The Glenn Beck Program - Pat Takes Revenge on the Metric System | 5/21/19 Aired: 2019-05-21 Duration: 01:44:19 === Legislators vs Democracy (07:38) === [00:00:02] The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. [00:00:05] This is the Glenbeck program. [00:00:08] All right. [00:00:08] Well, the 2020 candidates for president in the Democrat Party continue to stake out death as their main issue, really. [00:00:20] It's a death cult. [00:00:22] We've said that many times. [00:00:24] I think it's true. [00:00:27] We were just listening to Steve Bullock on the news on the four-minute buzz. [00:00:33] And, you know, the governor of Montana, you won't believe what he had to say. [00:00:37] We'll share that with you. [00:00:38] Also, the governor of Georgia, though, making some real sense. [00:00:42] And so we'll get into that. [00:00:45] Also, Jeff Daniels, actor Jeff Daniels has some words for Trump supporters. [00:00:50] It's all about race. [00:00:51] It's always about race. [00:00:52] That and much, much more coming up in one minute. [00:00:57] It's Pat and Jeffy for Glenn on the Glen Beck program, 888-727-BECK. [00:01:02] Great to have you with us. [00:01:04] Some interesting thoughts on abortion from some of these Democrat candidates. [00:01:11] People keep asking them, so where do you draw the line? [00:01:14] And they all say the same thing. [00:01:16] They won't. [00:01:17] There is no line. [00:01:18] Yeah, there is no line. [00:01:18] There's no lying. [00:01:19] There's no lying to them. [00:01:21] This is just unbelievable. [00:01:23] It's amazing to watch. [00:01:26] One of the latest, maybe the latest into the race, Steve Bullock from Montana. [00:01:30] He's the governor of Montana. [00:01:32] Why he thinks he has any chance at all at winning, I'll never know. [00:01:39] But here he is talking about abortion. [00:01:42] He's asked about restrictions. [00:01:44] What limits would you put on abortion? [00:01:49] None. [00:01:50] These are decisions that should not be made by legislators. [00:01:54] I mean, we 1973, Roe versus Wade is still the law of the land. [00:01:59] And as opposed to attacking it, we should actually be promoting it. [00:02:03] And we should be both codifying the opportunities under Roe versus Wade. [00:02:07] And at state level, I haven't allowed those any restrictions. [00:02:11] Okay, so it's a decision that shouldn't be made by legislators. [00:02:16] Why should it be made by Supreme Court justices? [00:02:20] Are they superhuman somehow? [00:02:21] Yes. [00:02:22] Are they superpowers? [00:02:23] Are they godlike? [00:02:25] Well, to them. [00:02:27] Only because they like that decision. [00:02:30] If it was a decision they didn't like, they would hate them with everything in them. [00:02:34] That's a decision that shouldn't be made by legislators. [00:02:37] Why? [00:02:38] What happened to democracy being so important? [00:02:43] I thought it was, I keep telling you it's not a democracy, but they keep telling us it is. [00:02:48] And then when it comes to democracy, they want it decided by nine people. [00:02:53] That's not democracy. [00:02:54] Not even close. [00:02:55] That's amazing. [00:02:57] That's amazing. [00:02:57] What a pathetic answer. [00:02:59] Which shouldn't be left to legislators. [00:03:01] Who should it be left to? [00:03:04] Amazing. [00:03:04] Amazing. [00:03:05] Well, we're going to find out from Pete Buttigidge, who he thinks. [00:03:13] The final South Bend. [00:03:14] And if anybody knows about abortion and the limits that should be placed on abortion, it's the mayor of South Bend, Indiana. [00:03:20] I think we all agree on that? [00:03:21] Yes. [00:03:22] Okay, here he is to level. [00:03:23] There's been a lot of focus this week about the states that have voted to restrict women's rights, but there's also been a movement in the other direction. [00:03:30] New York State also this year passed a new law which significantly increases a woman's right to accept to an abortion. [00:03:38] It used to be the exception was after, I think it's 24 weeks, to protect the life of a woman. [00:03:44] Now the new law is to protect the health of a woman, which is a much more lenient standard. [00:03:50] And I guess the question is, do you believe at any point in pregnancy, whether it's six weeks or eight weeks or 24 weeks or whatever, that there should be any limit on a woman's right to have an abortion? [00:04:02] You know, I think the dialogue has got so caught up on where you draw the line that we've gotten away from the fundamental question of who gets to draw the line. [00:04:11] And I trust women to draw the line when it's their opportunity. [00:04:17] Thank you. [00:04:18] Okay. [00:04:20] Such a pandering BSA answer. [00:04:24] And I trust women to draw the line. [00:04:28] Well, you can't trust them because that's cost us 60 million babies since 1973. [00:04:33] Trusting women has cost 60 million children since 1973. [00:04:40] I think that's a stupid thing to do once we've seen the outcome of trusting women. [00:04:48] I'm sorry. [00:04:49] You can't. [00:04:51] You can't allow the slaughter of babies anymore. [00:04:54] You just get, we can't. [00:04:56] And I think we understand that now. [00:04:58] I hope so. [00:04:59] And we're fighting back and we're fighting back really hard. [00:05:03] And we're getting a lot of pushback from the left because obviously they don't think there should be any limit at any time. [00:05:10] And that's up to 40 weeks. [00:05:11] Well, listen, we'd let them have free reign for a number of years. [00:05:15] It's gone for many years where we thought we just let them have this argument. [00:05:19] It's fine. [00:05:20] It'll be okay. [00:05:20] And it's not fine. [00:05:22] It's not okay. [00:05:23] Right. [00:05:24] And now the pushback is happening and they're like, whoa, wait. [00:05:27] They don't like it. [00:05:27] They don't like to be challenged on this issue. [00:05:29] They haven't been for a long time. [00:05:31] And they don't like it. [00:05:33] Well, tough. [00:05:34] Tough. [00:05:35] There's too many lives at stake. [00:05:37] No kidding. [00:05:38] That's a separate body. [00:05:39] That's not the woman's body we're talking about. [00:05:41] That's a separate body inside there with a separate DNA strand. [00:05:46] Yeah, but when? [00:05:46] Separate organs. [00:05:47] When is it a separate body? [00:05:50] After birth, two or three years? [00:05:52] No. [00:05:52] No. [00:05:53] Two or three, like when you're three years old, four years old, something like that. [00:05:55] Much right away as it starts developing. [00:05:58] It's separate. [00:05:59] Yeah. [00:05:59] So no, but I'm saying, like, when is it a human? [00:06:03] Yeah, this is a separate human being. [00:06:04] It's a human the whole time. [00:06:05] It's the whole time from the beginning. [00:06:07] The whole time, right after its birth. [00:06:09] It's never going to be a plant life. [00:06:11] It's never going to be a vegetable matter. [00:06:14] From what? [00:06:15] It's not going to be an auto part. [00:06:16] It's always going to be a human from the beginning. [00:06:20] From the very beginning at the hospital. [00:06:22] We're talking about from conception. [00:06:24] So, yeah. [00:06:26] That's the way it works. [00:06:27] That's the way it works. [00:06:28] As far as I'm concerned, as far as these Democrats are concerned, it's never a child. [00:06:32] It's never a human. [00:06:34] Yeah, right. [00:06:34] Never. [00:06:36] Literally, this is literally. [00:06:38] Not one of the 23 candidates in the Democrat Party have any cutoff for abortion. [00:06:46] There is no cutoff from any of them. [00:06:49] That's staggering. [00:06:53] Yes, it is. [00:06:54] It used to be that they'd concede, all right, you know, 21 weeks. [00:06:58] Come on, yeah. [00:06:58] 24 weeks, whatever. [00:07:01] I mean, you can't have third trimester abortions. [00:07:05] Well, now. [00:07:06] Unless the health of the mother is in effect or something. [00:07:08] And that's right, but they always threw that out there. [00:07:11] Very rare. [00:07:12] But they always threw that out there after the 21 weeks or the whatever amount of line that they're drawing. [00:07:17] There's no line. [00:07:18] There's none. [00:07:19] There's no line. [00:07:20] Zero. [00:07:21] That's how extreme. [00:07:22] That's how radical they are on this. [00:07:26] It's gotten worse. [00:07:27] But that's really what put us our back against the wall on this, right? [00:07:31] It's time to fight back. [00:07:32] No. [00:07:32] I think we really woke up when New York passed that bill and then Virginia was going to pass that bill. [00:07:39] I think so too. === No Line On Life (02:23) === [00:07:40] And other states considered the bill. [00:07:44] So, you know, and you've got states fighting back all through the South, which is great. [00:07:51] You have eight states now who have passed pretty tough new laws. [00:07:55] Six of them heartbeat bills and one of them beyond heartbeat. [00:07:59] So good. [00:08:01] Yeah, I think it's great. [00:08:03] Meanwhile, Georgia's governor, Brian Kemp, mocked the celebrities who are threatening to boycott the state because of their heartbeat bill. [00:08:13] Of course, Alyssa Milano and Alec Baldwin and others have spoken out against the law, and they've signed letters of protest to demand that the state abandon its heartbeat bill. [00:08:24] Was it like a strongly worded letter? [00:08:26] Yeah, it is. [00:08:28] Yeah, they're strongly worded, and they're really upset, and they don't like Brian Kemp. [00:08:34] And he said, I understand that some folks don't like this new law. [00:08:37] I'm fine with that. [00:08:38] We're elected to do what's right. [00:08:40] And standing up for precious life is always the right thing to do. [00:08:45] We value and protect innocent life, even though that makes C-list celebrities squawk. [00:08:54] Oh, it's really bad. [00:08:55] That is fantastic. [00:08:57] That's really good. [00:08:58] Just poke them another time. [00:09:00] Yeah. [00:09:00] Poke them one more time. [00:09:01] You know that that hurt them more than anything. [00:09:05] Calling them C-list. [00:09:07] Really good. [00:09:09] Is Alyssa Milano even C-list, though? [00:09:11] She might be D or E by. [00:09:13] Oh, no. [00:09:13] She's F-list. [00:09:16] What was the last thing she was in? [00:09:18] I told you she was in. [00:09:19] Oh, yeah, that's right. [00:09:19] Runway something or other. [00:09:21] Project Runway All Stars. [00:09:22] Project Runway All-Stars. [00:09:24] Yeah. [00:09:24] I'm sure that's. [00:09:25] Plus, she's made a fortune on her clothing line, right? [00:09:28] Has she? [00:09:28] Yeah, she's done a bunch with Major League Baseball and NBA and NFL with her clothing line. [00:09:34] I mean, she's big contracts with them. [00:09:36] Yeah, so she's doing okay. [00:09:38] Plus, her show, Charmed, is in syndication. [00:09:42] She's in syndication for a long time. [00:09:43] She probably makes good money from that. [00:09:45] I mean, she's okay. [00:09:47] I mean, she's for sure a C-lister. [00:09:48] Sure. [00:09:50] At best. [00:09:51] Yeah, C-Lister for sure. [00:09:53] I mean, she's not even getting the Hallmark gigs. [00:09:57] No, she's not getting the Hallmark Christmas movies even. [00:09:59] I've never seen her in one. [00:10:00] Of course, she probably wouldn't want to do a Christmas movie. [00:10:02] That's true. [00:10:03] Yeah. === Project Runway Fame (04:52) === [00:10:04] That's too nice. [00:10:05] She's too evil for that. [00:10:08] Other entertainers who have had a fit over George's law are Mia Farrow, Ben Stiller, Don Cheadle, Sean Penn, Kerry Washington, and others. [00:10:21] Yeah, I mean, those are some big names in Hollywood, but it's the same group. [00:10:27] It's the same. [00:10:28] Yeah. [00:10:28] The same loudmouths on every issue. [00:10:32] So that's great that the governor of Georgia not caving in to any of this. [00:10:38] More in just a minute. [00:10:39] Coming up. [00:10:40] Pat Gray, it for Glenn Beck. [00:10:42] And you can catch my own show, Pat Gray Unleashed, weekday mornings right before Glenn here on The Blaze. [00:10:47] Or, you know, you can check out the podcast at any time during the day. [00:10:51] Same with Jeffy's podcast, which is Chewing the Fat, which is loaded around 5.30 a.m. [00:10:57] About 5.30 Central, 6.30 Eastern, Monday through Friday. [00:11:00] Be sure to subscribe. [00:11:02] And if I subscribe, what happens? [00:11:04] It just automatically shows up? [00:11:06] It automatically shows up. [00:11:07] You're like, oh my gosh, there it is. [00:11:08] You get alerted. [00:11:09] Oh, there it is. [00:11:10] That's wonderful. [00:11:11] You want to do that. [00:11:12] That's like. [00:11:14] You don't want to just think to yourself at the end of the day, oh, I missed. [00:11:20] You don't want to do that. [00:11:21] You want to be able to just, you know, at 5.30, you'll hear that boop and you'll get that alert and you'll realize, oh, my gosh, I've got to listen to Chewing the Fat. [00:11:28] Yeah. [00:11:29] You'll think those exact words. [00:11:31] Yes. [00:11:31] All right, if you say so. [00:11:33] This is a great story. [00:11:34] A 94-year-old World War II veteran is planning to reenact his parachute jump into Normandy to mark the 75th anniversary of D-Day. [00:11:47] Has anybody told him he doesn't have to do that anymore? [00:11:50] I don't think so. [00:11:50] There's a direct flight that goes right to Paris. [00:11:54] Yeah, you can go right to Paris. [00:11:56] You don't need to parachute in there anymore. [00:11:58] I mean, the first time we did it. [00:12:00] You know, some Germans aren't there anymore, right? [00:12:01] The first time you did it, thank you. [00:12:03] Yes, that was awesome. [00:12:04] Needed