Willie Robertson, star of "Duck Dynasty," reflects on his journey from Italy to running Duck Commander. In Florence, he gained an appreciation for art and culture, but you'll never believe what his actual college degree was. His entrepreneurial spirit began early with Willie’s Worms. Influenced by his father, Phil, and supported by his wife, Korie, he embraced the idea of a reality show to spread the gospel. Discussing his new book, "Gospeler," Willie emphasizes the importance of active discipleship and connecting with others to spread faith, showcasing a story of hope, faith, and authenticity. In this episode, Willie shares the lessons he learned about business, the impact of family, and the importance of stepping out of comfort zones to make lasting connections. His journey from early entrepreneurial ventures to leading a multimillion-dollar hunting and outdoor business highlights the significance of resilience and vision. He discusses how his family’s authenticity, faith, and humor made "Duck Dynasty" a hit and stresses the need for believers to actively engage and share their faith with others. He also discusses the real-life situations that led to the hit movie “The Blind,” a biopic of patriarch Phil Robertson.
Willie Robertson's Wild Ride - Worm Farms to 'Duck Dynasty' Fame | The Glenn Beck Podcast | Ep 221
Autistic Kids Can READ MINDS? ‘Telepathy Tapes’ Doctor Reveals All | The Glenn Beck Podcast | Ep 273
Autism may not be a curse ... "it may be a blessing that we just don’t understand yet,” says Glenn Beck to groundbreaking neuroscientist Dr. Diane Hennacy, whose research into the telepathic powers of autistic children left the nation stunned in “The Telepathy Tapes” podcast series. The pair go on a mind-bending exploration into psychic phenomena, savant syndrome, the secret messages in our dreams, and the possibility of a spiritual meeting place for autistic children guarded by angels. Glenn says, “This will make you reconsider everything you think you know about autism, the brain, ESP, human consciousness, everything.” That is, only if we’re willing to leave “scientism” behind us and embrace the fact that reality is much more than the material world ...
This will CHANGE how you think about NUCLEAR WAR
The new Netflix movie “A House of Dynamite” has caused a stir at the Pentagon and led many Americans to change how they think about nuclear war. The film’s writer, Noah Oppenheim, joins Glenn Beck to address the controversy and explain why his movie ends the shocking way it does…
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: Noah, welcome to the program.
NOAH: Thank you so much for having me.
GLENN: You bet. I have to tell you, your movie, frustrating, because it ends. And I'm like, wait, there should be five more episodes.
This should just not be a 90-minute movie. There's so much more.
Really compelling the way you told the story. So congratulations on that. First question: Are there going to be sequels?
NOAH: Well, first of all, thank you very much. I really appreciate it. It means a lot coming from you.
There is no plan for a sequel. You know, we -- we wanted the movie to be a provocation, in the best sense of the word. You know, a provocation to a larger conversation about this nuclear issue, which I'm so glad to be having with you right now.
GLENN: Yeah. Was your primary source the Annie Jacobson book, or was that just one of many? Did you go to government sources?
How did you get all this information?
NOAH: We spoke to a wide variety of people, who had worked in places like the White House, the CIA, strategic command.
We -- you know, I had worked as a journalist, previously. And so new folks who had held these kinds of jobs, Kathryn Bigelow, who is the director of the movie had made Hurt Locker, Zero Dark 30. So she has extraordinary relationships in the national security world. And obviously, there is some incredible body of work that has been done over the past several decades.
Think tank folks, authors, journalists, et cetera.
And, you know, it's surprising how much -- a lot of this information is in the public domain. In terms of what procedures the government would follow. In -- in case of an attack like this.
And then a lot of it, you know, you can build by talking to sources. You know, much like you would do, if you were trying to report out a story or get to the bottom of something.
GLENN: You know, it's amazing to me, that most presidents don't ever ask for training on this.
They don't -- they don't do dry runs. This is -- you're the one person that could change the whole world. In 15 minutes.
And you're coming into it, most of them are coming into it, absolutely dead cold. If something would happen. They don't -- they don't know how it works.
And this is not something. I don't know how you would make the decision, in that amount of time.
NOAH: Yeah. Two of the most terrifying things that we -- that we zeroed on early was this question of sole authority and decision time. Right? So the idea that in the United States we live in a nuclear monarchy, the president of the United States has the sole authority to determine whether these weapons are used. It's not like he has to build any kind of consensus with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He has to decide. He has to decide under extraordinary time pressures.
