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The Glenn Beck Program

Best of the Program | Guest: Kelsi Sheren | 2/16/26

16 Feb 2026

Transcription

Chapter 1: What is the difference between Obama's and Trump's deportation policies?

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If we fix the language, we can lower the temperature and have a conversation on the omission of key facts in the immigration cases. We've got a few of those I want to share with you. Also, Rubio's speech, tying it together with Great Britain and what it means there and here.

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And Kelsey Sheeran, an amazing woman who is trying to stand up and fight made in Canada, but she says, I might be Canadian, but you guys have a real problem. She talks about that all on today's podcast. Preborn is our sponsor. Scripture tells us, you know, we don't wrestle against flesh and blood and bone. We wrestle against powers and principalities.

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That matters, especially when we talk about the issue of life and abortion.

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Chapter 2: How does Marco Rubio's speech connect to British politics?

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When you're standing for life, you're not at war with young women who find themselves scared and confused or alone. You're pushing back against an evil idea, the idea that tells them they have no other option, that the life inside of them is a problem to be solved instead of a human being. This is why Preborn exists.

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They provide women a free ultrasound and compassionate care from people who aren't there to condemn them, but to support them and give them information and give them real help, not death. When a mom hears a heartbeat, everything changes.

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Chapter 3: What issues does Kelsi Sheren raise about the Canadian government?

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It stops being abstract, and it becomes a reality. I want you to help if you can. Go to preborn.com. Any donation is so well needed and worth your time. It's preborn.com slash Beck. Preborn.com slash Beck. You can dial pound 250 and say the keyword baby. Donate today. Preborn.com pound 250 keyword baby. Hello, America. You know we've been fighting every single day.

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We push back against the lies, the censorship, the nonsense of the mainstream media that they're trying to feed you. We work tirelessly to bring you the unfiltered truth because you deserve it. But to keep this fight going, we need you.

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Chapter 4: What is the role of Preborn in the abortion debate?

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Right now, would you take a moment and rate and review the Glenn Beck podcast? Give us five stars and lead a comment because every single review helps us break through big tech's algorithm to reach more Americans who need to hear the truth. This isn't a podcast. This is a movement, and you're part of it, a big part of it.

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So if you believe in what we're doing, you want more people to wake up, help us push this podcast to the top. Rate, review, share. Together, we'll make a difference. And thanks for standing with us. Now let's get to work. You're listening to the best of the Glenn Beck Program. Welcome to the Glenn Beck Program. Just got a couple of comments from insiders.

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Chapter 5: How can we effectively communicate about sensitive topics?

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I'm talking about... The the story about how two stories, one in Minnesota, a woman who's, you know, tracking down ice and yelling at them as they're trying to deport somebody who literally had been raping children. And then the second the second story was about this guy who is an Irish immigrant who came here to start a new life, yada, yada, yada. But half that story. has been left out.

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The story that he was wanted in Ireland. He left behind his family and two 18-month-old children and came over here and started and then only reached out to his children 18 years later because he was in trouble over here in America. Okay, so... Let me tell you the rest of those stories here in a second and how you can communicate. But somebody wrote in. Who was it that wrote in? Tracy. Okay.

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Tracy said what? Said, thank you so much for the first immigrant story on the Ireland ad. Poor Seamus.

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Chapter 6: What is the impact of government policies on healthcare in Canada?

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My daughter has been inundating me with this type of story. I try, but I cannot find the facts. I wonder why. And thank you for confirming what I had suspected. There is more to the story. Of course there is. There always is more to the story. And they are always left out. Okay, so now that you have the facts, how are you going to talk to your daughter about it?

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Because giving her the facts won't be enough. You need to know how to talk to people on the other side. And believe me, a lot of the stuff I say on the air, the person that needs to hear it the most is me. So let's learn this together, if you will. what is the question that will open the door for anybody to hear you? Okay. It's not, how can you not care about the victim?

