Welcome to today's edition of the Rush 24-7 podcast.
And greetings to you, music lovers, thrill seekers, and conversationalists all across the fruited plain.
We come to you today from the rainy and wet and cold Northern Command, the EIB Network.
We are here in New York.
At the big annual cigar dinner tonight that we do for prostate cancer.
Marvin Shankin, Cigarficianado, puts this on.
I've not missed one.
I'm one of the few that's made the appearance every year.
Looking forward to it tonight.
Always a big net.
Black tie races.
I can't tell you how much money for prostate cancer.
Anyway, we got a lot to do today, folks.
The telephone number is 800-282-2882, the email address rush at EIBnet.com.
I want to start with the Duke La Crosse stuff today.
We'll eventually get to the race baiting of the Reverend Zach and Reverend Sharpton regarding MSNBC, the hypocrisy over there at NBC of getting rid of the Imas Simulcast.
All that will come in mere moments.
Lots of stuff here today in the stacks of stuff.
I got to tell you, we on the program yesterday, as you know, we gypped, we joined in progress the press conference by the Attorney General of North Carolina.
And when it was over, as I said yesterday, and if you watched any TV last night, I'm sure that you heard things that I mentioned yesterday echoed.
It was profound to hear this Attorney General, the number one law enforcement officer in the state of North Carolina, actually proclaim innocence.
As I said, these guys normally circle the wagons, protect each other, could have said, yeah, there wasn't enough evidence, insufficient evidence to charge.
They could have left a cloud hanging here, but they didn't do it.
I mean, just innocence was proclaimed, and the press conference that followed that by the three Duke La Crosse players and the lawyers, I watched that on the airplane flying up to New York, and I was riveted.
I could not pull myself away from it.
It was just these young men and what they've been through, they all spoke without notes from their hearts.
It was just, it was brilliant.
And you know, there's an old saying that challenge does not build character.
Challenge reveals it.
And yesterday, we saw the character of many people revealed.
We saw the good, solid character of the young men who were accused, falsely so, and their families.
We saw the character of these lawyers who fought so hard to have the truth known.
We saw the character of the Attorney General of North Carolina to break long-standing tradition and lamb-based a fellow lawyer.
And also what happened, the character of the city of Durham, the character of the DA Michael Nyfong, the character of the police in Durham, the character of Duke University and the newspapers in Durham and Raleigh, as well as the news, like the New York Times, the drive-by media in total.
Their character was also revealed.
Today, all the words that they all hid behind were thrown away, and we see them for what they are.
The New York Times, the local media in North Carolina, the Duke University faculty, and the administration there, a bunch of racists, a bunch of liberal racists who simply saw a template that their little closed world belief system has adopted.
And when they had all the elements of that template plugged in, man, they just jumped on it and embarrassed themselves to no end.
I see also, by the way, ladies and gentlemen, that Oprah Winfrey, the Oprah, is having the Rutgers ladies basketball team on her show as guests.
So I went to the Oprah.com website.
I wanted to see when she was having the Duke La Crosse team on her show.
And there must be a scheduling problem there because I don't see it there yet.
I don't see the Duke La Crosse team scheduled on the Oprah show, but we'll keep a sharp eye on that website.
And when we find out that the Oprah has scheduled a Duke La Crosse team, we will let you know.
By the way, the Reverend Sharpton, we heard the horns here.
You know, the EIB building in Midtown Manhattan is just down the street from BlackRock, the CBS headquarters on 6th Avenue.
And about 40 minutes ago, even I, in my enclosed cave here, soundproofed, I thought I heard something.
I couldn't, it was something unusual.
I really couldn't see what it was, peg what it was.
I'm right here.
And I got a quick note from Cookie.
Do you hear all those horns honking out?
I said, is that what that is?
She said, yeah, Sharpton's protest at BlackRock is underway.
Al Sharpton now demanding that CBS follow in the footsteps of PMSNBC and cancel the Imus show.
