Folks, you know what would be you know what would be really cool if Bill and Killer Bill and Hillary Clinton held a joint press conference and announced that they are just not comfortable with the apparent level of corruption that might be tainting the Obama campaign.
And as such, she has decided not to accept a nomination as Secretary of State.
Greetings.
Welcome back, Rush Limbaugh, the EIB Network, and the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
Your phone calls are coming up in this hour.
Thank you for holding and waiting out there.
800-282-2882 and the email address LRushbo at EIBnet.com.
Speaking of Senate seats, if Mrs. Clinton does not tell Obama that she's uncomfortable with his level of corruption, what's going on with her Senate seat, folks?
I mean, in New York, we now know how Democrats operate.
They sell the Senate seats out there in situations like this.
So who's approaching David Patterson?
Who wants Hillary's seat in New York or who does he want to have it?
I haven't heard anything.
But I mean, once we learn how things happen in the Democrat Party, is it not logical to assume that they don't just happen that way in Illinois?
Speaking of which, if we need a car czar, we need an Illinois czar.
We need a union czar.
We need an Illinois czar.
Now, you watch what's going to happen here.
Because Pete Wilson, Pete, is that used to be the Pentagon spokesman for Cheney.
Pete, Pete, he's in NBC now.
Pete Wilson.
Williams, that's it.
Pete Williams.
Pete Williams was just on PMS NBC.
And Pete Williams was saying about Jesse Jackson Jr., Senate candidate number five, supposedly offering up to a million bucks up front for the Senate seat.
Pete Williams is on there to speculate.
Well, you know, he may not have known anything about that.
Well, he just could have had some loose cannon on his team running around talking about this.
He might not have even known anything about it.
They're going out of their way to just protect everybody here.
And here's an interesting question, folks.
What has Blagojevich done?
This goes to the question of why did they stop the investigation and go public with this?
Yeah, Blagojevich is on tape calling Obama an MFer and saying that this seat's worth something and he wants to get a bunch of jobs for his wife and get some money for himself, but he didn't actually do it.
He hadn't sold anything yet.
And the investigation was halted just in time to protect old Blago from doing something that might be a felony.
So legally, is Blago even liable for anything?
Yet bail was awfully low, $4,500.
Now, not to say that the Chicago, Illinois machine run by Richard Daly won't send this guy packing, you know, fit him for a cement swimsuit or something.
But in terms of his exposure legally, what did he do?
They stopped the investigation.
He hasn't done anything yet.
He didn't sell the seat.
And that's why I raised the question yesterday.
Why stop this now?
What Fitzgerald was talking about, this amazing degree of corruption, that they had to go in there and stop this before he named somebody.
Fitzgerald didn't say this, but others are speculating.
He had to go in there and he had to shut this down before Blagojevich actually nominated somebody for the seat.
Why?
That's the whole purpose of getting the felony, is it not?
And a note for Pete Williams, even if you want to try to spend this, that Jesse Jackson Jr. had no knowledge, it's still going to be very difficult for him to get the Senate seat now.
I mean, if Jesse Jackson Jr. does get this seat, you imagine the hell.
I mean, I don't think Dingy Harry would approve of it.
Dingy Harry has said nobody appointed by Blagojevich is going to get the seat.
Dingy Harry has said it.
Now, he might have to deal with Supreme Court on that, but that's what Dingy Harry has said.
You remember that off-mike comment by the Reverend Zachan in which he said he would like to cut the nuts off of the Messiah?
Do you think he's back to thinking that again?
Because now his son, in the midst of all this, has just been aced.
And by the way, Jesse Jackson Jr. was a national co-chair of the Obama campaign.
So we have all of these people who are involved above their eyeballs in the muck that is Chicago politics.
None of it tainted Obama.
In fact, I have a prediction for you.
It won't be long.
Mark my words.
For the next round of media spin.
And it'll go something like this.
You know, Abraham Lincoln had to deal with lots of distractions.
Abraham Lincoln had to deal with a lot of innuendo.
In fact, Jesus Christ did too.
Jesus Christ had his problems dealing with the people in his immediate orb who were corrupt.
He had his own traitors to deal with.
This is nothing new.
This has happened throughout our human history.
So the Democrat governor of Illinois is corrupt.
He has mismanaged the state.
He is running deficits.
We need an Illinois czar to oversee the Democrat Party there, as well as the Democrat-controlled legislature.
We need Washington to run the Democrat government in Illinois.
It's just that simple, folks.
