We're just looking at some of these fox uh anchorettes, the info babes.
Ah, they all look alike.
The one in the afternoon looks like the one in the morning, and they don't.
Dawn and I agreed on that.
This is uh I guess it well, no, it doesn't get a little blurry when you're single.
It doesn't get blurry at all when you're just the exact opposite.
Greetings and welcome back, uh uh friends.
L. Rushbaugh here from the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies 800-282-2882, if you want to be on the program today.
All right, we have some lighthearted off-the-wall stuff first from right here in Palm Beach, Florida.
For years, Janie Carp has battled depression and anxiety with the help of prescription drugs.
Though millions of Americans do the same, Carp admits that she's intensely private and can't help but feel stigmatized for needing medication to feel good.
And normal.
So when she read the printout that a Walgreens pharmacy attached to her prescription last week for the sleep aid ambience, she couldn't believe her eyes.
Typed in a field reserved for patient information, dated March 17th was 2005, was the word crazy with two exclamation points after it.
In another field dated September 30th, 2004, it read, She's really a psycho.
Do not say her name too loud, never mention her meds by names, and try to talk to her when blah blah blah blah.
The information continued onto another page, but that wasn't attached.
She said, I was devastated, I was humiliated, I was embarrassed, I honestly couldn't speak.
I was trembling.
She filed suit yesterday against Walgreen, they're based in Illinois, accusing the nationwide retail chain of defamation, negligent supervision, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Walgreens is investigating this, according to their company spokesman Carol Hively, who said that computers are accessible to pharmacists and pharmacy technicians.
The drug utilization review includes a notes field intended for the pharmacist to use to enter reminders and patient requests.
We want to ensure that our pharmacy employees are acting in a proper and professional manner, so we're looking into this.
The notes field is intended for internal use as a private reminder for the pharmacist, and the patient's never supposed to see it.
For Janie Carp, seeing the printout underscored her long-held fears of being labeled for taking medication to stabilize her moods.
In August, she moved full-time from Connecticut uh down to Palm Beach.
And when she was younger, she uh self-medicated her angst with uh alcohol and drugs, but now she's out using ambient and stuff, and so they sent her they gave her these notes, crazy psycho.
It just you know, it just it just goes to show you about medical records privacy.
You uh it just does, folks.
You just have no idea what's in these things.
Uh let's see, where's the um Deputy Fire Chief story?
Yes.
Leroy Donald Johnson caught this weekend in a barn with his pants down, literally, according to a sheriff's report.
You caught me.
I tried to bleep your sheep, Johnson told his neighbor, according to the report, but the Mesa Fire Department deputy chief changed his story when a sheriff's deputy arrived on his doorstep minutes later, denying that anything had happened.
Johnson, who's 52 was uh jailed on suspicion of disorderly conduct and criminal trespassing after the neighbor, told investigators he found Johnson unzipped and holding a sheep down on its side.
That's the sanitized version.
The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office report released Monday night's a little bit more graphic.
Johnson's neighbor told Sheriff's deputies he was called home Saturday afternoon when his 13-year-old daughter saw Johnson drag one of their sheep into a barn.
The teenager said that Johnson had first knocked on the front and back door of the home.
Uh and I guess felt safe when it was an answer.
One of the deputies noted Johnson had blood shot eyes and smelled of alcohol, and uh neighbors who confronted him said he admitted everything.
According to the deputy's report, the owner took me into the backyard, showed me where he and a neighbor pulled up.
He took me through the corral gate, and I saw the victim for the first time.
She was a small gray lamb, about three feet tall and four feet long.
Uh The men told the deputy walked over to the small barn, opened the door, saw Leroy holding the lamb down on its side in the hay with his pants down, trying to have sex with it, and that's when he made the statement about bleep the lamb.
That'd be one way that the story here does not divulge whether or not there was anything else, but there'd be a quick way to determine whether or not story is true or not, and that's if they find a Montana stick anywhere in the barn.
Montana stick, we learned this last week.
A Montana stick is about three to four feet long, uh and it has a mirror on one end, and is used primarily to uh be able to determine whether or not the sheep is smiling.
If they find that, they might have a little bit evidence rather than just eyewitness accounts, because those things, you know, when you're watching somebody have sex with a sheep, it could look like something else, I suppose, depending on just never know.