So if a missile is launched from the Pacific theater. That part of the world. It's under 30 minutes to impact on the continental United States.
If a missile is launched off our coast by a Russian sub, for instance, it would take ten to 12 minutes. So you do have a scenario, in which one person has arguably the fate of all mankind in their hands, and they have a clock ticking. And, you know, depending on where they are, and what the target is. They're probably running for their life or being evacuated. Worrying about their own family.
And it's all put to them, what you want to do.
And if you -- that's not scary enough. The cherry on top is, we spoke to people who had worked directly with presidents. Directly with secretaries of defense. And we said, how often is the president rehearsing this. Practicing for it. Preparing. And they said never.
Basically never. They get one briefing when they take office, or they're introduced to the military. We're all familiar with the guy who follows him around with the suitcase. The nuclear football, if you will. Their process is explained, how that would work. And then after that, they never think about that again.
And, you know, Ronald Reagan, we were told, was the last president who participated in any kind of live nuclear decision-making exercise.
And it's -- and so the -- the guy who has the most responsibility, all the authority, is also arguably, the least practiced and prepared of any one of his --
GLENN: It's really.
It's terrifying.
You know, I've talked to President Trump about nuclear capability.
And I will tell you, you can say whatever you want about Donald Trump.
But one thing I know he's afraid of, is nuclear war.
He -- that has kept him awake, night after night after night.
He knows. Like Reagan did. And Gorbachev did.
You start that, you push that button. It's over. It's all over.
There's -- I mean, you hinted at it, you know, when you -- you were like, I've got -- if we fly these missiles over this country, what are they going to -- are they going to perceive this as a threat?
You know, missiles with Russia. I think in the movie, you've got Russia saying, how do we know you're not going to bomb -- we should just trust you?
It's over!
NOAH: Yeah. All of which begs the question, I think, for President Trump and for all of our leaders, what do we do about it?
You know, how do we solve this problem? We've lived with this threat, in the background of all of our lives, since the dawn of the nuclear age.
Despite my last name, not related to Oppenheimer.
GLENN: Half the name.
NOAH: We've lived with this dynamite in the walls.
For so many decades now. And really, since the end of the Cold War. We haven't really thought or talked about it very much.
It obviously is on President Trump's mind.
He does talk about it. He talks about trying to build the Golden Globe. And a better defense missile system.
You know, I think -- I think this question of, how do we make the world safer?
And it may be, part of that is building a better missile defense system. It may be part of it is reengaging with an arms control and an arms reduction process. Right?
You start our last remaining treaty with the Russians, that -- that governs the development and, you know, proliferation of these weapons. Is set to expire at the end of the year. Maybe we should engage in a process with Russia and China. To try to dramatically reduce the nuclear stockpile.
There are a lot of levers, that the president can pull to try to make you us all safer.
GLENN: So part of the controversy with your -- your movie, which is House of Dynamite, and it's on Netflix.
Part of the controversy, I guess, with the -- with the Pentagon is that the ground-based missile, interoceptors, and the interoceptors, you say it's 60 percent success. I think -- I think Annie Jacobson says, it's like close to zero.
And the Pentagon says it's 100 percent every time. What do you think it really is?
Is it 60?
NOAH: So there's a few factors involved here. The record of -- the testing record for this system, which was the ground-based mid-course interoceptors, is -- is public.
And it is 61 percent. They have done a series of tests over the last 25 years.
And if you add up the -- you know, the number of successes, over the number of failures, it comes to 61 percent.
The -- the Pentagon in their memo, is trying to say that the last several tests have been successful.
The previous ones were not.
So they say, if you only count the most recent ones, it's 100 percent.
That's like saying, I made my last -- I made my last two free throws. So I am a 100 percent free throw shooter --
GLENN: Exactly right.
NOAH: Yeah. So that being said, they're not wrong, in that that the system is getting better.
The software is getting better.
All of it is improving. It's nowhere close to being able to say, it's 100 percent effective. And part of that also comes down to the conditions under which these tests are undertaken. Right?
If I tell you, Glenn, I'm going to throw a baseball at your head. It's a lot easier for you to brace yourself and be ready and catch that baseball.
If an attack were to happen in the real world, it's far less likely, you know, it's far more complicated to defend against.
So, you know, this though, is not a debate between, you know, us as film makers and the Pentagon. It's really a debate between the Pentagon and a much wider community of experts, about the efficacy of this system.
