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July 22, 2009 - Rush Limbaugh Program
35:44
July 22, 2009, Wednesday, Hour #2
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Okay, we're back.
Rush Limbaugh, the EIB network, the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
A thrill and a delight to have you with us today, folks.
We are here at 800-282-2882, and we're going to get to your phone calls quickly in this hour.
We also have soundbites coming up with Nancy Pelosi just before the program today began another page right out of the 30-year-old Democrat playbook.
The Democrats are dragging out people who had or have cancer to support their health care bill.
Okay.
How about presenting those who have diseases and illnesses that won't get the drugs and procedures they need because Obama and the Democrats are going to be denying life-saving medicine and procedures.
Let's, if the Democrats want to play this game, the Republicans ought to get some people who have these diseases who are not going to get covered because of their age or the advanced state of their disease.
Let's play the game.
Let's get some people with spirit who want to live or are going to be denied health care under the Democrat bill.
No longer will Obama and his ilk get away with trying to paint us as lacking compassion when it is we who are standing up for these people.
We are standing against the politicians and the bureaucrats who are going to end up denying your so-called right to health care based on your age, the severity of your disease.
This tactic from their 30-year-old playbook won't work anymore.
Big government is not compassionate.
Big government is destructive.
Big government is harmful.
Big government denies people life and liberty.
It does not enhance it.
And that's the hallmark of the Democrat-led Congress and the Obama White House.
They are denying people life and liberty.
They are not enhancing it.
They are not compassionate.
They are destroying jobs.
They are destroying the place in our economy where jobs are created, the private sector.
And nothing compassionate about these people.
And yet they're dragging all these people up.
To support their bill.
I've got cancer and I want Obama's health care plan.
I've got I've got dread diseases.
I want Obama.
Well, let's bring some people up that have a dreaded disease who aren't going to end up being covered.
Speaking of this, Dick Morris has a piece that was posted yesterday at I think the Hill.com.
Doesn't matter.
He ends up posting everywhere.
And Dick Morris, a big polster.
He lives and dies by poll.
So keep that in mind as I share with you the details here of this piece.
Superficially, the U.S. appears to have a presidential system, but in fact it more and more resembles a parliamentary form of government.
When a president loses the approval of the majority of the voters, and polls reflect that his ratings have fallen below 50%, he loses his power.
This is a generic theory of Dick Moore.
Now stick with me on this.
In this context, polls are like parliamentary votes of no confidence in European systems.
While the government does not fall if it loses in the polling, it limps on until either its ratings improve or it's voted out of office in the next election.
Clinton was called irrelevant after the congressional defeats of 94 by me, by the way.
I'm the one that called him irrelevant.
He went on TV, um, relevant.
I am still relevant.
Watch this, I'm on destroy your health care.
Clinton was called irrelevant after the congressional defeats of 94 when his ratings hovered in the high 30s.
Bush seemed almost out of power in the last years of his administration when his approval dropped to the low 30s.
Now Obama faces the loss of power that comes with dropping poll numbers.
The two early symptoms of this cream creeping impotence are his inability to pass the union card check legislation or to force action on health care before the August recess, once highly touted administration goals.
As is usually the case, the apparent cause of these defeats, the buildup of public disapproval of both bills, is not what is really at Work.
Rather, it's the president's obvious inability to improve the economy that is exacting the daily toll and his approval ratings, evident in all the surveys, like the body counts that mounted in Iraq and drove Bush's numbers ever downward, the rising unemployment numbers are stripping Obama of his popularity and power because people are saying, what has he done for us?
What has he done for the country?
Who is better off after six months of Obama's highly touted fix?
The stimulus program.
Who is better off?
It's so bad in California, they're even going to do offshore drilling off the coast of Santa Barbara.
That's how desperate they are for money.
They are cutting health care in California.
They are cutting state jobs.
Nothing is working at the state level.
In Texas it is, certain states.
Obama's not doing anything for anybody.
And now they're saying, well, we never intended it to work this year.
It was always going to work next year, the stimulus.
Nothing they rescued the economy.
If this is rescuing the economy, then all that's happened to us is we have pulled, we've been pulled out of the Titanic while it's already on the seafloor.
We are drowning.
We are drowning.
It is the president's obvious inability to improve the economy that is exacting the daily toll.
He's not even trying to improve it, folks.
That's the dirty little secret.
Despite having 60 votes in the Senate, it is a serious question as to whether Obama will be able to get his controversial programs passed in the fall.
