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April 30, 2007 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:21
April 30, 2007, Monday, Hour #3
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If you ever had any doubt that symbolism is more important than substance in liberal politics, I love this.
Let me read.
Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton has dropped the use of her maiden name Rodham in her bid for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Clinton identifies herself as Hillary Clinton in her campaign press releases and on her campaign website.
The lone mention of her maiden name is in a campaign biography that says Hillary's father, Hugh Rodham, was the son of a factory worker from Scranton.
However, she continues to use Hillary Rodham Clinton in her New York focused press releases and in the Senate.
You've got to think about this for a minute.
As a senator, her name is Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton.
That's what all of her press releases that she sends out from the Senate say.
In New York State, her official name is still Hillary Rodham Clinton.
But if she's campaigning across the country, she's Hillary Clinton.
She, where being a liberal feminist, a liberated feminist plays, New York State, and in the Senate, why she's Hillary Rodham Clinton.
I'm a woman standing on my own.
I'm not just somebody who married my way into power and became a big shot because of that.
I'm Hillary Rodham Clinton.
And you know if she had her druthers in her press releases in New York and in the Senate, she'd just be Hillary Rodham.
But she's Hillary Rodham Clinton.
But now she's campaigning across the country.
And it's suddenly Hillary Clinton.
Rush was right about this.
What do you say that the whole point of this candidacy is that her name is really I'm Mrs. Bill Clinton?
That the way they're going to run this is you get to have Clinton back.
That's the message she wants to send to Democratic primary voters.
So she's once again reattaching herself to him because that's what serves the purpose.
Hillary Rodham Clinton de-emphasizes Bill Clinton.
And running nationally, she wants to do that.
However, in her separate career in the Senate and in New York State, she wants to bask in the glory of all of her Hillariness, or better put, all of her Rodhamess.
Have you ever heard of a politician that uses different it's bad enough that the woman speaks differently depending on the part of the country that she's in.
She now has different names.
I've what is it with Democrats and their middle names?
You've got one candidate almost denying that his middle name is his middle name.
Now you've got another candidate who uses her maiden name or doesn't use her maiden name, depending on what she's running for and where she is.
Now, if these people were Republicans, they'd have a name and the name would continue to be the name without regard to what they were doing, and no particular conservative would give a rip much what that name happened to be.
But Barack Hussein Obama is almost ready to sue anybody who calls him Barack Hussein Obama, even though his name is Barack Hussein Obama, and Hillary has decided that it now serves her pri her uh her uh prospects of being elected president to not be Rodham anymore.
In any event, that gives me an opportunity to speak about the presidential election.
Everybody thinks the Democrats are going to win.
That this is a slam dunk.
You even see Harry Reed talking about the gains they're going to make in 2008 because of the unpopularity of the war in Iraq.
The default media story is, and the conventional wisdom is that the Republican slide that began in 2006 is going to worsen in 2008.
The Democrats are going to take even more seats in the Senate, they're going to gain more seats in the House, and they're going to win the presidency and probably by a landslide.
You even see Democrats elated over their field of candidates.
Why, it's just wonderful, even our second springers are great people.
Whereas Republicans are totally depressed about their candidates.
Republicans have had a very, very hard time warming up to any of their candidates for president.
And this is true, and I acknowledge it.
But the fact of the matter is that the field of Republican candidates is far more qualified than the field of Democratic candidates.
While the Democrats love their field, and Republicans are very ambivalent about theirs.
Which field consists of people who are qualified to run this country?
Look at the Democratic field.
You have a woman who is a one-term senator, whose sole qualification for the job was that she was married to a guy who served as president.
The next guy has been in the United States Senate for two years, hasn't done one thing in the Senate that anyone can associate him with.
and prior to that was a relatively unknown state senator from Illinois that was part of the Jesse Jackson machine.
The third guy running, Edwards, was a fairly lackluster one-term senator from North Carolina who to this day is still better known for his hair than any policy position he's ever taken.
He was not in the Senate Democratic leadership when he was in the Senate.
He was chosen as vice presidential candidate solely on the basis of balancing the John Kerry ticket.
Kerry felt as though he needed to have a Southerner.
The only Democrat among the top four or five that they have running that I think that you can argue has a decent amount of qualifications is Bill Richardson, who served in the cabinet, is the governor of New Mexico.
Richardson may not be the most qualified candidate for president, but he does possess leadership positions, and he does possess a background and an array of experiences that would have you argue that yes, he is qualified to be president.