But if they find the Montana stick, and understand that they're quite common in this practice, a Cape Coral, Florida resident, concerned about people having sex in a yacht club parking lot, took that concern to the streets.
Robert Payne, who lives next to the Cape Coral Yacht Club's overflow parking lot, recently placed used condoms that he found in the lot on sticks and planted them in the street median in front of a sign at the entrance to the yacht club.
His not so subtle message, I got a picture of it here in this story.
His not so subtle message was a response to anger building among neighborhood residents over condoms littering the parking lot and other problems at the Riverside Park.
So Pay and Mike Hermanson, who lives adjacent to the park are concerned that as the park grows, these problems need to be addressed before they get worse.
Hermondson said, Yeah, these things happen very slowly, referring to city officials' response to the complaints.
We're right in the front line.
If we don't speak up, we have a lot to lose.
So they're talking used condoms here, folks, just to just to clarify.
And there's a little picture here of the condom farm that they have uh or condom garden, I guess you'd say, uh, that is growing here in the uh in the median next to the yacht club.
So um Cape Coral, Florida.
I never heard this kind of thing about Cape Coral, Florida, but it's I guess it's happening everywhere.
We've got this, we've got this story uh that kind of it kind of frightens me.
Frightens me, it surprises me.
We've got this story.
Who is the group that's warning the women?
Uh yeah, it's right.
The American Medical Association has sent out a uh a bulletin, if you will, to uh all girls uh going to uh spring break.
Uh is it just a girls going to spring break here in Florida?
Or spring break, period, everywhere.
The girls going to spring break, period.
Apparently, uh what happens during spring break is that is that uh sexual activity and drinking spike up by a considerable amount.
What is it, 10% or more?
Something like Oh, that's what it is.
10% of the girls have multiple partners.
And they've been warned in this bulletin from the AMA that that is bad.
What is I can't find the story here, fresh my memory.
What is the point of the bulletin?
Warning them not to do this.
Oh, that's it.
Girls shouldn't go wild.
Oh, that's right.
They that then be wary of the girls gone wild videos and the guys who want to make them uh out there.
So um this is this is one of those strange things.
The AMA thinks it's just learn something.
The girls and guys have been going to spring break have known this for 15 years.
Back in just a second.
Stay with us.
Yeah, here are the details on uh this AMA story.
Study warns women about spring break.
I don't think the women need to be warned.
And the ones making it happen.
How can they possibly need to be warned?
The AMA is warning girls not to go wild during spring break, all but confirming what goes on in those girls gone wild videos.
83% of college women and graduates surveyed by the AMA said spring break involves heavier than usual consumption of adult beverages.
Seventy-four percent said that the break results in increased sexual activity.
Well, I why need to warn them?
They're the ones doing it.
They had they they're the ones that provided the data for the survey.
That's like I can't imagine what the sizable numbers reported getting sick from drinking and blacking out and engaging in unprotected sex or sex with more than one partner, activities that increase their risks for sexually transmitted diseases and unwanted uh pregnancies.
Uh Kathleen Fitzgerald, a twenty-one year old junior at Illinois State U. So the AMA's effort to raise awareness is a good idea, but probably won't do much to curb drinking during spring break.
I think a lot of students would really wouldn't really pay that much attention to this warning.
It'd be just like, duh, that's why we do it.
Well exactly.
I this is Yeah, this is not this is not the thing that grabs me about the story.
I don't know how you people react to this, but I'm fifty-five, and I'm gonna tell you what.
When I was high school and college, we had to work at this.
All you gotta do is apparently fly off some spring break capital and just stand there, and you will be attacked.
Hell, the teachers are making moves on students.
That never happened.
Now you've got this.
Man, oh man, oh man.
Dave in Dallas, Texas.
I'm glad you called, sir.
Welcome to the program.
Hey, Rice, just wanted to tell you.
I worked for Walgreens as a pharmacy technician for five years, just quit a couple of years ago.
I wanted to tell you this note writing process is commonplace across the board.
We all would put Oh, I'm sure it is, but I mean but but do you do right do you write uh things that if the patient saw they'd be insulted or angry?
Oh, absolutely.
Well, just in terms of giving each other a heads up, we you gotta understand the abuse we take uh in the retail business anyway, and we we're constantly accosted and chastised and screened at, and we sort of give each other as colleagues a heads up.