A public mood is congealing against his health care proposals.
Skepticism over the impact of cap and trade on American manufacturing is growing.
It's ridiculous with what?
Oh, why is uh skepticism building?
Why is the public mood congealing?
Well, I answered this question yesterday.
It is I and my brethren in Talk Radio.
And you know what else?
Mark Levin's book.
That book's out there, all I think it's sold over a million copies.
And it's still at the top of the list, and they still are trying to kill it when they review it.
There is a pulse.
There is a more there is a big heartbeat going on in this country.
The mainstream media, state-run media, I said they have met their waterloo.
We can talk about Obama meeting his, but the media have met theirs and it's Obama.
They have sacrificed whatever integrity they had left, whatever character they had left, whatever professionalism they had left, it's gone.
Their Waterloo is Obama.
Obama's destroying them too, along with our economy.
It's just that they are in on destroying themselves.
MSNBC is running, believe this, a countdown clock all day to an Obama press conference.
Right now it's six hours and forty-six minutes and some odd seconds.
They've got a countdown clock.
And they're talking about it on MSNBC today as can he pull this out?
Can he?
They're not talking about what a bomb bad debacle of a mess the program is.
They're not even reporting on the details of it.
So that's why public mood is congealing.
We've got the internet, we've got a great roster of bloggers, we have a great roster of talk show hosts, we got Levin's book.
I mean, there's all kinds of people responsible for this.
But the people who are appointed the watchdogs and guardians have checked their professionalism at the door, and all they care about now is getting some private time with the president to talk about the kids.
Voters are idealistically determined to cover the uninsured.
I mean, we all are compassionate People.
While that's true, they are more selfishly concerned about their own health care, and they are loath to trust the man who sold them on a stimulus package when he says their care will be protected.
Their jobs aren't protected.
Their automobile companies aren't protected.
Their dealerships are gone.
And this guy who has destroyed jobs where nearing double digit says he's going to save and protect everybody's health care when he's going to end up taking it away from people.
More and more they are asking the very simple question that Obama cannot answer.
How is he going to cover 50 million new people without more doctors?
How is that going to happen?
The elderly are coming to understand that his plan effectively repeals the bedrock guarantee in Medicare that seniors can get whatever care they want free.
The opposition to health care changes is building up so fast Obama was forced to retreat from his August deadline.
It's unlikely he'll be able to make a successful stand in September or October when his ratings will likely be ten points lower than they are today.
That's Dick Morris.
And I hope he's right.
He makes a lot of sense in this piece.
He really does.
And this employees, it's from the Wall Street Journal.
Employees at some big agencies like the Department of Agriculture are being encouraged to host meetings in more buttoned-down places, St. Louis, Milwaukee, or Denver.
In other words, the feds have issued guidelines to the bureaucracies.
Stay away from Orlando, Florida.
I kid you not.
And that's very cynical.
Now, how about how about this is a way to anger voters?
Las Vegas already in trouble because Obama's told people don't go there.
Now the whole federal government is in guidelines.
If you are in the federal government, you're gonna have a party or a plan or a meeting.
Don't go to Vegas, don't go to Orlando.
Now, what's wrong with those two places?
Voters in Nevada and Florida be very interested to know the federal government is telling agencies to avoid booking meetings in Vegas and Orlando.
We don't know when this guidance was supplied to federal agencies, but a sneaking suspicion is that it was after the Arizona Biltmore tape aired, and some genius in the White House reacted, not realizing it Harry Reed's up for re-election next year.
This is from Thomas Lipson, by the way, at the American Thinker.
Uh the stack of stuff never ends today, folks, but I'm going to get to your phone calls next after this brief timeout.
So sit tight.
Now what?
What's so funny in there?
Go ahead.
Well, that's not a bad idea.
That's not a bad idea.
That's not a bad idea.
Okay, federal agencies.
If you are if you've been issued guidelines to avoid Vegas and Orlando, let's issue some places that you should go.
Detroit.
Have your next meeting in Detroit, and then stop off in Flint for a couple days while you're on your way to Detroit.
And then have, you know, a movie meeting in Port St. Lucy.
Well, there are no hotels in real Linda.
You couldn't really have a meeting in real London.
I don't know if you'd want to either, but's promised to the phones, but I got them loaded here today.
Soundbite's out to Wazoo.
By the way, a couple other places they have a meeting.
Camden, New Jersey.
Uh, East St. Louis, uh, Illinois.
How about Martha's Vineyard?