Now contrast this with the Republican field.
You have Giuliani, who is one of the most successful United States attorneys ever, who took over as mayor of the largest city in the United States, and led it through unbelievably difficult times.
Never mind 9-11.
He took over a city that was crime-ridden, scandal-ridden, major corporations were leaving in droves because of the tax environment.
And without raising taxes, he rebuilt New York's business climate, made the city many times safer than it is right now, and then had to lead a city through the most traumatic event in American history, the attacks on 9-11.
McCain, whom I'm obviously not a fan, has nonetheless been in the United States Senate for more than two decades.
He has a variety of experience.
He's made himself involved in foreign affairs and domestic policy.
While I don't particularly like him, he has a command of virtually every issue and certainly has the experience necessary to be president.
Mitt Romney.
Okay.
Managed to get elected as a Republican as the governor of one of the most democratic states in the Union.
Prior to that, took over in the private sector, the totally scandal-ridden Salt Lake City Olympic Committee, turned things around in less than two years, and oversaw one of the most successful winter Olympics ever, and got the thing to run like a champ, and then has had an outstanding career in the private sector besides.
A great variety of experience.
Fred Thompson, who's probably going to enter the race.
Brilliant lawyer, so accomplished that he was named counsel to the Watergate Committee while he was still in his twenties.
Outstanding private law practice.
Member of the United States Senate.
Even the Republican second string.
Sam Brownback has been a leader in the United States Senate.
Duncan Hutter is an expert on military affairs, strong views on immigration.
Tommy Thompson, former governor for 14 years of my own state Wisconsin, will be regarded by historians as the greatest governor in Wisconsin history.
He invented the welfare reform that Bill Clinton wisely stole and made American federal policy, invented school choice, the concept of allowing disadvantaged kids to attend private schools, and then served nearly four years as a cabinet secretary.
While nobody in that Republican field has given me goosebumps yet, other than Fred Thompson.
The fact of the matter is that the Republicans are the ones that are putting up qualified candidates, and the Democrats are putting up candidates that come out of central casting.
Hillary is running as the first woman.
Barack Obama is running as whatever it is that he you should see the profile of Barack Obama today's New York Times.
First of all, they got a photo of him on the top of page one in a church with the cross behind him, and the way the lighting is such, it almost looks like there's a halo over his head.
They are all running on the basis of their resume and their image.
I happen to think that as we get serious about the 2008 election, and that means after both parties have chosen their candidate, when you look at the individuals one on one, without regard to who wins the Republican primary or who wins the Democratic primary,
the Republican candidate is going to present himself and the Republicans running our own men as more presidential than whomever the Democratic candidate is.
There's also a chance that the whole issue of Iraq will be old news by November of 2008.
The Democrats get their way and we bail.
It will be out of the news.
The Republican candidate running in 08 will not be able to be tied to it.
We are likely to have moved on.
So I wouldn't be as pessimistic as a lot of Republican voters are right now.
As for the Republican field, as I said to a column earlier, I love Fred Thompson.
The guy is sharp as a whip.
He is in the conservative mainstream on every issue.
He projects the sense of being a strong leader and...
And unlike so many Republicans out there, thanks to his experience as an actor and his experience on television, he is very good at being able to convey and communicate a message that has not been President Bush's strength.
In fact, it's not been the strength of any Republican since Reagan.
Thompson can get out there and make the conservative case in an eloquent fashion that people can relate to.
I'm not necessarily going to sign on and endorse him here on national radio, but I do like Fred Thompson a lot.
My name is Mark Belling and I'm sitting in for Rush.
I'm Mark Belling, sitting in for Rush Limbaugh, 1-800-282-2882.
Is the telephone number.
Al Gore and Dale Earnhardt.
Still to come.
They don't have anything to do with the actually they do.
Still to come.
You know what I really like about Fred Thompson?
He's not going to be one of those Republicans who's constantly on the defensive, constantly showing weakness, constantly feeling the need to apologize for being a Republican.
When Scooter Libby was convicted in that terrible miscarriage of justice, put on trial solely because a special prosecutor had to justify four years of not being able to find anything in the Valerie Plain case.
Fred Thompson came out and said he should be pardoned, and he did nothing wrong.
That is not the statement of somebody who's trying to be cast positively by the media.
