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tv   Glenn Beck  FOX News  February 25, 2010 2:00am-3:00am EST

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go to twitter.com slash greta wire. see you tomorrow night at 10:00 p.m. eastern. and only on fbn. captioned by closed captioning services, inc >> glenn: welcome to the "glenn beck program." tonight, vallu we have the reas why obama is failing. he's just too darn smart. i'm not kidding you. plus, van jones, 9/11 truther and radical communist who defends cop killers. shamed? no, no. he's getting awards. speaking of communicommunism, toyota, the executives drilled by congress today. congress. who is overseeing and owning g.m., a direct competitor of toyota. what a mess! how do we fix it? well, we think out of the box. i'll show you how and why right now. c'mon! ♪ ♪
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>> glenn: hello, america. how are you? we have some choices to make. we have to start thinking radical. we have to learn from the past. and start thinking radical. now there are two choices. we can be these radicals or we can be these radicals. this is van jones. he's radical. this is, it's frightening what is going on behind the scenes. you'll understand why these people are now in and around our white house in the next 20 minutes. okay? progressives don't want you to read real history so they can hide their failure and hide behind masks. to get out of the mess we're currently in, it's imperative that we understand how we got here. we designed another 20 minutes of just to get ratings, you know, the history lessons for you.
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this one is, this one is a little tough. when i was a kid, i used to watch television and i used to see what was going on. one of my favorite movies, still is mo for my kids is "music man." i feel like this sometimes. trouble. we got trouble. ♪ ♪ >> glenn: back when we were growing up, after the world wars, people were freaking out about nuclear weapons. everybody was -- i mean i don't know about you, but i used -- they used to show the movies at school. i used to be so freaked out. remember the duck and cover thing? i would think i don't think my desk is going to protect me from this. it was scary. we thought the soviets were going to vaporize us. the science world was working on ideas to protect us, several ideas. one, did you hear of the doomsday device?
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this was the most remarkable thing. when i started researching this, i don't know, a few years ago and looking into history, this is the most amazing thing i've ever heard. they actually, this kookie scientist, the global warming type, they absolutely thought if we put a series of data points in a computer, on the big cards punches on them, and they would create some sort of a program that would calculate the risk of the world going into a war, nuclear war. if anyone started to make those moves, well then the computer would take over. here is what they wanted to do. they wanted to take a massive stockpile of nuclear weapons. they wanted to bury them in the earth and put it all over the earth. the centralized computer would say if russia does this or if the united states does this, if anybody starts moving in this direction, the computer would read it and it would automatically trigger
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back to the central compute er, trigger a nuclear explosion and the entire world would blow up. okay? yeah. luckily scientists said i don't think so. i want to go on a limb and say i think the theory has a few holes in it. weapons of mass destruction. rings a bell. what if the computer had a glitch? i don't know if there were hackers an it the time. but a lot of ways we could blow up the world. the world said no to that idea and the way to stop thermonuclear war, mass holocaust because of a nuclear weapon -- this was the first idea. the second idea was i think, i think this was mad. this is mutual assured destruction.
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the idea was if two countries engaged in nuclear attacks, say we were north america coming off south america. we launched against south america, they could launch against north america and we'd both be vaporized. everybody armed each other to the teeth. mutual assured destruction. a way to keep everyone from moving. this wasn't good enough for the thinkers. that's not good enough. how do we do it without weapons? now, let me take you back to right after 9/11. i was a really lazy american. i didn't know much about american history. i didn't know anything about anything really. i was just starting to come in my own and figure things out in the five years prior to that and i thought boy, i don't know anything about the middle east or america or anything. how did we get here? i started to read everything i could get my hands on.
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i read this one. "tragedy and hope." it was written in the early 1960s but a well respected professor who taught at georgetown, harvard, princeton. he was all over. his name was carroll quigley. he has mentored people from every president for i don't know how many years. he was also very close mentor to bill clinton. in fact, i believe he was the guy who helped bill clinton become an rhode scholar. he had a better idea than the doomsday device or m.a.d.d. in this book in 1962, '63, somewhere in that area, he said i've working on it and i've just play admin mall role in it. i figured out a way and we put it in and i'm told i can now tell the world what the device is that will stop us from having an all-out world war. the tragedy is world war. the hope was an end to all wars.
