President Trumps Plan to Make America Great Again

In October, Donald Trump released a plan for his first 100 days in function. Called "Donald Trump's Contract With The American Voter," the programme promises to restore "honesty, accountability and alter to Washington."

"It's pretty impressive," Glenn said Thursday on his radio programme.

Trump's very first line item is proposing a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on all members of Congress. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has already gone on record equally saying, "Information technology will not be on the calendar in the Senate."

"It's not going to happen, and it has naught to do with Donald Trump. If anyone can get it washed, it might be Donald Trump," Glenn said.

Read beneath or lookout man the clip for answers to these promising questions:

• What half-dozen measures does Trump promise on day one to clean upwards corruption and special interests?

• What seven actions does he hope to take on 24-hour interval 1 to protect American workers?

• What v deportment will Trump accept on day 1 to restore security and the constitutional dominion of police?

• What ten items does Trump pledge to fight for in the first 100 days of his presidency?

• What, if anything, does Glenn disagree with?

Below is a rush transcript of this segment, it might incorporate errors:

GLENN: Hello, America. I desire to talk to yous virtually the 100-day action program to make America great again.

I volition tell you that elections have consequences, and also obligations. And in this ballot, our obligation is to now stop fighting the battle of, should he be president, should he non be president?

Did he believe those things? Did he say those things? What'due south he going to do? And at present he's president. Let's take him at his word, and let's follow what he's going to exercise and then agree him accountable if he deviates from that, with the agreement that every president has to make some sacrifices. They have to compromise from time to fourth dimension. As long as we don't compromise our principles, we'll be fine. And then information technology's a new twenty-four hours. Elections take consequences. Elections take responsibilities for its citizens.

And one of those is not to be marching in the streets, calling for people'south, the death after an election. That is more like a -- oh, I don't know. Russia 1919.

What follows is the 100 day action plan to make America great again. Let'due south go through this. It's pretty impressive.

Starting time, suggest a constitutional amendment to impose term limits on all members of Congress.

STU: Showtime!

PAT: I like that.

STU: I beloved that.

PAT: Yeah, that'southward peachy.

GLENN: It'southward not going to happen. And information technology has nothing to practise with Donald Trump. If anyone can go it washed, information technology might exist Donald Trump.

JEFFY: He won't.

PAT: Yes.

GLENN: But -- considering he tin speak directly to the American people and try to push information technology through. But already, Mitch McConnell, you know, that great guy who was for Donald Trump, he has come up out and said, "No, that's not even going to make it to our Senate agenda."

STU: And the thing nearly -- the upshot why this never happens -- because this is something that'due south supported by eight percentage plus of the people.

GLENN: Aye.

STU: Is that, it's always somebody who understands, quote, unquote, that, you know, you need to stay in office and everyone needs to hang effectually. You need to empathise the organization and all that.

This is ane thing that I really have and had hope that Donald Trump would push for. It came forth late in his calendar. It was not like one of the get-go things he passionately talked about.

But it strikes very much of that -- honestly, the Bannon philosophy. Hopefully, that really happens. That one, I'yard actually -- I would love. Because that one is huge, and it has long-term implications.

GLENN: Aye. That'southward number i on his list.

Number two, a hiring freeze on all federal employees to reduce federal workforce through attrition, exempting military machine, public prophylactic, and public health.

STU: That'southward --

GLENN: Third, a requirement that for every new federal regulation, two existing regulations must exist eliminated.

PAT: What?

JEFFY: Okay.

STU: Wow. I hateful, I like that. I don't know if that'southward --

GLENN: We'll see.

STU: We'll see. I similar that.

GLENN: Fourth, a 5-yr ban on White House and congressional offices becoming -- or, officials becoming lobbyists afterward they get out government service.

PAT: Aye, Obama --

GLENN: That should be easy.

PAT: Simply, whatsoever.

GLENN: I know. Fifth, a lifetime ban on White House officials, lobbying on behalf of foreign governments.

PAT: All correct.

GLENN: Half-dozen, a complete ban on foreign lobbyists raising money for American elections.

PAT: Uh-huh.

GLENN: So he says that's twenty-four hour period one.

STU: What'south that last one?

GLENN: A consummate ban on foreign lobbyists raising money for elections.

