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You know, it's becoming exhausting buying food from companies that want your money but don't want to tell you where anything is made or anything much about it. You pick up a package, you squint at the label, and somehow you still need a private investigator to figure out what you're actually bringing home for dinner. It shouldn't be like that. Shouldn't be hard. That's one of the reasons I like Good Ranchers. Good ranchers delivers 100% American meat straight to your door. Sourced from local farms and ranches range right here in the United States. Beef, chicken, seafood, quality, quality food from people who still take pride in doing things the right way. You can start your plan today and you'll get free meat included with every order, plus a hundred dollars off your first three orders with the promo code GLENN. So go to goodranchers.com use the code GLENN at checkout. It's free meat with every order. A hundred dollars off your first three orders. This month only. Just try it. You get $40 off your first order with a promo code Glenn. Goodranchers.com American meat delivered. Hello America. You know we've been fighting every single day. We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you. We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it. But to keep this fight going, we need you right now. Would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast? Give us five stars and leave a comment. Because every single review help us break through Big Tech's algorithm to reach more Americans who need to hear the truth. This isn't a podcast. This is a movement. And you're part of it. A big part of it. So if you believe in what we're doing, you want more people to wake up, help us push this podcast to the top rate, review, share together, we'll make a difference. And thanks for standing with us. Now, let's get to work. Pass it on. Crank the game. Glam back is on. Glamback is on. Of entertainment, enlightenment and empowerment. This is the Glenn Beck program. I am going to say the first thing I've ever said about France that is nice. I agree with them. On the four day work week. Oh my gosh, what's happening? I'm questioning everything in my life, all of my life choices. How am I agreeing with France? Is this not sweet? It's Friday. It's Friday, gang. We've made it a difficult four days. We're glad you're Here I've got a lot, you know, usually I'll tell you, we have a great show coming up for you. You know, not today, but some other today we actually have a great show. Well, I have a good hour. I have a good hour and I'm going to stretch that over a three hour period. I've got actually a great first hour for you plan because I have a few things to say. First of all, we're going to talk about the, the blue origin explosion. We're start there then aliens.gov oh my gosh, that is enough to blow a gasket last night. The 250 hypocrisy of first of all, Milli Vanilli has canceled a concert. Who invited Milli Vanilli in the first place? For the love of Pete? Are our standards at low America, I got to talk to you about this hypocrisy. Also, the Huffington, Huffington Post is very upset because the word retarded is coming back in style. Oh, I worked, I worked hours on an appropriate response. Yeah, no, it's very inappropriate but very appropriate for the Huffington Post and all of the word police people on the word retarded that's coming up. And speaking of retarded, we have Justice Ketanji Jackson Brown, and that is her name, who is absolutely retarded and all of the justices know it. And they need to start saying, they need to start saying we have all of that this hour. We begin in 60 seconds. First, let me tell you about Z Factor. No matter what gets you out of bed in the morning, it's going to be a lot harder to face if you haven't had a good night's sleep. Getting adequate rest, it doesn't only make your day better, it contributes to your continuing good health. So if you're like me and sleep poorly sometimes, sometimes you need some help. There is something that help you sleep better, I take it, every single night. It's just, it's from the makers of z factor. It's 100% drug free. And so it's just working with your body to calm down and have your body do the things it's supposed to do. Fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, sleep deeper. It's all natural ingredients. It calms your mind, relaxes your body so you can ease into sleep and sleep through the night. Works for me, works for my wife. Rediscover the joy of a great night's sleep with Z Factor. Get the best sleep you've ever had. It's 46% off right now. Your first order 1995, 30 day supply. 800 for relief. 800. The number four relief is on. So I got mocked a lot when I was at Space Launch recently and I watched what I call a wonder of the world lift off. And I cried. And everybody's like, oh, look at this baby cry, blah, blah, blah. Maybe it's because you haven't lived as long as I have and you don't know what that means. Maybe you don't understand what man has done, but that is a miracle. Last night when I saw Blue Origin, the rocket explode on the, on the launch pad, the first thing I said, oh my gosh. My wife was sitting next to me. I said, honey, look at this. And the first thing she said was, please tell me. And I knew what she was going to ask. And I said, no, there wasn't anybody in. I grew up at a time where men were in those machines. They had to actually flip the switch or turn the key to make it start. And they were in. And thank God we live at a time where that doesn't happen or hopefully it doesn't happen. It didn't happen last night. You know, the last time we had something like this was 1967 and it was, I think Apollo 1 and they were doing a pre launch test and the oxygen in the capsule, it was pure oxygen at high pressure. They flipped a switch, there was a spark, it burned everybody up alive. Elon Musk said yesterday, rockets are hard. They are. But I want to show you how amazing this is. Do you know how many people we have had travel into space? How many people have been into space? Just guess at the number.
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10, right?
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I wouldn't think it was that small, but I would think it was smaller than it is. 600 people, 600 people have actually traveled into space. Now, out of six, 600 people that went up, how many people have actually tried to go into space and died? 19. 19. That's a miracle. That is a miracle. Especially when you understand, I mean, Saturn 5 was the rocket that put us onto the moon the first time. That is seven and a half million pounds of thrust. What does that mean? Let me translate it. Saturn 5, what you saw was about 60% of Saturn 5. Saturn 5 has 160 million horsepower. So take a Mustang or no, take a Ford F150. A Ford F150, that's 400 horsepower. Saturn 5 has 160 million horsepower. That means it's 400,000 Ford F150s running flat out at the same time. It burns 20 tons of fuel a second. To get it off the ground. It is the energy that is a small nuke. It's almost the size of, I think it's actually slightly larger than what, what we set off in Hiroshima. The difference is, A, it's not nuclear, and B, it's coming out in a controlled way. It's 13 kilotons of TNT equivalent. Oklahoma City bombing was 2 tons of TNT. The conventional bombs, the largest ones we dropped in World War II, was 10 tons. Saturn 5, 13,000 tons of TNT. Hiroshima, 15,000 tons of TNT. So slightly larger than. That's what's sitting on the launch pad. That's why I cried when we launched every time. It is a miracle. Saturn 5 had about 3 million more pounds of thrust or shove than New Glenn did. Just the difference. Just 3 million more pounds of thrust. Just that small difference is 1500 diesel locomotives all pulling flat out together. Just that difference is enough to lift 15 fully loaded Boeing 747s straight up in the air and hold them there. New Glenn is a monster. Saturn 5 was a controlled earthquake, but New Glenn is one of the most powerful rockets flying today. And as Elon Musk said, rockets are hard. These guys are heroes. Everybody who is involved in this, thank you. Thank you and thank God. We prayed for you last night and we thank God that no one was hurt. It's a miracle. Nobody was hurt. Now let me switch, because the next thing I said to my, next thing it comes up, I look at my wife, I'm like, she just walked out of the room. I'm like, you got to come back. Oh, my gosh. What is this? And it's aliens. Aliens.gov and it's from the White House. And I'm opening it up and I'm looking at it, and I don't know if you saw the video. Do we have. We happen to have the video.
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We do.
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Okay.
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There's a lot of anticipation for this.
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Yeah. Yeah. Okay. So the White House releases this video. Go ahead and play the video. And the video says, For 60 years, the US government has kept a closely guarded secret. Aliens have been walking among us, living in our neighborhoods, interacting with us in our daily lives. They've shopped in the same stores, attended the same classes as our children, and live seemingly normal human existences with one exception. They don't belong here. Okay, Now I'm reading this, and I start reading this, and I listen to my wife. Honey, you gotta come back. She's like, what? And I pull the bar back and I start from the beginning. So I miss. I Start from the beginning. And I'm like, what the hell is happening? What is happening? And she's like, this isn't from the White House. And I'm like, this is from the White House. Okay? And then we realize, no. Until one man finally had the courage to tell the truth. Bold, unapologetic, unafraid. President Trump was the first to call out the real danger aliens pose to every American family, every community, and the future of our nation. The truth is no longer out there. It's right here, right now. He's talking about illegal aliens now. I think my first reaction was, oh, thank God. Second reaction was, this is brilliant. This is brilliant. This is the best troll I've ever seen. My third reaction was, except if you're one of the people who are really invested in this and really believe that aliens are here, and I'm not judging you on this, I don't know. I don't know anything anymore that aliens are here. That we do have evidence of some alien life or whatever, and the government has been covering it up, and now it feels like a troll. Now it feels like, are you mocking me? Are you mocking what I believe? So I don't know how to feel about it. I think it's brilliant because I'm not one of those. I mean, if aliens. I would not be surprised that the government is hiding this from us. Would not be surprised. I would be surprised if they've. If we have aliens that are living around us and we all. And they've all known it and it has been kept this secret. Okay. That we have some alien ship, maybe, or some alien technology, maybe. I don't know. But if you really are down this road and a lot of people are, because the government lies about everything, if you're really down that, you kind of feel kind of violated today, I would think, what if they do come out
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with real disclosures about aliens? What is that new URL going to be like? Aliens for real. I'm serious this time.gov
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I don't know. Jason, how do you feel about this?
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I think that the government has done
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a very good job on.
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Throughout the years, throughout the decades of. I guess, how should I say, Use it as a psyop, basically to make us not pay attention to certain things and whether that would be government programs they're running, like the stealth bomber, things like, that they don't want us to talk about. So they encourage the alien stuff. But I think there are some stuff that's unexplained, and I. I don't have an explanation for them.
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A lot of people are curious about it.
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So when I first saw this, I, I laughed at first, but kind of like you, I thought, well, there are still a lot of things that are unexplained that people are very passionate about.
