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GLENN BECK PROGRAM
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
GLENN: Now, you
being a person that would be just like me, you don't have
time to do all of your homework. So you just have that
thought, wait a minute, isn't NBC owned by G.E.? I on the
other hand, have people that follow these trains of thoughts
like Stu.
Stu, give me a little give me a little background on, gee,
there's two parts of this story. The second part will boggle
your mind. But here's the first part.
STU: Well, as you know G.E., electric is in their name.
GLENN: Yes, General Electric.
STU: Generally electric, and they are big fans of
electricity. One way they like to produce that electricity
are green ways.
GLENN: Green ways.
STU: Very green.
GLENN: Green like nuclear plants?
STU: Perhaps.
GLENN: Do they build parts for nuclear plants?
STU: Yes.
GLENN: Do they build any parts that maybe sequester coal to
oil?
STU: Clean coal.
GLENN: Clean coal. They're involved in that. Hydro
electricity?
STU: Off the top of my head I'm not sure about that one, but
probably.
GLENN: They make the big turbines.
STU: Wind turbines, definitely.
GLENN: How about wind power, big on wind power?
STU: Very big on wind power.
GLENN: Let's come back to wind power in just a second.
STU: Yes. Now, there was a story done this is back in 2006,
European website had done the story, of basically that while
the CEO of G.E. and the people in G.E., particularly in
Europe are fighting hard for, Kyoto and these sort of
energy, C02 emission caps, they were fighting hard for those
because it was the right thing to do.
GLENN: Right.
STU: As you know.
GLENN: Wait a minute. They're fighting for emission caps.
That means the big companies couldn't put a lot of emissions
out, they would need clean technology, or they would need to
trade for, hmm, higher emissions, right?
STU: Uh huh.
GLENN: Is that right? They would trade. They would say, hey,
you have a lot of emissions, we need more emissions or
whatever. And they could trade back and forth.
STU: Yeah, and in case you're not sure what that means.
Basically it's trading things that don't really have any
value.
GLENN: Yes.
STU: It's a made up market, because these things wouldn't be
traded if you didn't just create the market to trade them.
GLENN: For instance, if all of a sudden we said, hey, you're
only supposed to use so much air, if I had a thousand acre
ranch, I could trade air. So, in other words, I could say,
oh, well, I've got a thousand acres and there's only, you
know, six people in my family and obviously only six people
on a thousand acres but you have a family of eight living on
half an acre, the government says you're using too much air
per acre I tell you what, you just buy my air from my land
to live on your land across the country.
We don't actually change anything. I'm just trading money.
STU: Right.
GLENN: Got it.
STU: Shockingly enough businessmen tend to find ways to take
advantage of such things.
GLENN: You think so.
STU: Yes.
GLENN: You're not saying that G.E. found a way.
STU: No, of course not. The same story in the same website
reported that because of G.E. being heavily invested in all
the clean energies, the reason for this was, quote, in
anticipation of the European carbon trading process,
inspiring a similar measure in the US.
So they invested in these carbon tradings, in these clean
energies, specifically because they were anticipating the Al
Gore world to come to fruition.
GLENN: Got it. So they're investing in these clean energies
because they understand that the trading system is coming,
Kyoto, blah, blah, blah. Now, we're going to take you to
another company that every liberal in America hates. It is
the most evil company I'm not talking about Halliburton.
Thinking more evil than Halliburton. The most evil company,
because all they care about is energy. All they care about
is screwing the little man, all they care about is making
money. They went out of business. All these people lost
their life savings. George Bush had to be involved. World
Trade Center No. 7 was brought down to cover the tracks. We
of course are talking about Enron.
How does Enron connect to the little green peacock? Next.
(OUT 9:44)
GLENN: 888 727 BECK. 888 727 BECK. So NBC has the green
peacock. They're green all week. Everybody thinks it's great
because oh my gosh look at that they're just helping the
environment. They just love the environment so much.
The Today Show has sent people to the North Pole, the South
Pole and the equator for sweeps week. They're not doing it
for ratings. They do it because it's the right thing.
All of the shows are green. They do the half time show by
candlelight. Why? Just gave you the connection to General
Electric. General Electric saw this one coming a long time
ago. They saw the political climate changing in Europe.
And so what they wanted to do was they wanted to make sure
that they got into this technology here in America as well
because they know it's coming to America. But somebody in
America had the market cornered. Somebody in America
actually was loved by all the environmentalists for so long.
They were held up high esteem, look how much they care about
the environment.
Because this company was leading the charge on the Kyoto
treaty. We have got to get into that Kyoto treaty. Why did
Enron want to get news the Kyoto treaty. Why was Enron all
over this?
Let me ask you this: What did Enron do? Enron sold energy.
Enron loved, what, when the forest fire do you remember?
When the forest fire happened, what did they say? "Burn baby
burn." Wait a minute they're for the Kyoto treaty why would
they say burn baby burn? Because they knew this would cause
massive energy brownouts. They knew if those power lines
burned up, look at this, we are in the money.
So they wanted to make sure Kyoto passed and we got all
strapped down because it would cause energy shortages. It
would cause energy problems. They love that. Unfortunately
for them, they went out of business. But...but they were the
world's leader on wind energy. What was it called? Enron
Wind?
STU: Enron Wind.
GLENN: When they had the big fire sale, who bought Enron
Wind? Stu?
STU: That would be General Electric.
GLENN: That's weird.
STU: Yeah.
GLENN: That's really weird. So now General Electric is the
world's leader in wind.
STU: One of them, yes.
GLENN: Oh. Hmm. That's really weird.
STU: It's really weird because even you don't think Enron
was the most evil company in the universe, one thing you can
definitely recognize about them is they knew how to trade.
They knew how to take advantage of trading systems, which is
why they wanted them implemented that's why they bought the
other side of it by buying clean energy.
GLENN: There you go every time you see the peacock that's
green think wind power from General Electric.
END TRANSCRIPT |
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