STU: That'due south interesting. Because that was some of the stuff -- information technology was i of the issues that Manafort was criticized for, being a lobbyist, working with foreign governments. It's interesting he would accept that on as a large part of his platform. Because, I hateful, the nearly recent --

GLENN: This was afterwards Manafort left.

STU: Exactly. And I know the new people didn't particularly similar the quondam people. And so it's an interesting part of that.

GLENN: Aye.

Offset, I will announce my intention to renegotiate NAFTA or withdraw from the deal nether Article 2205.

At present, when information technology comes to trade deals, I believe Donald Trump 100 percent. I believe he will spend all of his political majuscule on trade deals. He'south willing to, at least.

Considering he -- that'south the only -- that's the one thing that remained truthful and constant his entire entrada. And he said it for years.

Second, I will denote our withdrawal from the Transpacific Partnership.

JEFFY: Yes, he wants that.

PAT: Wow. Good.

STU: I hateful, that's no surprise.

GLENN: And I think he'll do both of u.s..

STU: Yeah, those -- yeah, the NAFTA i volition be interesting to encounter of what he does with it. Again, he's not maxim he's going to get rid of information technology.

And there's been a lot of positives from it, to be perfectly honest. Just I remember --

PAT: A lot of negatives though, too. It's non a great treaty.

STU: Just if y'all tin can go through and discover the bad and get rid of that obviously --

GLENN: Well, yeah, the problem is, it'due south an outside -- it'southward an unconstitutional government framework being congenital to a higher place the Constitution. That's the trouble with TPP.

PAT: Uh-huh.

GLENN: Third, I volition direct my Secretary of the Treasury to label Red china a currency manipulator.

Warning.

STU: Aye.

GLENN: Warning. I would beloved to do that, but that is boot the people who are feeding you correct now.

PAT: Hmm.

STU: And, well, I hateful, A, he promised it. Right? He's promised this -- all this stuff are campaign promises. Then y'all're non as surprised to see them. I hateful, I don't concur on a lot of this --

PAT: However, all his promises were suggestions. Allow'south non forget that. They were all --

GLENN: Wait. Wait. I volition tell yous this -- I volition tell you this, this is 1 of the main concerns I have had with Donald Trump's policies, is he is not a bourgeois when it comes to trade deals, non at all.

STU: He's Bernie Sanders on it.

GLENN: Yep.

STU: And that'south -- look, that's not something he lied about. He was straight-up and honest most it.

GLENN: No, no. No, I know that. But I accept been very clear that if he wants or if he -- if he gets into trade wars -- and that'due south how these things are solved -- if you start to stick a hot iron into one of your partner'south optics, they're going to stick two hot irons in your eyes. And this is what the Great Depression became the Great Depression, instead of an eighteen-calendar month low, because of Smoot-Hawley tariffs. Then this is very unsafe territory.

I will direct Secretary of Commerce and United states trade representative to identify all strange trading abuses that unfairly impact American workers and direct them to utilize every tool nether American and international law to end those abuses immediately.

STU: Okay. Again, that's --

PAT: Still waiting for Obamacare repeal.

GLENN: It's coming. Information technology's coming.

STU: We're on 11. Just number 11.

GLENN: Hang on. Hang on. Fifth, I will elevator the restrictions on the production of 50 trillion dollars' worth of job-producing American free energy reserves, including shale, oil, natural gas, and clean coal.

PAT: Oh, adept. Good.

GLENN: That could save the economy in that location alone.

PAT: That'southward really good.

GLENN: Except -- except prices of free energy is so depression right now.

STU: Yes, but, I mean -- certainly, A, this is a positive.

GLENN: I know. It's a positive. I know.

Six, lift the Obama/Clinton roadblocks and allow vital energy infrastructure projects like the Keystone Oil Pipeline.

PAT: Yes. Good.

GLENN: That's gigantic.

PAT: Those two are really good.

GLENN: Yep.

Seventh, cancel billions in payments to the Un climate change program.

PAT: Oh, practiced golly.

STU: Aye.

GLENN: And utilise the coin to set America's h2o and environmental infrastructure. I'grand okay with that.

PAT: All right.

GLENN: I desire to know the details on that, only I recollect I'm okay.

PAT: All right. Yeah.

