Half my brain tied behind my back just to make it fair.
Rush Limbo, and the most listened to radio talk show in America.
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It's uh three weeks, two weeks, a little over two weeks in now.
Twenty.
No, I've been well what I don't even know what day of the week the first is.
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Uh more than 43,000 children go to emergency rooms each year after slipping or falling in a bathtub, according to researchers at nationwide children's hospital.
Do you know what that works out to?
That works out to 120 kids injured every day in a bathtub in the most prosperous nation on earth.
Now something needs to be done about this.
Don't know what, but something needs to be done.
Well, because uh it's 43,000 kids are given hurting, falling in a bathtub in there.
Bathtubs are.
Maybe we needed a bathtubs.
I don't know.
Uh I know kid.
No, it's not allowed for kids to get hurt.
You've seen those stories, haven't you?
I I remember when I was a kid.
Let's see how much of those I can remember.
When I was a kid, Cape Girardeau, Missouri.
Get up in the morning and leave the house at eight o'clock.
And the parents were in a summertime.
Happy to see you go.
Get out of here, kid.
You'd get on a bike and you'd go, and they didn't know where you were going, and you had no helmet.
You had a deck of cards in the spokes to make noise.
And a little transistor radio attached to the hand handlebar so you can pretend you're driving a car.
And you'd cruise around and sometimes you'd run through red lights, sometimes you'd run through stop signs, risking it all that no car was coming.
Sometimes you'd end up five miles away from home.
Parents didn't know, didn't care.
You got home, tell them what you did.
They'd comment on it one way or the other.
Uh, you know, we'd fall off the bicycle, scuff up our knees.
I remember one time my mother sent me up to the snacking pack, which was the convenience store of the snacky pack, I think it was, which is five blocks away.
She sent me up there on my bicycle to pick up some stuff so that she wouldn't have to go to the grocery store.
She was busy doing something, playing with a dog.
So I went up there and I got the sack of stuff, and I'm carrying a sack and a handlebars, and my left knee, as I'm pedaling, hits the sack and causes the front wheel to do a 90-degree turn, and I went head over heels onto the street, no helmet, no nothing, sat up, stuff had fallen out of the sack, and I am mad as I can be.
I'm I'm probably 10.
I'm mad as hell my mom made me do this.
I didn't have a basket on the bike, so I had to carry that sack in the left hand on the handlebar.
So I got home and I told her what happened, and she said, Stop whining.
Stop whining, and don't worry, get you she ran and got some iodine and put on the scuff on the knee, and that was it.
I remember playing uh baseball, youth league baseball before before 12.
And we had the screen backstop.
As these little park baseball diamonds had.
And a wild pitch, and I scurried, I was a catcher, and I scurried back to pick up the wild pitch, and one of the prongs of the screen came out.
I cut my head.
And the coat said, don't worry about it, grab some dirt and rubbed it in it.
This is how we deal with it, son.
Don't cry.
And I wasn't crying, he said, don't worry about it, keep playing.
Now I guarantee you, none of that's allowed to happen today.
And we we, you know, we were fine.
At the time, you know what we were worried about, we were worried about the Russians nuking us.
Kids, they are worrying about stupid polar bears dying.
Or they're worried about Bush Lion.
Oh, I don't know what they're worried about, but they're they're made to worry about a bunch of stuff.
I'm just telling you that that, you know, I I'll bet you that people fall in the bathtub.
We know they fall in the bathtub all the time, kids, adults, or what have you.
But in this climate, when this the statistic, this in the Baltimore Sun, by the way, I won't be surprised if somebody we've got to do something about this.
We can't have 120 kids uh falling and hurting themselves in bathtubs or showers every day in this country.
But it's it's d do you think that your average parent today will wave goodbye to a kid at eight o'clock in the morning on a bicycle and not care.
No, they have to arrange play dates.
And the reason is there are molesters and all this other kind of stuff out there.
Uh well, that you might have had weirdos where you we are weirdos.
We're we people we laughed at.
We weren't afraid of.
Our weirdos were 90 years old driving down the middle of the street weaving in a 1920 car, and then showing up at Wimpy's, which is a local hamburger joint to get a cup of coffee.
We we named this guy, Gertrude Vanguard.
I don't know what his name never knew what his name was, but it was his funniest old little guy.
Gertrude Van Gogh.
We wait, we made fun of the local mortician.
