's just... It

3:50

is... I thought it would be a little more

3:52

exciting. Yeah. It's a little

3:54

slow. Here it is. Okay. Ukraine

3:57

will become a member of NATO. Our

4:00

purpose at the summit is to

4:03

help build a bridge to that

4:05

membership and to

4:07

create a clear pathway for

4:10

Ukraine moving forward. No!

4:13

Oh! Okay! Alrighty then!

4:16

That is great! Now,

4:18

Stu, can you help me out? What

4:20

was it that Russia said that

4:24

the reason they were going

4:26

to war was because of

4:30

Ukraine potentially getting into NATO? Yeah!

4:33

And so the one thing they didn't

4:35

want us to do was to

4:37

push for Ukraine to be in

4:40

NATO. And so the goal of

4:42

this big global conference in Europe

4:45

yesterday was to put Ukraine

4:47

in NATO. Okay, this sounds

4:50

bad! Now look, Russia

4:52

shouldn't be able to tell the

4:54

rest of the world who gets in NATO and

4:56

who doesn't. But in

4:59

this moment, in

5:01

the current moment that we're in, potentially

5:04

an answer somewhat like, you

5:06

know, we're in the middle of a war right now,

5:08

I don't know if anyone's noticed this. Perhaps

5:12

we don't want to inflame tensions, we'll discuss

5:14

this a little bit more, of

5:16

course our policy is not changed. Something like

5:18

that, where you're not necessarily, because the policy

5:20

has been they want Ukraine, and

5:22

the president has not changed that policy. So,

5:25

you know, Blinken can't come out and say

5:27

that's not the policy anymore, but he could

5:29

probably be a little bit more judicious with

5:31

the way he talks about this in the

5:34

middle of hundreds of thousands of people dying

5:36

on a battlefield. Yeah, okay, alright, good

5:38

safety tips. Now you're not

5:40

the Secretary of State. I'm

5:43

thinking I might be qualified for it after today though. I

5:46

kind of thought I was way too much of an

5:48

idiot to get that job, but that might be the

5:50

main qualification. Yeah, I don't think you are. I don't

5:52

think you are. Now, at the same

5:54

table, at the same time, the

5:58

President of France, Macron

6:01

has been saying lately. He's

6:03

thinking about sending troops now

6:05

remember Another

6:08

thing Russia has said is

6:10

you guys get involved then

6:12

you're involved and I

6:14

target you as well So

6:17

macron now help me out

6:19

because we may have slipped through another

6:21

wormhole. No, okay In

6:24

the universe that I went to sleep

6:27

in last night France

6:31

were wusses France

6:34

never I mean they were not exactly fight.

6:36

They were lovers. They weren't fighters and They

6:40

were the joke in the universe. I came

6:42

from that like France, you

6:44

know Will will

6:46

surrender to your suitcase? So

6:51

Not a carry-on. It's gonna have to be

6:53

a full checkable bag Well,

6:56

not necessarily. No, not necessarily you may

6:58

be from a different universe tonight. Okay.

7:00

Okay Have

7:03

we slipped through a wormhole How is

7:05

it that France of all places is

7:07

beating their chests going? You know what?

7:10

We got a military and we're gonna

7:13

use it When

7:15

did that happen? Why are

7:17

we listening to France? Why?

7:21

Why? Okay, so

7:23

macron also said that he knows for

7:26

sure Russia is gonna target the Paris

7:28

Olympics They're gonna know it. They're

7:31

gonna do it Hmm.

7:34

Okay. Okay. So that's uh, that's

7:36

good. Now. This has not been a

7:38

problem at all for oil prices. I

7:42

Mean yes, it went up to $90 a barrel but

7:46

that probably has something to do with

7:50

Iran getting

7:52

ready to attack Israel and Full-fledged

7:56

war breaking out in the Middle

7:58

East which would drive the price

8:00

of oil through the roof. Could anybody say

8:02

$200 a barrel? By the way, America,

8:07

the economy is built for $100 to

8:09

$110 a barrel. It doesn't survive long,

8:15

the economy, anything over that, that's

8:17

what we've already priced in. If

8:20

you remember, 2008, it

8:22

was the sustained, what was it, Stu,

8:24

$130 or $40 a barrel? That

8:30

seems high from my memory, I think it was a little

8:32

lower than that. With inflation it would certainly

8:34

be at least that high. Right, so $110 in those days

8:36

is like $190,000, $200,000, $300,000, whatever it is. So

8:44

it was a sustained over

8:47

$120, and I

8:50

had been warning about it. You

8:52

can't, with everything is so delicate

8:54

right now, you cannot handle that

8:56

it will break the back of the economy.

8:59

Well it did, and we had the 2008,

9:01

we're talking now possibly $200 a barrel. $200

9:04

a barrel, and what is our government doing?

9:07

They're saying they're

9:12

not going to fill the strategic oil

9:14

reserve because it's

9:16

now too expensive. I

9:19

don't know, I say we bite the

9:21

bullet. We don't seem to have a

9:23

problem sending billions of dollars overseas. For

9:26

why, I don't know, France needs

9:28

animal crackers. Let's get them, let's

9:31

get the animal crackers to France

9:33

quick. They need ten billion dollars

9:35

for animal crackers. We

9:37

seem to find the money to do whatever we

9:39

want. Why can't we find the money to fill

9:43

the strategic oil

9:46

reserve from the people

9:48

who brought you Afghanistan? Comes

9:50

an empty strategic oil

9:52

reserve. Who would have seen

9:55

it coming? And of course no weapons because

9:57

we gave them all to other countries. Yeah,

10:00

so you have that going? Yeah, that going oh

10:02

and by the way because of corruption and everything

10:04

else in our government All of

10:07

our f-35s only 25% of them are mission capable, but don't worry

10:11

It was just the most expensive airplane ever built

10:14

So it's more like a an

10:16

f9 or an f8. Yeah, that's what

10:19

we have left. Yeah, okay. The F8s didn't work

10:22

So also we have Anthony Blinken yesterday.

10:25

I love that me. I love the

10:27

I love the fact that his name

10:29

is not Anthony He knows Anthony. Anthony.

10:32

Hey everybody. It's me, Anthony I'm

10:35

over here to tell you you

10:37

know what Israel is becoming indistinguishable

10:39

from Amas You

10:41

know what I'm saying because they're doing

10:44

too many bada-bings and

10:46

bada-booms And they

10:48

gotta stop the bada-booms. I might support

10:50

him if he sounded like that I

10:52

might be okay with it. I would

10:54

at least enjoy this trip to World

10:56

War three sure You know to me

10:58

much more fun version. So we got

11:00

a little world war three Yeah, you

11:02

know what I'm saying bada-bing bada-boom And

11:04

when I say bada-boom what I'm

11:06

talking about is what happened in Washington DC boom

11:11

It's gone. Good thing. I wasn't there.

11:13

I was at a strip club that

11:15

night. I Was

11:18

the one that was held back, you

11:20

know for in case of a catastrophic

11:24

You know event and it went

11:26

bada-boom and she was going bada-bing

11:28

on stage, you know Okay,

11:33

so yesterday Anthony Blinken

11:37

Said those words

11:39

Israel is becoming

11:41

indistinguishable from Hamas

11:47

Okay, all right and

11:50

Joe Biden, I mean he laid

11:52

it down on the terrorists. Okay,

11:55

you know all those terrorists the Houthis

12:01

Man they are so vicious those Houthis.

12:06

So the Houthi terrorists have

12:08

been launching

12:11

rockets at our ships, at the

12:13

ships in China, everything else. They

12:16

have been attacking the ships. And

12:19

Joe Biden came out yesterday, I

12:21

mean with a strong, BAH-DAH-BING! He

12:23

came out and he said,

12:26

They said, I don't know

12:29

the Houthi terrorists and

12:32

the Houthi terrorists decide that they won't

12:35

launch any more

12:41

missiles. I

12:43

won't call them terrorists, okay?

12:46

So I'll use

12:49

a nicer

12:52

descriptor word

12:55

for the Houthis if

12:57

they just stop bombing, I won't call them terrorists.

13:00

What's going on with his voice? Did he have several red bulls

13:02

before they said? I

13:06

mean, wait, wait, wait.

13:08

So the Houthis are like, oh, well,

13:13

America won't call us terrorists

13:15

anymore. That

13:17

would be the opposite that

13:19

they want you to call

13:21

them terrorists because it makes

13:24

the Houthis sound scary. You

13:27

really think, you know, I have really

13:29

had, I've got

13:31

a lot of sand in my ears because I

13:33

grew up here in the desert, but

13:35

I, I

13:38

can't even say it, I

13:41

have been so hurt by

13:43

America calling us terrorists just

13:45

for doing terrorists activity. What?

13:50

They're not Harvard students.

13:53

They don't have their feelings hurt

13:55

by mean words. I'm

14:00

like, I'm just being words or nothing. I

14:04

don't know, stop it by just not

14:06

launching rockets at their ship. Oh

14:08

my god. We're

14:11

doomed. That was our fault. These

14:13

things are always our fault. Like if we

14:15

would just improve our behavior, they'd stop shooting

14:17

missiles at us. If

14:20

we would just stop being so

14:22

mean to the Gazans, they'd stop

14:24

raping all the Israelis. Exactly right.

14:26

It's always our fault. Exactly right.

14:29

And maybe you call them Gazans

14:31

and they're not. They're Palestinians. Sorry,

14:33

Palestinians. How do they deal with

14:35

you people? If

14:37

we would just stop calling them the wrong

14:39

name, they would stop all the

14:42

murder. Yes. I guess that's what we're saying.

14:45

Every single time it's always our fault. It's our fault

14:47

that because

14:49

Hamas, the people that were

14:51

elected by the Palestinians, came

14:54

across the quote unquote border and

14:56

murdered and raped a bunch of people, it's

14:59

our fault that their citizens are

15:01

not getting food and water now.

15:04

That's because of us. It's not because

15:06

of the 150 countries across the world who supported Hamas. Can

15:14

I tell you something? I would love to be

15:16

a fly on the wall at

15:18

the National Security Committee

15:21

and listen to them in

15:24

the bunker in the bowels of the basement

15:26

of the White House. As they're

15:28

saying, Mr. President, things are getting a little crazy. Well,

15:35

let's just stop calling them terrorists. My

15:39

gosh, President. Mr. President, that is

15:41

genius. I think that

15:43

is the greatest strategic move our

15:45

military could ever. That is,

15:48

you are a history maker. It

15:51

could go as well as

15:53

our withdrawal from Afghanistan. to

16:00

be fair about Afghanistan for just

16:02

a second here. They did send

16:05

in multiple officials with no evacuation

16:07

plan and within hours after

16:10

Kabul fell. So they decided to come up with

16:12

a plan after the

16:15

fall of Kabul, which wasn't at all foreseeable

16:17

in the days leading up to that. And

16:20

hey, what are you going to do?

16:22

Right? Hey, are we still in Afghanistan?

16:24

No. Badabing! Badaboo!

16:28

It would be a better press conference than the one that

16:31

Blinken was giving. Picture this. Burglar breaks into

16:33

your home. Thankfully it's during the day. You

16:35

and your family are gone so nobody's going

16:38

to get hurt. But he's still going

16:40

to help himself to your stuff. But

16:43

then all of a sudden a voice

16:45

rings out. You're on camera. The police

16:47

are on their way right now. No,

16:49

no, even better. It's

16:51

Antony Blinken. His voice

16:53

comes out and says, hey, you're on

16:56

camera. Normally I like that kind of

16:58

stuff, but hey, this time the police

17:00

are on their way right now. Criminal

17:03

drops everything and runs.

17:06

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17:18

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18:19

you dirty filthy

18:21

ten-second station hotaboom

18:28

hotaboom hey

18:34

you know should we what was

18:36

slow as the remember we used to

18:38

have the governor Cuomo music do

18:40

we still have that because that might be

18:42

good for Anthony Blinken you know hey

18:45

I'm just here at the

18:47

negotiation table you

18:49

know you got yourself a

18:52

nice little country there be a

18:54

shame if something happened to you

18:56

know what I'm saying Vladimir I

18:59

think that's the kind of

19:01

negotiation we like right mm-hmm

19:04

it's a curious approach it would

19:07

seem that the best

19:09

path forward would be to eliminate

19:12

the possibilities of World War 3

19:15

whenever possible and that does not seem to

19:17

be the approach of the

19:19

administration seems like a

19:21

vote for Joe Biden is a vote

19:23

for World War 3 is

19:26

that their new slogan I'm thinking about you know making Biden 2024

19:28

bumper stickers

19:34

highlight vote for Biden is a vote

19:36

for World War 3 and it's you

19:39

know what I like about it is

19:41

it's objective if you want World War

19:43

3 you can have that way we're

19:45

not saying you can't vote for Biden

19:48

you just might want for 3 and

19:50

then you can vote that way sad

19:52

misinformation no that's this is that's malin

19:54

malin malin formation there's no there's no

19:57

evidence at all that they're looking and

19:59

itching for World War. I will say

20:01

it's not my favorite bumper sticker because it

20:03

rules out the possibility of World War 4

20:05

and World War 5 under his reign and

20:07

that's of course right around the corner probably

20:09

as well. So World War 3, World War

20:11

4, World War 5 coming soon to a

20:13

Biden administration near you. Hey, you know what

20:15

I'm saying? I'm over here making deals. Pressing

20:18

the flesh, kissing babies. You

20:20

know, hey, you want to

20:22

be a NATO? What?

