Yeah, so the Jim Campbell, the president CEO of General Electric's Appliance and Lighting Division, rushed to a doctor this morning after he collapsed before 11.30 as Vice President Joe Bite Me was speaking.
Campbell seated on a stool.
I mean, there's a video of this.
You can see the guy just goes tumbling off the thing, falls off of it to his left out there.
Bite me paused and called for a doctor.
He said, could you stop being a for a while to the guy who fell off the stool and said, we have a doctor here?
Ladies and gentlemen, there's a sad note to end this on.
Do we have a doctor here?
According to GE spokeswoman Kim Freeman, Campbell appears to be okay, but was taken to a medical clinic on site to be seen by a physician.
As Campbell was taken away, Joe Bite Me said, so folks, my grandfather used to say, hey, Chuck, stand up out there.
Let him see you.
Oh, my.
Oh, God.
Love you.
Well, keep the faith, Jim.
Keep the faith as they rush you off to the hospital.
Greetings, folks, Rush Limbaugh, the EIB Network, Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
Vice President Bite Me was in Milwaukee.
Talk about jobs Saturday.
Made a stop at Cops Frozen Custard outside the city.
What do we owe you? Vice President asked after enjoying some of the cold treats.
The unnamed store manager said, don't worry, it's on us, but then added, lower our taxes and we'll call it even.
A few minutes later, Bite Me indicated he didn't exactly appreciate the remark.
Why don't you say something nice instead of being a smart ass all the time?
He said to the manager in exchange captured by the local station, WISN.
We have the audio of this.
It goes by really fast.
It's 10 seconds.
This starts off this factory noise off Mike and Vice President Bite Me says, what do we owe you?
Here we are.
Don't worry, turn it off.
Don't worry, our taxes call any bad.
Can we say something nice?
You hear it?
I mean, this is the Vice President of the United States.
This is who these people are.
Let's go to, this is, I guess, Friday night, your world with Neil Cavuto.
He spoke to the AFL-CIO chief economist, Ron Blackwell, about the economy and job creation from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
Cavuto says, if the trillion dollars we've spent has not added jobs and minus census workers, which seems to be about the best gig going, and you're not creating the jobs, all the money you wanted to spend, why should we keep digging?
What's wrong with saying, let's put the shovel down, it's not working?
Look, we just had the most serious economic crisis since the Great Depression.
We had a massive collapse.
Why were spending more money?
These programs did create jobs, but not net creation.
We lost more jobs because of the recession than were created by these programs.
Net gross.
Is that a true thing?
Wait a minute, Ron.
You're the chief economist there.
Absolutely.
Where did you get your degree?
I mean, at a baking school?
Where are you cooking up these numbers?
The fact of the matter is we spent a trillion dollars and we've not seen results for that money.
And now you're saying, well, it could have been worse than that.
We told you we have seen results.
We lost more jobs because of the recession than we created by these programs.
Gross and net.
It's not a complex idea.
You should have learned that in high school, Neil.
That's the chief economist, the AFL-CIO, who called.
First, you have Bite Me saying, you know, stop being a smart ass all the time.
This guy called Neil Cavuto called him a climber.
It called him a bodily orifice.
And they weren't through.
Cavuto's had enough of all this and ends the interview.
Here's what I learned in high school.
Money in, money out.
We've got a lot more money going out with little resolve, with little to show for it.
And now you're telling people who are concerned that this has gotten really bad, that they're hysterics.
You know what?
They listen to you with your curse and everything else, and they say, you know what?
He's the hysteric.
He's the nut.
Let them make their decision.
I think they're concerned about their jobs.
I think they're concerned about their money.
And they're concerned about your answer.
They're not going to be able to do this work.
Neil.
That's hysterical.
How are you going to put these people to work?
Oh, for God's sake.
All right.
We're done here.
Done here.
So this is, I mean, they're not happy.
They're not happy.
It's not working.
All of this magic, all this utopia, it was supposed to be a panacea.
It's not working, and they're all happy.
And from the Financial Times, investors will this week be bracing themselves for signs that the U.S. recovery is slowing as a slew of economic data on the world's largest economy is expected to paint a downbeat picture.
