Glenn Beck slams bogus reports that The Nazarene Fund pledged and then withdrew 600000 for plane full of dogs Were not charging to get to freedom
Conservative commentator and radio staple Glenn Beck slammed a nonprofit group for what he says is a âdefamatory lieâ after they tweeted that Beckâs Nazarene Fund pledged $600,000 to help them fly dogs from war-torn Kabul, but then rescinded the offer.
The group, âVeteran Sheepdogs of America,â tweeted, â@glennbeck group committed $600,000 then decommitted helping get our flight get off. State Department is aware and NOT HAPPY.â
The tweet naturally raised eyebrows, and received more than 1,000 likes in less than 12 hours.
[email protected] group committed $600,000 then decommitted helping get our flight get off. State Department is aware and NOT HAPPY. ð
â" Veteran Sheepdogs of America (@Veteran Sheepdogs of America)1630393774.0
What are the details?Beck addressed the reports during his Tuesday radio show, and stated that The Nazarene Fund simply never pledged to help the group â" nor would it have because the group did not have even the most basic requirements for a nonprofit organization to assist such as proof of clearance to get in and out of Kabulâs Hamid Karzai International Airport.
âI just found out about this this morning, and when I found out about it, I thought, âThat smells like bullcrap,'â Beck began the fiery segment. âAnd so I got a hold of the CEO, and COO, and everybody else involved with The Nazarene Fund because I saw a tweet from âVetSheepdogsUS,â and normally I would immediately just take VetSheepdogsUS at their word, but seeing that it was against me or The Nazarene Fund, I didnât take them at their word. Theyâre a 501c3, âa veteran organization with a sheepdog mentality to advocate for all veterans.â The tweet went out this morning, it said, âGlenn Beckâs group ⦠committed $600,000 then decommitted helping get our flight off. State Department is aware and not happy.'â
âOK,â he said. âThe first tip is that this person doesnât know what theyâre talking about or theyâre on the wrong side is that they called the State Department and got somebody on the phone that said, âOh my gosh, that happened to you? Thatâs horrible!â OK. Well, really? Because we canât even get the State Department on the phone usually. So I immediately called and said, all right. Does anybody know, is this true, what happened if it is?â
Beck said that after discussing the issue with The Nazarene Fundâs executives, he was fully convinced that his nonprofit organization never offered any money to Veteran Sheepdogs of America, and especially not $600,000.
âLet me reassure you now: This is not true. Not true,â he insisted. âThere was no money ever committed to this group or for this plane. And apparently, they were going to take the dogs that were left behind â" which, my heart breaks for the dogs, and I think itâs wrong that they left the dogs behind. But they were going to take the dogs and put them on the plane and then apparently because they did reach out to us â" letâs see here, we were contacted by many of our partners asking about this plane that was transporting dogs and charging for additional seats at $6,000 to $10,000 per seat to get out of Kabul airport.â
Beck said that The Nazarene Fund immediately balked when they heard that the plane â" which was set for transporting dogs â" would be charging people anywhere from $6,000 to $10,000 for seats on the plane.
âWe, of course, because weâre good stewards with the money, we of course asked for some detail, we did our due diligence, tried to get some background. ⦠So we got a hold of the person who was selling these tickets and he asked us for $600,000. Well, we donât ever sell tickets,â he fumed. âWe wonât get involved with people who are selling tickets. You can do that, thatâs fine; but weâre not charging to get to freedom. I donât think that is right to do. And luckily, we have the money we donât have to. So we donât ever charge anyone that we rescue anything for those seats, ever.â
He explained that the unnamed person representing Veteran Sheepdogs of America told Nazarene Fund executives that they were unable to provide any clearance or proof to get into Kabul.
â[W]e would have been happy to provide a flight, but they couldnât provide any clearance or proof into Kabul,â Beck said. âHad they been able to provide proof of clearance, we could have gone to the next step, which was âWeâve got some other questions.â My team, I am told, asked this individual, âCan you provide clearance paperwork into Kabul, the callsign, tail number and clearance code.â If you donât have that, you donât have a plane! You donât have a way to get â" give me your tail number! And if you have the plane, give me the callsign, the tail number, and then give me the clearance code, because nothingâs flying in. ⦠Iâm not gonna give you $600,000 if you canât land the plane. They didnât have it.â
Beck said that his group would have had myriad more questions, but the group representative couldnât even answer the most basic of questions about how the proposed operation would work.
âHow are you getting them through to the gates of the airport safely? Because we canât do that,â Beck said. âAnd I donât know anyone who can. Youâre coming with dogs and people? How are you doing that? Maybe we can learn something from you. Couldnât provide that. Where are you taking them? How would you get them through the Taliban checkpoints? What kind of diplomatic paperwork do you have? These are all questions that would have been asked â" some of them asked, but really kind of stopped at âYou donât have a clearance code? You donât have a tail number?â If you canât give us the clearance proof into Kabul, you donât really have a plane.â
He concluded, âWe would have loved to help them, Iâm sure. Iâm not making any of these decisions. ⦠As much compassion as I have for dogs, I love dogs, and it killed me yesterday to see those dogs on the tarmac, you know. The Nazarene Fund, we didnât come to you and ask to save a plane full of dogs. Now, if you could have had dogs in the aisle and people in the rest of the plane, Iâm good with that. Iâm totally good with that. Love to help them with that. But we never, ever said anything about giving them $600,000. We have had other, multiple non-profits who have been contacted already by this group who also have chosen not to fund this group for similar reasons. I donât know anything about them other than this tweet is a lie.â
Beck tweeted the clip and captioned it, âVeteran Sheepdogs of America claimed @thenazarenefund âcommitted $600,000 then decommitted helping get our flight offâ in Afghanistan. I called those who spoke with them at The Nazarene Fund to get to the bottom of this. This is a LIE.â
Beckâs executive producer, Rikki Ratliff, also addressed the controversy on Twitter writing, â
@GPollowitz @glennbeck Itâs a defamatory lie. Glenn addressed on radio today. Look for tweet and https://t.co/wYq6TUzq8c write up soon.
â" Reality Czar Rikki (@Reality Czar Rikki)1630426586.0
Blaze Mediaâs Jessica OâDonnell added, âNO money was ever promised to @VetSheepdogsUS by Glenn Beck or orgs he is associated with. Vet Sheepdogs asked for money. GB org asked for proof of clearance to get in/out of airport in Kabul. Vet Sheepdogs did not/could not provide it. Thatâs where it ended.â
She later tweeted, âReminder: @glennbeck spent days in the Middle East last week after raising $28 million dollars to safely evacuate thousands of people from Afghanistan. If youâre looking for someone to be angry at for not doing enough, Glenn should be the last guy on your list.â
NO money was ever promised to @VetSheepdogsUS by Glenn Beck or orgs he is associated with. Vet Sheepdogs asked for⦠https://t.co/7mteLlJvei
â" Jessica OâBoy-Football-is-Back-Donnell (@Jessica OâBoy-Football-is-Back-Donnell)1630424638.0
@VetSheepdogsUS Reminder: @glennbeck spent days in the Middle East last week after raising $28 million dollars to s⦠https://t.co/FEY1KfKdmW
â" Jessica OâBoy-Football-is-Back-Donnell (@Jessica OâBoy-Football-is-Back-Donnell)1630425046.0
Source: TheBlaze
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