Right.
The customers always write syndrome.
Right.
But there's no there's no I can't figure out how that could have gotten into the patient printout.
There had to be a glitch in the computer system.
We're always very careful of that.
That that that happens.
Sure.
Well, now this is this is interesting to know.
So virtually everybody that goes into a pharmacy, there are these notes, and if if whatever the uh the people at the pharmacy think about the person might be found in these note fields.
Well, I can't speak for any other chain.
I can tell you that uh I no longer work for that company, but it wasn't anything.
I need to ask you a question about that, by the way.
Did you leave under uh favorable friendly circumstances?
Absolutely.
Okay, so you you don't have an axe to grind, you don't have you don't have a vendetta against them, and that would be why you know not at all.
Not at all.
As a matter of fact, front many friends.
Well, as a journalist, I have to ask that.
Oh, sure.
Sure, absolutely.
But I'm really defending Walgreens more than anything else.
I'm I'm trying to tell you that it was not a malicious thing.
If the lady said the things that the note said, obviously I'd I'm inclined to believe the pharmacist and the staff.
Uh well, it did it it did, it did contain things that advised the clerks at the pharmacy.
Don't don't mention her meds by name, don't look at her, don't laugh, don't this.
She is crazy.
Right.
She's a psycho.
Well, you can imagine we in in retail pharmacy we deal with with every kind of person.
We deal with sick, we deal with the elderly, we deal with uh mentally unstable, and we certainly get our share of of uh screaming matches and and unfair, you know, long weights, all that kind of stuff that go along with the retail pharmacy field.
I understand.
I've seen that.
I've seen it.
The people go in there and think they own the stores.
Sure.
Yeah, I see I know what you're going through.
Well, I appreciate the call, appreciate the uh the information on that.
What are you doing now?
I actually am a full-time student finishing up a degree uh at a college here and uh actually working for another chain, but uh just a little friendly competition.
So you go you're going to college in Dallas.
Are you are you by any chance taking uh uh human geography?
No, I'm not, believe it or not, I'm a journalism major, pretty far stretched from pharmacy.
You're a journalism major.
Yes, sir, broadcast, concentration and broadcast.
Okay, why did you want to get into that?
Well, I just I've always been strong at writing, but my family has always been involved in pharmacy, So pharmacy seemed like a natural thing to do.
No, no.
Why did you want to get into broadcast journalism?
Oh, well, I've always been told I have a pretty good voice uh for television and radio and I enjoy writing and I enjoy finding out the truth.
Uh and the investigative side really interesting.
Okay, let me give you some advice.
That's the wrong thing to say to a professor or to anybody if you're ever in the in the halls of that J School, wherever you're going, and somebody says, Why do you want to get in it?
What are you here for?
Here's your answer, because I want to change the world.
I want to make a difference.
I don't care what you say that and they'll leave you alone.
If you tell them that you're there to get the truth out, you're you think the notes the pharmacy writes, what do we see?
The notes your professor writes about you and uh uh send them out to people that you're trying to get a job for.
This guy is interested in the truth, and you have just disqualified yourself.
Right.
I'm not trying to discourage you here.
I'm trying to help you.
You go and when you get the job, go do the truth.
We need people like you out there doing it.
Just don't tell them that's what you're doing.
Just don't.
That's that's not what you're there to do.
Yes, sir.
What it is.
I'm not kidding.
I'm I mean, I'm maybe exaggerating a bit to make a point here, but it's not about the truth.
It's certain it's not not at the big jobs that you probably are.
Where do you where do you want to work?
What's your ultimate job goal?
Oh well, I certainly don't want to be just uh an anchor and a local affiliate.
I would love to uh report for one of the bigger cities and uh maybe one day be on a network.
Yeah.
Well get there fast because they're not gonna be doing news much longer.
At least they're not gonna be doing it as big as they do it now.
Well, their audiences are I shouldn't be saying this.
Look, just go out and be the best journalist you can and that'll take care of it.
You'll end up wherever the best jobs are.
Just just do that.
I'm not trying to discourage you, I'm really not.
Just do the it's it's like any other job.
Go out and do it the best you can, be the best at it that you possibly can be.