It's not the politically correct answer, which is, well, it's up the verdict of the legal system and it's up for the president to decide.
He stuck his neck out and specifically took a stand that was not politically correct and was not necessarily going to be popular.
That shows me that he's a man of conviction, but also someone who isn't going to back down just because the media asks him a question.
Put him in a one-on-one debate with whomever the Democrats nominating.
tell me who wins that debate.
Lawyer by trade, he's used to thinking on his feet.
and Actor by training in his second life.
Outstanding command.
Brilliant individually, strong views on the issues.
If I mention that I kind of like Fred Thompson a lot, I am, by the way, not speaking for Rush.
He can speak for himself, as you all well know.
I am speaking only for myself.
I'm the guest host that really likes Fred Thompson.
Molly in Peoria, Illinois, you're on Russia's program with Mark Belling.
Hi.
Hi.
I wanted to mention you were talking about Hillary claims to be the first woman running for president.
No, the first woman who would be president.
Oh, who would be president?
Okay, because a long time ago, Carol Mosley Braun attempted the same thing.
You're right.
You know who else ran for president female.
Elizabeth Dole ran for about nine minutes.
Remember that.
Yeah, you can go all the way back.
You can go all the way back to Shirley Chisholm ran.
There have been other women who have run uh for president.
Hillary is trying to be the first woman elected president, but you are right.
Other women have run.
Because we've had the vice presidential with Walter Mondale and Now maybe Hillary can count as two candidates since she's actually Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton and her she's candidate Hillary Clinton.
I'd love to have I'd love to have one of her supporters explain that.
And explain why we right wingers are making another big deal out of nothing.
Okay, we're making a big deal out of nothing.
Why does she have two different names?
Explain that to me.
You want the point.
In fact, if any of you Hillary supporters are out there and would like to explain the dropping of the name Rodham solely for the purpose, and I'll tell you if she does win, God forbid, if she does win, that name Rodham is going to be right back.
She will be President Hillary Rodham.
She'll drop the Clinton.
She may drop Bill entirely, and she's certainly going to drop the name.
She will be Hillary Rodham if she is the president.
And then when she runs for a second term, it'll come back again.
And we'll just say uh thank you for the call, Molly, to uh Lansing, Michigan and Mark.
Mark, you're on Russia's program with Mark Belling.
Hey, how are you doing, Mark?
I'm great, thank you.
Good.
Yeah, and the subject of of Fred Thompson, uh, you know, I don't know great details about anyone's any of the Republican candidates, their backgrounds and stuff.
I hear pros and cons about pretty much everybody except for Fred Thompson.
I I only hear good stuff about him.
And uh whoever the nominee is uh needs to be able to inspire the Republican Party to actually take a stand on something and and develop a backbone and and give the people something to vote for rather than trying to.
I think you're right.
If you if you talk to, you know, the introduction that they run every hour from me here is from America's Heartland, which is sort of a cliche, but it's true.
If you go to my part of the country and you talk to Republicans, the thing that they are most frustrated about with regard to President Bush is that he doesn't seem to fight back, that he just sits there and he takes it or that they feel the need to apologize and explain, and that they show it that he shows this weakness.
I think most conservatives are looking for someone who is willing to take a conservative message and run with it without apology, without feeling a need to explain yourself and say, well, I don't really mean that, and feel this need to moderate yourself toward the center.
Republican candidates who have run and won have not done that.
That's how Bush won the presidency, and it's how Reagan won two terms by landslides.
And I think Fred Thompson can do that.
As for the other Republicans, the reason that they haven't expired uh inspired Republican voters is Giuliani isn't conservative on a lot of issues.
Mitt Romney is a Johnny Cum lately, and John McCain isn't conservative at all.
He has spent most of his political career trying to impress the media and the political elite that he isn't really a Republican, and now he wants us to support them.
Fred Thompson does present that image of strength, and I don't think he'd be embarrassed as running as a Republican.
I'm Mark Gulling in for Rush.
Alright, I saved this for the last half hour.
Primarily out of cowardice.
On the other hand, just as I said that I admire in Fred Thompson, and what I admire in conservative leaders, is the willingness to take a position even if it is unpopular.
So here goes.
First of all, for those of you who pay no attention to the third greatest sport in the world, stock car racing, a significant event occurred yesterday in Talladega.
Teledagus in Alabama.