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Yeah, here's, here's, here's. Now I'm up to my fourth thought. My fourth thought is that I don't think the President would. I don't think the President has information or believes that there are aliens among us or anything that important because he wouldn't do this if he knew he would not do this. Okay? So I don't think he knows, but that doesn't mean that doesn't exist. You know, there's. There's one guy in the government, I don't even know who it is now, but there's one guy in government who is the key holder of all of the biggest secrets, and you have to go through him. The President can say, I want to see all the alien stuff. And he can say to the President, you don't have a need to know, sir. And one guy makes the decision on all of the most top secret stuff, who gets to see it and who doesn't. That's pretty. I don't think that's right, quite honestly. I just don't think that's right. But maybe that's just me. I think an elected official, the President, United States, should have the right and go, I want to see the alien stuff, and I want it on my desk right now. All right, let me take a quick break, and then I want to talk to you about this 250 debacle with Milli Vanilli and Martina McBride and all these people coming out saying, we're not going to participate in this America 250 thing. Okay, all right, I want to hear you out, but I have some questions on this. We'll do that next. First, let me tell you about the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. Prayer isn't just words. It changes people. It strengthens people. And sometimes the thing that gives somebody the ability to make it through the day when everything around them feels really dark is just knowing somebody else is there. You know, there are people in Israel and Jews all around the world who need prayers desperately right now. Families living under the threat of terrorism, children who have grown up hearing air raid sirens, people who have survived programs and everything else before thought they'd never seen this kind of hatred again in their lifetime. And here it is. I mean, did you see what happened? I want to say it was in Canada. I do not remember where it was. Where the might have been in New York, where the Muslims came and they put their prayer rugs on the sidewalks surrounding a school, a Jewish school. Why would you do that? Can you imagine what it feels like to be Jewish today? Oh, my gosh. Pray. Pray. A simple prayer, a few heartfelt words can lift the spirit of somebody facing fear, uncertainty and isolation. Just let them know you're not alone. We're praying for you. We're with you. We're standing. I don't care if you stand with Israel. Stand with Jews. Stand with the Jews. Prayifcj.org Go there now and submit a prayer there today. Prayifcj.org prayifcj.org 10 seconds. Station ID. Okay, so the Great American State Fair is happening on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. to celebrate America's 250th birthday. And it's being put on by Freedom 250. Okay? Martina McBride, Young MC, CNC, Music Factory, Vanilla Ice, Milli Vanilli, the Commodores. There's Morris Day and the time. Florida. Florida, whatever. I mean, that's how big this, this lineup is. Bret Michaels, 16 days, 56 states. We don't have 56 states. What is that all about? 56 states? That's what it says from Freedom 250. Anyway, now everybody's canceling on this. Can I just say, very few countries make it this far. You know, empires rise, empires fall. Revolutions, you know, consume themselves, usually. Constitutions become suggestions. Freedom becomes a memory. Do you know how long the average constitution lasts? 17 years. 17 years. What are the odds that we are still standing? And now we're being told that celebrating our own birthday for our country is divisive. Okay, that's why you're canceling, because it's divisive. Okay. All right. Could you, any of you show me, tell me exactly, specifically, what is divisive? Can you point to the speech or the exhibit or the event or the idea or the thing you were asked to do that was so divisive? What are you. What exactly are Americans being asked to celebrate that is so offensive now? Because from what I've seen, no one is giving specifics. They're just using the word. You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means. They're using the word divisive. And it's one of those words now that gets thrown around whenever somebody doesn't, like, you know, something and doesn't want to explain why. Well, it's just divisive. Well, that's just racist. How is that racist? It just is, you know, racism. When you see racism, it's sexist, it's homophobe, it's Islamophobe. This, that he, her, they, them are divisive. That word means nothing. Just like almost all the other labels that used to mean something important but now no longer do because you've destroyed the language. Divisive doesn't mean anything because you can't tell me what it is. America's 250. And I'm. I'm prepared to be corrected on this. If you come with the. You come with the receipts, I'm prepared to believe you. But America's 250th birthday, it doesn't belong to the Republicans and it doesn't belong to the Democrats. It belongs to all Americans. This is all of our country. Now, I want to give you some political history here. The original America 250 Commission was created during the Biden administration. And people that were involved openly discussed using the anniversary to present a more critical view of American history. Some talked about moving away from what they considered traditional patriotic storytelling. We want to deemphasize America's history. What, What? I mean, you're throwing a party for a 250-year-old man. You think the time to tear him down and to emphasize all the bad things he did in life is at the party, when you're bringing the cake out with the candles. I mean, you talk about that some other time. This is a birthday party. And also, also, I really don't understand how you can celebrate 250 years of a nation by downplaying the very history of the 250 years of that nation. I mean, the entire point of an anniversary is remembrance. The entire point is gratitude. The. The entire point is to say, look at the good. Look what worked, look what failed. And, but look what's worth preserving for the next generation. And that's why President Trump started Freedom250, because America250, I mean, honestly, I don't know what they do now. I mean, I've seen them in commercials, you know, at the end. Proud sponsors of America 250. What are they doing? Okay, And I have to tell you, I was asked to serve on the board of America 250 to at least have one voice in favor of America in the room. And long story short, I didn't think I could make a difference as one voice. And I was told, just hold your tongue. Just try to make a difference. And I'm like. But how many other people are, you know, am I alone in this room? I declined because I was told, we don't want you to make a big deal out of it if something. And I said, I can't be in a room, make no difference. Spend that amount of time and then not expose it to the American people if they're like, yeah, we gotta de. Emphasize American history. So I said, thanks, but no thanks. But the Freedom250 vision is closer to what Americans remember as the bicentennial from 1976. Parades, celebrations, music, historic existence, exhibits, flags, fireworks, all of that stuff. An actual celebration of the American story. I want to get into what the divisive, what the divisive key is to all of this. An honest search for that. And retards next. Oh, man, I'm sounding, I am sounding like a boomer today. I really, I'm sorry about that. No, no, I'm not international. No, I already did that one. Our sponsor is Relief Factor. If every time you went out your front door, you got mauled by a bear, you'd stop going out your front door right? Until the situation was resolved, you do something about it. You'd either shoot the bear, take a different way out of your house or something, right? I mean, not. You wouldn't shoot the bear if you lived in Oregon. Let me get to that story a little later. But if you suffer from regular pain, why not to try to do something about it? And I know you probably tried to do a lot of stuff and it hasn't worked. I know I live that life. And I gave up. And my wife said to me, I'm not going to listen to you wine anymore. And because she said, why don't you try this Relief Factor thing? I've heard it on the radio. And I'm like, people on the radio don't know what they're talking about. I wasn't advertising for it at the time. And she said, just try it. I'm not going to listen to you wine if you don't try everything. So I did and it actually worked for me. And I take it every day. See if it works for you. Get out of pain. Stop being mauled by the bear. Relieffactor.com relieffactor.com 800 for relief, try the three week quick start now.
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Coming up, kids, polite millennials and James Talarico may need earmuffs. Glenn's epic open letter to Karen's at the Huffington Post is next at the Glenbrook program.
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I'm sorry, I just got to jump to place a place Because I'm riddled with add. Oh, my gosh. How would you say riddle with add? And I've got a lot to cover today. I'm going to come back to America's 250 because I got a few things to say to people like Martina McBride. And I love you, Martina. I love you, do. But pony up with some evidence here. I'd like to know what you're talking about. We'll get into that a little later. But also, I've got to stop here. There's two stories. One comes from the Supreme Court, and the other one comes from the Huffington Post. Huffington Post is very angry right now because the word retard is making a comeback. What a surprise. You know, they're saying, oh, this is. This is an ugly descriptor that you're. Okay. It's making an unfortunate comeback. Yeah, yeah, it is. It is. You know, you notice you don't say that about imbecile or moron, but that's why the word retarded came in. Because retarded is a clinic, a progressive clinical term, okay? Because scientists said if you have severe intellectual disability, if you're severely retarded is what we would have said, you're an idiot. That's what the medical term was. You're an idiot. If you're moderately retarded, you're an imbecile. If you have mild intellectual retardation, you're a moron. Okay? So it was idiot, imbecile, and moron. And everybody started calling people, you're a moron, you're an idiot, you're an Amazon. The people. No, no, it's a medical term. That's not what that. That's so offensive. And nobody was hurt by being called a. You got over it. And so then retard. And so everybody's like, I mean, I. I grew up in a world where retard, everything was either gay or retarded, and it didn't mean gay or retarded, okay? And. And everybody was ringing their hand, clutching their prolo. We can't use that word. So they replaced it. They replaced idiot, imbecile, and moron with retardation or retarded, okay? Because it was humane and scientific. Then the same thing happened because you didn't change people and you didn't change the meaning. You know? And so you started saying, well, these are intellectually disabled people. They're developmentally disabled. They're people of special needs. And you know what? Guess what? Guess what? People of special needs is now not welcome in professional settings, it's an insult. Now, wait, I thought that was to replace the insult of retarded. You can't just replace words, okay? You just. You can't. Because if society doesn't change, then the new word just means what the old word meant. And then you're going to have to constantly. It's lather, rinse, repeat, lather. You know what it is? It's retardation. It shows retardation. You're slow. You're slow. Okay? So I couldn't take it anymore. And I am so tired of the word police. And when Huffington Post came out and they were like, oh, you know what? We're so very upset about the word, I decided I'm going to write an open letter to the word police, okay? And I took some time crafting this because I feel it deeply. So here it is. Dear retarded language enforcers, professional offense takers and euphemism evangelists. Oh, how I've missed you. But there you are, melting down in perfectly choreography choreographed outrage because the word retarded is making a comeback. And not just any comeback, but a glorious, unapologetic, full speed ahead retardation of your carefully constructed news speak empire. Oh, the sheer panic on your face. I mean, it is a chef's kiss, really. It's like watching somebody try to put toothpaste back into the tube while the tube itself is retarded. But let me be clear, since clarity seems to be a retarded concept in your circle. Words are not violence. They are syllables with baggage. And retarded has been carrying its suitcase through the English language for decades now, describing everything from developmental delays to your entire approach to public discourse. Now, you've spent years trying to retire it. You have replaced it with increasingly retarded alternatives. Intellectually disabled, differently abled, cognitively divergent. A person with lived experience of slower neural pathways could. Heavens, man, each one of these is more retarded than the last one. It's honestly, it's like you're a thesaurus having a stroke. The retardation of your project is, however, truly impressive. I mean, you didn't just want to retire the word. You wanted to retard the natural evolution of language itself. You wanted all of us walking on eggshells retarded in our speech, self censoring like good little hall monitors. Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will literally kill me and require a safe space with an emotional support animal in it. How retarded is that? Extremely clinically textbook retarded. Now, here's the funny part, you magnificent retard, you. The more you clutched your pearls and screamed ableist, the more the word gained power. Why? I know you can't figure it out, but you're a little slow. Forbidden fruit always tastes sweeter. So now it's back. And not as a cruel slur aimed at the genuinely disabled, who, by the way, have bigger problems than vocabulary, but as a perfect descriptor for your entire retarded worldview. Climate, policies that retard economic growth. It's retarded. Higher education that produces graduates who cannot define a woman. Peak retardation. Cancel culture that treats retarded as worse than actual policy failures. That's not just retarded, that's meta retarded retardation so advanced that it loops back around, back into performance art. So you wanted to police language. You wanted to police language so hard that you retarded social progress. Remember when we could call bad ideas stupid without triggering a UN resolution? Those were the days. Oh, and they are coming back. But now every mildly edgy observation requires a dissertation on harm and impact. Your retardation of humor, art and honest conversation has produced a culture so fragile that it makes Victorian ladies look like stand up comedians. So keep seething, word warriors. Keep writing your think pieces about how retarded is punching down and we'll be over here using it creatively. That DEI training, that was retarded. Your pronoun obsession is retarded. This open letter might even be a little retarded in its enthusiasm, but at least it's honest. You should know the linguistic pendulum is swinging back and it's retarded in all of the right ways, slowing down your march toward total somatic control. So, in conclusion, I leave you with this. The word retarded is not going anywhere. It's been retarded from retirement. It's your word, your progressive word. You brought it into the culture, so deal with it. Or don't. I don't. I mean, honestly, your meltdowns are half the entertainment for me. Signed with zero regards and maximum linguistic freedom. A recovering compliant speaker who's done being retarded. Glenn Beck, thank you. That's for you, the Huffington Post. Now, I want to talk to you about the Supreme Court, because. Ketanji Jackson Brown, and that is her name, is retarded. And I'll prove that next. First, let me. Let me tell you about our sponsor. It's Rapid Radios. For all the technology we have now, most people are less prepared to communicate in an emergency than their grandparents. Were your grandparents could probably fix a tractor with a hammer and a wrench and pure spite. Now half of us panic. Have a panic attack if the WI fi goes down for four minutes or,
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like, what's going on?