It didn't go well because it is pouring here.
It is wet and it is cold.
Sharpton organized a rally outside of CBS corporate headquarters, West 52nd and 6th Avenue, this morning.
But due to the heavy rains plaguing the city, Sharpton spoke briefly and said an actual protest would be rescheduled for Saturday at noon.
They couldn't get, I heard the horns.
There must have been, well, I didn't, I heard a noise, but it was nobody, I don't, well, who's around Saturday at noon is the question point.
Nobody will be around Saturday at noon, but you wait.
The National Action Network will get into gear and it'll find plenty of people to be around here Saturday at noon.
I'll tell you who else will be around here Saturday at noon.
Every media camera in this city that hasn't been assigned to Shea Stadium for the Mets game will be at BlackRock at noon on Saturday.
You can bet your bippy on that.
Oh no, suppressing a sneeze.
I think I got it.
Oh, by the way, we have a brand new Justice Brothers commercial, you know, new sponsors.
In fact, let's start with the spot from yesterday, Mike.
If you weren't with us yesterday, by the way, hearty welcome to those of you watching on the Ditto Camp today.
The Justice Brothers, a new advertiser, we always welcome new advertisers with a big bunch of hullabaloo outside commercial time.
We do it within the program content.
And the Justice Brothers, amazing results from just one spot yesterday.
Actually, we played it twice.
Amazing results.
And they've already sent in a new spot.
Here is the spot that ran yesterday.
Oh, Koreans.
Now, by the way, we're going to, I've got a really impassioned monologue slated for when we get to the whole MSNBC and Imus thing down the road, but I've got some sound bites from the Duke La Crosse circumstance that I want to share with you.
Oh, we got a great soundbite coming.
Laurie David was on CNBC yesterday, CNBC talking about global warming.
That is just a hoot.
I can't describe it.
I'm not even going to try to.
You just have to wait for it.
It's all coming up.
Here's the second spot just arrived this morning from the Justice Brothers.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah, Isley Brothers.
One of my favorite tunes in the EIB bumper rotation.
Got to fight the power, folks.
Fight the power.
By the way, as a little tease, and I'll admit this is what this is, as a little tease, I am going to agree today with both the Reverend Zach and Reverend Sharpton and comments they made about MSNBC last night.
Yes, they are right on the money on this.
And when they're right, they're right.
And I'll explain when we get to that segment.
First off, here is our first obscene profit timeout of the day.
There are many of these.
We'll be back and continue after this.
Welcome back, Rush Limbaugh, America's real anchorman, truth detector, doctor of democracy here behind a golden EIB microphone at the prestigious Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
For those of you watching on the DittoCam, this happens every time we come up here.
We can't test this until the show starts because the monitors in the studio do not reflect what you see or what anybody sees watching it on the internet.
Until we see that, we can't fix it.
I understand it's too bright.
A number of other things.
We're working on it.
We'll do the best we can.
In the meantime, just be grateful that you've got anything out there on the DittoCam.
It can't be perfect every day.
It should be.
This is Excellence in Broadcasting.
It happens every time I come up here.
I don't know why, but we'll get it fixed in due course.
After this, I don't want to be distracted by it anymore.
I want to point this out.
If you look at the differences in the behavior and the character of two American universities, what happened when these baseless charges were filed by Mike Nyphong down at Duke, and then the whole faculty picked up on the mantra and they fired the coach.
Duke immediately condemned the entire lacrosse team, canceled the season, fired the coach on an accusation of wrongdoing.
Rutgers, what did Rutgers do?
Rutgers immediately held a press conference to support the basketball players who are not what they were called.
Now, if you are a parent and you're thinking of sending your kid away to school, where would you rather send your kid, to Duke University or to Rutgers after what you have seen here today?
All of these comparisons that are out there are just, they're stark.
Let's go to the audio sound bites.
I was, when the program ended yesterday, I had to cut an audio bit for the season premiere of The Family Guy on Fox.