You know, like I said, it's a good conversation to have. Do we want to improve the system.
Do we want --
GLENN: Yes, we do.
NOAH: -- to get more and more money to build something like Golden Dome?
GLENN: Yes, yes, we do.
Yes, we do.
The -- one thing that you didn't hint on, that was in Annie's book that I thought was fascinating. Was that when the president has to finally make the decision, he still doesn't know if it's nuclear-tipped.
There could be a conventional weapon on a ballistic missile, that is being sent by North Korea, let's say.
I mean, it would be an incredible waste.
But, you know, if we launch, before the missile hits, we don't even know if that's nuclear.
And we would have then started a nuclear war. Because we're launching nuclear weapons.
And they didn't!
NOAH: I think that one of the things that we're trying to capture in the story that we taught, which, of course, is a fictional story. Is the difficulty of making decisions in the thick of war.
And that particularly, when you have such a tight decision window. When that clock is winding down, so rapidly. It's -- you're going to find yourself being forced to make calls with imperfect and incomplete information.
And the other thing that is scary, is that the system that we built to -- that governs the use of nuclear weapons was designed during the Cold War for a specific purpose.
It was to make sure that the Soviets believed they could never get away with a first strike.
That if they launched missiles at us. The president would be able to fire back, so quickly. That our decision-making. Our command and control apparatus. Would be able to retaliate.
And so maintaining that deterrent threat, we needed to make sure that the president could respond, and retaliate as quickly and as easily as possible.
So that's the world we still live in now.
And so, again, if one domino falls, there's not a lot of breaks built into this.
The idea is to make it easy for the president to fire back.
And so, yeah. The mistakes can be made. I think it's miraculous, frankly, that we're all still here.
GLENN: It is. It is.
It really is.
Noah Oppenheim. We're talking about the show on Netflix called House of Dynamite. If you haven't seen it yet, it's a must-watch. It is an absolutely thrilling 90 minutes, that will scare the living daylights out of you. Because you'll be like, that can't be true! Right? That's not the way this works. No, that's exactly the way it works. And we're talking about nuclear war. We will come back for a little bit more here.
I want to know, Noah, because I made a decision, what I would do. But I think that is what would make me a really bad president, maybe.
I would love to hear if you guys had a debate, internally. And decided what you would do, if you were the president in that exact situation. We'll come back in just a situation. First, let me tell you about Chapter. There's a good chance, you've already heard it on TV. The Medicare deadline is coming. It's true. It's December 7th. And that's not far away.
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So when the next year rolls around, they're still there, helping you reevaluate, adjust, and stay covered. It's free. It's personal. Believe me, they saw their own parents get screwed by this, and they're like, I don't want that to happen to anybody else's parents. Don't wait until December 7th. Get help right now. Chapter's lines will be full by December 7th. Make sure you call right now. Chapter. All you have to do is just hit #250 and say the key word Chapter. #250, key word Chapter. Free and honest advice. #250. Key word Chapter. Ten-second station ID.
(music)
GLENN: From House of Dynamite.
(music)
VOICE: Approximately three minutes ago, we detected an ICBM over the Pacific. Current flight trajectory is consistent with impact in the continental United States.
VOICE: Have we seen dead people fall?
VOICE: No.
VOICE: Is this real?
(music)
VOICE: Chi-Com is asking for the launch instructions right now.
VOICE: I'm going to need you to breathe. You're talking about hitting a bullet with a bullet.
VOICE: So what's the point? Us. That's what $50 million buys you!
VOICE: Get in the car, and just start driving.
VOICE: If we do not take steps to neutralize our enemies, now, we will lose our window to do so!
VOICE: If we get this wrong, none of us are going to be alive tomorrow.
VOICE: We did everything right. Right?
(music)
VOICE: We did everything right!
VOICE: None of this makes sense. Making all these bombs and all these planets.
(music)
GLENN: It is --
VOICE: The world is just ready to blow.
GLENN: It is remarkable. House of Dynamite on Netflix.
I'm talking to the screenwriter. The screenwriter and the movie maker, Noah Oppenheim. Noah, there's one part of this I don't understand.
And maybe this is what would make me a bad president.
Because I would say, I am not striking until that thing hits. And we know that it's hit.
And it's blown up one of our cities. And then I'm going to wait. And I'm going to say immediately to the world. Everyone in the world, you isolate, and -- and take action against this guy. Or I will have no other response.