to be done. [00:12:04] Needed to be done in 1944. [00:12:06] That's when he went the first time. [00:12:07] But this time. [00:12:08] Don't need to do it. [00:12:10] I think you're good. [00:12:12] Nobody should tell them. [00:12:13] They can just drive you right there. [00:12:14] Direct flight to Marseille, to Paris. [00:12:19] Germans are back in Germany. [00:12:21] I mean, there might be some German tourists there, but they don't have guns with them. [00:12:25] There's too strict a gun laws in France. [00:12:31] Harry Reid was. [00:12:32] This is not the Harry Reid, the sedator. [00:12:34] This is Harry Reid, the veteran, was a 20-year-old wireless operator when he first landed on the battlefields of northern France, June 6, 1944, at 20 years old. [00:12:46] After plunging into a flooded trench near Le Meznille, he made it through, made it through the war before going on to become leader of the Salvation Army in the UK and a great-grandfather. [00:12:58] That's nice. [00:13:00] During a visit to Normandy for last year's D-Day commemorations, he thought to himself, why not do it again? [00:13:08] So he admits it's a stupid thing to do. [00:13:10] That's what he says. [00:13:13] But he said about researching and preparing for it. [00:13:15] And so he's going to do it again at 94 years old. [00:13:20] That's amazing. [00:13:21] That's great. [00:13:22] At 20 years, he's fighting the battle for us. [00:13:25] Yeah. [00:13:26] Amazing. [00:13:27] Amazing. [00:13:28] In today's world, we've got people complaining that their college bill is too high. [00:13:33] Right. [00:13:34] Pretty amazing when you put it into perspective like that. [00:13:36] Oh, my gosh. [00:13:38] He said, the more I thought and prayed, the more foolish it appeared to do a skydive in Normandy without having done it one first here in the UK. [00:13:48] So last September, he successfully completed a test skydive near Salisbury. [00:13:56] And his doctor assured him, his heart was as healthy as a middle-aged man. [00:14:03] He found it a very different experience to his D-Day jump with his third parachute brigade, which lasted just 30 seconds. [00:14:10] But he said he felt lucky to have been able to experience this at his age. [00:14:15] Yeah, so at 94, he's going to do it again. [00:14:18] That's a cool story. [00:14:19] That sure is. [00:14:20] But again, he doesn't have to do that. [00:14:23] There's no need for that. [00:14:24] You just fly right into Paris if you want to go there. [00:14:26] He sounds like a smart man. [00:14:28] He would know that, but I don't know why he doesn't. [00:14:31] I don't know. [00:14:32] I don't know. [00:14:33] Somebody should probably tell him. [00:14:34] Hey, Harry. [00:14:36] Germans are gone, man. [00:14:38] They're gone. [00:14:39] You did your job the first time. [00:14:41] Thank you. [00:14:41] Yeah, everything's fine. [00:14:43] Just take a flight there if you want. [00:14:49] Triple 8727, B-E-C-K. [00:14:53] Oh, also, I love this story. === Sports Over Politics (04:12) === [00:14:56] A light went on at ESPN, apparently. [00:14:58] ESPN's president has realized sports fans don't want politics on ESPN. [00:15:06] What? [00:15:06] Ding, Yeah. [00:15:10] During, of course, the first few years of President Trump's first term, ESPN sports coverage often included political commentary. [00:15:20] And it was almost, I think, every single time, leftist. [00:15:26] Now, ESPN's current president is acknowledging that fans don't want politics with their sports. [00:15:32] ESPN president Jimmy Petaro admitted during an interview with the LA Times, one of the most significant things he's accomplished since taking over last March is getting the divisive politics off the network's shows. [00:15:46] That's great. [00:15:46] That's good. [00:15:49] So far, Disney chief executive Bob Iger is happy with Petaro's progress. [00:15:53] Appearing at a recent investors conference, Iger credited Petaro with dialing down the political discourse on ESPN's debate shows and its signature program Sports Center, as well as lifting its ratings. [00:16:04] Yeah, because you don't want to hear that. [00:16:06] Oh, we just want sports. [00:16:08] If you want that, you're going to listen to, I don't know, MSNBC or CNN or Fox, but rarely did they do, I don't know that they ever did any kind of conservative commentary. [00:16:22] It was always left-wing stuff. [00:16:24] Well, that's the sports. [00:16:26] Yeah, that's the sports guys. [00:16:27] That's who they are. [00:16:29] Petaro has also satisfied ESPN's more traditional fans by staring commentators away from political discussions on air and on social media, which, of course, heightened during President Trump's criticism of NFL players protesting against social injustice during the playing of the national anthem. [00:16:48] Without question, our data tells us our fans do not want us to cover politics. [00:16:53] My job is to provide clarity, Petaro said. [00:16:56] I really believe that some of our talent was confused on what was expected of them. [00:17:02] If you fast forward to today, I don't believe they're confused. [00:17:09] Apparently, we cleared it up for you. [00:17:12] I love that. [00:17:14] I love that. [00:17:15] I'm going to bring you in here. [00:17:16] We're just going to discuss a little bit. [00:17:17] I want to clear up any confusion that you have on this, okay? [00:17:22] There was nothing worse than tuning into ESPN, just wanting to, you know, get away from it all and watch some sports and relax. [00:17:31] And they'd start in. [00:17:34] Come on. [00:17:35] And it's like, please shut up. [00:17:38] You don't know what you're talking about. [00:17:40] You don't know what you're talking about. [00:17:46] So that'll be nice. [00:17:47] Yes, it will. [00:17:48] And obviously they've been, you know, he's hit the ground running with this, right? [00:17:52] He's now promoting it. [00:17:53] So that means everything's in place and people are starting to recognize it without it being talked about, which is good. [00:17:59] And the ratings are going up as a result of it, which, you know, that's going to happen because you got back to your roots and you've gotten back to what we liked about ESPN in the first place. [00:18:13] Entertainment and Sports Network seems like what ESPN stands for. [00:18:20] Doesn't seem to be any politics in there. [00:18:23] No, there's no, there is a P, but I think it's part of the sports. [00:18:27] Oh. [00:18:28] ESPN. [00:18:30] Yeah. [00:18:30] I think it's entertainment and sports, not entertainment and politics. [00:18:36] All right. [00:18:37] Triple 8-727-BECK. [00:18:44] Got to tell you about Joe Biden taking credit for climate change. [00:18:49] Wait, what? [00:18:52] Yes. [00:18:53] He's taking credit. [00:18:54] He started the whole climate change thing. [00:18:56] Aren't you aware of that? [00:18:58] Yeah. [00:18:58] I am now. [00:18:59] Yeah, you are. [00:19:00] We'll tell you more about that coming up on the Glenbeck program with Pat and Jeff. [00:19:05] Pat Gray and Jeffy for Glenn on the Glen Beck program. === Extinct Koalas And Tariffs (15:07) === [00:19:08] 888-727-B-E-C-K. [00:19:11] Oh, boy. [00:19:12] Koalas are now functionally extinct, according to experts. [00:19:18] Really? [00:19:18] Yeah. [00:19:19] They've been declared functionally extinct. [00:19:22] They're not extinct. [00:19:23] So. [00:19:24] But functionally extinct. [00:19:27] Functionally extinct means. [00:19:29] They're down to just 80,000. [00:19:31] Wow. [00:19:32] Wild specie members. [00:19:33] Wow. [00:19:34] Because 80,000, you know, and I'm not great on math. [00:19:39] I don't even profess to be, but 80,000 seems like more than zero. [00:19:44] Well, yeah, it is. [00:19:45] I think it is more than zero. [00:19:48] But apparently, there aren't enough breeding adults left to support another generation. [00:19:53] Wow. [00:19:54] The tree-dwelling species has been ravaged by the effects of rising temperatures and heat waves, which have caused widespread deforestation and fatal dehydration. [00:20:07] What about koalas? [00:20:08] What about logging and illegal logging? [00:20:10] Yeah, all of that too. [00:20:11] I'm sure that too. [00:20:12] Yeah. [00:20:12] Overfishing. [00:20:14] That probably has done it as well. [00:20:16] There's only 41 of the koalas, 128 known habitats in federal environments that have any of the animals left in them at all. [00:20:26] Of course, there is hope. [00:20:27] It's the koala protection act. [00:20:31] And it's based on the U.S.'s Bald Eagle Act, which was successful in rescuing the Bald Eagle. [00:20:37] Yeah. [00:20:40] So I guess the Bald Eagles are fine now. [00:20:42] So maybe Australia will want to protect koalas. [00:20:46] It's really not much we can do about it since we don't have koalas here. [00:20:53] It's the same with orangutans are suffering the same fate as koalas on the planet. [00:21:00] We don't have orangutans here. [00:21:01] Well, we do, just not. [00:21:03] Well, in zoos. [00:21:04] They're not in the water. [00:21:04] They're fine in the zoo. [00:21:07] Here's what bugs me, though. [00:21:08] How do you you don't know for sure because maybe they've just moved to a new location. [00:21:13] That happens all the time where a species has disappeared and they think it's gone and then oh well they moved over here. [00:21:20] They just didn't leave their postal address. [00:21:22] They didn't leave their forward address with the post office. [00:21:24] What? [00:21:25] Yeah. [00:21:25] Yeah, you're supposed to do that. [00:21:26] You are supposed to. [00:21:27] Otherwise, we'll think you've gone extinct. [00:21:31] So I don't know. [00:21:32] It was like that colony of penguins that they hadn't seen in 50 years or something. [00:21:38] We just had this story. [00:21:39] And then they looked at an island near Antarctica and found 5 million of them. [00:21:45] They're like, oh, there they are. [00:21:46] There they are. [00:21:47] Okay. [00:21:47] So we. [00:21:48] We thought you all died. [00:21:49] We thought you were gone. [00:21:51] Yeah. [00:21:53] They moved. [00:21:53] They moved. [00:21:54] We got tired of that place. [00:21:56] This place was better. [00:21:57] It was really cold. [00:21:58] And, well, this place is too. [00:22:01] You know, it's better. [00:22:04] Less penguin poop around. [00:22:06] And so we've got a new area here. [00:22:10] Plus, even if we have animals going extinct, we still find animals that we've never seen before. [00:22:18] I should say species. [00:22:19] We find new species on this planet every day. [00:22:22] Right. [00:22:23] Oh, those. [00:22:24] What are those? [00:22:25] Yeah, they're new. [00:22:27] So, I mean, I would guess that, you know, the Earth, I don't know, evolves. [00:22:32] And they say that a million species are going to go extinct in the next few years. [00:22:38] You don't know that. [00:22:40] You just don't know that. [00:22:41] I mean, a lot can happen. [00:22:43] A lot can happen. [00:22:44] And, you know, I know everything is important to the circle of life. [00:22:50] But I'm guessing maybe. [00:22:52] Are you about to dismiss a million species? [00:22:58] So what? [00:22:59] Maybe 900,000 of them we don't need. [00:23:05] Nice. [00:23:06] Who cares? [00:23:08] I hope it's some species I don't really like. [00:23:14] You know, if cockroaches went extinct, I wouldn't really mind. [00:23:17] Thank you. [00:23:17] I'd be okay with that. [00:23:18] I'm all right with that, too. [00:23:19] Spiders, cockroaches, beetles, they can all go away. [00:23:23] The Rolling Stones, I mean, how long are they going to hang on? [00:23:27] A long time. [00:23:29] I mean, Jagger's back. [00:23:31] That's right. [00:23:32] Jagger's back. [00:23:32] Did you see the footage of him dancing? [00:23:35] It's amazing. [00:23:36] Do we have that? [00:23:37] He's back from his heart attack. [00:23:38] He's getting ready for the North American tour. [00:23:40] And he posted a picture on his Instagram of him working out and dancing. [00:23:46] Yeah, here he is. [00:23:46] Getting ready for the tour. [00:23:50] You're the classic Jagger movie. [00:23:58] He looks pretty healthy. [00:23:59] Yeah. [00:24:00] For a guy who just had a heart attack. [00:24:02] You weren't doing that when you came back from your heart attack. [00:24:08] This is every day. [00:24:09] That would have been great to see a Jeffy video like that. [00:24:13] You know, Jeffy's getting ready to come back to work. [00:24:15] I don't like to post my exercise ideas like that. [00:24:17] All right. [00:24:18] I mean, that's just. [00:24:19] You don't like to show off. [00:24:20] I mean, that's what Jagger's doing. [00:24:22] Just to show off. [00:24:23] Yeah. [00:24:24] It's good for him. [00:24:25] He's been showing off like that his whole life, but I'm not doing that. [00:24:27] Yeah, it's just not you, right? [00:24:29] It's just not you. [00:24:30] Thank you. [00:24:32] Speaking of global warming killing off species, Joe Biden says he was the guy who, quote, started this whole thing, unquote, on climate change. [00:24:43] That's interesting. [00:24:44] That is interesting. [00:24:45] Former Vice President Biden was asked on Saturday by an activist with the U.S. Youth Climate Strike. [00:24:52] What a great organization. [00:24:54] Don't you love the U.S. Donate every year? [00:24:57] Donate every year. [00:24:59] And I hope you go to their events and protest as well. [00:25:04] But he was asked if he would support a presidential climate debate hosted by her group, at which point he jumped in to tout his global warming expertise. [00:25:14] He said, by the way, I want you to know, I'm the guy that did all this stuff. [00:25:18] Read real clear politics. [00:25:20] I'll tell you about how I started this whole thing back in 87 with climate