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GLENN BECK PROGRAM
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
GLENN: George
Noory is on the phone. Good friend and just one of the
nicest people I know in broadcast and he's got a new book
out. It's out in paperback now, been out for a while, it's a
best seller, it's in paperback and he joins us again because
I just have to -- George, you know I love you, right?
NOORY: Yes, I do and I --
GLENN: First of all, I believe that you hypnotize people. I
mean, listen to the way George talks. Have you ever noticed
that? It's always like, yes, I do know that; you are getting
sleepy. I mean, I think that you have hypnotize people but
that's a different story. George, you are --
STU: You're making fun of him.
GLENN: George, you're doing some sort of mind experiment,
trying to make it rain in California?
NOORY: We have done -- no, we wanted the winds to stop in
California. We wanted it to rain in Atlanta and it seems
like both. We've been doing this, Glenn, for years now. I am
a believer that there's something in the universe -- I call
it the wireless Internet, that all of us have the ability to
tap into.
GLENN: I agree.
NOORY: No doubt about that. How it works, why it works, I
have no idea. I just know it does work. So years ago when I
first started doing Coast to Coast, when I started filling
in for Art Bell, I started experimenting with the millions
of people who listen to Coast to Coast trying to get them
collectively to think about one thing. Now, in Princeton
they have what they call eggs. It's a mechanical system of a
number of computers, random generators scattered all around
the planet that registers people's reactions and they see
spikes. They saw spikes right before 9/11, for example. They
can now deduce that the human mind has an ability to sense
things. They might not know what it is, but they just feel
events anyway.
GLENN: Okay, wait. Before the event? Because I -- quite
honestly I think the American people know right now that
we're in trouble.
NOORY: Uh-huh.
GLENN: They just don't know what it is. And most people are
avoiding looking into it but they know something's not
right, something bad is coming our way.
NOORY: Yep, absolutely. We've talked about that. We'll talk
about that before I'm off with you on what this is and why
people feel the way they do. But anyway, what we started
doing is experimenting collectively trying to get everybody
to think about one thing. So we had a hurricane, for
example, that was approaching a Category 5, not Katrina, and
within an hour after we were on the air talking about
diminishing everyone, think of it just dropping down, it
went from a 4 to a 1.
GLENN: Okay, all right, hang on, hang on. I want everybody
in the audience right now, I want everybody in the audience
-- and this is how I'll know this is real or not because
it's not possible at this time. But I want everybody in the
audience to think in the next 20 minutes, McGriddles will be
delivered to my studio door.
NOORY: See, it won't work that way.
GLENN: Why?
NOORY: Because you're mocking it.
GLENN: I'm not -- I can't tell you how much I want
McGriddles.
NOORY: Well, yeah, but it's not the way. It comes to you
when you believe it. When you really believe it.
GLENN: So you're saying if I really, truly believe that
McGriddles will come to my door?
NOORY: Somewhere, sometime, a listener will buy it and send
it to you.
GLENN: You know what, George, I believe that we are all
connected. I believe that there is a collective warning
system, and I believe as you believe, so shall it be. I get
it. I just -- you know, I -- why, why haven't we seen a
greater impact? Is it because, you know, more people have to
do it?
NOORY: Well, because it has to be channeled and other than a
program like ours, there's nobody out there channeling this
thing for the common good. I mean, I believe that even one
individual has an incredible effect on this.
GLENN: I do, too.
NOORY: But you have to put them all together. Look, all I
know -- and let's very quickly use what's happening over the
last few weeks. There's a little more than three month
supply of drinking water left in Atlanta. Lake Lanier is
running dry.
GLENN: I just flew over it last month.
NOORY: He was thinking about how they are going to get water
into that city. So we went on the air last Friday when I was
in Norfolk and talked about folks, let's let it rain in
Atlanta. And you know what? It's been raining on and off for
the last three days. This is bizarre. They've had a drought.
Now with the fires in California, I'm not saying we made
some of these Santa Ana winds diminish, but when we said
let's see if these 70 mile an hour gusts can drop, all
you've got to do now is talk to the firefighters and they
are saying, thank God, it's slowing down. Did we do this
collectively? I don't know. It's just unbelievable that the
synchronicity continues to happen whenever we do this.
END TRANSCRIPT |
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