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GLENN BECK PROGRAM
BEGIN TRANSCRIPT
GLENN: We have
been trying to get Senator Fred Thompson on since, I don't
know, forever, and today is the day he has agreed to come on
and I am pleased to have Fred Thompson, a conservative,
running for President of the United States. Welcome to the
program, sir.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Hey, Glenn, thank you. Good to be with
you.
GLENN: Good. We have a couple of ways to go. I'm afraid,
because we've been trying for a long time, I'm afraid that
we're going to eat up our 15 minutes here and then I'm not
going to get a chance to talk to you again and --
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, that's not necessarily true. If I
had known you were trying to get me that hard, I would have
just overruled everybody. I would blame it on other people.

GOP Candidate
Fred Thompson
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GLENN: We've been
trying to do it for a while. We could go rapid fire or take
some things and pull them apart, but I've got a ton of
questions for you.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, we'll do it again, too. Let's do it
that way.
GLENN: Then let's start here. I have a -- as a voter, as an
American, I have a quest and so far I haven't seen anybody
that hits all of this. I have a quest of hiring a President
or voting for a President that is not going to compromise
with evil, and that is in the Middle East, that's, you know,
here and abroad, but also not going to compromise with
socialism and what I believe is a global movement to turn us
away from our own Constitution. Convince me that you're the
guy.
SENATOR THOMPSON: The two big issues facing us, the
Democrats clearly want to take us down the road of a welfare
state. I think that we're at a crossroads in that respect. I
think that as some would have it, the Government would
become more and more of a transferation between some
Americans to others, between one generation to another and
it would continue to grow and the attitude would be, don't
worry, be happy, we'll take care of things and, you know,
we're spending our grandkids' money but let them worry about
that.
GLENN: Go ahead.
SENATOR THOMPSON: That's on the social front. That's my plan
on the social front. On the other side there are those who
think that if we will sit down across the table from the
most evil people in the world and just talk common sense to
them that they basically, just the way we are and they think
the way that we do and we can work things out. In the
meantime the world is becoming a more dangerous place almost
day by day. It's not only the terrorist organizations and
the weapons of mass destruction that they have at their
disposal out there in the world that they are trying to get
their hands on but it's the rogue nations that have the
infrastructure and so forth to create these things on their
own or to cooperate with the terrorist organizations, and we
have to be stronger and more united and more committed in
terms of unity and resources than we've ever been before.
GLENN: I've been saying for a while that there is a storm of
biblical proportions headed our way. It's almost the perfect
storm between the economy, what we've done to ourselves and
our spending not only as a government but also personally we
are stretched too thin. The rest of the world with its
global warming bullcrap where we're talking about spending
$26 trillion, we're losing our sovereignty, we're losing our
borders. I mean, we are hit with a perfect storm.
When you get up in the morning, you look at the newspaper,
you look at America, what are the top two things that you
say we must fix now? What are they?
SENATOR THOMPSON: You've hit them. They are the nation's
security and the nation's future prosperity. Those are the
two things, and the things that go into security is
primarily understanding the nature of the world that we live
in. What you talk about just then is exemplified by what's
going on in Iran. I mean, these folks are sitting around
waiting for the twelfth Imam. I mean, that's their goal. The
mullahs want that to happen. They talk in terms of millions
of people perhaps getting killed at the time. It's perfectly
okay with them. They look at things from the standpoint of
religious fanatics, they consider us to be the great evil.
Israel, of course, is the little evil and they've been
killing us for a long, long time through Hezbollah and Hamas
and others. They simply look at the world differently.
They're undoubtedly intent upon nuclear weapons. I don't
care what this latest NIE says. That's foolishness that
represents our own inability to get a handle on it more than
anything else. They've got a missile that will already
travel 1200 miles. I mean, people are always saying that
folks are Chicken Little, you know, for emphasizing these
things, but we have such a short memory since September
11th. I mean, that was a low-tech attack compared to what's
out there, and every intelligence community that we have
access to tells us that they are trying to get their hands
on the worst kinds of weapons possible, and we're going to
have to do more. And we're talking about spending less in
terms of our military and in terms of our intelligence
capabilities. We've had to rebuild almost from scratch. I
was on the intelligence committee. I've watched it.