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how did they do it? instead of tying everybody to a master compute they're showed we're going to blow everything up, they decided to tie everybody's econo econom together. no one would go after europe or come after the united states because we'd collapse. if we could tie our economies together. this came out in the early '60s. he said you will no longer see any wars that are full, fought out full force. there will be no clear victors or losers anymore. early '60s this came out. think about it. have you seen any real winners or losers in vietnam, gulf wars, afghanistan with us or russia? there hasn't been a big war anymore. it's much ral assured destruction. if someone launches nuclear weapons we launch one back. mutu
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mutually assured destruction. wally assured -- mutually assured economic destruction. no weapons involve. just money tie it all together. leave the past and now i'll explain why we're in so much trouble. we have to go to the future. go around the globe. show you what is happening now in greece. over in europe, the economy is failing. their debt is more than twice what russia owed when it defaulted in '98. the unrest is now beginning to boil over. the people are striking. the unions there are saying no cuts to anything that we have. riots and violent outburst. it's ugly. sore s george soros, of all people, proprogressive who advocates for the e.u. policy and global government acknowledges now that it's not just greece in trouble. it's spain, italy, greece, portugal, and ireland. who are also floundering.
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of course, soros' solution is more intrusive monitoring. okay, big brother, soros, i don't know what it means but i don't think i want any of that. so you have all of these countries going down in domino effect. we're starting to see now people are freaking out, wait a minute, wait a minute, what is happening in europe? apparently, their economies are all tied together. it's almost like we're all interdependent on each other. oh! wait a minute, yeah, that's right! to stop nuclear war we could just tie all of our economies together. who would have seen this coming? who would have seen this coming when this coming, when all we were trying to do was stop nuclear annihilation. it's like george soros type global master planning idea is horrible. when we're all tied together, when one falls down, we all
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fall down. if america falls economically, the entire world will fall. if china falls, the world falls. europe falls, the world falls. got it? it's the reason we now hear on television it's the phrase, "it's just too big to fail." nobody explains why. they don't explain what does that even mean? i just have. if these countries go down it was designed for a different reason entirely for the entire system to go down. one person said it clearly. i think it was sincere but maybe he acted shocked because he doesn't know history or how or why the system was put together. right after tarp, everything was going on, on congressman on c-span said this. watch. >> if they had not done that, their estimation was that by 2:00 that afternoon, $5.5 trillion would have been drawn out of the money market
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system of the united states. would have collapsed the entire economy of the united states. within 24, the world economy would have collapsed. now we talked at that time about what would happen if that happened. it would have been the end of our economic system and our political system as we know it. >> glenn: okay. that's the most honest thing i've heard on television. that goes back to this. they didn't see what we're going through now. maybe they did. i don't think so. they didn't see it coming. they were trying to stop world war. so now we have to decidecide, cn we save things like the banks or greece? i personally don't think we can. i don't think it's healthy to. others do. the question should be now: should we save them? now knowing what i just told you, that if we don't everything collapses, i mean it's designed to collapse, should we save them? your gut instinct is yes, we should. hello!
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we should. now let me introduce you to somebody else from history. this is an economist you probably never heard of because he's been practically erased from the history books. he was a russian. his name was nikkeli kondrakia and is credited with popularizing -- it's so popular with the people i hang out with -- the wave theory on capitalism. 1925, writes a book major economic cycles. basically, the wave theory -- hang on, i need my pipe. the wave theory was a capit capitalism for pattern of ups and downs an long waves average 40 to 60 years. well they always show a turn-around. let me explain what it means. here is a guy in russia. stalin comes to him and says, "what is better, communism or capitalism?" you're stalin, what do you think you'll say?