However, they face a challenge disentangling the effects of the removal of government stimulus programs from the scale of the private sector recovery.
This week sees the result, or the release rather, of the monthly U.S. non-farm payrolls report, the most closely watched stat in global markets.
The headline figure is expected to show a sharp drop in non-farm employment, but that's largely the effect of temporary workers hired to work in the census coming to the end of their contracts.
There was a deadline of a decline of $250,000 or $250,000, the number of people working on the census this month from May, leading to the consensus expectations.
Anyway, bottom line is the economic outlook, a worsening picture in the U.S.
And the weasel-like Paul Krugman, actually looks like a ferret, New York Times columnist, all upset that the gee whiz meetings over the weekend, they told Obama to go pound sand when he asked him to spend more money.
Krugman said, well, that's it.
You know what?
We're just, we're heading to a, we're going to go back to double-dip recession.
It's over.
If we stop spending, we start getting concerned about deficit reduction in debt, then it's over.
We're headed for a double-dip recession.
Which takes us to the New York Times.
And this is from yesterday.
Safety net phrase in Spain as elsewhere in Europe.
This was the deal that Gemma Diaz 34 thought she had made.
When she took a job with the city in Madrid as a purchasing agent 12 years ago, she knew her salary would be low, but the income would be reliable.
She could expect steady raises, manageable hours, six weeks of vacation, a good pension, and the usual benefits from free health care to subsidized housing.
Now, as Spain embarks on a range of austerity measures, the careful math of Ms. Diaz's life is coming undone.
Her salary is being cut.
Her pension does not look so secure.
Even the daycare for her second child due in August will cost more.
There can be no more illusions about getting help from the state, she said.
Hers is a story repeated across Europe, fueling the protests and strikes that have tied up the airports, blocked highways, and in Greece, even turned deadly.
For millions of Europeans, modest salaries and high taxes have been offset by the benefits of their cherished social model, a cradle-to-grave safety net, which in the recent boom years seemed to grow more generous all the time.
Now, governments across Europe say they have little choice but to pull back on social benefits, at least for now.
Tax revenues are falling.
Populations are aging.
Rising deficits are everywhere, threatening the Euro.
Cutbacks and higher taxes have been announced in Ireland, Spain, Italy, Greece, and Portugal.
Even France, until recently a holdout, has now proposed to raise the legal retirement age from 62 from 60.
With each new proposal, the popularity of the socialist government has plummeted.
These are powerful and painful times, said Ángel Torres-Torres, the Secretary General of Economic Policy and International Affairs.
We have a model that we value.
We are a civilized society.
We pay taxes.
We take care of our needy.
The question is, is this sustainable?
For Ms. Diaz and her partner, Robert Garcia, also 34, Spain's austerity measures, which include salary cuts for civil servants, pension freezes, and the elimination of a $3,400 baby bonus, have been profoundly unsettling.
They used to be able to afford a large flat-screen TV and vacations in Russia and China.
Well, I mean, it's got to be pretty bad if you want to take a vacation to Russia.
Well, maybe St. Petersburg.
They retiled the kitchen in the bathroom.
When their first child was born 22 months ago, they used their baby bonus to buy a bigger car.
You realize if Spain, you get a $3,400 baby bonus.
They went out and bought a bigger car and no doubt increased their carbon footprint.
Mr. Garcia fumes he would like to see the bankers he considers responsible taxed and prosecuted.
He does not think much of government officials either.
The day the first austerity measures were announced, he saw the mayor of Madrid and his minister of public works on TV attending a sporting event in Germany.
Now, having heard all this, do you know what the salary cutback is?
It's 5%.
All of this angst, all of these hysterics, all of this unsettledness over at most a 5% cut in salary for Spanish workers.
Where in the world did a stimulus anywhere work?
Where?
Somebody tell me, where has a stimulus worked?
If it had worked in Europe, wouldn't they want to continue it?
Now remember, they've got a 30 to 40 year head start, sometimes longer on us.
Their socialist model, they have endeared themselves to our left.
They're dialing it back.
They are out of money.