20:27

Was there a lot of baby kissing? Lots

20:29

of baby kissing. You know, like kissing

20:31

you baby. You know, goodbye. Friday,

20:37

can you tell we don't care today? I'm

20:40

wearing, it's Hawaiian shirt Friday too. Okay,

20:43

I did notice, can we talk about your

20:46

shirt for a second? Yeah. Because

20:48

first of all, I don't think it would qualify

20:50

as a Hawaiian shirt at all. That's not what

20:52

I would say. I've never seen Weird Al wear

20:55

something like that and that's I think the standard

20:57

bearer for Hawaiian shirts. You know what? Then we'll

20:59

make one with a palm tree on the back.

21:02

Okay, how's that? Well, you can do that but

21:04

that's not... Yeah, okay.

21:06

So it has the skull and crossbones on it.

21:08

Yes. And with the little

21:11

crown, which is kind of the

21:13

colonial logo for, you

21:15

know, no king but God. And

21:18

it says STF, which is

21:21

Stu. Well,

21:24

I can't... Anyway, no, what

21:26

is it? Because there's an F there. It's six

21:28

twisted free. Yeah, because I was wondering if there

21:30

was a U after it. That was sort of

21:32

an STFU and then I was like, that's pretty

21:34

dark when you're going pretty

21:36

aggressive there. Well, there's a

21:39

happy skull and crossbones for the sick

21:41

twisted freaks. Right. Which

21:44

you've been calling the audience for years and

21:46

somehow have still been successful. Yeah, it's weird,

21:48

isn't it? It is weird. Yeah, even chat

21:51

pots all around the world are like, I don't know. I

21:53

don't know how he's successful. It doesn't

21:55

make any... I don't know how to make...

22:00

Phew. So

22:02

I'm just trying to do my

22:04

part to help the world free itself from AI.

22:08

Another reason why we're successful?

22:11

Scollen crossbones? Sick

22:13

twisted freak Hawaiian shirts that don't

22:16

really feel like you're in Hawaii?

22:19

Yes! Yes, of course.

22:22

Hey, it's the geniuses that

22:24

brought you... ...that

22:27

brought you the Escape

22:29

from Afghanistan! Now in

22:32

t-shirts! And shirts

22:34

that kind of are Hawaiian but not really. Rough

22:38

greens. Some of the happiest memories you ever make

22:40

in life are with your dog. Uno

22:44

is sleeping all

22:47

the time. All the... ...he

22:49

walk in and he's just...he doesn't even open

22:51

his eyes. Because he's so deaf

22:54

he doesn't hear anything anymore. It's

22:56

sad. It's sad. He's

22:59

so loyal and he has

23:01

provided... I told Tanya yesterday, Hey,

23:04

leave him alone! She's

23:06

like, Come on, come on Uno, come on. And I'm like,

23:08

Leave him alone! He's like 97 years old now! He

23:13

can, you know, put some Madlock on for

23:15

him. Turn it way up because he can't

23:17

hear it. Anyway, we're

23:20

feeding him rough greens. We

23:22

put that on his dog food and

23:25

he loves it. He loves it. It's the only

23:27

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them? Thenbeckmerch.com? Yeah,

24:00

I'm sorry you didn't get it. Welcome

24:13

to the Glenn Beck program. It

24:15

is Friday. You know on Friday nights

24:18

you used to go into Blockbuster Glenn? Yeah. And

24:20

you go like, guys, the drama section. Right. Romantic

24:22

comedy. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. You started the action section,

24:24

right? Right, yeah. Then you get to the horror

24:26

section. And that's where I've been living all week.

24:28

Really? The horror section? Because I've been looking at

24:30

lots of charts. Oh. You know me. I like

24:32

my charts. Yeah. And I've been slowly

24:36

convincing myself over the past week

24:39

that the media is going to be

24:41

successful in convincing the American people the

24:43

economy is good. You

24:46

know they're going to lay this on thick. And we

24:49

know what the reality is, but it's the

24:51

media versus reality. And I'm getting more and

24:53

more scared that the media is going to

24:55

succeed in this effort and Joe Biden is

24:57

going to win. So I'm terrifying myself all

24:59

week long. Okay. So

25:06

let me just call you Shafit. Okay.

25:08

Shafit. You

25:10

know the meaning of the name, Shafit. I

25:13

just – No? Not off the top of my

25:15

head, no. How about Shamua? That

25:19

one sounds familiar. Shafit,

25:21

Shamua, Igal, Palti.

25:24

Yeah. Recognize any of these names.

25:26

They kind of sound familiar. Do you want to

25:28

reveal what they are? Omeil, Sethor, Nabi. Nabi.

25:34

Yeah, Nabi. Ghoul. Ghoul.

25:37

Yeah. Okay. You ever heard of

25:39

any of those names? I mean, you kind of

25:41

have, right? You're like, there's a list of

25:44

weird names. I've read that

25:46

before. Sure. And usually

25:48

it's like, Be-gat is

25:50

in between. Yeah. Right. So

25:53

you know those are probably Bible names. Yep. You

25:55

have no idea where they are. Don't remember what story they're from. Don't know.

25:58

No. So,

26:01

you remember when God delivered

26:03

the Hebrew people from slavery in Egypt,

26:05

and they were all crybabies, and the

26:07

minute they hit the water, they're like,

26:09

oh, I don't know, we should go

26:11

back to Europe, go back to not

26:13

Europe, go back to Egypt, right?

26:17

And they, you know, it was supposed to

26:19

be an 11-day walk, and it turned into 40 years because

26:23

of what God, you

26:26

know, because of the response that God had

26:28

when 12 leaders shaft

26:32

it, people like you, Moses

26:35

picked 12, they went

26:38

in. I don't think this is going to turn out well for me.

26:41

Okay, Moses says, you guys go into

26:43

the promised land and see what it

26:46

looks like. What kind of people does

26:48

it? Doesn't it milk and honey, right?

26:50

Yeah. You can bring walls around the

26:52

city, you know, basic stuff, bring back

26:54

some fruit of the promised land. So,

26:57

and I'm not making this up, it

26:59

was grape season, and the

27:01

grapes were so big, it took two men to

27:03

carry a cluster of them, okay? Really

27:06

good land that God was giving them. Look at the size

27:08

of the grapes, right? But it wasn't just

27:10

the grapes. Big grapes mean

27:12

big people, and

27:15

the people were living there, they were huge

27:17

too. So the spies came back, and

27:19

what did they say? Oh, we can't take

27:21

that land. We can't do it. We can't

27:24

do it. Yeah, it's flowing with milk and

27:26

honey like God said, but the city walls

27:28

are gigantic, and the

27:30

giants there make us look like grasshoppers.

27:33

They really use grasshopper. They're giant, they're

27:35

giants. We look like grasshoppers. Sure. Okay,

27:38

so there were two other

27:40

people, they were spies too, and

27:42

they were like, uh, no, you know, we got God on

27:44

our side, we can do this, okay? And

27:47

then everybody started, I wish we were

27:49

back in Egypt, we should go back

27:51

to slavery, this Moses guy. They were

27:53

totally without hope, okay? So

27:57

the two guys, they start saying, no, God's with

27:59

us. This is great land. Don't don't

28:02

give up your hope now That

28:04

didn't work and everybody tried to stone them

28:06

to death. Okay. Okay. All right. Okay. Hey

28:08

again I don't know what

28:11

this has to do with my election. I

28:13

know who Caleb and Joshua

28:15

are I know several Caleb's Caleb and

28:17

Joshua in this context. Have you ever

28:20

heard of those names? I'm sure that

28:22

means I'm just it's something that's going

28:24

to mean bad things for me. That's what I know Let

28:28

me break this down for you. Sure. Please do. Let me break

28:30

this down for you In

28:33

every journey It

28:36

seems insurmountable There

28:39

will always be voices like stew what

28:41

do you mean? It's

28:43

amount of both. We have a Decrepid

28:46

man with Alzheimer's who's losing at every

28:49

swing state. This isn't that's not the

28:52

The feel of the moment you're the one that

28:55

your voice was clouded with fear and

28:57

doubt. Yes. Yeah, that's true That is

28:59

I am crying clouded with fear and

29:01

doubt and you often Forget

29:03

the extraordinary power of our God. That's

29:06

that's I don't forget that at all

29:08

Get it all the time. I do

29:10

not forget all the time not you

29:12

were like the ten spies Oh, yes,

29:14

you are just a fair we might be a

29:16

little too optimistic Pass

29:20

the challenges that there are big

29:22

grapes waiting for you, you

29:24

know, it didn't reference grapes at all

29:26

Why names like stew

29:28

and chef it? You

29:32

know that their names overshadowed by

29:34

their doubt faded in the

29:36

backdrop of history just gone however,

29:40

the two spies and others

29:42

like them Who

29:45

remain very humble? Mm-hmm They

29:48

have a radical different perspective

29:52

They knew the strength and the promise

29:54

that lay with the

29:56

faith in God See

29:59

they look beyond the giants, Stu.

30:01

They saw potential, they saw hope,

30:04

they saw the fulfillment of promise

30:07

underpinned by the unwavering belief in

30:09

the power of God. Their

30:11

names, unlike your name,

30:13

will be as it is

30:16

endured through millennia. Not

30:18

because they face lesser challenges, no, no,

30:21

but because they chose to see those

30:23

challenges differently. It

30:28

was their unyielding belief in

30:32

vision that led them to

30:34

be remembered. In

30:37

the face of challenges,

30:39

we should be

30:41

more like Joshua and Caleb and

30:45

remember just don't be Stu. Remember

30:50

the voices of doubt, both

30:53

external like Stu's and internal like

30:55

Stu's will fade away but

30:59

the courage to believe in what seems

31:01

impossible that echoes

31:03

through eternity. So

31:12

let your faith

31:15

be stronger than fear and

31:17

your vision, don't

31:20

let that be guided by the obstacles in your

31:22

path but by

31:25

instead the boundless power

31:27

of your belief because

31:31

in every challenge Stu, there lays an

31:33

opportunity. For

31:36

instance, my challenge today

31:39

was how

31:41

can I make you look stupid and

31:43

feel insignificant and

31:46

then your challenge, a very godly challenge by

31:48

the way, you put yourself up to it

31:50

really, really hard. It is. It is. Right

31:52

out of your Bible country. We are in

31:54

Bible, well, well anyway,

31:57

so and then your obstacle. Your

32:01

challenge that you presented gave

32:03

me this opportunity. I

32:05

suppose that's true. Because I have faith. You can't address any of

32:07

my concerns at all. Faith. I

32:09

have determination to overcome. So you're no longer

32:12

worried about the election? It is not the

32:14

voices that tell us that

32:17

we're never going to make it that will be

32:19

remembered. No. It'll

32:21

be those who against all odds believe that we

32:23

can and I believe that we can. So

32:27

no more, you're not going to worry about the election.

32:29

No more fretting from Glenn Beck for the next six

32:31

months. No, no, no, no. Just

32:33

because you have faith in God doesn't

32:35

mean that you don't have to go in and fight

32:39

those giants. Which

32:41

is what I was bringing up by the way. Now

32:43

you're bringing in fear. Well, I was

32:45

bringing in fear. I will say you should be scared.

32:47

Fear and doubt. Fear and doubt. I will say I

32:49

have both fear and doubt. Sarah, watch on the record

32:52

right now. That's what you heard, right? Fear and doubt.

32:54

That's what America, I completely admit I was bringing up

32:57

fear and doubt. The whole point of my... Well

33:01

it has no place here, Stu. It does

33:03

have a place here. We better be scared and

33:05

we better freaking not be sure of ourselves. Now

33:07

here's the thing. Here's the thing. We have to

33:10

be sure that our God is bigger than Stu's

33:12

fear. That's 100% true.

33:14

I'm not saying... I'm just saying like...

33:16

I'm glad to see you're beginning to see the light. No!

33:20

I'm not being... You're beginning to see the light. There's light

33:22

that you're describing I've seen for a very long time. Let

33:24

your faith be stronger than Stu's

33:26

fear. I know it's not

33:29

hard because anything

33:31

with Stu is very, very little

33:34

and small and insignificant. That's

33:36

what I hear. That's what I've heard. Do I

33:38

know what to say? Did all the ladies say? No, I...

33:41

To be serious, I am

33:43

with you. They

33:47

seem to like know something that we don't know. You

33:50

know? They seem to... You know, that's

33:52

a great way to describe it. That's what it feels

33:54

like. It does. It's like, wait, you're doing

33:56

what? Like how many poles have we seen in a

33:58

row where they're like, hey, just pole of... seven swing

34:00

states, Trump leads in all of them. And they're like, that's

34:02

no big deal, don't worry. Yeah. Don't worry. There's something else

34:04

we're going to do. Hey, you

34:06

dummy, why don't you

34:08

have an electric car yet? Oh, I

34:11

don't have the money. I can't over

34:13

yourself. Like they're

34:15

legitimate election. That thing is get over yourself.