You know, we weren't a fes, they were.
Well, the school now that's true.
The school teachers weren't having sex with us back then.
That uh and and so there was there was a lot, it just it was different.
Now, I'm not at all foggy and and and saying that let's go back to these.
I promise I'd never be one of those, but I'm I'm just telling you that that we were allowed to be kids and grow up and have things happen that shaped us, and today no harm, no pain, no suffering is is a lot is not good.
It stunts growth, it's the wrong thing.
Not even kids today aren't even allowed to compete.
They secretly do.
You know, when they when they tell these kids at T ball you can't keep score, which they do.
They know at the end of the game which team won, even though it's not officially done.
I mean, people are naturally naturally competitive.
Mm-hmm.
Uh actually, I did have an experience with a bully uh when I was uh two of them.
And if you went home, I remember the first time I went home and I I told my uh mom or dad or whatever it was a bully in the school.
Well, what are you gonna do?
What are you gonna do about it?
Rather than call the school and demand that something be done with a bully, and nobody called Congress or the state legislature to get bully legislation passed.
Uh it was uh it was much different.
But of course, back then, the teachers also were not polluting our minds with ultra-radical leftism.
Uh teachers uh, you know, were not requiring us to watch Al Gore movies and not telling our parents we had to come watch, they had to come watch, or we would fail uh the class.
We didn't have teachers who were giving us the answers to the tests in history so that the teacher could actually teach anti-Bush republicanism while uh disguising successful history class with test scores that were made by that's happening today.
It's happening today.
So I'm just telling you, something's gonna have to be done.
Bathtub falls, 43,000 kids a year.
Something's something's gotta give here.
Something has to give.
You imagine, can you imagine if I would imagine somebody listed hearing the story today when the story about rubbing dirt in an open wound in my head?
Lawsuit, I guarantee I'm tea.
If I lawsuit.
Sue the coach, sue the city for having uh a defective backstop and screen, and social services would have probably come and try to take me away from my mother if I'd have told them she made me drive to the snacky pack, and I've cut myself open with the on the bicycles because the pack got hit my knee and the wheel went 90 degrees and I went flying.
Then they'd sue the bicycle maker or the store that sold it to me, because they didn't put a proper basket on the back to carry sacks from the snacky pack or whatever it was called.
I think it was pack and snacked at the day.
It's where we went and got the baseball card.
Uh well, uh at any rate, folks, we've got to take a brief time out.
I'm I'm just trying to avoid more Sonya Sodomy or sound bites with these stories.
But there will be some after this.
Ladies and gentlemen, President Obama is in Michigan this afternoon.
It was originally scheduled to be a town meeting.
Now it's just going to be a speech.
We have an advanced indication of what the president plans to say in Michigan.
My fellow Americans.
Some are questioning whether my economic stimulus plan is actually working.
I can assure you it is working as intended.
In some areas, you are seeing the economic engine turn.
But our plan will put a stop to that so that every American can equally share in the 12 to 20% unemployment of places like California and Michigan.
Creating the crisis and fear necessary to move our agenda forward.
Now and our stimulus plan.
We did not ignore the critical needs of Americans.
We included bike paths for those who no longer had cars.
Funding for the arts to supply unproductive work, which is necessary for a permanent recession.
Because we always knew that A, this recession was going to have to be deep.
And that B, it was going to last for a while.
And C that it may need a second stimulus for it to last long enough.
Please be assured that we are doing everything we can to use this opportunity to change America.
A little preview of President Obama's message to the nation and the people of Michigan this afternoon.
Jeff Sessions was precise and terrific when he got his chance at Sonia Sotomayor today.
During his 30-minute questioning period, he dissected every statement that she has made, properly analyzed it, and asked her about.
Here's one.
He said to her, you previously have said that the Court of Appeals is where policy is made.
And you said in another occasion, the law that lawyers practice and judges declare is not a dis definitive capital L law that many would like to think exists.
So I guess I'm asking today, what do you really believe in those subjects?
In that conversation with the students, I was focusing on what district court judges do and what circuit court judges do.
And I noted that district court judges find the facts.
And they apply the facts to the individual case.
And when they do that, their holding, their finding doesn't bind anybody else.
Appellate judges, however, establish precedent.