I mean, if if if it's good enough for the Obamas to spend 10 or 12 days there on vacation, uh, headed there in August, then it's good enough for our bureaucrats.
How about Hyannisport?
Good enough for the Kennedys, good enough for our bureaucrats, and if they're not supposed to go to Vegas, not supposed to go to what in the world could anybody have against Orlando.
So what?
What oh, Disney's there, they don't want to give the appearance they're playing, same thing with Vegas.
Well, uh They are playing.
There's no such thing as a federal meeting that amounts to anything.
No bureaucratic people need go to meeting.
They don't need to leave Washington.
All right.
Rachel, 23 years old, Bartow Florida.
Great to have you on the EIB network.
Hello.
Hi, Mr. Linball Mega Ditto's.
I've been listening to you since day one.
I was a really little kid, but been listening to you ever since.
Thank you very much.
Well, um, I have health insurance.
I work for a national home improvement chain, and my health insurance is absolutely horrible.
It is awful.
I cannot stand it.
I cannot wait to get out of my part-time job and go into the full-time third after I get my degree.
And um, I just like to say that health insurance that I have right now is still better than what Obama is proposing.
What is so bad about your health insurance?
Well, the number one thing that gets to me is in order for me to go to the ER, they don't cover ER visits unless I'm hospitalized.
So if I'm in a very severe car accident and I have to be hospitalized, then they'll cover the ER visit.
But if I break my arm at seven o'clock at night and have to go to the ER to get it set and everything because my orthopedist isn't open until 8 a.m. the next day, well, I have to pay that out of pocket.
I got a suggestion for you.
There's an emergency room in Texas.
Uh that I think over there's so many numbers here, but over 2,000 visits by six patients or nine patients in six years.
Now that that emergency room's obviously treating people who can't pay.
Yes.
A number of times.
Another thing you could do is if you have that catastrophic accident, but it's not enough to hospitalize you.
Just ask for some pain pills.
That's in the Obama health care plan.
And if you can't go to the emergency room, at least they'll give you some pain medication.
I would love to take painkillers, but if I were to do that, then I couldn't go do my job because heavy machinery is going around.
Well, wait a second.
You can't do your job if you're in the emergency room either now.
We gotta get our priorities right.
It's true, this is true.
But still, it's uh it's absolutely amazing to me how look at your apartment.
You're a part-time worker, but you know this this your your story illustrates what national health care really ought to be.
Catastrophic only.
We cover everybody on catastrophic illness accidents because that's what breaks everybody's bank.
You don't need health insurance for annual checkups, tests, or you can pay for that.
Or you can you can buy a different policy that'll be a lot cheaper that would cover those things if you want to.
This catastrophic, that's what scares people your age.
You're not worried about a terminal disease right now.
You're worried about an accident that lays you up, and you can't afford to pay for it.
Well, it's funny you say that because I have a herniated disc in my neck.
So I still go to work every day.
I never call in sick, I don't complain about it.
I'm not on narcotics, I don't do painkillers, it's just not my thing.
I don't like being looped out like that.
And I don't see a problem.
I mean, my health insurance is bad, but I still don't have a problem getting the medical attention that I need for my pain.
That's the point.
That's I'm the reason you were not first in line, Rachel.
And I didn't put you first in line because Rachel is one of my all-time top ten favorite female names.
I put you first in line because of this story that I'm holding here in my formerly nicotine-stained fingers.
It's from the Associated Press, and it's a cry sob story that is designed to help BAM get back in gear on health care.
The headline, no jobs, no insurance.
Hard times for young adults.
One in three 20-somethings is without health insurance.
Oh no, what a horrible country.
None of my friends need health insurance.
They're never sick.
That's so what does it matter?
That's that's see, that's the key.
Most health money, most health expenses come later in life.
But I'm not going to read the whole story here to you.
But it it's Emily Weinstein graduated from college into an economic meltdown and a self-employed jewelry maker, she'll be lucky to bring in $16,000 this year.
Health insurance is just out of rich.
So she avoids thinking about what would happen if she got sick or was hurt in an accident, was severely burned.
Would I have to declare bankruptcy days 23?
Would my parents have to bail me out?
What would I do?
Oh, what would I do?
You're talking to somebody who has their backs to me already, and I'm working part-time.
Yeah, but wait a second, Rachel.
When you go when you read the story, and it's three pages long, you find out that all of these people got the health care they needed.
They don't have insurance, but they all get health care.