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Because they see a victim and that victim is real or not. They see a victim, you see a victim and they're different. So you can't say, how can you not care about the kid that was raped? Okay. Or in the case with the, the, the Irish guy, how can you not care about the two daughters? Okay. You need to ask this to open the door.

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What would you need to see to believe the situation might be different from the abuses that you're worried about?

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Chapter 7: How does the MAID program reflect on societal values?

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Okay? Ask them questions. Always ask questions and separate them from the ideology. Because if you say you're wrong, they feel attacked. They'll fight. If you say... Wow, I can understand how you're suspicious on this. Government has done so many bad things. Government has lied a lot, and a lot of people are worried about this. Can we look into this case, this specific case, a little deeper here?

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You're lowering their shield. You're giving them the wind. Do you trust the government? Because I don't. And that's the thing that we all have in common. They don't trust the government. Neither do we. So let's give on that one. You know what? I understand that. A lot of people are suspicious, and I'm very suspicious of our government.

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But let's look at this particular, this individual case specifically together. You want to protect innocent people. I want to protect innocent people. You want to prevent abuse from the government. I want to prevent abuse from the government. I want fairness. You want fairness. Let's start there, but let's start with the facts here. Okay. This is the part that you instinctively might understand.

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Okay. It's why our, it's why that monologue with the two points of view actually works is If you can honestly hold two truths at once, you can make all kinds of progress. Okay. And that is one. Yeah. You should fear the government. You should fear the government. You should fear the government overreach.

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Chapter 8: What are the implications of euthanasia laws in America?

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Our founders were against that. Our founders warned us that government is fire. So yeah. Okay. There's one truth and I'm with you on that. Are you also worried about violent crime? and children being raped because I know you are, you're my daughter, you're my son. I know you, that is important. Those two things can be true. And it's in that space where we can have a dialogue. Okay.

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Some people are not going to be reached, you know, in the moment. Some people are just, I mean, if there's a, if there's a camera, it's over. Okay. When identity and ego and audience are, combine, the persuasion rate drops almost to zero. So in that case, if there is a camera, the person that you are trying to appeal to is not the person yelling. This is really important.

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If a camera is rolling, you are no longer, this is Martin Luther King, you are no longer trying to persuade the person who's yelling at you You're now arguing for the people who are watching who haven't fully made up their minds yet. They don't know. They can be persuaded. That's where minds move.

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So once there's a camera, stop performing for that person and start understanding the audience that you're trying to attract and to appeal to are the reasonable people who still have an open mind and want to see which one is going to act like a normal human being. Okay? You don't break through by shouting louder than the crowd.

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You break through by speaking to the person who is standing quietly behind the crowd, wondering, is there another way to see the world than these two points of view? Because that's what we're trying to do. So let me tell you the three stories that happened in the parking lot in Minnesota. No battlefield, no courtroom, no history book, just a parking lot.

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Three different stories happening at the same time. Layer one, the activist. She sees agents with badges and unmarked cars. She didn't see safety. She sees power. Now, maybe she's watched videos for years that convince her that our government is, you know, is just abusing people and killing people. Maybe she believes the weak are always one step away from being crushed by the system, whatever.

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So she steps forward, camera in hand. She thinks she's doing something brave. She believes she's standing between the vulnerable and the machine. And when the agent says, we're looking for somebody accused of raping children, her mind is not going to process this information. It processes that information as some sort of justification.

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Because once trust is gone, every explanation sounds like an excuse. She doesn't trust them. She doesn't trust them. So it doesn't matter what they say. Layer two, the agents. Now step into the agent's shoes for a second. They're not seeing ideology. They're seeing names on warrants, reports, victims, paperwork that says someone dangerous might be close by.

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They're thinking about the people who don't get interviews on social media, the child harm, the family that lost somebody, the victim who doesn't get their camera pointed their way. To them, interruption is not a protest. It feels like obstruction, especially when people are chanting death threats to them. So when somebody says, I don't care, that lands on them as a punch.

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