Jeff Gordon passed Dale Earnhardt, the late Dale Earnhardt, the original Dale Earnhardt, Dale Earnhardt driving now as his son, passed Dale Earnhardt Sr. on the all-time NASCAR career victory list.
I think it moved Gordon up to sixth.
I'm not positive about that, but he passed Earnhardt.
It was a watershed event primarily because Earnhardt is Earnhardt.
I am, even though he's now been dead for several years, still a Dale Earnhardt fan.
Earnhardt fans relished being Earnhardt fans because Dale Earnhardt was politically incorrect.
They love the fact that nobody on either coast even knew who Dale Earnhardt was.
They love the fact that in an age of sports heroes who were more concerned about their image that he was still at you know what kick an old good old boy who get out there and go race it.
They loved the fact that he'd be willing to bump other drivers out of the way, and they also admired the fact that he was a brilliant racer.
He died several years ago tragically at the end of the Daytona 500.
His son became an active driver shortly.
In fact, his son just started his career right when Dale Sr. died.
His son, who by fate was given the incredible name of Dale Earnhardt Jr. and has had to live up to his father, has become the new fan favorite on NASCAR, primarily because he's Earnhardt Sr.'s son.
In the meantime, there's Jeff Gordon.
And I can relate to Earnhardt fans here because I remember when Jeff Gordon came on the NASCAR scene.
Jeff Gordon is right now one of the biggest stars NASCAR has.
And when he came onto the scene, he was the kid of privilege.
Instead of having to work his way up, he was plopped into a major car on a major team.
Hendrick, which is maybe the dominant NASCAR team, hired Jeff Gordon.
He was an open wheel racer.
He raced in California.
He's from Indiana, he's a northerner.
He's a good looking pretty boy, and to make matters worse, the first car that he put was put in was this DuPont car, the 24 that was painted all these not very masculine colors.
So here's this guy who's just dropped in and handed this.
And he proceeds immediately to win.
Gordon's first couple of years, he was winning all the time.
And in fact, he was winning as much as or more than Dale Earnhardt.
He never was respected by the Earnhardt crowd.
He even denied Earnhardt, one of his Daytona 500s when he bumped him.
I still remember the comments because I made it.
Yeah, the guy in the girl car knocked Dale out of the way.
A lot of reasons not to like Jeff Gordon.
Then he's kind of sanctimonious.
And his wife, his first wife, she was beautiful, and he'd mention her every time after the race.
It was kind of nauseating to watch.
But the fact of the matter is that he lasted, and he's won and won and won and won.
He's overcome adversity, come back, and now he's winning again.
Well, he was dropped into a situation.
He made the most of it.
A lot of drivers drive for well-funded teams and do nowhere near as well as Jeff Gordon.
The fact of the matter is that he can flat out drive.
So yesterday he wins coming from behind at another thrilling NASCAR finish at Talladega, and that means he passes Dale Earnhardt on the all-time win list.
As he's driving around the track, taking his victory lap.
Virtually the entire crowd is booing.
And then they started throwing things.
It was bizarre.
There were beer cans flying from all over the grandstand.
A lot of them not even making it to the track, but many of them, they were hitting Jeff Gordon's car and bouncing off the car.
I've never seen anything like this.
It was the Earnhardt crowd making it clear that they still hated Jeff Gordon and resented the fact that he, Jeff Gordon, had the audacity to actually win so many races that he won one race more than Dale Earnhardt ever did.
I am second to no one in admiring how good Dale Earnhardt Sr. was.
He was one of the two greatest drivers in NASCAR history, Richard Petty being the other.
And I never particularly have been a Jeff Gordon fan.
But the behavior in Talladega of the Earnhardt fans was boorish, obnoxious, and not worthy of the late Dale Sr.
Jeff Gordon did what he did by earning it.
And he didn't deserve that reaction.
And those fans who resent the fact that Gordon is now number six or whatever it is on the all-time victory list, ought to be able to deal with their problem.
This wasn't a bogus accomplishment.
It was a real accomplishment by a guy who has proven it.
And the fans who not only were booing him, but pelting his car with cans, showed no class, and act like a bunch of selfish insolent babies.
What they reminded me of was the Democrats in 2000, who simply would not accept the fact that Bush won.
They wanted a recount and recount and recount and recount and recount.
They wanted to do the, they wanted to go to this court.
They went to the Florida Supreme Court to overturn the election results.
They wanted to claim that voters in a couple of counties didn't know who they were voting for.