34:17

Legitimate. And they're like, Oh, we're going to

34:20

win this. No problem. And why do they

34:22

think that? Yeah. Because they know something we

34:24

don't know. Perhaps. Perhaps. Like I'll give you

34:26

this in mid 2020. Uh,

34:30

the economic index was minus 60. That's

34:34

not good. That's not good. Yeah. You might not

34:36

be new. You may be new to

34:39

some of these measures. Minus 60 is not

34:41

good. Okay. You don't win elections at minus

34:43

six. Right. Okay. It's gone from minus 60

34:45

to minus 20. Now

34:47

minus 20 also not good. Right. We

34:49

are not at the position where people

34:51

think, Oh, this is a great economy,

34:53

but it is moving significantly in the

34:55

direction they wanted to go in. And

34:58

it goes, you look at, uh, previous

35:00

elections. If you can

35:02

get to about even you can probably

35:05

win. If you're below, if

35:07

you're below, you're minus 10 minus 20. It's pretty

35:09

hard. So I think like if the election

35:11

was held right now today, uh, I

35:14

think Trump would win, however, we've

35:16

got seven months of foreign election and

35:19

in that seven months, the media,

35:21

the establishment, every, every single lever they

35:23

have is going to be used

35:25

to its full capacity to convince the

35:28

American people that the economy

35:30

is good. And if they are successful

35:32

in that venture, Joe Biden will

35:34

win. That

35:36

is a scare. That is fear and doubt.

35:38

Yes. I agree. Let me say this sincerely,

35:40

not about you. I was obviously joking, but

35:43

let me say this sincerely. The

35:46

voices of doubt, both

35:48

external and internal.

35:52

They fade away in history, but

35:56

the courage to believe in

35:58

what seems insurmountable. All echoes

36:01

through eternity. Let

36:05

your faith be stronger than

36:07

your fear. Understand

36:09

that that requires you to

36:12

act in faith. Don't

36:15

look at the obstacles in your

36:17

way. Do you have

36:20

faith in miracles? Do you

36:22

have faith in God? Have

36:25

you gotten down on your knees

36:27

and begged Him for forgiveness of

36:29

the sins of our country? Have

36:33

you turned your face back to Him?

36:38

We win through

36:40

our boundless belief that

36:42

the God of Abraham, Isaac

36:45

and Jacob is

36:47

real, is alive,

36:50

is engaged. Don't

36:54

be the generation, don't be

36:56

the people who lose this

36:59

country because we doubt unwavering

37:03

faith, determination

37:05

to overcome. That's

37:09

what will be remembered and that's what

37:11

will win. We

37:13

must actively engage the God

37:16

of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob,

37:19

beg for His blessings while

37:21

doing the things that

37:23

would bring those blessings on our

37:26

heads. Turn

37:28

back to God. Their

37:32

arrogance will be their undoing. See

37:37

if this sounds familiar. You're out in the

37:39

garage, you're cleaning, you're organizing and

37:41

you don't want to be there in the first place so

37:43

any excuse to stop what you're doing is a welcome one.

37:45

You're like, oh a box of pictures and

37:48

then you sit down and you're like, oh and

37:50

the home movies. Before you know

37:52

it, you're a weepy mess and you're in the

37:54

garage and you just can't go on anymore, honey.

37:56

I'd like to finish but did you know you

37:58

look like you're the baby? was, look

38:01

at this! As

38:04

you're doing that and you're avoiding work,

38:06

you realize that the pictures that you have are

38:09

not as pristine as they used to be. They're

38:11

beginning to fade with age. The home movies have

38:13

been sitting in your garage. It will be lucky

38:15

if you can get another play out of them.

38:18

You realize everything. The history of

38:20

your family is, it

38:23

could vanish. Getting

38:26

them into a legacy box is

38:28

so important. You are the historian

38:30

of your family. You are

38:32

the historian of what life has been

38:35

like in America. Please

38:38

protect your memories. Get it in your

38:40

spring cleaning list of things to do.

38:42

Legacy Box. Go to legacybox.com/records. They

38:44

have a $9 tape sale, so

38:46

all the tapes that you send

38:48

in, it's $9. But

38:51

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this incredible offer now.

39:03

legacybox.com/records. This

39:07

is the Glenn Beck program.

39:25

Welcome to the Glenn Beck program. I

39:27

have one of the most amazing

39:30

podcasts that I think I've ever done. It

39:33

is episode 216. It's

39:36

with Richard Verner. Richard

39:38

Verner is probably the

39:41

leading voice against CBDCs.

39:45

He is

39:47

absolutely incredible. He

39:50

is the guy who came up

39:52

with the term quantitative easing. But

39:55

as he says, the quantitative

39:57

easing that I came up with is...

40:00

not what's happening. He's

40:03

one of the leading

40:05

voices, wildly

40:07

credentialed, one of

40:09

the leading voices in the world

40:12

of economists saying

40:15

this is trouble. And he explains

40:17

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40:19

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40:21

the world, what is coming next. He's

40:24

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40:26

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40:28

voice. I learned more about the banking

40:31

system in probably the first

40:33

15 minutes of this podcast

40:38

than any other study

40:40

book, anything that I've ever done. It completely

40:45

opens your eyes and

40:47

turns the banking world upside down and

40:49

inside out to where you see it

40:52

for what it really is. He

40:54

said banks are only

40:57

slightly illegal. It's

41:01

an amazing thing. Don't miss it.

41:03

It's my podcast. It comes out everywhere

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tomorrow. It was available last night, all

41:08

day today, for anybody who subscribes

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to Blaze TV. Get it now,

41:12

Blaze TV, tomorrow wherever you get

41:15

your podcast and my YouTube channel.

41:18

The Glenn Beck program. Hi,

41:21

it's Jason Whitlock. Have you

41:23

secured your spot for Roll Call

41:25

2.0, my annual men's summit

41:28

in Nashville, Tennessee? Are

41:30

you looking for an opportunity to fellowship

41:32

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41:39

country music star John Rich and

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41:45

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gonna listen to great music, eat

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and shared values that made our country

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your spot. Do

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you know about house stealing? Yes, a scammer

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can forward to your signature on a fake

42:26

transfer document stating you sold your home to

42:28

them. I was trying to steal Stu's house

42:30

the other day. My back hurts

42:32

so bad. It is. It's a very, you have to

42:35

be, you have to train for something like that. Yeah.

42:37

Lift with your legs. Remember, lift with your legs. If

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you are trying to steal a home, and this is

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42:46

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44:00

Welcome

44:22

to the fusion of entertainment

44:26

and enlightenment. This

44:30

is the Glenn Beck program.

44:34

Hello America. I

44:37

will tell you that the

44:39

Bubba Effect never felt

44:41

better than it does

44:44

when I share with you something that I'm going

44:46

to share with you in the next few minutes.

44:49

It's very satisfying. And

44:51

the guy who's going to bring this to you, his

44:54

first name is Flash. Flash

44:56

Shelton. Yeah, it's happening. I

44:58

guess without the little theme

45:00

song it might have

45:03

been a little better. We're

45:06

going to do that in 60

45:08

seconds standby. It is Friday. What

45:11

would you give to be able to undo some

45:13

of the mistakes of the past? We've all made

45:15

them. We carry around the baggage from them. Unfortunately

45:18

we can't take them back. We can't

45:20

ask for forgiveness. But we also can

45:22

help try to make up for mistakes.

45:24

We can try to help others make

45:27

better decisions. And

45:29

the Ministry of Preborn is doing that. There

45:33

are far reaching consequences for

45:35

the abortion industry

45:38

in this country. And we

45:40

have got to lead the way. And

45:43

you don't do it by shouting at people. You

45:46

do it by loving the moms. Really

45:50

caring about the baby. Not just the

45:52

numbers, not just the babies, all condemning

45:54

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46:46

I love this story and I'm gonna let him

46:48

tell the story. Flash Shelton is

46:50

with us now. He is the founder

46:53

of Squatter Hunters. He's

46:55

an anti-squatter activist leading

46:58

the charge. And

47:01

Flash, welcome to the program. Thanks,

47:04

thanks for having me. Good morning. Is

47:06

that really your first name Flash? Your

47:08

God-given name? That is, yes,

47:10

it's my name since I was a

47:13

kid like everybody. Right,

47:15

but not everybody has the name Flash. You

47:18

had cool parents apparently. And not

47:20

everybody has a name that you have to live

47:22

up to. Yes, and

47:25

so you are. So tell me what happened in

47:27

2019 with your mom. Yeah,

47:32

my father had passed away and we

47:35

had moved my mom out of the house.

47:37

It was up in a remote location up

47:39

in Northern California. And

47:41

so the family decided we needed to sell

47:44

the house, moved her in with me, and

47:47

we listed the house. And

47:50

I get a, nothing was

47:52

happening and I get a report that there was

47:54

a break-in and then someone had broken in the

47:57

back door and that neighbors were seeing cars in

47:59

the door. driveway and wondered if I

48:01

rented the house. And

48:04

I immediately called the

48:06

sheriff. I told him that, you know, the

48:09

house is vacant, that the back door was,

48:11

you know, broken in. The deputy

48:13

goes out there and says, yeah, you

48:15

know, it's, the door

48:18

is broken in, but you said it was

48:20

vacant and there's a house full of furniture

48:24

and there's nothing we can do. It

48:26

appears you have squatters and it's a civil matter.

48:29

So, you know, blindsided just

48:31

like everybody. And those words

48:33

are devastating when you start

48:35

looking into squatters and

48:38

their rights and how you have no

48:40

rights. And so I just

48:42

decided to, you know, punch, you know,

48:44

punch and kick the heavy bag for

48:46

a bit. And then, and then

48:48

I went to work just breaking down the

48:50

laws and the rights and figured, figured

48:53

out that if they could take a house, I could

48:55

take a house. And I

48:57

had read that someone, you know, that many have fake

48:59

leases. And I thought, you know, it's like a

49:01

10, 12 hour drive. So I, you know,

49:05

so I thought, well, I can't go up

49:07

there and not have a

49:09

lease in hand just in case. So

49:12

my mom wasn't in the, you know, she just

49:14

mentally couldn't, wouldn't have been able to handle it.

49:16

So I told her I was going up to

49:18

do repairs on the house. And,

49:21

but just wanted at least since no one knew me,

49:23

you know, really like up there.

49:25

And I, you

49:28

know, so she, we got a lease,

49:30

notarized it just in case, went

49:33

up there. And I think

49:35

I arrived in there like four in the morning.

49:37

And I just kind of parked

49:39

down the street and watched and I

49:41

slept probably a bit, but around eight,

49:43

eight 30 in the morning, they

49:46

pulled out of the driveway. And I was

49:49

prepared with a new lock cameras

49:51

and alarm system and a lease.

49:54

And they left three cars

49:56

about seven, I counted like five men

49:59

and two. women. And

50:02

so once they left, I

50:04

went immediately went in

50:07

and, and my

50:09

key work, the back door was still broken in.

50:12

And, and I secured the

50:14

back door, put up cameras. And

50:16

they arrived as I was putting up

50:18

the last camera over the driveway. And,

50:21

you know, and I just

50:24

basically told them that, you

50:26

know, they that it

50:28

was my house now. And there was

50:30

an alarm and cameras and, you

50:33

know, that there would be evidence of break

50:35

in if they broke in on camera, prosecute.

50:37

And I told them that, you

50:40

know, I have all the rights since I have

50:42

possession. And turned

50:44

out one of them was a prison guard.

50:47

And so, you know, she, she knew

50:51

that she didn't have a leg, you know, just stand

50:53

on. So I basically told them that they had till

50:55

the end of the day to get

50:58

this stuff out of the house and,

51:01

or, you know, where they would lose it. And

51:04

I had already talked to neighbors,

51:06

young guys, and set it up that

51:09

I just said, Hey, like 5pm, there's

51:11

no furniture on this driveway, then come

51:13

over, you can have anything you

51:15

want to just help me get it out of the house.

51:17

And they were like, Yeah, dude, yeah, that would be awesome.

51:20

So I, yeah,

51:22

so they complied. And, and

51:25

I told them that I was, you know, I was

51:27

videoing, I had a YouTube channel. And I said, Look,

51:29

I'm gonna, you know, you have a

51:31

choice, I will expose you to the world. And

51:33

or I will share the

51:35

story and blur your faces and not

51:37

share your name. That's your choice. So

51:39

either your life is going to change

51:42

big time, because everyone's going to know all about you.

51:46

And they chose to comply and get

51:48

out and they were out

51:50

all the furniture was out before midnight. And

51:52

I think they took the last load at

51:55

like 2am out of the driveway. So yeah,

51:58

so that video is like 5.9

52:01

million views right now. It's unbelievable.

52:04

Now you have gone kind of into business

52:06

with this in a way, right? Yeah,

52:10

so I, you

52:12

know, it, the video popped up,

52:14

I mean, it, I held

52:16

on to it because of COVID because I,

52:18

you know, right now I'm America's hero and

52:21

I would have been America's villain if I

52:23

kicked people out during COVID. So

52:25

I held on to the video, I posted

52:27

it January 20, 2023,

52:31

March it, it went viral March

52:33

10th, I was like news, you know,

52:35

newsworthy. And then, yeah,

52:38

and I, people were asking me like

52:40

saying, Hey, use your popularity to help

52:42

people. So I announced on

52:44

Jesse Waters that I was going to be

52:46

fighting for law change. And

52:48

then I just figured, you know, not only to

52:51

keep it in the media and keep it going

52:53

and bring awareness to it, but

52:55

I had all these people reaching out to me just

52:58

asking for help. So I started helping and I was

53:00

helping for free and I was, you

53:02

know, and I was doing, I was just,

53:04

it just consumed my life. So I decided

53:06

to, you know, protect

53:08

myself, not only with the business,

53:10

but, but also

53:12

just being able to

53:14

officially help more people.