change. [00:25:27] So he was asked that if he'd be a leader, and he said, I guarantee I'll be a leader. [00:25:32] So he started this whole thing back in 87. [00:25:34] He's the frontrunner on this. [00:25:36] When in fact, everyone knows that shortly after I took the initiative to invent the internet, Jeffy, I also, not Joe Johnny, come lately Biden, I took the initiative to create this incredible hoax known as climate change. [00:25:55] I decided right away that it would all be caused by our Matthew Voiv and not Joe Biden. [00:26:04] So I wonder if Al will take exception to this. [00:26:07] He might. [00:26:08] I can't wait to see what he has to say about that. [00:26:11] He might, although he'll try to say, try to work it in that while Joe was instrumental in doing a little bit of the paperwork. [00:26:21] I don't know if he'll even give him credit for that. [00:26:24] Plus, I'd like to just say that Joe Biden saying that everything is great because he was in office in 1987 or 1887 or whatever 87 he was talking about. [00:26:36] That's too long. [00:26:37] That's too long, Joe. [00:26:39] Just retire. [00:26:40] Just go away. [00:26:42] It's too long. [00:26:43] It is too long. [00:26:44] It's too long. [00:26:45] He's been around a lot longer than that in politics. [00:26:49] And you just think, okay, it's going on 50 years. [00:26:52] When is enough enough for this guy? [00:26:54] When's enough enough? [00:26:56] Enough is enough when he wins the presidency, which he's not going to do. [00:27:00] So shame. [00:27:02] Let's hope not. [00:27:02] It's a shame. [00:27:03] Let's hope not. [00:27:04] Let's hope no Democrat gets anywhere near that office ever again. [00:27:09] I don't know that we can take that. [00:27:11] I don't think we can. [00:27:12] Quite honestly, I don't think we can. [00:27:14] You look at how extreme they are on every issue, especially, especially abortion. [00:27:22] They're just, they're too extreme. [00:27:24] Open borders, eliminating ICE. [00:27:28] I mean, we've gone through this several times, but it's important to understand how critical this is. [00:27:35] 70% income taxes from some of them. [00:27:37] Right. [00:27:38] The Green New Deal, I think they all support it. [00:27:41] Almost all of them support the Green New Deal. [00:27:43] I don't know that any of them have actually come out against it anymore. [00:27:45] Not that I've seen. [00:27:46] Socialized medicine, they're all for that. [00:27:49] They're all for socialized higher education. [00:27:52] Elimination of student debt. [00:27:54] Many of them want to pay off student debt. [00:27:58] I know Kamala Harris just posted her pay gap plan. [00:28:02] Oh, my gosh. [00:28:04] Which is doesn't exist, as we've explained a million times. [00:28:10] And not just us, the Washington Post has debunked that myth over and over again. [00:28:18] And they still don't get it through their heads. [00:28:20] Nope. [00:28:20] Doesn't matter. [00:28:21] They still lie through their teeth on it. [00:28:22] Reparations. [00:28:23] All the time. [00:28:24] Reparations for Native Americans and African Americans. [00:28:28] They want to pack the Supreme Court. [00:28:31] They virtually all want to eliminate the Electoral College. [00:28:35] That in and of itself would be a disaster for this country. [00:28:39] They want to lower the voting age to 16. [00:28:42] All right. [00:28:45] Sanders and others want felons to vote from prison. [00:28:50] I know that's Sanders, Corey Booker, several of them. [00:28:55] There's been talk of confiscation of guns from Corey Booker and from Eric Swalwell. [00:29:01] I mean, this is just a disastrous group of people that would finish off this country. [00:29:11] So we have to do our part and get the word out and get the vote out and do everything we possibly can to make sure a Democrat does not get elected in 2020 or 2024 or frankly, ever again. [00:29:29] They've just gone too far. [00:29:30] You know, they're not Democrats anymore. [00:29:33] They're socialists now and they're extremists and they're radicals and it's got to stop. [00:29:40] Triple 8, 727BECK, Mark in Florida. [00:29:44] You're on the Glenbeck program with Pat and Jeffy. [00:29:47] Hey, Pat, how are you doing today? [00:29:49] Doing good. [00:29:50] Yeah, honestly, I'm not really caring about how you're doing. [00:29:53] I just wanted to ask a question about we talk about tariffs. [00:29:57] We talked about tariffs, and you say tariffs are a bad idea. [00:30:00] I've heard Glenn say carrots are a bad idea, and I agree. [00:30:04] But my real question is: what's the better solution? [00:30:08] I mean, they're ripping us off. [00:30:10] Trade imbalance is bad. [00:30:11] They're stealing our technology. [00:30:12] So if you think tariffs are a bad idea, I agree. [00:30:17] But what's the solution? [00:30:19] What's a better solution? [00:30:20] That's a good question. [00:30:21] Thanks, Mark. [00:30:23] It's a tough one. [00:30:24] I mean, sure is. [00:30:27] We could bring a WTO case against China over their failure to publish thousands of trade-related final measures, subsidies. [00:30:39] I mean, China has not been trading fairly with us for a long time. [00:30:43] No, they have not. [00:30:43] They're not going to bring that to the WTO. [00:30:45] No, they have not. [00:30:45] And we could, you know, that's part of the bigger negotiation picture, right? [00:30:50] And what had been happening and how they've negotiated and then taken back their word and gone against what they've already negotiated, which is what pushed presumably President Trump into the tariff land. [00:31:06] But, I mean, we see from history that tariffs really have never worked. [00:31:13] They haven't. [00:31:14] So, what else you could do, I guess? [00:31:17] You could ask Congress to reform U.S. antitrust law. [00:31:22] There's some things you can do. [00:31:26] You could utilize existing Treasury Department authorities to sanction Chinese companies that benefit from stolen IP or coerced technology. [00:31:36] I mean, they are stealing us blind in the technology sector. [00:31:42] And they have agents here sent specifically to do that. [00:31:47] They're in our colleges. [00:31:48] They're in our corporations. [00:31:50] And it's, I mean, China really has messed us up on trade, on technology, between stealing us blind and slapping tariffs on our goods that come into their country. [00:32:08] It is bad. [00:32:11] But there are things you can do. [00:32:12] And there are some outlined. [00:32:16] You could ask them really nicely. [00:32:22] Pretty please. [00:32:23] With sugar on it. [00:32:25] Stop taxing our goods. [00:32:27] I feel like President Trump has tried that by giving him chocolate cake and stuff down at Mar-a-Lago before. [00:32:33] And I don't think it worked out well. [00:32:35] Yeah. [00:32:36] Maybe you can ask him again. [00:32:37] Let me ask him again real nicely. [00:32:39] That's true. [00:32:40] There are some diplomatic things you can do. [00:32:43] You could refuse to recognize them as a market-based economy with the WTO. [00:32:50] You could deny Chinese headquartered enterprises access to being listed on the U.S. Stock Exchange. [00:32:56] That might be an incentive. [00:32:58] Yeah, that might be. [00:32:59] Yeah, so if you don't give them access to the U.S. Stock Exchange, that could hurt them. [00:33:05] A lot of money. [00:33:06] It's a lot. [00:33:06] That's a lot of money. [00:33:08] So there are some things you could do. [00:33:10] None of them are perfect. [00:33:12] But tariffs have just been proven historically terrible. [00:33:17] It's Pat Gray and Jeff Fisher in for Glenn this week. [00:33:22] 888 727BECK. [00:33:25] Coming up, we got to tell you about the kilogram because they've changed it. [00:33:28] Oh, no. [00:33:28] What? [00:33:28] I mean, this is what I'm talking about. [00:33:30] The metric measurement is ridiculous. [00:33:35] There's no way to tell what the measurement is. [00:33:38] You can't. [00:33:38] Now they're changing it. [00:33:39] So now even close to being able to tell. [00:33:42] They're changing it. [00:33:43] Why? [00:33:43] Because it didn't work. [00:33:46] As I told you forever, it doesn't work. [00:33:50] After 130 years of going by the kilogram, the prototype kilogram, the measurement upon which most nations, not us, because we're better than most nations. [00:34:04] Thank you. [00:34:05] It's their weight measurement. [00:34:07] And now it's being replaced by a new standard based on fundamental laws of physics. [00:34:13] What? [00:34:14] Really strange. === The Broken Kilogram (15:03) === [00:34:15] Isn't that weird? [00:34:16] Yeah, we have to get it. [00:34:17] Yeah, we'll. [00:34:18] Tell me about that. [00:34:19] That is. [00:34:20] That's nuts. [00:34:21] That's crazy. [00:34:23] I mean, why does he just. [00:34:25] I'm telling you. [00:34:26] Yeah. [00:34:27] Just go to pounds. [00:34:29] So easy. [00:34:30] So easy. [00:34:31] Pounds. [00:34:33] Duh. [00:34:34] It's not kilometers. [00:34:36] It's miles. [00:34:37] Thank you. [00:34:39] Be so much better. [00:34:41] If you were, if you'd just be Americans, I mean, it's not that hard. [00:34:46] Okay. [00:34:50] The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. [00:34:54] This is the Glenbeck program. [00:34:57] Pat Gray in for Glenn Beck. [00:34:59] You can catch my own show. [00:35:00] Pat Gray unleashed weekday mornings right before Glenn here on the Blaze. [00:35:05] And of course, the podcast you can check out any time of the day or night. [00:35:09] Also, Jeff Fisher here. [00:35:10] Jeffy from Chewing the Fat. [00:35:12] And you can check out his podcast wherever. [00:35:16] Wherever free podcasts are. [00:35:18] Free podcasts are sold. [00:35:20] Thank you. [00:35:21] That's available on any platform you want. [00:35:24] Wherever free podcasts are sold. [00:35:27] That doesn't make any sense, Jeffy. [00:35:29] That doesn't make sense. [00:35:31] Free podcasts aren't sold. [00:35:33] I don't know if you're aware of that. [00:35:35] I just know nobody else is using that line, so it's mine. [00:35:38] Okay. [00:35:39] All right. [00:35:41] We've got to tell you about this poll on socialism and this poll on something to be taught in American schools. [00:35:54] Pretty amazing survey on this, too. [00:35:56] We'll get into that in about a minute. [00:35:58] Pat and Jeffy for Glenn all week. [00:36:01] He'll be back on, well, Tuesday, I guess, because Monday is Memorial Day. [00:36:05] It just hit me the other, I mean, yesterday it hit me. [00:36:07] That's right. [00:36:08] Memorial Day already? [00:36:09] Isn't that amazing? [00:36:10] It's incredible. [00:36:12] It's incredible. [00:36:12] Oh, my God. [00:36:13] And by the way, every summer, Mercury One, in collaboration with Wall Builders, opens its doors for emerging leaders for its leadership training program. [00:36:21] This program is really impactful. [00:36:24] Don't take my word for it. [00:36:26] Listen to what former LTP students are saying. [00:36:29] Like this, being able to come here and study and read what the founders wrote really opened my eyes to the truth and what's real about our country. [00:36:37] That was from Jonathan from Kathleen. [00:36:39] I learned more in these two weeks than I think I have in the rest of my life from an anonymous person who took the class. [00:36:47] LTP is life-changing. [00:36:49] It will literally change the way you think and the way you act because when you're taught the truth, you can't help but be accountable for your choices. [00:36:57] So you can apply to join this elite group of students for Mercury One's LTP now taking applications. [00:37:06] Spots are limited and it's only offered once a year for young adults from 18 to 25. [00:37:13] The first session is June 3rd. [00:37:16] So, man, it's coming right up. [00:37:18] June 3rd through the 14th. [00:37:20] Second session, July 15th through the 26th. [00:37:23] Still some seats or some spots available. [00:37:26] Go to mercury1.org/slash LTP or you can call 817-441-6044. [00:37:34] Mercury1.org slash LTP. [00:37:38] Probably the easiest way to do that. [00:37:41] And we've met so many of those kids that have been part of that leadership training program. [00:37:45] Great kids. [00:37:45] Unbelievable. [00:37:46] Yeah. [00:37:46] And they were all so we read some of their words, but they were all so amazed at how much they learned and what they came across. [00:37:54] Like, we didn't know that. [00:37:56] Yeah. [00:37:57] Oh, they're going to find out so many things they didn't know. [00:38:01] Just a wealth of knowledge. [00:38:02] I mean, David Barton takes him through all of history, pretty much. [00:38:07] All of American history. [00:38:10] He knows a little. [00:38:10] Yeah, he does. [00:38:11] Yeah, he knows a couple of things. [00:38:13] AA is all right. [00:38:14] He knows a couple of things. [00:38:16] Oh, by the way, how many Americans now are in favor of socialism? [00:38:26] I guess you could say. [00:38:27] Two. [00:38:29] I mean, I'm two Americans. [00:38:30] It shouldn't be more than two. [00:38:32] It shouldn't. [00:38:33] It should be Bernie Sanders and his wife. [00:38:35] Right, but it's quite a few more than that. [00:38:37] It's 40% of Americans. [00:38:39] Fact it's 43 percent. [00:38:42] 40 believe that socialism would be a good thing for America. [00:38:50] It's only 51 percent who say it wouldn't be a good thing. [00:38:54] 51 to 43 now I would like. [00:38:57] This is getting really frightening, really frightening. [00:39:00] It is frightening. [00:39:02] In 1942 it was uh, 25 of Americans believed it would be a good thing, 25. [00:39:11] It's gone up 18 percentage points. [00:39:14] I mean 25 is too much. [00:39:15] Yeah 25, i'm kind of surprised. [00:39:17] It was 25. [00:39:18] But you had, you know, the