
The Glenn Beck Program Best of the Program | 10/30/25
Oct 30, 2025
In a whirlwind of intriguing revelations, Glenn dives into a bizarre incident at a Wikipedia conference that raises questions about editorial integrity. He boldly claims the Arctic Frost scandal dwarfs Watergate in significance, scrutinizing its implications for justice. The strange saga of a diseased monkey from Mississippi escalates, as conflicting reports and official responses leave everyone baffled. Additionally, Glenn humorously reflects on his own experiences working with famous primates, blending serious discussion with lighthearted anecdotes.
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Protecting Vulnerable Pages
- Glenn Beck argues Wikipedia must restrict users who openly identify as pedophiles from editing child-related pages to protect the vulnerable.
- He frames that restriction as safety, not thought policing, comparing it to removing a suicidal pilot from a cockpit.
Media Clips Shouldn't Drive Subpoenas
- Beck highlights that Arctic Frost used news clips as the investigative predicate to sweep communications and donors into subpoenas.
- He warns that using media reports as legal justification undermines equal protection and turns the state into a partisan weapon.
Alternate Electors Have Historical Context
- Beck notes alternate electors have historical precedent (1876, 1960, 2000) and were previously treated as political, not criminal.
- He says criminalizing them now needs new legal theories and clean facts, not partisan dislike.