I think they told me that this season premiere for next season, whenever that next season starts.
And while I was waiting for the phone connection to do this, I was watching what was it, PMSNBC after the press conference from the Attorney General of North Carolina.
Right after this press conference, a lawyer shows up and says she still thinks something happened that night.
We're back here to the libs and the seriousness of the charge, not the nature of the evidence, as all that matters.
The anchorette, the infobabe, Contessa Brewer, was talking to former prosecutor Georgia Gosley, and she said to her, are you surprised at this reprimand?
Something in the back of my mind still tells me that something occurred in that house on that night that the victim said that she was right.
If the legal authorities in North Carolina have so ruled, then I as a lawyer, we don't have a choice but to accept it.
But I just still believe that something happened that wasn't quite right in that house that night.
I still will always believe, and it's just my opinion as an attorney who's tried many cases, investigated many cases.
I just still believe that something happened more than a false accusation.
It's unbelievable.
So even after a special investigation, and let me point out that the Attorney General of North Carolina is a Democrat investigating another Democrat, Mike Nyphong.
Imagine that.
Even after all of this, this attorney, this charge is too serious.
The nature of the evidence doesn't matter to liberals.
It's the seriousness of the charge.
In the back of my mind, something happened.
There is no evidence that anything happened.
If there were the slightest bit of evidence, the word innocent would have not been used.
And this lawyer, again, her name is Georgia Gosley.
That was the point she started out with in her soundbite.
The thing that says, I'm surprised I couldn't believe it.
I heard the word innocent, and that's what launched her into this diatribe.
And again, I have to tell you, and I know all of you saw this, or most of you did.
Reed Seligman, Evans, Colin Fennery, when they got up, these three lacrosse players, America saw them probably for the first time.
They were allowed to speak in a forum like this.
And you were looking at quality individuals mature beyond their years.
They have had life experiences that most people will not have at a young age.
They have dealt with it.
You know, character is not built by this kind of thing.
Character is revealed by this kind of adversity, and it was on display for one and all to see.
I was just amazed.
I thought I was watching seasoned media veterans of at least 35 or 40 years old speaking off the cuff at the podium about this case.
I was watching young men in their early 20s go through this and make these remarks.
And it was inescapable.
The quality and the great family support that they've had.
They've obviously all been raised very well.
And they shot the myth.
One of the parts of the template that I wonder if the Duke faculty, the faculty of 88 that signed that letter and then backed up that letter with the confirmation.
I wonder if there's the slightest bit of embarrassment.
I wonder if there's the slightest bit of embarrassment on the part of the Duke University president who got rid of the lacrosse coach.
I doubt it.
I don't think there is.
I think they're probably harboring in their minds thoughts expressed here by Georgia Gosling.
Something happened in there.
We know something happened in there because we're smarter than everybody else.
So we know.
And in fact, they're just a bunch of elitists who are not smarter than anybody else.
They're not as smart as most people.
They don't come close, but they live in this tight little enclosed world where they tell each other that they are the brains of society.
And unfortunately, they have all this unfettered access to young skulls full of mush in order to indoctrinate them and inculcate them with a bunch of drivel and so forth.
But these three lacrosse players yesterday hit grand slam home runs.
Last night on CNN, Anderson Cooper 360 talked to the Reverend Zach.
And Cooper said, in looking back about how you spoke about the Duke lacrosse players, do you have any regrets?
No, there were past Mr. Miller charges.
There wasn't because of these athletes often who feel entitled paying money to watch women dance naked before them.
Now, did they go as far as molesting her?
Apparently not.
Apparently not, but he's not going to apologize.
And neither is Sharpton.
Sharpton's not going to apologize.
Well, nobody can remember what he said, so he's not going to apologize.
Of course, these are the arbiters now of who can say what, ladies and gentlemen.
This is where you have to go.
In fact, I was thinking, well, I may even do this, so I'm not going to give it away later on in the program.
Because what if we all have to go through the Justice Brothers, Sharpton and Jackson, in order to get the content of our programs approved every day?