JEFFY: He'due south already tapped the climate skeptic Myron Ebell for his --

STU: Yeah, and that'southward a good hire.

PAT: Expert.

STU: Smart guy. And definitely a skeptical climate guy. Again, practiced for us.

PAT: Yeah.

STU: That'due south a good proper noun.

GLENN: Additionally, on the first twenty-four hours -- then everything he's saying so far is day one.

PAT: Wow.

GLENN: Additionally, on the first 24-hour interval, I will --

JEFFY: It'due south a good day.

GLENN: Y'all get this washed, you could take a vacation.

I volition take the post-obit five actions to restore security and the constitutional dominion of law.

Beginning, abolish every unconstitutional executive activity, memorandum, and gild issued by President Obama.

PAT: I mean, this is -- a lot of these things, Ted Cruz talked about.

GLENN: I know. I know.

PAT: This is corking.

GLENN: This came very late. And he took some of the last stuff -- this is his Gettysburg accost.

PAT: This is groovy. This is great.

STU: Is this mail service-election or pre-election?

GLENN: This is post-election, but this is what he said at Gettysburg.

PAT: All right.

GLENN: Okay.

Second, begin the process of selecting a replacement for Justice Scalia from one of the 20 judges on my list, who will uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States.

PAT: So he's actually verifying --

GLENN: He'south sticking to the twenty judges on his listing.

PAT: -- confirming that he's going to selection from that listing.

GLENN: Yes. Third, cancel all federal funding to sanctuary cities.

JEFFY: Ooh.

PAT: Nice.

JEFFY: Ooh.

STU: And then he tin do that on solar day one without --

GLENN: That's billions of dollars.

STU: Can he practice that?

GLENN: I don't know.

JEFFY: I don't know.

STU: I'm sure he has some programme to practise it, I just don't know what that is.

PAT: Executive order?

GLENN: Fourth, begin removing the more than than two million criminal illegal immigrants from the country and cancel visas to foreign countries that won't take them dorsum.

STU: Okay. So you're going to punish -- if they won't take them back -- because that is an issue that we don't talk nigh all that oftentimes. They might not -- we might say, "Hey, we found this criminal. Take him back, Mexico." And they're going to be like, "Screw yous. We don't want him." So they're going to be -- so he would cancel visas to that state every bit punishment.

That volition be interesting -- I mean, obviously both --

PAT: It will be retaliation.

STU: That would probably escalating --

PAT: You got to practice something, correct? Nosotros've been begging for something to be done.

GLENN: Think about but canceling federal funding for all sanctuary cities.

JEFFY: Wow.

GLENN: That puts cities similar New York --

PAT: Houston, Dallas.

STU: Oh, my gosh.

PAT: San Francisco.

GLENN: Into massive disrepair fast.

STU: They take to stop --

PAT: They take to cease it immediately. They have to finish information technology immediately.

STU: I mean, there will be a meg things that happen off of that.

JEFFY: Yes.

STU: But, again, these are --

GLENN: All of these things have massive consequences.

STU: To go to what yous were talking most earlier, I hateful, if you take this stuff literally, at that place might be problems here. But the general management of it is positive.

GLENN: Aye, it is.

PAT: If I'chiliad the city council of one of these cities, I'grand already planning for that.

JEFFY: You're darn right yous are. And you've got to be talking about the fact that if he does that, we've got to cease being a sanctuary urban center.

JEFFY: Or they're going to -- they're already starting to talk about filing lawsuit, even hither in Dallas, against that.

GLENN: Practiced luck in the courts in Dallas.

JEFFY: Okay.

GLENN: Good luck in the --

STU: It may or may not work. But, again, he can't control that. Right?

Then if he tries to do something --

PAT: Yeah, these are expert steps. These are expert steps.

GLENN: Fifth, suspend immigration from terror-decumbent regions where vetting cannot safely occur.

STU: Then this is what the Muslim ban turned into, which is a much more rational policy.

GLENN: Yeah. Yes. Yes.

STU: And, over again, there could be some problems with other countries --

PAT: There volition exist.

STU: And that'southward a fair -- that's a fair limitation.

GLENN: Okay. So those are the things that he says he's going to do on mean solar day 1.

PAT: Wow.