53:17

So I created squatter

53:19

hunters, LLC, squatterhunters.com. And

53:21

I'm, I basically, I've recruited now an

53:24

army across the United States of,

53:26

because there are, it's amazing how many people and,

53:29

and, you know, and I give

53:31

priority to ex police officers and

53:34

even some active police officers have

53:37

gotten approval to be able to help me

53:39

in their off hours. And, and

53:42

it's amazing because, you know, the,

53:44

my biggest supporters are law enforcement

53:46

because they wish they could

53:48

do something. They wish, you know, they, they

53:50

didn't sign up for the job to be,

53:52

to have to, you know,

53:54

walk away and let this happen.

53:56

And, you know, and a lot

53:58

of people blame law. But it's

54:01

not them. They're not the ones that made

54:04

this law and

54:06

basically handcuffed themselves. So

54:08

when you guys go into a house now,

54:11

you just, you make

54:14

them uncomfortable. You out squat them.

54:17

Yes. If

54:22

they want to be in there with us,

54:24

then absolutely, it's going to be very uncomfortable.

54:26

It will be cameras up in every room

54:29

except for their bedroom and the bathroom,

54:31

of course. But it

54:33

will be very uncomfortable just

54:35

in presence. But

54:39

yeah, I'm pretty animated

54:42

and I'll just do whatever

54:44

it takes to make them uncomfortable. So

54:46

what are those things? Well,

54:50

I mean, it's like when you're sitting in the couch and

54:52

you're underwear and you're pouring

54:57

a box of cereal over your job of

54:59

the hut, it's pretty intense. But

55:08

it typically doesn't get

55:10

to that because most people,

55:12

these people are regular. Well,

55:15

besides being a narcissist and entitled,

55:17

they're regular people. They

55:20

don't want to, they're banking

55:22

on the fact that they

55:25

deserve to be able to do this

55:27

because the law allows and why not

55:29

live rent free? But we have

55:31

a job, we go to the store, we go

55:33

whatever. Until

55:37

people are trying to get them out, they're

55:39

not bunkered in. As long as they don't

55:41

know anything, and that's

55:44

where I'm most effective is when

55:47

the squatter isn't expecting me because

55:49

they're expecting that first interaction

55:52

with the homeowner and then

55:54

that homeowner told by police it's

55:56

a civil matter and then they're

55:59

expected to. receive a three-day

56:01

notice. Then they're expected to receive

56:03

a 30-day notice and then a

56:05

60-day notice and they're

56:07

expected to go through the civil process.

56:09

So when all of a sudden they

56:12

show up one day and I'm

56:15

there with at least another

56:17

guy or more and they're

56:19

locked out and I'm showing them a lease

56:21

and I'm saying look I don't know who

56:24

you are but this is my house and

56:26

you know and oh my gosh it

56:29

came furnished. Yeah and then when they

56:31

call the police they you

56:35

know they can only tell them it's a civil matter.

56:38

I mean they're not prepared for that.

56:40

So you know but I spend a

56:42

lot of time and I and I tell people

56:44

look you know don't confront your intruder you know

56:47

it's like this is property don't risk your

56:49

life you know I'm trained you know

56:52

I'm certified in de-escalation. I'm

56:54

trained physically mentally and you

56:57

know and my guys are all trained. So you

57:00

know it's not something that a homeowner

57:02

not only can you not do it

57:04

legally as we've seen already you know

57:06

now some videos have been gone viral

57:08

with homeowners being arrested

57:11

for just changing the

57:13

locks. So homeowners can't

57:15

do this so it's very important

57:18

you know contact you

57:20

know contact me at

57:22

squatterhunters.com you know consultation

57:24

at squatterhunters.com you just send your

57:26

description of everything we set up

57:29

a zoom meeting and

57:31

we break it down simplify it I

57:33

give you advice and if you need you

57:35

know to hire my crew

57:37

then we'll come out and

57:40

take care of business. How

57:42

do you get around the law that

57:46

the it

57:48

is the homeowner hiring you to

57:50

do it? Well

57:54

it's yeah we're it's just

57:56

kind of done a certain way the homeowner

57:58

can and lease a

58:00

property to me. And

58:03

that's how it's done. Basically, they're

58:06

leasing the property to me and then I'm just

58:09

gaining possession as the lease holder. It's

58:12

interesting because you have, I

58:15

think a bunch of people who have a

58:18

lot of power, who for whatever reason like

58:20

this system, the way it's set up, that

58:22

are going to try to get you on

58:24

every little legal issue they can. They're going to

58:27

try to ruin what you're doing, I think.

58:29

Are you worried about that at all? Well,

58:32

I'm sure they will. And the way I figure it out

58:34

is that, there

58:38

have been what, decades, 100 years this

58:40

is going on and what, a million

58:42

attorneys and they couldn't figure this out?

58:45

So, yeah, they'll try to

58:47

outfox me, but I'll just

58:49

come up with something new. I love

58:51

you, I love you. Flash, thank

58:54

you man, I appreciate it. Flash

58:56

Shelton, it's squatterhunters.com. God

59:00

bless you Flash. One thing if I

59:02

can, one more thing. The one way

59:04

that everyone can help me because

59:07

my influence is what gets most of these squatters

59:09

out. So

59:11

just simply subscribing to my YouTube

59:14

outside the box with Flash, that's

59:16

the most crucial thing because

59:18

usually, I can just show that

59:20

I'm going to spread the word and I'm going to expose

59:22

their faces and they won't be able to

59:24

lease in the future. That's

59:27

the biggest thing, just subscribe to

59:29

my YouTube channel. I love that, that's an easy sell. I'm

59:31

there, I'm there. Out of the box with Flash. Thank

59:34

you very much, I appreciate it. God bless

59:37

you man, you bet. All right, as much as

59:39

the crazy breakneck pace of developing technology can sometimes

59:41

be a bad thing for

59:44

us as a species, it can also sometimes be a

59:46

really good thing. For instance, it allows

59:48

us for things to, like

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visit simplisafe.com/Beck. That's

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simplisafe.com/ Beck. Ten seconds. Station

1:00:49

ID. All

1:01:00

right I've got a I've got to play a clip

1:01:02

of the podcast that comes

1:01:04

out tomorrow. It

1:01:07

is it is

1:01:09

incredible Richard Verner. He

1:01:12

is one of the leading economists from around

1:01:14

the world. I don't even know what

1:01:16

I should should play here. There's so much.

1:01:20

Let's play cut 17 if

1:01:22

we have time. If

1:01:27

your dollar goes down and

1:01:29

they say you know what we'll give you

1:01:31

a dollar 20 right now. You

1:01:34

just bring your money in you just show it and

1:01:36

we'll give you a dollar 20 right now and

1:01:38

we'll give you 50 cents later or 30 cents or you take

1:01:43

this central bank digital currency

1:01:46

and all good things are gonna

1:01:48

happen to you and you know you could

1:01:50

even retire. You could you have

1:01:53

a what do they call it a minimum

1:01:57

basic minimum wage. Yes. People

1:02:00

will take that. Yes, or

1:02:02

universal basic income. Yes, that's what I

1:02:04

did. Exactly. And I've said this

1:02:07

actually since 2015-16 because suddenly all

1:02:10

these billionaires came out

1:02:13

and they said, oh, we need universal

1:02:15

basic income. Yeah. Now,

1:02:17

that's an old idea. It was actually first

1:02:20

formulated in the 1920s and it was

1:02:22

considered sort of socialist, almost communist idea.

1:02:25

Well, how come now

1:02:27

all the billionaires are endorsing this?

1:02:30

Well, because now we have the technology. For

1:02:33

what? Well, for central bank

1:02:35

digital currencies. And when

1:02:38

you introduce that, you need a carrot to get

1:02:40

people to take the chip and plant.

1:02:43

You see, one of the central

1:02:46

bankers in

1:02:48

Europe told me that he was shown

1:02:50

the prototype. It was already ready in 2015-2016. That's

1:02:55

when I decided, okay, one has to now speak

1:02:57

up more explicitly about this. But

1:03:00

at the time, just like you mentioned,

1:03:02

people just didn't know what I was talking about

1:03:04

and it seemed very strange and not

1:03:07

really likely to ever happen.

1:03:09

But that fortunately changed with

1:03:12

the COVID operation. And I think we

1:03:15

mustn't forget that the central bankers are,

1:03:18

they're not politicians. They don't have a thick

1:03:20

skin. They're very thin

1:03:22

skinned. So I

1:03:24

started to give speeches and talked

1:03:26

about this plan to

1:03:28

introduce central bank digital currencies and we must

1:03:31

oppose it. And

1:03:33

I guess some other people too, but it must

1:03:35

have been enough for them to say, okay, let's

1:03:38

first do some other operation as to

1:03:40

the COVID operation, which has also been

1:03:43

long in preparation because

1:03:45

then we can push the digital ID. That's precondition

1:03:47

for CBDCs. Then

1:03:49

it's a better position to do it. But I think

1:03:51

it was a strategic mistake because

1:03:53

so many people realized this

1:03:55

control and then there's suddenly

1:03:57

all the central banks were saying, oh, now. cash

1:04:00

is dangerous, there could be a virus on this. Right,

1:04:03

I know. A ridiculous story. Literally in

1:04:05

March 2020, they immediately said, oh, and

1:04:07

now we need to really push hard

1:04:09

to have digital currency. That's

1:04:11

what I love about Bitcoin. Bitcoin

1:04:14

could be used for nefarious purposes. Well, yeah,

1:04:17

so can cash, you know, of

1:04:19

course it can. Everything can

1:04:22

be used for nefarious purposes. And if you think

1:04:24

that you're controlling

1:04:27

the digital currency, it's going

1:04:29

to be an end to crime. You're

1:04:31

out of your mind. Exactly. That's

1:04:33

just an excuse. It's a very lousy excuse. This

1:04:36

guy will open your eyes to

1:04:39

the world of banking, of

1:04:41

the Fed, where money really

1:04:43

comes from. And he is the

1:04:45

leading voice against CBDC. I

1:04:49

think he should be on tour,

1:04:51

quite honestly, all across America. He

1:04:55

explains things so well that

1:04:57

you're like scales are falling

1:04:59

off your eyes. You're like, oh my gosh,

1:05:02

watch it. Richard Werner,

1:05:04

my podcast comes out everywhere

1:05:06

tomorrow, including YouTube. All

1:05:10

right. Next time you're just standing somewhere

1:05:12

in your home, I want you to do something. Just look

1:05:14

around. If I wanted to

1:05:16

put this home on the market, what would I need

1:05:19

to do to get it ready? Okay.

1:05:21

When you've calmed down from the panic attack after realizing,

1:05:24

oh my gosh, so much. Now's

1:05:26

the time to realize a simple fact. What

1:05:28

you need is an expert. If you're thinking about

1:05:30

selling your home, you need a real

1:05:32

estate agent that you can trust because that agent

1:05:34

is going to know the people he or she

1:05:36

trusts to do all of those things and

1:05:39

do them right the first time. I

1:05:41

believe in this so much because I've seen

1:05:43

the difference between what a mediocre agent can

1:05:45

do and what an amazing one can do.

