Welcome to today's edition of The Rush 24-7 podcast.
Yeah, we all have a we all have huge smiles on our faces today here, folks.
And for a plethora of reasons.
The uh the weekend totals for our leukemia and lymphoma society curaton are in.
Try three million dollars.
Unbelievable it by far and away, it is a uh it is a record.
The email I got today from uh people at the leukemia lymphoma society subject line is wow wow and double wow.
Anyway, greetings.
Great to have you with us.
Kick off a brand new week of broadcast excellence, Rush Limbaugh here, uh America's Real Anchorman at uh 800-282-2882, the email address rush at EIBNet.com.
We got a loaded program today, get Cheryl Kroll and her her her solution of global warming, which is uh one square of toilet paper per visit to the bathroom.
Now you think this is new.
Uh we we warned you about this back in the late 80s or early 90s.
They uh Wackos back then had a list of 50 things you could do to save the planet.
One of them was to eliminate toilet paper and use leaves.
And you people always thought was making this stuff up.
They're out there, they've been out there for the longest time, and they're just making a steady progression of things that uh I mean it's it's stupid.
It's absolutely silly.
We had to dust up these two babes stalking Carl Rov Saturday night, the White House correspondents dinner.
We'll have uh we have audio of that.
We've got we've got uh commentary on that as well.
Uh some uh some closing and wrap-up thoughts on the Virginia Tech shooting.
Mrs. Clinton once again uh she went to Sharpton's uh National Action Network, which by the way, Barama mispronounced it.
He uh he called it what did he call it?
He called it the um uh uh urban something or other.
Uh-uh.
What did he call it?
I can't I'm having a the the Urban Action Network, he called it while he was there with uh Reverend Sharp.
Speaking of that, I wonder how much Reverend Sharpton raised over his weekend to the National Action Network compared to our three million dollars here.
Let me give you the some of the uh details on that.
We uh we closed the program at uh three o'clock on Friday afternoon, and by 33 uh two women who I know, and I I do not mention any names here because uh all donors' identities are kept confidential.
But the two women who are sisters in the Great Northwest matched my $300,000.
So that that uh that put us at $920.
And then there's there's a there's a man that I met out in uh San Jose, California.
We did our sort of rush to excellence tour at KSFO in San Jose a couple of three years ago.
His name is David Sant.
He doesn't mind being identified.
He uh is a lymphoma society, lives in Northern California.
Three years ago he made a an independent uh I don't think anything to do with our curathon, uh a huge donation three years ago to leukemia and lymphoma, and since that time he's been become committed to uh the work of the society.
Uh and so we went out there and and uh he was he was in the crowd of people I met before the uh performance out in uh in San Jose, and late in the day on Friday, he sent in another huge uh donation.
Uh the amount of which we're going to keep confidential, but it was substantial.
And so this put us just under three million dollars.
And and and the the amount of money from well you got to count all this in the audio.
I mean, it's just it was just incredible.
And even without that, we were at a record.
Without that, we were we were uh uh we were at like one point nine million dollars without all these things I just told you about.
Uh yeah, but that that that's and and not counting me either.
I mean that's that's all from uh you, the uh the members of the of the audience.
So uh uh, you know, a huge thank you to everybody, and especially to me.
Because without me, it was I'm just reading the note it says they sent me.
No, thanks to all of you, and I as I spent most of the time on Friday uh uh thanking all of you for all the research that you've made possible and the expanded survivability rates and the um inching closer and closer to cures for some of the four blood cancers that the leukemia lymphoma society works on.
Just just a fabulous day.
And I'm still stunned.
I have to tell you that you uh we we like to share things here that we're proud of.
Uh We did this in three hours.
Three one day a year.
Uh and and and uh and again, not the whole three hours because we um we mix regular procam content in with the with the Curathon.
So uh in that three hours may have the combined amount of time I talked about might have been an hour.
Maybe a little bit more than an hour, but certainly not the entire three.