STU: No Obamacare in there. Merely I retrieve that's coming, right?

GLENN: It'due south coming. That'south gigantic. If he did all of those things on day ane, I can't guarantee yous what the ramifications will be. It makes me happy.

JEFFY: Me too.

GLENN: But it might set the world on fire. I don't know.

STU: Correct. Then going through -- categorizing existent quick, term limits, i, I'm 100 percent backside that. Then he goes to regulation cuts and spending cuts, I love that. With the hiring freeze. So he has the lobbying stuff, which is fine, only, I mean, I'm not all that passionate about information technology.

GLENN: Yes.

STU: Then trade stuff, which I think, in my stance, would exist bad about of it.

GLENN: Yes.

STU: And then energy, I similar that a lot. Climatic change, certainly love that he would not be paying for climate change crap like that. Supreme Courtroom, one of the 20 judges is a big step. And this is -- we were told and heard that was one of the things he locked in to get some conservative back up. Because the first time he gave that list, he gave information technology and so backed off of it.

JEFFY: Backed off.

GLENN: Drew said he locked in Mike Lee for that.

STU: And then that's -- and Lee was on that listing. And so sanctuary cities, illegal immigration, I mean, funding. That'south skillful too.

So, I hateful, most of that is pretty skillful, I think.

PAT: Really good. A lot of it is really good.

STU: Yes, information technology's more -- in the only iffy part is the trade policy. And, you know, nosotros've talked about that the whole time.

STU: And you knew that getting into this. That's not a surprise.

PAT: Yeah. Yep.

GLENN: So he says, then in my first 100 days, I'g going to piece of work on something more broad with Congress. And I'll tell you lot what that is, coming upwards in merely a second.

[break]

GLENN: First half-hour of this hour, we talked about the things that Donald Trump said he was going to practise on mean solar day 1. Pretty overwhelming. And pretty ambitious. And --

PAT: Almost of information technology pretty great.

GLENN: Yep. I think -- I don't call up there was annihilation in at that place that I didn't think was great. At that place were things in in that location that I worry sincerely about the consequences.

PAT: Uh-huh.

GLENN: And what he means. The devil will exist in the details on the trade stuff.

Merely, yous know, some things that are really groovy, but some things that, yous know, might start a trade war. Simply who am I to say?

He so says, within the first 100 days of my administration, I volition innovate the following broader legislative measures and fight for their passage.

One, Centre Class Revenue enhancement Relief and Simplification Human action. An economical plan designed to grow the economy 4 percent a twelvemonth and create at least 25 million new jobs through massive tax reduction and simplification, in combination with trade reform, regulatory relief, and lifting the restriction on American free energy.

The largest tax reductions will be for the middle course. A middle course family with 2 children will become a 35 pct taxation cut.

PAT: Hmm.

GLENN: The current number of brackets will be reduced from seven to three. And tax forms will too be profoundly simplified.

STU: I mean, this is almost identical to the Business firm program.

GLENN: Yes.

STU: We talk to -- we had Evan McMullin on the air several weeks ago, and one of the commencement interviews we had with him on Pat & Stu. Information technology was almost his exact taxation plan besides. Their plans were very similar at the finish. This was non the first Trump plan, merely the one he landed on was almost identical to the House Republican plan.

Anyways...

GLENN: The business organisation rate volition be lowered from 35 to 15 pct. You know how many people we'll hire?

PAT: Uh-huh.

GLENN: And the trillions of dollars of American corporate coin overseas tin can at present be brought back at a x percent rate.

That's a little concerning, but I capeesh the effort.

STU: Right. At that place'southward good and bad with that.

GLENN: Yeah. That can cause massive inflation. Y'all bring dorsum trillions of dollars of greenbacks.

STU: Many of these things too --

PAT: If it happens all at once, especially.

STU: Many of these things tin be washed through reconciliation likewise because they're upkeep matters. That's how the Bush revenue enhancement cuts got done. Information technology as well means that they would have an expiration date. Just I recall it's ten years. And so yous would have some time with a much more favorable business surround. But and then you would have to pass something to keep it this mode, which is where information technology gets really different. But, still, ten years is ten years.

PAT: The president and the House and the Senate, I merely don't understand why they tin't get afterward something more than ambitious than this.

GLENN: I agree.