That's what they're trying to set up.
This is their end around the fairness doctrine, folks.
And they've both said it.
Sharpton has much as said it.
We're not stopping here.
We're moving on.
And you'll hear the soundbite coming up in just a second.
Anderson Cooper says, wait, if that's a crime, you know, watching naked, it's naked, by the way, Reverend Jackson.
If that's a crime, watching naked women dance, then most of the men in America should be arrested.
There's a strip joint a couple blocks from my home, Anderson Cooper says.
Most men in America don't do that, shouldn't do that.
And when they do it, it is never right.
It is.
In fact, when you reduce women to dance before you're naked, that's the first step toward domestic violence.
Oh, my golly gosh.
Listen to that.
As though these women are members of a slave troop, they are in bondage, and they are dragged out before the polls at the bada bing.
They're dragged out at all these strip clubs, and they are forced to dance naked.
And it's the first step toward domestic violence.
A dirty little secret here is that some of these women dancing naked, and I'm not talking about this babe, but it might be.
A lot of them are single mothers.
They're divorced, and they can earn $100,000 a year at a good club doing this sort of stuff.
And they're protected, but this is the hypocrisy.
The Reverend Jackson will climb all over everybody who violates his boundaries and his rules, but he has no boundaries.
He has no rules.
He never has to apologize, like I told you.
Minorities never do anything for which they have to apologize.
Andrea Piser today in the New York Post, will the New York Times apologize?
Will the Raleigh News and Observer apologize?
Everybody's demanding that everybody apologize in this country for simply breathing.
It's getting to the point some people are not allowed to breathe or exhale or make syllables.
And some people who make syllables are being told they better apologize in advance and after they make those syllables.
But the media seems to get a free ride here.
The Reverend Jackson wants a free ride.
The Reverend Jackson and Reverend Sharpton both want a free ride.
They never have to apologize because they can't be racist, folks.
They're members of minority.
Don't ever forget that this is the case.
Minorities, victims, members of groups are allowed to do anything to dress their grievances and to get noticed because they're so oppressed.
And so they can't, they have no power.
They cannot act on whatever ism they have, racism.
They can't be bigots.
They can't be sexists.
They don't have the power to be.
Only racism, bigotry, sexism, homophobia, those things are reserved for the majority because they're the only ones that have the power.
Now, here's the Reverend Jackson.
The Reverend Jackson talking about how naked women being forced to dance in front of men is the first step toward domestic violence.
And no, it's wrong, and nobody should be doing it.
Has anybody remembered, have you forgotten this?
The Reverend Jackson himself has fathered a love child.
This is from World Net Daily in 2001.
According to the Reverend Jesse Peterson, head of the Los Angeles-based civil rights group Bond, or Brotherhood Organization of a New Destiny, it's not a big surprise that the Reverend Jackson has committed adultery and that his actions are unfortunately all too typical of black ministers and politicians in the black community.
The black community will accept and defend Jackson's sexual escapade as they did with Bill Clinton.
And this is the reason black Americans are suffering today, not due to racism, but rather because of the lack of character.
This was a blistering statement released by the Reverend Jesse Peterson.
Last week, the national media filled with details.
Again, this is January 2001.
Last week, the national media filled with details of the Reverend Jackson's long-term extramarital affair with a top aide working for his monochrome coalition, which resulted in the birth of a daughter in 1998, the aforementioned love child.
The Reverend Jack, at the time 59, has reportedly been paying the mother who headed the monochrome coalition's D.C. office $10,000 a month after DNA tests determined he was the father of her child.
Now, I know we're supposed to forgive.
I mean, this happens to a lot of people, too.
A lot of people engage in infidelity.
A lot of people have love children, love children.
But it's wrong.
It shouldn't happen.
All these people escape the same moral judgment that they meet out against everyone else.
They seem to be immune from it.
You know what's funny about all this, though?
I have to tell you, and I think it's ironic as hell.