You'll probably stand head in the shoulders of uh everybody else.
Just make sure you tell them you're there to make a difference.
Will do, right.
You see social injustice and you want to change it.
You want to make sure that life is fair.
Blah blah, you know, all that gobbledygook that journalists tell us that they do their jobs for.
But I'm kidding, I'm I'm not serious.
You stay focused on the truth, just do it, become the best you can be, and you will end up wherever uh the big journalism jobs are uh down the road.
Here's Diana in Colorado Springs.
I'm glad you waited, Diana.
Welcome to the program.
Hey, how are you doing today?
Fine, never better, actually.
Good.
I'm glad to be on the program.
I just wanted to call in real quick and um talk about the AMA.
Yeah.
I know you're s I understand where you're coming from, but on the other hand, I think what they're doing is wise.
A lot of these girls these days, I've noticed, they don't understand responsibility.
And they actually it's sad, but they need to be warned.
They don't realize that having relations with people could give them a disease.
All right.
They don't realize that drinking themselves to death is you know gonna get them sick or raped.
I mean, come on.
Diane, how old are you?
Do you mind if I ask?
You're twenty-four.
All right.
Now you know all this, right?
I do.
Okay, well, how did you figure it out?
Um, watching these other girls just ruin their lives.
And they're obviously just not that bright.
What about your parents?
Did your parents maybe have anything to do with i in the way they raised you to create some uh uh dignity for yourself and to think highly of yourself.
You wouldn't uh engage in demeaning activity.
Your parents have anything to do with it?
My mother did the best she could.
Dad wasn't around.
Um was kind of sick, and I had to pick it up.
Because I just kind of had to learn those things.
Okay, I guess you raise an interesting point.
I uh uh here the problem that's that's that I see out there with the girls that are younger than you, that the AMA is trying to warn here, is they've been ever since the second grade, sex education is or sixth grade or whatever, but the sex education and the the people that teach that do not teach consequences.
No, they don't.
Uh they um uh the the it's it's basically uh you know a behavioral promotion uh program.
Plus, can we be real?
How many of the babes going the spring break are little virgins anyway?
Well, yeah, you're not gonna catch me going on spring break, first off.
Uh I'm trying to avoid those kinds of things.
Well, my point is th that I shouldn't have said it.
Maybe I shouldn't have said it that way but but look I've got a time constraint problem.
Can you hang on because I have one more point that I want to develop with you based on something that you said.
Can you hang on for like three more minutes.
All right I'll be glad to uh do that.
You you stay where you are we'll come back we will continue this because she did say something that I want to um uh explore, bounce off of what have you and we'll do that in just a second.
And here we are having more fun than a human being should be allowed to have and Diana you are still there in Colorado Springs, correct?
Yes I am.
Okay, she's in favor of these AMA warnings to girls going to spring break that it's going to be really a boozy time and that the sex out there is going to be risky.
It'll happen more and more.
I guess the thing that you said that kind of took me aback, you said these other girls just ruin their lives.
They're honestly just not that bright.
These are college kids.
I know, and I'm a college kid.
These are college kids.
they're going I it's hard for me to believe at their age that they think so little of themselves that that they're willingly engaging that they're just trying to have fun.
They are but fun there's a limit to fun.
I think I'm not endorsing it don't springs I just you you're making it sound like they don't know what they're doing and I can't believe that I mean they I see these girls growing up on the streets trying to be popular trying to have fun and they don't realize those risks.
Why they don't I it's beyond me.
I can't understand how you don't realize it but they do.
I mean our society sadly it's filled with them and so if somebody needs I mean it's not hurting anybody giving away it maybe but I have never met one what was that last thing you said?
And be able to change what they were doing.
Well okay I guess they're going to spring break for a reason.
The reasons are what they've always thought about it and maybe what they've learned since they've been before the AMA or anybody to warn them about what awaits them seems like I can't relate to this because they already know it and it's why they're going.
But this is our society.
This is what our society has come to I don't support that.
I don't support the the way our society's falling down in moral value but somebody has to say to these people this was going to happen.
Well I'm not d I'm not I'm not defending the action don't I'm just I'm I know it's it's it's it's it it's sort of like uh uh you know putting a a warning let's say the FBI sends out a PSA war don't steal we will catch you it's doesn't it's not gonna stop anybody.