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kondratiev says let me think about it. so he studies capitalism. communism. he comes up with a wave theory. okay? he says to stalin, you know what? i've been thinking about it and i think it's every 40 to 60 years you have this cycle. let me explain hit the way. let's start here. this is winter. economic winter. it's really what we're at the beginning of right now. this is when everything is just cold and nasty. okay? there is nothing going on. people start to lose hope. they're like well, what is it? this is the great depression. okay? then there is springtime. this is -- i'd say this started in probably 1947 with us. springtime. it just starts coming up and everything is exciting. this is where the phrase --
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remember, you've heard this -- "green shoots." green shoots because it's spring here economically. then you get into a season of summer. where it doesn't seem like anything can go wrong. you are in summer. it's always going to be like this. we're always going to go to the beach. we're always going to go to the pool. it's so great! 1970s really to 1990s probably, 1990. here is, here is summer. when america can do no wrong. then you hit fall. probably 1990, probably '95 till now. the leaves start to turn, you see things like debt and things that aren't working. you say wait a minute, this
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doesn't seem good. it doesn't seem like it's right. but you have such arrogance from summer that you just don't believe that the leaves will ever turn so you think it is always going to be this way. going to be okay. going to be okay. at the end of autumn, you hit winter. only at the end do people freak out and try to save it. his theory was stalin and communism would always come in at this point. and push money up. and the state would do things like i don't know, buy general moths. they'd push it up. it doesn't matter. you can't stop trees going into hiber ration and it's -- hibernation and it's bad. it's important for the trees to go in hibernation. it's okay.
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1938, condratiev. i love this. he he's thrown in prison. tried on the same day he was sentenced to prison they executed him. stalin said, no, i don't like your wave theory. we're no longer allowing the natural dips to happen. i'm telling you that the argument coming in the near future will be that capitalism isn't working. we need to try something else. the problem with the argument we're not a capitalist country. we have haven't been for some time. we continue to prop things up. we're not allowing the capitalist system to clear out. what is so free about a government that takes over car companies and banks and healthcare and they control prices and cap salaries? that is not a free market. this must go in cycles. we disturbed the natural
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order of things so we're not free. and people are going to say, hmm, revolutionaries are going to say we've got to try something different because this doesn't work. the paradigm is about to shift. because we're all tied together, intentionintentionall specific reasons the old fix won't work it anymore. everybody knows it except for us in america. china gets it. tomorrow night, joshua cooper ramo doing a different show tomorrow and you don't want to miss this one. he is in beijing and we talk from time to time. he lives over there. he says, "glenn, it's exciting over there." they're all looking at what are the possibilities, what is going to happen. they're concerned about instability. they know what is coming but thinking about how do we redesign. here in america, we're not. massive fansormation is about to happen. they are excited about it and
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we're just hanging on by our fingernails. not everybody in the administration, government or america is oblivious to this fact. obama administration know it. radical progressives know it. this is the window of opportunity and they're thrilled. the only way to survive this is to pick a radical. these guys were radicals as well. free radicals. think outside the box. may i be so bold to say cut spending in half. radical idea. reduce the size of government in half. flat tax. of 12 to 15%. here is what happened. while the rest of the world and europe is on fire and begin to crater because remember, we're all tied together, somebody like george soros and all the entrepreneurs of the world need some place to put their money. entrepreneurs need to go to redesign. they're going to go to china if we don't wake up.
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we have always been the most stable free nation on earth. as the rest of the world craters, if we get government and taxes out of the way and we tell the world we're serious about not racking up debt, money will look for a place to go. if we have low taxes, minimum regulation, maximum freedom, money from all over the world will lead the burning economies of the world and rush to safe havens of america over china. we can get the best minds and the best capital and the best workers in the world here. we will reinvent the world of tomorrow. if we are stable with minimum government intrusion. economic incentives for people to come here. right now, we're headed in the wrong way. we have to be the thinkers we once were. the innovators who perfected the assembly line, who thought out of the box and who discovered vaccines. the people who didn't throw their hands up in the air. do you remember this as a kid? this is apollo 13. apollo 13, houston, we have a
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problem! when we were kids can, and this took off, we didn't know that they may not make it back. they had to look inside their capsule and find things that were never designed to bring them back. use them in ways they weren't meant to be used. just to get home. they made the impossible possible. this is who we are. we have to choose to be those people again. we have to roll up our sleeves. think out of the box. and innovate our way out of this mess.