And that's just uh mind-boggling.
That we were we were all floored when we uh I was uh got got the note about um uh two friends out in uh in the Great Northwest and David Sant late on Friday afternoon after I got in from a grueling game of golf.
They're all grueling because you walk and walking is grueling to me.
I golf was great.
Still knocking the cover off the what.
Well, sometimes it depends on what the other people in the group do, but uh uh sometimes even if if the other people cart, sometimes I walk.
Yeah.
Yeah, it it's it it depends on how much time we've got.
Or how quickly that we are uh we're trying to play.
I mean, if three people in a cart and one's walking, the one walking is to slow everybody down, so you uh you generally end up uh end up walking.
But at any rate uh X well, it is exercise.
But it's walking and you stop.
It's not don't don't give me this idiot, of course it's exercise, but it's not treadmill or elliptical cardio.
Now, don't don't start, Mr. Snurley.
I know you guys are trying to ruin my you think I've done the diet here, lost the weight without exercise.
Well, walking, look it compared to the amount of exercise they get, walking is exercise.
It's all relative.
But I mean now they think my credibility's shot because I told everybody I've lost this weight without the without any exercise, and I have.
I'm not out there walking four or five miles straight.
You gotta walk four miles or five if you walk a golf course, but I'm you stop.
And of course you puff on a cigar as you're walking out.
You're not gonna do that in a gym.
You're not gonna do that in a treadmill or on the elliptical machine.
Sometimes you bop in a cart that somebody has and you and you and you speed off to where your ball is because you say, screw it.
I'm out here to play golf and hit the ball, not walk.
But it all it all works out.
So once again, just an official thank you to uh to all of you from everybody here at the EIB Network and the Leukemia Lymphoma Society.
Um by the way, um, we had ten individuals who uh wanted to get in on the bone marrow registry.
That was uh uh led by the guy in Troy, Texas, or yeah, uh it was Troy, Texas, who uh who got that all started.
Uh so we we just we we had it was a banner day, and it uh sent us into a uh uh a great weekend, and I couldn't wait for the program to start share all this good news with you because obviously the news is uh is all about you.
You are the ones who uh who made this happen.
Let's take a brief time out.
We'll come back.
We got all this stuff to do.
We got the president.
This is a great in-your-face thing.
The pre- you know, Arlen Spectors on television yesterday, but Gonzalez has botched the Justice Department.
Gonzalez has to go making the administration look bad.
Bush says, I love the guy, thought the testimony was great.
He's staying.
That just an in your face, not just to Senator Spector, but to all these wannabes out there who are trying to tell the administration what to do so it'll make their campaigns in 2008 uh a little easier.
Uh we have uh let's see the Cheryl Crow stuff.
We got a great global warming stack, in fact.
And we've got Mrs. Clinton uh uh talking in their black dialect again at the uh National Action Network.
We'll go back and listen to her and her black dialect down in Selma refresh our memories.
Obama tried to make it clear at the urban, what did he again he called it the um the urban uh urban action network?
Uh Obama tried to make it clear that he is down for the struggle uh at the Urban Action Network.
So it's it's gonna be a red letter day.
We'll come back and get started with all of it right after this, folks.
So sit tight.
By the way, folks, we here at the EIB network going to get into the toilet paper offset business.
We're gonna start selling toilet paper credits for any of you idiots that want to follow the advice of Cheryl Kroll and use one square of toilet paper per visit to the bathroom.
Um just like Al Gore buys carbon credits so that he can continue to use as much energy as he wants while you reduce yours.
Uh We'll make it possible so that you go out, use as much toilet paper as you have been, or as much as you want, uh just by buying toilet paper credits from us, and this will guarantee something will happen down the line to assuage your guilt.
We don't know what.
The only question I have about about Cheryl Crow is what is she going to do about the excrement for brains that she's got?
You know, she's got two repositories of it there, and toilet paper is only one means of dealing with it.