A thief is a thief.
Somebody's gonna go they're gonna they think they can get away with it.
There's nobody who who actually engages in in in theft or that kind of crime that thinks they're gonna get caught otherwise they wouldn't do it.
I had to learn as well and I mean I've made my mistakes growing up I mean now I'm settled down I'm married I have a family and but I had to make mistakes sometimes to learn but I also learned a little guidance.
If if I'll tell you if if if you if you like the warning then there ought to be a better one.
Don't go here's what awaits you don't go.
But to warn them of what awaits them that's just going to titillate them.
You're gonna have boo oh wow look at what's going to spring break look what the AMA told me I'm gonna find there.
Maybe I'm splitting hairs with this but uh I I just I I think it's the AMA is a bureaucracy they have a magazine uh they occasionally do some good things like everybody does but uh I think this is more a feel good thing for them than it is something it's actually gonna have any substantive meaning to it.
Well we warned those girls we told them that we're good people and we care and so forth I want people to know that we care and that we did good things that we do good work and blah blah blah rush you sound awfully cynical about no I just it's just liberalism folks it's just it's just it never it never solves anything.
It just doesn't it only makes matters worse.
Uh thanks for holding on Diana I appreciate Samantha uh in Raleigh North Carolina you're up next welcome.
Megadosrush Thank you.
I have been listening to you forever, it seems.
And I just wanted to to put my two cents in with the young lady a h uh right before me.
Uh I'm a college student here in Raleigh.
Um no, I do not go to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill because, well, they're strange.
Um Chapel Hill is trying to change its city motto to left of center, right at home.
Um there's a reason that normal people don't live in Chapel Hill.
Um anyway.
I'm a college student here in Raleigh, North Carolina, and I figured out a long time ago that that I think you give the general populace way too much credit.
Most people are just not that bright.
And while I disagree with the the general premise that the Democrats have that they run around trying to save people from themselves, unfortunately, most people do need to be saved from themselves.
Oh, come on.
I'm not gonna want to hear this.
You sound like a liberal.
You're being very condescending to the people of your own country.
I I understand that, and and it pains me to say such a thing.
Um I was born and raised.
Most people, I can agree with some, but you said most people.
Most.
Most people.
How many of them have you met?
Where have you been?
How old are you?
I I'm actually pushing thirty, um, which makes me a really old college kid.
Yeah, yeah, well, but it doesn't make you old in life.
And and and you have you you can't look.
You can't look out at the country, look at the economy, look at the the achievement, look at the technological leadership and advancement, and conclude that most of the people in this country are blockheads.
But they just are.
Um I don't know.
Maybe maybe I've spent too much time with with really intelligent people and and have just you know th these they're they're not they may be intelligent in uh in in certain discernible ways, but they may not actually be your best sample to determine who's smart and who isn't.
I just I mean, just driving on on the streets, it amazes me that most people don't die in their own cars.
I don't know.
But fifty thousand a year do.
Yeah, it it amazes me that only that many die in their cars.
But that's okay.
Well, are you now what is that is that based on the way you see them driving, or just that we drive, period.
The way they the way I see people driving.
Um Did you see the story today about the woman in Great Britain and actually in Wales who was fined two hundred pounds for farting in her car?
No.
No, I did not.
That's fantastic.
Well, she it's a French word, farting with a D, and it means to apply makeup.
Now that's common.
I I warned people about that eighteen years ago.
So you're uh you I mean, there are people do some cell phones and this sort of thing.
But boy, you are extreme in this.
You are you are really down on your fellow citizens.
Well, I mean, take into consideration I grew up in Massachusetts, so I've seen people elect Kennedys and more Kennedys and I will admit what over the course of this program I've had callers like you who have in despair uh after certain elections, people whose country are stupid.
They're just plain idiots, Rush, and like you, they've said you're giving them too much credit for and I've you know I always I look at especially this audience uh in a farmer.
You have an above par audience, absolutely.
Well, that's evidence of that is that you're in it.
Well, thank you.
You welcome.
All right.
Well, I appreciate your input on this.
So so you you think that uh basically kids are if if if the country's basically dumb, then they're dumb sexually too.
They really are, and I mean the the college kids nowadays have never had any consequences for anything.