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>> glenn: all right. this show, this is, this is the most ridiculous show on television. the kondratiev wave. we're going for the ratings, aren't we? tragedy and hope. global economies are all tied together. this is from the 1960s. it was well-intended. i disagree it with, but it was well-intended. to stop nuclear war and world war. meaning, if somebody goes for all-out war, they'll fall and collapse their economy, because they're trying to collapse the economy of somebody else because we're all tied together. it's now called
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globalization. okay? how does this actually work and what does it mean? david buck neabucbucker, adjunc professor at teacher's college. the last break, do i have it right? >> it's right. the cycle works that way and the reality is we've seen examples of how they tried to bolster that and how it failed. >> glenn: this is pushing money into it to try to keep -- >> yeah, we saw this in 2000-2001 with the airlines. the airlines needed a bail-out. they claimed they needed a bail-out. the government bailed them out and they were in bankruptcy by 2004, 2005. >> glenn: happens every time. here is what i want to come to you with, david. the idea we're all interconnected and i think this is an important thing for people to understand. because what you see in europe affects us. >> that is the globalization concept. we viewed it as the up-side. >> glenn: the down side is
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this. i want to go to the chalkboard and you explain what this is. this idea that we're all connected. it doesn't matter -- i said start if greece. >> greece is where we're going. going down right now. >> glenn: but these are all interchangeable countries. doesn't matter. >> absolutely. >> glenn: help me out on the -- start at greece. >> as you shift from greece, france has a huge connection to greece. regardless of the fact it's part of the e.c., it's connected by its exposure. you see the $79 billion worth of exposure. when greece goes down, there is going to be an impact on france. >> glenn: when greece goes down, we're just using these -- >> it could be any country. >> glenn: more than france, et cetera, et cetera, so back off on these examples. france goes down. this week in france. then people will rush to bail-out france because france can't bail, that won't work. >> larger country, you've got germany that comes in and we
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make the assumption germany is there to bail out france as part of the e.c.. >> france if they were going to bail out greece, which i think they said no, to right? >> correct. >> glenn: right. it makes them -- they know they're down this line. so to give money here would have helped them if they would have believed it. >> germany had resistance. the people said no, no, no. we're not going to do that. >> glenn: got it. 8% of import comes from france so that affects germany. >> you get a domino. >> glenn: then the u.k. imports 13% -- >> their exchange is 13% with germany, you start to get the impact there. >> glenn: these countries are already weak. >> not only are they weak, they're -- the pull, the drag, the gravitational pull from greece, insignificant if you look at it on the global basis, it's very small. it started to create a momentum. you pull france, now france has to grab harder and germany now, or whatever country. >> glenn: yeah, yeah, yeah. >> the u.k. you get momentum like a snowball. >> glenn: the u.k. is already in delicate shape. >> they have a tough time. >> glenn: got it. they're the third largest
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holder of our treasutreasury. >> this is a tough one for us now. >> glenn: so now they fall, we fall, we fall, china falls. so this is the truth that nobody in the media is -- >> it is a snowball. >> glenn: right. >> it starts very small but with each pull down it grabs and pulls more pieces of it. >> glenn: so now let me go to -- we have to wrap up? i was going to a happy solution. can we -- well, you're going to have to wait for happy solution i guess. david we'll have you back. i want to talk to you about the solution, one thing we're talking about on the american revival. david will come with me in orlando and phoenix. tickets available at glennbeck.com. we are talking about not only this, but the solution. >> impact, what it does. >> glenn: it's an easy solution. we just have to be brave you have to do it. thank you. >> good to be here. >> glenn: i'll find out the ticket information and everything else for the american revival at
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glennbeck.com. we'll be right back. the top of .
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now back to glenn. ♪ ♪ >> glenn: all right. by the way, don't miss tomorrow night's program right here on the fox news channel at 5:00. we have incredible, we have three people on tomorrow.
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i don't usually have guests. we have three people on at once, the whole hour. it is amazing. amazing what you will see and learn tomorrow. all right. i told you we're coming to a time that circumstances dictate we think out of the box. that's what tomorrow's show is about. we're not the only ones that know this. my happy solution i was going to talk to david about and i will in the coming days i favor cutting taxes. i mean dramatic. not like bush stuff. i mean dramatic. and dramatic spending cuts like oh, i don't know, calvin coolidge. the other side's ideas are not even spending less. they're a massive expansion of government. and the redistribution of wealth. americans are not prepared to accept, i don't think either of these ideas and less prepared to accept a marxist kind of country. we've sort of been conditioned over the past couple of hundred years to be a tad skeptical of government
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power. so to implement the radical ideas you have to do one of two things. one, you can wait for a crisis and then force it down everybody's throats in a panic. or some sort of nuclear option. for that, you need radical thinkers very close to you that already have developed the plans and can jump in at a moment's notice. when there is an emergency, you jump in. the second way is to do it bit-by-bit, to constantly main stream the radical ideas over a long period of time until they don't sound so crazy anymore. this is the foundation of the glorious return today of van jones. you remember him? everybody's favorite self-described communist revolutionary, now on his comeback tour. we know his views are radical. we've covered them here endlessly. the van jones social calendar, however, has been packed lately. he's just made a speech at columbia, which is real aly
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no big deal. they'll let any dirt bag speak there. after all, wasn't the president of iran there? yeah. then jones made a speech at phillips exeter academy in new hampshire. what could possibly make a parent happener than high school age child hearing an address from disgraced revolutionary? is that part of the no truther left behind program? i don't know. next up, jones gets the naacp image award. one of their highest honhonors. usually this thing goes to people who accomplished something. champions like serena and venus williams, people breaking barriers like condoleezza rice or someone really big like the first black president. i wasn't aware that the few months of advocating for invisible green jobs before you exit your post in public disgrace qualified you for one of the awards.
