Episode Transcript
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0:00
Well, as we approach the 2024
0:02
election, I'm devoting a series
0:04
of episodes to the Glenn Beck program podcast.
0:07
Their conversations with presidential
0:10
candidates. My job, so
0:12
you know, is not to help or hurt any
0:14
candidate. There is no agenda except
0:16
to ask fair questions that are
0:18
important to the American people.
0:21
We need candidates to be crystal
0:23
clear about who they are and
0:25
what they stand for.
0:27
I've been watching the debates. I get very
0:29
little out of that. These episodes
0:32
will provide essential conversations.
0:34
You definitely will not hear on
0:37
a debate stage.
0:39
Now, today's guest is committed, and
0:42
he's committed an unforgivable sin
0:44
to the far left, at least.
0:46
He's a committed American, even though
0:48
he's black and he's a Republican.
0:52
He is the Senate's only black
0:54
Republican.
0:56
He's been called vile,
0:57
unrepeatable things. And of course,
1:00
all of these names come from liberals.
1:03
Turns out the same people who spend their time ranting
1:05
about systemic racism and the evils
1:07
of whiteness also happen to be incredibly
1:09
racist themselves.
1:12
He has a.
1:14
An inspirational and incredible
1:17
spirit of optimism. He says
1:19
that it's his grandfather who picked cotton
1:21
and never learned how to read. Got
1:23
to see his family go from cotton to Congress.
1:26
His grandfather used to tell him, you can
1:28
be bitter or you can be better, but
1:31
you can't be both. He's a
1:33
huge advocate for people to, quote, be
1:35
able to agree without disagree and
1:37
without being disagreeable.
1:40
Today, we're
1:42
going to sit down and listen to the senator
1:45
from South Carolina, Tim
1:47
Scott. It is never
1:49
fun to think about the unthinkable, but
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somebody has to do it. And we
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3:07
Senator,
3:09
good to see
3:11
you. Glenn, thanks
3:14
for having me. You
3:17
bet. Yeah, you look sharp.
3:20
Thank you. So do you. I'm not wearing a red
3:22
power tie. Well, you know. Can
3:24
I ask you just a frank question?
3:32
I've been watching the debates. Yes.
3:35
What the hell was that last debate? Yes.
3:38
It was... I mean, did you get anything
3:40
out of it? Well, I think I got a little
3:42
more out of the second one than I got out of the first one. The first
3:45
one was an absolute food fight. The second one
3:47
was better, but not much better. The truth
3:49
is, we're not learning anything about
3:51
what separates the candidates and why one
3:54
of us should become the nominee of
3:56
the great opportunity party. And frankly, that's
3:58
disappointing. I'd love to see...
3:59
been and thankfully we will spend some
4:02
time on not only the underlying issues
4:04
of the 60 second soundbite but
4:06
with philosophy that undergirds
4:08
that 60 second soundbite. That's where
4:10
the magic is made. The magic is
4:13
actually not magic. It's
4:15
typically hard work pressed
4:18
down, shaken together and then it runs
4:20
over the boundaries according to Luke 6.38
4:23
and then you see the benefits of that hard
4:25
work over time. If we had
4:27
that opportunity to see the summation
4:30
of a 60 second answer because of the
4:33
understanding of the underlying principle, then
4:35
we'd be cooking with oil. By
4:38
the way, great opportunity party. Did
4:42
you make that up? I didn't make it up. I'm sure I got
4:44
it from someone but at the end of the day. I've never
4:46
heard that. It's the most important transition
4:49
that's happening before our very eyes. One thing
4:51
about the grand old party is
4:53
that it does not, the roof
4:56
is not wide and large enough for
4:58
the great opportunity party to emerge. We
5:01
have to have the great opportunity party. The great opportunity
5:03
party is a party driven by principles. Its
5:05
focus is not on populism, it's on principles
5:08
because those principles have undergirded human
5:10
flourishing for all of human history and
5:13
they come from the gospel. When you understand
5:15
those basic principles. Let's go through
5:17
them. I think most people don't know
5:19
what those principles are. That's why we're in the trouble. What
5:22
are the principles? One of those principles for me
5:24
starts with, it's 2
5:26
Corinthians 10, 4 or 5 that says
5:28
take these thoughts captive
5:31
that exalt itself against the Lord
5:33
basically is what it says. Paraphrasing.
5:36
What that basically means is there's something called absolute truth.
5:39
It is a foundational principle on which
5:41
this country was born. The
5:43
idea of America is that there is an absolute
5:46
truth. You
5:49
cannot have an objective standard because
5:52
everything is relative. When everything is
5:54
relative, you get these people in 2023
5:56
who say, oh my truth
5:59
and your truth. There is no truth in my
6:01
truth and your truth. There are experiences
6:04
but there isn't a truth. The truth has to
6:06
be absolute. It has to apply consistently
6:09
throughout all of the universe. And without
6:12
that simple gospel truth,
6:14
you cannot have an objective standard.
6:17
So you can say, my truth is, America
6:19
is a great place. And somebody else can say,
6:23
my truth is that America is an oppressed
6:25
state.
6:27
But what's the principle truth behind
6:29
it? And those are your experiences,
6:31
leads you to the conclusion that America is... And those
6:33
experiences can absolutely be
6:35
real. Well, this is where I'm
6:37
going to love this part of the conversation. I hope we continue this
6:39
way. Our emotions
6:42
are real. They're just not real accurate.
6:47
One of the foundations of this truth
6:49
known as America is
6:52
that we are the greatest nation on God's screen
6:54
there. It's because we sought to do what no other
6:56
country's ever done, which is to be
6:58
born through a declaration of independence
7:00
that says
7:03
that we have things that don't come from each
7:05
other. Because there's a higher power
7:08
that gave us certain inalienable rights,
7:10
life and liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Pursuit
7:13
of happiness is in many ways
7:15
embedded in this notion of the rule of law because without
7:17
the rule of law, the strong take from the
7:19
weak, period. America
7:21
is unique that we believe something
7:24
far greater, far more
7:26
powerful than the strong take from the weak, that
7:29
there are boundaries, there
7:31
are legal limits. That
7:34
is unusual. That
7:36
says that the weak has
7:39
a right to life, born
7:42
or unborn. It says that the
7:45
kid who's living today in rural
7:47
Iowa understands that there is a playing
7:50
field called America that if you
7:53
just... The mayor
7:55
of Dallas, the new convert to the Republican Party said
7:57
it today. If you play by the rules... understand
8:00
the maze and respect law
8:02
enforcement, your chances of succeeding
8:05
in America, pretty darn good. That
8:07
works in rural Iowa or
8:09
any city of Chicago if
8:11
you have
8:13
absolute truth and objective standards. And
8:15
the big thing is you don't have them anymore.