They concocted every last excuse, and after the election was over, to this day they still claim Bush stole the election.
They cannot accept the fact, even though there have been now nine million recounts by news organizations and everyone else, and every single one of them shows Bush won Florida.
The Democrats still have this chip on their shoulder believing that Bush is the illegitimate president that somehow Al Gore won because they can't accept the fact that they lost that Bush won.
And that's what the Earnhardt fans remind me of, and I am an Earnhardt fan.
That's what at least the fans in Talladega yesterday reminded me of.
So yes, I think all of those fans in Talladega who are throwing beer cans at Jeff Gordon's car, you're acting like Al Gore.
You're acting like Al Gore.
Trust me, there is no greater insult than that.
Rush had some guy on the radio, and he said I was Al Gore.
I hate Al Gore.
Rush, you don't ever let him come out and do your show again.
You're going to get more reaction to this.
See, these Eastern guys that I'm doing this show with, they don't know Jeff Gordon and Dale Earnhardt from Adam.
they don't know who this is and they don't know why this is, and they don't know why this touches a nerve.
Does uh the guy in Memphis agree with me or disagree with me?
Uh let's try uh J.R. in uh Memphis, Tennessee.
You're on Russia's program.
Good afternoon, Mark.
I just wanted to uh say first of all, I do agree with your analogy, uh equating Earnhardt fans or other fans throwing stuff onto the track with Al Gore.
That's a good analogy.
I cannot dispute that one bit.
But I did want to correct one factual thing about what you said about Jeff Gordon being a kid of privilege just dropped into a Hendrick car.
Uh Jeff Gordon did earn what he got because he started racing go-karts at an early age.
Right, he did do all of that, but they resent the fact that he wasn't on the Bush series, which is the number two NASCAR series for three or four or five years.
They really resent the fact that he wasn't a Southerner.
He they resent the fact that he didn't, you know, cut his teeth in North Carolina or Alabama.
They kind of didn't like the fact that he was plucked out of open wheel racing, that they've all I I can relate to all of this because these are the reasons that I didn't like Jeff Gordon.
He was handed that in part because of his image.
Henrik was looking for a dri Hendrik wanted to bring on DuPont as this huge sponsor, and DuPont was interested in having a driver that presented a different kind of image than NASCAR presented.
All of that stuff is true.
The point that I'm making here is that simply being given something doesn't mean anything if you don't do anything with it.
What Jeff Gordon has done is prove himself over and over again in every type of racing, and he deserves the respect of anybody who calls himself a real NASCAR fan.
And those fans that are still clinging to the memory of Dale Earnhardt and don't want to acknowledge what Gordon did, aren't real fans.
And I'm speaking as somebody who admires Earnhardt.
Those people at Talladega acted like a bunch of drunken fools.
I'll tell you we've got something coming up in America very soon that's similar to this.
Bonds is going to pass Henry Aaron's great home run record.
That is something to look down upon.
Because everyone knows that Barry Bonds doesn't deserve that record.
And he's getting that record because of all of the things that have happened in the past with regard to all the things he's being investigated for.
There are going to be a lot of fans who believe that that is an illegitimate record, and I am one of them.
You can't say that about what Gordon has done.
He did it on the track, and he's done it because he's a great driver.
And what happened in Alabama and the Earnhardt in Alabama, there's history there.
He won a lot of races at Talladega.
It's also the scene of two spectacular crashes that he was involved in.
He's beloved down there.
But to show some class, they would have applauded him and they would have cheered him.
And I don't believe it's the kind of behavior that Dale Earnhardt himself would have would have wanted.
And I just think that they acted like a bunch of fools down there.
Thank you for the call.
My name is Mark Gilling sitting in for Rush Lamba.
I'm Mark Belling sitting in for Rush.
Rush never talks about NASCAR, does he?
See, he's got if if he started, he'd love it.
He's a football guy.
If you're a football guy, you've got potential to appreciate NASCAR.
Plus, I couldn't talk about the NFL draft because no one on Russia's audience cares that my team, the Green Bay Packers, made fools of themselves over the weekend.
To uh Lexington, Kentucky, and Betty, Betty, you're on EIB with Mark Belling.
Hi.
Hi.
Um I'm calling you because earlier in the program, I just wanted to pay you a compliment.
Because I totally enjoyed your teaching class this afternoon.
Thank you.
Uh pointing out the differences between the Democratic and the Republican wannabes for president, I guess, even though we are a long time away.