They cannot sustain their model.
They can't continue to pay people.
It don't work.
They just can't.
It doesn't work.
The math never works out.
And we're headed in that direction.
And these people with 30, 40 years under their belt told Obama at the gee whiz meetings, no mas, we're not spending anymore.
You're on your own, Barack.
You and your ears.
You want to go out and spend more money?
You go right ahead.
But we're not.
So the world's greatest orator, the one we've all been waiting for, one of the most persuasive spokesmen ever, was basically told to go pound sand by the very people we were told would have profound new respect and love for the United States simply because of his election.
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By the way, Senator, Senator, Vice President Bite Me also said over the weekend that we will not recover all the jobs lost.
So here we are, the summer of failure and surrender.
Vice President Bite Me, no possibility to restore the 8 million jobs lost in the Great Recession.
Now, to put things in perspective and before blasting Bite Me, let's look back at the Reagan recovery.
Remembering that Reagan inherited a far worse economy than did Obama.
Reagan inherited near 20% inflation, my friends, interest rates, and an unemployment rate over 7%.
He didn't complain.
He went to work, was a spectacular success.
Nearly 20 million jobs are created under Reagan.
Bite Me says there's no possibility to restore 8 million jobs with Obama at the helm.
Reagan's policies of lowering taxes, spending restraint, curbs on regulation fueled a sustained economic boom lasting 92 months.
The Reagan boom created 18.5 million new net jobs.
Unemployment fell from 7.1% in 1980 to 5.3% in 1989.
Inflation was 4.4% when Reagan left office.
It was around 20% when he took office.
To dispel another myth, Reagan did not cut taxes on the backs of the poor.
On the contrary, between 1980 and 92, the average income tax rate for the bottom fifth of all wage earners fell by a whopping 263%.
This is at allbusiness.com.
So, Joe Bite Me, we've got evidence how to do this and not only get back all the jobs lost, but add even more is the point.
And we got these guys giving up.
And they're doing it by blaming Bush.
What's Obama done?
Obama's created a gusher, not only a gusher of oil, he's got a gusher of red ink.
He hasn't produced any jobs to justify Obamaomics.
I mean, this has been, if you want to be objective analysis, and that's what I am all about, is objective analyses.
This has been a terrible few weeks for the president.
His rules of engagement in Afghanistan have failed.
His stimulus bill has failed both at home and abroad.
The Gee Wiz meeting told him to go pound sand with his stimulus ideas.
His efforts to clear his mind on the golf course has failed to help one human being.
Well, except maybe golf ball manufacturers, but I bet he's given his, so it probably a net cost to them on that.
At least one pelican, one fish suffering out there, one beach or one marsh in the Gulf of Mexico.
The only success, the only place stimulus has worked, it appears to me, is on Al Gore with the massage.
Other than that, I can't find any place else it's worked.
The only success Obama can claim is the Jimmy Carter Recovery Act.
Obama has saved Carter from being the country's worst president in American history.
And that's what really has been the summer of recovery and what it's all about.
And remember, Bite Me.
This is the same Bite Me who said the best is yet to come.
And remember, all these guys are saying in March, when the stimulus, the summer of 2010, that's when it's all going to kick in.
You got to give us time.
The summer of 2010, that's when all this is going to kick in.
That's when it's all going to happen.
That's when it's all going to matter.
Well, here we are at the summer of 2010, and Bite Me says, we are never, ever going to recover all the jobs lost.
Can you imagine a Ronald Reagan in 1980 had said, you know what, Jimmy Carter's done this and done that.
We're not going to ever get it all back.
And these guys are out saying, no more will the United States be the engine of economic growth in the world or here.
But now we're not going to get back all these 8 million jobs.
Don't you like this optimism?
Don't you like all this motivation, inspiration we get out of this bunch?
We don't get any of that.
All we get is a constant drumbeat of negativity.
And we're supposed to be comforted with the fact that they're being honest with us about this.
Joe Bite announced this weekend America would never, ever be able to create enough jobs to recover from the Great Recession.
That's not what we were promised, folks.
That's not what Obama told us when he took $1 trillion into the porculus bill.