1:05:48

The company I started, Real Estate Agents I

1:05:50

Trust, only deals with the amazing ones. Whether

1:05:52

you're planning to move or you just have

1:05:54

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1:05:56

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1:05:59

go there. tell us if you're buying or selling where

1:06:01

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country and we'll help you

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find that agent we don't charge

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trust.com that's real estate agents I

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trust dot com Glenn

1:06:18

Beck has a new line of shirts you can

1:06:20

get them at Glenn Beck merch.com he

1:06:23

looks adorable today and you can

1:06:25

look as good as Glenn Beck

1:06:27

merch.com dick twisted freak magnitude

1:06:43

four point eight earthquake is just hit

1:06:45

uh... new york looks like it may

1:06:47

have been centered in the

1:06:49

filly area uh... i just

1:06:51

know i've got a bunch of people that i know live

1:06:54

in filly felt it no

1:06:56

four point eight is uh... significant especially

1:06:59

for the east coast but

1:07:01

don't worry rumors

1:07:04

of wars earthquakes i

1:07:07

don't know what they have in common anyway there's

1:07:09

no packaging of linear what would warn anyone anything

1:07:11

right not a

1:07:13

lot of people i've heard about the

1:07:15

little town of lemore california but if

1:07:17

you live there it's

1:07:19

probably one of the greatest places on earth buildings

1:07:22

are from the early nineteen hundreds they decorate

1:07:24

the street corners and residents gather

1:07:26

around the town gazebo in the downtown area

1:07:28

and murals are painted on the sides of

1:07:30

the businesses that tell their history sounds

1:07:33

like a place i would i'd love to live in except

1:07:36

it's in california but it's

1:07:38

not the typical california town it's

1:07:40

it's inland way away from the pacific ocean

1:07:43

and it's about directly

1:07:45

in the middle of the state lemore is

1:07:47

around two hundred miles north of the glitz

1:07:50

and glam of uh... los

1:07:52

angeles two hundred miles south of

1:07:54

san francisco and about

1:07:56

two hundred miles south of sacramento driven

1:08:00

the 400 or so miles along

1:08:02

highway 5 from LA to San

1:08:04

Francisco, you might have an idea

1:08:06

of the type of community that the

1:08:09

people of Leimor live in. City

1:08:11

of Los Angeles just kind of fades away. The

1:08:14

bright lights of Hollywood, the hopes and dreams of

1:08:16

making it in show business slowly

1:08:19

gives way to more practical,

1:08:21

hardworking lifestyle. And

1:08:24

little by little, one by one, you

1:08:26

pass farming communities and dairy communities. At

1:08:30

times you might think you're in rural Texas. Hard

1:08:34

work, the kind of hard work that is

1:08:36

evidenced by the blisters on

1:08:38

one's hands, the sweat on their brow,

1:08:41

the dirt on their clothes. It

1:08:44

breeds hard and determined people. You

1:08:47

can find these people everywhere in the state,

1:08:50

everywhere in the union, really. They're

1:08:53

the people in Abilene, Texas or Preston,

1:08:55

Idaho or Sheridan, Wyoming,

1:08:59

Leimor, California. But

1:09:02

these are also the people that all

1:09:04

too often have to accept their fates

1:09:08

as their fates are being decided by

1:09:10

people in big cities like Los Angeles,

1:09:12

San Francisco or Sacramento. California

1:09:16

recently passed a statewide

1:09:18

legislation, mandates a $20 minimum

1:09:21

wage for restaurants. It went into

1:09:23

effect on Monday. And

1:09:26

on Monday, the reality of big

1:09:28

city politics landed in the

1:09:31

small town of Leimor. When

1:09:36

workers at the local Foster's

1:09:38

Free showed up on Monday morning, they

1:09:41

were told we're closing the doors

1:09:44

for good. Why?

1:09:49

The assistant manager said

1:09:52

the owner blamed the state's new minimum

1:09:54

wage increase. According to her, Foster's

1:09:57

Freeze isn't the only business in

1:09:59

Leimor. where the

1:10:01

wage hike is affecting people quote

1:10:04

this is not the first business that's

1:10:06

closing there are already been a few

1:10:09

local businesses for me that are closing

1:10:12

so I feel like this is just the beginning

1:10:16

how many businesses are going to be

1:10:18

destroyed by big city

1:10:21

policies destroying the small

1:10:24

towns all across America lemore

1:10:26

has around 30,000 people there

1:10:28

are only 11,000 jobs how

1:10:32

many jobs will remain in a month how

1:10:36

many jobs in two months what

1:10:39

does that do to the town and the population

1:10:44

how many people that do have jobs will

1:10:47

be able to afford the inevitable

1:10:49

price increases so

1:10:52

far restaurants like chipotle mcdonald's jack-in-the-box

1:10:54

starbucks they've already announced that they

1:10:56

have to raise prices and the

1:10:58

prices are already out of control

1:11:00

other restaurants like pizza hut have

1:11:02

announced layoffs 1200 employees this

1:11:10

is the beginning who

1:11:13

knows how bad this is going to get for

1:11:15

your small town which

1:11:17

will empty your small towns make your

1:11:19

small towns that were just maybe beginning

1:11:22

to thrive again back into

1:11:24

ghost towns if

1:11:26

you live in places like los angeles san

1:11:29

francesco or sacrameno you

1:11:32

might be able to find another job or

1:11:34

eat at a cheaper restaurant but

1:11:37

what about all of the people that

1:11:39

live in towns like lemore what

1:11:42

if you live in a small town

1:11:44

outside of california do

1:11:46

you feel safe you

1:11:49

shouldn't because california

1:11:51

is the proving ground for

1:11:54

radical left-wing politics and

1:11:57

when i say proving ground not that they work

1:12:00

Just that they can get them past. It's

1:12:03

like a giant crash test dummy

1:12:05

for bad ideas. And

1:12:07

our country is being destroyed because of

1:12:09

it. The

1:12:13

history tells a tragic story. Obamacare

1:12:18

likely never would have gotten done without a radical

1:12:21

California sociologist, who

1:12:24

advised both Bill Clinton and Obama,

1:12:27

and a high-profile governor named

1:12:29

Arnold Schwarzenegger. Schwarzenegger's

1:12:33

insane climate agenda was all

1:12:35

but copied by President Obama.

1:12:38

Now under Biden, it's destroying all

1:12:41

of the reliable energy at breakneck

1:12:43

speed. I don't live

1:12:45

in California for a reason. Because

1:12:49

there is no reason in California. We've

1:12:53

all watched over the past

1:12:55

few years how the left's

1:12:58

radical criminal justice reform is

1:13:00

incentivizing crime all over the

1:13:02

country. Back

1:13:04

in 2014, California passed

1:13:06

Proposition 47. It

1:13:09

reclassified multiple crimes from felonies

1:13:11

to misdemeanors, rendering

1:13:14

things like shoplifting, theft of

1:13:16

property, forgery, drug possession,

1:13:18

and others to mere slaps

1:13:20

on the wrist. It gave

1:13:23

criminals early release from prisons.

1:13:27

We're seeing the ramifications on the

1:13:29

streets everywhere. You

1:13:36

know, at the base of the Statue of Liberty, there is

1:13:39

a poem that was written just

1:13:41

to raise the funds to erect the Statue

1:13:43

of Liberty. In

1:13:47

it, it says, Give me your tired, your

1:13:49

poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free.

1:13:53

The wretched refuse of your

1:13:55

teeming shore. Send these, the

1:13:57

homeless, the tempest-tossed to me.

1:14:00

We always read that in the wrong way. We

1:14:02

always read that as, Oh

1:14:04

send me your homeless. No! Send

1:14:07

me the people you have made homeless.

1:14:10

Send me the people that you say

1:14:13

cannot make it. Send me the people

1:14:15

that you have broken through

1:14:17

all of your policies and your rules

1:14:20

and your experts. Send

1:14:22

those people to me. Send them

1:14:24

to Texas and let us show

1:14:26

you what those people can do.

1:14:33

But what a new meaning this has in

1:14:35

this new progressive day and age for

1:14:38

the tired, poor, homeless and huddled

1:14:40

masses yearning for freedom. They're

1:14:44

now the American cities that are being left

1:14:46

in the wake of

1:14:48

California progress. Let me ask you a

1:14:51

question. Are you living a life you

1:14:53

want to live? Are you

1:14:55

doing the things you want to do? If not, is it because

1:14:57

you're living with pain? For years I was absolutely not living the life I wanted to live

1:15:00

because I was dealing with serious pain all of the time. In

1:15:04

desperation and because my wife made me, I gave Relief Factor a

1:15:06

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1:15:44

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1:15:49

1-800-4-RELEAF. When

1:15:53

you feel the difference, you know

1:15:56

it works. relieffactor.com This

1:16:01

is the Glenn Beck program.

1:16:23

So there's something new that is coming to Dallas.

1:16:26

Yes. We're a test

1:16:28

market for McCosmics

1:16:30

or no, Cosmics. Yes.

1:16:33

I'm going there today, Glenn. I'm doing a YouTube adventure.

1:16:36

You can follow along on youtube.com/Stu Does America. It's

1:16:38

going to be around 1230 Central, so 130

1:16:40

Eastern. Today

1:16:44

I'm going over there. It's

1:16:46

a new, this is a big day, Glenn.

1:16:48

This is a new McDonald's franchise style type

1:16:51

of thing. And they've got all sorts of

1:16:53

different drinks and foods. And

1:16:55

they just opened, I think, the second location in the country right

1:16:57

down the road from us. So I'm

1:16:59

going, I'm going to load up. It's going to

1:17:01

be Thanksgiving, basically. Going to gain

1:17:04

10 to 12 pounds on

1:17:08

McDonald's food from outer space. This

1:17:11

sounds like a McFlop. A

1:17:13

McFlop? McFlop. Why do you say that?

1:17:16

I think the food looks good. They got these spicy queso

1:17:18

sandwich, like breakfast sandwich

1:17:20

type of thing. That looks really good. You've

1:17:24

got the Mc- They only serve

1:17:26

really breakfast? I think it's

1:17:28

more breakfast focused. They have McPops though. Have you

1:17:30

heard of these? McPops,

1:17:32

they have a hazelnut one,

1:17:35

like a Nutella type of situation.

1:17:37

You got a, like I think an apple cinnamon

1:17:39

one. They have a lot

1:17:41

of different drinks. The drinks are kind of the

1:17:44

attraction, the main attraction. And I think it's one

1:17:46

of these things too where you don't actually interact

1:17:48

with human beings because the franchise is from outer

1:17:50

space. Oh yeah, okay, good. And

1:17:52

we've been talking a lot about the minimum wage and

1:17:55

here's your future world. But

1:17:57

they, I think they look- The

1:18:00

food comes out on like conveyor belts and

1:18:02

you order it a kiosk I got

1:18:04

excited about it as you can tell like they're really no

1:18:07

people or the people know there are people I think Inside

1:18:09

I think that you can if you need help with something

1:18:11

they'll come out and help you But I think the whole

1:18:13

it's supposed to be the sort of a space-aged Oh,

1:18:16

yeah space-age stuff is really yeah It's

1:18:19

not as futuristic when we when we have what

1:18:21

Elon Musk like satellites up in the space every

1:18:23

few seconds but that's come

1:18:25

to say I guess it cosmic was a I guess a a

1:18:28

like but Character

1:18:30

of McDonald down once in a while

1:18:32

and he has stole McDonald's food to

1:18:34

bring it back to me comic like

1:18:36

a space-age to hamburglar basically Right

1:18:40

and he was in a couple of commercials I think

1:18:42

and then they're like alright this isn't working and kind

1:18:45

of just discontinued it and then like you know decades

1:18:47

later They're just launching him into his own franchise. Yeah,

1:18:49

that's great And they'll probably be going to an early

1:18:51

working and they'll probably blast him back

1:18:53

That's why I'm going today at 1230

1:18:55

central 130 Eastern on youtube.com/do

1:18:58

does America before they close it down.

1:19:00

I Want to

1:19:02

get there and try everything before they close it down I think

1:19:04

some of the stuff looks good some of it does look good

1:19:06

But there's a lot of it that it just looks like a

1:19:09

rehash of McDonald's, you know,

1:19:11

I mean You're

1:19:13

a bad person that just go

1:19:16

to McDonald's Well, because

1:19:18

they don't have these things at McDonald's now

1:19:20

They do have some things that you can

1:19:22

find at McDonald's at cosmic They have a

1:19:24

lot of drinks, but then they just seem

1:19:26

to have they don't really have they have one burger

1:19:30

If you don't like the spicy queso sandwich you're

1:19:32

out There's a creamy avocado

1:19:34

tomatillo sandwich, which I don't know what that

1:19:36

is I don't know what that is and

1:19:38

I don't trust the McDonald's people to make

1:19:41

it. You're just a bad person That's what

1:19:43

you are. You're ruining my fun. You're ruining

1:19:45

America's fun I mean I want and by

1:19:47

the way, I don't want to I don't

1:19:49

know if anyone knows this but Glenn Beck

1:19:51

has been to McDonald's a few times Maybe

1:19:54

we could meet what do you enjoy? That's

1:19:57

what I'm saying. No, I like McDonald's. I

1:19:59

do like you You eat it often. I

1:20:01

do. I do. Often. I'm

1:20:04

beginning to wonder if it's only people like me that can afford to go

1:20:06

to McDonald's now. Yes. I

1:20:08

mean it's great. Especially why, let me ask you something.

1:20:10

Why is it that Gavin Newsom has

1:20:13

raised the minimum wage for

1:20:15

fast food restaurants only? Like

1:20:18

his favorite restaurant. Nope, $16 an hour. That's

1:20:21

true. That's true. I

1:20:23

would assume the French Laundry is not having to

1:20:25

do this. Right. Right. Because

1:20:28

it's not for business people and people who can afford a

1:20:30

nice lunch. Why is it that

1:20:32

they're not getting the $20 minimum wage? It's

1:20:36

only the ones where people are struggling.

1:20:38

I mean how many business meetings have

1:20:40

you ever taken into McDonald's? Me

1:20:43

personally? I think the average person. You

1:20:47

go there for a couple of reasons. One, you

1:20:49

just have a craving for it. Two,

1:20:51

and you're usually alone. Two. And

1:20:54

you sit and despair in the parking lot and eat

1:20:56

all food. And then you realize this isn't going to

1:20:58

go well for me today. And then

1:21:00

the second reason is you're in a

1:21:02

hurry. But I think the

1:21:05

most important reason is, especially now is

1:21:07

I can't afford anything else. Yeah.

1:21:10

So why are they the ones at the bottom of the ladder? Why

1:21:13

is Gavin Newsom targeting fast food

1:21:15

restaurants and not sit down nice

1:21:17

restaurants? I have an answer to

1:21:19

that. I think his answer to

1:21:21

that would be he knows better

1:21:23

as to what these people should

1:21:25

eat. That's what he would say

1:21:27

essentially. It's not unhealthy food. And

1:21:30

these people are going in there and

1:21:32

so you raise the price there.