I mean, she this is just it's frankly absurd, and these people wonder why Carl Rolfe has no desire to talk to them.
You know, if smoking gun has a thing, Drudge has it up on his website about the demands that Cheryl Crow makes when she heads out on tour.
She demands a bunch of buses and tractor trailer trucks and phone lines and faxes and all kinds of adult beverages and so forth.
And once again, I don't care.
I mean, if they can do what they want, that's fine with me, but it's the hypocrisy of all this.
These people make no reductions in what they do.
I want to see them use.
I want to see.
I want to see.
Well, I don't want to see, but I mean, I I I want to hear about Cheryl Crow getting by with one square of toilet paper every time she goes in there.
I mean, isn't it just sick to even think about this?
And as I say, the excrement for brains that she's got, that's going to require a whole nother cleanup method, too.
I don't know what she's using for that now.
All right, let's let oh, you know I saw an MSNBC this morning.
I'm sitting here diligently working doing show prep, and I see this crawl, this graphic on the bottom of the screen, asking the question, will illegal immigration be the sleeping giant issue of 2008.
I said, Well, where did what are they two or three years late on this?
Where do what tuned them into this?
At the NBC Newsroom.
So I started scouring the print pages of Washington newspapers, and lo and behold, there's a story in the Washington Times about how the Democrats themselves are in jeopardy on the illegal immigration story.
Uh I'll give you the details are illegal illegal immigration, period.
I'll give you details as the program unfolds.
But it just it's a study, it's an indication how things end up on broadcast news.
Generally, the New York Times is what directs the daily broadcast of news on networks.
They read the Times, ooh, go ahead and do a TV version of the story.
Uh I've never known them to pay much attention to the Washington Times, but it's out there.
And then the Washington Times story has the Democrats in jeopardy on this, so that's why MSNB said, Oh, my gosh, what if we miss?
Well, we here on this program where I am America's real anchor man have been telling you about the saliency of this issue for both parties for over two years.
And now all of a sudden, MSNBC's out there like they've got some kind of a scoop.
All right, now on to Reverend Sharpton's National Action Network Convention.
Last Friday, this is Mrs. Clinton.
The abuses that have gone on in the last six years, I don't think we know the half of it yet.
You know, when I walk into the Oval Office in January 2009, I'm afraid I'm gonna lift up the rug, and I'm gonna see so much stuff under there.
You know, what is it about us always having to clean up after people?
Oh, Hardy Harharha, you're the last person, Mrs. Clinton, that ought to be talking about what anybody would find on the oval office rug.
Of all the things to say, not only do we not want to know what we'd find if anybody knows what's on the Oval Office rug, it would be Mrs. Clinton on it or under it.
But here she is using this black dialect again.
And by the way, this this demeaning reference to the fact that they're janitors or custodial workers or cleaning people.
Yeah, I mean, this is she sits there and says, you know, what is it about us always having to clean up after people when's the last time you cleaned up anybody but your husband in those sordid messes of his, and we're not talking about dirt, uh soil, uh, that kind of thing.
But I mean, this this is just it's this so it's demeaning.
It is uh it it it's pandering.
It's no different than when Don Imus called Gwen Eiffel of the New York Times a cleaning lady getting the White House this time.
What, Mr. Snerdley?
What?
What do you mean?
Not if you believe it.
What?
Well, well, I know Do you really Snerdley says that that's her view that America looks as black that black people is cleaning?
I think she's telling us her view, not America's view.
Is that what you mean?
Okay, it's her view.
All right, then the liberals are sharing us their perception, their vision of what black America is all about.
And a downtrodden maids, custodians, janitors, chauffeurs.
You know, this, this kind of thing is how they see them.
And that's how they want them to see themselves as constantly downtrodden.
And of course, gets his big standing O and so forth.
Let's go back.
Let's let's listen to her back in March at the first Baptist Church down in Selma, Alabama.
Let us say with one voice.
The words of James Cleveland's great freedom hymn.