8:17
So people would say that I don't
8:20
have that because I don't have the
8:22
education, I don't have the family, I don't
8:24
have the opportunity. I didn't either.
8:27
I'm here to celebrate the
8:29
goodness of America, not because I was
8:31
born with a silver spoon. Mine was plastic.
8:34
And I grew up with a father in a household
8:36
who was there to teach me all the things
8:38
that you hoped that your father would teach you. I
8:41
missed that part of growing up. I
8:43
did have a strong, powerful
8:45
mother who believed that prayer was the key, that faith
8:48
would unlock the door. And a mentor who came
8:50
along who really complimented
8:52
my grandfather's early teachings
8:54
that, you know what?
8:57
Getting bitter is a choice. Being
8:59
better is also a choice. You
9:02
can only choose one route. I
9:04
chose the route of being better because
9:07
there was someone there that helped me understand
9:10
that the harder I worked, the luckier
9:13
I got. John Moniz, a Chick-fil-A operator,
9:15
Citadel graduate, Goats Bulldogs in
9:17
South Carolina, one of the lessons that John
9:19
Moniz taught me when I was 15
9:22
years old, you got to remember that
9:24
I am the opposite of
9:27
the privileged person
9:29
growing up. I now know we're
9:31
all privileged. If you're living in America,
9:34
I have to tell you. You
9:37
are most of the most privileged people on the
9:39
planet. Yeah. Even,
9:41
I'm sorry, no matter where you're living. No, no
9:43
doubt. You're privileged but this
9:46
particular time, the
9:48
reason why we're having so much strife,
9:51
I think, is because we're absolutely
9:54
ungrateful. We don't recognize
9:57
how great our life is and we're looking
9:59
for something else.
9:59
a bitch about. Well, you're not wrong. I
10:02
think you're right. Here's how I would take
10:04
what you just said and say it in Timism. One
10:06
of the things I'd say is that we
10:08
are like a group of
10:11
people, not Americans, but
10:13
those who believe that victimhood
10:17
is the choice of drugs of today.
10:20
They're like geese lost
10:22
in a rainstorm. They
10:25
have a compass. They have
10:27
an internal guiding system that tells them which
10:29
way to go. The circumstances
10:32
around them have short circuited
10:34
what is innate within them. Americans,
10:37
we are exceptional because our DNA is different.
10:40
We've embedded within the construct of who we are.
10:43
It's just true north. We have a
10:45
compass that works, but when you start looking
10:47
around for feedback
10:50
as opposed to looking up for direction,
10:53
you find yourself like a goose lost
10:55
in a rainstorm. You start thinking
10:58
that what you see around you is more
11:00
important than what you have in you. Our
11:02
founding fathers should be celebrated as geniuses,
11:05
not canceled. Here's why.
11:07
The resources were not the brilliance
11:09
of America. It was this notion
11:12
that you have the right to be
11:15
free, to pursue
11:17
your definition of the American
11:20
dream, embedded in the DNA
11:22
of every human, blessed by God,
11:25
to be an American.
11:28
We not only have that in our DNA, we
11:30
have the opportunity for full expression
11:33
of that passion to be free.
11:35
But if you pervert it,
11:38
you actually see the
11:40
results
11:41
in Baltimore, D.C.
11:44
last night with the carjacking of a congress member,
11:47
to Los Angeles, Philadelphia, 50
11:50
arrested after a melee
11:53
of night. Listen, the facts
11:55
are simple.
11:58
Truth works.
11:59
else?
12:03
What's the role of government? Limited.
12:06
Our founding fathers got that right too. We have
12:08
certainly three different forms of government that we
12:10
could talk about. Article 1 Section 8 is a really good
12:13
place for us to start on the federal level but then
12:15
we also have the state and the local government. If
12:17
you take local you can break that out down into
12:19
two specific areas which are typically the county
12:22
level and then just the city or municipal
12:24
level. The truth of the matter is that
12:26
the less intrusive the government,
12:28
the better off the people seem to be. The
12:30
people who trust the government closest to them more
12:33
therefore why not find ways to
12:35
shift those resources and decisions back
12:38
to the local levels. Classic example,
12:40
I created Opportunity Zones
12:42
as part of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act
12:46
and one of the things I decided in my Opportunity
12:49
Zones I basically took Jack
12:51
Kim's idea of Enterprise Zones. Wanted
12:54
more money for people living in poverty
12:56
or in vulnerable economic situations. Jack,
12:59
been there, done that, got the t-shirt. Phew, he wanted
13:02
the government to provide more assistance.
13:05
Well, been there, done that,
13:07
got the t-shirt too. That didn't work out very well for me.
13:10
Poverty in my neighborhoods were sky high.
13:12
Unemployment for kids like me was
13:14
over 30%. I
13:16
knew the government was not the answer. Jack
13:19
really had a good idea but that
13:21
one part needed to be shifted. I shifted the
13:23
focus to the private sector. $75
13:26
billion from the private sector, not opinion
13:28
from the federal government, coming into the poorest
13:30
community designated by the governors,
13:33
not by Washington, on where
13:35
those locations should be has
13:37
led to an 8% increase
13:39
in wages, a 20% increase in
13:41
property values, less than 5% gentrification
13:45
and real opportunity
13:47
for poor kids who are really smart, really bright
13:49
but don't have access to the same opportunities
13:52
as wealthier kids. Why not just love the playing field
13:54
and bring opportunities back to those communities?