It's not what he told us when he was emaculated.
Either Joe Bite me has rebuked Obama or he's telling us our president's been a spectacular failure, just like Jimmy Carter.
Here's Obama's emaculation speech.
This is a little bit.
This is the journey we continue today.
We remain the most prosperous, powerful nation on earth.
Our workers are no less productive than when this crisis began.
Our minds are no less inventive.
Our goods and services no less needed than they were last week or last month or last year.
Our capacity remains undiminished.
That's at the emaculation.
It's January of 2009.
And now, 18 months later, well, jobs are never going to get them back, Bite says.
And Obama and Geithner say, nope, we're really not going to be the engine of economic growth in the world.
We can't do it anymore.
Then in his speech in Denver, he signed the so-called job stimulus bill in Denver all by himself.
Remember, all by himself up on the stage so he alone could take the credit.
It's great to be in Denver.
We begun the essential work of keeping the American dream alive in our time.
It's more like a coma.
What makes this recovery plan so important is not just that it will create or save 3.5 million jobs over the next two years.
A promise with no qualifiers, by the way.
I mean, so here we are.
We're a year and a half into the next two years.
We've lost 3.5 million jobs.
We haven't created 3.5 million jobs.
And the vice president, who calls a custard guy smartass, tells us that we're not going to be able to replace these 8 million jobs.
Having more fun than a human being should be allowed to have Rush Limbaugh to Orlando, Florida.
Ron, glad you waited.
You're next on the Rush Limbaugh program.
Hi.
Yes, Rush.
Hello.
Hi.
Yes.
I went to a job fair this morning at Amway.
What is a job fair?
Well, there's a bunch of booths set up like different companies and different like the city has buses for school buses and transportation, and there might be some for police officers, the forest, forest patrol, stuff like that.
Well, wait a minute.
Were there any private sector companies with booths?
Yes, Athletic Insurance and Bankers Trust.
There were some there like that.
Okay.
And so I'm looking for work.
I'm a 65-year-old, out-of-work white male.
And when you go in, there's only one way in, and they have these folding tables, and they have these women behind them handing out small clipboards with yellow cards.
And so I went up to the table and I started filling out.
I wrote my first name, and then I saw the name Corine Brown on top and just her name.
And I said, well, what are these cards for?
She says, well, we want to get a registration and a count of how many people come to the job fair so we can keep a count.
I said, wait a minute, this person is a political person.
I'm not going to fill this out.
So I grab the card, I walk away, and I go in the arena, and on top, there's a gentleman collecting cards.
I just walk by him, and down the stairs, there are two women with a fistful of these cards collecting them.
So I walk by them, too.
And as I go down, I'm looking up at them, and they're looking at me.
He says, where's your card?
And I told them what I, you're taking these cards out of false pretenses.
You're making these people fill out these cards, and you're getting their email address and their addresses for this Corrine Brown, who's a political person in Orlando.
And I was fit to be tied.
And so I called him.
Wait a sec.
I was wondering what the name Brown had to do with this.
I thought they were filling everybody's name out as Brown.
This is Corrine Brown, who is a Congressman or some local politician?
Correct.
Congresswoman Corinne Brown, Congress Democrat.
And so what was the purpose of giving all these cards and information to her?
I guess for political purposes, for mailouts and contacts and phone calls.
So the job fair was really the illusion.
The purpose here was to collect information on all the people that showed up for this Congresswoman.
Well, that was part of it.
That was the introduction to the job fair.
In order to get down on the floor, they meet people, you know, quite a scam.
So did you get to the job fair?
Of course.
I walked down and I walked right by them and I told them what I thought.
I yelled up.
I didn't yell in a stern voice of what I thought they were doing.
It was a bunch of baloney.
You're collecting these cards from Corrine Brown.
Why don't you tell the people what you're doing?
And so I think Acorn is alive and well in Orlando, Rush.
I called your affiliate Fox on 35, Channel 35, about an hour and a half ago, two hours ago, and I told them to get a camera crew out there.
Maybe they can have a story about this.
So hopefully we can see this on TV tonight.
Well, more importantly, did you get a job at the jobs fair?