PAT: Why not? Why non go for it now? Y'all've got the ability. Go for it. They never do. Never do. Republicans never -- expect what Democrats did when they have the shot.

GLENN: Yeah.

PAT: They overhauled 17 percent of the US economy.

GLENN: Among other things --

PAT: Among other things.

STU: Dodd-Frank. Non to mention the stimulus. They went for it. They did serious damage. Well, we could repair a lot of that with a actually ambitious program. Information technology's a shame they're --

STU: Only this ane is better than what we take now.

PAT: I mean, I'll take it. I'll take it. But we ever just take to accept information technology. All right. Throw us a scrap. I'll eat information technology. Any.

GLENN: Well, and that's the problem. That's why y'all tin accomplish things on the left that the right tin can't accomplish, because the left is always big and aspirational and new.

PAT: Always.

GLENN: And you're like, "Wow, that's -- I mean, wow. Who tin can't dream about that?"

PAT: Right.

GLENN: We're e'er about nickel and diming the tax brackets.

STU: But, once again --

PAT: Like Ted Cruz proposed is doable right now. Considering you've got the power to practice it.

GLENN: I agree.

STU: Let me give you where this was. So Bush-league had the tax rates at 35 percent. This -- and they're now 39.six, plus some other junk that I assume this gets rid of likewise. I don't know that for a fact.

This would move information technology to 12, 25, 33. So y'all would still have a 33 percent tax rate, and capital gains would be at 20 percent. So, again --

GLENN: That'south withal loftier for --

PAT: Are they keeping deductions, or are they trying to take those?

STU: Some -- I mean, it'due south a mixed pocketbook on that. At that place's aught flat about it. It's the House plan. Information technology really is.

I don't retrieve it'south that simplified. At that place'south not just charity and mortgage. At that place'south still lots of deductions in there. They will get rid of some of them. They will get rid of the expiry tax, at least temporarily, which is always -- it's just a ridiculous tax. It's similar the most insultingly ridiculous affair I've always heard of in my --

PAT: It's authorities theft.

STU: It's not the biggest role of the economy, merely information technology'south merely morally ridiculous.

PAT: Yeah.

STU: That you would --

GLENN: All this stuff -- all this stuff that progressives accept done, I think, that revolve around expiry, is morally reprehensible. I really do. The death tax.

I'm sorry. Merely I think somebody ownership land and putting it in a trust in perpetuity is wrong, is admittedly wrong.

To exist able -- if information technology's owned by your family unit, yous know what I hateful? And your family -- you lot pass it to your son. That'southward fine. But telling your son and his son and his son, what he can and cannot do with that land, nosotros have no idea what that might be on that land.

Y'all might detect that it has a special stone in that land in 100 years from now. And somebody ruling from 100 years ago is going to tell usa, I can't get that stone. Who the hell are you?

STU: But whose land is it?

GLENN: It bothers me when it is locked upwardly -- it's still his land. Information technology's still his country. Because he's locked information technology up. No i living today tin can say, "Oh, well, we want to -- nosotros want to go await for that rock. We desire to go practice this." No.

That land is merely for this particular use. Flow.

STU: But, I mean, isn't that your correct, as someone who is -- if you want to -- like, I remember there was a radio station, I don't call up where information technology was. You'll remember this story probably. And the people who owned information technology, information technology was a great signal, in the heart of the FM dial. And they fabricated it a classical station.

GLENN: It was King.

STU: And and then -- in Seattle?

GLENN: In Seattle.

STU: And they said, I don't care what you practise with this. It'south just got to be classical.

GLENN: But they were still live. The family that owns King, I call back they notwithstanding are -- I tin't think their names anymore. But they were still alive. The sisters were still doing it. And, over again, it'south -- the country -- I'm pitiful. I'yard much more Native American on the land.

Men do not ain country. We tin possess the country while we're alive, and we tin -- we can have our own borders on information technology. But we are really care takers of the land. The next generation comes in and they decide what they're going to do with --

JEFFY: What you're saying is y'all're giving information technology to the side by side generation, and the next generation is able to decide what they're going to exercise with it during their lifetime.

GLENN: Yeah.

JEFFY: Not three generations from at present, Glenn Beck'due south property is nonetheless Glenn Brook'south holding.