I think if my speech is heard outside of the minute and a half that YouTube presents and its full context examine, that is very clear that I was talking about the policy ramifications of precedent and never talking about appellate judges or courts making the policy that Congress makes.
This is a clear example of what I was talking about earlier.
This answer is a total fudge.
She meant it when she says judges make policy.
That's what that's how liberals view courts.
That's exactly what she meant, but she knows if she says that in this hearing, she got big problems.
So she's got to fudge it.
Now let's go back and let's listen to what she said.
Here's the comment they're all referring to.
It's from February 25th, 2005, in Durham, North Carolina, at the Duke University Scruel of Law.
All of the legal defense funds out there, they're looking for people with court of appeals experience because it is court of appeals is where policy is made.
And I know, and I know this is on tape, and I should never say that because we don't make law, I know.
Um I know.
I'm not I'm not promoting it, and I'm not advocating it.
I'm you know.
She admits I mean the whole bite, she know I shouldn't say this then.
Let's all chuckle about it, because we're all of the same mind here.
Uh, shouldn't have said this on tape.
Court of appeals is where policy is made.
She's talking uh folks, it it's like everything else that's happening in these hearings.
She is fudging what she really means in order to get confirmed.
She's lying, in other words.
Even though she said it seven times, she said today she didn't mean it.
Jeff Sessions, do you stand by your statement that my experiences affect the facts I choose to see?
Do you stand by that statement?
She said my experience as a wise Latina affect the facts I choose to see.
Do you stand by that statement?
No, sir.
I don't stand by the understanding of that statement that I will ignore other facts or other experiences because I haven't had them.
I do believe that life experiences are important to the process of judging.
They help you to understand and listen, but that the law requires a result, and it will command you to the facts that are relevant to the disposition of the case.
Well, I would just note you made that statement in individual speeches about seven times over a number of years span, and it's concerning to me.
She didn't mean it, though.
She said it seven times, but she didn't she didn't know.
She doesn't stand by the uh understanding of that statement that I will uh ignore facts and so forth.
What she said, my experiences affect the facts I choose to see as writ look at in all of her speeches, she's telling us who she is.
She just won't do it with the national spotlight.
Um how can you reconcile your speeches, which repeatedly assert that impartiality is a mere aspiration, which may not be possible in all or even most cases.
How do you reconcile that with your oath that you've taken twice, which requires impartiality?
I was using a rhetorical flourish that fell flat.
I knew that Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant that if judges reached different conclusions, legal conclusions, that one of them wasn't wise.
So I was trying to play on her words.
My play was fell flat.
It was bad, because it left an impression that I believed that life experiences commanded a result in a case, but that's clearly not what I do as a judge.
And once again, Ms. Sotomayor misleading, and I will be charitable there, misleading everybody, rambling incoherently trying to change the subject from who she really is and what she really believes.
Sessions was great on this stuff today.
Let's move on.
We're going to skip number 15, Mike.
This is the Ricci decision.
Senator Sessions, you've stated that your background affects the facts you choose to see.
Was the fact that the New Haven firefighters had been subject to discrimination one of the facts you chose not to see in that case?
A variety of different judges on the appellate court were looking at the case in light of established Supreme Court and Second Circuit precedent, and determined that the city facing potential liability under Title VII could choose not to certify the test if it believed an equally good test could be made with a different impact on affected groups.
The Supreme Court, as it is its prerogative in looking at a challenge, established a new consideration or a different standard for the city to apply, and that is, was there substantial evidence that they would be held liable on the law?
That was a new consideration.
Our panel didn't look at that issue that way because it wasn't argued to us in the case before us.
Now that is just a total distraction.
That is the worst of all of these.
She buried what she really believed.
There was an unpublished opinion in a summary judgment case she was finding for the minority because they were the minority, pure and simple.
She was ignoring every other aspect of it, ignoring the Constitution, and she was even called on uh on that fact.
One more sessions.
Do you think that Frank Ritchie, the other firefighters whose claims you dismissed, felt their arguments and concerns were appropriately understood and acknowledged by such a short opinion from your court?
We were very sympathetic and expressed our sympathy to Mr. Ricci and the others.
We understood the efforts that they had made in taking the tests.
We said as much.
They did have before them a 78-page thorough opinion by the district court.
They obviously disagreed with the law as it stood under Second Circuit precedent.
That's why they were pursuing their claims and did pursue them further.
The panel was dealing with precedent and arguments that relied on our precedent.