fascist in Italy and they got a lot of good press, just like they get now in the NEW YORK Times and the Washington POST. [00:39:27] Uh, and anytime socialism crops its ugly head, NEW YORK Times and and the Washington POST have great things to say about it. [00:39:35] Uh, we'll just, we'll just, we'll do it better than they did. [00:39:38] Uh, this time, and in America, we'll do it right. [00:39:41] You know we can do socialism and communism right here, because you know, we know how to do it. [00:39:48] For Democrats, this is amazing, 57 of Democrats view socialism favorably 57. [00:39:57] I think a lot of this is because of the language that they use with the social equality nonsense, the social justice stuff, the social equality. [00:40:08] They've made it, they've they've pinned socialism to equality. [00:40:12] Yeah, and you know, if you don't know any different, you might just think, oh okay well socialists, why everybody equal? [00:40:20] Certainly makes sense. [00:40:21] I mean, the joke is uh, you know, so they like socialism because of the social networks, but it's really just about equal justice. [00:40:27] I think that I think the youth are pretty confused about what socialism is, and we've seen that we've. [00:40:32] You know, more on trivia which, by the way, we still, we still still do on my show on Pat Gray Unleashed every fall uh, during football season. [00:40:40] You, if you can tune in for more on trivia every friday we were 15 and three last season you're welcome. [00:40:49] If you would have placed bets based on more on trivia, you would have made a lot of money right, a lot. [00:40:54] Of course we don't recommend that, it's just for fun but uh, but some people actually did. [00:40:59] We did find out that some people were using it against our wishes, against Star wishes. [00:41:04] And we did not recommend that. [00:41:07] So, but I think with some of the millennials, that's what they equate it with. [00:41:13] Social media, socializing. [00:41:17] But I think most adults understand what socialism is. [00:41:21] I hope. [00:41:21] I hope so. [00:41:22] I hope. [00:41:23] But you get to these numbers and it's really scary. [00:41:28] I mean, then you've got a bunch of people agreeing with AOC and Bernie Sanders. [00:41:33] Oh, my gosh. [00:41:33] And you see why he's such a star among Democrats. [00:41:38] Democrats are pretty favorable towards socialism. [00:41:42] Frightening. [00:41:43] It sure is. [00:41:46] Also, this is an interesting survey. [00:41:50] A survey was taken that found that more than half of Americans believe Arabic numerals should not be taught in American schools. [00:42:01] Right. [00:42:02] Right? [00:42:02] I want that Arab stuff over here. [00:42:05] Right. [00:42:07] You keep that in your Saudi Arabia and your Qatar. [00:42:12] It's that over there. [00:42:14] Here are Arabic numbers, by the way. [00:42:16] Arabic numerals. [00:42:17] Okay. [00:42:18] One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine. [00:42:28] I mean, that's funny, but we're talking about Arabic numbers that we have. [00:42:31] Yeah, those are those are as opposed to Roman numerals. [00:42:34] The Arabic numerals replaced Roman numerals with the Western civilization some time ago, and we've used them ever since. [00:42:44] So they tricked about half of Americans. [00:42:47] So funny. [00:42:48] That's not nice to do. [00:42:49] No, it is not. [00:42:50] It's not nice to do at all. [00:42:52] 72% of Republicans did not want Arabic numerals to be in our curriculum. [00:42:58] 40% of Democrats. [00:43:04] Not knowing exactly what Arabic numerals were. [00:43:08] So obviously more cannon fodder for MSNBC. [00:43:14] But here's some for us. [00:43:16] After 130 years, the so-called prototype kilogram, which so many other nations base their measurements upon, and we're always told we're ridiculous because we don't use that system. [00:43:30] And they tried to switch us in the 70s, if you remember correctly. [00:43:33] And I said, no. [00:43:35] I do. [00:43:36] No, thank you. [00:43:37] They tried to ram that hard down our door. [00:43:39] They did. [00:43:40] And you know why it didn't work? [00:43:41] Because there's no way to convert it. [00:43:42] You can't tell what it is. [00:43:44] I mean, a kilometer, that could be 17 inches or 900 miles. [00:43:50] There's no way to know. [00:43:51] There's no way to know. [00:43:52] You don't know. [00:43:53] And we rejected that. [00:43:55] We like to know. [00:43:56] We like to know. [00:43:57] Thank you. [00:43:58] We like to know. [00:43:59] If somebody weighs 40 kilograms, I don't know how much that is. [00:44:03] Is that four ounces or is it 7,000 pounds? [00:44:06] I don't know. [00:44:09] That's dangerous if I don't know. [00:44:11] So we rejected it. [00:44:13] Anyway, the new definition of the kilogram is apparently based on fundamental laws of physics, and it was adopted at an international conference held last November in Versailles, France. [00:44:24] Oh, good. [00:44:24] It went into effect Monday. [00:44:27] Instead of being based on a shiny hunk of metal stored in a vault in France, on the outskirts of Paris, the kilogram is now based on the Plunk constant. [00:44:43] Oh, wow. [00:44:44] The Plunk constant. [00:44:45] And that's better than a shiny piece of metal in a drawer inside of Paris. [00:44:50] Because it's a tiny, unvarying number that plays a key role in quantum physics. [00:44:57] So the metric system is so bad they had to change it. [00:45:00] To the plunk. [00:45:01] So I've been proven right again. [00:45:03] Told you there was no way to tell. [00:45:10] They finally admitted it. [00:45:12] Yes. [00:45:13] It's Fat and Jeffy for Glenn. [00:45:15] Okay, I was proven right on the metric system, right? [00:45:18] They had to change it. [00:45:19] It was so stupid. [00:45:20] I mean, are you just going to keep bragging about it? [00:45:22] Yes. [00:45:22] And well, I've got something else to brag about. [00:45:24] I've been proven right on another scientific thing that science isn't always right. [00:45:30] So they don't know everything. [00:45:33] And I've been saying that for some time. [00:45:35] They've been wrong a lot. [00:45:38] They're wrong again on the age of the universe. [00:45:43] First of all, I don't know how you tell how old the universe is. [00:45:46] I mean, come on. [00:45:47] Well, it's the rings. [00:45:48] You count the rings of the universe. [00:45:51] So you just go to the universe tree, cut it in half, count the rings, and you see that there's 13 billion rings. [00:45:59] Or thereabouts. [00:46:02] Well, apparently, it's not 13 billion rings anymore. [00:46:06] We may be off by a little bit. [00:46:11] A billion years. [00:46:12] No, a billion years. [00:46:16] Long time. [00:46:18] You can't pin it down any closer than that. [00:46:23] Recent studies show science may have overestimated the age of the universe by more than a billion years. [00:46:30] A surprising realization that's forcing them to rethink key parts of the scientific story of how we got from the Big Bang to today. [00:46:40] I'll tell you, I've mentioned on my show, I don't know if I've said it here. [00:46:45] I've been watching these nature shows a lot. [00:46:47] I've gotten really hooked on them. [00:46:50] There's Our Planet, there's Blue Planet, and Blue Planet 2. [00:46:54] Have you watched any of those? [00:46:55] Some of those. [00:46:55] Some of them, yeah. [00:46:56] Fascinating. [00:46:57] I love them. [00:46:59] I hate the global warming nonsense in it. [00:47:01] I do too. [00:47:01] That's what kills me with them. [00:47:03] It's hard to get through that part. [00:47:05] But if you can, you learn the footage is unreal. [00:47:10] The footage is unbelievable. [00:47:11] I don't know how they do it. [00:47:12] I honestly don't. [00:47:13] A lot of money. [00:47:14] I mean, they go underground into the dens of animals and things. [00:47:20] I mean, like teeny little animals. [00:47:22] How did you get into that den? [00:47:24] How did you do that? [00:47:26] Caves where they're underwater in a cave and squeezing through unbelievably tight spaces, taking their life in their hands, I think, doing this stuff. [00:47:37] That's why I don't do it. [00:47:38] Is that why you don't do it? [00:47:39] I'm not squeezing through those tight spaces. [00:47:41] You're not squeezing through those tight spaces. [00:47:42] I can guarantee you that. [00:47:46] I'm not doing that. [00:47:47] No, you're not even squeezing through the cave opening. [00:47:50] So the tight spaces down the cave a little ways, you're definitely not getting through those. [00:47:57] The footage is amazing, though. [00:47:58] But it's the information that they tell you is also amazing. [00:48:02] I've learned so much. [00:48:03] Like, really? [00:48:04] And I watch this and I think, how can you see all of this and the way everything fits together and the way everything flows and works and how this ecosystem works and takes care of each of the species on this planet? [00:48:24] How can you see all that, know all that, and think it all happened by accident? [00:48:29] I don't think it's logical. [00:48:31] To me, it doesn't even make sense to think that science could think there's no God, that this just, you know, the Big Bang exploded. [00:48:40] It spun out into the universe. [00:48:41] It just happened. [00:48:42] And it just accidentally happened here on this planet. [00:48:46] And if you believe that, though, I could absolutely see how you would believe maybe we're the only ones in the entire universe. [00:48:52] Because how could that happen again? [00:48:54] I mean, it's ridiculous that it happened the first time, let alone happen again. [00:48:59] So to me, these prove the existence of God. [00:49:05] But the lost time on this billion years or so is especially vexing because in a universe full of mysteries, its age has been viewed as one of the few near certainties. === Science And God (02:22) === [00:49:19] Okay, so science has thought this a near certainty that we're 13 billion years old. [00:49:27] Okay, not so much. [00:49:29] But we're not supposed to think they're fallible for some reason on the climate change thing. [00:49:33] Right. [00:49:34] Right. [00:49:34] That's a fact. [00:49:35] That is a fact. [00:49:36] You're not supposed to doubt them. [00:49:38] Right. [00:49:38] One iota. [00:49:40] Not one point. [00:49:41] By 2013, the European Planck Space Telescope's detailed measurements of cosmic radiation seem to have yielded the final answer. [00:49:51] Oh, 13.8 billion years. [00:49:53] Of course, what's 800 million years among friends, right? [00:49:56] So sick of you quabbling over 13.8 billion years old. [00:50:01] All that was left to do was verify that number using independent observations of bright stars in other galaxies. [00:50:08] Simple. [00:50:08] Then came an unexpected turn of events. [00:50:11] A few teams, including one led by Nobel laureate Adam Reese of the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. [00:50:19] I love them. [00:50:20] That's my favorite Space Telescope Science Institute. [00:50:24] Yeah, the one in Baltimore. [00:50:25] Is the one in Baltimore? [00:50:26] Those are great. [00:50:27] I used to love the one in Des Moines, Des Moines, Iowa. [00:50:31] It was great. [00:50:32] But then Baltimore. [00:50:34] Yeah, it's got a special place in my heart now. [00:50:38] Anyway, they set out to make those observations. [00:50:40] Instead of confirming the measurements, they started getting distinctly different results. [00:50:46] Huh. [00:50:46] It was getting to the point where we say, wait a second, we're not passing this test. [00:50:51] We're failing the test, Reese said. [00:50:54] He estimates his results taken at face value indicate a universe that's only 12.5 billion to 13 billion years old. [00:51:03] So like 1,300 million years younger than we thought. [00:51:11] That's significant. [00:51:12] That's a significant error. [00:51:13] It is. [00:51:14] Of 1.3 billion years. [00:51:16] Studies of star clusters in neighboring galaxies add to the evidence that the universe is younger and faster expanding than expected. [00:51:26] Okay, so, you know, just another indication that they don't know everything. [00:51:31] They think they do. [00:51:32] They tell us they do. [00:51:33] And you're a moron if you challenge them on anything, but they're proven wrong all the time. === Failed Climate Predictions (13:13) === [00:51:41] Yeah, all the time. [00:51:44] It's agonizing. [00:51:45] All the time. [00:51:46] And then it's, oh, yeah, yeah, well, that's, that's, that's okay. [00:51:49] Right. [00:51:50] That is not right now. [00:51:53] It just wasn't as right then as I am now. [00:51:56] Don't worry about it. [00:51:58] Okay, well, you're asking a lot of me because now you're asking me to agree that we should spend like $93 to $100 trillion to solve a problem that you believe is happening that I don't. [00:52:11] And I'm just supposed to take your word for it. [00:52:13] Well, yeah, because you're a scientist. [00:52:15] I know I was wrong here, but because I was wrong here makes me right back over here. [00:52:19] Right. [00:52:20] Oh, wait. [00:52:21] Oh, okay. [00:52:22] Well, you've been wrong on every prediction you've ever made on climate change. [00:52:25] Not on this one, though. [00:52:25] No, okay. [00:52:26] All right. [00:52:27] This one, my friend. [00:52:27] All right. [00:52:29] This one, I know. [00:52:31] Look around. [00:52:32] Okay. [00:52:32] Look around. [00:52:33] Right. [00:52:33] Look around. [00:52:34] You'll see. [00:52:35] The evidence is overwhelming. [00:52:37] For instance, it rained today in Dallas Metroplex. [00:52:41] Thank you. [00:52:41] That didn't used to happen, I guess. [00:52:43] It didn't used to rain. [00:52:44] No, and