Episode Transcript
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0:00
Hey, our march number for inflation is in.
0:02
It's great. Eight point five. Let
0:05
me talk to you above
0:06
expectations. We're exceeding
0:08
expectations once again. Yeah.
0:10
Definitely not. I will say this. Not a time
0:12
to refinance your mortgage. No. Won't do it
0:14
right now because this is getting
0:17
really
0:17
good. These rates are not going up. Yeah. I can't tell
0:19
you that. Yeah. No. Not at all. They've
0:22
got to move the interest rates up
0:24
and you've got to get out
0:26
of the you gotta
0:28
get out of your high interest credit cards.
0:30
You gotta do it. Your
0:32
your cart your cart is probably the average
0:34
is about nineteen point nine percent. They've
0:36
seen them as high as twenty four percent.
0:38
You're not gonna able to pay these things off. If
0:40
that being risk rate goes up, how are
0:43
you gonna get behind? You know, get out from behind
0:45
one of these things? You're not. Please. Please.
0:48
While your house has extra
0:50
value, use that mortgage
0:53
to reset those credit cards get
0:55
that off your back. It's American
0:57
financing at eight hundred 906 twenty
0:59
four forty or go to american financing
1:01
dot net. Do it now. Come
1:18
on, don't know, to compromise. You
1:22
gotta stand together. It's
1:34
a no damn turnarounds.
1:40
What you are about to hear is the fusion
1:42
of inner retainment and enlightenment.
1:45
This is the combined bag
1:48
program.
1:51
Hey, everybody. It's
1:53
Tuesday and it's great.
1:56
Inflation, we just got the March numbers
1:59
up eight point five. Right?
2:01
We're at eight point five percent inflation.
2:04
Yay. Now
2:07
that I want you to know, they did do a favor
2:09
by taking out their longer tracking
2:11
the numbers like rent or
2:14
gas or lot of food,
2:17
you know. But those Artur.
2:21
Anyway, we'll get into that also the
2:23
new gun band and been
2:26
joins us in sixty seconds. Okay.
2:32
So you could clean your house and,
2:34
you know, do deep, clean, and spring
2:36
clean, and my mom was nuts. This
2:38
time of the year, no, I mean, she was. She was
2:40
nuts. This time of the year, we would have to
2:42
take all of our furniture out of the
2:44
house. Every stick of
2:46
furniture was out on our front
2:48
lawn. Oh, we were classy neighbors.
2:51
And and then she would clean. We would have
2:53
to clean all the walls and the
2:55
woodwork and everything and then
2:58
put it all back into the house. It
3:00
was a classy white
3:03
trash weekend. Anyway,
3:05
you could do that or you know, you
3:07
just say, why don't we get new blinds? You
3:09
know? We get new blind shutters. Shutters
3:12
make things dark. You can't see everything. You
3:14
know? This is the way really to
3:16
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3:19
especially right now at blinds dot com.
3:21
They have their outdoor event going on right now.
3:23
You could save up to forty five percent
3:25
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3:27
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3:30
now, forty five percent off-site wide.
3:32
It's blinds dot com. Rules and
3:34
Restreras captions may apply.
3:36
Mister Dave Rubin, how
3:38
are you, sir? Glenn,
3:41
I'm doing well, although I got tell you, you know,
3:43
you're giving me these these inflation numbers. I'm trying
3:45
to move book
3:45
today, man. Yes. I need some good inflation
3:48
numbers. Keep product to get out of the warehouse.
3:50
You are going to do really well.
3:52
You just have to charge eighty five dollars
3:55
per book. Dave
3:58
does have a new book out. It's called, don't burn
4:01
this country. And,
4:04
you you know, in it, you you say
4:06
something kind of interesting that this is
4:08
the kind of the this is your last
4:10
chance to try to to
4:12
try to save Liberals. Oh,
4:15
yeah, this is it, man. I mean, you know
4:18
my evolution well and your audience,
4:20
I'm sure, is pretty familiar with it.
4:23
I have tried for the last, say, seven
4:25
years to really wake up the remaining liberals
4:27
and go, you know, do the obvious stuff first.
4:29
The obvious stuff is okay. The left
4:32
is gone bananas, the woke stuff and two
4:34
plus two is five and boys or girls
4:36
and non racism is racism. All
4:38
the stuff that you've been talking about for you enough
4:41
of the liberals get that. But at some point,
4:43
the rubber meets the road. At some point, you have
4:45
to make a choice. You have to see that fork in the
4:47
road and say, okay, I'm gonna have
4:50
to separate from some of my old ideas,
4:52
some of the old political leaders and political
4:54
parties I've followed, and blaze a new
4:56
trail. I think that's what I've tried to do in my life.
4:58
And really, this book is saying, hey,
5:00
we're past the point of talking. We're past the
5:02
point of just explaining
5:05
that there is something wrong with the left. Now
5:07
we really have to build new things.
5:10
We have to separate in essence from these people,
5:12
build parallel economies, build new
5:14
educational institutions, build new
5:16
networks, I mean, every literally
5:19
everything. And I mean, literally, literally, literally,
5:21
everything that we have. We have
5:24
to either rebuild or separate from these
5:26
because they're not going to stop. For
5:28
all that we've warned, for all the
5:30
work that all of us have done, they're
5:32
still not stopping. Sure, we're waking up
5:34
people, but the march is on. So It's
5:36
time to it's time to blaze a
5:38
new trail.
5:39
Okay. So what does that mean exactly? Well,
5:42
it means a lot of things. I mean, first off, you
5:44
really have to think about your
5:46
life in different way. I tell a story
5:49
in the book about an intern
5:51
that I had about two years ago who is
5:54
a great kid. He was really crushing it.
5:56
And I said to him, he was going to school and then working
5:58
for us part time intern, and I pay all my interns,
6:00
by the way. And I said to
6:02
him, hey, listen, forget about
6:04
school. You're killing it here. Let
6:07
me hire you full time. We pay all your benefits.
6:09
Join us. And you've got bright future
6:11
ahead of you. We'll take good carry and I I know you'll
6:13
make the show better. I know it'll work for me too.
6:16
And he said, you know, Dave, I I think I want to stick
6:18
with college. I get it. I'm flattered. Flash
6:21
forward year later, where now I live in
6:23
Florida, as you know, I live in Cali at the time,
6:25
called me about three months ago, called me about
6:27
three months ago and said Dave, I've had enough.
6:30
I don't like the Zoom schools. Nobody's learning
6:32
anything here. We're being indoctrinated. My teachers
6:34
are all activists. Does that offer
6:36
still stand? And now he's got a full time
6:38
job. He just moves to Florida, and
6:41
and he's flourishing. And I use that as an
6:43
example, meaning you don't have to go
6:45
a hundred fifty thousand dollars into
6:47
debt.
6:47
You don't when you are twenty one years old
6:49
to get a marginal job that that most
6:51
likely you didn't learn anything that got you the job
6:54
in the first
6:54
place. That's one example. I think we have to figure out
6:56
ways to get off the big tech rails.
6:59
It's why the blaze is thriving because you
7:01
years
7:01
ago saw the path of, oh, I
7:03
can't be so reliant on the
7:05
big boys. I have to build my own thing. It's why
7:07
I started locals. I think
7:09
there's all sorts of things. You know, you need to know
7:11
how to do a few things. One of
7:13
the real crises we're having,
7:16
think right now is that the millennials don't know
7:18
how to do anything. They don't know how to change a tire.
7:21
They don't know how to, you know, raise
7:23
some chickens or or start a garden.
7:25
I mean, basic things this stuff
7:27
sort of sounds simple, but we've become so
7:29
reliant on these big systems
7:32
and that everything will always be delivered
7:34
to you. And if you just don't ask any
7:36
questions, and if you're nice to the machine,
7:38
it'll be nice back to you. But two
7:40
years after fifteen days to
7:42
slow the spread, I think we realized they're
7:45
never gonna stop. They're coming. And
7:47
and until you realize that it's your
7:49
life, that you better grab what you can, while
7:51
you can, they will just keep moving on
7:53
everything. Yeah. You you talk about
7:55
the difference between self care and and
7:58
and being self reliant. And it I I
8:01
can't tell you how important that
8:03
is right now. All of us need
8:05
to learn certain things. If our kids don't
8:07
know how to read a map, you better
8:10
teach them how to read a map and have
8:12
maps that they can read.
8:15
Also in the book, you you
8:17
you write how to spot fake
8:19
news. Can you take us through that? Yeah.
8:22
So, you know, there's there's many types
8:24
of fake news. You know, we think of fake
8:26
news traditionally as just sort of the made
8:28
up story. And believe me, there are plenty
8:30
of those. And then I think another type of fake news
8:32
that we think about is when the headline has
8:35
almost nothing to do with the story.
8:37
Those are sort of the two big ones that are that
8:39
are somewhat obvious. But there's a couple
8:41
other versions of fake news that I actually think are far
8:43
more nefarious and more dangerous. I mean, one of
8:45
them the best example because it's
8:47
relative to what's going on right now. I mean,
8:49
this Hunter Biden laptop story,
8:51
which, you know, right before the election,
8:54
was not allowed to be on Twitter even though the
8:56
New York Post is a totally reputable place
8:58
of journalism that has existed as a newspaper
9:00
for over two hundred years but
9:02
you could not tweet about it, not only could
9:04
you not tweet about it, but as you
9:06
know, you could not send the
9:08
link to the story in your private
9:11
messages on Twitter. That means
9:13
they were monitoring people's private messages.
9:15
private messages of even journalists you
9:17
know, quote unquote, journalist that we're sending stories
9:20
to each other. So a
9:22
type of fake news is things that they
9:24
won't let you see. And I'm far more
9:27
interested and worried about that
9:29
than the fake stuff. We've all done
9:32
pretty good work and your audience is well
9:34
aware of all the fake you know, very fine
9:36
people on both sides, the Russia collusion hoax,
9:38
Brett Kavanaugh, the serial rate that's the company
9:40
against the races. And so everyone gets
9:42
that okay, the Internet has allowed
9:44
us to some degree to expose
9:47
that. The bigger issue is the
9:49
stuff that we can't quite see.
9:51
We can't quite make sense of, you
9:53
know, fifty one former intelligence
9:55
officials tell us that the Hunter Biden
9:58
laptop story is
9:58
fake. And now the New York Times is
10:00
even saying it's real, except that's a year and
10:02
a half later. And not only that, but
10:04
the the the fake news continues.
10:07
They say that it was real
10:09
However, the president's not
10:12
implicated in this at all. So
10:14
they've just moved the bar and
10:17
they're still saying kind of the same
10:18
thing. Well, that's the extraordinary
10:21
part. And that's one way that the machine, and
10:23
this is what I mean by these big systems. They
10:26
always are a little bit in front us. And we're
10:28
always playing a little bit of catch up because you're totally
10:30
right. So at first, it was the story's completely
10:32
a hoax. Then it sort of was like, okay.
10:34
Maybe it's true, but it doesn't really input
10:37
can't implicate Hunter in any way. Now
10:39
it's sort of okay Hunter could be in some trouble,
10:41
but it has nothing to do with Biden. And
10:43
I suspect to Glen that adds more and more
10:45
info leaks from this thing and we figure out
10:48
how Hunter got these jobs that he was completely
10:50
unqualified for. Do you think
10:52
do you think that may I'm not a rocket scientist
10:55
or a biologist, but do you think that maybe
10:57
it had something to do with the fact that his dad
10:59
was vice president of the United States and
11:01
maybe could influence
11:02
policy? I mean, is that am I a crazy
11:05
conspiracy here? Oh, yeah. Of course you are.
11:07
Of course you are. Let
11:09
me just quote the book and you expand. The
11:11
collectivist left wants to strip
11:14
you of the intrinsic and personal
11:16
choices. You should want to stay
11:18
at home. In fact, you'll get paid for it.
11:20
You can watch porn and play video games
11:22
all
11:23
day, and when doing so, you're
11:25
actually helping people. Yes.
11:28
I mean, what a twisted thing they
11:30
put on all of us over the last couple of years
11:33
that they got good people who
11:35
work really hard to build great businesses
11:38
and restaurants. We all know someone in our own
11:40
lives whether it was us personally
11:42
or a neighbor or a friend or a cousin. Who
11:44
had a business closed, someone who lost their
11:46
job, the mom and pop stores, I think, in California,
11:49
it was something like seventy
11:51
percent of mom and pop stores closed during
11:53
COVID, but for some reason, the Target,
11:56
the big box stores, they were allowed to stay open.
11:58
Well, if you had a mom and pop shop that was selling
12:00
virtually the same stuff, they had to close
12:02
these ridiculous arbitrary rules
12:04
and then of course the way I relate
12:06
it to collectivism is that at
12:08
the same time they're telling
12:11
us, we must stay home and you're gonna kill
12:13
grandma and just order in food. Well,
12:15
first off, you're creating a class war because
12:17
only people that can afford to stay
12:19
home. We'll stay home. And then you've got these other
12:21
people that have to wear masks to deliver
12:23
your food. So we have a huge class
12:25
war problem there. But
12:27
also then the the
12:29
utter hypocrisy that they threw in our face
12:31
when it was black lives matter rallies.
12:34
SUDDENLY Erika Garcia said he, THE MAYOR OF LOS
12:36
ANGELES, COULD GO OUT WITHOUT A MASK AND HE COULD
12:38
BOW THOSE PEOPLE OR LORY Lightfoot
12:40
IN CHICAGO. SHE HAD HER, YOU KNOW, KIDS
12:42
AND MASKS they still may have some
12:45
degree of kids in the masks in Chicago. But
12:47
for Black Lives Matter, she could be out there without
12:49
a mask. And even -- granted, even in
12:51
the last couple days. sure you guys covered it the
12:53
ridiculous press conference. But
12:55
that chronic liar, Jen Saki,
12:58
gave the other day where she think she was asked
13:00
about Kamala Harris wearing masks
13:02
indoors. And she says, well, she took it
13:04
off for this because this was very important related
13:06
to Khataji Brown Jackson. This was a historical
13:08
moment. They lie about
13:11
everything while they they take your rights
13:13
and dignity away, and then they
13:15
throw it in your face. And we just
13:18
have to say enough is enough.
13:20
You'll move to California, which is
13:22
interesting to me because you talk about inclusiveness,
13:24
you you talk about the importance
13:27
of being a good
13:28
neighbor. Can you be
13:30
a good neighbor in the wrong place? It
13:34
was tough. It was really tough you know,
13:36
I moved to Cali in two thousand thirteen
13:38
and I had a a really nice run
13:40
there. I I became professionally successful.