Miraculous, timely, brilliant, life-saving enhancing cutting-age health care.
In a story, no jobs, no insurance, hard times for young adults, adults.
This story nevertheless points out that these people do get health care.
It's just not apparently worth paying for.
So here we have a system where the vast majority of Americans get all this astonishing medical care that costs so much nobody can afford it, which is a problem, by the way.
But they they may not have insurance, but they're getting health care.
The story inadvertently points that out.
Rush Limbaugh, talent on loan from God.
Actually, more talent than I need.
I did a show with half my brain tied behind my back just to make it fair.
I actually wish I could give some of my excess talent away.
It's just not possible.
Marla in Rockford, Illinois.
Great to have you with us today on the EIB network.
Hi.
Hi, Rush.
Uh listened to you for years, and it's great to talk to you.
Thank you.
Very much same here.
Thank you.
Um, I'm calling because I have a grandmother who's going to be a hundred and three in August.
And this past June, she had a pacemaker put in because she was getting weak and pretty lethargic and very low energy.
And so they put in a pacemaker.
It went very smoothly.
Now my grandma's very active.
She's uh lives on her own.
Uh, my uncle lives above her in her apartment.
She gets her hair and her nails done every week.
She loves the shop.
She goes shopping every week.
She has a woman's a woman, doesn't matter the age.
Yeah.
She she has lunch with her daughters, her granddaughters, her great-great-granddaughters, and uh, she's just in great shape.
She got um she got her bill uh for the pacemaker, twenty-six thousand dollars this past week.
Whoa!
Yeah.
Wait a minute.
Does she have insurance?
She has a supplement to her Medicare.
How much of the 26 grand was covered?
You know, I don't know that.
I mean, my I know that my mother, my the daughter, uh told me that it would be covered between the the Medicare and her supplement.
Okay, see.
Now this is a very interesting point here.
Medicare already covers your mom.
Medicare is going broke, but the promise of Medicare was that it would cover the elderly free till they died.
That's the promise.
That's gonna change if Obama gets this plan because your mom, unless she had the money herself to pay for the procedure, because she wouldn't be allowed to buy her own insurance policy.
Unless she had the money, she wouldn't get Obama's health care plan paying any of that pacemaker because she's 103, and Obama already said about a hundred and five-year-old woman, maybe it'd be better just to have her take a pain pill.
Oh, yeah, and he wasn't listening to her because if he had listened to the woman who was describing it, he said, painkiller, there is no pain.
My grandma has absolutely no pain.
So again, another waste of money prescribing drugs that pay don't need.
He didn't mean.
He was speaking.
I know what he was, I know what he meant by this.
He he knows that there's not pain associated with uh with pacemaker.
If you don't get you're you're not in pain, you just die.
Right.
What he was saying is, if you don't have a pacemaker, and you get you're just you just wither away.
Like like like you know, like Medicare is gonna wither away.
Obama's gonna cause it to wither on the vine.
But nevertheless, what he meant by that was look, end of life.
People have these diseases.
It's not sometimes it's just better to give them a pain pill, loop them out, so they don't know what's going on, and let them just fade away rather than spend all the month.
That's what he meant by the pain pill reference.
Cancer patients can't, you know, you get into advanced stages of cancer, certain kinds, and you're you're on so many pain medications.
It's the only way you cancer the pain of cancer is just f uh everybody I know that's had it is just unbearable.
Certain kinds, but he he knows there's no pain with a with a pacemaker business.
He's just look at sometimes it's better to Zone them out.
Just loop them out, and they won't know what's going on and eventually die, and we save a lot of money.
Yeah.
Well, he didn't have any problem entitling himself to a date with his wife that cost over $50,000 that meant nothing to any of us.
And yet our the lives of our seniors who are still inputting, inputting into the economy.
My grandmother still pays her property taxes every year.
She's still contributing.
And in the interview, Well, she's getting manicures and getting her hair done.
We've met on and she's shopping.
Buying lunch, yeah.
But you know, he called it end of life.
Uh, instead of calling it senior care, he called it uh end of life care.
And really more accurately, it's end of life termination, and he's the caller of it.
Uh my brick my brother-in-law's nicknamed him the terminator because that's what he's gonna do to them.
Yeah, because that's that's what the plan will do.
And we learned yesterday that in the House bill there are end-of-life counselors.
So in a case of your grandmother, under Obamacare, they'd tell her no on the pacemaker, and then they'd send a therapist in to, you know, help her deal with the fact that the government's just sentenced her to death.