we're all supposed to be worried about massive tornadoes hitting us. [00:52:47] Yeah, tornadoes have been hurt. [00:52:48] Never had tornadoes before. [00:52:50] Never had. [00:52:51] Never. [00:52:51] Not once. [00:52:52] Okay. [00:52:55] It's ridiculous. [00:52:57] And they keep telling us they're more frequent and more intense when that isn't true. [00:53:02] Really? [00:53:02] That's not true. [00:53:03] Really? [00:53:05] They're not happening any more frequently than they ever have, and they're not more intense than they ever have been. [00:53:11] So shut up about it. [00:53:18] In two words, shut up. [00:53:21] They're not going to. [00:53:22] They're not going to. [00:53:23] I know. [00:53:23] So we certainly should. [00:53:25] All right. [00:53:25] We're going to tell you about somebody you really need to worry about. [00:53:28] She is frightening and dangerous, and we'll tell you about her coming up in just a second. [00:53:34] Thank you, Facebook, for pointing this out for us because now we know what to look out for. [00:53:40] We'll share that with you coming up here on the Glen Beck program with Pat and Jeffy. [00:53:48] Pat and Jeffy for Glenn on the Glenn Beck program, 888-727-BECK. [00:53:52] I mentioned this 94-year-old World War II veteran who is parachuting into Normandy. [00:54:01] He's 94 now, and he just thought it'd be cool because he did it in 1944. [00:54:07] And so he wants to, he wants to try it again. [00:54:10] What I'm hoping is we've alerted the French that he's doing this so that they don't surrender to him when he lands. [00:54:19] If we alerted the French, it's just okay. [00:54:21] This guy's just doing it for fun. [00:54:23] Actually, no need to surrender to him. [00:54:25] Actually, I say we don't alert him. [00:54:27] Just let him surrender. [00:54:28] I don't want to see him surrender. [00:54:29] Just let him surrender. [00:54:30] Just surrender again. [00:54:30] That's a good point. [00:54:31] Yeah, let's not tell him. [00:54:32] All right. [00:54:33] Let's just watch him. [00:54:35] We're going to watch the YouTube video of France surrendering to this guy again. [00:54:38] To 94-year-old Harry Reed. [00:54:41] Yes. [00:54:41] Yeah, it'd be great. [00:54:43] Not the senator, Harry Reid. [00:54:44] This is a different Harry Reid. [00:54:46] No, the senator would not be doing that. [00:54:48] No, he would not. [00:54:49] No, we know that for a fact. [00:54:52] All right. [00:54:52] Hey, Facebook has let us know about a dangerous, dangerous person and thought I'd pass this along to you. [00:54:59] So in case you see her out and about, you know to run. [00:55:03] Candace Owens. [00:55:05] Dangerous person. [00:55:06] Wow. [00:55:07] Yeah. [00:55:07] They've singled her out for scrutiny and a potential ban. [00:55:11] Oh, no. [00:55:13] They've encouraged some of their employees to probe the background of Candace Owens for anything that could give the social media giant grounds to kick her off their platform. [00:55:25] I mean, this is nuts. [00:55:27] It sure is. [00:55:28] Candace Owens. [00:55:30] Come on. [00:55:32] The document is a spreadsheet on policy review of what the company calls hate agents. [00:55:39] Oh, my gosh. [00:55:41] Seriously, are you going to label Candace Owens a hate agent? [00:55:44] Come on. [00:55:45] It was created in early April. [00:55:47] It was related to prominent figures recently banned from the platform. [00:55:53] I don't see them doing any of this to anyone on the left. [00:55:56] No. [00:55:58] I mean, did they maybe make some kind of little token movement on Louis Farrakhan recently? [00:56:05] I think they did. [00:56:05] Yes, they did. [00:56:07] Yeah. [00:56:07] And I mean, that kind of blatant anti-Semitism. [00:56:11] Hey, congratulations that you sniffed that one out. [00:56:15] Way to go, Facebook. [00:56:16] I'm sure you had to have the chart laid out in front of you to get to the end of Louis Farrakhan. [00:56:23] Well, and you needed the Facebook bloodhounds to track down that scent of it. [00:56:27] Right. [00:56:28] That was nice. [00:56:29] Find. [00:56:31] But it's been, other than that, it's been almost exclusively people on the right, as far as I can tell. [00:56:40] And, you know, we get the argument of it's a, you know, I don't care anymore. [00:56:44] We need to stop with the argument that it's a private business. [00:56:48] It is, but they're protected by the U.S. government. [00:56:52] And because of that. [00:56:53] And they're protected only because they're supposed to be non-biased. [00:56:57] Right. [00:56:57] So when they show this kind of bias, I'm sorry. [00:57:01] No. [00:57:02] The protections need to go away. [00:57:03] The protection needs to go away. [00:57:05] And you open yourself up to being sued for things that happen on your platform. [00:57:10] It'll be nice and nice. [00:57:11] Go ahead. [00:57:12] If this is what you're going to do, then I'm sorry. [00:57:14] You've lost that protection. [00:57:17] Agreed. [00:57:18] And if you think that that's not why Zuckerberg and Jack are fighting to be regulated, you're wrong. [00:57:25] Yeah. [00:57:25] I mean, they want that regulation. [00:57:27] Oh, yeah. [00:57:27] Bad. [00:57:28] Yeah, they do. [00:57:29] So her Facebook account was suspended on May 17th for seven days. [00:57:34] After she posted a picture of her Twitter post that listed the disparity between poverty rates among blacks and whites in the United States, as well as the high father absence rate in black households, she blamed liberal policies. [00:57:50] Okay, you can't present facts on Facebook anymore? [00:57:53] She didn't make these statistics up. [00:57:56] Yeah, but she posted them. [00:57:58] She posted them. [00:57:59] Wow. [00:58:00] And she wrote black America must wake up to the great liberal hoax. [00:58:04] White supremacy is not a threat. [00:58:06] Liberal supremacy is. [00:58:09] I mean, that's great. [00:58:11] And true. [00:58:12] And it's true. [00:58:15] So a Facebook spokesperson said the account was suspended by mistake for seven days. [00:58:21] Was it? [00:58:22] Was it? [00:58:22] Uh-huh. [00:58:23] Oh, sorry. [00:58:24] Okay. [00:58:25] Sorry, because we just did it by mistake. [00:58:28] It was part of our agents of hate. [00:58:32] Yeah. [00:58:33] Sorry, we called her an agent of hate. [00:58:36] Dang, we just slipped up on that. [00:58:38] It's ridiculous. [00:58:40] And, you know, it's not just Facebook. [00:58:42] It's Twitter. [00:58:44] It's Instagram. [00:58:46] It's all these social media platforms that are doing this. [00:58:49] And it's got to stop because otherwise they shouldn't be afforded the protection of the of the federal government. [00:58:56] Triple 8 727B ECK. [00:58:58] Let's go to Matt in Canada. [00:59:01] Hey, Matt, you're on the Glenbeck program. [00:59:04] Hey. [00:59:05] Just to be clear, you guys, just to be clear, I'm a male and I am 1.8 meters tall and I weigh 97 kilograms. [00:59:14] We have no way of knowing how tall. [00:59:15] So that could be four ounces. [00:59:17] You could be 78 feet tall. [00:59:19] I don't know. [00:59:19] You've told us nothing, man. [00:59:20] Well, that's just it. [00:59:22] Now, I grew up in Canada, and when I cut a 2x4, I want to cut it by the foot and inches. [00:59:29] Thank you. [00:59:33] But I actually live in the U.S. and I married an American girl. [00:59:36] Okay. [00:59:38] But I'm in Canada right now, but the craziness of what's going on with the youth, especially, but not even the youth. [00:59:46] I'm talking 40-year-olds. [00:59:48] This climate change is out of control. [00:59:51] It's out of control. [00:59:53] It is. [00:59:54] They bought into it hook, line, and sinker, haven't they? [00:59:57] It isn't even, it's not even like they're believers. [01:00:01] They live it. [01:00:02] Yeah, it's almost a religion to them. [01:00:04] It is. [01:00:06] The carbon tax, the carbon footprint is right on everyone's lips. [01:00:11] And, you know, you shouldn't go to Vegas. [01:00:15] It's overkill. [01:00:16] Airplanes should be a once-in-a-lifetime type thing for emergency. [01:00:22] Jeez. [01:00:24] Crazy stuff. [01:00:26] The millionaires, they don't need all that money. [01:00:29] They don't need it. [01:00:30] They don't need it. [01:00:32] It's a whole upbringing of just government knows best, and you're just in there for whatever they think you should do. [01:00:45] Yeah. [01:00:46] It's total indoctrination of this generation and several generations now, actually, because it's been going on for a long time. [01:00:53] It actually has. [01:00:54] In the United States, and I assume it's even worse in Canada. [01:00:59] It seems like it. [01:01:00] I have nephews that are like, you know, 15, 16 years old, and that's where I'm really seeing the last five years, their development. [01:01:07] And their parents aren't much better, I got to say, even though I love my siblings, if you're never out of Canada, you don't know what's out there. [01:01:15] And it's a strange thing. [01:01:19] I mean, they're bought right into. [01:01:21] When you go to a city, you should be on a train or you should have an electric smart car. [01:01:26] And that's just the way it is. [01:01:28] Unless you're a company that has to have a big truck, you shouldn't have that. [01:01:34] It's hard when you find out what's out there. [01:01:37] What about if you're a government official? [01:01:39] Yes. [01:01:40] Oh, yes. [01:01:40] That's okay then. [01:01:41] Yeah, thank you. [01:01:43] Yeah. [01:01:44] Well, you know. [01:01:45] Appreciate it. [01:01:46] Thanks a lot, Matt. [01:01:49] It's amazing to see then, too, the purveyors of this climate change hoax. [01:01:54] And it's only a hoax to me because it's not catastrophic. [01:01:58] Has the temperature gone up one degree in 100 years? [01:02:04] Yes, I believe it has. [01:02:06] Has it also paused for the last 18? [01:02:10] Yes, it has. [01:02:12] Is it catastrophic? [01:02:15] No, it is not. [01:02:16] In fact, one degree of warmth is good for the planet. [01:02:22] It grows food. [01:02:25] I don't know if you're aware of that. [01:02:27] Food grows better in warm weather than it does, let's say in the dead of winter when it's 30 below. [01:02:34] Yeah, it's strange. [01:02:35] It's a strange phenomenon. [01:02:36] And we as humans, being, you know, there's more humans on the planet now, would need more food. [01:02:45] Right. [01:02:46] So, right. [01:02:47] So the earth is adjusting to feed the humans on the planet. [01:02:54] Yes. [01:02:55] Huh. [01:02:56] Strange, isn't it? [01:02:57] Huh. [01:02:58] Now, I guess we should be scared of that, but frankly, I'm not. [01:03:03] I'd love to say thank you. [01:03:07] But it's agonizing how the youth have been indoctrinated. [01:03:12] They almost all believe this. [01:03:14] Oh, yes. [01:03:15] Absolutely. [01:03:16] We homeschooled for 23 years. [01:03:18] Jeff, you homeschooled, right? [01:03:20] We made the mistake of letting our oldest two, our oldest son and our oldest daughter, to go to high school so that they could do the extracurricular stuff after we'd homeschooled them up till high school. [01:03:32] Well, those four years, three to four years, I forget which it was, whether it was sophomore or freshman year, they still got the indoctrination. [01:03:44] And I had to really work hard to try to bring them back to. [01:03:48] Have you brought them all the way back? [01:03:49] No. [01:03:50] No. [01:03:51] My son, yes. [01:03:52] My daughter, my oldest daughter, no. [01:03:54] She still believes a lot of that stuff. [01:03:56] She's totally into the global warming stuff. [01:04:00] Show me the evidence of any catastrophe going on. [01:04:05] Show it to me because I don't see it. [01:04:08] I believe there's too many people on the planet. [01:04:10] We're all in the streets. [01:04:11] And that's been so disproven ever since Paul Ehrlich wrote the population bomb in the late 60s or 1970, whenever that was. [01:04:19] And every prediction he made in it was wrong. [01:04:23] Every prediction. [01:04:24] I mean, you talk about cataclysm. [01:04:27] He predicted all kinds of catastrophe, like billions, 2 billion people dying from starvation. [01:04:33] The 1980s were supposed to be death and famine everywhere around the planet. [01:04:39] There was supposed to be worldwide chaos. [01:04:41] None of that happened. [01:04:42] And yet, Paul Ehrlich is still quoted on his predictions today. [01:04:46] What? [01:04:47] Has he not been, I don't know, completely discredited? [01:04:51] No. [01:04:52] Obviously, he hasn't been. === Wrong Apocalypse Forecasts (05:27) === [01:04:54] It's just. [01:04:56] It's like what we said before. [01:04:58] Yeah, yeah, I was wrong here, but don't worry about it. [01:05:01] Yeah. [01:05:02] Amazing. [01:05:02] It is amazing. [01:05:04] Pat Gray and Jeff Fisher for Glenn all this week, Triple 8, 727B ECK. [01:05:10] So the preliminary numbers are in for the big finale of Game of Thrones, and it looks like it was they had about 19.3 million. [01:05:19] Pretty good. [01:05:19] That'd be the most they had all season. [01:05:21] I think 18 was the last couple of shows. [01:05:23] Last couple of episodes were 18. [01:05:26] So 19. [01:05:27] To be on a pay channel like that and to get 19 million. [01:05:30] I know. [01:05:30] Here's the other thing. [01:05:32] If you include delayed viewing, it's 44 million on the average every week. [01:05:38] Huge. [01:05:38] So that doesn't even include the finale yet. [01:05:41] I don't know what that's going to be. [01:05:42] And so, look, the last season was struggling, and the last episode really struggled. [01:05:48] I mean, it was tough to find anybody that really enjoyed it or liked it. [01:05:52] Didn't you do your podcast on it? [01:05:53] Yeah. [01:05:54] And did anybody like it? [01:05:55] No. [01:05:56] I