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what do i know? they didn't ask me to vote. jones will also be at -- i kid you not -- princeton woodrow wilson school of public and international affair affairs. [ snickering ] kind of a glenn beck 5:00 smart joke. woodrow wilson and van jones, who would have seen that comin coming? he is going to hang out with senator kirsten gillibrand from new york. whoa! we should ask can her as a new york senator how she feels about the government blowing up the world trade cent center. they are going to be at a green's job forum. plus he has a new job at the exact place we told you we would end up at. the hard left soros funded progressive think tank/arm of the white house, the center for american progress. how close are they to the design of the white house
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policy? it's headed up by john pedesta. love this chap. he is great. john even announced the hiring of van jones. this is how they describe what he's been up to lately on their own website. as the surge, as cochair of president obama's transition, where he coordinated the priorities of the incoming administration's agenda. especial special interest group, coordinating agenda, oversaw developments of the policy and spearheaded the appointment of the major cabinet secretaries and political appointees. oh, is that all you've been doing there? the ultra left think tank with soros. brave you who thought our president got rid of jones because he didn't want to sel self-evolve 9/11 truther working on his policies.
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it's basically tiger got caught in bed with an exotic dancer and in response, installed a stripper pole right there in his guest house while leaving the ski -- key at scores. we know jones is close to the action. now remember how he reacts to a crisis in capitalism. >> how is capitalism working for you? how is that capitalism working for you this year? >> glenn: okay. he doesn't like it. that's the attitude. we have to look at other things because the evil capitalism isn't working out for us. please, if you d.v.r.s the show go back to the beginning 20 minutes of the show write talk about what is coming. a lot of people probably think i'm upset about all of, this but i'm not. i didn't want people to fire van jones. i don't ask can van jones to shut up. i want him to be heard loud and clear. i want places like the center
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for american progress to unveil what progressivism really is. there is no better way to do that than hirer a revolutionary communist. to excuse his blaming our government for the 9/11 attacks and embrace the defense of cop killer munia abu-jamal, to struggc snuggle ua man who admits the green movement is a step to destroy "the exploation and op regulation of capitalism." i think it's a fantastic thing. i don't know how much money he's making. but the fact that we can continue to be reminded of what he believes and those in the administration believe, how he's intertwined those beliefs with progressivism and this presidepresident, to m that's worth every dime he's being paid.
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>> glenn: toyota executives were dragged into congress today. >> i am deeply sorry for any accident that toyota drivers have experienced. >> glenn: is there any bigger waste of time than congressional hearings? seriously. the only thing america ever learns from the hearings is which congressman or senator is, you know, is the best one at hogging the camera. don't take this the wrong way.
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toyota, sticky gas pedals. really? i mean, the only problem i can think of that would be worse is i don't know, cars that spontaneously blow up. you should be sorry. and i think they are. if i'm not mistaken, congress has -- what do they call it in the legal circles -- conflict of issues. this is like shell with a kangaroo court and exploiting exxon executives on live television. they're competitors. the government now owns g.m. and chrysler and they're taking the opportunity to annihilate their competitor. they sevensi si eve evensicked n them. they raided three toyota suppliers yesterday. why don't we just send in the ground troops? toyota screwed up and screwed up bad, but i don't think toyota would be in business very long if they just allowed that random acceleration feature to persist, do you?