Well, no, you don't get a job there right away.
You just get an application.
At my age, I'm probably overqualified for anything, so.
But I did get some leads on construction management jobs.
Yeah.
A sidebar, my son is an administrative sergeant in your police department.
That's just a sidebar.
Okay.
Well, he can always hire you.
Forget the nepotism rules.
But anyway, I just thought it was astonishing, and I'm glad I waited so long because I had to pull into my heart doctor's office because my heart was palpitating so much because of the anger of these people.
Sir, typically take a look at the people.
Were you the only guy that figured out what was going on?
I didn't really know.
I just everybody was doing it like sheep to the slaughter.
You know what I mean?
I don't know if I was the only one, but I certainly made it verbal enough once I got down to the floor of the arena.
So all these people are going to be harassed by Karen Brown.
That's the whole purpose of the job fair.
Correct.
Well, I don't know, maybe basically, but I just thought it was astounding.
Well, I appreciate the on-the-spot news report.
You ought to call Fox 35 and ask for a job as a reporter.
Well, I did vote for NBC a long time ago as a photographer.
Oh, okay, there you go, because anybody, you know, CNN is using cell phone cameras now as official news gathering devices.
Yeah, I thought I saw some report where some CNN report was filmed with a cell camera, a cell phone camera.
Yeah, you can hire anybody.
I mean, but you've got decent repertorial skills.
You should, I mean, the job for you is waiting for you did it today.
You ought to demand to get paid by somebody for the scandal you uncovered.
You're giving yourself away out there.
That's not good, Ron.
You got to learn to charge people.
Here's Dave in Heron Lake, New Mexico.
Great to have you on the EIB network.
Welcome.
Good day, Rush.
I just want to get to my point.
Do you know a place called Maywood City, California, right outside of Los Angeles?
Yeah, it's south of Los Angeles.
I know it well.
Well, they're closing up shop.
They went bankrupt because they're a sanctuary city handing out welfare and, frankly, breaking the law all the time.
I lived in California for 35 years.
And this city, I drove in and out of it because I worked the transit service there.
These people are, I'm Hispanic.
Let's get that straight to begin with.
Their government is all Hispanic.
And the sad thing is, our people, you can't even trust them.
They break the law and such.
Well, this is just a blueprint for cities that I live in New Mexico now.
This is a blueprint for what's coming to your city.
My home cities back in New York in Suffolk County.
Patch Ord, Babylon, and all of those have the same situation.
It's coming to them.
This is a problem that we have.
They're going bankrupt because of what Obama has been putting out.
Now, like the other guy said, a sidebar.
You said that fifth graders were being handed out condrums.
It's not fifth graders.
It's five-year-olds and preschoolers.
And another thing about this person that's being nominated for the Supreme Court, they should ask her one question.
If you were nominated to the Supreme Court, would you resign if you did not follow constitutional law?
Well, yeah, she would, of course, say no.
I would follow constitutional law as I interpret it.
That's what she would say.
Here's the deal on Maywood.
We had this in the stack last week.
I didn't quite get to it.
But it's going to happen this Thursday.
There's a working class enclave south of downtown Los Angeles.
They're going to lay off all of their employees.
They're going to eliminate the police force.
They are going to contract a neighboring city to run municipal operations, and they're going to have a contract with the L.A. County Sheriff's Department for police services.
More than 100 city workers, the people who keep Maywood streets paved and parks clean, the school crossing guards and the cops will get fired.
The action is without precedent in the state of California.
The police department, which had enjoyed a love-hate relationship with the mostly immigrant city of 50,000, will account for 70 of those jobs, including 47 sworn officers.
Yeah.
Yeah, we've become the extreme example in that the city is now contracting all of its municipal services, absolutely everything, to another city that'll now generate revenues off that, said the Maywood Police Chief Frank Hoffman.
Some people ask the question, well, why even have a city anymore?
From California to Pennsylvania, cities and towns are being pushed to the brink by the lingering economic downturn and mounting debt.
Well, how's that stimulus working for people?
The obligations of state and local governments have doubled to $2.4 trillion the past decade, according to the Federal Reserve.