And that's another thing.
This precedent business, Daria DeCis, says, well, I'll go for precedent every time I can, except when I won't.
Precedent is not locked.
Precedent doesn't mean you can never vary.
If precedent meant that, we'd still have slavery.
I mean, it was the Roger Tanney court with the Dred Scott decision.
That was dead wrong about slavery.
But if we had relied on precedent as something Roxel, we can't move, where would we be today?
Following precedent, my rearion, that's that's not at all.
She was very sympathetic.
And remember that's what Ruth Buzzy Ginsburg said.
While the court sympathizes with that's not what they want when they go to before a court.
They don't want sympathy.
want justice, and we'll be back.
And the very much alive Ray Davies.
The kinks...
Remember this tune, come dancing.
By the way, folks, on this wise Latina comment, just to put this in its proper perspective.
Even CNN pointed out uh one of the times I've got the website here, the web page, one of the times that uh Sotomayor said her why made her wise Latina comment, she added a contrast to white men.
So I I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experience would more often than not reach a better conclusion than your average white man.
That sentence or a similar one has appeared in Sotomayor's speeches delivered in 1994, in 1999, in 2002, in 2004 and 2001.
And in the 2001 speeches where she included the phrase, that a white male who hasn't lived that life.
She added that at the end, and that's what's sparked the cries of racism here from me and others.
But let's see, one one, two, three, four, five, five years, different speeches.
She's made the comment, and today she tries to, well, there's a rhetorical flourish, or if it was taken out of context or uh just outright deny it.
Now, here's here's why Sonia Sotomayor in a very simple way of explaining it is dangerous.
You heard her say, in fact, I may want you to hear her say it again.
Uh, I just need to find it.
It's the one where she told Justice Ah.
Grab number 14.
I need soundbite number 14 to illustrate the forthcoming brilliant point.
Are you ready?
Here it is.
I was using a rhetorical flourish that fell flat.
I knew that Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant that if judges reached different conclusions, legal conclusions, that one of them wasn't wise.
So I was trying to play on her words.
My play was fell flat.
That's enough.
I knew that Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant what she said.
I knew that Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant what she said.
If Sonia Sotomayor is willing to, in open testimony, say s Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant what she said.
How simple and easy will it be for her to say the founders couldn't possibly have meant whatever they said when they wrote the Constitution.
They couldn't possibly have meant this.
Even though they wrote it down in cleared declarative statements.
Sonia Sotomayor says about Santa O'Connor, so her literal words couldn't have meant what they said.
She had to have meant that she was talking about the equal value of a capacity, to be fair and impartial.
She couldn't amend what she said.
If she can say that about Santa O'Connor, she can look at the Constitution.
They didn't mean that.
And this one little example is all you need to know how dangerous this woman is.
Your con our Constitution is not safe with this woman interpreting it.
Because if she can say Sandra Sanada O'Connor didn't mean what she said, then she can say the same thing about any of the founding fathers and authors of the Constitution.
Now to show you how effective Jeff Sessions was, we have here samples of the state-run media reacting to Sessions.
Remember now she is the one who has used this term wise Latina in speeches over five years, richness of her experience.
In one of the speeches, she said it would be she'd be better judged than a white man.
Chris Matthews is talking to this guy, Richard Wolfe on MSMDC, says she didn't make these Maya culpas on her own before the process began.
She didn't choose to qualify her statements till she had to here in this hearing.
Sessions, of course, is well within his rights to push her on these comments.
But the majority of his questions were focused on race.
He's playing racial politics, too.
And that's a very sensitive area for Republicans in general.
Because he's from Alabama.
Well, look, Alabama politics on one side, but this is also Republicans on a national stage.
You said yesterday this was a surrogate fight over the direction of the country politically.
And the sympathy the Democratic Party generally espouses towards minorities.
Generally, right?
Mm-hmm.
Is an issue here.
That's what's been a good thing.
That's litigated before us.
And that's what's being litigated before us.
That's what so she's the racist.
And they turn it around and say that Sessions is the racist.
Soda Myor is the one who used the word or the phrase wise Latina, and the richness of her experiences would make her a better judge than the average white guy.
She is the racist.
State-run media attacks Jeff Sessions.
Because he's in Alabama.
Why, it's got to be a racist.
Just like those three kids at Duke had to rape that dancer.