13:42
My life was enriched in in many, many
13:44
ways But these last
13:46
couple years, and it started -- it really
13:48
did start before COVID, but then COVID
13:50
put it on steroids. You know, the
13:53
the societal breakdown because
13:55
the the individual is not separated
13:58
from your politics and and vice versa,
14:00
meaning that if you really
14:02
if you're watching the news all day and you're
14:04
completely fearful of everything and you're
14:06
wearing masks outdoors and all of those things,
14:09
you will start separating from your neighbors.
14:11
So I would quite literally, you know, LA,
14:13
beautiful eighty degrees every single
14:15
day. Not a cloud in the sky. I'd be
14:17
walking my dog with no mask
14:19
on outdoors, fresh
14:21
air, and neighbors would be,
14:23
I kid you're not running the other
14:25
way. You know, the degree
14:27
that everyone would go into the supermarkets
14:30
and nobody would look at each other. You know, you wouldn't
14:32
even you'd have a mask on, so that's already weird.
14:34
You can't read facial keys. What do
14:36
we think this is going to do to generation
14:38
of people? So I have to tell you, going
14:40
from California to Florida
14:42
where I am now, and I've been here for about three months,
14:45
I feel like I'm in a completely different country
14:47
and I I don't mean that I don't mean that
14:49
to be I'm not exaggerating when I say that.
14:51
I genuinely feel like I
14:53
am living in a place with a completely different
14:57
outlook on life. I go to the store, people are
14:59
smiling, they say hi, that you can
15:01
feel energy here, and
15:03
and excitement businesses are thriving.
15:06
And that, as I said, it's not disconnected from
15:08
politics. We have a governor here who
15:10
said, hey, I don't know everything that's going on
15:12
with COVID, but we're going to let people make decisions
15:14
for themselves. And by the way, occasionally, you
15:17
see some people in masks here and that's their choice,
15:19
that's fine. But the government is
15:21
in dictating that everyone lives under
15:23
the
15:23
boot. And it's a much more
15:25
refreshing way to live. Glenn, I think, you know, I can't
15:28
it's like
15:28
a way off
15:29
my chest. From here, I can breathe deeper.
15:31
I know. We're talking to Dave Rubin, the
15:34
Blaze TV host, the the Rubin Report,
15:36
which you can find online, or at Blaze TV.
15:38
He's got a new book out today called don't burn
15:40
this country, surviving and
15:43
thriving in our woke dystopia. In
15:45
the book, you you have a great thought
15:47
experiment on Plato's
15:50
cave. And I want you to -- Mhmm. -- take us
15:52
through that in in sixty
15:55
seconds. Can yang? Let me
15:57
tell you about Kim. She wrote in. She said I've
15:59
been having relief Artur I've been
16:01
taking it now for about a month. It's hard
16:03
to believe, but my back pain is
16:05
gone. When I first heard about it,
16:07
I thought, who who could ever
16:09
believe that? I I am
16:11
now a full fledged believer.
16:14
This product really was a miracle
16:16
for me. Thank you so much for relief factor.
16:18
Kim, I know exactly how
16:20
you feel. People all
16:23
the time, say this, and this is the way
16:25
I felt there's no way this stuff's gonna work for
16:27
me. It's all natural. It's,
16:30
you know, there's no Dow Chemical in
16:32
it. None. I mean, how is that
16:34
healthy for you? It's
16:36
not a drug developed by doctors and
16:38
it has four different ingredients that
16:40
work with your body to fight inflammation. Ibuprofen
16:44
is only one way
16:46
to attack inflammation. This has four
16:48
different ways. Alright. Three
16:51
week quick This is where the rubber meets
16:53
the road. Try it. If it's not
16:55
working for you, that's fine
16:57
to stop taking it. It's nineteen
16:59
ninety five to try it. Take it three times
17:01
a day as I do for
17:04
three weeks. Be faithful on it.
17:06
See if it changes anything. If
17:08
you see a difference in three weeks,
17:11
keep taking it because you'll start
17:13
to really see it'll compound. If
17:16
you don't see any difference in three weeks, stop
17:18
taking it. Seventy percent of the people
17:20
who try it go on to order more month after month.
17:22
It's relief factor dot com. Relief
17:24
factor dot com eight hundred. The number
17:27
four. Relief. Eight hundred.
17:29
The number four. Relief. Relief
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factor dot com. Ten seconds
17:33
station ID. Dave
17:47
Rubin's new book, I love this. In
17:50
a time of madness, don't burn
17:52
this country. Will give
17:54
you the tools you need to think for yourself.
17:56
I want you to walk into the bar and order
17:58
a full bodied opinion. I want
18:00
you to get absolutely wasted on
18:02
facts until three AM. And then
18:05
when you're just about ready to pass
18:07
out, I want you to get another glass of
18:09
lady and chug it. I love that,
18:11
Dave. Glenn,
18:13
I I know you don't drink anymore,
18:15
but Oh, I can relate.
18:17
There's something there. Yeah. There
18:19
is. Alright. So take us to Plato's
18:21
cave twenty twenty two. First, explain
18:23
for people who don't know what Plato's cave
18:25
is. Yes. The basic idea of
18:27
Plato's cave and why I use it as an
18:29
example in this book is that in
18:32
the cave, if you live in this cave as Plato
18:34
scribe did in his conversation that he was having when
18:36
he originally wrote it. If you live in a cave,
18:38
your perception, and if you only live in
18:40
a cave, then it encapsulates everything that you know
18:43
what you can see around you in the immediate
18:45
vicinity of you. Your perception of
18:47
reality will be extremely different
18:50
than what actual reality is.
18:52
And somehow through
18:54
social media, through lockdowns, through
18:57
closing businesses, social distancing,
18:59
eliminating the ways that humans have always
19:01
communicated. In some
19:03
ways, we're all sort of caught in our own
19:05
cave right now. And
19:07
those of us that are trying to have difficult conversations
19:09
that are trying to build some bridges instead of burning
19:12
everything down. I think the challenge for us
19:14
is to get out of our cave. We can
19:17
you've got it because we can analyze the news and
19:19
we can try to translate it in sensible
19:21
way to our audiences and hopefully they can incorporate
19:23
some of that in their lives and figure out what's real.
19:25
But it's on everyone to do that to
19:27
whatever degree you can because, you
19:30
know, especially when you add in the big
19:32
tech element of this and algorithmically charge
19:34
stuff where we do not know how
19:36
news is being catered to us and what they're
19:38
sending us, the feeds, what they're doing
19:41
to our dopamine related to
19:43
likes and clicks and retweets and all these
19:45
things. In essence, we're all being pushed
19:47
back into the cave where only our sort
19:49
of preconceived notion are the things that
19:51
are gonna matter. And we really all have to step
19:53
out of that. And by the way, when I wrote this, it was I'm
19:55
talking to myself as well. None of us are perfect.
19:59
And you say, imagine
20:02
a civil war breaks out,
20:04
two groups. One who wants to
20:06
conserve, one who wants to destroy.
20:11
Look, this is this was not AAA
20:14
line that I wanted to write thought a lot
20:16
about this and there is a little bit
20:18
of a -- you can feel a grumbling right now
20:20
of a movement of a sort of separation movement
20:22
between the red and blue states.
20:24
And the problem is that,
20:26
look, we are called the United States of
20:28
America. We are supposed to be individual states.
20:31
This is what federal system of is about, of
20:33
course. And then we are supposed to be united in
20:36
some form of commonality. Unfortunately, because
20:39
the the Democrat Party has done so
20:41
far off the deep end and taken the blue states
20:43
with it. As I said before, if you live in
20:45
Florida or California, in effect, you live in different
20:48
countries. We have to figure out
20:50
how to arbitrage this situation. My
20:52
suspicion is that the red states are going continue
20:55
to flourish and the blue states are going to continue
20:57
to crumble Now the problem with that
20:59
inherently is that the red states
21:01
kind of are going to say, okay, hey,
21:03
we're doing it right. We're out of here. But
21:05
the blue states are going say no, we still want
21:07
more. We want more of your tax money. We want
21:09
more of your production whatever value
21:12
you guys bring. I think the red states generally
21:14
speaking. I'm not talking about a, like,
21:16
a true succession movement or something like that,
21:18
but I think sort of an ideological, hey,
21:20
this is where I live, and these are the things I care
21:22
about. The blue states won't let that alone.
21:24
So I think this is going to be something that comes
21:26
up more and more. But the irony
21:29
of course is that in many ways, this is the way
21:31
the country was set up be. The federal government
21:33
is not supposed to have nearly as much
21:35
power as it does. Dave,
21:37
I'm so glad you're on our side. Expensive.
21:41
I'm I'm glad to be on the same side with
21:43
you. And let me tell you something, my because I know you're
21:46
not gonna sue your own horn. We're we're burning up the charts
21:48
with this book right now, but can't get ahead of
21:50
the great reset on any task for you.
21:52
Could you're still killing it,
21:53
man? You're you're crushing it all the
21:55
way to put it out for two months. Thank you very
21:58
much, Dave. I appreciate it. The name
22:00
of the book is don't burn this
22:02
country. Make sure you grab it now
22:04
wherever books are sold. Dave
22:07
is a remarkable guy Artur,
22:09
well, seven years ago questioning
22:13
his own beliefs and He
22:15
is I think next year, he he might
22:17
get to point where it's like, Angus gone
22:19
didn't go far enough. I mean, he is
22:21
really becoming a conservative
22:24
warrior, Dave Rubin, you
22:26
can find his show at Blaze
22:28
TV. The
22:30
Glenback program. When
22:32
it comes time to sell your home
22:35
or are you ready? I mean, it's a three
22:37
ring ring circus most of the time,
22:39
hard to know really even where
22:41
to begin unless, of course, you have
22:43
the right real estate agent talking about
22:45
somebody who can navigate the whole process
22:47
from beginning to end, making sure that you're
22:50
on track to sell at the highest level,
22:52
get the most amount of money that you can get for
22:54
your home. And then somebody
22:56
on the other side that is really
22:59
ready to help you get the
23:01
best price in the right neighborhood
23:03
in the house that you really want. Somebody
23:05
you can honestly talk to
23:07
and somebody who listens to you.
23:10
Real estate agents I trust dot
23:12
com. The name says it all. Real estate
23:14
agents I trust dot com. If
23:17
you're looking to buy or sell a house,
23:20
you need to help your family, your
23:22
mom, or dad sell their house even
23:24
across the country. If you're
23:26
moving across the street or across
23:28
the nation, we have the right real
23:30
estate agents for you and it's a free service
23:33
to you. Real estate agents
23:35
I trust dot com. Do your own homework
23:37
interview these people? I think you're
23:39
gonna I think you're gonna see why
23:41
we think they're the best in your area. Real
23:43
estate agents I trust dot com. Don't
23:46
burn this country by Dave Rubin and the great
23:48
reset by Quebec available now. Buy
23:51
them both together. There's
24:02
breaking news. Multiple
24:04
people have been shot at a Brooklyn
24:06
subway station. Down in
24:08
the subway, they found multiple unexploded
24:12
devices. We don't have a lot of information
24:15
at this point. But say a prayer for
24:17
those who have been shot and
24:19
also that the police are protected
24:22
and can catch this terrorist
24:26
I want to remind you coming
24:28
up at the top of next hour, so at about thirty
24:31
five minutes, I'm starting
24:33
a series, a four
24:35
part series that will end on Friday that
24:38
is on America's
24:41
God. Who is it that we
24:43
worship? And are
24:45
we doing this with our
24:47
eyes wide open America's
24:50
God coming up in just about
24:52
a half hour Wanna GO TO CANADA TO
24:55
TALK TO THE CANADIAN PASSOR THAT HAS BEEN
24:57
ARRESTED OVER THE COVID-nineteen RULES.
25:00
HE'S BEEN ARRESTED, I THINK, fifteen
25:02
times now. He has just
25:04
been jailed for speaking to Canadian
25:06
trucker, the trucker convoy, And
25:11
what he says happened
25:13
in jail up in Canada
25:16
is third world country stuff. Artur
25:19
Pawlowski
25:20
is with us now. Welcome,
25:23
pastor. How are you?
25:25
Good. Good. Thank you so much for having me
25:27
in. Sure. Now we had you on before.
25:32
You were The guy that was
25:34
supposed to recite
25:36
a government approved COVID warning
25:38
before you talk to anybody.
25:41
Yes. That's correct. That's correct. CommPelt
25:44
speech. It seems like the good
25:46
old days compared to what's happening now.
25:49
I know. Tell me
25:52
tell me the latest on because
25:54
you've just been released from prison, but
25:56
you're on house
25:57
arrest. Facing a
25:59
dozen criminal charges. Tell
26:01
me what happened. Where
26:06
to start. As you can tell, I grew up
26:08
behind the Iron Curtain in Poland
26:10
under the boots of the Soviet So
26:13
my parents decided enough is
26:15
enough. They wanted to give us a better
26:17
life for me and my younger brother David,
26:19
and we emigrated through Turkey
26:22
two Greece, we spent a few years there.
26:24
And then when Canada opened its borders
26:26
and they said come to Canada to the freest
26:28
country on Earth, where no one will
26:30
persecute you for your faith. And while
26:32
we took that offer and we
26:35
sold everything we had and we had some businesses
26:37
in Greece, and then we immigrated to
26:39
Canada and behold,
26:42
what a surprise right now?
26:45
I have been facing over hundred
26:47
court cases, three forty
26:49
citations, and this was my sixteenth
26:52
arrest. Why? Well,
26:55
during the COVID era, I think they have
26:57
found a new way to deprive us
26:59
from our rights to steal what's rightly
27:02
belongs to us from God and from the
27:04
state, the constitution, the charter rights
27:06
and freedoms, the criminal code of Canada.
27:09
Clearly, it's telling a dam that
27:11
they cannot do what they do to us.
27:13
However, we have entered an
27:15
era of dictatorship. Canada
27:17
is no longer a democracy I
27:20
call it China. I'm truly
27:22
living again behind the iron
27:24
curtain. I dare to speak at the
27:26
rallies. I dare to tell
27:28
that people remember their names,
27:31
the COVID didn't do this to us.
27:33
It's people, remember the
27:35
premiers, remember the police
27:37
officers that are arresting people for no
27:39
reason just for peaceful assembly.