1:21:34

Well, it helps people because they won't eat

1:21:37

unhealthy food, which I completely

1:21:39

reject. Obviously McDonald's is very healthy in

1:21:41

every way. But

1:21:44

in addition to that, I think there is a

1:21:46

dependency here. You

1:21:48

price people out of the market so that

1:21:50

every McDonald's is built with conveyor belts and

1:21:52

kiosks. And then they become dependent on

1:21:55

you. And you advance your

1:21:57

long-term goals. Yeah, I'd like to

1:21:59

go back. I'd like to go back

1:22:01

to my reason then. Evil.

1:22:05

It's just evil what these people are doing. They

1:22:08

are making it impossible. Look at what's happening.

1:22:10

I just told you about the small town

1:22:12

in California. Our small

1:22:14

towns are being raped and pillaged

1:22:16

right now because

1:22:18

of policies. Our small businesses, who creates

1:22:21

80% of all jobs in recessions? Small

1:22:26

businesses. What are they

1:22:29

doing? They're making it impossible for

1:22:31

small businesses. Don't people

1:22:33

see what the

1:22:35

global elites are doing? They

1:22:39

are pushing us back

1:22:42

into this state-run kind

1:22:44

of country like

1:22:46

the Soviet Union, where

1:22:49

they'll make all of the decisions for

1:22:51

you, and you must do

1:22:54

what the state says to do. And

1:22:56

by the way, if they have CBDCs,

1:22:59

they'll have complete control of your life.

1:23:04

God help us, because I think they're going to make CBDCs.

1:23:07

I think they're going to come out in the next couple of years. CBDCs,

1:23:11

when they're introduced, they will be introduced

1:23:13

at a time of crisis, and everybody

1:23:16

will rush into them. And I'm telling

1:23:18

you, don't do it. Don't

1:23:20

do it. We've got to stand up

1:23:23

against CBDCs. Because

1:23:26

this is a real... it is the end

1:23:28

of freedom. It

1:23:30

is the Chinese state,

1:23:33

where they will have absolute control of

1:23:36

everything you do, because if

1:23:39

they don't want you to travel, you won't

1:23:41

travel. You're not an

1:23:43

essential employee. You won't buy gas. The

1:23:46

Glenn Beck Program. For

1:23:57

more information, visit www.fema.gov I

1:24:02

don't know how long

1:24:06

it's been to come to mind.

1:24:10

We're gonna get together.

1:24:14

We're gonna come back.

1:24:16

We're gonna come back.

1:24:20

We're gonna come back. We're

1:24:23

gonna come back. Welcome

1:24:35

to the fusion of

1:24:38

entertainment and enlightenment. This

1:24:43

is the Glenn Beck program. Well

1:24:48

hello America. It's the Glenn

1:24:50

Beck program. It's Friday and we've got

1:24:52

a few stories that I

1:24:55

just, I can't really make sense of, but

1:24:57

I just thought I'd give them as a

1:24:59

sign post to where America is. We'll

1:25:01

do that coming up in just a second. Sometimes

1:25:04

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heavily on the values of the company that is

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you know, Black

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www.patriotmobile.com/back or www.972patriot. So

1:26:22

here's some good news. The

1:26:27

country has been told that we're

1:26:29

going to get off of gasoline cars. We're

1:26:33

going to be driving EVs in the

1:26:35

future, the very near future. In fact,

1:26:37

California and I believe eight other states

1:26:39

have now joined with California to say

1:26:41

no more gasoline cars

1:26:43

by 2035. We're

1:26:45

going to be all EVs. That's

1:26:49

going to be fun to watch and see how that works out for a

1:26:51

minute. Ford

1:26:54

has delayed production of their new

1:26:56

electric vehicles by

1:26:58

years now because

1:27:01

EVs are not selling and

1:27:04

so Ford's like, I don't know. I

1:27:09

think maybe we should slow

1:27:12

down on this. The splits on their business are

1:27:14

incredible. Do you have those in front of you

1:27:16

by any chance? The splits on their business? The

1:27:18

splits between EVs and gas powered vehicles. I'm

1:27:21

going to miss these probably by

1:27:23

a few hundred million dollars or so,

1:27:26

but my remembering of

1:27:28

this is something like they've lost $3.5 billion

1:27:32

on their electric vehicle business and

1:27:35

gained $7 billion profit

1:27:38

in their combustion

1:27:41

engine business. They

1:27:43

are actually a really healthy company

1:27:45

if they didn't listen to the

1:27:47

government. What

1:27:50

a surprise. Say that again.

1:27:52

I can't believe that's true. If they

1:27:54

didn't follow the edicts of

1:27:56

the government, they would be massively

1:27:58

successful right now. I think a lot

1:28:00

of people look at Ford and they're like, oh, they've had

1:28:02

their problems and they have over the years. Obviously, you know,

1:28:05

go back to 2008 and... I

1:28:07

look at Ford and think that's the end

1:28:09

of the American car. I

1:28:12

honestly do. It does feel like that. And it actually, they're

1:28:14

doing pretty well. If

1:28:16

it wasn't for the

1:28:18

EVs. Yeah. So here's the actual

1:28:21

spread. Ford's electric vehicle business lost,

1:28:23

would you say, three? I

1:28:26

mean, I'd be remembering it. I

1:28:30

missed that 1.2 billion dollars. That's

1:28:33

before interest in taxes. The

1:28:35

division that makes gasoline and hybrid made

1:28:37

7.5 billion in

1:28:40

profit. In

1:28:42

profit. So again, that they're

1:28:45

overall profitable solely because of

1:28:47

their gas powered size. Yes.

1:28:49

And they would have a

1:28:52

much larger profit if not for the EVs. And

1:28:54

the hybrids is an interesting thing where I think a lot of

1:28:56

these companies are going to wind up landing because

1:28:59

hybrids aren't bad. No, I don't love

1:29:01

them. I don't love them either. I don't want one,

1:29:03

but I don't want one. But what I will say

1:29:05

is it does solve the real negatives of the EVs

1:29:07

in that you can just put gas in it if

1:29:09

you want. So you

1:29:12

can, you don't have to worry about the charging craziness

1:29:14

and all that other stuff. The plug-in hybrid is something...

1:29:16

Wait, wait, wait, wait. What do you mean about the

1:29:18

charging craziness? Joe Biden

1:29:20

promised that he was going to build charging

1:29:24

stations all across the country and they've put

1:29:26

in seven. They have

1:29:28

put in seven. So far that

1:29:30

has not really helped other than seven people,

1:29:32

the situation all that much. Seven. I

1:29:34

was talking to somebody who works here

1:29:36

who owns a Tesla recently. And

1:29:38

she's like, you know, I thought it was cool and

1:29:41

it was great. And now I've had it for a

1:29:43

few years and, you know, I

1:29:45

can't wait to get rid of it was basically

1:29:47

the way she summarized it. Really? Why? And it's

1:29:50

a nice car. Tesla's are nice

1:29:52

cars. They're very fast, especially if you get some of

1:29:54

the higher end ones. But

1:29:56

just the charging of it, I mean,

1:29:58

she went through the entire situation of like the

1:30:00

agony of getting this thing charged every

1:30:02

day because you know she doesn't work

1:30:04

in it she doesn't have the upgraded electric she's renting

1:30:07

a house so she can't upgrade the electricity so she

1:30:09

can't charge it at home so she has to stop

1:30:11

coming into work every other day for 45 minutes it

1:30:13

does the her whole life

1:30:18

I mean honestly it seemed like her

1:30:20

whole life was based around how to

1:30:22

charge this car she plans

1:30:25

45 minute parts of her day

1:30:27

where she works in her car so

1:30:29

she can get the thing charged to get her through the next couple

1:30:31

of days and it gets

1:30:33

too hot it gets you cold and charging she

1:30:35

comes in such you could go to know what

1:30:38

that like there are a lot of charging stations

1:30:40

around a Tesla put in the Tesla put it

1:30:42

right I don't know why the government needs to

1:30:44

be involved in this of course well no they're

1:30:46

gonna build them all across the country he promised

1:30:48

he was gonna build them all across the country

1:30:51

and he's completed seven of them and in three

1:30:53

years yeah in three years great and I don't

1:30:55

want to I shouldn't downplay that I keep I

1:30:57

keep wanting to downplay this is us but don't

1:30:59

but she's saying that like she has run out

1:31:01

gone to zero on the battery multiple times

1:31:03

and had had the car towed because it just was

1:31:06

impossible to time also you come

1:31:08

in in Texas you park your car outside

1:31:10

you work inside for several hours you come

1:31:13

back out the battery is lower than when

1:31:15

you came back in so you have

1:31:17

to factor that into your calculation every

1:31:19

day what is the percentage going to

1:31:21

be when I come back out of

1:31:24

my workplace why well I mean the car

1:31:26

does some stuff while you're inside like it

1:31:28

cool it can do some of that's

1:31:30

great like I was actually looking at an

1:31:32

electric car when I couldn't get

1:31:34

my car delivered for 14 months after I ordered it and

1:31:37

I and there's one electric car that I thought was

1:31:39

really cool and I was looking into it and one

1:31:41

of the things I liked about it was in

1:31:44

Texas you know

1:31:46

having a car that can keep

1:31:48

your the interior temperature at like

1:31:52

a cool 97 or something right would

1:31:55

be fantastic right because you know the whole thing where you

1:31:57

like oh I can start it up and let it run

1:31:59

for a minute Yeah, that doesn't really work. Like,

1:32:02

in Texas, you're just going to fry when you

1:32:04

get into your car, basically, every situation. No, seriously,

1:32:06

you make very good pot roast on the dash

1:32:08

of your car. You absolutely can. You can. It's

1:32:11

great. So, with an electric car, like some

1:32:13

of them have the feature where you can turn it, you can

1:32:15

basically set your temperature

1:32:17

in advance and it cools with electricity and not

1:32:19

have to worry about it. So, there are some

1:32:22

good features to it. There are reasons why electric

1:32:24

cars are cool and can be

1:32:26

great. However, like the hybrid sort of solves it.

1:32:28

If you really care about that stuff, you can

1:32:30

get both. And that's why I think

1:32:32

a lot of these car companies now are saying, well, if

1:32:34

we go the hybrid situation, we can appease the government officials

1:32:38

and, like, people who drive 10 miles to work

1:32:40

can use electricity every day, probably plug it in

1:32:42

and get that much mileage in. It's not a

1:32:44

big deal. But when they want to go on a

1:32:46

long trip, they can just use gas. And you

1:32:48

know, you're not going to get necessarily the sexiest car

1:32:50

out of that situation in most circumstances. So, I will

1:32:52

tell you that when I was in St. George, I

1:32:55

don't know if you were there. No, you didn't show.

1:32:57

What a surprise. Wait,

1:32:59

I went to your stage or your art show? I

1:33:02

was there. I was in the art show. It was

1:33:04

a museum. Oh, I went to the art show in St. George.

1:33:06

How many times do I have to go there? I haven't done

1:33:08

an art show. No, it was another

1:33:10

place in Utah. Good for you.

1:33:13

Good for you. What was it? Park

1:33:15

City. Park City. Very

1:33:17

different than St. George. But anyway. So,

1:33:20

you should have come when we did the

1:33:22

museum because I know a guy there who

1:33:25

is I

1:33:27

think he's the national

1:33:31

PR guy for McLaren. Oh.

1:33:34

And I've never driven a McLaren. I would

1:33:36

like to drive a McLaren. Yeah. And

1:33:38

so, he said, hey, would

1:33:41

you be willing to give my

1:33:43

daughter's class a tour of the

1:33:47

museum? And I said, sure. And

1:33:49

he said, oh. And I said, what do you mean, oh? And

1:33:52

he said, well, I was going to offer an exchange that you could

1:33:55

drive a McLaren for a day. And

1:33:57

I'm like, whoa. Your daughter? No, I'm not.

1:34:00

I don't do those unless I

1:34:02

compensated properly. Right. So

1:34:04

he let me borrow it for a day. It

1:34:07

is all electric. I

1:34:09

hate you in your life. I know. Too

1:34:12

many good things happen to you. I know it's great, isn't it?

1:34:14

No. Because they don't happen to

1:34:16

you. I like those things more because they

1:34:18

don't happen for you. You don't even care

1:34:20

about having stuff you do. I don't. But

1:34:23

anyway, so this McLaren, it runs

1:34:26

all on electricity

1:34:28

until it's like a little bit like over 30 or 40

1:34:30

miles an hour. So

1:34:33

if you're just driving around town, it's all... Yeah.

1:34:36

So all around town, it stays in electric. But

1:34:44

once you punch it, it's crazy.

1:34:47

It is the coolest thing ever. Because

1:34:49

you feel like you're kind of in, I don't

1:34:52

know, you remember when they used to turn the

1:34:54

power packs on in Ghostbusters? Yeah. Yeah.

1:34:57

Remember it was like... Yeah. So

1:35:00

once you hit a certain... Maybe it's

1:35:02

40 miles, I can't remember, but you hit

1:35:04

a certain amount and the engine warms up.