You know, it's always been, you know, I mean, every generation has had we want to raise our kids better than the one before.
Well, unfortunately, the generation that's now college kids, they've never had any consequences for anything.
I mean, there's they've never had to work a day in their life for anything.
One of their problems one of their problems is that their parents are baby boomers and the baby boomers only think about themselves.
I mean m I mean my parents are are technically baby boomers, but I mean, I worked, I got my first job at twelve.
I wanted to go to summer camp.
I worked to earn my way to summer camp.
Well, you and I have a similar resume.
I did the same.
I I uh my parents weren't baby boomers, they're World War II babies, but I'm a baby boomer.
There are exceptions to all this, uh, obviously.
But the baby boomers, as a as a unit or collective unit, are very, very, very self-absorbed.
Me, me, me, me, me.
The world revolves around them, and it it it might have had a impact in the way some of them raise their kids.
But I still think at some point most parents want better for their kids than they had for themselves.
The uh reaction now people are having is hey, I don't mind you having more than I had, but uh don't expect it at twenty-one.
There seems to be a high level of expectation in the country because of the prosperity that everybody sees.
Uh one more before the break.
Thanks, Samantha.
This John in Lincoln, Nebraska.
Welcome to the program.
Mega Ditto's, Ross.
Thank you.
Well, I was just calling to uh kind of refute the last two callers.
I mean, I'm I'm 26 years old, been through college, been to a couple spring breaks, and you know, I knew exactly what I was going down for.
Loosen up, you know, not technically drink myself into excess, but we all know the consequences of our actions.
We're like you said, we've gone through high school, be it it as may in the public school system.
We still know what we're going down for.
Wait a second, Johnny AMA didn't warn the guys.
The AMA only warned the girls.
So we need to ask you, the girls that you've run it, do they know what they're doing, or are you unfairly able to take advantage of them as a guy at spring break because they're that ignorant and stupid about what they're running into?
Absolutely not.
We happen to be at the same place for the same reason.
They're not there coincidentally or by accident, Rox.
Okay, so he's confirming my theory.
It's easy.
You just show up as a guy down here.
The AMA is gonna warn the girls.
That's only going to excite them, and it's half fun.
I'm just telling you when I was your age, had to work for hell, still do.
Okay, before we get out of here, I have to uh mention the civil war, the declaration of war that Hillary Clinton and her associates have waged on the mayor of Cooksville.
That would be Howard Dean, the chairman of the Democratic Party.
The Washington Post has this story today.
Democrats data mining stirs an intra-party battle.
You can all it's Harold Icky's that's gonna run this.
George Soros is gonna fund this, and you could almost describe this as the Democrats version of able danger.
They're gonna go out there and they're gonna start data mining a competing list of donors and try to pirate some of the existing donors from the Democrat National Committee.
Now, of course, ladies and gentlemen, this is only for Hillary's Senate run.
Uh it's nothing to do with uh anything else.
A group of well-connected Democrats led by a former top aid of Bill Clinton, raising millions of dollars to start a private firm, and this for this is for profit, by the way, a private firm that plans to compile huge amounts of data on Americans to identify Democrat voters and blunt what has been a clear Republican lead in using technology for political advantage.
The effort led by Harold Ickies, deputy chief of staff in the Clinton White House and advisor to Hillary, is uh prompting intense behind the scenes debate in Democrat circles.
Officials over at Cooksville, the Democrat National Committee think that creating a modern database is their job.
And they say that a competing for-profit entity could divert energy and money that should instead be invested with the national party.
And this is all happening because Dean has not quit.
Dean has not surrendered.
He's not gone away.
They're just trying to take over the Democratic Party apparatus, uh, basically, and set it up as a for for-profit uh outfit.
This is this is gonna be a big civil war, and this is the Clintons trying to officially take over, maintain whatever you want to say, control of the Democratic Party's fundraising efforts.
Ickers or Ickies and others uh involved in the effort acknowledge their activities are in part a vote of no confidence uh regarding the mayor of Cooksville, Howard Dean.
Uh the Republicans have developed a uh cadre of people who appreciate databases, and they know how to use them.
Uh, we're way behind uh that march.
It's unclear what the DNC is doing.
We don't even know what they're doing over there.
Uh is it gonna be kept up to date?
I'll tell you who else isn't gonna like this.