27:42
So I was invited to goods is
27:45
a port of entry between
27:48
Alberta and Montana. And
27:50
over there, there were trackers and the ice
27:52
of the world were fixed on Coods
27:54
and Milk River fourteen kilometers from
27:57
Coods when the people assembled and
27:59
they said listen We are
28:01
freaking Indians and we wanna remain
28:04
freaking Indians. Who do you think Trudeau you
28:06
are? Who do you think you throw the code
28:08
Jason Kenny the Premier of Alberta.
28:10
Who do you think are you supposed to represent
28:13
as the people, but you have
28:15
waged a war against us.
28:17
So they decided to bring
28:19
the attention of the world what's happening
28:22
in China, to the whole
28:24
world. And then they assembled
28:26
recruits. There was a few hundred people
28:29
over there. And then when people
28:31
learned that there is this
28:33
Alamo, if you will, this
28:35
stand by the Free People, they
28:38
assembled at Milk River. As
28:40
you know, during the time over a million
28:43
people took part in the
28:45
truck
28:45
convoy, including me and
28:47
our church, we were feeding the truckers I
28:50
was giving speeches to the truckers and
28:52
you were you were advising
28:55
them to hold the line against the government,
28:57
but you also were advising BE
28:59
VERY CAREFUL DON'T RESARD TO VIOLENCE
29:02
JUST TO HOLD THE LINE AND SPEAK
29:04
THE TRUTH. SO YOU WEN'T DOING you
29:06
weren't doing anything that was inciting
29:09
anyone, but then they arrested you
29:11
and put you in jail. And I
29:13
saw a recent interview where you
29:15
say you were kept in a small cage
29:18
for a while. Yes. That's
29:21
right. Jason Kenny, everything comes from
29:23
the premier's office. The so called minister
29:25
of justice that it
29:28
used to be the minister of health, Taylor
29:30
Chandra, And both of
29:32
those gentlemen were caught breaking the
29:34
same mandates and the same restrictions in
29:37
the Sky Palace, hypocrisy
29:39
where they were Artur while
29:42
we -- my brother David and me, we were
29:44
arrested by SWAT team in the middle
29:46
of the road for inciting people to come
29:48
to church participating in a church service
29:51
and are appreciating
29:53
an illegal gathering shared service. So
29:56
we spent three days and tonight at that
29:58
time and then they arrested
30:00
me after the good speech. And you're right,
30:03
I said clearly no violence,
30:05
no guns, no source. This is peaceful
30:07
resistant solidarity style
30:10
movement, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther
30:12
King, junior civil rights movement, No
30:14
violence. And our CMP was
30:16
there and no one stopped me. No one said
30:18
the word. No one said you're illegally
30:20
here. It is this illegal of protest.
30:23
I know nothing like that. They actually let
30:25
me in and let
30:27
me out of the barricade, the police themselves.
30:30
Few days later, it was a stink
30:32
operation like I felt like
30:34
Escobar, El Chapo, Al
30:37
Capone, that was Cruisers on
30:39
the cover police Artur
30:42
CMP officers, detectives. I mean, it
30:44
was absolutely crazy. I was interrogated
30:47
four hours and then taken to
30:49
prison hours place in
30:51
solitary confinement twenty two
30:53
to twenty five hours straight
30:55
I was placed in metal box,
30:58
bigger one than a smaller one. I was
31:00
strip naked multiple times.
31:02
They were -- they said they're looking for contraband
31:04
They would not give me Bible. When finally,
31:07
I complained over and over, they gave me
31:09
a Bible, but they did not give me my glasses.
31:11
I could not read. Hours taken
31:14
in and out of my cell into
31:17
another cell on concrete for
31:19
hours. And then after our
31:21
shift to Edmonton for no reason
31:25
forty four days that they spent
31:27
in Calgary remain center
31:29
where Guards were inciting
31:32
inmates to beat me up. They said,
31:34
we're going to open Pawlowski's door
31:37
by accident, go and do him,
31:39
beat him up. We are sick
31:42
of this guy. He embarrassed us.
31:44
And the inmate, I was such a hero
31:47
in prison that the inmate said to them,
31:49
first, we would beat you up before
31:51
we would touch this man. He's an innocent man.
31:53
He's a good man. Is a clergyman. We
31:55
will not beat him up.
31:57
And when I was taken to my
32:01
cell in concrete every day,
32:03
when I was coming back, they
32:05
would be yelling free pass through art, free
32:07
pass through art, free pass through art. So
32:09
it was incredible solidarity from
32:12
coming from the image. Then
32:14
I was taken to Edmonton and
32:16
I was placed believe it or not after
32:19
spending forty four days without incidents,
32:21
without any problems whatsoever, they
32:24
placed me on administrative segregation
32:28
in MaxPod MacSpot
32:30
is a place where
32:33
you place the most dangerous, most
32:35
violent motors that
32:37
attack the guards or stop the
32:39
motor inmate, and
32:42
they check the box saying
32:44
that I am considered unsafe to
32:46
the center and to the stop. The
32:50
detailed description, the reason
32:52
given It says here I am looking
32:54
at the document right now placed on administrative
32:56
segregation as per senior
32:58
management. So the document
33:01
says I will spend fifteen to forty
33:03
five days or indefinitely in
33:05
this horrible, horrible place
33:08
Elon without being able to see
33:10
another human being. And it was extremely
33:13
cold to the point that I could not sleep
33:15
I was shivering all day, all night,
33:18
and then the next day was the bail hearing.
33:20
My lawyers said to the judge
33:22
what was happening to me And I think that
33:24
scared them because I don't know if you are aware,
33:27
a remote centers are privately
33:29
owned. So it scared them
33:31
and they moved me to a psych ward. Can
33:34
you believe it? I as a
33:36
pastor, I was moved to a mental
33:38
ward. And when I asked the judge,
33:40
why, where where am I? Like, what what
33:42
is going on? It looks like
33:44
they are no accountable. Those
33:47
people can do to you whatever they want,
33:49
and they were laughing. And they said, you
33:51
are in a wild wild west.
33:53
And I said, what that means? Well, you're in
33:56
a crazy war. Enjoy it.
33:58
So they had they thought it was hilarious.
34:00
They thought it was, you know, a great
34:02
fun doctor comes
34:04
at the next day. And he says, like,
34:06
why are you here? And I said, that's a good question.
34:09
I have no idea. He said, this
34:11
is outside of the protocol. You're not
34:13
allowed to be here. This is place for
34:16
people that we we decide
34:19
that they need this unit,
34:21
not people that are not mentally ill.
34:24
So even the doctor was puzzled,
34:27
what was going on? And then he said to me,
34:29
well, this decision came outside of
34:31
AHS, which is Alberta Health,
34:34
and it came straight from the director.
34:36
The document that was signed dated
34:39
March twenty four, twenty twenty
34:42
two was signed by the Deputy Director or
34:44
three month center in Edmonton. Then
34:46
four in the morning, a week later, I
34:48
was taken from myself as trip
34:51
naked in front of
34:52
women, men, those people
34:54
are dehumanizing anyone
34:57
that comes under their supervision,
35:03
five hours on concrete and then I was
35:05
shipped back to Calgary strip
35:07
naked again, the
35:09
whole unit actually was finalized because
35:12
when I came in, they hugged me,
35:14
they cheered for me and they yelled pre
35:16
pass the art, so they placed us on
35:18
the wall, searched us again, spread
35:20
your legs, arms, took us to
35:23
administer a unique strip
35:25
naked again, in time
35:27
for hours on concrete. And
35:29
that was my last day, the fifty
35:32
-- after fifty days on
35:34
the fifty one, they let me out.
35:36
There was hundreds of people that came to welcome
35:39
me and they were told if they will
35:41
stay there to welcome my release,
35:44
I will be immediately arrested. I
35:46
was told that if I say even a hi
35:48
to them, if I harm my children, if
35:50
I harm my father, the team to welcome
35:53
me, how do we arrest this again?
35:55
And I am not a free man. I am
35:57
on house arrest facing dozens.
35:59
Criminal charges for,
36:01
like, the premier Kenny light to the
36:03
public said, the Autopolowski incited
36:06
violence towards others.
36:08
So Is
36:10
this all worth it?
36:13
A hundred percent. I mean, history is teaching
36:15
us that it's it's worth it. I mean, if
36:17
we don't stand up, If we will not
36:19
push, if we will not fight, if
36:22
good people will not do what's right,
36:24
if the light will not shine, the darkness
36:26
will take over. So yes, I was sitting
36:28
in a solitary confinement and I'm telling
36:30
you, they were hard times and sometimes
36:32
I was crying out to God, God, take
36:34
me out of this place. Please, please take
36:36
me out of it. But to
36:39
fight for freedom, to fight for the children,
36:41
I got three children and you
36:43
know, when I look at their eyes, I can
36:45
say truly your father
36:47
did what your father could. I
36:50
am not ashamed of what I'm doing. I'm standing
36:52
for truth, others did it before me.
36:55
I am preaching the truth. I'm setting
36:57
the captives three. I'm giving people hope,
37:00
and I have to come back to me
37:02
to them and to you and
37:04
say, yes, to do the right thing
37:06
is always water. God
37:08
bless you, pastor pastor. God bless you.
37:10
Thank you so much. We will continue to
37:12
follow this, and please
37:15
let us know if there's anything that we can
37:17
we can do. You can find his
37:19
story at save arter, ARTUR
37:24
dot com. Save Artur
37:27
dot com. Go there now.
37:31
Keep him in your prayers. It's
37:34
hard to believe that's Canada. Home is where
37:36
you live, but it's a
37:38
lot more than that as well. It's an investment
37:40
tool, especially these days. Right
37:43
now, Your home value
37:45
could be up as much as twenty percent, and
37:47
that's a big deal because it means you have
37:49
access to equity as
37:51
cash. At an incredibly low
37:54
interest rate if, you know,
37:56
you're getting it now at a five percent interest
37:58
rate. But I'm looking at that and saying
38:00
if I haven't paid off credit cards I
38:03
know those are adjustable and they're gonna
38:05
continue to go up. The average now
38:07
you're paying nineteen point nine
38:10
percent interest. That's
38:12
not good. That's not good. And
38:15
it's gonna go higher and higher. You gotta
38:17
pay those things off. If you
38:19
are a responsible person and you're not
38:21
gonna be selling your house for a while, please
38:24
use that equity right now
38:27
to pay off any kind of adjustable
38:29
loan. Call American Financing
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MLS182334WWW
38:45
dot n m ls consumer access dot
38:47
org. Stay
38:50
informed. Sign up for the free
38:52
newsletter today at glenbeck dot
38:55
com. Welcome
39:06
to the Glenbeck program. We
39:09
have we're
39:12
living in an incredible time, really
39:14
truly an incredible time where you're
39:18
gonna see giants rise up around
39:20
you. Hopefully, you'll be one of them.
39:23
Man, it doesn't take anything that
39:25
everybody's gonna see. It
39:29
just takes it just takes You're
39:33
just doing the next right thing. We
39:36
have a choice to make. Right
39:40
now and the hour is growing
39:43
late. Our society
39:46
is not doing well. I
39:48
don't know if you've noticed that. Thirteen
39:50
injured five shot in a New York
39:52
subway shooting. I
39:55
remember doing this job back in
39:57
the nineties and seeing the
39:59
first school shooting, thinking,
40:03
oh my gosh, what's happening to us? Now,
40:06
It's all too regular, and it's
40:08
not about the guns. It's about something
40:10
inside of us. And
40:13
we are headed down the path
40:16
of of
40:19
the French revolution and
40:22
we're headed towards the the
40:25
progressive revolution that
40:27
became Nazi Germany. And
40:31
we have certain patterns that
40:34
we can identify and
40:36
certain things that we can do. The choice
40:38
is, are we going to worship?
40:43
A god that is going to give us
40:45
nothing but destruction. Informed
40:47
consent has to be given. In
40:50
just a minute, when we come back, one
40:54
of a four part episode on
40:57
America's God. Who
40:59
do we serve?
41:01
This is the Glenback program.
41:04
Alright. Let's talk about what you're wearing
41:06
right now. What are you wearing
41:08
right now? You
41:09
mean, who
41:09
am I wearing? No.
41:10
I was gonna I was gonna was gonna go
41:12
in the more of the fashion direction.
41:13
Yeah. I mean, I'm wearing Grip six. Oh,
41:15
you're wearing Grip six. And that's all I'm
41:17
wearing.
41:19
No. just had the worst possible
41:21
visual. Would
41:22
it be nice to say something like that and not
41:24
have everybody in the room go,
41:25
oh my god. Feel like there are
41:27
a few people on the planet where that's
41:28
true. It is. Like, there are some
41:31
people would say that you'd be like, take socks off.
41:34
Grip six is a small company in Utah that
41:37
makes great stuff belts, wallets,
41:39
socks, great stuff that you use you use
41:41
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today. Come
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on, don't they capitalize. You
42:30
gotta stand together.
42:48
What you are about to hear is the fusion
42:50
of entertainment. And enlightenment.
42:53
This is the Glenbach program.
42:59
I feel it to
43:01
be incredibly important to
43:03
share with you an Easter and Passover
43:05
message beginning today. All
43:08
this week, I want to look at
43:11
a question, and that question's
43:13
answer will determine our future.
43:17
Here it is. Who or what?
43:20
Does America truly worship? Part
43:24
one of a four part series begins
43:27
right Now, who is
43:29
America's God in sixty
43:31
seconds? Donna
43:34
wrote in about her experience with relief factory,
43:37
I couldn't use my right hand because it was
43:39
so swollen with arthritis. I
43:41
used to wake up screaming in pain.
43:44
But this morning I woke up, and my
43:46
right hand is no Lars Wallen.
43:48
It it let alone painful
43:50
at all. This is
43:53
amazing I get
43:55
to do the things I want to do
43:57
today. It's worth
43:59
it. It's worth trying it just for
44:02
that possibility Donna, thank
44:04
you for writing in. I take relief
44:06
factor every day. I'm sure Donna does now as
44:08
well. It has made an enormous impact
44:10
on my life. Three week quick start
44:12
is all you need to try. Just try it for
44:14
three weeks. If it's not working within three weeks,
44:16
it's probably not gonna work on you. But
44:19
seventy percent of the people who try it for
44:21
three weeks go on to order more.
44:23
So try it now. Relief factor.