I don't feel no ways tired.
I come too far from where I started from.
Nobody told me that the road would be easy.
I don't believe he brought me this far to leave me.
Anybody else does this and they're going to be tarden and feathered as uh pandering, uh speaking in a demeaning tone.
Uh, and it is.
It's degrading and demeaning to the people in her audience.
But maybe it's not.
I I don't know.
I didn't see a snapshot of the uh of the audience.
Now, Obama, you know, he followed this, and he had to go out there and prove that he can speak this way, too.
But the question that always surrounds Obama, even when he goes out and tries to imitate Mrs. Clinton's dialect is is he down for the struggle?
There's something humming down here.
Oh, that's somebody's black bear.
That's Sharpton's black bear.
Is that Hillary Collin?
Now keep in mind, this is a day where Blackberry service had blacked out.
I don't know Friday was a bad day for Blackberry on his Thursdays and Friday.
Uh uh, I never lost mine.
Well, I lost mine on Saturday a little bit the receivability, but nevertheless, there's the um uh there's the the black dialect for the uh urban national networkers so forth.
Let's go back to March 5th again.
This is Selma, Alabama, and this is Obama uh talking about having been in Selma before.
This is the site of my conception.
I am the fruits of your labor.
I am the offspring of the movement.
So when people ask me whether I've been to Selma before, I'll tell them I'm coming home.
Okay, so she's trying to illustrate here that he is down for the struggle.
And this next bite, this is at the uh National Urban Network, uh uh Obama says that he shouldn't get black votes just because he's black.
I should not get the support of the African American community simply because I'm African American.
I don't believe in that.
That is not what America is.
Well, you better change better change your attitude because Hillary certainly thinks that.
I mean, that's exactly what Hillary thinks.
I guess they've patched it up, folks.
I guess Sharpton and Obama passed it up since Obama showed up at Sharpton's big whoop.
Before we go to break, I got a quick question.
Do you all know what we're talking about?
Well, I did.
Do you think Hillary Clinton could could use one square of toilet paper?
Don't have a goop.
There's no gonna about it.
We are having a good time.
We have more fun than a human being should be allowed to have.
Rush Limbaugh, your highly trained broadcast specialist, meeting and surpassing all audience expectations on a daily basis.
Here's the audio soundbite from uh last Saturday, Barack Obama at Sharpton's convention.
These issues that the Urban Action Network talks about.
National.
He mispronounced it.
The whole crowd shouts out the correction.
And I've got to play you this.
It's got nothing to do with any of this.
This has to do with the V Tech shooting, but but the the um it has to do with something we spoke about last week on this program, sent me into a rant about all the criticism that me and my uh my buddies on Talk Radio get for this incivility, the desensitization of our culture, the coarsening of our culture and so forth on Saturday morning on the Fox News channel, the Forbes on Fox show.
David Asman interviewed the Silicon Valley Bureau chief for Forbes magazine, Quentin Hardy.
And the question was, Quentin, the rights of these crazy people aren't as important as the rights of the innocent that may be hurt.
Everybody looks for a why to explain madness.
And frankly, they just fill in their biases.
It might be Rosie talking about gun control.
It might be Rush Limbaugh saying he was Korean, so he got a pass.
All right, go check my transcripts.
My transcripts are up there at Rush Limbaugh.com, and you will not find my coming close to having said he was Korean, so he gets a pass or got a pass.
This is precisely what happens when other agents listen to this program, take it out of context and report it, because it does it he could not have listened to my program.
This this Quentin Hardy could not have listened to it because it didn't say that.
Once again, and this this goes to the whole concept of the spoken word then being written down, shortened and sweetened, and maybe perhaps even taken out of context.
What we were talking about was we had some callers calling here wondering why nobody did anything to stop him, why nobody did anything to report him, why nobody before, when everybody saw the warning signs and in a discussion of political correctness, we theorized on a whole bunch of reasons, and one of the reasons was he was a minority.