I don't think we need to bail him out, but we certainly need an Illinois czar appointed by President Bush, approved by Congress to go in and run that state.
Look at the level of corruption here.
And I know just the guy to do it.
Nominate Richard Daly as the Illinois Tsar.
He's already the guy.
Remember, folks, nothing happens there without him knowing about it.
Nothing happens there without him signing off on it.
The governor of that state does not run that state.
Richard Daly, the mayor of Chicago, owns and operates that state.
Audio soundbite time.
Let's start with number seven here.
Mr. Broadcast Engineer.
The question about Fitzgerald and why he shut down this prosecution at the time that he did, Toobin says it's a tough thing the prosecutor always faces.
This was a continuing criminal enterprise, according to Fitzgerald.
And he needed to stop at this point.
It's a reasonable question, though, to ask of the prosecutor.
Why not wait and see where this thing leads to see who else wants to get into this to be snared in this web?
Well, that's always the tension that a prosecutor faces.
Do you look for more evidence or do you try to stop other crimes from being committed?
This is the judgment Fitzgerald made.
So Toobin says that prosecutors always face this decision.
But this same prosecutor, Patrick Fitzgerald, didn't have that tension in the Playham case.
He knew who the leaker was, but he wanted to find out more.
So he started investigating a lot of people, asking them questions.
Even though he had the answer to his question, he wanted to know who else was involved, and he got himself a process crime with Scooter Libby.
Jesse Jackson Jr., by the way, last night before ABC named him today, said this about being the anonymous Senate candidate number five.
Since the investigation of the governor is an ongoing investigation, it's probably inappropriate for me to comment any further.
Okay.
Okay.
Brian Ross commented for you today at ABC, David Gergen, David Rodham Gergen, last night on CNN's Anderson Cooper 180.
Will the Republicans, will conservatives, will bloggers, will others go after Obama coming from a culture of corruption in Illinois and given his relationship with Tony Resco, who has, you know, who is a fundraiser both for Obama and for this governor, will they use that in some way?
I personally think that would be very, very unfair, but I'll have to tell you that I think that it removes one layer of protection for him in the next few months, and that is if something else were to happen around him, he's a little more vulnerable.
Oh, shit.
Oh, my God.
Corruption, nationalization, propaganda.
We have the corruption throughout Illinois with everybody Obama knew.
We have nationalization going on with the car business and other businesses.
And we've got the propaganda, as you just heard it articulated by David Robham Gergen.
Back in a second.
Dawn, are you drinking some tea?
Did you remember to put some water in the machine?
I got to tell you something.
I went to Indianapolis for the Patriots and Colts back in October.
No, it was November.
It was a Sunday night before the election.
That's what it was.
Sunday night before the election.
That'd be November the 2nd.
And we stayed at the Conrad Hotel, which is a really nice hotel downtown in Annapolis.
And I don't know about you, but when I get up in the morning, I want a cup of coffee.
I don't want to have to call room service because I don't want to have to get in the shower and get all prumped up.
And I'm not going to answer the door at a robe.
Because A, I don't wear robes.
There isn't a hotel robe big enough for me that's comfortable, no matter what hotel I go to, and I just so either sit there and suffer with no coffee or they have these little Mr. Coffee machines in there that make two or three.
But this play.
This hotel had a different machine in there, K-E-U-R-I-G Kurig, and it's a coffee machine that makes one cup at a time.
It brews real coffee.
It they call it a K-cup and it's a small little cup of coffee or plastic container coffee that's going to filter and everything in there.
You you, you fill up the water container in this machine, you put that K-cup in there, you close the lid, hit the brew button.
In 60 seconds you've got a fresh cup of coffee or hot chocolate or tea, whatever you want.
They got seems like hundreds of different kinds of coffee.
We got one here in the in the EIB studios back here, and it's an.
I've bought a bunch of them to give people for Christmas.
They just, and there's a bunch of different styles.
I mean you go, you can go high grade for your office or you can go just for home or stuff, but just it's amazing and you can get decaf, regular coffee.
I mean, this stuff is extra bold.
The numbers and flavors of coffees that they have are just.
I can't tell you how many.
You pronounce it Kurig.
You think Kurig K-E-U-R-I-G I came, I looked up on the website.
That's how I ordered the stuff off the website.
I'd never heard of this thing.
And there's no mess.
It just punches a little hole in the top of this little cake cup, and the water goes through that hole, brews the coffee.
When you're finished, you throw this little cake up.
What's about an inch and a half in diameter?
You throw it away.
You never touch the coffee.
You never touch a filter.