13:57
The government, when creating
13:59
the right incentives and then taking a step
14:01
out of the way, letting the free market
14:04
miracle work, you
14:06
know, the theory of the invisible hand, as
14:08
it works, we get better results for
14:10
the people who need it the most and the
14:12
people who have it get the incentives,
14:15
capital gains reduction to
14:17
play where they would not play before because
14:19
the risk was too high and the return was too low. If
14:22
you can reduce the risk and increase
14:25
the potential return, people
14:28
will take the calculated risk to do the right thing. Americans
14:31
always do the right thing, sometimes
14:34
after doing the wrong thing.
14:36
I'm a huge fan of the concept that we should
14:39
be buying products made here in America and there's
14:41
a lot, there's a certain level
14:44
of pride that comes from
14:47
making things and knowing you're spending your
14:49
money on things that are made here in America
14:51
and the money that you spend is going to land
14:53
in the pockets of hardworking fellow Americans,
14:56
but it's hard, it's really hard, just
14:59
about everything you buy
15:01
comes from someplace else on the globe or at least
15:04
has parts of it. All too often
15:06
it's China. That's
15:08
one of the reasons why I enjoy partnering
15:10
with companies like Grip6. With
15:13
Grip6, you're getting true American
15:16
experience, products you can count
15:18
on and they have all kinds of different products.
15:20
For instance, their socks, really great socks.
15:23
When you're supporting American ranchers,
15:26
it's because you're buying Grip6 socks. They
15:29
raise specially bred sheep that
15:31
produce the modern world, wool. Then
15:34
they shave it, they give it to another manufacturer
15:36
who will wash it, process it and
15:38
weave it into the socks that keep your
15:40
feet warm in the winter and cool in the summer. These
15:43
American business owners have accepted the
15:46
risk that comes along with only using
15:48
all American made products and American
15:51
labor. Check out Grip6 today.
15:54
Grip6.com
15:55
slash Beck.
15:58
So, so help me out on... capitalism
16:00
because if I'm listening to you and I'm 24 years
16:04
old, I've only seen capitalism
16:09
give it to the government, giving it to
16:11
the banks, the banks screwing
16:13
my mom and dad because they lost
16:15
their house in 08. That's
16:17
all I know. So
16:21
why would I want to give any money or
16:23
help have the private
16:25
industry come in and do anything?
16:28
Well you know this is a great question and a fair question.
16:30
This thing about a 24 year old whose
16:33
parents lost their house in 2008, I'm going to compare
16:35
that to the 7 year old
16:37
who had no house to lose
16:40
being me, living in poverty,
16:42
in an inner city community, government's
16:45
always around, trying to provide more resources,
16:47
more help and what was the result of
16:49
that? The stagnation.
16:53
Very static. The people in my
16:56
communities where I grew up most
16:58
often into generational
17:00
poverty. Why? The
17:02
result? Well the great society is a big part of that. Part of the great
17:04
society was that we were going to bring
17:07
checks into households if
17:09
the male, the father would leave
17:11
those households. The devastations
17:14
particularly in black communities can
17:16
be measured in unemployment, measured
17:20
in crime, measured in
17:23
fatherlessness and from the good
17:25
book Hope Deferred Makes the Heart Sick.
17:27
We can now look generations later, decades
17:30
later, 60 years later and
17:32
see that the devastation of the first
17:35
inklings of socialism
17:38
brought by the government into the poorest
17:40
communities, that devastation
17:43
is wreaking havoc all over
17:45
the country in these big blue cities. That
17:49
is avoidable for this 24 year old. I
17:52
brought this up to a couple of people and I'd love to hear
17:54
your opinion on it. How did
17:57
Lynn
17:58
Baines Johnson who was a who was absolutely
18:00
racist to the day he died, horrible racist,
18:03
the guy who stopped the Civil Rights Program
18:06
in the Senate in 1959, all
18:08
of a sudden becomes the architect
18:11
of the great society. I
18:13
am convinced that the people
18:15
that he worked with that produced that did
18:18
not necessarily have African
18:20
Americans' best interest in mind.
18:22
I think it was a poison
18:25
pill. African Americans
18:27
had a higher familiar
18:29
or marriage rate than white Americans
18:32
did. Absolutely. Going
18:34
into this, that's one of the things I said that
18:36
the founder of 1619 Project has been
18:39
just trying to destroy me on the
18:42
web. Congressman Bowman
18:44
called me Sambo because of my positive
18:47
comments the other night. Oh my gosh. I
18:49
mean, the kind of disgusting racism
18:51
that I'm hearing and feeling from people
18:54
who look like me, it would devastate
18:56
the average person. I've just had so much of it over
18:58
the last several years. When I wrote the tax
19:00
cuts and jobs, I think that's one of the three authors
19:02
of the legislation. They called me
19:04
a prop. When I decided I wanted to
19:08
stop the defunding of the police and start refunding
19:11
the police, they called me a token. When
19:14
I pushed back against Biden's agenda,
19:16
they called me the N-word. The one thing I see
19:18
from the radical left and frankly from the power
19:21
brokers who sometimes look like me is
19:23
that they are willing to use class and race
19:26
to hold on to their power even
19:28
at the expense of the American people.
19:30
It is disgusting what we're seeing
19:33
there. I will say that what we've
19:36
learned over time is that the
19:38
radical left says to people like me,
19:40
sit down,
19:42
shut up,
19:43
but don't forget to vote and we mean
19:45
blue. The
19:48
price is too high. You
19:51
think about LBJ
19:54
or Planned Parenthood
19:56
founded for
19:58
the termination. really exterminate
20:02
her perspective
20:03
of blind people.
20:05
And to see where they set
20:07
up their shops, to see what
20:09
they're selling. They're not in my neighborhood.
20:12
It's devastating and that's
20:14
why I feel like it is my
20:16
responsibility as a kid
20:19
who grew up in poverty, as
20:21
a kid who only had a mother
20:23
in the household, as a kid who had a mother who
20:26
barely had a high school education, who
20:28
worked 16 hours as a nurse at the attending
20:31
bed pens and enrolled in patients.