44:25
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factor dot com or eight hundred,
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the number four, relief.
44:40
All of history's strongest empires
44:43
are no more. Mongol
44:46
empire is gone. Roman
44:49
empire fell. The
44:51
Ottoman Empire, that's
44:54
finished. And the British
44:56
Empire from rising sun
44:58
to setting sun dissolved. America,
45:05
Well, she's not down yet.
45:08
Law technically were not an empire yet
45:11
up Karen. The
45:13
point is that every society
45:15
that has ever led the world has diminished
45:18
or collapsed And
45:21
in those times, it's a scary and
45:23
exciting time to be alive. As
45:26
Dickens wrote, It was the best
45:28
of times. It was the worst
45:30
of times. America
45:33
is not the unsinkable ship we thought
45:35
she was. And the iceberg
45:38
is not just close, we've already hit it.
45:41
If you think the currency is unstable,
45:45
Have you looked at our kids? Child
45:48
suicide doubled between two
45:50
thousand seven and twenty seventeen,
45:53
self harm among preteen girls
45:56
is up one hundred and eighty nine
45:58
percent. Americans
46:01
can't afford family vacations, but
46:04
it's kind of fine because the family
46:06
fell apart a long time ago. We
46:09
live in a time where every woman of the
46:11
year this year is a man, and
46:13
every man is told he's an oppressor.
46:16
Our Ivy League students want more
46:19
censorship and our government wants
46:21
more surveillance, all
46:23
while we grow more and more isolated depressed
46:26
and unstable. We've
46:29
lost our way America. We've lost
46:31
our uno. And
46:34
nobody really knows how to get it back.
46:37
While all of this is going on, the brave new
46:39
world is accelerating towards us at
46:42
an incredible speed. Futurist
46:44
dreamers and innovators foretell a
46:47
future where man and
46:49
machine become one. A
46:52
world more virtual than physical,
46:54
a world where technology extends life
46:56
beyond death and intelligence
46:59
beyond our universe. Some
47:02
say we'll colonize Mars between the
47:04
before two thousand and thirty. Others say
47:07
we have to do that because we gotta
47:10
Get off this planet before we link
47:12
to computers, but one thing is
47:15
certain. Life
47:17
as we know it. Is
47:19
changing forever. Are
47:22
we ready? If
47:25
we don't enter into this brave new technological
47:28
era with some collective moral
47:31
agreements, then our advancements will
47:33
overtake and doom us. If
47:36
we can't define the difference between a man
47:38
and a woman, can we know the difference
47:40
between man and machine? What
47:44
are the ethics of this new world? What
47:46
is life? How
47:48
do you live in a virtual world? What
47:52
gives us meaning? Are
47:55
we just giant pieces of meat being
47:57
driven around by machine brains? Are
48:00
we a dwelling place for god?
48:04
Are we just a sum of what
48:06
we've experienced or do we have a more
48:08
souls trapped in mortal bodies. If
48:13
all of the data of who I am can
48:15
be downloaded, does that mean I
48:17
live forever? Is that even
48:19
me? Or is there
48:21
something more to me? Something
48:24
that could never be downloaded, reproduced,
48:27
or preserved?
48:29
If a machine can deduce, communicate,
48:33
abstract, out ideas,
48:36
imitate infer
48:39
patterns. If they can write poetry and
48:41
art, tell us they
48:44
love us. Is that real?
48:47
Are they human? If
48:49
they respond to touch and seem to make
48:51
friends, if they
48:53
say I am lonely. Are
48:56
they any different than us? If
49:00
a car is driving itself and there's no
49:02
time for that car to stop, Elon
49:04
Musk is on the right, and the president
49:06
is on the left, and mother Teresa
49:09
is in front of us. Who should
49:11
the car hit? We
49:14
as humans won't be able to decide, but
49:16
MIT is already working on that.
49:20
Because the car will be fast enough to decide
49:22
who lives and who
49:23
eyes. My question
49:25
is what moral standard are they using?
49:28
Ours?
49:30
Because I don't know what our moral standard is
49:32
anymore. According
49:35
to the NIH, artificial intelligence
49:38
will be used more extensively in
49:40
health care in ten years, but don't
49:42
fear the machine. Fear the programmer.
49:45
Someone somewhere in the world of
49:48
big tech is developing the technology
49:50
that literally will be making life
49:52
and death decisions. Do
49:54
you trust that guy? Do
49:57
you know who that guy even is?
49:59
Because soon it just becomes an algorithm.
50:04
Where did that programmer get his values?
50:06
Are they the same as mine or yours?
50:09
Also in the NIH website, is
50:11
a report that scientists now are using
50:14
CRISPR technology for
50:16
human enhancement. They
50:18
are genetically modifying babies
50:21
in test tubes and they
50:23
say it's working. Genetically
50:27
tailored humans. What
50:29
could possibly go wrong? Oh,
50:31
and the Pentagon went ahead and admitted, we
50:34
have seen UFOs. Nobody really
50:36
paid any attention but come just asked the
50:38
question if aliens come down
50:40
with higher level of intelligence, are
50:43
they our masters? Are
50:46
we like animals to them? Or
50:49
are we all created equal? Who
50:54
decides? Well,
50:56
God does? But
50:59
do we believe in God anymore? And
51:01
And how could we even make this case to
51:03
aliens or a machine? If we're not
51:06
living it now? We
51:08
don't believe in God as much as we used
51:10
to. According to Pew Rees Search Center.
51:12
The secularization, the shift
51:15
is now evident in the American
51:17
society. So far in the twenty
51:19
first century, we show no signs
51:21
of slowing. Pew's religious
51:24
landscape study breaks the data down by age
51:26
group. They found that each new generation cares
51:28
about god less and less. The
51:30
generational declines, belief
51:32
in God, frequency of prayer,
51:35
importance of religion in one's life,
51:37
and even frequency of feeling
51:39
spiritual peace and well-being. Our
51:43
nation is abandoning the God of
51:45
our founding. So where do
51:47
we go to answer huge questions
51:50
about right and wrong, life and death, meaning,
51:52
and values. Without
51:55
a god to order our society, a god
51:57
that empowers you, not the
51:59
government, not special interest, but you,
52:02
who's gonna step in to fill that gap?
52:05
And will that person empower or
52:07
enslave. As
52:10
America shakes off our religious foundation
52:12
in the name of freedom, We
52:14
have not freed ourselves from dogma
52:17
or religious strictures. Far from it,
52:19
we've just introduced new dogmas, new
52:21
strictures. There is
52:23
a new religious cult in
52:25
America. It's wokism.
52:29
Is this our new god? It
52:33
is accepted wisdom that you cannot
52:35
serve two masters, but
52:37
it should be equally regarded that everyone
52:40
serves someone or something. So
52:44
one god must perish and in
52:46
its death, all of its traditions, histories,
52:49
and decency will be
52:51
buried along with it. Is
52:54
this what we want? Because
52:56
this is the choice in front of us now,
52:58
the elephant in the room, the root of our problems
53:01
and solutions, Not
53:04
to just question and
53:07
think, but
53:10
come up with an answer.
53:13
And if you think you don't have to answer
53:15
this question, no answer is
53:17
an answer. The
53:20
good news is this has all happened before and if
53:22
we know the results, perhaps
53:24
we can change our thinking to change our
53:26
course.
53:29
So today as we enter in this new era,
53:31
an era rife with ethical debates,
53:34
crisis of meaning, and the
53:36
last ditch efforts to remain functioning
53:41
in the world. We
53:43
have to ask the question, who is
53:46
America's God now?
53:50
More in sixty seconds, I wanna
53:52
tell you about the tuddle twins. If you
53:54
want your children to think, really
53:56
think and learn, you
53:59
need to teach them a solid
54:01
set of values and
54:04
doctrines, and the tussle twins
54:06
will help you do this. Now I ask the
54:08
tussle twins people make this
54:10
book available. The
54:12
creature from Jekyll Island. This
54:15
is if you if you know the the
54:17
very famous book, the creature from Jekyll
54:19
Island, You know that's about the
54:21
Fed. And the Fed is the one
54:23
causing the inflation. This book
54:25
will teach your kids and many
54:28
of us as well. Exactly
54:30
what the Fed is, how it works, how it was
54:32
developed, how it prints money, what
54:34
inflation is, and how to deal
54:37
with it. This is a critical
54:39
book and that's why I've asked them to make it for free.
54:41
All you pay for is the
54:43
price of the shipping. So do it
54:45
now. Go to tunnel twins back dot
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com while supplies last you get a free
54:50
copy of the tunnel twins and the
54:52
creature from Jackal Island. Tuttle
54:54
twins back dot com.
54:57
Ten seconds station ID. We
55:09
aren't the first country to attempt nationally
55:13
to rinse that God ride
55:15
out of our hair. There's
55:18
really nothing new under the sun.
55:20
And although we sometimes remember
55:22
the problems of the past, we then
55:25
go on to tell our SELVES, IT'S NOT GOING HAPPEN
55:27
HERE, OR THIS TIME IT'S
55:29
DIFFERENT. SO IN DOING
55:31
THAT WE RAARLY REMEMBER ANY OF
55:33
THE SALU and in that way,
55:35
we doom ourselves to repeat
55:37
our failures over and over throughout
55:40
history. This is our country,
55:42
our freedom, our children's future.
55:45
We should all have to give informed
55:48
consent. Do we want
55:50
this new world order, the great reset,
55:52
or any of its other names or prophets,
55:55
CRT, BLM, Inc.
55:57
Wokeism. If
55:59
not, we can stop the cycle, but
56:02
we have to recognize the pattern
56:04
first. So let me take you back to
56:06
the French revolution in the seventeen
56:08
nineties. The French revolution was
56:11
the result of many things, but religious unrest
56:13
was undeniably one of them.
56:16
When the cathedral of Notre Dame was
56:18
stormed by angry revolutionaries, they
56:20
decapitated twenty statues
56:23
because they thought they were beheading French
56:25
kings but they were actually
56:27
statues of kings of Judah.
56:30
It's kind of a clever irony. The
56:32
cathedral of Notre Dame represented
56:35
everything the revolutionaries hated.
56:38
Not only was it religiously significant,
56:41
but the cathedral was the symbol of
56:43
the our key Henry VI of England
56:45
was crowned king of France there. Religion
56:48
in politics had corrupted each other
56:51
in the pursuit of power and people
56:53
could hardly tell the two apart. In
56:55
the revolutionary's rage against the establishment,
56:58
they were eager to destroy all connect
57:00
not just to the church but to god himself. This
57:04
would prove to be a real challenge considering
57:06
most French citizens were Catholic,
57:09
Gatholicism was the state religion,
57:11
and the church owned a lot of property.
57:14
Yet, people had grown tired
57:16
of the church AND IT'S GUIDING
57:18
HAND IN THE NATION. THE
57:21
VISION OF A DECRYSTIONIZED FRANCE
57:23
CAPTURED THE MINDS OF THE REVOLUTIONARY. They
57:26
massacred and jailed priests,
57:29
made public worship illegal, and
57:32
rushed to destroy every symbol of religion
57:34
left standing. The
57:36
cathedral itself became the
57:38
the site of the anti religious festival, the
57:40
festival of reason, which
57:42
mocks catholicism and suggested
57:45
parisians worshiped the principles of
57:47
the enlightenment instead. This
57:50
festival was the opening ceremony for the first
57:52
state sponsored atheistic religion, the
57:55
cult of reason. The
57:58
new atheistic religion held their
58:01
launch party at the cathedral to send
58:03
a very clear message that reason
58:06
would replace traditional religion. By
58:08
any means necessary, the Bishop of
58:11
Paris and clergy were forced to attend the
58:13
festival and publicly renounce
58:15
their religion and promised to henceforth only
58:17
recognize the public worship
58:19
of liberty, equality, and fraternity.
58:23
What Constantine had done
58:25
in the name of Christianity? The
58:27
French did in the name of reason.
58:31
The great irony in the fallout of the French revolution
58:34
was that the revolutionaries thought
58:36
they were freeing themselves from religion.
58:39
But in reality, they just
58:41
swapped depressors. Absent
58:43
the Catholic church,
58:47
New and still quite demanding, secular
58:50
religions stepped in to fill the gaps.
58:53
It was maximilian row Oebes Pierre, a prominent
58:55
leader of the French revolution who was wholly
58:58
unimpressed with the cult of reason and
59:00
proposed instead the cult
59:02
of supreme being. Where
59:04
the cult of reason insisted on a world
59:06
without god, the cult of supreme being
59:09
accepted the existence of a supernatural
59:11
deity, but profess that this deity
59:14
didn't interfere with men's lives.
59:17
There was a God disturbed the people,
59:19
but only men could tell them what to
59:21
do, how convenient for Robespierre.
59:25
This new cult organized the ordinary
59:27
people and instilled them instilled in
59:30
them proper morals and
59:32
patriotism. It was
59:34
the transitory ideology between
59:36
the worship of a god and the worship of a country
59:39
or worse the worship of country's
59:41
leadership. Robosphere
59:43
doubted the cult of reason could actually
59:45
handle the work of organizing society
59:48
so he peppered this new
59:50
cult with recognizable religious
59:52
undertones in the hopes of inspiring the
59:54
masses. This new religion
59:56
came with rituals, virtues, commandments,
59:59
and holidays including the festival
1:00:01
of the supreme being, where Robes
1:00:04
Pierre Gallantly climbed up a paper
1:00:06
mache mountain and saying revolutionary
1:00:09
songs while the ordinary people
1:00:11
looked on from below. One
1:00:13
of Robespierre's critics actually said
1:00:15
it is not enough for him to be in charge he
1:00:17
now has to be god.
1:00:22
So why did the French leap from one religious
1:00:24
order to the next? Is
1:00:26
it possible that in their zeal to
1:00:29
get rid of anything resembling church,
1:00:31
they took for granted the role religion
1:00:33
plays in ordering society? They
1:00:39
removed the iron fist of the Catholic
1:00:41
church. But it
1:00:43
appears they had no plans
1:00:46
of what to replace it with. They
1:00:49
miss the do unto others.
1:00:52
Forgive others and serve
1:00:55
part of the faith. So
1:00:57
the opportunistic ideologies of
1:01:00
men stepped in as an alternative,
1:01:03
They replaced the idea of forgiveness with
1:01:06
the guillotine. Are
1:01:13
we not doing the same thing today?