It's all, it's genius.
And if you just want one cup of coffee at a time, it's all.
And Dawn's in there drinking the green tea.
Hot chocolate's delicious, too.
It's really good stuff.
K-E-U-R-I-G.
And they, what, it's some, somebody told me they have a bed, bath, and beyond.
I don't know where else they have them, but it's, if you make one cup of coffee at a time or you want the option to, and not expensive.
It was, it was just, it was such a relief not to have to brew these little Mr. Coffee.
Nothing against Mr. Coffee, but these little machines that make, they say it's a four-cup pot that's one and a half cups by the time you finish.
You can never open those packages of coffee with a coffee going all over the room.
Anyway, to the phones.
People have been waiting patiently.
This is Cheryl in Brooklyn.
I'm glad you called.
Nice to have you on the EIB network.
Hello.
Hi, Rush.
I hope you're feeling better.
You sound better.
Yeah, I am feeling better today.
I stopped taking a bunch of medicine.
Good.
Well, whatever you did, I'm glad you sound so much better.
I just stuck with it.
You know, it's all you can do.
This is some kind of a really, really bad book.
I've still got a little bit of it, but.
I was worried about you.
You sounded awful a couple of days there.
You really did.
Well, I shouldn't have been here.
It was just out of a sense of devotion and duty that I came in.
I was advised not to, but I did.
Well, we missed you, and I'm glad you're feeling better.
Thank you very much.
Okay.
Now, I don't know about you, but the Barry and Blago show has quickly become my favorite new sitcom.
And my favorite actor is by far Axel Rod because his statement that he was mistaken when he said that the president-elect had conversations with the governor regarding the he didn't say he was mistaken.
The campaign did.
No, no, no.
Well, a skateboarder was released saying that he was mistaken.
Yeah, but he didn't say, he didn't go out there and say, I was mistaken.
The campaign released or the office of the president-select issued a statement.
No, he didn't say that.
Or he said it, but he was wrong.
The governor never talked to Obama about this and vice versa.
But there's a problem now because this reporter, Carol Sowers, or something in Quincy, on November 5th, CBS station, I think, reported that Obama was going to go talk to Blago that day about who would fill his Senate seat.
You know, here's the thing that I find amazing.
I know that they think that we're all stupid.
I understand that.
And given the outcome of the election, I can understand why they would think that.
But we're not.
Not every single one of us is an idiot.
So if we're to believe that Mr. Axel Rod was indeed just mistaken, then we also have to believe that he, the man who had Obama's ear from day one of the campaign, the man who orchestrated every move of the Obama campaign, the man who pulled the strings and told him what to say at every public appearance, because we saw what happened whenever he went off script.
Yep, yep, yep.
Yep.
I know.
It's just too much to believe that Axel Rod would go out and tell the truth in the campaign saying, no, essentially he's wrong.
He was lying.
But there's one other, one other, one other point here, Cheryl, to add this to the sitcom script.
One thing that has come out, and Patrick Fitzgerald made it claim, plain, plain and clear, Obama was not involved.
And how is Obama not involved?
Well, because Blagojevich knew that Obama was not willing to give him anything in exchange for the Senate seat.
How did Blagojevich know that?
Why did Blagojevich call Obama the MFer?
It's because Obama wouldn't give him anything for it.
Now, who told Blagojevich that Obama wouldn't give him anything?
So somebody from Obama's campaign, if not Obama himself, was talking to Blago, but they're denying it.
It seems to me they could admit they were, and they didn't know what anything to do with it because of what Blago was demanding, but they're denying when the complaint makes it clear that they were talking.
Here's Jeff in San Francisco.
Great to have you, sir, on the program.
Hello.
Hey, Rush.
Glad to hear that you're feeling better.
Thank you, sir.
We've got millions of us out here that are praying for you, and I hope that you'll watch your back.
They're right called by Ashbo if you guys would play Banking Queen.
You want to hear Banking Queen, Barney?
Oh, absolutely.
We have this laugh all day.
We have it standing by.
Yeah.
We do.
Oh, hang on.
We're getting it right now.
We may have to truncate it.
Okay, well, I have one other comment.
Are the chickens coming home to roost?
Not yet, but they are crossing the road.
Barney Frank, ladies and gentlemen, is portrayed vocally here by Paul Shanklin, the EIB Network.
Barnie Frank.
He is the banking queen on the EIB network.
How about that Barney Frank falsetto?
Barney Frank, Banking Queen, the EIB Network, and we'll be back.
Happy holidays, everybody.