20:33
As a kid whose grandparents
20:36
endured racism
20:39
from the 1920s in the Jim Crow South,
20:42
to pretend that that family
20:45
history didn't
20:47
exist would be alive from the pit of hell. To
20:50
pretend that it is exactly that
20:52
way now would also be
20:54
alive from the pit of hell. So my
20:56
responsibility is to take the seriousness
21:00
of who we are as Americans, the seriousness
21:02
of the issues that we face and take a
21:04
look back and give people a snapshot
21:07
of what is possible in this
21:09
great nation coming from tough
21:12
neighborhoods where my friends were shot,
21:15
buried or locked up. When
21:18
you understand that this country
21:21
works for all of us in
21:23
the year 2023, we should not
21:26
be playing games with people's
21:29
emotions. We should be selling
21:31
socialism in a radical progressive
21:34
movement that has been proven wrong
21:37
not just in Cuba or today
21:40
in Venezuela, but in the poorest
21:42
blue cities in our nation. We
21:45
see the
21:45
results of socialism and
21:47
it's devastated poor
21:50
people.
21:51
it
22:00
have to get before you wake
22:02
up? And I would say that in Detroit in 1960 was
22:05
the greatest city
22:09
in the world. It was the
22:11
iconic city. This is how
22:13
you do it. Right. Totally agree. How
22:16
much, how many times do you have to vote
22:18
that way before you go,
22:20
this is not working out well. My
22:23
answer is stop. Stop. Don't
22:27
do it again. The
22:29
price is too high for your kids.
22:31
The price is too high
22:34
for the people that you love the most. The
22:36
price is too high
22:39
and there is no ROI
22:43
coming your way. We cannot
22:45
sell
22:47
baby Americans
22:49
the path of socialism. When
22:51
they are born they owe basically 90 something,
22:54
I say right around $100,000 per American born in
22:58
this country owed to the government. We
23:01
can do better. Nobody thinks that we
23:03
are going to have to pay that off. Please tell
23:06
me why this debt has
23:09
got to be solved, why we have
23:11
to stop spending. But say
23:14
it to the average person who
23:16
has never felt the effects of this
23:18
debt. Well, the short answer is
23:20
we are a country that brings in $4.8 trillion under
23:23
Joe Biden. He
23:25
plans to spend $7 trillion which
23:27
is 40% over spending. That
23:30
annual deficit, annual deficit
23:32
is $2 trillion. When you
23:34
see that as your future you should ask yourself,
23:37
do you ever have to pay it back
23:39
and do you have to service the debt? The answer to both
23:41
is yes. The immediate
23:44
question then is if I have to pay
23:46
the debt back, what is
23:48
that credit card payment
23:50
today? The credit card payment today
23:53
is an interest only payment that does
23:55
not include the last 11 rate
23:57
increases. Oh my.
23:59
The interest only is 572% or over 10% of all of the revenues
24:02
that we have coming in today. We
24:08
are paying out on interest only.
24:12
Therefore, the $33 trillion
24:15
worth of debt keeps going up without
24:17
being touched. Second thing you
24:19
should ask me is, well, what does that
24:21
look like in five years or in 10 years
24:24
on interest only? Well, if you
24:26
increase the interest rates
24:29
to reflect the 11 rate increases
24:31
we've had that... So this is
24:34
already, it's just coming. We haven't rolled
24:36
over all those pieces of debt. So
24:38
it's already here. What is it? It'd
24:40
be closer, between $1.2 and $1.5 trillion. In
24:45
a nation that only brings in $4.8 trillion,
24:47
said in a way that we understand, one out
24:50
of every $3 would go to
24:52
debt service interest only, not
24:55
to our military, which is about $850 billion, not from Medicare,
24:57
which is about $750 billion, not to Social Security,
25:04
which is $1.1 trillion, not to
25:06
veteran benefits, which is around $400 billion, or Medicaid, which
25:09
is somewhere around $300 billion, or Obamacare,
25:11
no one knows what that costs. Not
25:13
to any of those things. Not to the annual
25:18
expenditures, which we know, we think of
25:20
it as far as the annual corporations, about $1.7
25:22
trillion. None of that.
25:26
Just
25:28
for our debtors,
25:31
one out of every $3.
25:36
That's why you run for president,
25:38
to restore sanity to a country
25:41
that afforded me an opportunity
25:44
that I could not get
25:45
anywhere
25:46
on earth
25:47
but here.
26:00
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26:02
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27:01
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27:06
You don't seem to have either
27:09
party. We're
27:13
getting to the place to where I think
27:19
Charles Sumner was when he spoke
27:21
on the floor of the Senate in the 1850s
27:24
and said, neither of you, neither of you parties are
27:26
serious about anything. You run
27:28
and you say this and then you don't do it.
27:31
And that was the beginning of
27:33
the Republican Party, which was all
27:36
about stopping slavery. And
27:39
it was a group of people who actually believed
27:42
it. They weren't running
27:44
for just an office in power. They
27:46
wanted to do this. They
27:49
wanted to stop slavery.
27:52
Set people free. Right.
27:54
So I keep waiting
27:57
for that moment because I look at the GOP.
28:00
Honestly, I'm done. I'm
28:02
done. Never write a check to the GOP
28:05
ever again. Just
28:07
look at what they've done with the budget. Congress
28:11
has the purse strings. That's constitutional.
28:14
We have had both parties
28:16
in power. It started
28:19
in 2008.
28:20
If Congress doesn't take their power
28:23
back and say, no, you're
28:26
not using that money that way, we
28:28
have the purse strings. The entire
28:31
balance of the Constitution and
28:33
the separation of powers is gone.
28:36
It rests upon getting that
28:38
power structure back the way that
28:40
it's supposed to. So how are you going to do that? I
28:42
think you have to do this from, frankly, it takes the chief
28:44
executive of the United States, also
28:46
known as the president, the commander in chief, that
28:49
says that here are the limits. It's
28:51
not a phone and a pen.