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how about we let the free market work it out? do we really need congress, the direct competitor of toyota to correct the problem? another reason for the full-scale assault. unos. toyota is not bogged down by the unos. they don't like that. they passed g.m., toyota, to become the largest auto maker in the world. what a better way to save union jobs than publicly slaying the new giant and hoping people will buy a g.m. instead. i know chrysler and g.m. have big pensions to pay for, on every added car. they have to add it in the price of the car, which makes them not so competitive. wow. hmm. wouldn't it be amazing if everyone started suing because congress made a huge deal out of it, everybody starts mass lawsuits to teach toyota a lesson. they will probably have to add that in the price of a
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car which would make them competitiv competitive. er we could make it go away talking about union stuff. suddenly, this statement from congress doesn't look so laughable. >> guess what that liberal will be all about? this liberal would be about socializing -- would be about -- >> glenn: yes? hmm? >> basically taking over. >> glenn: oh, boy, that's worse. >> and the government running the company. >> glenn: much, much worse. quiet. inside voice. completely unrelated news, chrysler is recalling minivans because of an issue with air bags. i can't wait to see those congressional hearings! ♪ >> the number of flu cases will soon be on the rise. and with the recent onset of the h1n1 virus, many people are concerned about their health
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and safety. we can all fight the flu virus by taking four simple steps. number 1: get vaccinated every year. number 2: if you do have the flu, stay home so you avoid spreading it to others. number 3: always cover your sneezes and coughs. and number 4: wash your hands frequently. [running water] for the latest information in flu prevention tips, please visit flu.gov. in flu prevention tips, please visit flu.gov.
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>> glenn: america, are you ready to be talked down to again by the administration? pip, pip and all the rest. valerie jared, one of the president's top advisor advisor last week, jared was asked by a smart man in a snappy bow
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tie, the administration would consider drafting up some sort of a booklet on healthcare. you know, for dumb, dumb, dummies, including those people in tea party, that riffraff that just doesn't get it. here is what she said -- >> if the obama administration -- and i'm ask this of you -- could write some much simpler booklets on housing foreclosure, of the healthcare bill, wall street collapse, whereas a typical person including those in the tea party, et cetera, could understand the basics of it, because i feel that many of them simply don't, do you think it is an analogy and -- >> i think it's an excellent analogy. hope and change were so catchy because it was very simple and something that everybody understand the definition of. death panels were catchy because nobody knew what it meant but it was really bad. part of what your challenge is to find a simple way of
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communicating. >> glenn: yeah, i think -- did i mean she just admitted that the really super smart obama voters who are like brains of this big they have to carry them in luggage sometimes, extra brains for extra people. didn't she admit they voted for barack obama because the hope and change thing was so simple? if they're so smart, next election put up bumper stickers, obama obama: because rich people have to much 22-7s. it's a pi joke. not a real pie, mathematical pi! ha, ha! jarret also points out that president obama doesn't need people like tea party -- blood will shoot out of your eyes. doesn't need people like tea parties to correct him. why? listen.
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>> glenn: wow! he's just so bright that he sees his errors immediately. maybe if he were a tad less smart he could see his errors before he made them, or does that mess up the time-space continuum? i love this. he's just so bright, you know that is a burden for him. oh, yeah. yes, it is. it must be so hard to be so much smarter than everyone else. what a burden having to make little coloring books for those guys. obama's brilliance includes bill mar. yeah, they're brothers in brilliance. bill mar also thinks very little of those americans. listen to this.
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>> glenn: i wish i was bright enough understand that man. americans aren't bright enough to understand the issues. they don't care about policies. so bill marr is saying shanghai them. into whatever you want. maybe you could do a nuclear option. just jam it down their throat. make a decision and stick with it. they'll never know the difference! they just want somebody strong. this is so weird, bill marr, because i remember in history, there have been several examples of this, but this has been tried a few times. people aren't smart enough. they need someone to take care of them. just look and act strong and they'll be popular. yes, that's right. that worked out well, didn't it? pip, pip and all the rest. ooo
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two of the most amazing storious i'll ever read about in history, because progressives tend not to mention them. revolutionary debt bomb and america's forgotten depression. how the founders forgot their debt bomb and how americans have come out of depression before, but not with fdr. it ended a lot faster. read about it in the free e-mail newsletter at glennbeck.com. tonight at 3:00 a.m., don't miss "red eye," a three-part interview with

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