Um I hope you will do that more often when you have the opportunity.
Well, Betty, they have to ask me back.
But you've been very, very nice, and I want to stretch your call out as long as possible because I know that there are Dale Earnhardt fans who are waiting to just savage me on a national audience.
So Betty, you have anything else nicely that nice that you'd like to say about me.
We can just stretch this out forever and ever and ever.
How much did you like the show, Betty?
A real lot?
Yes, a real lot.
Betty is a great caller.
We need more callers like Betty.
Betty, thank you very much.
I appreciate those comments.
I want to say one more thing.
Yes, you can, Betty.
As a matter of fact, you can.
I truly, truly, truly thank you for all the information you gave.
And uh the in-depth uh information that you gave, even though it's very early.
But there's one.
Actual, actually, it's not as early as we think.
You know, the Iowa caucuses are in January, the New Hampshire primary is a week later, and what is it, like 20 states and I'm gonna vote on February 5th.
Both parties are going to have their candidates nailed down before Valentine's Day of next year.
So it's not as early as uh you think.
Thank you very much for your call, Betty.
She was stuck, it was starting to get too much even even for me.
She was so nice.
To uh Charleston, South Carolina and John.
John, it's your turn on Rush Limbaugh Show.
Hi.
Uh nice show today.
Thank you.
Um I I'm a Dale Earnhardt hater from way back that now love him because of the tragedy.
And I'd like to kind of equate it to uh both of them, Dale and Jeff to New York City.
Uh we kind of like to hate on Jeff and we hate on Yankees down here.
But when something happened to New York, and when something happened to Dale, it turned us.
You know, we knew it was all in fun.
Well, I liked him too, but I that's why I think I and I understand that you go to a NASCAR race, you cheer for one guy, you boofer the other.
It's the same thing.
I've been going to stock car racing since I was eight years old.
That's what you do.
The reason I'm singling this out is Jeff Gordon yesterday made a major accomplishment.
And it might be that the fans reacting negatively because it's almost like the mantle is past.
Dale Sr. really is dead, and Jeff Gordon is now the biggest star on the circuit, or the guy with the most accomplishments, and they resented having that.
The fact of the matter is is that when something like this occurs, he deserves respect, and not he certainly doesn't deserve firing beer cans of the you mean you've got to hit somebody in the back of the head for heaven's sakes.
They're throwing cans at his car.
It was just obnoxious to watch.
And the worst thing is all the people out there who laugh at NASCAR and think people who follow stock car racing are a bunch of idiots who don't have any teeth, that we're all a bunch of dopes that we just like to see the crashes.
Now that's all being reinforced because they watch ESPN last night.
The only highlight you see is all the fans throwing the beer cans at Jeff Gordon's car.
So it just reinforces every negative stereotype that's out there.
And the stereotype actually isn't true.
NASCAR has a very diverse cross section of Americans, including, I'm sure, a whole lot of people in Russia's audience, but that display yesterday is just going to give ammunition to everybody out there who wants to make who wants to carry on and act as though we're a bunch of fools.
Thank you for the call.
My name is Mark Elling, and I'm sitting in for Rush.
I'm Mark Belling sitting in for Rush Limbaugh.
You're not going to believe this.
You're not going to believe it.
There's a chance it's not true, but I'm pretty sure I'm right about this.
It's something I remember from years back, and I'm not positive about it, but I'm pretty sure I'm right.
I wouldn't just come on Russia's show and make something up.
It's beneath the standards of his program.
So I think this is true, but I swear to you, I am not making it up.
The very first race, Jeff Gordon, who I was talking about earlier, raced.
Guess the city it was in.
First race ever.
Tell Adega.
No.
I I could be I don't think I'm wrong.
The first race Jeff Gordon raced in was in Rio Linda, California.
I don't I think that's right.
I know that sounds insane, and it sounds like a coincidence beyond I believe it to be correct.
And finally, this from Potna, India.
Villagers at a wedding in Eastern India decided the groom had arrived too drunk to get married, so the bride married the groom's more sober brother instead.
Police said on Monday.
Quote, the groom was drunk and had reportedly misbehaved with guests when the bride's family and local villagers chant chased him away.
The groom apologized for his behavior, but has been crying that word will spread and he will never get a bride again.
That may have been how Hillary ended up with Bill.
She actually knew Roger and all kind of work.
Privilege, thank you for listening.
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