tried to go into it with it. [01:05:59] No, I mean, there was too much wrong with it. [01:06:01] Wow. [01:06:01] Too much wrong with it. [01:06:03] That's too bad. [01:06:04] On such a popular series like that, you'd like to have a nice ending. [01:06:07] Right. [01:06:08] You'd want people to watch. [01:06:09] And obviously, no one watched. [01:06:10] You just got done with saying the numbers. [01:06:12] I mean, everybody. [01:06:14] It didn't hurt them number-wise, apparently. [01:06:16] But still, it would have been nice if they would have wrapped it up to people's. [01:06:19] It's so dissatisfying to all the fans. [01:06:22] Yes. [01:06:22] We've been devoted to it for eight seasons. [01:06:24] It's very disappointing that the first six seasons were so great. [01:06:29] Too bad. [01:06:29] And that we ended with the last two that are just questionable and writers leaving and they lost the books. [01:06:35] And it was just tough. [01:06:36] It was tough to take. [01:06:37] But I do have some good news for you. [01:06:39] Yesterday we talked about John Wick being the number one movie over the weekend. [01:06:44] John Wick. [01:06:45] I was very excited. [01:06:45] You were excited about it. [01:06:46] Very, very excited. [01:06:48] I mean, it was in charge. [01:06:49] But John Wick 4 has been confirmed. [01:06:54] Oh, wow. [01:06:54] That is good. [01:06:58] Not only has it been confirmed. [01:06:59] I'm kind of worried about that. [01:07:00] We've got a date. [01:07:02] No. [01:07:03] When's it coming out? [01:07:04] I know. [01:07:04] You're thinking to yourself, they're actually going to give us a date, too. [01:07:07] Coming out next week? [01:07:09] May 21st, 2021. [01:07:10] Oh, no. [01:07:11] I can't wait that long. [01:07:12] So. [01:07:13] That's too long. [01:07:13] I mean. [01:07:16] Well, that does give me a chance to catch up because I know I wouldn't understand the subtle nuances of John Wick 4 without watching 1, 2, and 3. [01:07:25] So I've got some time to catch up. [01:07:29] There are subtle nuances. [01:07:31] Yeah, I'm sure. [01:07:32] It's about blowing people's heads off about the way they get shot. [01:07:36] And what really triggers him. [01:07:40] The main trigger point on John Wick is ugly. [01:07:43] Well, didn't he start all this because somebody killed his dog? [01:07:49] Yes. [01:07:49] Well, his wife died and he was sad. [01:07:52] Yeah. [01:07:52] And the dog on top of that. [01:07:54] The dog was a gift from his wife. [01:07:56] His wife had given him. [01:07:57] Oh, no. [01:07:57] And then when somebody killed his dog, well, now you're justified to kill hundreds of people. [01:08:01] I just proceeded to do, from what I understand. [01:08:04] And I mean, you get four movies out of it. [01:08:08] Good for him. [01:08:09] No kidding. [01:08:09] That's great. [01:08:10] No kidding. [01:08:10] Good for him. [01:08:11] That's great. [01:08:13] Also, Rocket Man. [01:08:16] Yeah, that's huge. [01:08:18] He's doing really well. [01:08:20] And it was interesting to see what the director of Rocket Man, Dexter Fletcher, he directed Rocket Man, but he also directed Bohemian Rhapsody, the Freddy Mercury story. [01:08:31] Which was really good. [01:08:33] And it's amazing that he actually said, Yeah, I did what I had to do on the Freddy Mercury film, but really my focus was always Rocket Man. [01:08:47] Wow. [01:08:48] That's a pretty big admission. [01:08:49] That sure is. [01:08:50] Especially when, I mean, Olive Queen made such a point. [01:08:53] Oh, this is the, you know, we're focused on this. [01:08:55] This was our 100%. [01:08:57] Yeah, for eight years. [01:08:58] Well, and apparently, this was the one that was important to him. [01:09:00] The Queen thing was like a throwaway. [01:09:02] Wow. [01:09:03] Which I loved. [01:09:04] I loved Bohemian Rhapsody. [01:09:05] I thought it was really good. [01:09:06] I'm looking forward to Rocket Man, too. [01:09:08] We should talk about the controversy, though, surrounding Rocket Man because people are all upset over the fact that a gay man is not playing a gay character. [01:09:20] So amazing. [01:09:22] We'll get into that. [01:09:23] Also, the lineup of 2020 candidates. [01:09:26] Got to talk about that coming up. [01:09:28] The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment. [01:09:36] This is the Glen Beck program. [01:09:39] Wow, we still have so much to talk about. [01:09:44] I'm going to talk about this mindset with millennials about free speech. [01:09:51] Really, something staggering, Newpoll, that shows how they feel about free speech. [01:09:58] We'll get into that. [01:09:59] Also, is it a problem for a non-gay person to play a gay role? [01:10:05] Yeah, apparently it is. [01:10:06] Apparently, it is. [01:10:09] And we've got some interesting things to show you from the long lineup of terrible 2020 candidates. [01:10:19] We'll get into all that starting in one minute. === Free Speech Mindset (12:40) === [01:10:22] Pat Gray, in for Glenn Beck. [01:10:25] And you can hear my own show, Pat Gray Unleashed, weekday mornings right before Glenn here on the Blaze radio and television. [01:10:33] And don't forget to sign up. [01:10:35] You can go to theblaze.com slash TV and sign up, get a subscription, and then you can watch us as well as listen to us all. [01:10:42] So you talk about exciting. [01:10:44] It is exciting. [01:10:45] It is exciting. [01:10:46] Can you imagine actually seeing Jeffy? [01:10:49] That's like a dream come true. [01:10:51] I hear that song. [01:10:52] Ones of people. [01:10:54] Well, those are literally ones of people. [01:10:58] And I don't know that they actually exist, to be honest with you. [01:11:02] Which is why Chewy the Fat is just an audio podcast right now. [01:11:05] Right now. [01:11:06] Right now it is. [01:11:07] But plans are in place. [01:11:09] People are demanding it. [01:11:11] The ones are demanding it. [01:11:12] I believe clamoring is the word. [01:11:14] There's like an uproar and a clamor about it. [01:11:19] You can't stop it. [01:11:20] No, you can't. [01:11:21] Even if you wanted to. [01:11:23] And who wants to? [01:11:24] I don't want to. [01:11:24] I don't. [01:11:25] You don't want to stop that momentum, do you? [01:11:26] I don't. [01:11:28] We are in good hands with our next generation, as I think everybody understands by this point. [01:11:35] Man, they've got some great ideas. [01:11:38] They do. [01:11:38] 41% of college students, 41% believe hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment. [01:11:50] What? [01:11:50] You know, this is our fault, though. [01:11:53] This is our generation's fault because they've been protected every step of the way. [01:11:58] We've babied them. [01:11:59] We've coddled them. [01:12:01] We took red marks off of their homework assignments and test papers because it was too intense for them. [01:12:08] So you can't mark up their paper in red. [01:12:11] We artificially raised their grades. [01:12:14] We made it impossible for them to get Fs. [01:12:16] We don't want any failure at all. [01:12:19] That was too traumatic. [01:12:21] We created safe spaces for them where they wouldn't have to hear anything they disagreed with or that would upset them in any way. [01:12:29] We don't want you offended. [01:12:30] We don't want you upset. [01:12:31] We don't want you uncomfortable. [01:12:34] We set up crying closets. [01:12:36] University of Utah set up crying closets. [01:12:38] Remember that? [01:12:39] Yes, I do. [01:12:40] We didn't keep score at their games so that there were no losers and nobody would feel badly when they walked off the playing field. [01:12:48] We gave them participation trophies just for showing up. [01:12:53] You guys are wonderful. [01:12:54] You're so good. [01:12:55] We evenly distributed game balls. [01:12:58] You could strike out nine times in a game and you'd still get a game ball. [01:13:02] I mean, of course they don't think hate speech is protected. [01:13:07] Of course. [01:13:08] They don't believe that anything in life should challenge their tender sensibilities. [01:13:14] It's just that simple. [01:13:16] Yeah, I mean, and we see that evidence of that every day. [01:13:20] Every stinking day. [01:13:22] Every day. [01:13:25] You had your feelings hurt. [01:13:26] You don't like what someone said. [01:13:28] Tough. [01:13:29] Yeah. [01:13:30] I mean, if we all talk like Barney the dinosaur, as they watched growing up, this generation, if all we said was, I love you, you love me, we wouldn't have to protect any speech. [01:13:45] No, there wouldn't be nothing to protect. [01:13:46] Nobody would object to it. [01:13:49] But when things irritate you, when you disagree with them, when things are harsh, that's the only speech you need to protect. [01:14:00] How do you not understand that? [01:14:02] I don't know how you don't understand that. [01:14:05] I mean, the days of sticks and stones and words. [01:14:10] Words break my bones. [01:14:11] Words could never hurt me. [01:14:12] That was a long gone. [01:14:14] And that's why you never hear that saying anymore. [01:14:17] You don't hear it. [01:14:18] Nobody says it. [01:14:19] It's just not true. [01:14:24] Sticks and stones can break my bones, but names are a lot worse for me. [01:14:29] That's what it is now. [01:14:31] That's the new saying. [01:14:32] Yeah. [01:14:33] Sticks and stones may break my bones, but names evidence yesterday of the guy that is arrested for transgender beating the heck out of someone. [01:14:47] I mean, assaulting this human being. [01:14:49] Yeah, I beat her. [01:14:50] I didn't call her any name. [01:14:52] It's amazing. [01:14:54] It's amazing. [01:14:55] That was unbelievable. [01:14:58] And he's saying it because he believes it. [01:15:01] Yeah. [01:15:02] I'm not going to get in trouble for calling her a name. [01:15:05] So it's just, it's no wonder we've got this situation because we essentially created this situation by not expecting anything of them, by protecting them from absolutely every negative situation in life. [01:15:22] And some of you do that. [01:15:24] You can't go from the negative situation. [01:15:26] I'm trying to remember how that actually came to be. [01:15:32] Because my oldest son lived through some of this, and I remember thinking, no, you don't. [01:15:37] Everybody doesn't need to get a trophy. [01:15:39] Everybody doesn't need, no, you won. [01:15:42] You scored more points than the other teams. [01:15:44] You won. [01:15:45] That's the way it is. [01:15:46] And then it just seems like I don't know that. [01:15:48] I don't think we believed it would hurt. [01:15:50] It was just like, yeah, whatever. [01:15:52] It was almost like the abortion thing. [01:15:53] It was just like, I don't know. [01:15:55] It's been going on for a while, though. [01:15:57] And it went on even in Texas. [01:16:00] I remember when my youngest son was playing his, I don't know, 11 or 12-year-old season. [01:16:09] I think he was 11 at the time, and he was on a terrible team. [01:16:12] Sure. [01:16:13] And they went 0-16. [01:16:16] And I'm sitting there in stands, and the team mom is going to all the various parents collecting money. [01:16:23] I'm thinking, hmm, what do I own? [01:16:25] We have a little afterseason party. [01:16:27] What is this about? [01:16:28] Yeah, that's what I thought it was. [01:16:29] Maybe a party of some kind afterwards. [01:16:32] And again, the team is 0-13 at this point. [01:16:37] It's been a long season. [01:16:38] She comes up to me. [01:16:39] It's been a long season. [01:16:40] Let's wrap up. [01:16:40] It's been tough. [01:16:41] Yeah. [01:16:42] So she comes up to me and says, so we're collecting $10 for the team trophies. [01:16:50] I'm like, the team trophy? [01:16:54] What? [01:16:54] You don't, you don't think? [01:16:56] They're 0-13! [01:16:58] Well, they still played good this season. [01:17:01] They still played good this season. [01:17:02] No, they didn't. [01:17:03] No, they really didn't. [01:17:07] I mean, I know they tried, but they did not succeed. [01:17:10] And I don't want to pay for a big giant. [01:17:12] I'm not paying for a giant letter L on it. [01:17:15] Yeah. [01:17:16] And of course, there wouldn't be a giant letter L. [01:17:18] No, no, no. [01:17:19] He'd be presented as champions for participating. [01:17:22] All right. [01:17:23] And she's like, oh, so you don't think that. [01:17:28] No. [01:17:28] No. [01:17:29] I don't think. [01:17:30] I'm certainly not ponying up money for an 0-16 season. [01:17:36] Thank you, though, for the opportunity. [01:17:39] So even that was when we were in Houston. [01:17:41] Even in Houston, Texas, you had that mindset. [01:17:44] So what chance do they have? [01:17:46] Seriously, what chance do the kids have? [01:17:48] It is hard. [01:17:49] It's hard. [01:17:50] We should have let them experience this because now they're getting out into the world and trying to become productive citizens. [01:18:00] And it's just going to be really hard for them to be that. [01:18:02] Yeah. [01:18:03] Because they've got too many things that are going to come at them. [01:18:05] Did you say something harsh against me? [01:18:08] Right. [01:18:08] Did you just make me uncomfortable? [01:18:11] I shouldn't be made to feel uncomfortable. [01:18:14] That's against the constitution. [01:18:15] I think they really believe it is unconstitutional. [01:18:19] It's unconstitutional to make anybody feel uncomfortable. [01:18:23] So good luck. [01:18:25] Okay. [01:18:27] And we're going to turn the country over to them. [01:18:30] Yikes. [01:18:31] I know. [01:18:32] I know. [01:18:32] It's the same group, you know, in that Gallup poll that talked about socialism. [01:18:37] Yeah. [01:18:38] It also talks about how the respondents favored government control in environmental