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GLENN BECK PROGRAM
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
GLENN: Scientists
now say that dark matter, which is some sort of fundamental
building block of the universe -- there's more dark matter
than anything else, but we have no idea what dark matter is.
We think it has something to do with, you know, forcing this
universe in its expansion but we also think it's the glue
that holds it together and it's -- I have no idea. But we've
never been able to observe it and so it's been behaving the
way it always has. Well, now we've observed dark matter and
scientists believe that now that man has observed dark
matter, it has selected its course and it's now collapsing
in on us and we're all going to die, smothered by dark
matter.
Here's why I pass this story on to you. I don't know about
you, but I didn't observe dark matter. Dan, did you observe
any dark matter lately?
DAN: No, really haven't.
GLENN: Stu?
STU: There's dark meat for Thanksgiving.
GLENN: Dark meat? No, I'm looking for -- you're still
getting Dark Matter Observer magazine, right?
STU: No, I'm actually not a subscriber.
GLENN: I know I wasn't in my car observing dark matter. I
wasn't in my giant SUV observing dark matter. The scientists
were. Don't blame me, scientists. Oh, I've got my little SUV
that's going to make the world a little hotter. You're
collapsing the universe! Which one of us suck more for
nature? I'm only wrecking the planet. You've destroyed the
entire universe! Thanks a lot!
Now, here's what I'd like to begin. I would like to offer to
scientists dark matter offsets. You write me a check for
$1,000 and I will not observe dark matter so you can. I
promise I will not observe dark matter. Now, that's $1,000.
I will get my family to not observe dark matter for $5,000.
That's a yearly thing. These are just dark matter offsets,
and every year we have to do it. And we have to reduce the
observation of dark matter quickly. We are running out of
time, and if we don't reduce our observation of dark matter,
the universe will collapse on us.
So I ask every listener right now in the sound of my voice,
what is your observational footprint? I encourage you to
just look inside yourself and say, how much dark matter have
I observed? Can I observe less? Do I have too powerful of a
telescope? Have I ever watched the NASA channel? Maybe you
just watch the NASA channel on an energy-saving television.
Maybe you just watch the NASA channel with the contrast
turned all the way up so the dark matter's not really so
dark. In the meantime we understand that you have to observe
some dark matter but please buy a dark matter offset. And
I'm also going to encourage the United Nations to start
taxing those who are observing dark matter because as I
learned in the London Times last week, taxes are the only
way to solve these kinds of problems. So if we can tax all
of the scientists, all of the scientific universities, I
think we should start levying giant fines on universities
like Columbia. Anybody who is training these scientists to
observe or to contemplate dark matter or want them to
observe, teach them about dark matter which leads other
people to want to observe dark matter, I think we need to
levy high punitive taxes on them and I think then, of
course, we'll be able to have this dark matter situation
under control because do you want to die in a collapsed
universe? How selfish are you? Don't you care about your
children? We're light here at the Glenn Beck program. We're
not dark. Just want you to know that.
We're light.
Okay. What else? Yeah, do we have anything else on our
plate? We've saved the universe, Stu. Anything else?
STU: No, it's officially saved. So I think we're all set.
GLENN: Well, it's never really saved. Some people are
saying, some people are saying that the universe, when we
observe the dark matter, is now expanding at a faster rate.
STU: Oh, but those people are all hacks.
GLENN: No, no.
STU: No, they're all hacks.
GLENN: No, no, no. Stu, collapsing, expanding, all we're
talking about is dark matter, okay?
STU: Oh, dark matter change you're talking about.
GLENN: It is universal change that we need to fear.
STU: A dark matter shift?
GLENN: Yes.
STU: Not necessarily expand -- look, all we know is that
this dark matter is causing the problem.
GLENN: Okay. So today you might look at it and say the
universe is expanding. Another day you can say, jeez, it's
getting a little tight in here? Have you noticed lately how
small the universe feels? Hey, it expands and contracts, it
expands and contracts, you know?
STU: Next day we'll say, hey, the dark matter is causing
wildfires in California. Let's just, you know, eventually
we'll figure out which one it is, whichever one happens and
then we're good.
END TRANSCRIPT |
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