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Communication redefined. Your feed's full of noise, your town's full of folks who'd help you move a fridge. Don't lose touch. Glenn Beck will be back after this. Now. So, you know, I'm not going to demean the office of the Supreme Court any more than Justice Katanji Jackson Brown intentionally has demeaned it already, okay? She came out. She was the only. Even the liberal judges are like, oh, can you just shut up? You're so stupid. Please just shut up. She was all alone. She wrote the lone dissent. And what. What this case was about was, can a judge who sees an injustice have broad power to fix it? Okay? And all the other. The other judges, all eight of them, they were like, no, it's not in the Constitution. They. They. They have powers and you gotta. They gotta be controlled, okay? And she's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. Let me. Let me give you an analogy of what they were discussing. Let's say there's a lock on a front gate, okay? And the front gate is the official process for claiming you were wrongly convicted. It's difficult. It takes time. There are forms. There are deadlines. There are legal standards. You got to hire an attorney. You got to go back. It's called an appeal process, okay? But there is a side door that gets you out. Now, it's a different. It's a different purpose. Maybe the prisoner is terminally ill, and the judge can say, you know what? I think we should let them out. Maybe they're 90 years old and they're terminally ill. You know, or there's extraordinary humanitarian reasons. Okay, this. This case was. Well, the judge should be able to use that door. Why do we have to go through. Because this judge knows that I'm innocent. Well, that. Wait, no, that. That's not the system. You were judged by a jury. You got to go back through the jury system, and you got to be judged again, and you can be found that this was wrong, and we can overturn that. But there's a system. So Jackson was saying, if a judge discovers somebody may be innocent, why should they force everyone through that front gate when the side door is right there? I mean, and Amy Coney Barrett, who wrote the majority opinion 8 to 1, said, because the side door wasn't made for that. If you use that door for this, then no one will know what the doors are for. People just use the doors and the windows and whatever, and you empower the judges. I mean, it's. It's like. It's like saying, you know, the referee. Let's say the referee noticed that a player had cheated earlier in the game. Her position is the referee should have the flexibility to make things right. Barrett's like, no, no, no. The referee's job is to enforce the rule book, not rewrite, you know, the rules or right injustices during the game that already is passed. We've moved on. You got to follow the rule book. She just believes that referees, judges, in this case got to do what they feel is right. No, you're making them into dictators. They have ultimate power. That. That's how. She is. And I mean that in the clinical sense. She is a slow thinker, okay? She's. She's not the sharpest knife in the drawer. And. And even her. Even on her own side, I. She's embarrassing. She really is embarrassing. And I. I hate to say that, because I don't. I don't. It's not good. I mean, you know, I never thought. I never thought you could come to a place. I kind of said this, though, when she was there. I hated her policies. But Ginsburg was. You know, she was at least honest. She could make an intellectual case. I think she was wrong many times, but she could make the intellectual case. And she wasn't. You know, she wasn't filled with hate. I mean, she was good friends with Scalia. They were good friends. They couldn't disagree more. Jackson Brown the non singing one maybe should try singing because I mean there's no intellectual firepower there. It shows that she just does not understand the constitution or rules at all. When you can just say, oh, you know what this judge needs to have the power just to go, you know, I think that person's innocent. Where do you find that in the Constitution? Where do you find that in the rule of law? That goes against everything our laws say. But again, they don't care. They'll just, you know, and if they don't get their way, they'll just kick the other. Can you imagine having eight other judges like that? Oh, we would be living in a fun house. It would be a house of mirrors. We'd constantly be walking into a mirror. I didn't realize that was there. You'd never know what was real. You'd never know where to go. I mean one of the reasons why we lasted 250 years, one of the reasons why we've been so successful monetarily is because our laws made sense and they were consistent. We knew that people knew they weren't going to swing wildly. You could put your money here, you could build a business and you knew 10 years down the road it's still going to be safe. It'll generally be like this. In Ketanji Jackson Brown's world, it's a madhouse. I mean everything collapses in that kind of world. But the ones in prison that say they're innocent, they would be free. So you have that going for you. Being prepared, always a good idea. But as somebody who tries to prepare, I've always been frustrated that nobody had the medical solution on preparedness until Jace Medical. They've just launched the Jace plus plus, the Pocket Paramedic. You know, most people get their over the counter medical supplies and hope, you know, they never have to use them. But preparedness doesn't end with that. Supplies run low. When something actually happens, you don't want to be figuring out in real time how do I get my prescription medication. The Jace plus is a membership designed to help you stay ready over time. In fact, it was my idea the first time I met with the Jace Team Plus. With Jace plus membership you can get 15% off on all products on Jace.com, 50% off replenishment medications, free shipping insurance, plus so much more. And then there's the Pocket Paramedic. It's real time guidance for everyday injuries and situations. Live professionals one call away. It's about responsibility, self Reliance. It's about Jace.com. find out what's available to you now. Jace.com use the promo code free month for one month. Free. Pass it on. Crank the game. Glam back is on. Glam back is on. The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment and empowerment. This is the Glenn Beck program. Years ago, Thomas Jefferson wrote a phrase that when I read it, it changed my life. And I have tried to base my whole life on this phrase because to me, it's how we all should be living our life. And he was talking to his nephew, Peter Carr, and he was talking about how you need to educate yourself. And he got to the last part of it and it was about religion. And he said, above all things, fix reason firmly in her seat and question with boldness even the very existence of God. For if there be a God, he must surely rather. Honest questioning over blindfolded fear. I spent two months probably just pondering that phrase and what does all of it really mean? And honest questioning means that if you go in to search for truth and you find an answer that you don't like, but it is the truth, that's an honest search for truth. And that means now you've got to change your life. And I've been fortunate enough to know a few people in my life who completely changed because they found out something wasn't true. One of the men I so admired before he passed away was David Horowitz, who back in the 60s was a left wing radical and for communism and everything else and against the Vietnam War. They were arguing about it. The Pentagon came out, said if we pull out now, there'll be killing fields in Cambodia and Vietnam, et cetera, et cetera. He and his group talked about it. They said, that's nothing but propaganda. That's lies. Then the killing fields happen. And David told me, he said, I went back into one of our meetings. I said, guys, we have to talk about this. We were wrong. And he said, the entire group turned on me and looked at me. And he said, david, move on. We don't care. And he said, that's when I realized none of this was honest. He said, I actually believe these things. I was trying to help people. I thought that's what we were really doing. He said, I realized they didn't really care about people at all. They had an agenda. I will tell you, there is a new hero in my book, Taryn Thomas. Somebody. I have not met her or talked to her, but I know her story. Somebody who was on the extreme Palestinian left, searched for honest questioning and honest questions, and it changed her. And I want to introduce you to her. In 60 seconds. First leaf filter. Some jobs sound simple until you actually start doing them, until you actually are putting the ladder, you know, up against the gutters and you're up there and you got like, okay, no, no, no, no. This is not good cleaning the gutters. This is not going to end well. That's why I want to tell you about leaf filter. Stop digging out the gutters and making sure that the rain actually goes to where it's supposed to, not into the foundation or under the roof. You get the debris out of your gutters. Why? Get a, get a, get a leaf filter now. Because leaffilter will stop the leaves in the gunk and the pine needles and everything else from going into your gutters in the first place. Get a free inspection now@leaffilter.com Glenn Beck leaffilter.com Glennbeck free inspection 15 off. Leafilter.com Glenn Beck. Taran, what an honor it is to have you on the, on the phone and on the show. Thank you for joining me.
B
I thank you for having me.
A
It must be a little surreal to be on the program, because if you had your viewpoint and you knew anything about me, the last place you would want to be is on a show like mine. So, again, congratulations for having even the bravery to do this. Can you, can you explain who you were before your change? How deeply into this were you?
B
Yeah, So I think it starts before October 7th, that I used to be a Black Lives Matter activist, like, when I'm 16 years old. This was, like, during quarantine 2020, right after George Floyd got killed. And I remember seeing, like, Palestinian flags, like, at our Black Lives Matter protests. And so when I saw this, I would ask our leaders, like, you know, why, you know, why are Palestinian flags here? And they would say that, you know, for us to be free, Palestine has to be free. And. And they would utilize the same words. Even now, we're seeing the same language of apartheid, dispossession, colonization. And it, like, kind of struck me as, like a black woman, and I think more so just because of identity politics and kind of like, I, like, mistook that familiarity for understanding this conflict and had some intellectual shortcuts when it comes to understanding this very complex and nuanced history and just compressing into an oppressor versus oppressed narrative.
A
So you went from leading some of these rallies at Stanford, being part of the Stanford encampment, et cetera, et cetera, and then you had a change of heart. And it started, if I'm not mistaken, it started because you were actually looking to disprove something. Correct. Tell me about this experience, what happened?