protection and online privacy protection of these. [01:18:47] I mean, they're okay with, they don't want people saying bad things about them, but they want the government to protect them online and make sure that the water, you know, the fitness. [01:18:56] And they'll probably get that too. [01:18:58] They will. [01:18:58] They'll get that. [01:18:59] Because Mark Zuckerberg is for intervention from the government. [01:19:04] Yeah. [01:19:04] Why would you want that? [01:19:06] So he could control my company. [01:19:08] Yeah, please. [01:19:10] What? [01:19:11] Why? [01:19:12] Why would you be for that? [01:19:15] It's amazing. [01:19:16] It is. [01:19:19] The only reason that I can see of him being for that isn't for our safety. [01:19:24] Oh, not at all. [01:19:25] It is not for our safety. [01:19:26] No. [01:19:27] He's partnering with the government. [01:19:28] You're darn right he is. [01:19:29] Let me in. [01:19:30] Let me in. [01:19:31] Kind of a chilling little beginning of things we've seen on sci-fi movies where corporations are the government. [01:19:39] Let me in. [01:19:40] Yes, you're right, man. [01:19:42] Scary. [01:19:42] We are bad. [01:19:43] I should be. [01:19:44] I need to be in with you guys. [01:19:46] That's what he's pushing. [01:19:48] Pat Grave. [01:19:49] Jeff Fisher. [01:19:50] In for Glenn, 888-727-B-E-C-K. [01:19:53] And we got more. [01:19:55] We got more actors jumping into the middle of the fray because we haven't had enough do that so far. [01:20:03] The latest is Jeff Daniels. [01:20:04] Now, is Jeff Daniels a Republican? [01:20:06] He seems to be lamenting the fact that he can't support Republicans. [01:20:11] I don't know. [01:20:12] He doesn't directly say that, but that's the impression I get from the way he's talking here. [01:20:16] Yeah, I think he's, I don't know that he ever said it, that he's a Republican, or I think he's come across as being conservative-ish. [01:20:26] As conservative as people get in Hollywood, maybe. [01:20:29] I don't know. [01:20:29] Anyway, here's what he had to say about the shape of things now. [01:20:33] At the end of the day, aside from, yeah, I don't want to pay taxes, it's race. [01:20:39] It's race. [01:20:39] Oh, my gosh. [01:20:40] Can you pause that for a second? [01:20:43] Aside from it. [01:20:44] If you don't want to pay taxes, it's about race. [01:20:48] If you don't, I don't want to turn more money, my hard-earned money, over to the government. [01:20:55] That means I'm a racist? [01:20:57] Okay, that's just, that's, that's insane. [01:21:04] Wow. [01:21:05] I rule the day I ever watched while you were sleeping now because Jeff Daniels was in it. [01:21:13] That's ridiculous, but there's much more score. [01:21:17] This is about the Republican Party or a wing of it going, this is our last chance to save the party. [01:21:27] If we don't, it's the end of the Republican Party. [01:21:29] And the only way they can do that is to tap the race button and say, go ahead, it's okay. [01:21:34] Oh, my God. [01:21:35] And he did. [01:21:36] And they did. [01:21:37] And that was the only card they had left to play, and they played it. [01:21:40] And they aren't going to go quietly. [01:21:42] And that's why you look at the cowardice of the 15 or so Republicans in the Senate who are still quiet. [01:21:47] And I'm not talking about Bob Corker and Jeff Flake and the other two. [01:21:53] I went out the back door. [01:21:54] You know, that's not courage. [01:21:56] That's not courage. [01:21:57] That's making sure you've got a job somewhere after politics. [01:22:00] Courage is standing up and being a true patriot like we used to have when you're doing right now, Jeff. [01:22:07] Who are the heroes going to be? [01:22:09] You. [01:22:09] You are going to be. [01:22:11] What a courageous stance Jeff Daniels is taking there from calling out the Republican Party in Hollywood. [01:22:20] Ooh, that's so brave of you. [01:22:26] Wow. [01:22:27] Nicely done, Jeff. [01:22:28] That's really impressive. [01:22:31] Wow, who would ever think that a Hollywood leftist could stand up against the awful Republicans? [01:22:41] What a bold move. [01:22:44] So incredible of him to dare. [01:22:46] To the heroes. [01:22:50] It just makes it hard, doesn't it, to watch any movies you like to support them in. [01:22:58] It's just that we don't do that as conservatives. [01:23:01] No, we don't. [01:23:02] And we like to work. === Hollywood Leftist Moves (04:29) === [01:23:03] Yeah. [01:23:05] And it's really hard sometimes to get past it. [01:23:08] Really hard to get past their personality that they've spewed out. [01:23:12] I can't look at Robert De Niro anymore without thinking about what an extreme idiot he is. [01:23:17] Me too. [01:23:18] But, you know, they just posted, he did like this two or three minute commercial for, I forget what company it was for. [01:23:24] It was a pizza company or something, a bagel company, a bagel company. [01:23:28] And it was great. [01:23:31] And it was so, I was just like, I don't want to like it, but it was great. [01:23:36] And I still, I mean, he's such a bad guy. [01:23:40] Yes. [01:23:41] He's just a bad guy. [01:23:42] Jim Carrey, too. [01:23:44] And I can't imagine going to a Jim Carrey movie. [01:23:46] Not that he's going to do any anymore. [01:23:48] He seems to have been dumped by Hollywood. [01:23:51] But if he had something that came out that was really popular, I don't think I could watch him in it. [01:23:57] Tough. [01:23:58] Really hard. [01:24:00] Yeah, it is really hard. [01:24:01] It's tough. [01:24:02] I know. [01:24:03] And I find myself struggling a lot with De Niro, DiCaprio. [01:24:12] He's going on and on and on about the climate change and the globe and of the planet. [01:24:16] Well, he takes private jets all over the world. [01:24:19] Leo is out jet-setting the world. [01:24:22] Yeah, no, it's tough. [01:24:23] I know, Leonard. [01:24:24] I know. [01:24:25] Yeah, same with we had this story last week about Drake, the rapper Drake, who I guess even surpassed the Beatles in the number of hit singles he has on the Hot 100 chart all at once. [01:24:37] It's like 12 or something. [01:24:39] So he's huge in pop culture. [01:24:42] And he's a big climate change advocate. [01:24:46] He's always out there talking about climate change. [01:24:49] And he walks to all his shows. [01:24:50] Well. [01:24:51] He walks to all his shows so that he shows up, you know, on foot. [01:24:54] No, really? [01:24:56] I'm going to say no. [01:24:57] And he rides his bike in from the hotel that he stays at. [01:25:00] No. [01:25:01] No. [01:25:01] He doesn't. [01:25:03] And he just bought a massive private jet. [01:25:06] And he made a point of saying on the video as he's showing off his new private jet. [01:25:12] This isn't a rental or some type shit. [01:25:15] I own this. [01:25:17] I own this. [01:25:19] This is actually all mine. [01:25:21] Really, Mr. Climate Change? [01:25:24] Wow, that doesn't seem carbon-friendly. [01:25:27] No, it does not. [01:25:28] I mean, I realize, how many bicycles or scooters can you fit on that? [01:25:32] Hypocrites. [01:25:33] The dudes I say not as I do. [01:25:36] Hypocrisy is pretty amazing. [01:25:38] Well, I mean, I'm more important, right? [01:25:40] I mean, they don't have to live like they tell us to live. [01:25:43] I'm living like this so that I can jet-sit around the world and tell you how important I am and how important the cause is. [01:25:50] But you little people need to do what I tell you. [01:25:54] In fact, you need to hang your laundry out to dry on clotheslines when I'm jetting around the planet. [01:26:03] Okay. [01:26:04] Thank you for that. [01:26:05] Thank you. [01:26:05] Yeah. [01:26:06] Be sure to do that. [01:26:07] Right. [01:26:08] And I need to go vegetarian. [01:26:09] It's tough to take. [01:26:10] Even though you're not. [01:26:11] Tough to take. [01:26:12] It's just tough to take. [01:26:16] It is. [01:26:16] It's amazing we're saying it all. [01:26:18] And I think a lot of people would say, well, you're not, though. [01:26:23] And they might be right. [01:26:26] So if you're wondering who you could vote for in the Democrat Party, because they're all so wonderful. [01:26:35] And it's a tough choice. [01:26:38] They all want infanticide. [01:26:41] They all want to spend $100 trillion on climate change. [01:26:44] They all want socialized medicine, socialized university admittance. [01:26:53] And you got to love these super old white guys who are at the top of the heap. [01:26:58] Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders now locked in a tie in Iowa. [01:27:02] Wow. [01:27:02] Okay, so not nationwide, but it's really tight in Iowa right now. [01:27:07] And that's what it's going to come down to: you know, the individual states, not a national poll. [01:27:12] So they are essentially all knotted up at the top of the poll. [01:27:18] Both Sanders and Biden have 24% support among the Democrat candidates in Iowa. [01:27:26] Three contenders trail the leaders with pretty healthy percentages. [01:27:30] Who would you think is number three? [01:27:31] Have you seen this poll yet? === Drag Queens Bullying Kids (09:04) === [01:27:32] I have not. [01:27:33] Okay, so take a guess at who's number three. [01:27:37] I mean, Pete, right? [01:27:38] Dude, yes. [01:27:39] He nailed it. [01:27:40] Got to be. [01:27:41] Nice. [01:27:41] Yeah, well, it's got to be. [01:27:42] I looked up at the board. [01:27:43] We're looking at these names that we have up on the chalkboard here and on this list. [01:27:47] He's the only one. [01:27:48] He's the only one out of all these names that are making a move. [01:27:52] So Biden and Sanders have 24%. [01:27:56] Buddha Judge is at 14. [01:27:58] Yeah. [01:27:58] He's the only one making a move. [01:28:00] The rest of them, Kamala. [01:28:01] Elizabeth Warren's at 12. [01:28:03] Kamala Harris at 10. [01:28:04] Wow. [01:28:05] Betto, 5. [01:28:07] Yeah, I mean, he's lucky to have that, right? [01:28:08] I mean, nobody's talking about him. [01:28:09] Nobody cares about you. [01:28:11] I really think that's true. [01:28:12] Where's Corey at? [01:28:13] Three. [01:28:13] He's nowhere. [01:28:14] He's lucky to be there. [01:28:15] He's at less than, well, he's at 1% or less. [01:28:19] And you forgot to mention Amy Klobuchar. [01:28:20] I mean, I'm sure she's ahead of Joe Biden or Bernie Sanders, right? [01:28:24] No. [01:28:24] Jamie Klobuchar, she's not? [01:28:25] No. [01:28:26] Oh, wow. [01:28:26] But she does have 2%. [01:28:28] Oh, she's on there, though. [01:28:29] She does make the list. [01:28:30] There's at least a pulse there. [01:28:32] Sort of. [01:28:33] Yeah, sort of. [01:28:35] Pat and Jeffy for Glenn, 888-727-B-E-C-K. [01:28:39] Just to show you you can't please everyone. [01:28:40] In fact, you can almost not please anyone anymore. [01:28:44] Right. [01:28:46] Elton John's new movie is called Rocket Man. [01:28:50] It's out. [01:28:51] Is it out already? [01:28:52] Well, it was out already. [01:28:54] The actual huge release is the end of this month, the 31st, but they were doing a limited release started a couple days ago. [01:29:01] Well, yesterday, I think we started the limited release. [01:29:04] So he's getting, Elton John is getting all kinds of flack from the LGBTQQIA2 plus community. [01:29:12] Elton John. [01:29:16] Who might be the patron saint of the community? [01:29:18] Elton John. [01:29:20] I mean, this guy walked through fire for these people. [01:29:24] Yeah. [01:29:24] Well, playing him in the new movie is Taryn Egerton. [01:29:30] And Elton really liked his performance. [01:29:32] He loved his performance, and he was happy with it. [01:29:35] Well, the LGBTQQIA2 Plus community wasn't so happy about it because Taryn Egerton is not gay. [01:29:43] Oh, no. [01:29:44] So I guess now the thing is, obviously, only gays can play gay roles. [01:29:49] Guess so. [01:29:49] Only trans people can play trans roles. [01:29:51] We found that out with Scarlett Johansson, who accepted a role and then was drummed out of it because she's not trans. [01:29:59] So Elton said that's all BS. [01:30:03] Bullcrap. [01:30:04] He used a different word. [01:30:05] Yes, he did. [01:30:06] Said, I'm sorry. [01:30:07] If people don't like it, review-wise, or it doesn't make $1, it's the movie I wanted to make, and that's all that counts. [01:30:15] I can look back and say, you know what? [01:30:17] I love it. [01:30:18] I can live with that. [01:30:19] Good for you, Elton. [01:30:21] So he said the guy's great. [01:30:24] It doesn't have to be a gay person playing a gay man. [01:30:27] I thought that's why it was acting. [01:30:30] Right. [01:30:32] I know I'm just throwing it out there. [01:30:34] I thought that was the whole point. [01:30:35] Should we then assume that the LGBTQQIA2 plus community will agree with us in saying that no gay person can ever play a straight role? [01:30:48] You know, that's not true. [01:30:49] You know, they're going to agree with that, right? [01:30:50] Just to be consistent and not hypocrites, certainly they would say, hey, I'm sorry, you're gay. [01:30:56] You can't play a straight role. [01:30:57] You can't, no. [01:31:00] You know, it doesn't work that way. [01:31:01] No way. [01:31:02] Not even close. [01:31:03] And when asked, you know, Egerton said, I'm an actor. [01:31:06] I think now to get into acting just to play people like me, you have to draw the line somewhere. [01:31:10] And I don't want to live in a world where straight people play straight people and gay people play gay people. [01:31:15] Well, it's too late. [01:31:16] We're in that world. [01:31:17] I think we are, too. [01:31:18] We're seriously in that world. [01:31:20] And it happened quickly. [01:31:22] That's too bad. [01:31:23] I mean, it seems like that's