28:54
Here's the Constitution. I'm going to abide by
28:56
it. I mean, the power of my
28:58
veto, I mean, the power of my bully pulpit,
29:00
but I'm not going to pass laws from
29:03
my desk. That is a problem
29:05
that we've been facing for, frankly, multiple
29:08
presidents. And that is a problem that can
29:10
be fixed by a president who says, there
29:13
is a greater good, there's a greater opportunity
29:15
for me to point the rudder of our
29:17
ship in the direction we want the nation
29:19
to sail. So you're saying that you
29:22
would not be frivolous
29:25
and write the kind of executive orders that have
29:27
been written? And, yes,
29:30
I'm saying that, but I go a step further. We
29:34
also have to have a president who reigns
29:36
in the bureaucracy that creates
29:39
rulemaking and they decide that those
29:41
rulemakings are laws. The SEC
29:44
is a classic example. I'm no fan of
29:47
Chair Gensler and probably anybody who's been on the before
29:49
banking committee knows that, including Chair Gensler
29:52
of the SEC. He's making decisions
29:54
about environmental policy as
29:57
the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
30:00
He's making decisions about ESG, DEI,
30:03
and the future of this country from sitting
30:05
at his desk. He wants to get everybody's
30:07
identifiable information, who makes a transaction
30:09
in the stock market. He wants to gather to one location
30:12
so that it's easier for people to cyber attack
30:15
us, I guess. I don't know what is that, but there he
30:17
is there. But it's that kind of
30:19
rogue behavior that if you appoint
30:21
the right people who want to actually be textualists
30:23
like we want on the Supreme Court, you want people who are going
30:25
to follow the law in every single
30:28
cabinet position. Getting that
30:30
would transform this nation and it
30:32
would restrain the bureaucracy who
30:34
believes all you have to do is outlive,
30:38
outlast a member of Congress and
30:40
they're not wrong. So getting
30:42
that right is
30:45
a job of a president who has a vision for
30:47
what this nation should be based on
30:49
what we have been. So
30:52
that's great and I agree with you. Everything you
30:54
just said. Donald Trump came
30:56
in and he came in
30:58
kind of a lone cowboy, not
31:01
popular with everybody. You'll
31:04
know, I mean, you've been a constitutionalist
31:07
for a long time. You're
31:10
an extremist according to a lot
31:12
of the people in the Republican Party. I agree.
31:15
You're an extremist. Yes. No,
31:17
you're a constitutionalist. I'm not a constitutionalist. You're
31:19
right. Exactly. But that's
31:21
the way they perceive you. Donald Trump took
31:24
shots from the inside and the outside
31:27
and they are currently trying to show everyone
31:30
this is what happens to you if
31:32
you dare cross us. Yes.
31:35
So how are you going to do it? Yeah.
31:38
Well, listen, I've been taking shots, as I said, from the work
31:40
that I've done on the tax code to working
31:43
on behalf of police reform to working on
31:45
behalf of pushing back on the cancer
31:48
that grows through this Biden administration. You
31:50
just have to be willing to take the shots and
31:52
frankly, push back. I
31:55
think we said this before we came on air, but the Congressman,
31:57
I think, is Conway from the guy
31:59
who pulled the alarm in the house just
32:01
the other day. He referred to some of my comments
32:03
that I made during the debate and said that I was
32:06
being Sambo, which
32:08
is about radical racist thought. He's
32:11
the guy who called you Sambo? Yes. Oh
32:14
my gosh. So disgusting. He reminds me of
32:16
what we would think of as a
32:19
plantation owner using the whip
32:21
to suppress the
32:23
thoughts of people that might
32:26
stand up and say that's wrong. In
32:28
modern America, in 2023, they'll
32:31
say plantation owners use
32:33
their words to suppress anyone
32:36
who looks like me from
32:38
standing up and speaking conservative
32:41
truths. This is the part
32:43
of the battle. When you stand up to that, standing
32:45
up to what the even our side, my
32:48
side, the radicals in Congress,
32:51
which would not of course be the conservatives, the
32:54
populace, that
32:58
is a challenge. It's
33:00
worth having. It's a fight worth having
33:02
for the soul of this nation. Our
33:05
soul is good. I think it was
33:07
Alexis de Tocqueville in the
33:09
1830s French temple that came to America
33:12
looking for the source of our greatness.
33:14
It was our goodness was the conclusion. Yeah.
33:17
He said it rang loudly
33:19
from the pulpits all across America. America
33:21
is great because she's good. However,
33:24
let's stop there for just a second.
33:27
Yeah.
33:29
I'm looking for the preachers
33:31
that are
33:32
ringing the bell from the pulpit. I'm
33:34
looking for the
33:37
black peer preachers who
33:40
will stand up to their own congregation
33:42
and say, I'm looking at my
33:44
own church to do the same. You
33:47
cannot be a member of good
33:49
standing. You cannot be and
33:51
call yourself a Christian if you
33:53
are associating yourself with people who
33:55
want to kill children. We could
33:57
even argue about when that light
34:00
begins but this celebration
34:03
of death
34:05
is immoral. Absolutely.
34:08
Where are they? I will tell you
34:10
that they're harder to find than any pulpit in America,
34:12
frankly, black or white. Yeah. And
34:15
that's part of the challenge that we have. We have to get back to fundamental truths, creating
34:17
a culture that protects and preserves life is
34:20
incredibly important. As a guy
34:22
who has a 100% voting record as a
34:24
conservative, pro-life conservative and a 100% pro-life
34:27
conservative. As per the United States,
34:29
I always want to shake your hand for that. Thank
34:31
you. Absolutely. Yeah, listen, I'm
34:34
on the campaign trail. I
34:36
speak in churches across this
34:38
country. I've had the privilege
34:41
of sharing the good news of the gospel. But
34:43
here's why I think this issue is so important. I've
34:47
taken two young ladies when I was in private
34:50
business for myself who worked for me,
34:53
who were both thinking about having an abortion. I
34:56
took them to the local crisis pregnancy
34:59
center because
35:01
I knew they needed advice that they couldn't get from
35:04
anywhere but people who have been where they are.
35:07
One decided to have an abortion, the other one chose
35:09
life. And the one that had an abortion, I think she was
35:11
about 22, 23 years old at the time, she
35:14
started writing poetry about the worst
35:16
decision she had ever made in her life. I
35:19
don't come at this purely from
35:21
a religious standpoint. I
35:24
watched two young ladies grapple
35:26
with the issue. I
35:28
watched them enter into the doors. One
35:31
made a decision for life, the other one says
35:33
it was the worst mistake she's ever made. I
35:36
will say this, having
35:40
the opportunity to win the hearts and minds of the American
35:42
people on such an important issue is our responsibility.