Well, she'd probably pray for him because she's a pretty strong woman.
She's gotta be.
My grandfather lived to 104, and he worked as a lawyer until he was 102.
Good for him.
My grandma shows no signs of dying.
We we don't have any indications that maybe a couple of months or maybe.
Well, did you hear about the guy over there in uh in I uh where was it?
Europe?
Britain?
Oldest guy died at 113.
Good for him.
118 just last week, and he said the secret to his long life was cigarettes, whiskey, and wild, wild women.
You should ask your grandmother if she has something similar to his theory.
Well, her she puts salt on absolutely everything, and she loves coffee and never turns it down.
Does she drink adult beverages?
Does she drink what?
Adult beverages.
No, she doesn't.
Has she ever?
No.
Well, it's just been a good Christian woman, raised all of her family.
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, a lot of Christians drink.
Yes.
Nothing unchristian about it.
I mean, wine's all over the Bible.
Right.
But in her in her time, you didn't.
And that's how she lived.
She's a good woman.
All right.
I uh Marla, I've enjoyed talking.
Thank you.
We she we didn't get to her yesterday and we called her back.
I'm glad you let us do that.
Thank you much.
Well, thank you.
All right.
Cece Connolly today uh in the Washington Post.
They're good, they're pulling out all the stops at the at the drive-by media.
Just as drivers must purchase auto insurance, the medical system of the future would put responsibility for health coverage first and foremost on every adult.
Like car insurance, health coverage will be mandated.
Well, there's no difference.
They say our car insurance?
Health insurance should be.
If everybody has to have car insurance, we ought to have health insurance.
Well, there's a do you health coverage, health insurance, and car insurance are entirely different things.
The reason for mandatory auto insurance is twofold.
One, driving is a privilege.
It isn't a right.
You don't have the right to you've got to go to license, you've got to prove you can do it without mowing down people or running into a storefront or something.
Uh in California to get a driver's license, you have to pass a high speed test when you get in a chase with the cops.
You just can't go out and start driving, not legally.
The reason we have mandatory automobile insurance is because when there's an accident, we want to make sure the victim gets paid for any damage or injury.
Whoever is at fault has to pay for whoever they harm.
The person driving the car isn't the concern in terms of the insurance.
It's the person the driver hits.
This isn't about making sure that when there's an accident, the driver or the driver's car is covered.
I mean, that's it is, but that that that's not the primary reason.
The only you know, you driver m runs into a tree, and uh depending on why, the insurance may not even cover you.
Or it might, and then your premium's gonna skyrocket.
Or if you have a hot rod kid, you know what your premiums for your hot rod kid are.
It's all because they have a higher risk, and it's about the victims.
It's about the people innocently tooling around who get plowed into, making sure that whoever did the plowing into has insurance to cover the victim.
Mandatory private sector car insurance is not the same as mandatory state-run sub-prime health care.
They're totally different.
But CC Connolly and the Washington Post would like us to believe that they're one and the same.
Hey, we got mandatory auto insurance.
We should have mandatory health insurance.
Guess what, CeCe?
When you secure a mortgage to buy a house, you have to have private insurance on the home.
And to make sure you can afford it, they put it in a monthly payment.
You know why?
It protects the lenders.
Because the lender actually owes your, owns your home until you pay off the mortgage.
I love pronouncing it that way sometimes.
So does that mean we should require everyone to have an individual health policy run by the same people who run Amtrak who manage the budget and are in charge of creating jobs.
If a person doesn't drive, they don't have to carry car insurance.
But every American will be required to have health insurance, and most will end up with state-run subprime insurance.
And if they don't, they will be fined, even though Obama argued against that in the campaign against Hillary.
So here we have another example, Washington Post's state-run media propaganda.
Cece Connolly feeling duty bound to carry Obama's water.
By the way, I made mention the fact yesterday that uh Republicans are finally courageously now using the fail word uh in association with Obama.
I, of course, uh took the arrows on that early on.
The Democrats have put together an ad, who DNC have put together an ad already.
This is Wednesday.
It was just, was it was just Monday that Mitch McConnell went out there and used the word fail, and Lindsay Gramnesty got in the act.
And of course, it was me back in January, said, I hope he fails.
I want his policies to fail.
Blah, blah, blah.
So the Democrat National Committee has a new ad.