And because the way college students have been trained from the time they were in kindergarten, it's discriminatory to point something out about a minority, including the mentally ill, not just Koreans or not just didn't specify anything about Koreans.
And yet this is what this guy thinks I said because of whoever it was that told him he's out there on Fox on Saturday morning repeating all this.
And I just wanted to use this as an example, what I was talking about last week about how programs like this are being held up and sifted through microscopes by people that don't even listen to them.
You talk about bias.
If anybody is working on preconceived notions, it's this guy about what he thinks happens on this program when he doesn't take the time to listen to it.
His uh his name is Quentin Hardy.
You can search my transcripts.
You will not find me saying he was Korean, so he got a pass.
Uh and to phrase and and to edit what was being discussed on this program in that way is irresponsible.
And this is the Silicon Valley Bureau chief for Forbes magazine.
Supposedly an unassailable, therefore, journalist.
Now, before we leave the subject of Sharpton and Obama and Hillary and the uh the National Action Network Convention.
On Saturday, the Washington Post published a story called the State of Black America.
And it looks like this was an editorial.
Uh State of Black America, the Urban League has some ideas worth pursuing.
Now, let me preface this and set it up by reminding everybody what we have said, what I have said on this program from time immemorial.
As conservatives, what do we want?
We want the best for every American.
We want every American to have the freedom of opportunity to pursue their passion with as few s uh obstacles uh and and uh obstructions placed in their way.
We believe in the potential and the possibility of the individual as conservatives.
We think that most people have far more potential and have far more ability than they even know.
And the sad reason for that is that they are not raised this way, or they are not instructed this way.
They are they are not told of their potential.
They're not made to feel special.
They're not made to feel as though they can rise above the normal rigors of life.
They are instead told, not just not just minorities, not just uh African Americans here, but a whole bunch of people are beaten down by their parents, beaten down by peers.
Uh, and uh with the constant barrage of daily doom and gloom apocalyptic news stories, it is no wonder that people in this country in large measure feel apocalyptic and feel tumultuous and and and in chaos.
We believe, uh unlike liberals who look at an average citizen with contempt, they look at the average citizen, they see no potential, no possibility.
They must see them that way, otherwise there would be no need for liberals.
To help these incompetent boobs go through the rigors of life as relatively unscathed and undamaged as possible.
They look at average Americans and see hopelessness.
They look at average Americans with a with a condescension and an arrogance that in the eyes of the liberals is Only I'm smart enough to overcome all this, but these poor people, because of racism, sexism, bigotry, homophobia, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, have no clue, no prayer, and it's it's it's all because of the majority, the power base in this country uh that keeps their foot on their necks and so forth.
We believe, as conservatives, that every individual having the freedom that exists in this country has the potential to be great, has the potential to at least be what they want, has the appellate ability to realize and further their ambition via the application of excellence and effort.
We believe that people must be informed and motivated and inspired, because we also know that most people don't have within them what it takes to get everything they've got out of themselves.
It's rare that it's true for most people.
That's why you think back, your favorite teachers when you get older and mature are the ones that worked you to the bone and got more out of you than you thought you had.
They may not have been your favorites, you may not have had any fun in the class, but that's who you end up remembering, as well as the stud the teachers you played pranks on, in my case.
Uh uh, but the the American left has no such rosy view of individuals in this country, nor do they of the country itself.
So I just want to I want to get that on the table.
That's the pretext for giving you the details of this story in the Washington Post on Saturday.
Black America is at a tipping point, said uh National Urban League President Mark Morreal in releasing the organization's annual State of Black America report on Tuesday.
We can celebrate a great deal of success, but we have a number of struggles to address.
Successes include Fortune 100 chief executives, a candidate for president with widespread financial and popular support, and an increasing presence in the middle class.
But the struggles, particularly for black men, require a sense of urgency, not only from government, but also from African Americans themselves.
Well, let me just pause right there.