B
Yeah. And so then I would want to say, like, give context on what had happened on Stanford's campus because like, I think that led me to pull away from the movement itself was specifically after October 7th. By October 20th, Stanford already put up its encampment sit in to stop the genocide. This is before the families had even finished identifying its dead. This is a week before a single soldier had even crossed into Gaza. And so we were already labeling it a genocide. And so we knew how the story was going to end and we were already protesting and there was no time that was spent to even grieve those that lost their lives. And if you did grieve and mourn publicly, you were immediately outcasted and you lost your social belonging. And so I was very like, I, I felt like I wanted a 2 safe solution, but I was just very like, I never wanted to talk about it with anyone because everyone was anti Zionist and it felt that you had to like the safest position was the most radical one. And so at one of our protests, at one of our protests In June of 2024, they broke into the Stanford University's president's office and caused $700,000 in damages. Twelve students received felonies. And they spray painted like disgusting things such as death to Israel, death to America, kill cops, pigs, taste best when dead. And this is, I was just confused on like where is Gaza in any of that, you know, and I, we completely lost sight of like who we were claiming to be fighting for. And at, at some point our pro Palestine movement became more of an anti Israel, anti American one. And I no longer could recognize what we were, what we were doing anymore. And I think. So once students got felonies, I like took a step back from the movement and it allowed me to receive an invitation to the Nova Music Festival exhibit that's right now being hosted in London.
A
Yeah.
B
And I went, going in wanting to investigate because I thought I would find like Zionist propaganda and Zionist lies. And I wanted to reaffirm my pro Palestine position more than anything. But that wasn't what I came across. I found instead, you know, half written I love you and last messages sent to parents and loved ones. And I'm just, it was, it was a tragedy. And then these are kids my age going to a music festival that I would have went to and it, it was just not political. None. Like Nova Music Festival was not a political thing. And yet we had like compressed them and flattened them into this political narrative. And in doing so, we killed them a second time. And it's, and I just, like, I think it was just very tragic for me to realize that. And I think one of the audio recordings that we had heard was a terrorist calling his dad, saying that he had killed 10 Jews with his own bare hands and celebrating. And I thought I was going to hear horror. And instead, the dad congratulated his son.
A
Put mom on the phone, if I'm not mistaken.
B
Yes.
C
And.
B
And the mom was on the phone saying, I wish I was there with you. And so I was. So this is our resistance. This was who we were calling our martyrs. That they were explicitly saying that they wanted to kill Jews with their own hands. And I'm just, I, again, I always call myself an anti Zionist, but not anti Semitic, and that completely deconstructed that.
A
Hey, stop for a second. I really want to meet you. I hope I get to meet you someday. I just have so much respect for you. I just want to give you a hug. Thank you for being honest.
B
Thank you.
A
Was there a moment? Because after this happened, it was what, six months after I called people in Israel and asked to see the evidence, and they brought it from Israel. And I sat in my office with a couple of people. Ricky was one. Weren't you in it? Or did you not? I actually declined. Declined? Yeah. And I sat in with a couple of people and we saw all of the video. We saw 90 minutes of the videos. And it was, it was horrific. It was horrific. Was there a moment inside this? Because I don't know exactly if they showed you everything that we saw. Was there one moment that made you go, I am on the wrong side? Was it that phone call?
B
I, I, I want to say, like, you know, I, I'm, I admire that you had went out to find it, like, to look for the evidence six months after. Because it took me a year to finally attend this funeral. And I, I, I, I feel when I was watching and reading their stories, it's just more so that, like, that could have been anyone. Like, that could have been your kids, that could have been my friends. And like, the fact that their faces just look so ordinary, just smiling and the stuff that they left behind, from, like baby bottles to strollers to, like, a calculator. I just, like, I, I was like, of course, like, you know, a Stanford student would bring a calculator to, like, a, a music festival. And it's just like, I, that's why I really hope that more people can attend that Nova Music Festival exhibit. If it comes to your area because it like it takes you out of social media and like just, you know, reading about it, hearing about it and you get to visually see and like feel and pick up with your own hands the artifacts of that day. And it's just, yeah, it's just not the same at all. I just like, like I said, like you take 20 minutes to go through this exhibit and you come out a different person and you just know that in your heart that
A
that's true.
B
It's. Yeah, go ahead. Sorry.
A
So, so you, you left you, I assume you went back into a meeting with your friends and did you express this? Did you say, hey, I can't be a part of this? Or do you try to convince them and, and what happened to you?
B
Right. So right after visiting the, the exhibit, I I I pl. I had planned to talk to my friends about this. I I immediately I, I didn't talk to my friends. I knew, yeah, I didn't because I knew that like expressing any hesitancy or like doubts or questions was to like risk my social belonging and like risk my genuinely scared, you know? Yeah, yeah. It's just oftentimes it that pressure to feel like you're one of the good ones and the, that you want to be like, like I feel like nothing recruits more than wanting to be on the right side of history. Like what you're, what you were mentioning, mentioning about David Horse wits. And so I just like, yeah, sorry. So it's, it's my friends. Like I knew that they were going to see this as like a moral flick, a moral failure rather than like a me expanding my empathy beyond having a selective empathy of like which certain deaths matter versus which don't. And that was the way that we were operating within the encampment. And so now I have like a greater empathy and to, to mourn that publicly. I was genuinely scared and so I decided to like withhold my beliefs and like what I was thinking and my doubts to myself and the people that had, had went to that exhibit were invited by Hillel to go to Israel. And I decided to go and to see for myself like what's reality like on the ground. And I think like once I went to Israel, it made me realize I need to start speaking up about this.
A
Like I, so, okay, so, so hang on just a second, hold on just a second. Let me take a one minute break and then I come back and then I want to hear, you know, about the trip and, and then what happened when you started telling your friends and where you are now. We'll do that in 60 seconds. First, let me tell you about Super Sure. If. If you were a business owner, you probably sacrificed a lot to get to where you are today. You pour time into that business, money into that business, energy into the business. You've worked early mornings, late nights, weekends, holidays, more than a few days there. Everybody else was headed home. You were there because when it's your business, it's personal, and naturally you want to run it as well as you possibly can. That's why it makes no sense to let something as important as insurance become a constant source of frustration. You shouldn't have to spend hours chasing down quotes or comparing policies or trying to figure out, am I covered for this? What is my health insurance? I. It's just too much. It's too much. Well, the super sure was built to make everything easier. They help business owners find coverage that fits their needs, compare the options more efficiently, manage everything through a simple, easy to use platform. And right now you can go to super sure.com beck get a full report on your current policies with no obligation. Find out if you're overinsured or underinsured. Just go to super sure.com Beck1 One super agency, one powerful platform, and all of your policies in one place. Go to super sure.com beck that's super sure.com Beck paid for by Super Sure Insurance Agency, LLC, a licensed insurance agency. You know, I think Taryn, we're talking to Taryn Thomas. She was a Palestinian, I would say radical on the left. And she actually did her own homework and found out she was on the wrong side. And I think we might have a lot in common. Taran. When I went to Israel, I wasn't sure. Now this is, you know, a long time ago, but I went to Israel and when I got on the ground, it's such a small place that everybody's living on top of each other. And you can see the truth. You can see what's kind of going on. You know, it's different than what people think it is. So you went over there, you, you realized you gotta say something again, an act of courage, real heroism. Don't dismiss that in your life. Real heroism, because I know what you were facing. What happened?
B
Yeah, it was a 10 day trip and we visited, you know, Tel Aviv in Jerusalem. And like in Jerusalem, like being within this old city, you would see, you would hear like church bells, Hebrew prayer, you know, the call to prayer. And you would just have so many different communities overlapping each other. And, and there is like Coexistence and peace, you know, to the day to day life of people trading and like eating together and breaking bread and every conversation that I had there complicated the last. And they didn't fit in my little neat boxes that I made for them at Stanford. And so I remember like visiting like a Druze family and then seeing a missile remnant in their backyard. And I would go to Shabbat dinner and see like an empty chair with a glass of wine that no one would drink because they're leaving it out for the hostages to come back. And so I, I just knew that the fear there was old and it was generational and it was a. It's just a cycle of fear. And I. And. And eventually that fear became mine. I. On my fourth day there, I had experienced my own missile, my first missile, which is, you know, I remember mine. Yeah.
A
Yes.
B
It's interesting to say. And so being on the ground and just praying, I just realized like, how ironic it is. Like, you know, a few years ago I was praying for the divestment of these systems. I'm now praying to help save me, you know, And I hear the interception of the Iron Dome and we get up and we go to the market and everyone resumes life like normal vendors opening up the stalls and like people are just like, you know, kids are running around. And I was just like, wow, like fear here is just so routine and people build their lives around trauma and like, just like, I just recognize so much being like my privilege as an American to not have to experience war and missiles and things like that, because to me, that was very traumatic and it just kind of felt embarrassing that, you know, to them this is just a dated, you know, I only got a slice of their cake, you know, and so. And I, I realized like, then it's. It's just so easy for a lot of the pro Palestine activists to call for war and violence from the safety and comfort of your home thousands of miles away, you know, and so I think a lot of the issue is like this distance.
A
Yeah, Taryn, I'm so sadly out of time. How do I follow you? Where. Where do I find you?
B
Yes, you can find me at. At. It's Taryn, though. I T S T A R Y T H O on Instagram. And you can email me tarantoanford. Edu
A
and. And the Nova, the. What is it called? The Nova Festival. That is exhibit. And that. Is that in the United States? I know it was in England right now. Is it coming back to the United States?
B
It might. I'M not sure. I'm not one of the organizers, but it will likely come back soon. But, yeah, right now it is in England until July 6th.
A
Thank you so much. God bless you. Thanks for your courage. All right, let me tell you about Mercury One. There is a big difference between caring about a problem and committing to solve it. You just saw that a lot of people care. A lot of people see disaster on television, shake their head, maybe even post something online, you know, and there's nothing wrong with that. But actually showing up, actually putting boots on the ground, actually helping people rebuild their lives, that is totally different. And that is why Mercury One exists. When floods hit, when hurricanes tear through communities, when families lose everything they own, Mercury One doesn't just talk about helping. They go to help and they work with the local people, people just like you. If your community goes down, we will be there supporting you to help rebuild. That's what we do. This is my organization, my charity, and I. It is this. The people are so great that are involved. It's not the headlines, it's not the numbers on a spreadsheet. It's families, neighbors, people created in the image of God who are going through the worst days of their life. And we show up, we show up with us, become a part of this family. Mercuryone.org, give $15 or more to our maximum impact fund. $15 a month would help out an awful lot and be there with us. Mercury1.org Help us celebrate America's 250th by
B
listening to the American Story Podcast. Episode 8 on the Secret high stakes creation of the Constitution drops tomorrow. Don't forget to rate and review.