You'll hear in this ad me, Senator Gramnesty, Senator Dement, uh, President Obama, uh, some uh people from PMSNBC, an unidentified woman, Mike Enzey, Republican Wyoming, Senator Judd Gregg, Lamar Alexander, and Donna Leanwond, I'm not sure he pronounces her name, the uh National Press Club president.
Here is the ad.
It runs, this is just the audio.
I hope he fails.
Basically, I think he'll fail.
If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will be his waterloo.
It will break him.
Now there's some in these this town who are content to perpetuate the status quo.
What is the Republican plan?
What will the political price for the Republican Party be if it succeeds in blocking health care reform?
I hope he fails.
Basically, I think he'll fail.
If we're able to stop Obama on this, it will be his waterloo.
It will break him.
This isn't about me.
This isn't about politics.
It's about a health care system that is breaking America's families.
Breaking America's businesses and breaking America's economy.
Healthcare is doing none of that.
This isn't about me, but yet I have here state-run media, the associated press.
Obama may have to wait for health care.
Well, it must be about him then.
Obama may have to wait about for health care.
Oh, I'm so sad.
I just said poor Obama, he may have to wait for health care.
No, it's so unfair.
It's this historic president.
Oh, no, he may have to wait.
Doesn't say nation may have to wait on health care.
Doesn't say people without insurance may have to wait.
Says Obama may have to wait for health care.
And I I thought it wasn't about him.
It's about Obama, not us.
It's about Obama, not the doctors.
It's about Obama, not your parents.
It's about Obama, not your grandparents.
It's about Obama, not even your children.
Obama may have to wait.
And he's already got the best health care he can get.
Jimmy Carter calling to cheer up President Obama to encourage him.
By the way, uh here's another way to look at it.
We we've learned that elective abortions, Peter Orsay, the budget director said, no, I elective abortion.
I can't say that they're not going to be paid for.
Elective abortions will be covered in Obama health care.
So the way to explain this to people is that President Obama of the compassionate Democrat Party wants to provide cover for those who kill us before we are born.
He wants to pay people to kill some of us before we are born, and before we're ready to die after we are born.
It's called uh efficiency.
Here's Ralph in San Antonio, Texas.
Hello, Ralph.
You're on the EIB network.
Big, big moment for you.
Well, Rush, thank you for taking my call.
Yes, sir.
I'm 60 plus years old.
And my income bracket would put me among the working poor, but I have health insurance because I choose to pay for it.
The idea that people making 50 or 75,000 a year can't afford health insurance is an out and out lie.
Oh, of course they can.
It's what what's happened in the last, you're exactly right out there, Ralph.
What's happened is over the last 30 years, people have been conditioned to think somebody else should pay for it.
It's a right.
If you can't afford a lawyer, we'll pay for one.
Why the health care is more important than a lawyer, so people think the government ought to pay for it, or your employer ought to pay for it.
Sure, everybody it's i i don't buy as many plasmas, uh, don't buy a new car.
But but health care is assumed this uh position because of the Democrat Party, Franklin Delhi Roosevelt, and some of the Democrats LBJ, health care shouldn't be paid for by people.
That's just not fair.
Well, the reason they don't have health care is because they choose not to pay for it, but Obama wants me to pay for their choice.
To me, fifty or seventy-five thousand dollar income would be a life of luxury.
When are people gonna come out from under the ether that this man has got them under?
You know, it's starting to happen.
I mean, it's got a long way to go out there, Ralph, but it's starting to happen.
The only way that you can accurately describe this administration is by the words of the song gypsies, tramps, and thieves.
Yeah, that was share.
That was back in uh the early 70s.
I played that song when I was a struggling young disc jockey.
Gypsies, tramps, and thieves, uh no offense, gypsies, but it's in the title of the song.
Now, uh the uh when I don't answer the tramps.
I'm not gonna name we all know who they are.
I'm not gonna name them.
Look.
Ralph brings up a very good point.
He could he he doesn't make much money, but he chooses to have insurance because he he buys a policy he can afford.
CC Connolly, Washington Post Automobile Insurance.
That's mandatory.
Why why was the difference in that health care?
Now there are people that don't own cars, and there are people that don't drive.
Should they have to buy auto insurance to lower the cost for all the rest of us?
Should people who don't have kids have to pay exorbitant property taxes support the scrolls?
This is such a it's just the whole thing's a fraud, folks.
This whole health care, it is a total and of course Obama may have to wait for it.
Hey, a quick question, folks.
What does health insurance ensure?
I'm not not this, there's not a trick question.
If you think health insurance ensures your health, you're wrong.
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