GLENN: Right. What I'thousand saying -- look, what I'k proverb is -- okay. I take a ranch. Okay. I dice. I desire my ranch to go to my children. Now, they can go along it exactly the same. But if I said to my children, oh, boy, you are never to build some other house on this state -- y'all know, Dad, you didn't see 50 years ago, before you died, what was happening in the earth. I want to build a house here.

STU: If it's something -- for example, if you are -- you put a religious institution on a slice of land and you say, "I desire information technology to be there because it'due south my principles, they concluding forever, it'due south mine. This is what I desire it to be." If you lot don't desire to accept my free souvenir of land under these -- under this contract, then don't accept it. But I congenital my life -- my life's piece of work resides here. It's important to me. I want it to last forever.

GLENN: You lock -- you lot lock --

PAT: Plus, how much of that is at that place?

STU: Not a lot.

PAT: That's a small portion of what we're talking about anyway.

GLENN: I just notice it -- I find information technology reprehensible. I find information technology reprehensible. That -- that the federal government can merely tell people who are close to the land what they take to practise from an function in Washington where they take no idea what they're doing with the land. They have no thought what they're doing.

And beyond that -- for instance, we have now -- are yous against -- are you going -- are you against going in and getting oil if the country needs information technology in the preserve lands of Alaska?

PAT: No.

STU: No.

GLENN: You're not against that?

PAT: Uh-uh.

GLENN: Well, why? It'due south deemed preserve land.

STU: Yeah, simply deemed past who? The government? If you lot said -- if you bought land and you lot said, "Yous know what, this is my land, and no one shall ever drill on information technology," then I think you would have a correct to do that.

GLENN: What right do you have to rule backside --

STU: It'due south yours.

GLENN: From beyond the grave.

STU: Y'all don't take to accept the state under that contract.

You lot just die, and no one accepts -- because you're deeding this every bit a -- you're putting information technology in a certain status.

PAT: And that'south the government's theory on your money as well: What right practice you lot accept to give your money to your children?

GLENN: No, no. That's non.

STU: Aye.

PAT: That's how they call back virtually information technology. You're dead. We should go that coin.

GLENN: No, wait. I'm saying that you could give that land to somebody and say, "Wait, Pat, take this land. Hither's our understanding. Our agreement is you don't build anything on in that location. You lot got information technology." Good. And so it's a contract between me and y'all.

And then, when y'all die, you could laissez passer it and say, "Hey, expect, I made him a hope." But it allows Pat -- if things change, it allows Pat to say, "Okay. Hang on only a 2d."

We have found a new rare mineral. It's only plant on this state.

STU: But progressives e'er find a style that things take changed. That'due south why -- I mean, that's why you lot have a principle. Information technology'due south essentially a part of your own Constitution. If you say you want to use land for a specific matter and it's yours --

GLENN: Okay. Allow me give y'all -- remember the Barnes Museum in Philadelphia?

STU: I do not.

GLENN: Okay. The Barnes Museum in Philadelphia, a guy was -- was an eclectic and pretty damn near crazy collector of fine art. One of the greatest collections of art in America. Okay? But he wanted them all hung.

Information technology makes no sense. The fashion you lot go and yous listen to the lectures, and they take you through his art collection, you're like, "What the hell. What?" And he'due south like, "See, this -- this represents this." And they are put together because of -- well, none of it -- some of it is inaccurate. But he -- that's the way he viewed the art. And and so he said, "I'll donate the collection, but it always has to be done like that. And these things have to exist said."

STU: Right.

GLENN: Okay. Hang on.

Well, the urban center of Philadelphia said, "It'due south in a neighborhood. It'due south poor lighting. Information technology doesn't make sense to be done that fashion." And they took it from the Barnes Foundation, and they forced them to movement it and to do it the way they wanted to.

The people from the inside who were responsible for the collection took it and said, "No, we're not going to practice that way anymore. Later all, he'southward expressionless." No, no, expect. That is private property. That's unlike than land.

STU: Yep.

GLENN: Land --

STU: I think land is belongings.

PAT: Yep, it is.

STU: It'south actually property brothers. It's a state --

GLENN: I'chiliad not -- no, I'g not saying that you don't own -- I'm not proverb someone tin come up on to your state and tell you lot what to do with information technology. I'g not maxim that at all.