A
Who do you want to be when you grow up? Who do you want to be when you grow up? Who do you hope in the time of trouble you are? I think I just met somebody. I'd like to be more like Taryn Thomas. She is going to do more good than she can even possibly imagine if she keeps her head on her shoulders. She's happy, she's bright, she's intelligent, she's honest and not unafraid. She's like every hero that I've ever read about. Heroes are afraid. They are. They're afraid. They just know something bigger is more important than their fear, than their life, their friends, their job, their death, whatever. They know this is more important. And that's who she is. And, you know, I want to. I want to pick up where I left off last hour about this Freedom 250 concert that's going on. You Know the, the Great American State Fair thing is going on at the National Mall in Washington this summer. And Freedom250 announced the lineup for the Great American State Fair is here. And it's bringing the hits. Martina McBride, Young MC, CNC, Music Factory, Vanilla Ice, Millie Vanilli, who knew New they really? That's. Holy cow. I'll tell that story some other day. The Commodores, Morris Day and the Time, Florida, Bret Michaels and many more. Okay, so now here's, here's what was trending last night and today, and that is all these people are pulling out and they're saying, we didn't know. We did. We had no idea. We didn't know. Have any idea that this was so divisive. Bret Michaels said he was worried because of the death threats. Wait, death threats coming from whom? From the people that were going to go to that or the people who don't want you to go to that? That's who you're afraid of. You're not afraid of the people who are for this. You're afraid of the people who are against this. That should tell you something. You know, here's what bothers me on all of this news about this concert. I looked at the criticism. I searched it out, okay? I watched all the performers pull out. I watched the headlines scream that these events are somehow dangerous or divisive. But I have not found any specifics. What exactly are you objecting to? What did they ask you to do that was so partisan or divisive? I mean, if there is something truly objectionable, then tell us. Tell us. Show us the evidence. Let us judge for ourself. Because as I said earlier, you know, this doesn't belong to Donald Trump and the Republicans. It doesn't belong to. It doesn't belong to Barack Obama or Joe Biden or the Democrats. This is an American thing. And if the entire, the entire argument boils down to one of these things, it says a lot. Is it boiled down that you'll never work again if you show up? Are you being threatened by your own colleagues? You will never work again. Nobody will ever trust you again if you go and perform on that stage, you'll never do anything again. Is that what it is? Or Michaels, is it really, Is it the death threats? I mean, if it's the death threat, shame on you. Really, shame on you. You know, we have, we as a country survived because patriots risked their lives while in actual danger. And, you know, and honestly, some of us actually live in real danger. Some of us live with death threats every single Day, wherever we are. But America historically has survived because there were a few people who stood when no one else would because they were all afraid. It's in the Declaration of Independence. Our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor. Are you not willing to risk that because that's what we're supposed to be celebrating? Is it just because if it's divisive because of Donald Trump, this isn't Donald Trump. America is bigger than Donald Trump. America was here before him. America will be here after him. George Washington is bigger than Donald Trump. Abraham Lincoln is bigger than Donald Trump. The American people, bigger than Donald Trump. The Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, bigger than Donald Trump. He just happens to be the President of the United States. Now. The millions of Americans who built this country, defended this country, farmed this country, invented in this country, sacrificed for this country, died for this country. That's all bigger than Donald Trump. And they're bigger than Joe Biden. They're bigger than Barack Obama. Is that what's so divisive? Because that's the problem now. We see everything as political. Everything. The flag is political. The anthem is political, the founders political. The Constitution. Now our birthday party is political. I'm. I'm just. I guess I'm just getting too old. I was a kid in 1976. I was 12 years old, and I was probably in the most patriotic family ever. We were trying to save our little town, little town of Mount Vernon, Washington. And it was dying because the mall came in and we thought, my parents did Mount Vernon, Washington. Why don't. Why don't we make it into, like, a little colonial town like Mount Vernon, you know, and salute George Washington, Maybe build a little miniature Mount Vernon. Because the bend of the river, the Skagit river, was right there. It looked exactly the same. And we'll make our town into something instead of just losing to the Mall. And so all through for like three years prior to the bicentennial and during it, I mean, we dressed up as, you know, I was a little drummer boy and we marched in parades and all of that stuff. But the one thing I remember about the bicentennial is all Americans celebrated the bicentennial. Everybody, we were all in that one together. It was everywhere. And nobody asked if you were a Republican or a Democrat. I remember people hated the President. President Nixon hated him, hated Ford. They still showed up. Hated Carter. They still showed up. People who love the President showed up. People who hated the President showed up. Because the celebration wasn't about the President. It was about the country. How have we lost that? Are we really that small of a nation that we can only see ourselves through the lens of whoever is sitting in the Oval Office? Wow. That is a dangerous way to think. You want to talk about fascism? That's the beginning of it. A nation that can't celebrate itself forgets itself. A people who only remember the failures eventually lose confidence in the future. We're almost there, gang, if we're not already. Confidence matters. And despite all of our mistakes, despite all of our sins, despite all of our shortcomings, and there is a of lot long list, believe me. I have a museum. I can outdo the worst people. Oh, let me tell you how bad the United States is. You're a rookie. Let me show you the actual documents. Still, with all of that, I know the United States has done extraordinary things for humanity. Yeah, we had slavery. We also ended slavery. We fought for it. We're the only country that fought our own people. You know how many people died? Yeah. Vietnam, so horrible, went on for 10 years. What was it, 60,000, 66,000 people died in Vietnam. Nearly 700,000 people died in the Civil War back when the population was a lot smaller. And when we fought in other wars, we go in and we rebuild, build our enemies. We feed starving nations. We pioneer modern medicine, and then we volunteer and share it with them. We've created technologies that change the world. We defended freedom across continents. We send missionaries and charities and doctors and inventors and entrepreneurs and dreamers into every corner of the globe. Now, is that the whole story? Of course not. Of course not. But that's an important part of the story. And after we have been beating ourselves up for the last 25, 30, damn, almost 50 years now, maybe we could take a summer to remember some of the good stuff. So, Martina McBride, I love you. My wife loves you. I love you. I have nothing against you. I just want to know your evidence. I want to know what they asked you to do so I can help you spread the word that that was wrong. But I'll be damned. I don't think you have a damn thing I don't. I think you have a lack of courage. And I don't say I like you. I don't mean. I don't say that to be mean to you. But damn it, it is time people have courage and stand up and say, this isn't about the President, and I don't care what you do to my career. I don't care anymore. My country is more important. So if you want to boycott America's 250. It's your right. If you want to criticize the event, that's your right. Just be honest about it. Tell us exactly what you oppose. Tell us exactly what is divisive. Don't hide behind the slogans. Don't hide behind the headlines. Make the case and let the American people decide. Because if the only reason you can't celebrate America's birthday is that it's a president that you dislike might show up somewhere, might be nearby you, and maybe that's your problem, then your problem is not the celebration. The problem is you've made one man larger than the country. And no president deserves that power. Not Donald Trump. No one deserves. America is bigger than all of the presidents. Help me help you. Tell me what was so divisive. I want to know. And if I don't hear, others can judge you any way they want. And I'm not going to judge you. But I am going to chalk it up to cowardice. You're afraid of what people will say about you. What will happen to your sales? What will happen to your career? Will I get a job? Will I be hated? Grow up. If your friends and your co workers demand that of you, they were never your friends and you shouldn't want to work with them anyway. Back in a minute. Let me tell you about real estate Agents I trust. Picture this. You see a house that you really like. You knock on the door. When the owner opens it up, you say, hi. Like your house. Here's some money. You hand the guy your credit card. Boom. Now you own the house. Wouldn't that be nice? They just move out, you move in. Everybody wins. It doesn't happen that way. I don't need to tell you it's. It's a lot more complicated, involves really difficult decisions on your part. Fortunately for you, I've built the company that I think you need. It's Real Estate Agents I Trust. It pairs you with the best real estate agent in your area. Somebody who knows the best practices, somebody who understands the crazy housing market. Somebody who's a team leader and a closer. If you're thinking about buying or selling a home or both, get in touch with them today. You'll see what I mean. Check out Real Estate Agents I Trust dot com. Realestate Agents I Trust dot com. We'll show you how to buy or sell a home, even in a really tough market. The name says it all. Real Estate Agents I Trust dot com. Glenn. Becky. Hey. Tomorrow, don't miss the next episode of the American Story podcast series based on the Book the American Story by David and Tim barton. It's episode eight, America's Secret Reboot, the Making of the U.S. constitution. Here is a clip. Listen to this. These men who stared down the redcoats and endured brutal winters of near starvation are now facing a bitter truth. They might never ever see a dime of what was promised. Whispers in the barracks turn to shouts and suddenly 400 Continental army troops erupt into action. The soldiers bar the door of Independence Hall. The delegates are now trapped inside, held hostage by their own troops. The crowds outside grow more and more restless, fueled by the rum and their sense of betrayal. It's a full blown mutiny, a powder keg ready to explode. The fragile unity of a nation barely born. It takes Alexander Hamilton himself a veteran of revolutionary battles, to calm things down. He negotiates, convincing the soldiers to stand down just enough for the for Congress to leave the building without harm. But when Congress then begs the Pennsylvania state militia for protection, the state refuses without any explanation. Maybe state leaders sympathize with the unpaid troops, or perhaps they're too cowardly to confront armed veterans. So no help arrives. Hamilton's blood boils over at the lack of assistance. He later writes to the governor of his home home state, New York.
C
The conduct of the executive of this state was to the last degree weak and disgusting.
A
Two days later, the mutiny still simmers. No sign of soldiers backing down the Confederation. Congress makes a humiliating run for it. They flee Philadelphia entirely, packing up what little dignity they have. And they move the national capital to Princeton, New Jersey. For a nation just born, it feels like a breakdown. The revolution has promised freedom and unity, and it now looks like it's eating itself alive. The government that had won the war can't even protect itself from its own soldiers. And yet this moment of near mutiny becomes one of the sparks that ignites an essential reboot. Because in 17 in 1983, America was not a strong union. It was a fragile experiment, one paycheck away from total collapse. The brand new nation was really not off to a great start. And it was about to get worse. As you've never. You've never heard history like this before. It's the way I wish I would have learned history, because it's not boring. Check out episode eight of the American Story. It's tomorrow wherever you get your podcast. It's all part of our summer of education as part of the torch. As we'll tell you more about this next week. June we begin with our education series on the Bill of Rights. Made for your kids in so many different ways. Join us please on our mission to restore America, restore the truth and our history this summer, the summer of education. Glenn beck.com torch join us on this mission because become a member today. Glennbeck.com torch. Pass it on. Crank the game back is on. The fusion of entertainment, enlightenment and empowerment. This is the Glenn Beck program.