Merry Christmas.
We get closer to it.
December the 10th today, just over two weeks.
Every time the Christmas season arrives, I'm amazed it's here.
And other times, I think time is just flying by so fast.
And it just really is.
New York City, Ezra, you're next on the EIB network, sir.
Hello.
Well, Menda Ditto's Rush, I just first want to say I consider myself to be in an elite group of an American because this is my third time on this show.
I was going to Ezra, what kind of phone are you using?
I'm just using a regular office phone that I hope no one knows I'm on right now.
Oh, it's an office phone.
Would you mind telling me the brand?
It was one of the best-sounding phones.
The best phones that people use in this program, they get at Walmart.
I don't know where this was bought, and I wouldn't want to reveal the brand.
You would not want to reveal the brand.
No.
Why?
The brand, they might be happy to hear the brand referred to as such a great phone.
But you're afraid it would give away where you were calling from.
Yes, I'm calling from a very liberal establishment, Rush.
I think you have to be.
You're in New York City.
You might say the belly of the beast.
You're on the Upper West Side, then?
Yes, yes, indeed.
The belly of the beast.
That's a pretty good clue to me as one who knows New York where you're calling from.
Yeah.
Okay.
Well, we won't keep you any longer than necessary in case you're being triangulated even now because they suspect you just on general principles each day.
What's up?
Well, Rush, I have to say, you know, we expect Pelosi Franks to go through this whole dance, but it just, it broke my heart to see all these stories this morning that the Bush administration is lobbying Republicans behind the scene to support this bailout.
You know, this is the Medicare prescription drug bill.
This is amnesty all over again.
And Republicans need to think, where has this gotten us?
Where has this approach gotten us over the last eight years?
And what do we want to do going forward?
And if we just sign on to this, then over the next four years, you know, even if it doesn't work, we're not going to be in a position to say, look, we had a different plan.
We told you so.
49 Senate Republicans have a chance to change our economy going forward.
Bailing out the auto industry is like bailing out canals after the railroads started.
This is an industry that hasn't modernized in 30 years, and we all know what this loan is.
This loan is what Pelosi thinks can pass politically now to hold them over until the next Congress, where they will become a fully subsidized industry.
This is a golden opportunity for the Republican Party to put a stake through the UAW, and woe to us if we blow this.
Don't know that they can put a stake through the UAW, but they can stand up for themselves and prepare themselves to come back running for reelection down the road.
The American people, poll after poll, are opposed to this.
But you are more right than you know.
This is a bridge amount of money, $15 billion, to get these people through Obama's inauguration.
And then, I mean, when I listen to what's going to happen with this money, we're going to have a car czar, and the car czar is going to make sure, and we don't know who it is.
They're talking about Paul Volcker.
And the car czar is going to tell these people how to make cars.
He's going to tell them where they can spend money, where they can't spend money.
He has to approve any expenditure over $25 million.
He's going to make sure that they follow through on all the federal demands that are part and parcel of the loan, so-called $15 billion.
This is scary stuff.
I mean, this is why I keep calling this corruption.
This is nationalization.
It's propaganda.
It absolutely is.
And this is going to be the last chance of the Republicans to really put their mark on something in a long time.
You know, all you Republicans out there who just lost re-election, you know, why don't you go out with a bang?
And those that are going to be up in two years, this is a great way to stake their claim to re-election.
Absolutely.
And, you know, there's areas of the country, you know, that are not in a terrible recession.
Yeah, you know, some people in Detroit are going to be laid off, but you know what?
They can go get jobs in Texas.
Barry, see, you have just highlighted one of the problems.
You have no heart.
That's their home.
That's their home, Ezra.
And what do you say?
Just, well, pack up, go where the jobs are.
That's the old America.
That's not what happens, Ezra.
The jobs come to where you are, and sometimes you don't even have to work to get paid.
Well, I mean, this is what we've been seeing this past year.
You know, we can't have any short-term pain.
You know, if you look at how economies work historically and what's happened over American history, it's been one migration after another.
People have moved from one part of the country to another.
Industries have changed.
If we have the attitude that every job we have can never be replaced, that no industry can change, then, you know, we're sowing the seeds of our own decline here, and it's unnecessary.
Well, you know, it's totally unnecessary.
It's like this almost now permanent extended unemployment benefits.
Absolutely.
And we all know the statistic.
You know, your chance of getting a job miraculously goes up, you know, 100% in the week that your unemployment benefits are about to expire.
It's right.
Athletes in their contract years seem to play better than they have in the previous four years.