Cooksville.
Not just the mayor.
Do you think move on.org is gonna sit around.
Move on dot org is doing just that.
They claim to have three million donors, contributors, participants, or whatever.
So here's Hillary and the and the and the and this new uh George Soros funded effort.
And they're gonna go out there, and they're gonna basically be competing with their base.
You know, the one thing that Howard Dean did, this is what's crazy.
Dean did raise a lot of money on the internet.
It's icky's and the boys that couldn't figure out how to do it.
John Kerry, the guy that led them into battle.
He served a Vietnam once.
Went down to blazing defeat, four million votes.
Dean didn't know what to do with the money, but he did raise it.
I think he raised something like 42 million dollars.
And that's why the Democrats are going all gaga before the primaries.
They thought they were on the cutting edge.
They thought they were tearing it up.
They thought they were leading the way.
Republicans can't hold a candle of this.
They didn't know how to use the money.
Dean flitted it all away, frittered it all away, and so hasn't been able to uh reciprocate it as the mayor of Cooksville.
So here comes George Soros and Harold Ickies, and to add insult entry, they're going to do it for profit.
So this is data mining.
They're going to be poking through every bit, every computer database they can find.
Your name's going to be on a couple of them.
My name's going to be I'm going to try to identify Democrats.
And they're going to try to make them donors and contributors and so forth.
And it's it's uh it's exactly what Abel Danger was doing.
Uh trying to find terrorists.
They did succeed at that.
Nobody wants to uh wants to admit it.
The pressure on Democrats to begin more aggressive data mining in the hunt for votes began after the 2002 midterms when the GOP harnessed data technology uh to uh power powerful effect.
Uh so you almost could say that that the that Hillary is setting up an echelon type system.
Uh keep your keep her uh keep your sharp eyes out for this, folks.
It's gonna be fascinating to watch.
David and Tampa, I'm glad you waited, sir.
Welcome to the program.
Hey, Rush, Megadetto's from Tampa.
How are you doing?
Thanks.
Very, I'm great.
Thanks very much.
Uh I've been a long time listener.
I've never been motivated enough to call you before, but this Samantha just pushed me over the edge.
She says most people are stupid and need to be protected from themselves.
But who is she to take away my right to be stupid?
That's a good point.
We all have the right to be who we are.
You know, i if I if I want to do something that I know is stupid, but I want to do it anyway, I'm taking the risk.
You know, who is she to tell me that I'm not allowed to do that?
That's the same thing as as the states that pass seatbelt and helmet laws.
You know, if I don't wear a thought or I don't wear a helmet on a motorcycle, yes, I'm stupid, but I have a right to be stupid.
You know, I don't know.
And nobody can say And nobody can take away that right to be stupid, and nobody can take away your stupidity.
That's right.
If you're stupid, you own it.
And proudly.
Good for you.
All right.
Thanks much.
Uh, let's see.
Craig in Washington.
Uh squeeze, you got a got about a minute here, but I wanted to get to you.
Hello.
Yes, sir, Megan Evi Shendido's rush.
Thank you.
The uh I think the actual this is a result of the attempt by the liberals to create a consequence-free society where there you know is no right or wrong and there are no um hassles that result from anything that you do, take abortion.
You know, you go out and you have sex.
Well, what do you do?
Yeah, you get a baby, just kill it.
And so it's the same way.
Um, you know, there are actual consequences, and the AMA has seen them, whether it's in STDs or other problems, and so hey, wait a minute, we need to let these people know.
You know, it's the same way with taxes, you know, people don't recognize I get that I do.
I I could not agree with you more.
I guess you have helped me focus my actual thoughts on this.
The time to start issuing these warnings is in high school, where there is no spring break, or maybe for all I know there might be spring break in high school, but but certainly after you you you you're you're uh uh you you're you're warning the people that are already engaging in the activity.
Uh warnings need to start earlier or the attempt to teach.
Uh but I appreciate your comment.
Thanks.
You're great.
You got it in in exactly the minute that I uh I had.
Back in just a second, folks.
Sadly, my friends, we're out of busy broadcast time, but that's okay because there's always tomorrow.
And I will look forward to being with you then and being on the cutting edge with whatever news is made between now and then.
Hope you have a great hump day, and we will uh broke back day.