35:45
It is. And when you have the second
35:47
most powerful woman in all of the government, Secretary
35:51
of the Treasury Janet Yellen
35:53
walk into a banking hearing
35:56
to talk about labor force participation
35:58
rates and she's...
35:59
says that poor black
36:02
women will have a better labor
36:04
force participation rate if
36:06
they have an abortion. Oh my gosh. As
36:10
a kid who was raised in poverty
36:13
by a single black woman, I
36:16
ran down to the banking committee
36:18
and I asked her, I knew I misheard
36:21
her
36:22
and she repeated it.
36:25
Can you have some of the most powerful voices
36:27
in our country suggesting
36:30
that abortion isn't even
36:33
a decision you grapple with but it's a decision that
36:35
helps your labor force participation? With
36:40
tears rolling in my eyes and anger
36:43
in my voice, I thank
36:47
God Almighty that
36:49
my mother chose life. And
36:51
how dare you come down here and
36:54
tell vulnerable women of
36:56
any color of
36:58
the alternative
37:01
for
37:02
better economic outcome?
37:05
I have to tell you, it's not only
37:08
stunning, it is one
37:11
of the most racist things I can imagine
37:14
because
37:15
if that's the way you think of the labor
37:17
force, what about the white women? Right.
37:20
What about white women? Absolutely, all of them. That's
37:23
my whole point is this is something and what
37:25
happens and this goes back to the conversation of eugenics and
37:28
Planned Parenthood is that wherever
37:30
you see powerful people
37:33
willing to take advantage of the vulnerable
37:35
just because they don't look like you or
37:37
live where you live don't think it stays
37:40
there. Three
37:42
out of four African American kids are growing up in poverty
37:45
and in a single parent household. Now, 40%
37:48
of white kids growing
37:50
up in a similar fashion, working
37:53
class white folks. Why is that the case? Because
37:55
anytime you introduce socialism
37:57
somewhere, it's going
37:59
to spread.
37:59
red. Yeah. Our country
38:02
needs a firewall that
38:04
stops this damage from spreading and then
38:07
we reduce the damage.
38:10
You know, it seems like
38:12
there is always a constant battle running
38:14
between cyber criminals and the United
38:17
States government. Who can steal
38:19
the most from people? Well, I
38:21
think we're going to learn in the end. It is definitely.
38:24
Yeah.
38:26
The U.S. government take
38:28
home home title theft.
38:31
Home title theft is
38:33
the fastest growing crime in America
38:36
right now. And there's a good reason for it. It
38:38
is simple to do. Home
38:40
title theft. You also
38:43
don't catch the people usually because
38:45
you don't realize it until it's too
38:47
late. You know, you you go
38:49
to get a loan at the bank and you no longer
38:51
have your house or you're paying
38:54
your mortgage and then somebody else comes and
38:56
tries to kick you out. The sheriff is
38:58
there because you don't have the deed
39:01
to your home. You've been making
39:03
payments. You thought everything was fine. It wasn't.
39:06
Somebody else took it, took
39:08
your deed and then mortgaged
39:11
everything against that. So
39:13
what do you do? Home title lock. They
39:15
put a like a razor wire fence
39:17
around your home's title. The instant
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they detect any activity or tampering, they
39:22
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39:39
OK, I've got a ton of
39:41
questions that I have to know that I have to ask,
39:43
and I know we're limited on time, so
39:46
I just want to go through some standard questions
39:48
we ask all of them. OK, let's
39:51
see. Are you for or against the ongoing
39:54
aid to Ukraine? Well, I am for
39:58
us understanding what is America. America's
40:00
national vital interest in Ukraine.
40:03
Degrading the Russian military is the answer. Should
40:06
we continue to provide assistance to Ukraine? Yes.
40:09
At what level? Very debatable. Second
40:11
question is, should we do it with accountability?
40:14
Absolutely. Why? Acts
40:17
of evil that started in 2014
40:20
under President Obama when he
40:22
allowed for the incursion into Ukraine
40:24
that took Crimea has metastasized.
40:27
No, no, no, no. You know
40:29
this. If you don't, we'll spend some
40:32
time if afterwards. We
40:34
didn't allow that. No, no. Yeah.
40:38
We were part of overthrowing. Obama. Yes.
40:41
Yes, exactly. Yeah, I'm sorry. My
40:44
point though is Obama years devastated
40:47
Ukraine. Twenty
40:50
years after President Clinton
40:52
got the Ukrainians with a promise from America
40:54
to be their firewall
40:59
promises made promises unkept
41:02
and then you saw the manifestation of that through
41:04
the Obama years. The point for me is
41:06
that the China,
41:08
Russia connection started
41:11
before 2016. Let's
41:14
talk about China. Yes.
41:17
I
41:17
think they're going to go into Taiwan. I think
41:19
they want to. I think they are reticent
41:21
to do so because they're not militarily
41:23
prepared as of yet. They will be. They
41:26
will be. I think their stats I've been reading
41:28
and watching and talking to my best
41:32
friends from John Ratcliffe to many
41:35
others on the topic. Their military
41:37
capabilities, they hope to hit their apex
41:40
between 35. They suggested between 27,
41:42
28 they find themselves there. I
41:45
think that's a premature number but this
41:48
one that they hope that we can see the point.
41:51
I think making sure that Taiwan has
41:53
the military capabilities, the missile defense
41:55
systems you saw recently that they
41:57
came up with their own sub. nearly
42:00
a decade saying we can't rely on
42:02
people who say yes to subs but never deliver
42:04
them. We can't rely on on allies
42:07
we're going to do ourselves. It's that kind of ingenuity
42:09
and resourcefulness that you want to reward
42:11
with the kind of training that you've seen,
42:14
the joint training exercises that you've seen
42:16
out that we continue to provide that kind
42:18
of assistance to Taiwan.