I have no choice, than hit him back.
But I would take the one hit, in order to try to save the whole world.
Why can't the president wait?
Why is it this constant, you've got to launch before it hits?
Why?
NOAH: I don't think that would make you a bad president at all.
I think that's a perfectly reasonable response to the situation.
I think that the counterpoint would be the -- the argument made by one of our characters. The generals in STRATCOM, who says, if you don't -- now that the genie is out of the bottle.
Right?
Now that somebody has kind of broken this nuclear stalemate that's existed for the last 70 years. That if we don't -- it is now increasingly dangerous. It is increasingly more likely that more weapons logical be launched our way.
We've now entered into what they call a spiral of alerts. Where bays that missile. The one missile is coming towards us. We then raise our level of military readiness. Start mobilizing forces. As soon as we start mobilizing our various forces around the world.
Everybody else does too. Now the nuclear genie is potentially out of the bottle. And do we want to wait and see if more missiles are sent our way. Or do we want to try to make sure that it stops with this one.
And take out the other -- you're enemy's arsenals and command and control systems, before they can potentially launch more.
I agree with you. It's perfectly reasonable to say, I'll take that chance.
There are more coming.
But I want to see what happens with this one first. Somebody else might say, don't take that chance. What are the odds it's only one?
Let's hit everyone else's missiles while they're still in their silos, and their bombers while they're still on the ground and make sure that we limit our losses to just this one city.
GLENN: Jeez. Once you do that, it's over anyway. Once you do that.
NOAH: Yes. That's arguably the insanity of the nuclear deterrent.
Which is once you do -- it's -- it's we destroy the entire world, as a means of defending ourselves.
GLENN: Yeah. Noah, great job. I hope there's a sequel. I would love to see what the president -- what he would choose. Noah Oppenheim.
The -- the show is, a House of Dynamite.
The REAL reason flights are being CANCELED
The FAA has begun to cancel flights at major US airports as the government shutdown continues. But Glenn believes the solution is simple: “Maybe, Democrats, you should open the government back up!”
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: Listen, so 10 percent of the flights in 40 major cities is where we're starting. We could go as high as 40 percent of our flights. In fact, we had -- we have our Secretary of Transportation, Sean Duffy actually coming out and saying, you know what, the problem is, we're not going to have skies, that, you know, are unsafe. Sorry! Can't do it. We'll just shut down the airspace before we have unsafe skies, which I appreciate. However, you know, there comes a time, where you're like, okay. Maybe we should stop this! Maybe, Democrats, you should open the government back up! At what point, Stu, do people start to lay the blame, you know, at the feet of the Democrats? Do they ever?
STU: I mean, they should, of course, do that. They should! That does not seem to be happening. You know, with the big thanks to the media. Right? I mean, we see this in all different topics. What was the stat? It was -- is it eight -- 90-something percent? I don't have it in front of me, that are favoring -- when it comes to talking with the shutdown, for example.
Ninety percent coverage has been favoring Democrats. Basically, saying that Republicans are the ones responsible for it. And when you look at that --
GLENN: Eighty-seven percent.
STU: Thank you.
GLENN: Eighty-seven percent.
STU: And when you look at that, and you say, well, this is a strategy potentially, that goes right through what changed the elections in Virginia. And I point specifically to the Jay Jones election. You know, when you have a good chunk of northern Virginia, that is home, and not at work, because of government shutdowns.
You keep this into effect through the election. Get that election win. And then Democrats are kind of free now as far as consequences probably, to their base. They got past this election. They got their wins. And now they could theoretically bail on this.
Question is, will Republicans kind of fold and give them this win?
All of this being said
If the recommends are going to be the ones blamed for this, why bail on the shutdown? I mean, what's the point?
All these workers are going to wind up getting their money anyway, eventually. So why not hold out to see what happens? They're getting no blame from this, because the government is shielding them or the media is shielding them from any consequences.
GLENN: Yeah. And only -- both on ABC and CBS, only 12 percent of the reports on either one of those networks mentioned any details on it.
So they're saying, Republicans are shutting the government town. And not giving any details.
STU: Yeah.
GLENN: That's remarkable.
STU: And think of how clear this is, the path here.
This is a -- a budget, if you will, because, you know, budgets aren't really budgets anymore.
But this is a spending plan, that was voted for, by Democrats. And Democrats during the Biden administration, voted for this spending plan.