1:01:21
Are we not experiencing a
1:01:24
digital beheading for those
1:01:26
who betray the gods
1:01:28
of our new society. It's
1:01:35
ironic that we
1:01:37
look now at what's happening in
1:01:40
Paris again. There
1:01:42
was a fire in the great cathedral
1:01:44
of Notre Dame. And
1:01:47
it destroyed everything that
1:01:49
had been rebuilt after
1:01:51
the temple of reason.
1:01:56
A fire destroyed it this time, and
1:01:59
it's being rebuilt. And
1:02:02
it once again has become a new
1:02:05
temple not to god. But
1:02:09
a temple to social justice. A
1:02:13
temple to equity, a
1:02:18
temple to earth.
1:02:24
Have we not just done
1:02:26
exactly the same thing that the revolutionaries
1:02:29
did? When they
1:02:32
killed god, wanted
1:02:34
to rid themselves for something that
1:02:36
would be better, a
1:02:39
utopia where everyone would
1:02:41
be free? When
1:02:50
churches become political, and
1:02:55
the government uses
1:02:57
that when
1:03:00
political Government
1:03:03
becomes the church and the church becomes
1:03:06
the government. We
1:03:11
make bad mistakes. And
1:03:15
sometimes, we throw the baby out with a
1:03:17
bathwater and we swing. As
1:03:19
they did in their fervor in France, too
1:03:22
far in the opposite direction. When
1:03:26
we come back, why nichey
1:03:28
was right, but not
1:03:31
for the reason everybody else
1:03:33
says he was right. The
1:03:38
Glenback program. Well,
1:03:43
he is Joe Biden, I suppose. We
1:03:45
elected him. And through his administration,
1:03:48
we're bleeding America dry over economic standing
1:03:51
both at home and abroad. Every day,
1:03:53
inflation seems to creep up a little
1:03:55
bit higher. Don't worry.
1:03:58
We were at seven point nine. Today, we
1:04:00
have the new numbers for inflation. They got
1:04:02
it on track. It is definitely
1:04:05
transitory. It's eight point
1:04:08
five. Listen.
1:04:12
We're in economic insanity right
1:04:14
now, and it can become an
1:04:16
absolute economic nightmare tomorrow.
1:04:19
Build up a hedge of protection
1:04:23
and spread your risk out,
1:04:25
take some of your money from your IRA
1:04:27
or whatever you have, and consider
1:04:29
precious metals, please. Goldline
1:04:32
is offering special on their historic five
1:04:34
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1:04:36
the new one out silver Ben Franklin
1:04:38
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1:04:43
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866 Goldline. Call them now 866
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Goldline. And ever of blaze TV
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dot com slash Glen. With the promo code
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Glen, you'll save ten bucks off your subscription
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to blaze TV. Today,
1:05:27
part one of a five
1:05:30
part series, where
1:05:33
we ask what God
1:05:35
is it that we are worshiping now, Because
1:05:39
as Michelle Michelle Obama said Barak
1:05:41
knows that we have
1:05:43
to change our
1:05:44
traditions, our language, We
1:05:47
have to change everything. And
1:05:51
we have. But
1:05:53
can we just stop and pause for a
1:05:55
minute? And ask, is
1:05:58
this dirt or the direction we want
1:06:00
to go? And
1:06:03
are we worshiping a new god? Absent
1:06:07
the discussion of whether or not
1:06:09
God is real is the discussion
1:06:12
of whether or not cultures need
1:06:15
some sort of faith to bind them
1:06:17
together morally. And
1:06:20
do the people find that themselves or
1:06:23
it inflicted upon them. Regardless
1:06:27
of a person's belief in god, if you
1:06:29
ask them if there are things that they could
1:06:31
do to make their life worse, Everybody
1:06:34
could rattle off a few things. I mean,
1:06:38
murdering someone would come to mind that
1:06:40
would make life much worse. So
1:06:42
would, you know, abandoning a child
1:06:44
or abusing an elderly person. These
1:06:47
are the kinds of actions we all most universally
1:06:50
agree would make life worse and
1:06:52
we shouldn't do them. But
1:06:54
on the reverse, there have to
1:06:56
be things that we can do to make life better.
1:07:00
And those things must be universal.
1:07:04
They must conform to, as our
1:07:06
founders put it, some sort
1:07:08
of natural law. We
1:07:12
already know these things because
1:07:14
those are the actions we point to when
1:07:17
we say and we all agree, that's
1:07:19
a good person.
1:07:22
But where do we derive good from?
1:07:25
Is it something that we're born
1:07:27
with? I used to think these rights
1:07:29
are self evident, but I'm not sure
1:07:31
anymore. I think
1:07:34
maybe we have to be taught what
1:07:36
is good. Why
1:07:38
is murder wrong? Why
1:07:42
isn't it murder when I put my dog
1:07:44
down? Why
1:07:46
is it everybody knows how hard that
1:07:48
is, but they don't question your right to
1:07:50
put your dog down, but now
1:07:54
putting your mom down would be different.
1:07:57
Why are humans more valuable than
1:07:59
a dog? I
1:08:03
think we still have some national
1:08:05
morals that bind us together that prioritize
1:08:08
human life, but Those are quickly
1:08:11
dwindling quickly. Last
1:08:14
month, we may have universally
1:08:16
agreed that teaching kindergarteners about
1:08:19
sex and trans
1:08:22
sexuals is wrong.
1:08:25
Shouldn't do that, not a good idea. But
1:08:27
this month, I don't know. We
1:08:30
used to agree that a man shouldn't be allowed
1:08:32
to bunk with a woman in a women's prison.
1:08:37
Because sex will happen. But
1:08:39
California, they
1:08:41
can't figure out why the
1:08:43
trans women The
1:08:46
people who were men, still are men,
1:08:49
somehow or another, they've been introduced
1:08:51
into the prison, but The women
1:08:53
suspiciously, strangely,
1:08:56
almost miraculously, are finding
1:08:58
themselves pregnant.
1:09:02
In an all women's prison.
1:09:06
Colorado just passed a law saying that unborn
1:09:09
babies have no rights and can
1:09:11
be aborted at any time without
1:09:13
restrictions. We
1:09:15
are so far away from safe,
1:09:17
legal, and rare. Which
1:09:20
should show us that the slippery slope
1:09:22
is real. But
1:09:24
my question is, have we hit bottom yet?
1:09:29
We have taken moral agreements for
1:09:31
granted. We have not paid
1:09:33
attention to our national values
1:09:35
or tended them. We
1:09:37
expected them just to naturally sustain
1:09:40
themselves. That
1:09:43
hasn't worked. Can
1:09:47
we count on knowing right and wrong
1:09:49
innately? Or do
1:09:51
we need something that guides us?
1:09:54
IS RIGHT AND WRONG DECIDED
1:09:56
INDIVIDUALLY OR DO WE HAVE TO
1:09:58
AGREE ON IT? FOR example, If
1:10:01
I only believe that murder is wrong,
1:10:03
but my neighbor who wants to kill me
1:10:05
does not, then I
1:10:07
think we're gonna struggle living in neighborhood
1:10:09
together. A
1:10:11
nation requires at least a minimum
1:10:14
level of moral order or
1:10:16
else the system collapses. Look what's
1:10:18
happening in our cities. The question
1:10:20
of our time is actually how
1:10:23
much order do we need.
1:10:26
Terrible things, yes, have been done in the name
1:10:28
of god in religion, but let's not forget.
1:10:32
The horrid things done under the umbrella
1:10:34
of a godless system like nazism
1:10:37
and communism. Communism alone
1:10:40
is estimated to kill up to
1:10:42
over one hundred million
1:10:44
people. Last century, the
1:10:46
only thing that beat communism and
1:10:49
death was disease. Yet
1:10:53
I argue that our
1:10:55
ideas of morality are not conceived
1:10:57
of independently. Morality is
1:10:59
received from the wisdom of others
1:11:01
throughout history. In America,
1:11:04
our morality has Judeo
1:11:06
Christian framework, a framework many of
1:11:08
us have just taken for granted. This
1:11:10
morality is baked into our
1:11:13
system of government through the protection
1:11:15
of natural rights, the freedom
1:11:17
of religion. The value placed
1:11:19
on human life, equal justice,
1:11:21
and so on. There's
1:11:30
a god shaped hole in
1:11:32
all of us. As
1:11:37
Aristotle said, nature abhors
1:11:39
a vacuum. He
1:11:42
meant this as a physical principle. But
1:11:45
it is aged into an idiom
1:11:48
that basically means if
1:11:50
there's a hole, it's gonna be filled.
1:11:54
We see this in
1:11:56
practice when somebody tries to quit smoking.
1:11:58
The smoker doesn't usually quit the habit without
1:12:00
forming a new habit. That's
1:12:03
because we humans are more motivated by
1:12:06
positive actions than negative
1:12:08
ones. When I want
1:12:10
to smoke, I'll shoot gum instead more
1:12:12
powerful than when I wanna smoke,
1:12:14
I just I'm not gonna do it. That's
1:12:16
how I work. In
1:12:19
religious circles, there's a concept that
1:12:22
inside every person there is a god
1:12:24
shaped hole. And
1:12:26
if god doesn't fill that hole, something
1:12:29
else will and
1:12:31
it's usually not something real good.
1:12:35
In Matthew, forty three Jesus warned
1:12:37
of this in a cautionary tale he told
1:12:39
his disciples he said, an unclean
1:12:42
spirit came out of a man and then traveled
1:12:44
around looking for somewhere else to live.
1:12:46
It didn't find anywhere. So
1:12:49
went back to the man and found that
1:12:51
the hole he was living in before
1:12:53
was still totally empty. So
1:12:56
he grabbed seven more unclean spirits,
1:12:58
and they all moved back in together.
1:13:01
And the man was worse off than he
1:13:03
was before. The
1:13:06
man in the parable neglected to fill
1:13:09
his hole, and his
1:13:11
life was much worse because of it. It's
1:13:14
kinda like what happened during the French revolution.
1:13:16
The French revolutionaries destroyed institutions
1:13:19
without understanding the role of
1:13:21
those institutions and the importance that
1:13:24
they played in holding their nation together.
1:13:27
And in the end, they weren't better
1:13:29
off. They were far worse off.
1:13:34
Friedrich Nicheck. Yeah.
1:13:37
The man who wrote the Antichrist, that's
1:13:39
a surprise on Easter week. The man
1:13:41
who railed against Christianity. He's
1:13:44
remembered for his work the madman in
1:13:47
which he wrote God is dead. God
1:13:49
remains dead. And we
1:13:51
have killed him. How can
1:13:53
we console ourselves? The
1:13:55
murderers of all murderers. Now
1:13:58
most of us know that line Time
1:14:00
magazine in the nineteen sixties came out
1:14:02
and they celebrated. They
1:14:04
made it just god is dead. But
1:14:07
the sentence that he followed the murderer
1:14:09
of all murderers with is important. Who
1:14:13
will wipe this blood off of
1:14:15
us? What water
1:14:17
is there for us to clean ourselves?
1:14:20
What festivals of atonement? What
1:14:22
sacred games shall we have to invent?
1:14:25
Is it is
1:14:27
not the greatness of this
1:14:30
deed. It
1:14:32
is greatness of this deed. That
1:14:34
is too great for us. Must
1:14:37
we not become gods simply
1:14:40
to appear worthy of this?
1:14:44
Neechie, in that sentence, asked the question
1:14:46
that we're we should be wrestling with
1:14:48
today. Absent God, How
1:14:52
do we atone for our sins? While
1:14:57
we have to become gods ourselves, in
1:14:59
our society, We're
1:15:03
already answering that question, but
1:15:06
too many people are are not realizing
1:15:08
it. There is a new god in town.
1:15:12
Who can take our guilt away? The
1:15:14
cult of wokism? We
1:15:17
now have people going
1:15:19
to the mob on Twitter to absolve their
1:15:22
guilt when they sin
1:15:25
against its religion. Worse
1:15:28
yet. Is there even
1:15:30
forgiveness in this new religion? The
1:15:34
high priests of Wokeism What's
1:15:37
his name ex Kandi? They
1:15:40
will they will tell you if
1:15:42
you are white, you will always be guilty.
1:15:45
Does this religion have forgiveness? And
1:15:49
who grants that forgiveness? If
1:15:54
you look at modern culture, you see we
1:15:56
are trying in every
1:15:58
way we can to absolve ourselves
1:16:01
of guilt. Do
1:16:08
we give acknowledgments to every Native
1:16:10
American tribe? Hoping
1:16:13
that we feel better about us existing.
1:16:18
We apologize for assuming that someone
1:16:21
who looks like a man is a
1:16:23
man. We started to say
1:16:25
things like as a cis white
1:16:28
male, I feel it's
1:16:30
best for me to keep my mouth shut to make
1:16:32
space for other more marginalized voices.
1:16:36
We try to atone for our skin color, but
1:16:38
you can't, are sex, but you can't,
1:16:41
our families, our friends, our ancestors,
1:16:43
even our old Facebook photos
1:16:45
or posts. We
1:16:49
will confirm even the most outrageous ideologies
1:16:53
if it means we can separate ourselves
1:16:55
from guilt. When
1:16:59
Neechie said, God is dead. Don't
1:17:03
interpret that as, God
1:17:05
is dead and all as well. No
1:17:07
need to give that anymore thought we're good.
1:17:11
What he meant was
1:17:13
that belief in god was
1:17:16
dead. And it was
1:17:18
our fault. And
1:17:20
that without god, everything about
1:17:22
humanity must change.
1:17:26
Barak nose. Throughout
1:17:30
our history, we have organized ourselves
1:17:33
around the belief in God.
1:17:36
Belief comfort us in death. It
1:17:39
gave us hope despite depression. It
1:17:42
inspired us in battle. Most
1:17:45
importantly, the battles that were
1:17:48
being fought with inside our own
1:17:50
self. God
1:17:52
gave us the ideal model
1:17:55
for our lives. The model
1:17:57
for the Judeo Christian world was
1:17:59
Moses and Jesus. But
1:18:03
most people, even people
1:18:06
that claim that that is their faith,
1:18:09
don't really even
1:18:11
understand who those people
1:18:13
really were. More
1:18:18
and more Americans don't know
1:18:20
anything about them. Who
1:18:23
is our role model?
1:18:27
As we've reason god out of our lives,
1:18:29
we
1:18:30
have incidentally diminished a crucial
1:18:32
part of what holds us together as human beings,
1:18:34
the part that looks upward to
1:18:37
align itself with something
1:18:39
better, with holiness.