C
Glenn Beck is.
A
Hello America. Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. Oh man. The one thing, one thing France has, right, a four day work week. I mean, is this not sweet? Yeah, I mean maybe a little decline for four day work week. Just a little decline. I mean we've already declined enough for it. We should just get it for the amount of decline that we've had. Anyway, welcome to the program. I have Steve Dase joining me here in just. We want to talk about restoring the country. What's going on? There's, I mean, rape is exploding in Europe. The numbers are shocking. I wonder what's causing this. Meanwhile, first woman wearing a hijab crowned Miss Wayne county at the Memorial Day parade in Dearborn, Michigan. And on top of that, we had aoc. Remember, she's a strong woman dressing in it. Was she in a burqa or just the hijab?
B
It was a hijab.
A
Dressing in the hijab. How does a, how does a feminist do that? I guess it doesn't matter, right? It doesn't matter. If you're on that side, you don't have to make sense. We've got Steve Dase coming in. We're going to talk about our kids and everything else, our future of our country in 60 seconds. First, let me tell you about chapter. If you're about to turn 65 or you recently have, whatever you do, don't take Medicare lightly. Don't assume one size fits all when it comes to Medicare plans. It's easy to assume Medicare is Medicare and you pick something quickly and you assume you're done. But unfortunately you might be done. They have different plans, different costs, different coverage, different doctors and network, different prescription benefits, different out of pocket expenses. In other words, this is not a decision you want to make by, you know, by yourself, quite honestly. That's why there's Chapter. Chapter is a service that helps you compare plans from more than anybody else can show you. I think they can actually show you coverage in every single plan in America. But if not, it's a huge. Nobody else can do it like this and they'll listen to your situation. Your doctors are unique. Unique. Your problems are unique. So don't assume that you just can just take the Umbrella of Medicare. You need something unique for you. What's the best plan for you? Please? I want you to go to Chapter. Give them a call. The call is absolutely free. You dial £250. Say the keyword chapter. £250. Just say chapter. All right. Steve Dace joins us. Steve, how are you?
C
I'm good, brother. How are you?
A
I'm good. It's good to talk to you, my friend.
C
Good to talk to you.
A
Steve can be heard by the way, on Blaze right after this program every day. So I have so much stuff to talk to you about. Let me just start with. Let me just start with the news of the day with America 250. I just talked about this here a second ago. This, you know, state fair that's going on. I mean, it sounds fun. You know, I think. I think actually I'm going to go to it. But I mean, who knew Milli Vanilli even was still an act? But they're all saying that they're getting out because it's too divisive. And I haven't heard anyone say what it was that they were asked to do that was divisive, other than the president might show up.
C
Right. You know, I was in D.C. last week, Glenn. I got to see a lot of the setup as they're getting ready for this. And if there's one thing I think we all know the Trumps know how to do is throw a party. And this is going to be quite a bash for America's 250th. And, you know, you know that Homer Simpson GIF, where he just kind of just retreats back into the bushes, you know what I'm saying? Okay.
A
Yeah. Yeah.
C
Okay. I think when a lot of us saw the announcement of this lineup, we kind of just rolled our eyes and like, what are we doing? There's a lot of washed ups, a lot of has beens. Several never actually were. Right. And it just seemed like kind of this motley crew, you know, no pun intended. Alignment.
A
Yeah. And don't make fun of Motley Crue. That's an insult to Motley Crue.
C
Yeah, that's true. I mean, they've had way more hit songs than most of these acts.
A
Yeah.
C
I think we should just take this as an opportunity to just do the Homer Simpson gif retreat back into the bushes. Mistakes were made. This never happened. We don't need to get, you know, rejected by a bunch of G list celebrities or people who are past their prime or people who are begging for you to bend the knee. To George Floyd, like Martina McBride was back in the day. And I think we ought to take a page out of what TP USA did at the halftime show. We ought to elevate our own. The Presidency in America250 is a platform in and of itself. We could create our own superstars. People are going to tune in just because of the greatness of the occasion in the event. And I think we ought to take a page out of what TPUSA did during the super bowl and just elevate our own. And elevate our own worldview. Take a page out of Charlie's memorial. There were a lot of very talented and best selling Christian, you know, contemporary music artists that showed up to play at that. And I still think we can put on one hell of an event here without any of the Spirit of the Ages contributions at all. And we just don't need to constantly be getting celebrity acceptance and mainstream legitimacy. And I think that this was just a misstep. And I think we should take it as an opportunity to course correct here.
A
Yeah, I find it cowardice. And I'm not surprised by it. I'm not surprised by it. I mean, everybody, you know, has their own pain point. And in that world, even Milli Vanilli, who hasn't had a phone call since maybe 1989, right. Was like, somebody wants us.
C
I didn't even know that they were above room temperature. Like, I didn't know they were alive.
A
No.
C
Okay.
A
No idea. I don't even know if they're the same Millie or Vanilla. I have no idea, nor do I care. You know, I'm not going to Washington for a concert, you know, to see any of these. Any of these people. And I like Martina McBride. I like Martina a lot. And, you know, I won't go any further than that. But anyway. All right, now let me talk to you about two other things that are happening in our country that are just changing the culture. AOC wearing the hijab. Here's a woman who is a woman's rights leader. You know, strong women, blah, blah, blah. How do you feel about that?
C
You know, many of us on the right have observed it's interesting to have a movement called Queers for Palestine when you can't be a queer in Palestine. And I. I think that what we are learning, Glenn, is the spirit of the age. And the Church of Hell has denominations like Christianity does, right. And. And those. Those denominations may fight and scratch and claw and argue and. And try to get into the front of the line and have their particular sectarian theological nuance ascend it at any given time. But when push comes to shove, you know, I mean, like when the Muslims show up in Vienna or just outside the gates of gay Paris, suddenly everybody puts those differences aside and realizes we're on the same team. And I think you're seeing that here with the Church of Hell, the spirit of the age. Right. Of course, it looks just beyond silly to see a woman who, who has essentially branded herself as the ultimate third wave feminist, who dressed as in the Handmaid's Tale at a State of the Union address, now wearing the ultimate sign of female subservience in the hijab.
A
Right.
C
But if you stop and you look at it that way and you realize whatever undoes the, the, the Christendom, whatever undoes the fabric and fundamentals of Western civilization, the when, when that opportunity comes up, she, I, I doubt she likes a lot of the way women are treated within the Islamic world, but if you could unite with them to undo what's left of the west, they're all in, they'll come together for the antifada because in the end they're all on the same team. They're branches off of the same tree. And I think that these kinds of images just kind of confirm that.
A
So I have to tell you, Steve, that's why I wanted to have you on today, because I've been saying this for a long time. I know you feel the same way. We have to put our differences aside and we need to. Do you agree with the Constitution? Bill of Rights? Good, then we're on the same side and start coming together. And the biggest thing we have to do is educate our children. And I wanted to have you on because Torch is doing Summer of Education for the next 250. If we don't educate our kids, we're not going to have another 250. We won't. We may not have another 25 minutes if we don't educate our kids. And you're putting out the third in a series of books and this one is. What is it? Why Independence Day? Is that the name of it? I can't remember.
C
Yes, yes, Independence Day. America is great.
A
Tell me about it.
C
God is. America is great because God is good. And the subtitle says it all. I mean, our 250th birthday. Birthday is really an event that is 3,000 years in the making. You know, Charlie used to point out that Deuteronomy was the most quoted book by the founders collectively, which would make sense. I mean, Moses is sitting there at the brink of, this is his goodbye letter, his eulogy, essentially farewell address. They're at the brink of the promised land he's laying out for them. It means Deuteronomy literally means giving of the law or re giving of the law, the second law. And he is reiterating now what their covenant with God will be and what godly character of the nation is expected to be. And so it would make sense that if you're attempting to create a, you know, a country where there's no king but Jesus, that there is a government exists only to secure your God given rights and it's limited to just that jurisdiction, then you're going to need a people to be governed by a higher authority than just themselves, and that is the creator of the universe. And so it's, it's not a secret that you see things happening like, like if you go to Texas right now, you're not sure if you're in Mumbai or Dubai, in a lot of Texas right now. And, and why has that happened? Because the more that we have departed from our founding and turned away from it, nature abhors a vacuum. A new theology will step in to take the place of the one that founded the country. And you know, we planned this trilogy out for, you know, five years ago to do this every other year. And we always planned this for the 250th birthday, Glenn. But, but I had no idea when we plotted this out, even when we were illustrating it takes eight months or so to illustrate one of these books. I had no idea. All the anti Semitism and the nihilism. I mean, at this time last year, we're all very fired up. The President had come out of the gate swinging with, with, you know, an amphibious assault against the left after a big election victory. So when we were putting this together, I had no idea that we were going to be having all these fights about whether resurrect Marcion and separate Judaism from Christianity and all this other stuff that's going on right now. And it looks almost like I wrote this book to answer this stuff, Glenn. And nothing could be further from the truth. It's just our history. And right now there is a movement afoot of people wearing our uniforms on our side right now that are trying to retell that history, trying to do their own essential version of revision of a revisionism of history. But let's in fact even reconsider Winston Churchill. Maybe he wasn't the hero that we thought. And so as long as we entertain that splintering we have no chance to unite against what is united against us.
A
Yeah. I will say it's not a coincidence also that this, you wrote this book and it's apropos for this time because you're a guy who listens to the Lord and follows what he wants you to do. And he is always ahead of all of us. It's really remarkable to see him work. So tell me what you think is coming with this splinter. I mean, are we going to pull back together for this next election, or is this, I mean, how does this work with this splinter? Steve, it's so concerning to me.
C
I think you're watching a schism occur, and I think the timing of it. We're only one year into President Trump's reign here. I mean, he's going to be around three more years. And if you've been around Donald Trump for more than 10 minutes, as I know you have this idea that when his term is up, he's just going to then just ride off into the sunset is not true. This guy's been, this guy has occupied the spotlight his entire life. Before becoming president, he was arguably the most powerful, most popular celebrity on planet Earth. So, I mean, this is, this is a permanent part of who we are as a movement now. And I think the fact that you're seeing people plot out their divorce one year into this is an, is indicative of a schism. And we've seen schisms all throughout the history of the church, all throughout the history of the West. And you're watching one of those occur right now, and you're watching a group of people that, and I don't think it's, I think for some people, it's a grift. I, but I, but some of the people that are doing this are serious people, people you and I have known for many years and, and are thoughtful people. And I think they clearly believe the Way Forward that Israel is a uniquely evil nation. I mean, I've had Tucker communicate this to me in, in private exchanges, that they're a uniquely evil nation and that that the, therefore then the path forward must be to realign the Judeo Christian understanding of the West. That's why I cited Marcion earlier, the great heretic who thought we divorced Christianity from Judaism. And, and that was one of the great Gnostic heresies of the early era of the Church. And so his goal, I think if
A
you watch one of the first things that, one of the first things that happened to the church in 1933 when Hitler took over too.
