Glenn Beck Program

The Full Program with Paul Andert
 
WWII Veteran Paul Andert on the Glenn Beck Program – 12, 11, 14
Paul Andert was 17 years old when he began training under General George Patton in the 2nd Armored Division. He took part in successful invasions in Africa and Sicily before training with British paratroopers for the Normandy invasion.

On Thursday, the vivacious veteran said there was one thing he remembered most about coming home five years later: how a young woman thanked him for his service.

“I picked up my barracks bag and I went out and got on a bus to go home,” he said. “While I’m on the bus I was still limping, and a young girl got up. She must have been about 16 or 15. She said, ‘Soldier, take my seat.’ And that was the best homecoming you could ever have.”

Andert said that after getting “$30 and a car token” and being told to “go home,” the kind actions of the girl almost “tore [him] apart.”

“It really, really — I can’t ever forget it,” he said. “And every time I see a young girl … I always remember the reception I got. And it was more important than any damn parade or anything like that.”

World War II veteran Paul Andert spoke on The Glenn Beck Program December 11, 2014. (Photo via TheBlaze TV)

Speaking on The Glenn Beck Program, Andert remembered the day he met Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Dwight Eisenhower.

“Churchill came out of the back of the train, and Eisenhower came along,” he recalled. “He came up to me, I was at the head of the platoon, and he said, ‘You’re kind of young to be a platoon sergeant, aren’t you?’”

“I’d already been in Africa and Sicily, you know!” Andert recalled. “And I said, ‘Yes, sir!’ He said, ‘You lied about your age?’ And I said, ‘Yes, sir!’”

 

“Churchill was the greatest man of World War II because he always said, ‘You never, never give up,” Andert added. “And I looked at him almost this close when he said that — ‘Never, never give up.’”

World War II veteran Paul Andert spoke on The Glenn Beck Program December 11, 2014. (Photo via TheBlaze TV)

After Andert was injured, he woke up in an Army hospital in England. He noticed that he was on one side of the hospital, and all the Americans were somewhere else.

“I yelled out, ‘What in the hell’s going on here?’” he recalled. “Two nurses run over and they said, ‘You’re an American!’ I said, ‘You’re damn right.’ I took out my dog tags and said, ‘You never even checked me!’”

The nurses told him that after they cut off his pants to treat him, he was put there “to be interrogated as a prisoner of war.”

Shortly thereafter he was given the option to go home, which he declined.

“You think I’m going to go home and sit by the radio, and hear what’s going on and wonder what’s happening to my guys the whole time because I left them?” he demanded. “I’m going back.”

World War II veteran Paul Andert spoke on The Glenn Beck Program December 11, 2014. (Photo via TheBlaze TV)

Andert, who participated in seven campaigns and two major landings during World War II, receiving a silver star, three bronze stars and two purple hearts for his actions, recalled a rule of Patton’s.

“He never wanted to see one man by himself — ever,” Andert said. “It was always to be two people, never one … and one of them has to be in charge. And they’d say, ‘Well, how will we know who’s in charge?’ And he said, ‘The one with the lowest serial number is in charge of the other person.’ … Even in the States, he wanted to see two men together.”

Patton also told his men to know their enemy’s “plan” and “be as dirty as he is or you’re not going to win.”

Andert said he spoke at Westpoint in 2011, but they wouldn’t let him speak with the cadets. Three managed to get permission to speak with him, and he said they “quietly” told him: “We’re being taught that you fought an immoral war. World War II was an immoral war.”

Andert’s response?

“If we did, tell all your teachers and the people in this place that you cover every statue out there with a black cloth,” he said. “All of our leaders fought an immoral war — Eisenhower, Patton, McArthur, the whole damn bunch of them. And we did. Because if we didn’t get down in the dirt, we wouldn’t have won and we wouldn’t be here.”

 To watch the Glen Beck Program with Paul Andert Click on the Link:

Or click on the 12/11/14  program once you click  onto the link

Paul With Dana Leosch of the Glen Beck program

Paul and Dana 2

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Dana Loesch hosts her award-winning, nationally syndicated daily radio show, The Dana Show: The Conservative Alternative from Dallas, Texas where she also hosts “Dana” on The Blaze television network. Dana appears regularly on Fox News, ABC, CNN, among others, and has guest co-hosted “The View.” She describes herself as a “conservatarian.”

Dana’s original brand of young, punk-rock, conservative irreverence has found a fast-growing audience in multiple mediums. Dana is listed on Talkers Magazine‘s top 100 “heavy hitters” and was named Missouri’s #1 Radio Personality in 2014. A former award-winning newspaper columnist (and notable blogger since 2001), Dana was ranked as one of the top 16 most powerful mothers online by Neilsen. The 2012 winner of Accuracy In Media’s Grassroots Journalism award and the inaugural Breitbart Spirit Award, Dana was one of the original Breitbart editors selected by her late friend and mentor, Andrew Breitbart, to head what was BigJournalism.com and helped break the Anthony Weiner scandal before departing in 2012. Her book on gun control, Hands Off My Gun (Hachette/Center Street) hits shelves October of this year.

Dana co-founded the tea party movement in St. Louis and speaks regularly on the subject of new media, gun control, anti-feminism, and grassroots.

A native Missourian, she and her family live in Texas.

 

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