1:18:43
I see what Nietzsche wrote as a warning to
1:18:45
us about the vacuum left when we were
1:18:48
we remove God from a God shaped
1:18:50
toll. Gang I have
1:18:52
news for you. We've already removed
1:18:55
him. What
1:18:58
are we replacing him with? Do
1:19:01
we still hold any truths
1:19:04
to be self evident? I'm
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a big fan I'm sure you are too of getting
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America was never special because
1:20:33
every single American believed in God.
1:20:35
Although many did, What
1:20:38
made it special was Americans agreed
1:20:40
to participate in a culture that
1:20:42
was formed by those who
1:20:44
did believe in God and expected
1:20:47
us to behave as if there was
1:20:49
a God. I
1:20:51
know many people who don't believe in God,
1:20:54
they're good people. Those
1:20:56
people hate it when the government encroaches on their
1:20:59
personal liver. The government doesn't have it right.
1:21:01
Says who? There
1:21:05
is no quality, justification
1:21:08
for individual liberty without god.
1:21:11
In America, atheists
1:21:13
are equally protected by it because
1:21:17
god, somebody bigger than the government,
1:21:20
provided those rights
1:21:23
equally to all of us. Before
1:21:27
we lose our freedom or worse, harsles.
1:21:30
America needs to consider again
1:21:32
the role of God and moral
1:21:35
order in our nation. This
1:21:38
week, Easter week, and
1:21:40
the week of Passover, we
1:21:43
look at our new
1:21:45
god and our old god
1:21:49
and ask which one of
1:21:51
these will empower us Tomorrow,
1:21:57
it's not about some mass conversion
1:21:59
to a single faith, faith, but
1:22:03
We have to look at our old system and
1:22:05
its hierarchies. And
1:22:08
America always had God at the top.
1:22:11
Tomorrow, we look
1:22:14
at science.
1:22:33
This is the Glenbach program.
1:22:35
Thank you very much, Hillary. Yeah. She brings this
1:22:37
has been kind of a big debate over the past
1:22:39
few weeks in conservative,
1:22:42
I guess, very online circles
1:22:44
of as to whether groomer
1:22:46
is the right term to use to describe
1:22:48
this. I thought James Lindsey really explained this well
1:22:50
when he was on,
1:22:52
I guess, it was last week. And
1:22:54
he talked about, look, you know, the idea that
1:22:56
grooming is something that
1:22:58
is only about -- Five seconds.
1:23:01
-- someone who is,
1:23:03
you know, someone who has attention on
1:23:06
sexual exploits with
1:23:08
your child is not the only use of the word.
1:23:10
The word means It's also very
1:23:12
well utilized in cults. And
1:23:15
grooming someone to a particular
1:23:18
world view and then locking
1:23:20
them in with punishments if
1:23:22
they vary from it. And
1:23:26
very legalistic ways of enforcing
1:23:28
it. I
1:23:28
mean, all of that is very much included
1:23:30
in this. Wait wait until you hear
1:23:32
Thursday's segment we just
1:23:35
did, you
1:23:35
know, America's
1:23:36
guide. Mhmm. We talk about the cults.
1:23:38
Mhmm. And you
1:23:40
won't not believe it's a fifty page
1:23:42
list of what a cult is.
1:24:28
What you are about to hear is the fusion
1:24:30
of entertainment and enlightenment.
1:24:33
This is the Glenback
1:24:35
program.
1:24:39
Hello, America. Welcome to the Glenback
1:24:41
program. There has been
1:24:43
a horrible shooting in a subway
1:24:45
in New York City, actually in Brooklyn.
1:24:48
Thirteen have heard at least five
1:24:51
were shot. There
1:24:53
were smoke bombs or something apparently.
1:24:55
The guy was dressed up as a transit cop.
1:24:58
We don't know that it tails, but
1:25:00
the president has been briefed on it. We
1:25:02
just got that flash. President has been
1:25:05
briefed on it. So, yet ready
1:25:07
because there's even more gun control that
1:25:09
will come. He he
1:25:11
is a well,
1:25:13
we'll get into it here this hour.
1:25:16
Standby. For
1:25:22
truth. Imagine
1:25:25
going to arrest when the waiter brings out your
1:25:27
food, it's just a bowl full
1:25:29
of burnt little chunks of
1:25:31
something. You're
1:25:32
like, that's not the steak I
1:25:34
ordered. No one is alone. But
1:25:37
it is. It has just been
1:25:39
sterilized the fresh way.
1:25:42
Hope you are not expecting nutrition, but
1:25:45
labor is great. Okay. That's
1:25:47
not that's not good. But that's what your dog
1:25:49
goes through. Hey, pray
1:25:51
for dinner. You don't even get it. He's like, oh, yeah.
1:25:53
It's gonna be so good because I have it smells the top of the
1:25:55
kitchen. And then they get this dried
1:25:58
food. They, at least my dog,
1:26:01
hates it. Until
1:26:03
I put on a little fresh secret,
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Gold Baraf brands. It is
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probiotics and the oxidants,
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vitamins, minerals, omega oils,
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everything that you just
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Folks at Rough Greens are so confident your dog is
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Just to make sure your dog loves it as much
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Azuno does. When your dog
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does like it, then keep putting the rough
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greens on the food. And over the next
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few months, you're gonna see massive changes. At
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least I did in my dog because
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of rough greens 833GLENN
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thirty three. That's 833 glen thirty
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three. It's rough greens dot com. Slash
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big. You
1:26:53
know, believe it or not, there was a day
1:26:56
when this show was rooted
1:26:58
in comedy. I
1:27:02
say this to people now they're like, what?
1:27:04
We used to go on the road. Twenty to
1:27:06
forty days a year -- Mhmm.
1:27:08
-- and we would do comedy shows.
1:27:11
And and mainly, I got into this
1:27:13
format and do. Correct me if I'm wrong. To
1:27:15
mock this
1:27:16
format. Mainly
1:27:17
that was It's painfully that was. Yeah. Yeah.
1:27:20
I mean, too too many of us take
1:27:22
ourselves way too seriously. And
1:27:25
I've strangely become one of those people
1:27:28
that are just like and and it's slowly
1:27:31
have it. It's like the frog being
1:27:33
boiled. Mhmm. You don't notice.
1:27:35
Nine eleven happened. And
1:27:37
we had to take our job more seriously, and
1:27:39
I realized, I'm a dope. I don't
1:27:42
know anything. So we
1:27:44
had to, you know, we're gonna just we're gonna just
1:27:46
figure this out, and then we're gonna go back to
1:27:48
normal. Well, an arrow went back to normal.
1:27:51
And then as as
1:27:53
the stakes kept getting higher and higher,
1:27:56
I mean, I became more serious on finding
1:27:58
answers. And then I
1:28:00
I was led to this new feeling, this
1:28:02
this calling, this responsibility to
1:28:05
warn you on what was
1:28:07
coming because nobody
1:28:09
else in the media. Most of them don't even
1:28:11
care. They don't I mean, it is
1:28:13
dark eyes. You start talking
1:28:15
to some of these people in the media about what's
1:28:17
really happening there like, I uh-huh.
1:28:21
I don't even They don't
1:28:23
care at all. So
1:28:26
nobody is really alerting you, which I
1:28:28
felt I had to do, but then Also,
1:28:30
the audience, as
1:28:33
a general audience, I mean, as
1:28:35
America, most people just
1:28:37
are looking for a normalcy. And they
1:28:39
really don't wanna know. You know?
1:28:42
I've asked myself and we've asked ourselves
1:28:44
among our group several
1:28:46
times. Because once you know
1:28:48
something, you can't unknow
1:28:51
it. Well, no, wait a minute.
1:28:53
Joe Biden is proof that's
1:28:55
not true because I think he knew a lot of things
1:28:57
and now he's like, Anyway,
1:29:01
Once you know something, you
1:29:04
can't unknow it. And
1:29:06
then what do you do with it? So we've asked each
1:29:08
other several times So would
1:29:10
it have been better if we just kept making
1:29:13
fun of stuff and we were living in a bubble
1:29:15
that we didn't really know
1:29:17
the stuff we knew? Would it be would we be
1:29:19
happier? No.
1:29:23
No. We'd find something to be miserable about.
1:29:25
Come on. We're on the radio. Talk radio. You
1:29:27
gotta be pissed about something. No
1:29:31
prophet ever, you know, ends his
1:29:33
days in a lazy chair because
1:29:36
most people don't want
1:29:38
to know. You know? And
1:29:40
they'll tune out because I think this is too
1:29:43
big of a problem for me. I
1:29:45
mean, what will be? Will be? God
1:29:47
will take care of it. You know, he's
1:29:49
really no. Uh-uh. He's
1:29:52
not your mom. He's
1:29:54
your dad. Dad's the one
1:29:56
that always came in and said, Your
1:29:58
mother has said clean this room
1:30:00
up. I want it clean. K.
1:30:03
He's your dad. He's not like
1:30:06
Clean please clean up your room. Please clean
1:30:08
up your room. Okay. Well, I'm
1:30:10
tired of asking him so I'll clean up the room.
1:30:16
We wash our hands and we wait for somebody
1:30:18
else to fix it. Then
1:30:21
worse yet, we get on Facebook and we apply
1:30:23
our filters and
1:30:25
pretend we have our crap together, look at me.
1:30:28
I'm actually thinking about doing something
1:30:31
on my Facebook and Instagram where
1:30:33
I just take a picture of me every morning
1:30:35
as I get out of bed. Because
1:30:37
it's a horror show. It's
1:30:40
a horror show. But
1:30:42
we look for the dopamine hit. You know,
1:30:44
we take selfies in places We're not
1:30:47
really even seeing. You know,
1:30:49
we're just like, oh, k. Guru. Let me
1:30:51
get a selfie. And we
1:30:53
move on with our lives. We're too busy looking
1:30:55
at our screen. Nothing
1:30:57
is real and nothing has meaning. And
1:31:01
I guess technically we're working with
1:31:03
our hands as we're typing and posting
1:31:06
but we're not creating anything. Really,
1:31:09
what are we creating online? Think how
1:31:11
much time you have
1:31:14
What are you creating with
1:31:17
your hands? Nothing
1:31:20
of value. I don't think
1:31:22
maybe in maybe in a thousand years, people
1:31:24
will go back and read some,
1:31:27
you know, some of our Facebook posts and go, oh,
1:31:29
my gosh, that was incredibly deep. But
1:31:31
I highly doubt it. So
1:31:35
we're living in a dream world. And
1:31:38
by doing that, we make ourselves slaves of
1:31:40
whatever is coming our way. Because how
1:31:42
many people do you know that you talk to and you're like,
1:31:45
hey, do you have, like, food
1:31:47
storage or something you see that, like,
1:31:50
for worlds on fire? No. I don't
1:31:52
pay attention to that. I'm just so sick
1:31:54
of watching the news. It just gets me
1:31:56
down. You're like, oh, okay.
1:31:58
Alright. Move away from this person.
1:32:05
They're gonna be a slave to whatever happens.
1:32:07
They're gonna need
1:32:09
somebody Oh,
1:32:12
and there will always be someone there
1:32:14
to help you. You
1:32:18
know, the problem is really because of the filters.
1:32:21
We we have this in the past. We remember
1:32:24
we remember our past in
1:32:26
technicolor or coat of coat of
1:32:28
chrome. Do you remember that? Where the
1:32:30
colors were very very vivid
1:32:34
Yeah. That's distortion. That that went
1:32:36
on. It didn't really look like that. No.
1:32:39
Grass was never that green.
1:32:44
So we look at the guys who
1:32:46
were probably I mean,
1:32:48
seriously, I don't not I don't mean to be crass
1:32:51
or anything. Or show any disrespect,
1:32:53
but I mean this sincerely. How many
1:32:55
people when that when
1:32:57
that door fell open on those boats
1:32:59
said Omaha, how many guys
1:33:01
actually crapped their pants?
1:33:04
Or peed their pants? I bet a lot.
1:33:06
I bet a lot did. But
1:33:09
you don't get that on smell of vision. You're
1:33:11
like, look at those heroes out there stole
1:33:13
one of peaches. Man, that's when men
1:33:16
women. They were crapping their pants
1:33:18
most likely, but
1:33:21
they did it. Those
1:33:24
who rode the freedom bus to march with
1:33:26
Martin Luther King I don't think they're
1:33:28
all like, yep, this is gonna be a picnic. We're gonna
1:33:30
have a nice time in Washington DC. No.
1:33:34
No. But they did it. And
1:33:39
then amazing, the last time we
1:33:41
we silenced people that, you know,
1:33:44
others disagreed with was the McCarthy
1:33:46
hearings. Remember
1:33:49
how shameful that was? What's
1:33:51
the difference besides now
1:33:53
communism is neat? The
1:34:00
difference is we don't stand I think
1:34:02
because we have a place to escape to
1:34:04
a digital landscape. It's
1:34:06
another world where everyone
1:34:08
is perfect. All kids
1:34:10
behave themselves and there are no
1:34:12
problems. When
1:34:15
I was growing up, you nasty
1:34:18
little kids, we only had
1:34:20
one reality and it sucked.
1:34:23
But we did it.
1:34:33
know, the news can really get you I
1:34:35
know. I'm an expert. News
1:34:38
can really get you down and then
1:34:41
you go home and
1:34:43
then your house is on fire and
1:34:46
you're like, Okay. Well,
1:34:48
not all of the kid. Nope. Nope. Now
1:34:50
all of the kids are on fire. Okay.
1:34:52
That's good. But
1:34:56
I want you to know, I am not here.
1:34:58
I I I've something's
1:35:01
happening in me. And
1:35:04
I think it's good. I think.
1:35:09
What I felt my
1:35:12
job was to warn My
1:35:15
job is changing. It still will be to
1:35:17
warn, but it's also to encourage you.
1:35:21
Because I know what life is
1:35:23
like. I live out there too.
1:35:27
You're driving. He can't understand my life.
1:35:32
Wanna swap places? I bet you are
1:35:34
the same. Except, no.
1:35:36
My pillow, I was gonna say, except I have nicer
1:35:38
sheets. No. We
1:35:46
live in at a time where Frank Sinatra was
1:35:48
right. Some people just
1:35:50
get their kicks on stomping
1:35:52
on your dreams. My
1:35:57
father was right. He
1:35:59
always said, you better know
1:36:01
who you are. Glenn.