C
Correct. There's Nothing new.
A
Get rid of all the Judaism. Yep.
C
Yeah. Just new people under the sun who haven't heard. They heard it yet. Okay. I think they, they absolutely believe that we need to recalibrate into Chrislam and into a Christian Islam alliance. I think they absolutely believe this. And I think if it's, it, it's historically insane. And one of the things I've tried to ask Tucker privately on numerous occasions and I've just finally gave up. When we, when we got to the point that the Book of Esther was really about Persian genocide, that was just kind of my get off point. And I, I, I have kind of held out because I love the dude and he's been solid to me and so many people. But when we got to the point that, that, that it's about Persian genocide, that was my get off point. But I, I kept asking him, tell me, Tucker, for 41400 years we had Islam on the earth and no country named Israel as any kind of fulcrum or center or repository of tension here between Islam and the West. So explain to me, brother, you're a smart guy, how did Islam treat the west during those 1400 years when there was no nation of Israel? It was a pox Romana. We got along great. It was just kumbaya. Right? Those churches in Asia Minor that the Book of Revelation begins with, they just had a democratic election, Glenn, and just decided to join the Islamic horde. That's what happened there. The Assyrian Christians, the Lebanese Christians, the Egyptian Christians, the Syrian Christians were first called Christians in Antioch. That's in Syria. Paul's on the road to Damascus where he gets converted. Syria. Where did all these Christian enclaves go? Did the, I mean, did Bibi Netanyahu take them all out? What happened? And they never have an answer for these questions because what they want doesn't align with historical precedent whatsoever. And so they have to essentially nihilist our past and say, well, you don't really understand your history. That's the same kind of stuff the left does, by the way, that you don't really understand your history. We, we need to reevaluate the, the post war consensus. And hey, I think there's some things post World War II that we need to reevaluate the idea. The idea, though, let's fundamentally reevaluate the last war we all agree we were morally united on. It was the morally righteous crusade. That's cultural suicide is what that is.
A
It is, it is. Can you hang on for just a couple more minutes? Sure. Okay, Steve Dase, we'll be back in just a second. In 60 seconds, to be precise. The convenience of modern American life sometimes complicates our efforts to maintain our values. For instance, not too long ago, if you wanted a good cell phone coverage, you pretty much had to go with one of the big boys, companies like Verizon or AT&T or T Mobile. So even if you knew some of these companies were donating to causes that you really were strongly against, you couldn't do a lot about it. But it's not that way anymore. Patriot Mobile gives you an alternative. They offer dependable nationwide coverage on all three major networks, so you don't have to sacrifice service to stay true to your values. And that's important because your monthly cell phone bill is something you're already paying anyway. The question is, where is that money going after it leaves your pocket? With Patriot Mobile, you can get the coverage you need while supporting a company that's open about standing for the values that matter to so many of us. So go to patriotmobile.com Beck call 972 Patriot 972 Patriot use the promo code Beck get a free month of service patriotmobile.com Beck 972 Patriot promo code Beck make the switch today. 10 seconds. Steve's new book is out. It is called why Independence Day. It's for Children. Why Independence Day? America is great because God is good. And when I say it's for children, I hate to say that it's for families. And quite honestly, a lot of our history is for adults, too, because we don't know any of it. We just didn't learn any of this stuff. And so you might want to start with a children's book. At least read it to your kids or your grandkids. You'd be surprised what you might learn as well. So, Steve, is the, is the election, this coming election, in as much trouble as everybody says it is?
C
I would say yes and no. I mean, fundamentally, we're up against history here, Glenn. I mean, if you go back 1982, Reagan lost 30 House seats, a dozen governorships, and then it was morning in America again two years later. We could do the one exception where a president, I mean, Barack Obama got Molly whopped in two midterm elections. Bill Clinton got Molly whopped in the first midterm election. So if you, if you look at what happens to presidents after they get elected, with one exception, George W. Bush in 2002, when America was still pretty united after 9, 11, that's the one time a president got an actual win in modern times after, in a midterm, right after winning a presidential. So there's history there. So we're up against that. Democrats are up against an unfavorable redistricting map and an unfavorable Senate map. My math right now, I think there might be no more than 20 and as few as 15 truly toss up House seats. But I think the thing to be concerned about with that though is Democrats again are not like the, the forces that we just talked about on our side right now. I think we all know that if they have a two seat majority, they're going to behave like they have a 200 seat majority. I think we all know that, right? They're going to market, they're going to march in lockstep. So it's great that we're shrinking their margin of error for us and we're shrinking the map via redistricting. But if they get any majority at all, it's just going to look like they have the, they have unanimity. So I think that, you know, I look at my home state of Iowa right now, we're going to have a guber, a first gubernatorial primary we've had in over a decade. Actually, it's been 15 years. We might, we have more Republicans in our state than ever before. 750,000, Glenn. Right now I'm forecasting we're going to have lower than 25% turnout in the state of, in the state of Texas, the March primary there. So you had the, the most hotly contested Senate primary in America was Cornyn and Paxton.
A
Right.
C
And then you have maybe the most expensive attorney general race in American history with Mays Middleton and Chip Roy. And yet about 140,000 more Democrats voted in their primary than voted in the Republican primary. Despite all that attention and all those resources, our base needs to be energized and needs the President back out on the campaign trail, needs frankly to see whenever epic fury is done, Americans need to see our base, needs to see an epic fury of our domestic agenda. They need to see that we are fighting as hard for our domestic agenda as we are our interest overseas. And I think that's very winnable. The fact that the Democrats don't have this wrapped up is indicative. I think a lot of normies realize how insane and crazy they are. What they're waiting to see is that we're going to deliver on the things that we promised.
A
I know, I know. And that is, you know, that that message is clear. I mean, with Cornyn, that message was clearly Sent. Look, dude, we've, we're done with this. We are done with this, and I'm glad to see that. But we, you know, the one thing that we can't survive is if the President appears to be forgetting the little guy because he's always been the president little guy. And if, if he's not, if he's not fixing and being seen fixing the problems of the little guy, it's not going to go well.
C
Can I.
A
Thank you so much.
C
Oh, you got to go real quick.
A
Yeah, go ahead.
C
When the President says he doesn't care about the midterms, when asked about gas prices, I think it's important for our audiences understand he's in a high leverage negotiation with Iran. He cannot show any weakness to them at all. Otherwise they'll say, we'll just wait it out then because you'll have to give up if your poll numbers are bad. He obviously cares. It's been his whole brand. He's lost every one of his famous relationships by aligning with people like us. But you have to give him some room to negotiate with Iran right now with language like that.
A
Exactly right. Thanks, Steve. And Steve will follow me on Blaze Blaze tv. All right, let me tell you about Relief Factor. Some people call it aging, other people call it life. But what if you're feeling pain? It's not inevitable. Maybe it's just untreated or not being treated the right way. When you're dealing with constant pain in your back or your knees, your neck, your shoulders, anything, it's easy to tell yourself, this way it's going to be because, you know, I remember my father, he started feeling bad at this time, you know, and you just start adjusting without realize how much you've already adjusted, how much it's changed. You, you move less, you sleep different, you're shorter with people. You stop doing things you used to enjoy. You just, just to avoid the stiffness that follows. Relief factor was not designed to mask that pain. It was designed to go after what's causing it. And that's inflammation. It's a daily supplement formulated by doctors with natural ingredients that supplies support your body's own ability to reduce pain and heal itself over time. It's not a quick fix, but it's a real path forward, one that hundreds of thousands of people have already taken, including me. Try that path. It's relieffactor.com relieffactor.com try their three week quick start. 1995800 the number four relief
C
America turns 250 once.
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And at torch we are Going to treat it like it matters. So America thrives for another 250. Join us now at glennbeck.com torch.