one of the newer rules that we're being sure is. [01:31:30] And maybe in the last year or two. [01:31:32] It sure is. [01:31:32] That's a definite new rule that's blasted in. [01:31:35] Yeah. [01:31:36] I mean, no more than a year. [01:31:38] It shows you more than a year. [01:31:40] Just how fast this society is changing. [01:31:44] I mean, you can't even keep up. [01:31:45] You can't keep up. [01:31:46] You just can't even keep up. [01:31:48] I mean, I love that Elton didn't cave. [01:31:53] Yeah. [01:31:54] Good for him. [01:31:55] Absolutely. [01:31:55] Screw you. [01:31:56] Good for him. [01:31:57] Elton John. [01:31:58] Right. [01:32:00] The guy is, I don't know. [01:32:02] I don't know if you know. [01:32:03] He's a gay icon. [01:32:05] Married to a man. [01:32:08] They have children. [01:32:09] I mean, he's the guy. [01:32:12] Yes, he's the gay icon. [01:32:14] He's the guy. [01:32:15] Well, it doesn't matter. [01:32:16] Can you think of a more famous gay person? [01:32:19] Right off the top of my head, I don't know that I can. [01:32:21] Out for as long as he has. [01:32:22] Right. [01:32:26] It's ridiculous. [01:32:27] Most definitely is. [01:32:29] Meanwhile, a North Carolina middle school used an interesting approach to stop bullying against gay students by bringing in drag queens to perform and educate students on the LGBTQQIA. [01:32:43] Because they thought it would be great to have drag queens come in. [01:32:55] Okay. [01:32:59] And of course, if you say anything about that, you're a bigot. [01:33:04] You're a hater. [01:33:06] You're a homophobe or a transphobe or whatever. [01:33:11] You're a phobe of some sort. [01:33:12] We know you fear. [01:33:14] That much we know. [01:33:16] We'll work out what you're afraid of later. [01:33:20] But for one thing, you're a phobe and a hater. [01:33:24] Okay? [01:33:27] Teachers Taylor Schmidt and Shara Brooks told CNN that the event was intended to reduce bullying so that the kids could focus on their education. [01:33:38] Our drive was to remove barriers to success, belonging, and the ability to thrive for all students. [01:33:45] It called for a hard look at the roots of these behaviors and intentional actions to liberate not just the bullied from the oppressive acts, but the bully from the oppressive root causes of their actions. [01:33:59] Wow, it was a two-hour event. [01:34:01] It featured a drag show that took place, and it's already happened. [01:34:07] So I don't, the parents were apparently not notified in advance. [01:34:15] Students, oh, I guess students were permitted to opt out, but most students decided to opt out of that. [01:34:22] No, they're not. [01:34:23] Well, I think they'd be bullied. [01:34:25] They'd be ostracized, right? [01:34:26] Be ostracized and bullied if they did. [01:34:28] Right. [01:34:31] You're going to go, right? [01:34:32] What a world. [01:34:34] Oh, of course I'm going. [01:34:35] Yeah, why wouldn't I? [01:34:37] Everything's wonderful about drag queens coming into a school and performing. [01:34:43] I thought you told me your parents said no. [01:34:45] I don't care. [01:34:46] No, they're haters. [01:34:47] My parents are bigots and haters and phobes of some sort. [01:34:51] I don't know what they're afraid of. [01:34:53] I just know they're afraid. [01:34:58] It's crazy. [01:35:00] What a world. [01:35:01] So we don't have any evidence that it helped in the bullying yet. [01:35:06] Right? [01:35:06] I mean, we don't know that it helped. [01:35:08] It made a difference. [01:35:10] Do not know that. [01:35:11] Because, I mean, it sounds like it's something that could make a huge difference. [01:35:14] If you see a drag queen perform, you're done, right? [01:35:19] You're not going to bully anybody. [01:35:20] You're not going to bully anyone about anything. [01:35:23] That's the perfect antidote to bullying. [01:35:25] Yes. [01:35:25] Is watching a drag queen. [01:35:26] You can't perform a drag queen. [01:35:28] Yeah. [01:35:29] Exactly. [01:35:30] So what? [01:35:32] I don't know. [01:35:33] I don't know. [01:35:34] This world, it doesn't make sense anymore. [01:35:36] I mean, I'm not opposed to the drag queen. [01:35:39] I'm opposed to them going and performing at school. [01:35:42] I don't think that's a good idea. [01:35:44] But it's time to just turn the country off. [01:35:47] Just flip the switch. [01:35:48] Turn the country off. [01:35:50] I mean, it is where we are right now. [01:35:53] Show up. [01:35:53] You do a couple of numbers. [01:35:55] Get out. [01:35:57] You do a couple of numbers. [01:35:58] You do a couple of numbers. [01:35:59] A couple of dance routines and whatnot. [01:36:01] Then you're done. [01:36:02] Wrap it up. [01:36:02] Get out. [01:36:03] Kids have an idea. [01:36:03] All right, well, you convinced me. [01:36:05] That was a good move. [01:36:06] Stop bullying. [01:36:07] Get out of here. [01:36:08] We're done. [01:36:11] I mean, you've got the drag queens reading to kids. [01:36:14] I mean, like four, five, and six years old at the library. [01:36:18] And the drag queen that has been featured multiple times is just frightening looking. [01:36:23] It's got horns coming out the head and all of that stuff. [01:36:26] The face up in the horns, strange stuff. [01:36:30] And again, if you don't want it to happen with your children, you're a phobe of some kind. === Stop The Library Bullies (07:42) === [01:36:36] I don't know. [01:36:37] You've got some kind of phobia. [01:36:39] I don't know what it is. [01:36:39] You're a phobe. [01:36:40] You're a hater. [01:36:41] Just a phobe. [01:36:42] And a phobe, obviously. [01:36:45] And you monger in hatred. [01:36:46] We do know that. [01:36:47] Yes, we do know that. [01:36:48] You are a mongerer of hate. [01:36:51] All right. [01:36:52] So that's when we turn to these Democrat candidates and lead us. [01:36:57] Lead us down the path of non-hatred, please. [01:36:59] Please. [01:37:00] This is kind of interesting. [01:37:01] Kirsten Gillibrand on CBS yesterday had something very, very interesting to say. [01:37:07] Here's what came out of her mouth. [01:37:11] Or not. [01:37:13] I guess she said it really silently. [01:37:16] Oh, okay. [01:37:17] So here's what she said. [01:37:21] She said, let's hope, without holding our breaths, that, oh, okay, that's not what she said. [01:37:29] We just don't have what she said. [01:37:30] She said that abortion. [01:37:32] Man, no wonder she's not doing well at the polls. [01:37:34] I'll tell you that. [01:37:35] She's peak up a little bit. [01:37:36] Maybe she'd step up at the polls. [01:37:40] She said that abortion is a matter of life and death. [01:37:47] Yeah, that's kind of what we've been saying. [01:37:50] So she said abortion is a matter of life and death, and that women should have the right to make that decision. [01:37:58] Huh? [01:37:59] Well, welcome to the party. [01:38:01] Except that she's saying the same thing that they all say. [01:38:04] Women should just have the right to say whenever. [01:38:06] There's no line. [01:38:07] It's just whenever. [01:38:08] She believes, as we do, though, apparently, that yes, there is a life at stake, and you're killing that life. [01:38:14] She just comes to a different conclusion that that life doesn't matter. [01:38:18] And the woman should be able to kill the baby if she wants to. [01:38:22] Wow. [01:38:24] Okay. [01:38:26] So you could vote for her. [01:38:28] She'll lead us down the right path. [01:38:30] She'll lead us down a path. [01:38:31] Away from being phobes. [01:38:35] And so will Kamala Harris. [01:38:37] Her 2020 plan now is to find companies that don't ensure equal pay. [01:38:44] Right. [01:38:45] Not find, fine. [01:38:47] Wow. [01:38:47] Yes. [01:38:48] Fine them. [01:38:50] So we're back to the pay gap thing again, which has been just proven over and over, including the Washington Post. [01:38:59] Not exactly a conservative publication. [01:39:05] But she's apparently closing the pay gap by fining companies with more than 100 employees that don't guarantee equal pay. [01:39:16] Full-time women in the workforce earned 80%. [01:39:19] I'm so tired of hearing this. [01:39:20] Earned 80% of what males earned. [01:39:22] She says it to be true. [01:39:24] It's not true. [01:39:25] You're comparing apples to oranges. [01:39:27] And there's a sense of what males earned in the equivalent professions. [01:39:32] Yes. [01:39:32] Well, black and aesthetic women. [01:39:35] Except no. [01:39:37] Oh, she said it. [01:39:38] I know she did. [01:39:40] But there's some differences in the way women work, in the commitment to the work, in a lot of different areas that have to be considered here. [01:39:49] Okay, Mr. White Male. [01:39:51] Yeah, I know. [01:39:52] I know. [01:39:53] Whatever. [01:39:56] It's amazing. [01:39:57] She keeps driving at home. [01:39:59] She just keeps driving at home. [01:40:01] It doesn't. [01:40:01] They do the same thing on climate change. [01:40:03] It doesn't matter. [01:40:03] They do the same thing on abortion. [01:40:06] They just keep harping the same line until, you know, you just succumb. [01:40:11] All right. [01:40:11] I don't want to hear it anymore. [01:40:12] Just give them more money. [01:40:15] Oh, boy. [01:40:16] Something frightening going on in the UK. [01:40:20] Neil Farage, just the latest right-wing figure to be attacked. [01:40:27] Oh, no. [01:40:27] We actually have. [01:40:28] Is he okay? [01:40:29] We have some. [01:40:30] I think we have the video of it. [01:40:32] Do we have the video? [01:40:35] Oh, what happened? [01:40:38] Nigel Farage attacked with a milkshake. [01:40:45] Now, if you weren't going to drink that, I would have. [01:40:48] You know, those are delicious, right? [01:40:50] I read about the new milkshake throwing attacks. [01:40:55] Why would you ever do that? [01:40:56] That is. [01:40:57] That's crazy. [01:40:59] That's crazy. [01:41:00] It must not be a Chick-fil-A milkshake. [01:41:02] That is a crime in itself. [01:41:04] That is. [01:41:05] That is a crime in itself. [01:41:06] Look, if you don't want it, Jeffy and I'd be happy to relieve you of it. [01:41:11] Absolutely. [01:41:12] We really would. [01:41:13] 100%. [01:41:13] As a matter of fact, I don't even care if you change straws. [01:41:15] Just let me have that thing. [01:41:16] What a weird phenomenon. [01:41:18] Right? [01:41:19] Throwing milkshakes. [01:41:20] It went from throwing eggs, right? [01:41:21] It used to be throwing eggs, which I guess. [01:41:24] I mean, I guess I got milkshakes better. [01:41:27] You got to get hit by something. [01:41:29] You're probably going to have more mess with the milkshake, I guess, than just an egg, a single egg. [01:41:34] You can wash the milkshake stuff out. [01:41:35] The egg is. [01:41:36] Is that harder to get out? [01:41:38] Eggs are nasty. [01:41:41] weird stuff going on how how is it that they're not being are the perpetrators being arrested for doing this I don't think so. [01:41:50] That's not cool. [01:41:51] It's just not. [01:41:52] That's not cool. [01:41:53] And they're just throwing a milkshake. [01:41:55] I'm sure that's what they think. [01:41:57] And I'll bet you they feel completely justified in doing it. [01:42:01] Absolutely. [01:42:02] These are the same people. [01:42:04] They're participation trophies. [01:42:06] They're justified. [01:42:08] I don't like what they're saying, and so I'm going to dump milkshakes on them. [01:42:11] We side with the girl that took the sign last week that was justified in 100%. [01:42:16] They can't be made to feel uncomfortable in any way. [01:42:19] Or anyway. [01:42:21] But they can dump milkshakes on other people. [01:42:23] They could attack other people, and that's perfectly fine. [01:42:25] Well, look what they were saying. [01:42:27] Right? [01:42:29] That's exactly how they shout down all the conservatives that come to the colleges. [01:42:35] They're totally justified in doing that. [01:42:38] Look at the things you're saying. [01:42:40] They shouldn't have the right to say it. [01:42:43] Wait. [01:42:44] You're letting them say that. [01:42:46] Right. [01:42:47] Right. [01:42:47] Yeah, no, they are, baby. [01:42:49] That girl last week, we had a video of a girl who stole a pro-life sign from somebody who was holding a pro-life rally. [01:42:59] Just walked up and took it off. [01:42:59] And she just walked up and took it. [01:43:01] There were police all over the place trying to keep the various factions of protesters from each other. [01:43:08] And so they call the policeman over, and she is whining and crying, well, they're trying to take away women's rights. [01:43:16] That doesn't make it okay to steal their sign. [01:43:19] But listen to what they're saying. [01:43:21] Don't listen to it. [01:43:23] Well, if I leave, they'll just come back and do it again. [01:43:26] Well, ignore them again. [01:43:28] You can't just walk them. [01:43:29] You can't just walk someone. [01:43:31] She could not understand the concept of why she was in trouble. [01:43:36] She didn't think she'd done anything wrong because she doesn't consider those people. [01:43:40] And they ended up arresting her, which I thought was maybe a little bit much, but it was nice to see. [01:43:44] It's a good lesson for her. [01:43:45] It was nice to see. [01:43:46] You know, she didn't spend any time in jail. [01:43:48] Yeah, but it was a dang good lesson. [01:43:51] And I hope it was a lesson. [01:43:53] Hey, Putin, you can't just treat people like that because you disagree with them. [01:43:59] What? [01:43:59] Why not? [01:44:00] They're saying mean things I don't like. [01:44:03] Right. [01:44:04] It's okay. [01:44:05] Just don't listen. [01:44:06] Or go home. [01:44:10] What a concept. [01:44:12] It's difficult to understand. [01:44:14] It really is. [01:44:17] You're listening to Glenn