She was black, she was poor, she was a dancer.
They're rich elite athletes at a at a power school.
Of course they raped her.
We don't even need to know the facts.
Of course they did.
Uh, no, they didn't.
Okay, never mind.
So now Jeff Sessions is the racist.
Here's Tammy in Tucson.
Tammy, nice to have you with us to the EIB network.
Hello.
Hi, Rush.
How are you?
Fine, thank you.
Well, I heard you talking this morning about um slips in the bathtub and you know, people going to the emergency room.
And I used to be a nurse.
I'm now a school teacher.
And I would say conservatively, probably seventy-five percent of the people that come into emergency rooms come in on a non-emergency basis.
I.e.
slips in the bathtub, which are really not emergency.
Um, children throwing up, you know, just you know, ticky tag things, which, you know, contributes to our health care situation.
And to prove my point.
Big U of A fan, University of Arizona.
When the University of Arizona is playing, whether it's football or basketball, the emergency room clears out.
The hospital floors, there's no lights being turned on.
Um, no one's sick.
So my point being that if you if you're not if if you're not sick when the U of A is playing, you're not really sick.
So don't come to the emergency room.
Don't come to the hospital.
I understand exactly what you're saying.
We've had this story for we've talked about it recently, where nine people over six years visited a single Texas emergency room over what, two thousand times.
Uh, and and uh some of them were illegal immigrants and so forth.
But it is it is a monarchy.
We've we have a lot of that here.
Uh I'm sure you do.
Uh you're a border state.
But you know, here's this is there's a there's a a dichotomy to this.
Because we can sit here and talk about the old days, back when I was a you know, twelve years old, which would be forty-two years ago.
We can talk about that.
But admittedly, times were different then.
We were not peppered every day with newspaper and TV stories about what was going to kill us.
We were not peppered with the notion every day that if we don't do that and don't do that and don't do that and don't do that, we can live forever.
Now, and we weren't nearly as affluent then as we are today.
A combination of media and affluence and medicine advances, medical advances.
So if the kid does get a cough, remember, my grandparents on my father's side lost a daughter.
Name was Marguerite, my sister, my my brother's sister, a father's sister.
She died at 13 because she scraped her arm on a nail.
You had a lead poisoning, there was no penicillin.
This is in the uh early 1900s.
Life was tougher then.
Well, that we can't imagine something like that.
I scraped my head on a backstop and they poured dirt in it.
And I was fine, by the way, didn't get affected.
Dirt's clean, very clean stuff.
Unless the animals have been on it and uh weren't there.
Uh so uh today uh people with their pets, people with their kids, first sign of problem, we can probably fix it now.
Plus, people have been told all these things out there are going to kill them or hurt their kids or what have you.
Medical panic.
I think health panic exists as a daily event in this country.
There was a story while I was gone.
I have it here in the stack.
There's an airline gonna be operating out of Baltimore, Baltimore, Washington, Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore, Washington International, uh Brown versus Board of Education Airport.
See if I can say that again.
Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore, Washington International, Brown versus Board of Education Airport.
There's an airline that's gonna fly pets.
It's a pet airline.
You put your pet in a cage, they put it in a seat on the airplane, or in at least in the in the passenger cabin, not in cargo.
I don't know if people also go or if it's just pets.
I didn't read the story.
It came out July 7th or some such thing.
And for 149 bucks, you can fly your pet to California.
The root system was published in the story.
I looked at this and I said, in the middle of a recession.
Yes, there's a demand for it.
People today don't want their dogs flying in cargo.
I remember when I moved to Sacramento, I'm I'm sorry for all this nostalgia, folks, but I remember when I moved to Sacramento, uh, to New York from Sacramento, had a couple of Cairn Terriers, which are the dogs.
That's it's it, that's the that's the uh that's Toto and the Wizard of Oz.
That's a Cairn Terrier.
Just it's a black version of the West Highland White Terrier.
Mighty strong little dogs.
And it came time to move them.
So call up Delta Dash, Delta Airlines, the Dash System, and put the dogs in these little cages, put them in cargo and fly them, and you pick them up.
And I remember taking a uh a limousine, well, a car service to LaGuardia in the Delta Dash to pick up the dogs, and I had an animal rights wacko as a driver, who was telling me something he had watched on television, it had to be PBS back then, because there wasn't no animal planet channel, and he was he was talking about uh these evil people killing the whales.