1:35:07

And so the engine automatically starts and you hear

1:35:09

it just go... Oh

1:35:13

my gosh. And then it just

1:35:15

is a rocket ship. All I have to do is

1:35:17

come up with a stupid museum and I'll get to

1:35:19

where you have to go. That's all you have to

1:35:21

do. Well, I'll put whatever they want on display. I

1:35:23

don't care. I'll make a fake documentary with George Washington

1:35:25

all day long. It's a fun car. It's a fun

1:35:27

car. I have a problem

1:35:30

with hybrids or whatever. If you want to

1:35:32

have an electric car, have an electric car,

1:35:34

don't wreck my life. Right. And

1:35:37

that's the problem. Like the

1:35:39

Tesla Roadster, they're talking about... I mean, he's been

1:35:41

teasing this for years and years and years, Elon.

1:35:43

But it looks awesome

1:35:46

and it is incredible. He's

1:35:49

merging it with SpaceX technology. They're going

1:35:52

to put rocket boosters on this thing.

1:35:54

They think they can get the 0-60

1:35:56

time, like near one second.

1:36:00

What's insane? I think it would hurt. I

1:36:02

think you'd physically be injured by that. Have

1:36:04

you been in a... Have you been launched

1:36:06

in a Tesla? Yeah. It does. You feel

1:36:08

your organs go ow. Yeah. It

1:36:10

is actually jarring. I think I bruised my

1:36:13

stomach there. Just you know what I mean?

1:36:15

It's that fast. It's that fast. So there's

1:36:17

no reason why... Look, technological advancements, we're

1:36:19

all in favor of those, but what they're

1:36:22

doing to make this happen, these things

1:36:24

are not winning in the marketplace. I

1:36:26

gotta tell you. I gotta tell you.

1:36:28

I... You know, we have these... Have

1:36:30

you ever been into the coffee and car show things

1:36:32

that they do around here? I haven't, no. So

1:36:34

they have this thing where it's just coffee and

1:36:37

car on Saturday mornings. And you bring your car

1:36:39

down and everybody just gets together and you're just

1:36:41

with a bunch of car people and you're just

1:36:43

talking and having a good time. I

1:36:45

love it. Go all the time. Everybody

1:36:49

who is into a car that I

1:36:51

know of, everybody that's into a car,

1:36:53

they are not into the electric anything.

1:36:55

Because it's not... It's

1:36:58

just not the same. It doesn't

1:37:00

sound the same. It doesn't feel

1:37:02

the same. These

1:37:04

engines are, when they're

1:37:06

done right, it is a piece

1:37:08

of art. It is really just

1:37:11

an amazing thing. And when

1:37:13

you step on the gas and it sounds like

1:37:15

it, when your wife... My wife said this to

1:37:17

me. My wife, I

1:37:19

got a car and it

1:37:21

has a growl to it. And

1:37:23

when you step on it, it just takes

1:37:26

off. And

1:37:28

then when you let your foot off the gas, it

1:37:30

has to burn off all of the extra fuel that's

1:37:32

in there. So it gives it that... The

1:37:36

greatest sound of all time. Awesome

1:37:38

American engine sound. And

1:37:40

my wife got into it and she's like, what

1:37:43

the hell's wrong with this car? And

1:37:45

I'm like, what are you talking about? Listen, what

1:37:47

is wrong with the car? And I'm like,

1:37:51

honey, I believe we might have paid extra for that.

1:37:56

But there's just something to it

1:37:58

and especially American cars. They're

1:38:00

just so great. Stop

1:38:03

wrecking it. You know, it's almost like

1:38:06

they're attacking our institutions and culture. I mean,

1:38:08

I don't want to say that because there's

1:38:11

not a lot of evidence of it. You

1:38:14

know, it's almost like Barack knew that we

1:38:17

would have to change our culture, our history.

1:38:19

And Barack knows that we are going to

1:38:21

have to make sacrifices. We're

1:38:23

going to have to change our conversation. We're

1:38:26

going to have to change our traditions, our

1:38:28

history. We're going to have to move into

1:38:30

a different place. My gosh. Listen

1:38:33

to that. It's like I heard that for

1:38:35

the first time again just now. Listen,

1:38:37

it was like we when we first found this

1:38:40

and played this, we were like, look, this is

1:38:42

what they're going to do. This is

1:38:44

what they're doing. Listen to it.

1:38:47

We'll play it one more time. Barack knows that we are

1:38:49

going to have to make sacrifices. We're

1:38:51

going to have to make sacrifices. Is

1:38:54

that not what we're doing right now? Everything

1:38:56

that is happening to us, you're having

1:38:58

to make a sacrifice. Pay a little

1:39:01

more here. You know, your shoulder gas

1:39:03

is more expensive. Sure you might not

1:39:05

want an electric car, but you have

1:39:07

to have one for the environment. Give

1:39:09

up what you actually believe because it's

1:39:11

not what society is preaching. Sure. Yeah.

1:39:15

You have to just you have to go along with that person who says

1:39:17

they're a girl. Just go along with it. So

1:39:19

sacrifice. Sacrifice. Okay. Next

1:39:22

one. We're going to have to change our conversation. Stop.

1:39:25

We're going to have to change our conversations. Have we not

1:39:27

changed? We don't even have them anymore.

1:39:30

We don't have them. You're not allowed to have them. When

1:39:32

you have a conversation, you get canceled. That's

1:39:35

like the preview of cancel culture. That one

1:39:37

little sentence. That one sentence. Next. We're

1:39:40

going to have to change our traditions.

1:39:42

Our traditions. Traditions. Our

1:39:44

traditions. Easter

1:39:47

is Transvisibility Day.

1:39:51

Next. We're going to have to move.

1:39:55

We're going to have to change our

1:39:57

history. You can't change.

1:40:00

your history that is

1:40:02

physically impossible 1619 project

1:40:04

but they tried right

1:40:07

they're still doing it stewed they're changing

1:40:09

our history right now if

1:40:11

you don't have paper copies of our history

1:40:14

you will not be able to teach history

1:40:16

you won't be able to teach it real

1:40:18

history not real history and

1:40:21

then she says it's a different place to

1:40:23

provide the kind of feature that we all

1:40:25

work this

1:40:28

is not the future we all want this

1:40:30

is the future that they wanted you

1:40:33

don't have a choice look at they're

1:40:36

moving us now world economic form and

1:40:38

everything else they're moving us into a

1:40:40

new place a future

1:40:42

that they all want you're

1:40:44

not even included you're being

1:40:46

told to sacrifice to

1:40:48

change your traditions to change the

1:40:51

way you eat the way you

1:40:53

think the way you talk to

1:40:55

each other you know one thing we

1:40:57

can't say is that we were not warned as

1:41:03

always as always

1:41:05

they tell you exactly what they're

1:41:08

going to do history will look

1:41:10

back on us just like they

1:41:12

look back on the germans and say what the

1:41:14

hell is wrong with them you read

1:41:16

the stuff they told you they told

1:41:19

you these

1:41:22

people are telling us too they're

1:41:24

telling us what they're going to

1:41:26

do and then they're doing it

1:41:28

and they're almost done look

1:41:32

at what's happening with with

1:41:34

war right now you

1:41:37

don't know you

1:41:40

missed yesterday i'll tell you

1:41:42

about it in a second first

1:41:45

israel continues to fall out of favor with

1:41:47

more and more in the world including sadly

1:41:49

more and more americans on the left we

1:41:52

have antony blinken yesterday saying that

1:41:55

you know it's

1:41:57

becoming israel is becoming

1:41:59

as bad as Hamas. What?

1:42:03

What? It

1:42:06

is important that we stand by

1:42:08

Israel. The International Fellowship

1:42:10

of Christians and Jews is working

1:42:12

to now provide bomb shelters. Can

1:42:14

you believe we, each

1:42:16

one of these shelters cost $15,000. They need 170 of them. That works

1:42:18

out to $2.5 million.

1:42:23

Now there's been a really generous donation by

1:42:25

somebody in the audience that is

1:42:28

giving a matching fund. So

1:42:30

we're talking about raising one

1:42:32

and a quarter million dollars. We

1:42:35

can do this. Every

1:42:38

Thursday they deliver a bomb shelter,

1:42:40

a completed bomb shelter. You

1:42:43

can even have your name put on the bomb shelter. You

1:42:45

want to buy one, they're $15,000. You

1:42:47

want to buy one yourself. They'll put your name on

1:42:50

it. Please,

1:42:52

donation. Please help the

1:42:54

people of Israel as they

1:42:57

struggle through this and become more

1:42:59

and more a pariah. Make your

1:43:01

stand now. Declare who you are

1:43:03

in these times. Sponsor

1:43:05

one of these shelters. Sponsor

1:43:07

just part of it. Even $5 will

1:43:10

help. Just go to

1:43:13

supportifcj.org. supportifcj.org. 10

1:43:19

seconds.

1:43:22

There's

1:43:25

a... So

1:43:29

the Scottish first minister, Humza

1:43:32

Yousaf, who,

1:43:34

you know, if that

1:43:36

doesn't sound like a homegrown name right there, Humza

1:43:40

Yousaf elected the first minister

1:43:42

in Scotland. That's how racist

1:43:44

they are. I'll tell you

1:43:46

that right now. Anyway,

1:43:48

he's a vocal proponent of the nation's

1:43:51

new hate crime law. He's

1:43:53

the one that really has put

1:43:55

J.K. Rowling in the crosshairs. And

1:43:58

so they started to say, you know,

1:44:00

if you want to report a possible

1:44:02

hate crime, you let us

1:44:05

know, you call us and anybody

1:44:07

who's stirring a Patriot, you

1:44:10

call us, they're going to be put on a list

1:44:12

and they'll have to go through some real problems. They'll

1:44:14

answer to the law, I'll tell you that right now.

1:44:17

Well on Monday, this new

1:44:19

phone number was opened up and

1:44:24

boy, oh boy, police

1:44:27

have responded to a large number of

1:44:29

complaints mainly

1:44:33

about Humza

1:44:36

Yusuf, the first

1:44:38

minister, saying that he

1:44:40

has made all kinds of racist

1:44:44

and anti-white comments

1:44:48

and so the Scottish police

1:44:50

are looking into him. They

1:44:54

said they can't enforce this retroactively

1:44:56

on him, but if

1:44:58

he does it again, boy, I'll tell

1:45:00

you what, he's

1:45:03

going to probably

1:45:06

be left alone, but they're

1:45:09

serious about it. If

1:45:13

you're white or you're a Christian

1:45:16

or you're Scottish, you

1:45:19

got a real problem, you got a real problem,

1:45:21

so look out, but it's all going to be

1:45:23

fair and balanced as it

1:45:25

always is. Coming

1:45:28

up in just a second, you will

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1:45:32

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to the program. Remember tthenumber2t.org. Welcome

1:46:47

to the Glenn Beck program. Thanks. I

1:46:50

wasn't welcoming you per se. You're

1:46:54

paid to sit here. It's

1:46:56

so nice to be welcomed. I'm

1:46:58

sorry. Yes, you don't. You didn't

1:47:00

even join me in Hawaiian

1:47:03

shirt day. You

1:47:06

keep saying Hawaiian shirt day. You're wearing a

1:47:08

short sleeve shirt, by the way, from your

1:47:10

fabulous collection available at glennbekmerch.com. Yes, fabulous. But

1:47:12

why are you calling it a Hawaiian shirt?

1:47:14

It's not a Hawaiian shirt. It's just a

1:47:16

shirt. I don't know why. I don't know why.

1:47:18

I think the Merch people, they have a gun

1:47:20

to my head, and they're just saying, please say

1:47:22

it's about Hawaii. I think it's a message to

1:47:24

Russia. Russia just came

1:47:27

out yesterday, at least one of the

1:47:29

main guys who's part of the strategic thinkers

1:47:31

over there, and said, you know what's not

1:47:33

in NATO? Hawaii. Because

1:47:36

that's in the Pacific. And

1:47:38

this is the Northern Atlantic Treaty.

1:47:41

And so we should

1:47:43

target Hawaii. And I think that's why

1:47:45

the Merch

1:47:47

people are saying, you know, let's be positive

1:47:50

about Hawaii. I don't know why it's

1:47:52

called... But it is. It's like a Hawaiian

1:47:54

style shirt, but it's got the, you

1:47:57

know, no king but god skull and

1:47:59

crossbones on it. It's a sick

1:48:01

twisted freak on it too. Don't

1:48:03

you remember the sketch where the the Nazis

1:48:05

are talking to each other? They say hey,

1:48:07

we've got skulls on our cross bar on

1:48:10

our shirts and uniforms. Are we the baddies?