STU: No, you lot're definitely confronting that. We know that.

GLENN: Right. I am for personal property existence land. I'yard maxim, when you die, what right do you have to take a finite thing, which is globe -- fine art is not finite. Just buildings -- annihilation yous desire to do, that's not finite.

STU: In that location'south e'er other land. At that place's e'er other state.

GLENN: There may not exist that land. There may not exist --

STU: There is a theoretical signal, right? Similar, that you're making, that theoretically, there's this plot of country that at that place'southward -- this i resource that we can but go there. In that, you know, one in a zillion chance -- I mean, once again, this is a real long shot. But if that were to happen, nosotros do have eminent domain laws, which is what this is really constitutionally to be used as, non for casinos or parking lots, but for that type of purpose. That's -- that is probably where that would apply, if information technology applies. Only, I hateful, that never -- that situation is almost incommunicable.

Like, I mean, to me -- if yous don't want to take the donation of whatever it is, and so don't -- then you don't accept it nether those circumstances. If there's a foundation that has that and that is your legacy, I think that is completely within your right to practice.

GLENN: All right. Here's our sponsor this one-half-hour, it's SimpliSafe.

PAT: Does Trump become to Obamacare in the starting time 100 days?

GLENN: Yes, he does. Aye, he does. And I'll get to those existent quick.

[interruption]

GLENN: All correct. So here'due south what he'due south going to practice: He's going to reduce the taxes. So terminate the Off-shoring Act, constitute tariffs to discourage companies from laying off their workers, in order to relocate in other countries to ship their products back to the US, tax-complimentary.

STU: That's something I disagree with.

GLENN: Yeah. American energy and infrastructure. Leverages private public partnerships, private investments through tax incentives, spur one trillion in infrastructure investment over ten years.

STU: That's a stimulus.

GLENN: Yep.

School Pick and Educational activity Opportunity Act. Redirects educational dollars to give parents the right to send their kids to public school, private charter, magnate, religious, or homeschool of their choice. Ends Common Cadre.

Love that.

Brings education supervision to local communities. It expands vocational and technical educations and make ii to 4-yr college more than affordable.

PAT: Pretty good.

GLENN: Let's meet.

Restoring the Community Safety Deed. Reduces surging crime, drugs, violence, by creating a chore force on violent criminal offense and increases funding for programs that train and assist local constabulary.

I don't like this at all.

I don't similar anything getting into the government, giving money to constabulary.

Increases resources for federal -- yeah, the federal government. Federal law enforcement agencies and federal prosecutors to dismantle criminal gangs and put violent offenders backside confined.

Restoring the national security human activity, rebuilds our military past eliminating the defence sequester -- good -- and expanding armed forces investment, provides veterans with the ability to receive public VA treatment, or nourish the private doc of their choice, good. Protects our vital infrastructure from cyber assault, expert. Establishes new screening procedures for immigration to ensure those who are admitted to our country back up our people and our values.

Ten, clean Up Abuse in Washington Act. Enacts new ethics reforms to drain the swamp and reduce the corruption influence of special interests in our politics. On Nov 8th, Americans volition be voting for this 100-day plan to make America bang-up over again.

STU: Yeah, the offset half of those are pretty specific. The second, they're much more broad.

GLENN: Yep, considering they're legislative acts.

STU: They could exist really practiced.

GLENN: They could be actually bad.

STU: They could accept lots of bug. In that location's definitely a lot of spending in that second half, which makes me concerned.

GLENN: Yep.

STU: Only, again, we'll look at it as these things come.

PAT: I'm not sure I ever heard the words repeal Obamacare either. I didn't hear that.

STU: No.

GLENN: Yeah, information technology is at that place. I must have skipped it when we took a suspension.

PAT: If information technology'south there, boy, they buried the pb.

GLENN: It is at that place.

Featured Image: President Barack Obama speaks while coming together with President-elect Donald Trump (L) following a coming together in the Oval Office November 10, 2016 in Washington, DC. Trump is scheduled to meet with members of the Republican leadership in Congress later today on Capitol Hill. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

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Source: https://www.glennbeck.com/2016/11/10/trumps-impressive-100-day-action-plan-to-make-america-great-again/

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