A
Last night, somewhere in America, there was a dad who was standing in the kitchen after everybody had gone to bed already, and the house was quiet and the dishwasher was humming and his phone in his hand. Maybe he just came in from helping his son or daughter do homework. And in that process, because I've lived it, that son or daughter asked a simple question. It could have been about math. It could have been, dad, what does the Constitution actually do? And he froze. And not because this dad is dumb, not because this dad doesn't care, but because somewhere along the way, nobody really ever taught him either. He knows it matters. He feels it in his bones, but he cannot explain it. I've lived that moment, and it is a terrifying moment for a parent to be. When you experience it, you're like, oh, my gosh. And you immediately think, I'm the dumbest person in the world. How do I not know this? You know, we just assumed that all of this stuff would just transfer. You know, that schools were going to teach history. Honestly, that civics would be obvious. You know, when I was growing up, the world was easier than it is now. And, you know, and I started having kids that just, you know, somehow or another, our kids are going to absorb what made this country different. They'll just see it, okay, but they don't. Instead, they're absorbing something else, and it's not good. They're being told America is beyond an accident. It's a tragedy. And when they're not hearing that, they're. They're hearing that fame and fortune and power is everything and that truth is relative and the past is mostly shameful. And you feel it as a parent. You feel it. You feel it when your son comes home cynical at 14. You feel it when your daughter says she doesn't even know if this country is worth believing in. And you thought you were doing a good job teaching them. You feel it when you realize they can name TikTok influencers, but not the three branches of government. That's not their fault. It's not entirely our fault either. They started with us at my age. Most of us were never taught how to think about power, truth, liberty, responsibility. How could we in government schools? You think the government is going to teach us about how? They're like fire. As George Washington said, the government is fire. Be very cautious of it. Why would a government school teach you that? We were handed opinions. We were not handed principles. We were handed headlines. Not history. Arguments, not understanding dates. What the hell does that date and that name mean? Nothing, if you do not know the story. And so now we are finding ourselves as parents in a moment that history will remember. And we find ourselves trying to teach our kids something we don't really know ourselves. And we're so busy. I don't know about you, I am exhausted. By the end of the night, I'm exhausted. Yeah, okay, let me go in now and do my own homework. I already did homework once. It pisses me off that I have to help my kids with it a second time. But this is the real crisis. It's not politics. It's not. It's preparation. It's the quiet fear that your child is going to inherit a country they don't understand and therefore can't defend. Because you understand it, but you can't really defend it. This is the real reason I built the torch. It's not another media company. We don't need another media company. It's not a political megaphone torch. In the coming months and years, you will see, I hope, that it is a tool. I was having a meeting yesterday and I said we need to be able to become a tool. So when somebody goes, I don't know the answer to that. How does that work? What does that mean? It's a source that they can ask and it can give it to you and you trust it because it's not chachi pt. It's not some AI slop that's coming out of God knows who. You don't trust. I don't trust any of that stuff. A place where a mom can sit down with her 12 year old and say, okay, let's learn this together. Where a dad like me who never really got real civics education can finally understand what does civics even mean? How does it work without being talked down to? Where history is told in context, where cause and consequence matter, where ethics are discussed seriously, where critical thinking is practiced, not preached. That's one of the most important things. This summer is the summer of education. The summer of 250 is the summer of education for America's next 250 years. And we are going to provide, beginning next month, our first structured lessons and family study guides. We already have dozens of documentaries and history series that don't assume you're stupid. And we have this amazing series that we're now publicly what up to outside of Torch world? We're up to eight. Eight. Eight. Episode eight. Here's just you you want to learn history? If. If history sounded like this when I was in school, I would have known history. Listen to this. This is the American story. This is episode eight that is coming out everywhere. You get your podcast tomorrow. This is about how the Constitution came about. Listen to this. These men who stared down the redcoats and endured brutal winters of near starvation are now facing a bitter truth. They might never ever see a dime of what was promised. Whispers in the barracks turn to shouts, and suddenly, 400 Continental army troops erupt into action. The soldiers bar the door of Independence Hall. The delegates are now trapped inside, held hostage by their own troops. The crowds outside grow more and more restless, fueled by the rumors and their sense of betrayal. It's a full blown mutiny. A powder keg ready to explode. The fragile unity of a nation barely born. It takes Alexander Hamilton, himself a veteran of revolutionary battles, to calm things down. He negotiates, convincing the soldiers to stand down just enough for Congress to leave the building without harm. But when Congress then begs the Pennsylvania state militia for protection, the state refuses without any explanation. Maybe state leaders sympathize with the unpaid troops, or perhaps they're too cowardly to confront armed veterans. So no help arrives. Hamilton's blood boils over at the lack of assistance. He later writes to the governor of his home state, New York.
C
The conduct of the executive of this state was to the last degree, weak and disgusting.
A
Two days later, the mutiny still simmers. No sign of soldiers backing down the confederation. Congress makes a humiliating run for it. They flee Philadelphia entirely, packing up what little dignity they have. And they move the national capital to Princeton, New Jersey. For a nation nation just born, it feels like a breakdown. The revolution has promised freedom and unity, and it now looks like it's eating itself alive. The government that had won the war can't even protect itself from its own soldiers. And yet this moment of near mutiny becomes one of the sparks that ignites an essential reboot. Because in 1783, America was not a strong union. It was a fragile extension experiment, one paycheck away from total collapse. The brand new nation was really not off to a great start. And it was about to get worse. So this is based on David Barton's book, the American Story, the Beginnings. And it has been adapted by the best writer, one of the best writers I know. I have several really good writers, but Nathan Nipper is an incredible history buff and knows how to write. And then Nick Daly does all of our production and Sam Cardin does all of our music. And I mean, we spend each episode runs about 45 minutes. And I think they're. What are they, eight days to produce something like that? Each episode, it's. It's a crazy amount of time. But I want it to be riveting because I believe everybody learns a different way. I'm very visual. I connect to stories. Most people do connect to stories. So I want to hear it. I want to see it. Some people connect through music, some people through just asking questions and reading. Everybody has a different way to learn. We're trying to cover all of them. This summer, we're releasing 10 songs. Each song is about a different bill of right. So we start with the First Amendment. It's called Five in the first. And it will come with an actual lesson plan. And it's important to me. You know, our education system was never. We didn't sit down and take tests. You would actually stand in front of the teacher and it was catechism. And they would ask you what you know, why is the Constitution important? Why did they. Why did they put the First Amendment in? What are those five freedoms that you get? Why is that important? Well, what happens if somebody says something that you don't like? Why should you defend that? Even if you think it's really harmful or maybe even a lie, do they have a right to say that? That's the testing that we used to go through. It was catechism. And so we've built it that way because it requires you to think. Not memorize, think. And that's the problem with our families, our kids, even us. We don't. We don't know how to think anymore. We're letting a machine do it for us now. And that's going to get worse and worse. And we have a responsibility. If we don't teach ourselves and our children who they are, someone else will. So join us, will you? We also are, if you happen to read Chasing Embers, the book that I put out, was it last year, Two years ago. Two years ago for summer that had huge, huge fan base. And people have been asking me two questions. A, are you going to finish the series? Because there's, I think six or eight in the series. And we just did number one. And I didn't have time to cut the. The audiobook. And that was the other thing. People. People love to listen to it on audiobook with their families, especially for a summer drive that is coming out next month as well. Book one, and we are going to be following it up with new books are being written right now, but the audio book, and it's really good. Really good. It's coming out next month. All of it is going to be available at Torch. You can get these lesson plans. You can get the music, you can get the first two chapters we're releasing here, I think in a couple of weeks of Chasing Embers. You get that way in advance of everybody else. Also, I think we're up to episode 14. Commercial free of the American Story. All I ask is that you join us on this mission. I don't, I mean, I appreciate your money because it's very expensive to do the things that we do, but it's. I don't. I'm not asking you to join for the money. I'm asking you to join for the mission. I'm asking you to help. Save the Republic. I'm asking you to do everything you can in your power to educate yourself on the basic truths you know. It's more important than knowing the what the latest battle is between this politician and that politician. Knowing what the Bill of Rights means, being able to say no by standing against Sharia law that is not covered by the First Amendment. And here's why that matters more than anything else you can do. That's what we're going to try to do this summer. And we're on this journey with ourselves and our families and I want you to be a part of it. Join us now@glenn beck.com torch it's the summer of 250, so there will be a second 250 in America. Glenn beck.com torch Join us now. All right, our, our sponsor this half hour is super sure. I think a lot of business owners have the same problem. You know, you didn't get into business because you love paperwork. You didn't start a company because you dreamt of comparing insurance policies. You didn't lie awake at night thinking, boy, I hope I get to spend my Thursday afternoon reviewing coverage options, you know. No, you started your business because you had a dream. You had an idea, you had a service, a skill and something, and you were passionate about that. I'm guessing maybe you feel the same way I do on that. The administrative stuff is just the price of admission you have to do, which is why I'm always interested in when somebody finds out a way to make that part a lot easier. Because that's the worst part of my job. That's what super sure is doing. They help business owners find the coverage they need without turning the process into a second job. You can compare options, manage policies, keep everything organized through one easy to use platform and right now, you can go to super sure.com beck get a full report. Report on your current policies with no obligation. Find out if you're overinsured or underinsured, somewhere in between. Go to super sure.com Beck one super agency, one powerful platform, and all of your policies in one place. Go to super sure.com beck that's super sure.com Beck paid for by Super Sure Insurance Agency, LLC, a licensed insurance agency. Doesn't matter if you drive a truck or a Tesla. Raising good kids takes the same kind of love. More Glenn Beck next. Oh, man, we live in interesting times. Karen Bass just released Angelenos need leaders willing to stand up and speak out. Jane has never been afraid to do either. Karen Bass for mayor endorsed by Jane Fonda Kennedy from Fox. Kennedy wrote, When American POWs tried to sneaker notes with their personal information to tell their families they were still alive, she gave those to the North Vietnamese. Some of them were beaten to death. You're both commies and you can well, do some things that I can't say. Okay, you didn't need it. Well, no, for them. Very probably very logical. But I mean, it's amazing. Spencer Pratt just said, when I was in my 20s, I was on a TV show. When Karen Bass was in her 20s, she was training in a terrorist. She was training in terrorist tactics and guerrilla warfare with communists in Cuba back when the LA Times was still in LA and used to tell the truth. And then he puts the LA Times from 1983 talking about what she is doing in 1983 in Cuba. I mean, it is. It's an amazing time to be alive. Will the truth matter? It does with me. For me and my household. I know who I serve. I know I pursue the truth and am corrected every day by the truth. And we live our lives and do the best we can. Maybe, maybe because of God, he'll save the republic.
Host: Glenn Beck
Guests: Steve Deace, Taryn Thomas
Theme: Insightful and candid storytelling on American politics, culture wars, language controversies, historical commemoration, and transformative personal journeys.
This episode weaves together commentary on America’s political and cultural crossroads, sharp critiques of media and “language police,” a deep-dive interview with activist-turned-advocate Taryn Thomas, and a discussion on the pressing need for honest American history and civic education.
Beck touches on:
“You wanted to police language so hard that you retarded social progress… Your retardation of humor, art and honest conversation has produced a culture so fragile that it makes Victorian ladies look like stand up comedians. So keep seething, word warriors.”
— Glenn Beck, [31:18]
“America’s 250th birthday doesn’t belong to the Republicans and it doesn’t belong to the Democrats. It belongs to all Americans… what exactly are Americans being asked to celebrate that is so offensive now?”
— Glenn Beck, [29:30]
A significant segment is devoted to Taryn Thomas, formerly a committed pro-Palestinian, BLM-linked activist who experienced a dramatic change of heart:
“I always call myself an anti Zionist, but not anti Semitic, and that completely deconstructed that.”
— Taryn Thomas, [53:49]
Beck’s reaction:
“If we don’t teach ourselves and our children who they are, someone else will.”
— Glenn Beck, [118:22]
[87:13 – 105:00]
“The real crisis is preparation. It’s the quiet fear that your child is going to inherit a country they don’t understand and therefore can’t defend.”
— Glenn Beck, [106:54]
This episode provides:
| Segment | Time | |--------------------------------------------|--------------| | Space travel & Blue Origin reflection | 07:19–11:10 | | "Aliens.gov" & government trolling | 11:10–14:00 | | America 250 event cancellations | 19:00–24:34 | | Open letter to the ‘retarded’ language police | 25:01–35:00 | | Supreme Court dissent critique | 35:00–47:45 | | Taryn Thomas interview | 47:45–66:05 | | Post-interview reflections | 66:29–69:30 | | Steve Deace conversation | 87:13–105:12 | | Closing reflections on education | 106:54–114:33|
Summary prepared for: Broader understanding, research, and educational use.