Okay? Were like, all right. We'll just keep it going. Then Democrats came in and stopped it and caused a shutdown. Why?
Because Democrats are saying that they want a -- these subsidies from Obamacare to continue, despite the fact that Democrats voted for them to end!
GLENN: Right.
STU: This is --
GLENN: All these subsidies were just for COVID. And we said at the time, you can't give them. They're not going to let you take them back. They're not going to stop it.
And that's exactly what they're doing. So they voted for this budget. What the Republicans are saying, just leave it alone. Just continue the spending, as is, but those subsidies have expired. Because that's what you voted for.
So those subsidies are gone now.
And the Democrats are saying, it's not enough. It's not enough. It's not enough.
Wait. This is your Biden budget. This is your Biden budget!
And it's not good enough, and they're willing to throw our airports and our transportation systems, just throw it away. Just throw it away. Wreck your day, if you're planning on travel.
I've got lots of travel come up in the next couple of weeks, and I have to tell everybody now, I'm not sure I will be able to make it. We'll see. We'll see. Just to have see what's happening with air traffic control. And this is the beginning of that.
And it's going to get worse and worse. Can you imagine what Thanksgiving is going to be like?
These guys have got -- they have got to stop! They have to stop!
Democratic senator Chris Murphy said yesterday. His, quote, party's brand could undergo substantial damage, if Democrats were to cave and reopen the federal government.
Their brand? Their brand! There will be some pretty substantial damage done on to the Democratic brand that has been rehabilitated if on the heels of an election, in which the people told us to keep fighting, we immediately stopped fighting! So he's -- he's looking at what happened as a mandate. And now, it will damage the brand!
Wow. Can somebody not talk -- I mean, that's worse than just making it about politics. That's making it about your brand as a party.
It's disgusting. I can't believe he had the guts to say it out loud! But I'm glad he did. So we all know exactly, you know, where this is coming from.
Silent squeeze: How the Dems shutdown is CHOKING the economy
The U.S. government shutdown is hoarding nearly $1 trillion in the Treasury, all while government employees are going without pay. Like a body slowly losing oxygen, this squeeze spikes rates, and threatens Main Street first—freezing small businesses, families, and consumers. This is all PLANNED to destroy Trump's economy and give power back to the Democrats. This MUST END.
Transcript
Below is a rush transcript that may contain errors
GLENN: So we have hit a critical juncture. A turning point, if you will. On the closure of the government.
And the government needs to open back up. And I'm going to explain it in a way that nobody else will explain it to you. If you're watching CNBC over the last couple of days, they were saying things like, you know, the repo market is under great stress. The banks are getting money from the Federal Reserve. At incredible rates. Highest it's been since 2020.
What does that mean?
What does that mean?
The banks, when they close, they have to have a certain amount of cash in their vaults to cover everything.
It's a requirement by law. And if they don't have that, then they have to go to what's called the repo market, and they borrow money overnight.
And there's interest on it, they borrow it over night. And they give it back in the morning when they open back up. Okay?
It's only done when banks are short of cash. It used to be a very bad thing. Now it's happening all the time. But not at these levels. So let me explain what all of these things mean.
Try to imagine, if you will, that America's financial system is like a living body. The heart, as much as I hate to say it. For this example, is the Federal Reserve.
It doesn't create life. But it keeps the blood pumping. Okay? The arteries and the veins are the banks and the institutions that carry the lifeblood of the economy, money. Okay?
And the capillaries, are like you and me. Every family, every small business, every worker trying to make a paycheck stretch from one week to the next. Okay?
We're not an artery. We're capillaries. Now, in this body, there's something called the repo market. Okay?
This is the place where banks and institutions go to borrow cash overnight. Okay?
Think of that cash like oxygen, okay?
The oxygen exchange that happens in the lungs. It's fast, it's constant, it's invisible. But it is vital. You don't have the oxygen, it doesn't matter what the blood is doing, right?
Every night, money goes out. Every morning, money comes back in. That rhythm is what keeps the entire body alive. Well, in the last few days, that rhythm has faltered, something is clogging the arteries.
The banks, the vessels, they're gasping now for oxygen. So they're going to the fed's emergency oxygen tank. The standing repo facility.
And they're drawing record amounts of cash out, just to keep breathing. Okay?
It's like watching a marathon runner suddenly reach for an oxygen mask at mile three. Why?
Why is this happening?
This is the important part. Because while the government is shutdown, and we might think. Well, that's good. They're not spending money.