There are plenty of middle class and upper class black Americans.
And what happens to them?
If they happen to not be liberal, they are excoriated.
They are held up for ridicule.
They're called Uncle Tom's or they've gotten there by being too white or whatever it is.
They are criticized.
They're all kinds of great role models in black America, in the middle class, the upper middle class, and above, and they're seldom held up that way.
They're not even cited.
According to this report from the National Urban League, African American men are more than twice as likely to be unemployed as white males, and they make only 75% as much per year.
They are nearly seven times more likely to be incarcerated, that's in jail for those of you in Rio Linda, and their average sentences are ten months longer than those of white men for the same offenses.
In addition, young black males between the ages of 15 and 34 are nine times more likely to die of homicide than their white counterparts, and nearly seven times as likely to suffer from AIDS.
Well, likely to die from homicide.
One of the whole subjects of the Reverend Sharpton's convention over the weekend was what to do about gang lyrics in popular music and popular rap songs and so forth.
I don't know how that ended up, by the way.
Probably got swept under the rug that Mrs. Clinton is going to have to clean up after she's elected president.
Topping Mr. Morrial's agenda, universal childhood education through public and private schools starting at age three.
Need you hear any more of this?
Universal childhood education through public and private schools starting at age three.
I hate to tell Mr. Morri all this, but we've got it.
We've got universal childhood education.
Maybe not in private schools because it's the civil rights leadership that opposes vouchers.
But everybody's required to go to school from the first grade on, a lot of people in kindergarten and pre-K.
We already got this.
And it's not working, and that's why we need job trading centers for people that graduated unable to read their diplomas.
We got head start.
We've got head head start.
We we got school breakfast, we got school snack, we got school lunch.
Even in the summertime, we got all that when school's out.
What in the world's he talking about?
Which leads to the point.
He said Head Start has a proven track record.
No, it doesn't.
Head starts rife with sucking up more money without showing results, been in place for at least how long's Head Start been out there?
Two decades?
Maybe more.
And and uh the point is, every solution he proposes has already been implemented.
This is the sad thing.
This is what this breaks my heart.
Everything he proposes is been in place for years.
You can boil the solutions of Mr. Morio down to this.
Well, all of them except one.
They all involve the federal government or public education to spend more money than we already are.
Um my question will would be this.
When will people like Mr. Moral understand it that the federal government and more money are the two reasons for the very problems he laments in this report regarding black men?
More money is not helped for the past ten years.
It hasn't helped for the past twenty.
It hasn't helped for the past thirty.
I have received calls from black women on this program who say that this kind of federal money actually created or helped to destroy the black family by taking the place of fathers.
All the welfare and all whatever you want to call it, all the money that Mr. Morio says is still not enough.
Federal government became the surrogate father, and the father didn't have to hang around and and uh accept responsibility.
And it's not me saying this.
I've had countless black women call the program and make this point, some of them quite passionately.
Uh but it's it's it's just it's just a rat hole.
It's throwing his money down, and there's no evidence it's working.
At what point do you look at the current prescriptions for these problems and say they're not working?
And come up with something else.
Well, the answer is never if you're a liberal.
Because you're never to examine results as a liberal.
You are only to examine intentions.
And of course, these people's intentions are great and honorable.
They are at least they're trying to do something, even though they've been accomplishing uh nothing.
And and it and and it's for decades that the accomplishments haven't been pounded mounting up.
It's for decades that the failures have.
And yet the uh Washington Post, Urban League has some ideas worth pursuing.
By the way, um the Urban League's report calls for greater experimentation with all male schools and longer school days.
While we have some questions about single sex education, parents must have more choice in their children's education.
Really?
There's no mention of vouchers in this story in the Washington Post.
I don't know about Mr. Moriol's report, but that's the one that would give parents the choice that the Washington Post says black parents must have.
They must have more choice.
It's being denied them by the very organizations that issue these reports.
It's being denied them by leftists and liberals all across the country.