Why do you think, this is a simple question, of all the people in this country, why is it that two of us, or two of them, the Reverend Jackson and the Reverend Sharpton, have become the final arbiters of what's okay and not okay to say on the quote-unquote public airways.
By the way, I have a situation.
MSNBC is not public airways.
It's cable.
None of it's on the air.
They're not subject to FCC regulations on this kind of thing.
The whole argument here that we got to clean up and detoxify the airwaves, well, cable's not the public airwaves.
It doesn't apply.
That's why all the raunch and rotgut in culture is on cable.
You get away with it there.
The FCC has no purview.
At any rate, why is it those are the two guys who were set up here as final arbiters?
Well, who created them?
The left, the liberals, the Democrat Party.
Jackson and Sharpton have seats at the Democrat Party table of power because they deliver votes.
They're the ones that have legitimized them.
And what's ironic and funny about this is now they got to deal with them.
Guess who it is that Sharpton and Jackson are trying to shake down?
NBC and CBS.
And those two organizations, ABC as well, the New York Times, they've all created this monster.
They've set them up.
And now these guys are turning on them.
For now, they'll go elsewhere after they get their love donations or whatever they want.
But it's hilarious to see this.
The left's created its own monster, its own Frankenstein, and Frankenstein's attacking the doctor.
The monster's attacking the doctor here.
It's just, it's amazing to see.
Anyway, I'm getting ahead of myself here as getting into this MSNBC case.
Drive-by media reporter in New York today asked Reverend Al about the nasty things he said about the Duke case.
But Al shouts him down in no bullhorn in this case and changes the subject.
Unidentified reporter, and this is why Reverend Sharpton was over there trying to protest at BlackRock in the rain.
Reverend, the three gentlemen at Duke University, you said some things about them.
How do you feel now?
Did I attack them or did I?
You said some very nasty things.
What did I say?
I don't know you.
Well, then don't ask a question.
But I'm saying, Reverend, I'm saying you haven't spoken out about that.
First of all, you've sold one distortion.
You said I said some nasty thing when I challenge you.
This is the kind of stuff we're talking about.
You guys go unaddressed.
That's got to stop.
What did I say?
I said we need to investigate it.
We need to see what that's nasty.
You said that about Michael Jackson.
Did you speak nasty things about Michael?
Did you speak nasty things about OJ Simpson?
This is the kind of distortion you guys have to stop.
But what happened to you with Amos?
Next question.
They won't talk about what happened at Duke.
Whether he had said anything about it.
Next question.
This guy's riding the crest of the wave.
I mean, this guy is feeling his power.
He is more powerful than Barack now.
He is more powerful than a presidential nominee or potential nominee, Barack Obama.
He's more powerful than the Reverend Jackson.
I got to tell you a little story.
When I landed, we had a little traffic delay coming into Teterboro yesterday, about 45 minutes out.
One of the pilots came back and said, they've put us in a little delay.
It's only going to be 15 or 20 minutes.
No problem.
I got lots to do back here.
So we landed.
And as I'm walking through the terminal at Teterborough, and I got outside, somebody said, boy, you just, you're 30 minutes too late.
I said, what?
What happened?
Well, the Reverend Jackson was here.
Reverend Jackson just flew in half an hour before you did.
Didn't have anybody with him.
Ran through here, got in an SUV, and I said, Well, I bet I know what this is about.
I bet he made a beeline for MSNBC to be on TV last night.
And damned if I wasn't right, I turned on the TV about an hour and a half later, there he is.
Because, you know, you can talk about Sharpton and Jackson being unified and all this, but there's an internal struggle there over who's running this show.
And Sharpton, right now, he's commandeered the lead in this circumstance, but they're out there echoing each other in some of their sentiments that we've, you know, we've got to detoxify the airwaves and it's not going to stop here.
We're going to move on to CBS and we're going to move on to NBC.
Where it's not going to stop with just this one guy and with these places.