Yeah, I wonder why.
Plexico Burris, a great example.
Said he got the money and then said, screw you.
He said, I'm going to shoot myself so I don't have to work.
Okay, look, Ezra, I appreciate the call.
Folks, nobody has more compassion for people in bad economic times that are having job pressures than I, because I have been there.
Remember now, I've been fired seven times, maybe eight.
One of them was justified.
The other times it was just the vagaries of the business that I am in.
Format change, like we were playing oldies.
I called it salted rotten mold.
Imagine playing an oldie format and a playlist of 150 songs.
You get tired of it.
And anyway, they sold a station and new guys came in to change the format to Chinese opera.
Didn't need me for that.
Those are the kind of vagaries that happen in this business.
I think I, on one of these times, I went out and I availed myself of the unemployment checks in one of those jobs.
Even though I supposedly had paid, the money had been withheld, but technically it was mine.
I just, I don't like it.
I'm just that the longer, this is human nature, the longer you pay people enough to get by not to work, the longer they're not going to work.
And I just, you know me, I cringe when we destroy people's ambition, when we take away their dreams, when we take away their drive, their desire, and then when we take away their need, it's just not, it's not pretty, and it's not a compassionate thing to do to people.
I know we balance this.
Well, we're rushed.
We're in a recession.
We're losing all these jobs.
What are people going to do?
It's Thanksgiving time.
They got to have their turkeys.
I understand all of that.
I really, really do.
What did I get fired for cause?
It was this same station.
I refused.
I just started playing the songs I liked the most.
If there's only going to be 150 of them in the list, I'm not going to play the trash I don't like.
And I told them that.
Actually, that's not why.
That's not why I got fired.
That's what they said.
And they couldn't.
It was under my thumb by the Rolling Stones.
I just played it over and over again.
I played it once a day because I wanted to hear it.
And in the rotation, it would come up every other day, but not on my show.
And I didn't go on and on.
That's not why I got, that's not why I got fired.
I got fired because I was working for a psychopath boss who was a biggest pathological liar.
And I just, people lie to me openly about things, and it just insults my intelligence.
And I got called in by this guy for a coaching session one morning, and he just started, and I hated those anyway, these coaching sessions that program directors bring you in and tell you where you did wrong and sometimes what you did good and so forth.
Just be as no, no, no, back then you didn't refuse to leave.
They told you after you left, after a show, then they escorted you out the door and then they sent you your things.
But that's how it worked, and I think probably still does in this business.
They don't want you going on the air and bleeding on the audience.
But anyway, this guy just, I forget what it was.
He was lying about people he knew.
He was lying about places he had worked.
He was lying about his expertise, lying about this or that, lying about where he went to dinner.
I couldn't put up with it anymore.
And I finally called him on it.
I said, would you just stop lying to me?
I can't handle it.
You're not the big shot you make yourself out to be.
And I went home.
And the owner of the radio station called me and said, you know, we just can't have this kind of insubordination and you blowing up like this.
I said, what are you talking about?
Well, I mean, you walk into my program director's office and you veritably attack him and you claim you're not going to work the way he's...
That's not what happened.
I said, the guy's a psychopath.
He's a pathological liar.
Well, you know, I didn't know how the game was played.
You know, the program director had iced me before I even got home.
He had, because that's the kind of guy he was.
So that's when I got fired.
First job upon leaving home.
But I was back two weeks later at a bigger station.
And I did not go on unemployment then.
And it was, you know, there was no, I mean, what was it?
It was 1972.
It was, yeah, we were in.
We were nationalizing health care then.
We're trying to, OSHA, Nixon was wage and price controls.
It was not pretty back then.
It was not pretty making $150 a week.
And, you know, I didn't do the unemployment thing then.
I'm not being critical of people that do.
Don't misunderstand.
I'm just saying that constantly extending this, it's the American people that run this economy, the American people that make the economy work.
The American people creating jobs, inventing jobs, doing things out of necessity, love, desire, what have you.
And the more you pay people to not work, and the more you, and not enough to make them comfortable, but just make them satisfy enough needs, they can continue to carry the credit card debt for a while.
It's the same when you pay union people not to work.
We support the workers, but not the union.
And we learned that some of these UAW guys, I forget the term now, it's a mental block I'm having, but they're not working.
They're getting paid for it.
And if a job comes up at some factory out of town, they don't have to take it and they can continue to get paid.
I mean, it defies the laws of economics.
And at some point, the golden goose are going to get killed, and that's what's happened here.