So it's just it's folks, I have to tell you, it's sad.
The the the evidence that the other way works is all over this country.
The evidence that that there are ways of accomplishing what Mr. Morriel wants to accomplish without the same failing prescriptions are all over the country, and yet for some reason they're not seen, or they are seen and ignored, or they are considered threats to the continuing viability of the civil rights movement.
I suspect it's the latter.
Grab a couple of phone calls here.
Uh, folks, Pittsburgh and Mike, you're up next on the EIB network.
Hello, sir.
Is this Mike in Pittsburgh?
Mike in Pittsburgh testing one two three.
Is anybody on the phone hearing me?
I hear you out there.
Sounds like a bad cell connection, doesn't it?
Or is it uh somebody?
Yeah, there you Mike, how are you?
Hey, good, how are you?
Most hosts would have flushed you down the toilet by this time.
I hung in there.
You're the best.
Because I love Pittsburgh.
Hey.
Uh home of the new world champion stealers, hopefully.
We'll see.
Gonna be a long, long road.
New offense this year.
Yeah, you're right.
New offense.
But uh we can all hope.
Hey, I couldn't help but uh think that while listening to Hillary, it sounded like I was listening to a minstrel show.
And I'm thinking if if any conservative had spewed the same thing in the same tone, they'd they'd they'd want their head on a platter.
Oh, hey, you're there's no question you're right.
Look at it.
Last week, as a means of illustrating on the show how the words of conservative talk show hosts are twisted and taken out of context.
I blamed the liberals for the Virginia tech shooting.
I said the guy had to be a liberal.
And I went through and I said, you watch, there's gonna be a website that picks this up, and a bunch of people are gonna read it, and they're gonna be outraged that I would possibly say this.
And I said, Yeah, you got a guy that hates the rich.
Uh you got a guy that that thinks American culture's debauched.
Who is it telling us all this?
And who is it that doing all this?
Is it's a liberals?
And sure enough, media matters fell for it.
Hook, line and sinker, they had it up all over the place.
But yet, Friday, at the National Action Network Conference, Senator Joe Biden, Democratic Party presidential candidate, blamed Republicans for the VTech shootings.
And a string of events that have made news in the past few years.
Biden said Bush, Gingrich, and Carl Rove are responsible for what he called the politics of polarization.
I would argue, said Biden.
Since 1994 with the Gingrich Revolution, just take a look at a rock, Venezuela, Venice, what Katrina?
What's gone down at Virginia Tech?
Darfer, I must take a look.
This didn't happen next.
All these things are the fault of Bush, Gingrich, and Carl Rove.
I'm was depressed when I read this.
He left my name out of it.
Usually I get blamed for this stuff.
But nobody said a word.
There's no website out there chronicling Biden blaming.
He was serious.
He was serious.
I was making a joke about the I was just setting everybody up to show how this stuff works.
Although I do believe that it was liberalism that got a hold of this guy and made him hate things, uh, professors and and this sort of thing.
But Hells Bells.
Have you heard anybody complaining about Biden and what blaming republic for Katrina?
Uh what else, Katrina and Darfer?
We're responsible.
Our culture?
This this uh the politics of polarization has created a genocide in Darfur.
The last thing I th I heard was that liberals were demanding Americans get there.
We're not even there.
How can we be causing it?
Imus, one of the biggest liberals on radio, now being blamed.
Or Bush and Roe being blamed for that, and yet nobody noticed.
So, yeah, if if uh if I or somebody else started doing a black dialect, speaking to a group of blacks, as uh Mrs. Clinton did, of course, it would be picked up on and it would be called racist, and uh, who knows.
It's like if I'd answered the phone when you call Mike and say, hey, do what it is.
Same thing would have happened.
Back after this will be.
Obama says we need to stop the mentally ill from buying guns, but the problem is we can't tell anybody who's mentally ill.
So how the gun owner's gonna know, thank you, political correctness.