1:36:06
Say this with me. I am
1:36:09
blank. Fill in the blank. What
1:36:11
are you filling it in with? Who are you gonna be?
1:36:14
I am what? And
1:36:17
what? Why am I destocking? He's
1:36:19
like, that's ridiculous. Stop it. Otherwise,
1:36:22
I'm gonna have to say you are stupid. He's
1:36:25
like, it's gotta
1:36:27
be What? Who do you want to be?
1:36:29
Not? What do you want to be? Who do you want
1:36:31
to be. I am strong.
1:36:34
I am independent. He
1:36:36
said, if you don't say those things,
1:36:39
Believe me there will be someone
1:36:41
or the entire world will
1:36:43
fill it in for you. Your
1:36:46
family does this. I I'm still the
1:36:48
dinky little brother. I
1:36:50
am the stinky little brother. Still
1:36:52
that to my sisters? Our
1:36:56
families do it, then the office
1:36:58
does it, school does it, the
1:37:00
world does it, and look at
1:37:02
how it's filling things in for you right now.
1:37:06
What are you? I'm racist.
1:37:10
I'm sexist. I'm
1:37:12
white. And
1:37:15
if you're if you're actually on
1:37:18
the popular side, what
1:37:20
are they teaching you to say? I'm helpless.
1:37:26
I'm impoverished. I'm
1:37:31
just someone who needs somebody else to do
1:37:33
everything for me because I can't do
1:37:36
it. Because I'm
1:37:39
not successful and
1:37:41
I'm not ever going to be successful
1:37:44
because I can't be successful. My
1:37:48
gosh, do you wanna live in that world? As
1:37:58
is all leading somewhere as I just
1:38:00
in the brake. Just
1:38:04
got news that a friend
1:38:06
of mine passed away. You
1:38:16
won't know her name. Few
1:38:19
will know her name. But
1:38:25
I hope when I die,
1:38:28
I can be six successful as successful
1:38:31
as she was. I'll
1:38:47
explain in a minute. Well,
1:38:51
looks like CNN file got around to listening to
1:38:53
things that, you know, we've been talking about here for a
1:38:55
while. Sit down for this. CNN is
1:38:58
reporting and I, quote, breaking
1:39:00
news. The
1:39:03
dollar might be in
1:39:05
trouble. Wow.
1:39:09
That was breaking news about two thousand eight.
1:39:12
The dollar is our country's
1:39:15
greatest weapon, and we blew
1:39:18
it up. We yeah,
1:39:20
we pressed the button on the dollar. Now
1:39:22
other countries are going, wait a minute, if
1:39:24
they'll do that to Russia, I
1:39:27
might wanna get away from the dollar.
1:39:30
This is gonna alert and lead to further
1:39:32
debasement of our dollar. According
1:39:35
to the IMF over the last twenty
1:39:37
years, a quarter of global reserves
1:39:39
have shifted from the dollar. That's
1:39:42
good. They told us, you
1:39:44
know, before it was breaking
1:39:46
news, they told us that would never
1:39:48
happen. Well, it's
1:39:49
happening. Goldline
1:39:52
is offering a special on their historic five
1:39:54
dollar Indian coins. These
1:39:56
are gold coins also they have the
1:39:58
new one out silver Ben Franklin Round,
1:40:00
which is an ounce of silver. They
1:40:02
are beautiful. Beautiful. I helped
1:40:04
design them. They have the the Ben
1:40:07
Franklin, Seal of America,
1:40:10
that if you don't think we were a God
1:40:12
based country or that Ben Franklin
1:40:14
didn't believe in God. You should see what he designed
1:40:17
as the seal for America. wasn't
1:40:19
the eagle, and it wasn't the turkey. It
1:40:22
was pharaoh and Moses. It's
1:40:25
on the back of that silver round. You can get
1:40:27
him for a limited time. They have
1:40:29
think they have the gold ones coming in, also
1:40:32
they have them in copper as well.
1:40:34
Qualifying orders are eligible for free
1:40:36
silver or platinum. Don't wait. Call them
1:40:38
right now. 866 gold line,
1:40:41
866 gold, by the way, just
1:40:43
just handed to me breaking news from CNN.
1:40:47
Pearl Harbor has been bombed
1:40:50
by the Japanese. Call
1:40:52
Goldline now 866
1:40:54
Goldline, ten second station ID.
1:41:11
So I
1:41:16
I wanna just I wanna briefly tell you
1:41:19
about my friend. Her
1:41:26
name was DeAnne Blair, and she
1:41:30
was an actress, had
1:41:34
success, then
1:41:36
moved to Texas. And
1:41:40
wanted to do something for kids.
1:41:43
Wanted to help kids
1:41:45
have a a theater
1:41:47
experience, a safe theater experience.
1:41:52
And so they started her and her husband, Artisan
1:41:54
Theatre in two thousand three. My
1:42:00
daughter joined about two thousand
1:42:02
ten or eleven. She
1:42:06
has learned so much and
1:42:08
grown so much, and I have seen
1:42:11
these kids grow so much. And
1:42:13
I My daughter is currently playing
1:42:16
Ariel from a little mermaid. And
1:42:19
I have to tell you, I'm the big fat guy
1:42:21
crying outside when
1:42:23
I'm watching her talk to these little
1:42:25
kids. These little girls are coming
1:42:27
up and they just see Ariel and
1:42:29
she's like, hi. How are you. And she
1:42:32
is like the perfect little princess.
1:42:36
And I see these kids look up to her
1:42:38
and it's just such a great thing.
1:42:43
And their standards have not changed.
1:42:46
They they even edit
1:42:48
out the children's versions. They edit out
1:42:51
things that they don't think is
1:42:53
appropriate, and they hold to those
1:42:55
standards. This
1:42:57
woman has changed so many
1:42:59
lives in the last twenty five
1:43:01
years, so many lives. And
1:43:05
you won't know her name. But
1:43:10
that's not why she was here. That's not
1:43:12
why any of us are here. I wanna
1:43:14
encourage you to do
1:43:17
what you feel you're supposed to
1:43:19
do. Stop being
1:43:21
the person that the world has
1:43:23
made you into. Stop
1:43:25
doing the things that the world is telling
1:43:28
you must do. Do
1:43:30
the things that you
1:43:32
know are right and good. Even
1:43:35
if they make you think no
1:43:38
difference at all, They
1:43:41
do. I
1:43:46
I'm encouraging you to
1:43:49
do whatever it is that you're
1:43:51
supposed to do because it will encourage
1:43:53
others. And that's
1:43:55
the biggest problem with our country today.
1:43:59
It's discouraging, discouraging,
1:44:04
taking courage out, Encourage,
1:44:09
bringing courage in. Fill
1:44:17
in the blank. I am. Blank.
1:44:21
And say it to yourself over and over and over again
1:44:23
for the next sixty days. Write it down.
1:44:26
Put it on the dashboard of your car, put it on
1:44:28
your mirror. Because
1:44:31
you are that person. You've
1:44:33
just allowed somebody or the world
1:44:35
to talk you out of it, and maybe it's just
1:44:37
been you talking you out of it.
1:44:41
Become that person. There's
1:44:43
enough darkness in the world
1:44:46
we need bringers of light. Be
1:44:49
that person. Back in just a minute.
1:45:17
The Glenback program. American
1:45:20
financing, NMLS 182334WWW
1:45:23
dot NMLS consumer access that
1:45:25
org. Okay. Let me ask you question. Stu,
1:45:28
does the Fed know
1:45:30
the higher the number I
1:45:33
mean, they they should be playing intra
1:45:35
the the inflation rate like golf.
1:45:38
It's the lower the
1:45:39
number, the better.
1:45:40
They might not know all the Okay. I
1:45:42
don't know if they know any other rules. Inflation
1:45:46
has continued to rise. It is now
1:45:48
eight point five percent up from
1:45:51
seven point nine, but don't worry. It's
1:45:53
just more than they expected, but
1:45:55
they're on it. They're on it. Your
1:45:58
interest rates are gonna go up. They're
1:46:00
gonna go through the roof, especially on
1:46:02
credit cards. The banks are gonna
1:46:05
start tightening things up. And
1:46:07
they wanna make sure that you're gonna be able to
1:46:09
pay, and so they'll make it impossible for you to pay
1:46:11
by increasing the the
1:46:14
credit card charges. The interest
1:46:16
rate. Get out of those. Please.
1:46:18
Call American financing right now.
1:46:20
Do a free mortgage review, see if you
1:46:22
can use the equity that
1:46:24
you have in your home right now, while
1:46:27
the prices of housing is so high,
1:46:29
get out of those credit card debt. Call
1:46:32
eight hundred 906 twenty four
1:46:34
forty eight hundred 906 twenty
1:46:36
four forty.
1:46:49
Alrighty then. So we
1:46:52
have the president. Coming
1:46:55
out yesterday and and saying that,
1:46:58
you know, guns are
1:47:00
not just one solid piece.
1:47:03
Now, I didn't know that. Did you know that?
1:47:05
All kinds of pieces in a gun. More
1:47:08
than well, you're saying plural, like,
1:47:10
more than one piece. Obviously, there's more than
1:47:12
one piece. Yeah. It just
1:47:14
so they're not born that way. No. They're
1:47:16
not born that way. They're not born
1:47:18
that
1:47:19
way. But it's because we piece
1:47:21
them together that they slowly become killers.
1:47:23
Oh. Because I know I
1:47:25
know one of the biggest,
1:47:26
you know, my understanding, I just wanna make sure
1:47:28
I I I'm not a crime expert
1:47:31
He's not a crimiologist. Right. My understanding
1:47:33
is all, you know, drug dealers that are killing
1:47:35
each other in the streets of these cities
1:47:37
run by Democrats largely are
1:47:40
hobbyist that stay home and build guns
1:47:43
from spare parts that get mailed
1:47:45
from all over the world. Yeah. And they spent hours
1:47:47
and hours and hours, manufacturing the
1:47:49
guns on their own. So they can avoid
1:47:51
those serial
1:47:52
numbers. They do not want to shoot someone
1:47:54
and murder someone with a serial number
1:47:56
gun. Well, you know, what's really interesting is,
1:48:00
you know, he was talking about the
1:48:02
The gods have to have serial numbers. Ghost
1:48:05
guns Glenn. Ghost guns guns
1:48:07
that are ghosts.
1:48:09
Now, I've I
1:48:11
have called -- Mhmm. --
1:48:13
Fred.
1:48:15
Fred? Yeah. Who's
1:48:17
friend? With Daphne? Okay.
1:48:19
Alright. Okay. Yeah. And they're bringing the van here.
1:48:22
Right. And they're going to start chasing the
1:48:24
ghost guns. Yeah.
1:48:25
Okay? Mhmm. Because think that's really
1:48:27
important. Mhmm. That we that
1:48:29
we stopped these ghost
1:48:30
guns. Oh, the ghost guns. My guess
1:48:32
is that there is
1:48:34
somebody behind that these aren't really
1:48:36
ghost guns. Mhmm. There's some
1:48:39
rich guy, maybe powerful
1:48:41
guy -- Mhmm. -- that is trying to get the
1:48:43
ghost guns and make everybody believe in ghost
1:48:46
guns. So they can
1:48:48
do whatever. I mean, you know, take over
1:48:50
the old mansion or --
1:48:51
Yeah. -- whatever is. He's probably
1:48:53
in a mask. And he's probably gonna
1:48:55
get away with it if it wasn't
1:48:57
for these pesky teenagers that
1:48:59
I'm sending with a van to the White
1:49:01
House. Couldn't get any dumber
1:49:04
than the conversation around guns. What
1:49:07
is -- Yeah. -- what are guns responsible for?
1:49:11
One tenth of a percent Maybe
1:49:13
of of murders in this
1:49:15
country,
1:49:15
maybe if
1:49:15
we save one ghost.
1:49:18
And I don't know. I can't I can't point to any.
1:49:20
I mean, I know there have been cases where they
1:49:22
they certainly uncover some ghost guns. It's
1:49:24
not it's not a it's not a complete
1:49:27
nothing. It's really close to
1:49:29
a complete nothing, though. It gets really
1:49:31
close to it. You know, the overwhelming
1:49:34
majority of quote unquote ghost guns
1:49:36
are made by hobbyists who
1:49:38
like building guns on their own, and they think
1:49:41
it's cool and interesting, and they're collectors.
1:49:43
The average drug
1:49:45
dealer The average criminal
1:49:47
is not going to rob AAAA
1:49:50
convenient store after spending
1:49:52
fourteen hours putting together a
1:49:55
firearm when there are four hundred
1:49:57
million firearms in this country, and
1:49:59
they can go buy one for like a dollar. Like,
1:50:02
this is not an it's so
1:50:04
cool. You don't have any idea what When
1:50:07
they break into the up thing that they broke into
1:50:10
last week, you know. You're so
1:50:12
so wrong on this. People will do anything to
1:50:14
get around the laws
1:50:17
that are on the books, for instance, you know,
1:50:19
the airports. After nine eleven, they shut
1:50:21
down the airports. There are hobbyists
1:50:25
that are now fashioning airplanes
1:50:27
out of soap. Oh, no. And
1:50:30
you make it onto a giant soap
1:50:32
airplane And it'll
1:50:35
it'll blow up. I mean, it'll blow up in bubbles
1:50:37
and stuff, but it'll pop eventually and
1:50:39
you'll all
1:50:40
die. That's that's how bad
1:50:42
it is. About Go airplanes made
1:50:44
out of soap.
1:50:47
Yeah. And by the way, can I
1:50:49
point out Yeah? -- why you might be able
1:50:51
to legally ban soap airplanes.
1:50:54
You are not legally able
1:50:56
to ban ghost guns or any other kind
1:50:58
of
1:50:58
gun. Well, we have a second amendment
1:51:00
that does not allow you to infringe
1:51:03
on the right of gun
1:51:05
owners to own their weapons and
1:51:07
bare arms. Excuse me. They already
1:51:09
have serial numbers on all of the soap. And
1:51:13
let see what they don't know. These guys in
1:51:15
the caves, they're really smart. These hobbyists.
1:51:18
What they what they realized is,
1:51:20
but if the soap bubbles
1:51:22
up, There's no
1:51:24
evidence the first rainstorm and that
1:51:26
plane is gone. All
1:51:28
evidence gone.