Let me grab some phone calls.
People have been patiently waiting.
We'll start in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
This is Sean.
Nice to have you, sir.
Hey, Rush.
How you doing, buddy?
Never better, sir.
Great to have you on the program.
It's great to talk to you.
Well, what I wanted to say was, I've been living in North Carolina my entire life, and I feel that the real problem here goes back to what you've been telling us the whole time about Shelby Steele and white guilt.
And I feel that North Carolina is always just going crazy far trying to prove that we're not racist and we're not rednecks.
And that's the reason why this thing went as far as it did.
Well, there's no question that there's some white guilt involved here, but you talking about average citizens?
Everybody, the citizens, the government.
I mean, take the professors, for example.
88 of them signing that with the film.
No, no, no.
I'm going to tell you something.
That has nothing to do with white guilt.
I mean, they have some white guilt, obviously.
I mean, these are people that believe the minorities have been screwed.
They feel guilty about it.
But they don't want to make any changes in order to accommodate minority progress.
They want everybody else to make them.
They're too smart.
They're too elite.
They can't give up their positions of power.
Those 88 faculty members were liberals first and second before they suffered any white guilt.
White guilt's in the mix.
But those people were liberals, and there is a template.
And this story fit the template.
And the template is that minorities are always victimized.
And when you get to a minority woman and a weird elitist sport like lacrosse, where the players come from the Northeast, why you've got the temple.
Rich white guys, poor struggling single mother doing the pole dances here while naked, according to the Reverend Jackson.
It fit the template.
This is how they view America, whether they've got guilt or not.
That may be that their guilt drove them to it.
But this is how they view America.
I'll tell you, I think that most people in North Carolina thought this was bogus from the get-go.
Now, Nyphong, it's going to be difficult to peg this.
Nyphon, first and foremost, you've got to think, just saw an opportunity.
I think Call of this program yesterday had it right.
He thought it'd be contained in some local little story.
Who cares about lacrosse players?
He said, I've got the perfect story here to launch my primary campaign.
He never.
You're absolutely right about that.
I mean, with Nyphong, it was complete politics from the beginning.
I mean, this is politics from 100 years ago.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And this is George Wallace politics, Les Dramatics politics.
You know, I wanted to say something to you real quick.
One of the biggest things that I noticed about the whole thing was what I didn't know if you noticed, but what Reeg Seligman said when he said, you know, the craziest thing about this is how we got railroaded.
And I can't imagine how people that don't have the resources we did could deal with something like this.
And that's a huge problem with lawyers.
He said that.
He said a couple other things, too.
We have that soundbite.
So here, play that line.
If police officers and a district attorney can systematically railroad us with absolutely no evidence whatsoever, I can't imagine what they'd do to people who do not have the resources to defend themselves.
One of these young men, and I forget, I forget which one.
You might be able to remind me, Sean.
One of them said he has an entirely different view of the legal system now.
He had no clue this kind of thing went on.
He had literally, he's got an entirely different perspective now, as I knew he would have.
They all will have over being railroaded with false charges and immediate dump.
And by these guys, dumped on the media, they dumped on the local media, they dumped on everybody.
But they did it with class and they did it with a lot of dignity.
But this soundbite that you refer to, about people who don't have the resources to defend themselves, that's, of course, an excellent point.
But I think, to me anyway, the more profound observation was when he said, I never knew the legal system could be like this.
It proves, I hate to keep saying I was right and so so.
What it is, what it is.
Most people, when they hear law enforcement say something, they automatically believe it.
This is not political bias.
It's just that institution always has credibility.
Plus, people don't like criminals.
And they don't like bad guys.
And if somebody, law enforcement, comes out and says Perp A did it, everybody believes it because people think, why would law enforcement waste their time with false charges?
And that's what these guys learned.
And of course, the drive-by media.
They are slavish to law enforcement, law enforcement sources close to the investigation.
Next time you see that in a story, sources close to the investigation, understand it somebody at a prosecutor's office is leaking.
