Glenn Beck
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I'll tell you who you do at the checkout in your rent with your tax bill. These are not the faceless cogs, but they're human beings propelled by the same hunger for betterment that drove pilgrims across the oceans, they'll tell you. They rise before the sun, hands blistered, knees bent, harvesting what we consume without even a second thought.
I'll tell you who you do at the checkout in your rent with your tax bill. These are not the faceless cogs, but they're human beings propelled by the same hunger for betterment that drove pilgrims across the oceans, they'll tell you. They rise before the sun, hands blistered, knees bent, harvesting what we consume without even a second thought.
I'll tell you who you do at the checkout in your rent with your tax bill. These are not the faceless cogs, but they're human beings propelled by the same hunger for betterment that drove pilgrims across the oceans, they'll tell you. They rise before the sun, hands blistered, knees bent, harvesting what we consume without even a second thought.
Yes, California growers have said that they've posted ads for years and locals just don't apply. These jobs are theirs because no one else will do these jobs. And the data concurs. In states like Texas and Florida, native-born workers shun the fields, leaving 80% of crop labor to the immigrants, documented or undocumented. They don't displace. They sustain.
Yes, California growers have said that they've posted ads for years and locals just don't apply. These jobs are theirs because no one else will do these jobs. And the data concurs. In states like Texas and Florida, native-born workers shun the fields, leaving 80% of crop labor to the immigrants, documented or undocumented. They don't displace. They sustain.
Yes, California growers have said that they've posted ads for years and locals just don't apply. These jobs are theirs because no one else will do these jobs. And the data concurs. In states like Texas and Florida, native-born workers shun the fields, leaving 80% of crop labor to the immigrants, documented or undocumented. They don't displace. They sustain.
Quote, without this labor, our way of life will crumble. Quote, this is a necessary good. Look where they came from. They're better off in our fields and in the shadows than where they were when they came here. Look at where they came from. Gee, is there an echo in here? Maybe it's just the ghost of arguments past that I hear. I'm not sure, but it seemed without this labor, we will starve.
Quote, without this labor, our way of life will crumble. Quote, this is a necessary good. Look where they came from. They're better off in our fields and in the shadows than where they were when they came here. Look at where they came from. Gee, is there an echo in here? Maybe it's just the ghost of arguments past that I hear. I'm not sure, but it seemed without this labor, we will starve.
Quote, without this labor, our way of life will crumble. Quote, this is a necessary good. Look where they came from. They're better off in our fields and in the shadows than where they were when they came here. Look at where they came from. Gee, is there an echo in here? Maybe it's just the ghost of arguments past that I hear. I'm not sure, but it seemed without this labor, we will starve.
Our way of life will collapse. This is a necessary good. It's necessary for us and good for them. Look at where they came from. They're better off in our fields than where they came from. The prosperity of the superior depends on the toil of the inferior. Oh, wait a minute. I have heard these phrases before. Seems as though they've just been rinsed out and repurposed.
Our way of life will collapse. This is a necessary good. It's necessary for us and good for them. Look at where they came from. They're better off in our fields than where they came from. The prosperity of the superior depends on the toil of the inferior. Oh, wait a minute. I have heard these phrases before. Seems as though they've just been rinsed out and repurposed.
Our way of life will collapse. This is a necessary good. It's necessary for us and good for them. Look at where they came from. They're better off in our fields than where they came from. The prosperity of the superior depends on the toil of the inferior. Oh, wait a minute. I have heard these phrases before. Seems as though they've just been rinsed out and repurposed.
Without this labor, our way of life crumbles. That's a mirror, gang. The words aren't new. They're borrowed from a time when men in frock coats deemed human bondage a necessary good. Because if we don't have these slaves in the field, our very way of life will crumble. You won't be able to afford any products. It's a pillar of economic order. James Henry Hammond, 1858.
Without this labor, our way of life crumbles. That's a mirror, gang. The words aren't new. They're borrowed from a time when men in frock coats deemed human bondage a necessary good. Because if we don't have these slaves in the field, our very way of life will crumble. You won't be able to afford any products. It's a pillar of economic order. James Henry Hammond, 1858.
Without this labor, our way of life crumbles. That's a mirror, gang. The words aren't new. They're borrowed from a time when men in frock coats deemed human bondage a necessary good. Because if we don't have these slaves in the field, our very way of life will crumble. You won't be able to afford any products. It's a pillar of economic order. James Henry Hammond, 1858.
In all social systems, there must be a class to perform the drudgery, freeing the refined for higher purposes. Wow, that almost sounds like Harari, doesn't it, from the World Economic Forum? There will be a permanent underclass of useless people who just need to keep busy doing stuff. Oh my gosh, the compassion, you're right, he's speaking right from the heart.
In all social systems, there must be a class to perform the drudgery, freeing the refined for higher purposes. Wow, that almost sounds like Harari, doesn't it, from the World Economic Forum? There will be a permanent underclass of useless people who just need to keep busy doing stuff. Oh my gosh, the compassion, you're right, he's speaking right from the heart.
In all social systems, there must be a class to perform the drudgery, freeing the refined for higher purposes. Wow, that almost sounds like Harari, doesn't it, from the World Economic Forum? There will be a permanent underclass of useless people who just need to keep busy doing stuff. Oh my gosh, the compassion, you're right, he's speaking right from the heart.
John Calhoun, 1837, it's a positive good. It's good for them and it's good for us. It's an institution that if we don't have it, civilization falters, end quote. Then it was cotton and tobacco. Now it's lettuce and drywall. But it's the same damn thing. Then it was chains. Now it's fear. The fear of ice raids, fractured families, a life uprooted. It's still fear, isn't it?
John Calhoun, 1837, it's a positive good. It's good for them and it's good for us. It's an institution that if we don't have it, civilization falters, end quote. Then it was cotton and tobacco. Now it's lettuce and drywall. But it's the same damn thing. Then it was chains. Now it's fear. The fear of ice raids, fractured families, a life uprooted. It's still fear, isn't it?