Hmm. The treasury is the fiscal liver of the body. And it's storing all of the blood in the liver. Okay?
It's storing cash in a valuate now called the treasury general account. There's nearly a trillion dollars sitting there.
A trillion dollars sitting there.
Not being paid. Every dollar that goes into that vault is a dollar that can't circulate now through the body. So now it's starving everything of cash. Because there's a trillion dollars sitting in the Treasury.
And even though, you can't see it, every second the shutdown drags on. The system is being starved. And the arteries are tightening.
And the heart is straining. And the body is starting to shiver. And that's what's happening right now in the shadows of our financial system.
It's not about Wall Street freed. It's not some obscure number on a Bloomberg terminal. It is about a government that has turned inward, frozen by politics, unable to pass the simplest resolution to fund itself. And because it's doing this, it's pulling all of that pretty sure liquidity. A trillion dollars in cash. The oxygen. The life of our economy, out of the bloodstream, and into a vault.
If you've ever had a power outage in winter, you might know the feeling. Let me describe it this way. First, it's fine. You grab a candle. You grab a blanket. You start the fireplace.
Hours drag on. The house starts to get a little cooler. If it continues to drop on. The pipes begin to trees. And by morning, it's no longer a cute little thing, that, oh, no. We'll just sit by the fireplace. It's cold. Okay?
That's where we're at, financially right now. We are not at the point of collapse. But we are at the point of freezing the pipes.
What does that mean, when I'm talking about the arteries?
The government you shutdown has locked up the treasury's checkbook. That means fewer payments to contractors. Less spending. Less money flowing into the banking system. When less cash circulates, the banks can't lend freely because there's no cash.
Money gets tight. Repo rates, that invisible overnight interest rates. That starts to spike. And when that happens, it affects the capillaries.
You and me. The smallest players. The smallest businesses. The consumers. The credit unions. We begin to feel it first.
Okay?
When arteries clog, at the heart, what's the first part of the body that goes cold? Goes numb. The fingers. The toes. That's us! Here's the tragic irony.
The politicians, you know, the Democratic Party, fighting over principle. They may think it's about posturing, about leverage, about who blinks first. But it's not. While they're playing chicken with our nation's checkbook, it is now time to say, enough is enough! Because the system is gasping for air.
And this is how financial crises begin. We're not in one yet. But, again, the pipes are beginning to freeze. This is how things happen. They happen quietly, not with a bang.
Not with a crash. But with tightening. With the arteries getting clogged. All of a sudden, you have a widow maker. And you didn't see it coming.
Because it's a slow, silent squeeze that begins in the overnight funding markets. The kind of plumbing that nobody ever looks at, nobody ever talks about.
Nobody even understands. Do you understand how the pipes are working in your house, behind your walls? I don't even know where they go. I know they eventually go down and out, but I don't know. And all of a sudden, you find out, when a pipe bursts.
Make no mistake, if this continues, it won't just be the banks that are hurting. It will be your mortgage rate. Your credit card interests, your grocery bill.
Because the system has to begin charging more for everything. Because they are paying more in interest, to hoard what little cash is out there.
The longer it goes on, the more cash goes into the government, and it sits there.
It's -- it's like watching your bloodstream start to clot!
You're not going to feel it right away. But if it reaches the heart. Reaches the brain. The damage can be fatal.
So here's the one truth today, on the economy, that the media won't tell you, or -- they fail to explain it. The repo market.
What the hell does that mean!
Why are you only talking to the people on Wall Street. Why don't you tell the people who are going to be affected first.
How can an alcoholic DJ figure out a way to explain this to the average person?
But you can't!
This shutdown is not just a political stalemate.
It is a self-inflicted wound.
We are at a point now, where the government is literally draining oxygen from the economy! And the Fed is in triage mode. Pumping emergency liquidity into the veins, just to keep the patient alive. The question is, how long can the patient keep doing CPR, before they tire out?
How long before, we need to start printing money.
The cure is not money printing.
It's governance. It's having a damn adult in the room. It's lawmakers that understand that starving the bloodstream to win a headline is not courage. It's madness!
When -- when will the Democrats stop this game, the shutdown has to end!
Not because Wall Street wants it. But because Main Street needs it!
The blood of the American economy. The trust, the liquidity, the stability.
It's not infinite.
And once the heart starts to falter, it takes more than an emergency repo to bring a nation back to life.
This must end!