On the prosperity side, that has to do with fiscal policies
and taxing and spending, and we spent all of our time
talking about the pork barrel spending which is bad, you
know. People ought to be defeated and in some cases
prosecuted for some of it. It's bad enough, it's ridiculous,
it's given congress an even blacker eye than they so richly
deserve. But the real money is on the entitlement side, and
nobody wants to talk about that.
Every economist in the country that takes a look at it, left
and right, says that our path is unsustainable. We are
bankrupting our social programs that we say that we love so
much and we're leaving our kids and our grandkids with an
insurmountable debt. We have a $9 trillion debt now. A lot
of that's held by the Chinese and others. And we're a
graying society, we're an older society because of medical
advances, but we're turning that blessing into a curse for
the next generation. Everybody wants to kick that can down
the road and not talk about it. We could make some moderate
changes now that I propose that will save Social Security,
for example, let people contribute a little more during
their working years for their own retirement with the help
of the government and it would wind up being beneficial to
the government, being beneficial to the individual and save
about $4 trillion in our entitlement programs. That's where
the real money is. It's a little more difficult to talk
about, a little more complicated.
GLENN: But you're --
SENATOR THOMPSON: That's what I think about. That's why I
decided to run, those two primary things. And the third one
would be the fact that we're becoming less united on
fundamental things that we traditionally have been united
together with regard -- and that's going to require
credibility from the President, somebody who will look the
American people in the eye with credibility and tell them
the truth and say, here's where we need to go, here's where
we need to do, let's get together and get it done.
GLENN: You talk about Social Security, but you know and I
know that it's Medicare or Medicaid that's really going to
-- it's going to kill us. I mean, it will eviscerate us here
by 2012. And everybody, damn near everybody, is talking
about raising taxes and that pain has to be felt. You're
talking about a flat tax. Thank God somebody is finally
talking about a flat tax. All the communist countries have
already gone there. I don't know why we can't. How do you
propose to take the IRS and abolish it and put a flat tax
in?
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, it's not a matter to me of
abolishing the IRS as richly as it deserves to be. You've
got to have some mechanism and it's just the mechanism is a
symbol in which we can focus on, but it's not really the
heart of the problem. The heart of the problem is that we've
got the most inefficient complicated tax system in the world
and it's costing us billions in compliance costs and
billions that go uncollected to make everybody else's taxes
higher.
GLENN: So what is the flat tax? What is the proposal?
SENATOR THOMPSON: What I've suggested is this. First of all,
keep the '01 and '03 tax cuts in place. I mean, that's
growth. That's not just lost revenue to the government. That
brings about economic growth which underlines everything
else. We ought to get rid of the death tax, we ought to
lower the corporate tax, which is the second highest tax in
the industrialized world we have. We're very uncompetitive
there. It's costing us jobs.
Then on the individual side you say this. A person has the
option. You can fill all your taxes out the same old way you
want to, using the same old rules, or you can go to a much
flatter approach. If you have individual income of $50,000,
family income of $100,000, you file on a 10% rate. If you
are above that, you file on a 25% rate. You have one
standard deduction and that's it. Your choice. I feel like
people will gravitate to that, people will start using it,
it will lay the groundwork for even more fundamental reform
and greater simplification, which we greatly need for
economic growth in this country.
GLENN: I don't know who wouldn't take you up on that.
However, we're losing -- it seems to me there's a -- well,
let me just ask you the question. What do you think about
this Al Gore global warming? To me it seems like it's global
socialism and a total loss of sovereignty and not really
about global warming at all.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, what troubles me about it is not the
analysis and the debate over the analysis. I think that that
can be a good thing. It's jumping from there to all of these
solutions that people have because they're being proposed on
the basis of inadequate knowledge.
We don't have all the answers by a long shot. We know the
Earth is warming. We don't know whether or not it's a part
of a cycle. We've had cooling stages before. We don't know
to what extent it's due to manmade causes. We don't know
what effect we can have on that. We don't know what the
significance of it is going to be. You have everything, you
know, coastline estimation from inches of water rising to
feet and everything in the middle. All the answers are not
there. I resent trying to close off debate about all this,
but a lot of people are trying to do that. Then they're
jumping from that to solutions that are probably -- it's not
a matter that it's a global thing as much as it is -- I
think if it was a global deal that we could all come
together and agree on, that would probably be a good thing.