Here, grab audio soundbite number 36.
This is Tom Coburn, senator from Oklahoma today on Capitol Hill.
He was talking about the automobile bailout, and the numbers that he had here are stunning.
7.
GM sold 9.37 million cars worldwide.
Toyota that same year sold 9.37 million cars worldwide.
GM lost 38.7 billion.
Toyota made $17.7 billion.
Therein lies the problem.
2007, GM and Toyota sold the same amount of cars, same number of cars worldwide, 9.37 million.
General Motors lost 38.7 billion.
Toyota made $17.7 billion.
You figure it out.
If Obama knew, if Obama knew that Bogoyevich was selling the seat, why didn't he tell somebody?
Maybe he did.
Obama knew because Bogoyevich knew that Obama wasn't going to pay anything for it.
That's why he called him an MFer out there.
So Obama knew.
Somebody in Obama camp knew.
Well, we didn't talk to governor.
We have no idea what's going on out there.
Axel Ruts.
Oh, yeah.
He talked to him.
Stand up, Chuck.
Let him see it.
Oh, God.
No, I didn't say that, did I?
No, we didn't talk to him about that at all.
Here's, oh, I got the perfect Karzar Karzai, president of Afghanistan.
Hamid Karzai for Karzaar.
Here is Rick in Bay City, Michigan.
Nice to have you, sir.
Hello.
Good morning, Rush.
Hi.
My first question when I turned on the television yesterday morning was: what is the going rate to become a senator to an appointed position?
I watch all these talking heads talking about, oh, they've never heard of such a thing.
It's never happened before.
And I said, no, you know, there's nothing new under the sun.
These people do this all the time.
And then I started thinking about Hillary, and I said, when she said she was going to be the Secretary of State, then she wasn't going to be the Secretary of State.
I said, that's just a sales ploy.
She's just doing things to up the ante.
What does she get out of this deal?
You mean for giving up the Senate seat?
Yeah.
You know, first she wants to be the Secretary of State, and then she doesn't want to be the Secretary of State.
And that's just to get somebody to up the ante here.
Does she get her debt retired?
Well, you know, I have to confess, you may have a point.
If it's going on in Chicago, which is that's the motherland for Democrat Party corruption in politics, you've got to figure that it's happening in other Democrat enclaves as well.
Camille Paga, by the way, Camille Paga, in her most recent salon column, has a pretty good question.
She looks at all these Clinton people in the cabinet, Obama's cabinet.
She says, what do the Clintons have on Obama?
And if they've got something this powerful on Obama, why didn't they use it during the campaign?
I have no idea.
No, I don't either.
You know, I don't think anybody has anything on Obama because, like David Gergen said, it would be very, very unfair.
Well, the honesty God's truth is, Bulgoyevich isn't smart enough to think of this on his own.
Well, look, the one thing that people outside of Chicago don't really know is that the mayor of Chicago Daly runs all this.
I mean, not saying Daly put words in Bogoyevich's mouth, but I'm saying whatever's going on in that state, Daly knows it.
Daly approves of it.
So I think, I think Obama's president, because Daly wanted him out of Illinois.
I don't think Daly wanted him running for governor there.
Why would Daly want to have to deal with a Messiah who's governor of Illinois?
Getting the hell out of the state.
The last thing anybody expected was that he would win.
And now, look, they're all nobody.
AP is finally running stories on his cronies today on December 10th.
AP is finally telling us about Jeremiah Wright and Bill Harris and Tony Rezco.
It's like, oh, my God, what have we done here?
This Bulgojevich thing, they're just running there to run a cover and they're spreading the wagons, covering the wagons, circling the wagons, everything they can to protect Obama here.
I mean, he's the Messiah who, you know, Jesus walked on water.
Obama apparently walks on a cesspool and is untainted by it.
Well, I. That's what they want us to believe.
I have no idea how they came up with this plan, but my suspicions run to New York that there's something else going on here.
You mean related to Illinois?
No, related in the fact that Senate seats are up for sale.
Yeah.
Like this.
Yeah, like what did it take to get the Laut back out of retirement?
Anything's possible.
Yeah, and look at all of the money that's in this business.
Look at all the money in politics is every dime produced by the American people.
Well, and where does it end up?
It ends up in Washington's state capitals, ends up at your city, ends up with your fire department, ends up with your dog catcher.
Yeah, yeah, that's a sad thing.
I know a lot of Americans are sad today to realize their Senate seats are up for sale.
As usual, my friends, having more fun than a human being should be allowed to have.