And he said this this particular story uh that he did the show that he'd watched uh got a close-up of the whale's eyes as people moved in to save the whales from the evils who were trying to wipe them out.
And the whales knew.
You could see in their eyes the whales knew who their friends were.
And he was just excited as hell I was picking up the dogs and so forth.
So you go pick them up and they just here they come, you know, one of the a dog, You know, a cargo baggage carousel.
Here come the dogs, and you get them out of the cage, take them in the car, head home, and that's it.
Today, that's that's cruel.
That's yeah, we well, I'm not gonna put my dog in cargo.
Who do you think I am?
I mean, I might get sued.
ASPCA might find out about it.
So an airline has been born in the middle of a recession to fly pets around 149 bucks.
I mean, this is a great country or what?
Meanwhile, there are there are people in this country, 11 percent, 9.5% unemployment, who can't afford a cab.
By the way, on the pet airline that uh that runs out of uh Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore, Washington International, Brown versus Board of Education Airport.
Uh human beings are not allowed on the pet flights.
Only the pets fly to the strict pet airline.
Again, that's out of uh Thurgood Marshall uh Baltimore, Washington International, Brown versus Board of Education Airport.
No humans allowed on a pet plane.
Uh Christian in Somerset, New Jersey.
Great to have you with us on the EIB network.
Hello.
Hey, how are you?
Fine.
Rush, I sit there and I cringe sometimes when I listen to you.
Sotomayor, in her speech today, in her answer today, clearly said that Sandra Day O'Connor, if the outcome between a uh a wise old woman and a wise old man were different, if they came to different conclusions, then she couldn't have meant that one of them was not wise.
She didn't disagree with O'Connor.
She didn't look at it and say her original premise is not a good idea.
I don't care.
And it's a stretch to say she would then look at the Constitution and say that's not what our founders.
Christian, back off.
It's not a it's it's not a stretch at all.
If she'll take Sandra Day O'Connor's words, say she didn't mean that, then she can it's just as easily say it about James Madison.
She didn't she didn't say that she didn't mean that they would not come to the same conclusion.
She didn't take her uh original statement and say that's not what she meant.
She carried it a step further.
Grab hold on a minute.
We're gonna listen to this sound by it together.
Grab number 14 again.
Now I don't this is Rush, I'm waiting to go into an appointment.
If I have to hang up, I'm sorry.
That's all right.
This take 30 seconds no more than 30 seconds.
Play number 14, we're gonna listen together.
Number 14?
I heard it though.
I heard her say about the wisely team.
I knew that Justice O'Connor couldn't have meant that if judges reached different conclusions, legal conclusions, that one of them wasn't wise.
Okay, I she couldn't have meant what she said.
She couldn't have meant if they came to different conclusions.
Sandra Day O'Connor was saying that they should come to the same conclusion.
But if she they came to different conclusions, she couldn't have meant that one of them was unwise.
It's it's maybe a fine point, Rush, but it it's it in no way mean or could mean that she would be a good one.
Yeah, well, let's talk context, Christian, because if you take that with everything else that she's hiding today.
Oh my gosh.
All right, you know what?
I'm called in, I have to go.
I'm sorry.
That's a shame.
Why didn't you call earlier?
Because um, that's the way it goes.
Sorry.
Oh, it's my fault.
Okay, fine.
All right.
It's the way it goes.
That's the way it goes.
Screw you, Rice.
It's my fault.
Bye, Christian.
And we'll be back here in just a second.
Hey, I just got a flash note here from Andrew Breitbart, Brightbart.com.
They have finally posted some pictures on the wires of Petairways.com uh that again originates out of uh Thurgood Marshall, Baltimore, Washington International, Brown versus Board of Education Airport.
And uh so we'll have those up at uh Rush Limbaugh.com.
Uh also um I folks that I knew I knew it was gonna happen when I said if she'll so eagerly change Sandra Day O'Connor's words, she didn't mean that.
Sotomayor can just as easily say it about dead people.
The people who wrote the Constitution and even the Declaration of Independence.
If I had the power Sonia Sotomayor has as a judge, you know what I would do.
I would issue at this moment summary judgment against her nomination to the United States Supreme Court.
Summary judgment killed the New Haven firefighters until the Supreme Court got hold of it.
Summary judgment announced by me today against Sotomayor's nomination.