Glenn Beck Thinks A Nobel Peace Prize Nomination Automatically Confers Credibility

Glenn Beck dedicated his television program last night to once again promoting his ongoing campaign to get right-wing anti-tax zealot Grover Norquist removed from the board of the National Rifle Association on the grounds that Norquist is supposedly a front man for the Muslim Brotherhood.

Predictably, Beck brought right-wing activists Kenneth Timmerman and Frank Gaffney — who, just this week, was blasted by former NRA president David Keene as an unhinged conspiracy nut — onto the program to make the case against Norquist.

Beck went to great lengths to try to bolster Timmerman’s credibility by mentioning three times that he had once been nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Timmerman “is a Nobel Peace Prize nominee,” Beck said in opening the show, so that gives him “some real credibility.” 

In case viewers weren’t convinced, Beck mentioned it again — twice — during his introduction.

“Just so you know, he comes to the table with a little bit of credibility,” Beck said. “He was nominated a few years ago for a Nobel Peace Prize.”

Of course, just about anybody can be nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, so simply being nominated doesn’t automatically mean that the nominee is credible, now does it?