42:21
I haven't seen since we switched to
42:24
you know police actions
42:27
and wars. I haven't seen a decisive victory
42:30
in a long time when it
42:32
counts
42:33
and I think that's because I mean
42:37
I think our foreign policy stinks
42:39
on ice. I think the State Department is wrong almost
42:42
every single time consistently.
42:44
Our presidents just follow the
42:47
advice and
42:49
I don't want to go to war with Russia. I don't
42:51
think anybody wants to go to war with Russia. Yeah
42:53
I think we've done a really good job of reducing
42:56
the likelihood of that by the by the degradation
42:58
that we've seen in the Russian military. That's really
43:01
good news. As of today they're
43:03
doing a nationwide drill
43:06
for nuclear weapons. Now that may be
43:09
posturing of course. Tomorrow
43:11
the United States is doing a EAB
43:16
test for the first time I
43:18
don't know on how many years sending
43:21
nationwide only done twice.
43:24
I mean I don't I I
43:28
think we are playing with matches
43:31
in a gunpowder factory.
43:34
One of the reasons why I respect
43:36
Ronald Reagan's peace through strength
43:39
doctrine is because it was so darn
43:42
effective. Yes. Overwhelming
43:45
force. It is the panacea
43:48
too much that ails us from a military
43:50
conflict perspective to the
43:53
extent that we understand and reinvest
43:56
in that single-minded approach of lethality
43:59
and coming home soon. safe, the less likely we
44:01
are to have to use the greatest resource
44:03
we have from a military standpoint and frankly
44:05
purging our military of all the social
44:08
experimentation that we've seen in the last few
44:10
years from the vaccine to gender
44:12
issues to abortion questions to ESG
44:16
and DEI. We have to purge all
44:18
of that out so that our men and women have one
44:20
single-minded focus that
44:22
they're really good at and that
44:25
would I believe help
44:27
reduce the likelihood of threat, not
44:29
increase the likelihood of threat. But you also have
44:31
to look at the fact that it's not only
44:34
Russia, when Jim Mattis was
44:36
on the Armed Services Committee, when Jim Mattis, the great general,
44:38
decided that we needed
44:42
to go from a counter-terrorism strategy
44:44
to a near-peer competition,
44:47
it was because of the
44:49
threats that he saw rising in China.
44:52
Listen, they have more warships than we have today but
44:55
their warships are not the same qualities as ours.
44:57
They have a couple hundred which is a
44:59
significant nuclear arsenal from what
45:01
I've been listening to
45:04
and reading and watching. They want to get to 1,500 by the
45:06
year 2020, 32, 32, 33. So
45:10
we know that the pressure and
45:12
then if you look at the Russian
45:14
military and nuclear arsenal, look
45:17
at Iran's objectives from a nuclear perspective
45:20
and you add in China's growing arsenal,
45:23
you have to ask yourself, where
45:26
is strength that reduces the
45:29
likelihood of this from becoming
45:31
one unit focused on us?
45:34
And it ain't appeasement,
45:38
it's strength. And that's why
45:40
when you see this administration talking
45:43
to Saudi Arabia about a deal with Israel
45:45
that may include a commercial
45:47
nuclear program, you guys are absolutely not. When
45:50
you think about the JCPOA under
45:52
President Obama, absolutely not.
45:55
We have to find a way to reduce the likelihood
45:57
of nuclear conflict in one
45:59
of the world. ways you do so is by shrinking
46:02
its footprint outside
46:04
of our country and making sure that we fortify ours
46:06
within the evolves of our country. So,
46:10
but maybe I'm on a different page
46:13
than you are and many of my
46:15
friends are. We'll
46:18
have conversations that I never dreamt
46:20
that we would ever have before and
46:23
their conversation, so you had one just yesterday
46:25
that said, can
46:29
you tell me how this
46:32
ends well for America? Can
46:34
you show me just on
46:36
the presidential race? Yeah.
46:39
Either side wins. The other side is going to
46:41
say they didn't trust it. If
46:44
you would win
46:48
the election, they would say it was
46:50
stolen or whatever. We
46:53
are in so much trouble
46:56
right now. The whole thing
46:59
is just a tinderbox.
47:02
If the Democrats win, Joe
47:04
Biden would win,
47:06
our side is
47:08
going to say, how is that even possible?
47:11
And it only takes a couple of people.
47:13
We also have war. We have
47:17
a federal reserve that is completely
47:20
out of control. Our budget is
47:22
completely out of control. Our Congress
47:24
is not working. No one's talking
47:27
to each other. We have the
47:29
outside, China, Russia. They
47:31
want us to collapse. I mean,
47:33
we'd be on the ground if this were Russia or
47:35
China because we did it before in Russia.
47:38
We'd be on the ground.
47:41
How does this,
47:44
you know, you're talking about in 2035,
47:47
I think there's a lot of people that go, how
47:49
about 2025? How do we make it to 2025? Yeah.
47:54
I think leadership matters, number one. The fact of the
47:56
matter is there's a way for us to rally this
47:58
country around. Frankly, a revival
48:01
in conviction that we can believe in each
48:03
other. The greatest threat to our country
48:06
does not come from China, does it come from Russia, does it
48:08
come from Iran, does it come from? It
48:10
really comes from internalism. So then... Here's
48:13
how we solve the problem. One of the
48:15
things I've been successful at doing in
48:17
this campaign and campaigns in the past
48:19
is finding a way to use common
48:21
sense conservatism to rally people
48:23
who don't vote for me to the same cause.
48:26
I'll give you two examples, one on the campaign trail and one
48:28
in the United States Senate. On the campaign trail,
48:31
I've been running ads in Iowa that basically
48:33
says four different things. Number one,
48:35
if you're able, bodied in America, you
48:38
work. Number two,
48:40
you take out a loan, you pay it
48:42
back. Number three, if you commit a violent
48:44
crime, you go to jail.
48:47
And number four, God made you a man,
48:49
you play sports against men. 95% of
48:53
Republicans say, heck
48:55
yes. 75% of Democrats
48:58
say, I agree.
49:00
65% I think it is of African
49:03
Americans agree with all four
49:05
points. 58% of millennials
49:07
agree with all the points. We
49:10
have to give this nation a vision
49:12
big enough to compel us to action.