1:48:12

Yeah, you know in probably

1:48:14

one of the most Humiliating times

1:48:17

of me on television and there's lots of oh

1:48:19

my gosh. There's such a great collection. You're a

1:48:22

YouTube compilation. Oh, yeah Yeah, yeah Was

1:48:24

when I was wearing one Something a hat

1:48:26

or a sweater or something with a logo

1:48:29

of the skull and crossbones with a crown above it Okay,

1:48:32

which is you somewhat of your own personal

1:48:34

logo? Yeah, it's what I use is you

1:48:36

know My letterhead and everything else is that

1:48:38

on it and it and

1:48:40

it it's an old colonial thing meaning

1:48:42

no King But God or no King

1:48:45

but Christ and

1:48:48

Until I had that on I was wearing it

1:48:50

and I said well, I mean did the Nazis

1:48:52

not did did no one ever go? Hey, maybe

1:48:54

we're on the wrong side. We're wearing clothes with

1:48:56

you know skull and crossbones on it While

1:48:59

and why I said that while I was

1:49:02

wearing With

1:49:04

skull across well, no it was my

1:49:06

producer just said in my ear check

1:49:08

your Check your left left

1:49:10

breast pocket and I looked down and I went Okay.

1:49:13

Well that maybe that's not the best I Think

1:49:19

you're biggest strength is your self-awareness. Yes, I

1:49:21

think so. I think so and my humility

1:49:23

my gosh I am so humble. There are

1:49:25

times that I think I should win awards

1:49:28

for my humility Mmm, you know what I

1:49:30

mean? Mm-hmm, cuz it just never ends. It

1:49:32

is it's so I mean mother

1:49:34

Teresa There's nothing

1:49:37

in humility compared to me. I will agree

1:49:39

it never ends It

1:49:44

Okay, listen, I want to talk to you a little

1:49:46

bit about the the podcast that

1:49:48

we have that is coming out

1:49:50

today Or

1:49:53

sorry tomorrow for everybody else today it's

1:49:56

on blaze TV it's with Richard

1:49:58

Werner This is a month must

1:50:00

listen to podcasts. This is really good. He

1:50:02

talks about where money comes from, how banks

1:50:06

don't take deposits. I mean, it's

1:50:09

really incredible. When he talks about

1:50:11

banks, he says they're

1:50:13

not loaning you money, they're

1:50:15

buying an asset and

1:50:18

then you just pay them back. So,

1:50:20

you know, what do they have to

1:50:23

lose? They're sitting

1:50:25

there with an asset, you're paying for it

1:50:28

and if you stop paying, they get the whole

1:50:30

thing. This is great for them. Universal

1:50:35

Income and Chips.

1:50:38

He is a guy who

1:50:40

is explaining CBDCs. Now, this is

1:50:42

a world

1:50:44

renowned economist. This

1:50:46

is a guy who came

1:50:50

up with the term

1:50:52

quantitative easing. But

1:50:54

his quantitative easing is not what

1:50:56

the Fed has turned it into.

1:51:00

And he talks about how dangerous

1:51:02

the Fed has become, how dangerous

1:51:05

the big banks are and how

1:51:07

we all need to be in

1:51:09

local banks. Because the way

1:51:11

he explains banks, it's

1:51:14

really amazing when

1:51:16

you understand where money comes from and

1:51:19

how banks actually work. Banks,

1:51:23

local banks are

1:51:25

actually taking people

1:51:28

in and saying, okay, what do you want to make? What

1:51:30

do you want to build? What do you

1:51:32

want to build

1:51:34

and possibly become

1:51:36

very successful and make a lot

1:51:38

of people a lot of money

1:51:40

and help our community? That's what a

1:51:42

local bank is supposed to be doing.

1:51:45

And they actually create money

1:51:47

to do that. They

1:51:49

don't borrow it from the Fed, they digitize

1:51:52

it. It's an

1:51:54

amazing, amazing podcast

1:51:57

that I honestly in the first 15 minutes.

1:52:00

My head was spinning because he basically

1:52:04

everything I thought about

1:52:07

banks is wrong. Here

1:52:10

he is. Let's play Cut 17

1:52:12

please. Here

1:52:14

he is on CBDC. I've talked about the

1:52:16

dangers of CBDCs for a long time.

1:52:19

Most Americans still don't really know

1:52:21

what it is. And I

1:52:24

think you do too. It's going to come down the

1:52:26

pike fast and it's going

1:52:28

to come with a crisis and they're

1:52:30

going to say look at all of the advantages.

1:52:33

You got to get into this now. And

1:52:36

I think the vast majority of people will go

1:52:39

right along with it. It's

1:52:41

a terrifying end of

1:52:44

freedom, end of free choice

1:52:46

kind of stuff. And you know, if you've

1:52:48

ever read the book of Revelation, it is

1:52:50

that system or could be

1:52:55

used as that system. Indeed,

1:52:57

indeed. It

1:53:00

is a totalitarian control tool of

1:53:04

historically unprecedented proportions

1:53:07

giving so much power to

1:53:10

the central planners, a small number of central

1:53:12

planners at the central banks that

1:53:14

is so unprecedented even that the

1:53:17

famous dictators or infamous dictators of

1:53:19

past days, past, you know, could

1:53:21

have only dreamt about this. They

1:53:25

didn't have the technology. And as the

1:53:27

central planners admit themselves, well, with the

1:53:30

CBDC, we can then

1:53:32

decide what you can buy,

1:53:34

where and when, and

1:53:36

depending on who you are,

1:53:38

we will have the technology

1:53:40

and the power to enforce

1:53:42

that. It is an incredible

1:53:45

section on just the CBDCs. He

1:53:48

believes it is coming. He's dedicating now

1:53:50

his life to speak out against

1:53:53

the CBDCs because he says they're coming

1:53:55

soon. Most people don't know what they

1:53:57

are and what they will do. Cut

1:54:01

16, listen to this, he talks about

1:54:07

don't take deposits and banks don't lend

1:54:10

money. Why? At law

1:54:12

there's no such thing as a deposit. It's

1:54:15

very clear in English law where modern banking was created

1:54:17

with the Bank of England and also that the law

1:54:19

legal system came into play

1:54:21

at the same time to

1:54:24

suit the system. And it

1:54:26

turns out that there's no such thing

1:54:28

as a bank deposit. At law it's

1:54:31

simply a loan that you're giving

1:54:33

to the bank. So you're lending

1:54:35

money to the bank. That's why if they

1:54:38

default, that deposit doesn't come back to

1:54:40

you. That's right, that's right. Exactly, exactly.

1:54:42

It's not protected. If you put your

1:54:45

money into a non-bank

1:54:47

institution, a stock broker that doesn't

1:54:49

have a banking license, then

1:54:52

when they go under it's troublesome but

1:54:54

your money will be safe. Ultimately it

1:54:56

may take time and go through the

1:54:59

rigmarole but it's never encumbered

1:55:01

because they never owned it. But

1:55:04

when you lend your money like to a bank, it's

1:55:06

on their balance sheet, they own it and

1:55:09

it's gone. Of course we have deposit insurance

1:55:11

so until that amount it will be replaced

1:55:13

by the government, by the insurance system but

1:55:17

technically you know. What about

1:55:19

private banks that are fiduciaries? They

1:55:22

can't, that's not their money right?

1:55:24

Well that is a type of business that

1:55:26

banks also do, the trust business, the fiduciary

1:55:28

business and

1:55:30

technically that works a bit different

1:55:32

but every bank that has a

1:55:35

banking license while

1:55:37

some may focus on the trust business and

1:55:39

do more of that where

1:55:41

there is technically a different process and

1:55:44

we don't get this money creation, they

1:55:47

also have the power to create money by

1:55:49

giving a loan or

1:55:52

by purchasing assets which is the same

1:55:54

thing actually. Because let me just actually finish

1:55:56

the explanation, so

1:55:58

banks don't take the poll because they're not going to do that. There's also a thing as

1:56:00

a deposit at law but surely

1:56:03

they lend money? No, they're in

1:56:05

the business of purchasing securities such

1:56:09

as government bonds but

1:56:11

also you see if you take a

1:56:13

loan, a mortgage, that mortgage

1:56:16

document, the loan agreement, that

1:56:19

is a promissory note that you issue.

1:56:23

Now at law, the paper money

1:56:26

is also a promissory note of course and

1:56:30

I mean it has particular features. I've

1:56:33

got one here from that

1:56:35

grand old institution, the Bank

1:56:37

of England and it says, I promise to

1:56:39

pay the bearer on

1:56:41

demand the sum of 50 pounds.

1:56:46

So that is at law, a bill

1:56:48

of exchange of a particular type called

1:56:50

promissory note and it's

1:56:52

a particular subset called bearer

1:56:54

promissory note because anyone who

1:56:57

holds this can demand the

1:56:59

money. Obviously, if you go to

1:57:01

the Bank of England, they'll just say, okay fine, we'll

1:57:03

just turn it into two 20 pound and one 10

1:57:05

pound. They'll

1:57:08

issue other promissory notes. So

1:57:12

banks are in

1:57:14

the business of purchasing securities and

1:57:16

the loan contract is also a

1:57:18

security. It's a promissory note. No,

1:57:20

no, the bearer one is very

1:57:22

clearly identified. All

1:57:25

the parties are named and so

1:57:28

on but at law, it is

1:57:30

a debt instrument and that's what

1:57:32

banks do and you say, okay

1:57:34

interesting detail but as

1:57:36

long as I get the money, how does the bank

1:57:40

give me the money? Well, the banker will say,

1:57:42

you'll find it in your account with us if

1:57:46

he's careful, he or she is careful. If

1:57:49

they're a little bit less careful, they might

1:57:51

say, we'll transfer it to your account and

1:57:53

that would be incorrect because no money is

1:57:55

transferred. Why? Because actually

1:57:57

what we call bank deposits. simply

1:58:00

the bank's liability to us, to

1:58:02

the public and

1:58:05

all the deposits are created at

1:58:07

one stage originally through some lending

1:58:10

when they purchased the promissory note

1:58:13

and then they also had

1:58:15

to record their

1:58:17

debt because remember it's

1:58:19

what we call a deposit is our

1:58:21

loan to the bank and their record

1:58:23

of what they owe us is

1:58:26

what we call deposits. So when

1:58:28

the bank gives a loan it

1:58:31

purchases the loan contract and then

1:58:33

the accounts payable liability arising from

1:58:35

the loan contract is

1:58:37

recorded and this is where banking is

1:58:39

still technically slightly illegal as I showed

1:58:41

in one of my papers. How

1:58:44

do banks create money out of nothing

1:58:47

is another paper because they

1:58:50

slightly incorrectly then present

1:58:52

this as another type of

1:58:54

liability called customer deposit but

1:58:56

clearly no customer has deposited

1:58:58

it you see. He's

1:59:02

fascinating and he

1:59:04

can tell you why we're in

1:59:06

the trouble we're in, what

1:59:09

the solution is, it's I

1:59:13

thank God that it's the

1:59:15

solution that we've told you about banks for

1:59:18

a while now but he explains it in such

1:59:20

a way to where

1:59:22

you understand why the small

1:59:24

bank is being taken on

1:59:26

by the Fed.

1:59:29

They are intentionally destroying

1:59:31

the small banks and

1:59:34

why we have to stand up for

1:59:37

these small banks. It's

1:59:39

fascinating. Richard Verner is his

1:59:42

name. You will look

1:59:44

at our situation on banking and money

1:59:46

in a completely different way. You can

1:59:48

get it wherever you get your podcast

1:59:50

beginning tomorrow. It's also

1:59:52

on YouTube tomorrow and

1:59:55

you can get it right now on

1:59:57

blazetv.com slash Glenn use the promo

1:59:59

code Glenn and you will save at

2:00:02

blaizetv.com slash Glenn.

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2:02:01

Hey, it's me Anthony Blinke, we just marched

2:02:03

it towards war, huh? I don't know if

2:02:05

you heard what he said

2:02:08

yesterday, but we're goose-stepping our way into World War

2:02:10

III. Yesterday they came out

2:02:13

and said some exciting things. Here

2:02:16

he is on

2:02:18

what they're working on now in

2:02:21

Europe this week. Ukraine will

2:02:23

become a member of NATO.

2:02:25

Our purpose at the summit

2:02:28

is to help build a bridge to

2:02:30

that membership and

2:02:32

create a clear pathway for

2:02:36

Ukraine moving forward. Vladimir,

2:02:39

you hear what he's saying? Hey,

2:02:43

we're going to make him part

2:02:45

of Ukraine, part of the NATO

2:02:47

alliance, which will be fantastic, eh?

2:02:50

Now, they're in a war,

2:02:53

okay? They're in a war right

2:02:55

now. If we make

2:02:58

them a member of NATO

2:03:01

while they're in a war... We're at

2:03:03

war. Are you sure? Yeah.

2:03:06

I mean, there's no way... Hey, there's always

2:03:08

something nice that we can make happen,

2:03:10

you know what I mean? Hey, look,

2:03:12

Vladimir, you got a nice

2:03:14

little country here, but they'd be ashamed of something

2:03:16

they ever do, eh? Maybe

2:03:18

you want to back off. I

2:03:21

just feel like you don't want to stir things up

2:03:23

a little bit more. I mean, I think it's fair

2:03:25

to be skeptical as to whether that's actually the only

2:03:27

problem Vladimir Putin has with Ukraine. Yeah. So

2:03:30

I don't know if this would solve anything,

2:03:32

but I try to keep it down. Yeah,

2:03:34

well, it's nice that we're marching off to

2:03:36

war, and hear those footsteps marching off the

2:03:39

war. It's wonderful. Good news is,

2:03:41

I don't think we're going to go to

2:03:43

war this weekend. It's just

2:03:46

crazy speculation, but we

2:03:48

hope to see you Monday.

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