1:51:31
That's true. It could happen at any time. Just saying
1:51:33
we should make guns out of
1:51:35
solar.
1:51:35
This is And only
1:51:36
commit crimes right before rainstorms.
1:51:38
This
1:51:38
is why. They do put
1:51:41
serial numbers on cheese.
1:51:44
Really? They government cheese. Not not government
1:51:46
not government cheese. Cheese produced
1:51:49
particularly in Europe is at a high
1:51:51
risk of being stolen.
1:51:53
And this is a real thing. And
1:51:56
then putting serial numbers on cheese. They
1:51:58
put serial numbers on cheese. Now,
1:52:00
I don't know. It seems like a
1:52:02
bite
1:52:04
might get rid of the serial
1:52:06
number. Well,
1:52:07
you could probably go to jail for I'd be
1:52:09
filing off the serial
1:52:10
number. Oh, geez. But
1:52:12
it's true. They just had a huge theft
1:52:15
--
1:52:15
Mhmm. -- of cheese. It was over a hundred, like,
1:52:17
a hundred thousand dollars of cheese. Don't you
1:52:19
think Let let me give you the most mind blowing
1:52:22
stat in the
1:52:22
world. Okay. And it can't be true. I know. But I gotta
1:52:24
talk to you anyway. I've got so many questions.
1:52:28
Who has a hundred thousand dollars
1:52:31
worth of
1:52:32
cheese? I mean, is it in a collection?
1:52:34
Is there a cheese museum? We'd have
1:52:36
a manufacturer sure that
1:52:37
this case sells cheese like giant parmesan
1:52:40
wheels. Yay. That's an
1:52:42
odd business to go in, you know.
1:52:45
And good luck fencing that cheese.
1:52:48
Hey, I've got some wheels. What
1:52:51
what do you who is buying the
1:52:53
black market? I don't
1:52:54
know. I don't want to know. You
1:52:56
know, like, who's not gonna you know what? I could say
1:52:59
fifteen
1:52:59
percent. You know what is? What? People who are
1:53:01
hobbyist making
1:53:02
their own ghost butt. Goes guns goes
1:53:05
I
1:53:05
mean, it goes cheese. Are they?
1:53:06
No. Of course not. That will be wrong. Okay.
1:53:10
So Thirty five hundred
1:53:12
pounds of cheese. Mhmm. Stolen,
1:53:15
twenty three thousand dollars in
1:53:17
value US. In
1:53:20
two thousand sixteen, a hundred
1:53:22
and sixty thousand pounds of
1:53:25
cheese was stolen from multiple stores.
1:53:28
Listen to the stat and it's going to blow
1:53:30
your mind of all
1:53:32
the cheese
1:53:34
made in the entire world.
1:53:36
Yeah.
1:53:39
About four percent of it
1:53:41
is stolen. How
1:53:43
on Earth is
1:53:44
impossible? We are
1:53:47
four percent of
1:53:49
all cheese is
1:53:51
stolen.
1:53:52
Probably from the employees of the cheese
1:53:54
factory. I don't
1:53:56
know. Taking it out slice by slice,
1:53:59
they're building themselves, a cow, or
1:54:01
something. I don't know what they're building, but
1:54:03
But what person is like, hey,
1:54:06
you know, I could He's
1:54:08
gonna go to the grocery store, but
1:54:10
then this guy in this
1:54:12
alley had this deal.
1:54:16
See, I couldn't cheddar and I had
1:54:18
to pull the trigger on it.
1:54:19
I I could see it happening you
1:54:22
know, that maybe one
1:54:24
percent is at the supermarket.
1:54:27
You know, somebody just picks puts it to their
1:54:29
go. Maybe. Maybe. I put
1:54:31
four
1:54:32
percent. And it's not just that it's four
1:54:34
percent. It's in large quantity.
1:54:36
Large quantities. So it
1:54:37
is like I am a g Steve.
1:54:39
Okay. But I've got a heist
1:54:42
that will blow your mind. Yeah. We
1:54:45
are going to be champions among
1:54:47
mice.
1:54:49
You gotta be the hero of the man.
1:54:52
I've retired. III can't risk
1:54:54
getting
1:54:55
back into that game. At
1:54:58
least
1:55:00
the Bree incident
1:55:01
of Eighty five almost killed me.
1:55:03
Oh, man.
1:55:05
I don't rate
1:55:05
cheese heist of eighty five. That was it.
1:55:07
With those days those days don't
1:55:10
come back, do they? No. It does seem to be
1:55:12
a strange way to go though. And I guess it's, you
1:55:14
know, it can be really really
1:55:16
expensive. Right? And especially if you're taking a
1:55:18
giant like hundred pound wheel of
1:55:20
parmesan, I guess.
1:55:21
What do you do with that? Why do you
1:55:23
fence it?
1:55:24
Where do you sell it? Right.
1:55:26
What? Nobody's
1:55:27
eating a hundred pound a wheel of
1:55:29
cheese. You'll be caught with the evidence
1:55:31
if that's your plan. I don't think you
1:55:33
beat the whole
1:55:34
hundred dollars. Right.
1:55:36
It would take
1:55:37
you a while. And it would be sold at, like, markets.
1:55:39
But again, like, what market owners like
1:55:41
look I really wanna
1:55:44
sell cheese
1:55:44
here, so I'm gonna buy it from this shady
1:55:47
guy who made the farmer's markets. Maybe
1:55:49
It is France. I saw beauty in the beast
1:55:52
where they have that little square with a fountain and stuff
1:55:54
and she comes out with a book and she's
1:55:56
like, I wanna read or whatever it is.
1:55:58
That's It's
1:56:00
a good telling of that story.
1:56:04
That's probably where they sell it.
1:56:07
In cartoons. Right.
1:56:09
It's a little different. To cartoon
1:56:11
mice from a variety. Yeah. There's a lot
1:56:13
of them. And if you're willing
1:56:15
to overlook that many of them are transsexual,
1:56:18
goes
1:56:18
goes, then you're then
1:56:22
you'll be fine. You can sell them cheese. I have
1:56:24
to say that they they stole not only all these cheese
1:56:26
wheels, but they also stole the the poor wheelbarrows
1:56:29
they take to move the cheese. And they
1:56:31
took it all. And now they're trying to figure
1:56:33
out how to stop it. And their big solution has
1:56:35
been putting, like, stamping numbers
1:56:38
into the cheese wheels. So that people
1:56:40
can identify where the cheese came from.
1:56:42
But it's like, cheese is soft.
1:56:44
Like, you just can take a knife and
1:56:46
take The little numbers come out really
1:56:49
easily and no one's gonna know where the cheese
1:56:51
came
1:56:51
from. They will eat the part of
1:56:53
the cheese you put the number in. They will enjoy
1:56:56
the rest. And how would you Once you let's
1:56:58
say you don't file off the number
1:57:01
off the
1:57:01
cheese. Okay. Let's say they
1:57:03
grade it off. It's called a cheese grinder.
1:57:06
Sell the shredded Jeez, too.
1:57:09
Let's just say that they've put
1:57:11
the numbers huge, like it's
1:57:13
number eighteen o one,
1:57:16
and it's it's been made to
1:57:18
stamp all the way through the cheese.
1:57:20
Okay?
1:57:20
Yeah. Alright. Uh-huh. You
1:57:23
just cut it up.
1:57:26
I think that's a one and an eight. No,
1:57:28
Bill. We don't have it yet. We need eighteen
1:57:30
01I mean,
1:57:33
could be eighty one. Might be
1:57:36
eighteen. You don't know. They've cut
1:57:38
it
1:57:38
up.
1:57:38
Not to mention, this is a product in its most
1:57:40
desirable form, which is melted.
1:57:43
Can I can I can I It
1:57:45
just doesn't work to stamp numbers?
1:57:47
Do you not wish, though, that
1:57:49
this was the problem our president was
1:57:51
working
1:57:52
on. Oh, god. I would put him on the cheese crisis
1:57:54
in a second.
1:57:55
Say Brocomo. Somebody Somebody
1:57:57
know. She's never been to Wisconsin.
1:58:01
It would take her about a month to get there,
1:58:03
but she'd get there eventually.
1:58:07
Alright. Let me tell you about light entity blanket
1:58:09
on mozzarella. Yeah. And you
1:58:11
hit that Seriously, it's a better
1:58:13
thing. Yes. Susan Rice on
1:58:15
on the on Caso? You
1:58:18
could put, oh, is that a is that a
1:58:20
racist, Hispanic kind of thing?
1:58:23
Is Susan Rice Hispanic? Of course,
1:58:26
she
1:58:26
is. Hey. I did. She's not a debt crisis.
1:58:28
I I don't know much to you.
1:58:31
Oh my gosh. I I well,
1:58:33
listen. God, I know when I can't
1:58:35
even define a woman. How would I know?
1:58:38
What he or she is. Alright.
1:58:40
Let me tell you about LifeLock. Ever
1:58:43
tried to clean up a mess while
1:58:45
it's still being made? Yeah.
1:58:48
That's called having kids fun.
1:58:51
Right? You want somebody
1:58:53
to put an end to that problem
1:58:56
of them making messes and
1:58:58
you're cleaning it up while they're making it.
1:59:01
Here's the thing. LifeLock can help you. Now with the
1:59:03
kids, sorry you're on your own. I mean,
1:59:05
they're only human. But they can
1:59:08
try to stop cyber theft
1:59:10
from you. And when I say try to stop, that's because
1:59:12
nobody can stop everything. It is
1:59:15
everywhere, and it is getting
1:59:18
really, really bad. So
1:59:21
you need somebody who's on it, who has
1:59:23
you know, lots of experience dealing with
1:59:25
it. A huge team knows exactly not
1:59:27
just what to look for, but they'll
1:59:29
alert you. And then it there's a problem
1:59:31
you want a team that helps you clean it up because
1:59:33
I have no idea. It's like how do
1:59:35
you stamp numbers on cheese? I don't know.
1:59:38
How do you clean up after a cyber criminal?
1:59:40
I have no idea I'm busy working on the
1:59:42
numbers on cheese. Use the
1:59:44
promo code back at lifelock dot com.
1:59:47
That's lifelock dot com promo
1:59:49
code backhaul eight hundred lifelock
1:59:51
one eight hundred lifelock
1:59:53
lifelock dot com promo code back.
1:59:57
This is the Glenback program.
2:00:07
This is the Glendbeck program.
2:00:10
Sixteen people injured h shot at
2:00:12
a subway station in Brooklyn. No.
2:00:17
This is gonna be used for political
2:00:19
purposes. I hope they've caught the
2:00:21
guy no word yet on they
2:00:23
they believe that he was dressed as a
2:00:25
transit authority guy. Right? Yeah. The
2:00:28
the at least initial reports, and we don't
2:00:30
know for sure yet. But the initial reports were
2:00:32
that they were dressed as a some sort of
2:00:34
MTA employee, metro employee, It
2:00:37
may be in a bright orange construction
2:00:39
vest. So, yeah, looked
2:00:42
like he was working there and then threw
2:00:44
some sort of device that smoked
2:00:46
and then started taking shots at people. And
2:00:48
there were reports of several unexploded
2:00:51
undetenated devices that were
2:00:53
there. But it's
2:00:55
unclear whether that is just, you know,
2:00:58
real overly per cautious
2:01:00
sort of language. Have you followed the
2:01:02
two guys that dressed up as
2:01:04
DHS? Yeah. That's a wild
2:01:06
story. Isn't it? Hey. What are
2:01:08
know why that story isn't getting more
2:01:10
widely covered. That
2:01:13
seems to be a problem. In
2:01:15
case you haven't heard it because it hasn't been widely
2:01:17
covered these two guys lived
2:01:19
in a apartment
2:01:21
building. They moved into an apartment building
2:01:23
that I guess a lot of, like, secret service
2:01:26
agents live in. And they'd befriended
2:01:28
them and they posed as federal agents,
2:01:30
and they gave these guy the Secret Service
2:01:32
agents lots of gifts and
2:01:35
seemed to be cozy up to them.
2:01:38
And then eventually, they found
2:01:40
out these they were opposed they were saying they
2:01:42
were federal agents as well for DHS, I think.
2:01:45
And then the truth came out and they were
2:01:47
not. They were faking it the whole time. I
2:01:49
believe I believe their excuses they
2:01:51
were just trying to make friends. Oh,
2:01:54
okay. So I you know Are there
2:01:56
sometimes you to make friends or you have
2:01:58
to close the federal government and give secret
2:02:01
service agents'
2:02:01
gifts. Of course. Of course. That happens
2:02:04
all the time, but there is obviously obvious
2:02:06
espionage espionage was
2:02:08
a foreign communist to
2:02:12
foreign countries.
2:02:15
I heard Iran. Is that
2:02:16
possible? There was some worry. Right. But
2:02:18
it's not we don't know if they're connections
2:02:21
or
2:02:22
should still
2:02:22
pretty pretty -- Sure. Let me
2:02:24
find that out before we finalize a
2:02:26
deal with the ran. Of
2:02:28
course not. It's got nothing to do with it. Oh, okay.
2:02:30
Okay. Okay. They
2:02:33
planted the SUV. Me not
2:02:35
using
2:02:35
it. Will be connected to
2:02:37
the global temperature. Yes. Right.
2:02:40
But, like, that's not the country that
2:02:43
spent millions and millions of
2:02:45
dollars supplying
2:02:47
people with IEDs -- Mhmm.
2:02:49
-- to
2:02:50
kill our soldiers in
2:02:51
Iraq, those people are totally
2:02:54
fine should do a deal with them immediately. Well, because
2:02:56
that's okay. Certainly, a couple guys live in an apartment
2:02:58
building gonna be. Okay. These the good news is
2:03:00
is that the foreign minister
2:03:02
of transit, their close to having the United
2:03:04
States unfreeze
2:03:05
eight billion dollars.
2:03:07
Oh, good. Thank
2:03:08
you for money. I'm glad. Let's get that more.
2:03:11
They deserve more are people deserve less?
2:03:13
They deserve more? And who knows?
2:03:15
They may behind b b, the ones
2:03:17
behind the cheese
2:03:20
thefts in France. You
2:03:22
don't know? I would not put it past the terrorist organization.
2:03:24
Maybe they need money. Maybe
2:03:26
they're Maybe they are the black
2:03:29
market for wheels of cheese. What
2:03:31
a great show in Turan. Wheel
2:03:34
of cheese
2:03:43
This is the Glenback program.
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