49:15
And one of the ways that we do that I believe
49:17
is to look at the formation of this
49:20
nation and say that the idea of
49:22
America and the American dream
49:24
is alive, it is well. And let me give
49:26
you a grand vision of your
49:28
ability to achieve the American dream, your
49:31
version of it that you can achieve
49:33
it. And let me give you some points
49:36
to think through about what those
49:38
common core principles are
49:40
that builds the greatest society
49:43
we've ever known.
49:45
Let me see, we've only got a couple more minutes.
49:48
I'm DOJ.
49:51
The...
49:52
Weaponization of lady
49:55
justice, which should have a blindfold
49:57
on. I have never agreed.
49:59
When I was small, I remember Nixon
50:02
being impeached. And
50:04
then they pardoned him right away.
50:06
And I thought that was wrong. Now, Mike Lee and
50:09
I have talked about it before
50:11
Trump was impeached. And
50:13
we were talking about Clinton. And
50:15
I said, I think she belongs in jail. And
50:18
you know, with a trial and you know,
50:20
an actual, not a kangaroo
50:22
court, actual facts. And
50:25
if she's found guilty, she should go to trial. And everybody
50:28
should be at that standard. She said, Glenn, that's
50:30
what banana republics do. And I said, but there's
50:32
a point to where it gets so
50:34
bad. People are now, they're
50:36
trying to put Donald Trump in. And I'm actually
50:39
hearing people on the left say, if
50:41
he gets in, he'll put
50:43
people in jail. Well,
50:48
I want to know from you, not
50:51
from vengeance, but
50:55
if people at the highest
50:57
levels, if the people they were lying,
51:00
obstructing, breaking
51:03
the constitution, any of those
51:05
things, will you put them in jail?
51:07
Will you use your bully pulpit to
51:09
say they need to be tried?
51:12
Absolutely. Here's what we need. We as
51:14
a kid who grew up in
51:17
the 1960s and 70s, the one thing
51:19
I yearned for was fairness. Yes.
51:22
I wanted justice for all. I wanted lady
51:25
justice to wear a blindfold
51:27
and make decisions. To me,
51:30
as we first started this conversation off
51:32
of the concept of absolute truth, and
51:34
then I talked about the objective standard. The
51:37
objective standard is how you apply fairly
51:40
the laws of the land equally
51:42
to everybody in the country. If you
51:45
depart from that, you put a big
51:48
question mark. Yeah, on everything.
51:50
On everything, and this Department
51:52
of Justice under Merrick Garland has
51:55
been weaponized to hunt
51:57
Republicans, including the former...
52:00
president, but it doesn't stop there.
52:02
This Department of Justice referred
52:04
to parents attending
52:07
school board meetings as domestic
52:10
terrorists. They show up at
52:12
a pro-life activist home
52:16
with a SWAT team. At the exact
52:18
same time, Marisma
52:22
sits there
52:24
in file 13
52:26
for four years.
52:28
Thankfully, Congressman Comer, winning back
52:31
the majority, elections have consequences
52:33
and they do matter.
52:34
And
52:36
general as I call them, but his name is Senator Chuck
52:38
Grassley, working together to bring
52:41
more and more and more of this information
52:43
to the surface so that we
52:46
can restore confidence. I think the last
52:48
poll I saw said that 17% of Republicans
52:52
had confidence in our Department of Justice.
52:56
Everything's
52:58
gone. We've got trust in all of it. All
53:00
the institutions. All the institutions. And this is what China
53:02
is selling, by the way. China is selling
53:04
that the Western decline is
53:07
irreversible and they point
53:09
to the internal conflict
53:12
as example number
53:15
one. Okay. I've got 90
53:18
seconds. On
53:20
a scale of one to ten, how committed
53:22
are you to this? Ten. Restoring
53:28
fossil fuels. Ten. Okay. Stopping
53:31
all this EV garbage of
53:36
making sure no time, anybody
53:38
can vaccine mandate. Ten.
53:43
The CBDC, the Central Bank Digital
53:45
Currency. Yeah. Is it going to be
53:47
against it or for it? I need more information
53:49
about it. It's only against the whole notion that we're
53:52
eliminating the dollar. So I'm probably at 9.8
53:54
there with the need of .02 for learning
53:56
more about the more of the consequences. Border.
54:01
11. Closing the border, reinstating
54:03
the remaining policy, the remaining Mexico policy,
54:05
the asylum policy that requires you to seek
54:08
asylum contiguous with the country that's near
54:10
yours, finishing the wall for $10 billion
54:13
and not selling off the construction material
54:16
like this president and using
54:18
military-grade technology to stop human
54:20
trafficking and to stop fentanyl from killing another 70,000
54:22
Americans in 12 months.
54:28
Last question.
54:30
Donald Trump just called for the end of debates. He
54:32
just said there shouldn't be any more debates. Okay.
54:38
How do you see
54:42
any of you guys breaking
54:44
through and
54:47
is it important to stay even
54:50
though at this time
54:52
it looks clear he's the front
54:54
runner and there's nothing to change
54:56
on that? Yeah, the
54:59
short answer is absolutely, positively,
55:01
unequivocally it matters to stay
55:03
the course and keep telling the story of
55:06
the goodness of America. We need someone with
55:08
the power of persuasion. We've lost three
55:10
national elections in the row and
55:12
one of those three elections that we lost was January
55:15
the 5th. Everyone knows January the 6th but
55:17
January the 5th, 2021, losing one out of the two Georgia Senate
55:22
seats cost the American people $4
55:26
trillion in
55:28
unnecessary spending. That
55:30
devastation can be reversed by
55:33
having a red wave winning back the
55:35
Senate, expanding the majority in the House.
55:38
That will take me at the top of the ticket.
55:40
By doing so, we not only restore
55:42
hope and create opportunities, we restore
55:44
faith and America. We
55:46
are the city on the hill. We've got to tell
55:49
people,
55:49
shout it from the rooftops.
55:52
Thank you.
55:54
Yes, sir. Thank you, Glenn.
56:01
Just a reminder, I'd love you
56:03
to rate and subscribe to our podcast. Pass
56:06
it on to a friend. We'll see you next time. Bye-bye.
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