And the drive-bys, they're not curious.
They don't, you know, they all have templates and pre-established mindsets.
So the next time something like this happens, everybody, I think, is going to be a little bit more doubtful, a little bit more suspicious when, because this is, you know, Nyphong, he has, you know how many DAs and prosecutors around the country are cursing this guy?
Because, I mean, he carries with him the reputation of the whole legal system to an extent with what he's doing because he has shown it can happen.
He has shown.
And these were not the atypical defendants.
It has been demonstrated now that there is corruption in the legal system as well.
Most people think, just as a matter of course, that it's pretty fair and the institution's pretty solid.
Anyway, a little long here, quick timeout.
Be right back.
Having more fun than a human being should be allowed to have Rush Limbaugh, often imitated, often duplicated, never equaled, seriously envied.
Entire broadcast industry, jealous of me.
I've become accustomed to it.
800-282-2882, if you want to be on the program, Tony Blair, I wonder if the Justice Brothers, when they hear about this, are going to make a trip overseas.
The black community, the vast majority of whom in these communities, incidentally, are decent, law-abiding people, horrified at what is happening, need to be localized in denunciation of this gang culture that is killing innocent young black kids.
But we won't stop this by pretending that it isn't young black kids doing it.
Oh, baby.
Ooh, baby.
Tony Blair says that most of the cultural problems in Britain and gang problems are because of young black kids that are not being dealt with properly.
Now, Blair is not long for the world in terms of being prime minister.
You can open up.
And I don't know if he'd have said this prior to a re-election effort.
Never know, he might.
I'm not trying to take anything away from him here.
But it is.
And when it rains, it pours out there, folks.
Here is Beth in Acton, Massachusetts.
Beth, I'm glad you called and welcome to the program.
Hi, good to talk to you.
I think that that caller from North Carolina had it right only in that Nyphong did do that for a political reason.
But I really think that the Duke professors would never go back on what they said because the whole reason why those boys are guilty to them is because they hate white men who are successful anyway, which is really the way the liberals operate.
If you look at it, any white man who's manly, masculine, and successful, like George Bush or yourself, is constantly under attack.
Yeah, but it can't be that because a lot of white liberals are successful.
Yeah, but other white men who are successful.
Look at Bill Clinton.
He's a playboy.
He doesn't have any integrity.
He's a joker.
And his wife wears the pants.
You know, white men who are successful.
But no, no, no, wait a minute.
I think I know what you're trying to say here, but you can't leave out the ideological component, and you can't leave out the characteristics of a liberal.
Liberal is an arrogant, condescending elitist, a superiorist.
And I think, you know, in the case of professors hating successful white men, that's just too broad.
There's no question that there's resentment or there's bias against them and so forth.
I don't think these guys were hated before these charges were mounted.
It was when the charges were leveled that the professoriate got into gear at Duke University.
In fact, there's a great piece at blackandright.mensnewsdaily.com by Bob Parks, who is black, and he talks about the circumstances involving the community of the faculty.
He said, remember the college faculty members who indicted an entire gender just to pacify the shrill squealings of campus feminists.
They're cowed by women.
These are the kind of guys that feminists consider real men.
Men that you can keep under your thumb, that you can cow, and that will do anything to keep women happy in this regard, feminist in terms of ideologically happy.
The next time any liberal tells you that Republicans play their race card and bring up Willie Horton, please remind them of a Democrat DA named Mike Nyphong who was willing to send innocent college students to jail for decades just so he could use his black constituents to get re-elected.
And then you have the college faculty members, and they're just, they're ignorant and they're naive, and they run around as the smartest people in the world.
But first and foremost, my friends, there's something very simple to learn from this.
They're liberals.
And that explains this.
Okay, we'll get to MSNBC, CBS, Sharpton, and Jackson and their demands, all coming up the top of the next hour.
If you want to stay on the phone to talk about the Duke case, feel free.
We'll be glad to get to you as the program unfolds.