It may be a real possibility for a few places.
We may actually see a few cases of muni bankruptcy that we haven't seen in previous years, said Chris Hone, the director of research for the National League of Cities.
So Maywood, California, RAP.
Rest in peace.
Yep.
And now that story on the kids, the condoms, I'm going to look that up, but I thought it was.
Yeah, here it is.
This is, what is this?
This is from this stupid website here.
Here it is.
A day after the new policy caused a media firestorm, Scruel Committee Chairman Peter Grosso said that Provincetown would probably limit condoms to fifth graders and older.
His stance stemmed from a conversation he had with the Superintendent Beth Singer, author of the rules set to take effect this fall.
This Cape Cod.
She said that the Scruel Committee is going to have to revisit the policy, definitely reword it so it's self-explanatory, possibly word it so that maybe there would be exclusion of the real young grades.
In a rare intervention, a local matter, Governor Duval Patrick called Singer yesterday morning to urge her to keep the free condoms out of the Cape Cod community's elementary school, which serves preschoolers to sixth graders.
School committee member Carrie Notaro said that while she prefers the current policy, she is willing to compromise.
If parents are that upset and we have to revise it to fifth and sixth graders, then that would be fine with me.
Here's the thing, folks.
We're talking about fifth grade.
How old are you in the fifth grade?
I was six years old in the first year.
So we're to 10 or 11 years old.
Condoms?
Condom's 10 or 11 years old.
That's, well, it's happening, Snurdley.
I don't know what to tell you.
Remember now, this is a positive change.
They used to give younger kids than that.
Now they're going to be limiting it to fifth graders and up.
It's a conservative move.
They realize, I mean, it's just into the guys.
Kids are going to have sex.
You can't stop them.
5th graders.
Quickly, we return to the phones on the Rush Limbaugh program.
Oak Park, Illinois.
This is Gene.
Nice to have you with us.
Hello.
Hi, Rush.
I'm so happy to be talking to you.
While I've been on hold, I've been so entertained by your show.
I've had quite a few laughs.
Now, I wanted to comment about the Al Gore incident.
Yes.
And is he in hiding?
I haven't heard any comments from him.
No, he's in there commenting on this.
One thing, there's two things.
Very quickly, you know, Al Gore and his wife bought the mansion in Montecito, California, right near Santa Barbara, for $8.8 million.
And then previous to that, all of their holdings in Tennessee, they shifted from their personal names to a limited liability corporation, which will help shield them if there is a lawsuit of any kind.
This was done before the allegations were made, but after the incident supposedly took place.
I heard about that.
Yeah, very wise, right, on his part.
But you know that story, this masseuse, it has to be dissected up, down, and all around.
You know what I mean?
Now, he comes in at the door, so we heard, and there was a nice hug and call me Al.
She seemed to be uncomfortable from the very beginning.
She could have left at that point.
You know what I mean?
And why is a hotel, a prestigious hotel, sending up a female masseuse to a man's room up there in the evening?
Well, they all do that.
They all do that?
Well, I mean, most hotels will do that, yeah.
Well, okay, that's all right.
But the point is, I don't know her story.
It seems to be well composed that she has.
What do you think, Al Gore?
You think Al Gore is innocent?
You think he's being settled?
Well, not exactly.
There might have been some sort of a rapport there, but it sort of maybe got out of hand.
But I think she stayed there too long and maybe in her own way encouraged what was going on until it got to a certain point.
But I think.
Yeah, this is what we always hear.
It's always the woman's fault.
Yeah, I know, but there could be guilt on both sides.
You know what I mean?
Well, but I think this has to be looked into.
Let me tell you something.
There's no, this filing for divorce here, whatever, this separation, it's not coincidental.
Well, the drive-bys are just drooling, and I can tell it by this story, this AP.
A tropical storm slamming into parts of Mexico is not taking aim at the massive Gulf oil spill.
Damn it.
But any system can quickly change course and halt cleanup efforts.
So they still want something to, they're so mad this thing is going to slam Mexico.
They're just so upset about it.
Hoping and praying for the next storm, which is us.