But what's really going to happen is that the United States
is going to be pushed into making unilateral decisions that
will hurt us and not help the overall problem. We could do a
lot of things here in the United States with the Chinese and
Indians did not participate, it would more than swamp
whatever benefits that we could come up with. So it's a big
problem. A lot of people are going to have to work together
on it, but we need to do it on the basis of complete
information and all the best that science and research can
teach us. And we've still got a long way to go there.
GLENN: There is a -- I've been in broadcast for 30 years,
senator. I've never felt this ever before from America.
There is a real sense of distrust with our politicians now.
SENATOR THOMPSON: No question.
GLENN: And there is real disenfranchisement and let me just
cover two things with you and get your answers on it. First
of all, Compean and Ramos, would you pardon them; and will
you tell me if you believe that there is a movement by some
to make us into some sort of, you know, continental trading
partner and is that what you believe is stopping people from
enforcing our own laws? What is it? Why are we allowing
Mexico to dictate so much to us?
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, Mexico's an interesting situation.
When you look into it a little bit, you discover that they
have tougher immigration laws than we do. They deport more
people every year than we do. It's really kind of
surprising. It makes you want to say to our Mexican friends,
look, you are our friends, our partners and we're doing some
good things in terms of drug enforcement and I think trade,
generally speaking, is a good thing, but what does it say
about an economy that depends so much on the exporting of
their own people to have the money sent back? It's bigger
than tourism now for them and, you know, they need to get
their own house in order and get their own economy in order
for their own people. But I think that you have -- the first
part of your question had to do with --
GLENN: Compean and Ramos.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Oh, yes, with regard to them, you know,
I'm a lawyer and I have prosecuted cases and I've defended
them. I always know the details of the facts rule as far as
I'm concerned. But I'll tell you my impression from a
distance from what I read. I think that they are probably a
proper subject for consideration for commutation. It seems
that they did do some things wrong, they did try to cover up
what they had done. You've got to apply the law to everybody
equally. But they were much, much too harshly sentenced.
They never should have been charged with what they were
charged with because it carried a mandatory sentence. The
jury didn't know that when they convicted them and you can't
get around the fact the jury convicted them what they were
charged of. So it's one of those cases where an all-out wipe
the slate totally clean is probably not in order but a
commutation to say, okay, these guys did wrong but they've
paid for what they've done; they should not spend any more
time in prison and they should be commuted. It looks to me
like that's probably a just outcome in a case like that.
GLENN: Senator Thompson, good to have you on, sir. I wish
you the best of luck. I hope we can speak to you again.
SENATOR THOMPSON: I do, too, and I will make sure that we
try to arrange that. We do get -- you know, we're out and
about everywhere. It's stretched out --
GLENN: No, no, no, I understand. Yeah, I do. But we would
love to have you on again. We just -- there's been a -- I
get a lot of mail: How come Fred Thompson's never been on
the program.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Well, I'm sorry about that.
GLENN: No, no, no.
SENATOR THOMPSON: We will do better. When I'm on the road, I
catch your TV show and I'm proud of you and what you've
accomplished and I'm a fan of yours and we should stay
closer in touch and I sure want to do it. It doesn't hurt me
any, either, to be on your show. I know that.
SENATOR THOMPSON: No, it's great. And I have to tell you, a
huge fan of the Michael Moore video that you put out. I
just, that film's so good.
SENATOR THOMPSON: I just have to tell you, you know, you
plan all these things and all that. That was done about --
you know, I got up one morning, took a look at it and says,
heck, let's do this. By the time we got the guy over there
with the camera, I decided what I wanted to say. It took a
couple of hours from beginning to end and probably the best
commercial I've made, if you want to call it that.
GLENN: It was great, it was great.
SENATOR THOMPSON: A top-of-the-head deal works out better
sometimes.
GLENN: Senator, thank you very much. We'll talk to you again
soon.
SENATOR THOMPSON: Okay, Glenn, thank you.
GLENN: You bet, bye-bye..
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