Is this the same Janet Napolitano who has no problem with an open border with Mexico?
It is, right?
It's the same Janet Napolitano who doesn't think we ought to make illegal show their papers, the same Janet Napolitano who thinks Arizona's going way overboard in simply trying to implement the existing federal law on immigration.
The same Janet Napolitano who doesn't have no problem whatsoever with an open border with Mexico.
But we've got to make sure the American people, these of them are humiliated in these pat down searches looking for terrorists at our airports.
Ha!
How are you?
Rushly and the pre-Thanksgiving Day show here on the EIB network.
It's become an American tradition.
The true story of Thanksgiving and a bonus today, uh, the true story of how we got screwed by Mannahattan, not the other way around.
Yeah, there's a lot of truth on this program.
And of course, if you um if you were not with us in the first hour, a very salient question posed by me.
So much distortion, so many lies, so so many untruths taught to our innocent young skulls full of mush throughout American history about Thanksgiving.
And one of the things that has been taught is that the arrival of the white man, I don't think it was the pilgrims or whoever came later, Christopher Columbus, even prior to that.
And what happened was that the Native Americans were basically slaughtered.
They were wiped out.
We came in here, we basically took what wasn't ours, and it was devastation out there.
But I asked if we could run the numbers on this.
Does anybody know the total number of Native Americans killed as a result of the arrival of the white man?
If we get that number, we need to compare it to the number of tobacco deaths since the white man arrived in this country because it was the Native Americans who figured out what to do with tobacco.
Smoke it.
And in some cases, chew it.
And we've been told that tobacco smoking, cigarette smoking, all that deadly.
Lung cancer and so forth.
I don't know how many millions of people die every year because of it.
Well, add up the number of years.
And who really killed who?
Here in the new world.
It's just a question.
I'm just saying, I am Rush Limbaugh's R-U-S-H, L-I-M-B-A-U-G-H, make sure it's spelled correctly, 800 282-2882.
If you want to be on the program email address, L Rushbaugh EIBNet.com.
Several thousand British students protested again today against government plans to triple tuition fees.
Two weeks after a similar demonstration sparked a small riot.
College and university students across the country held marches and sit-ins to oppose the decision to increase university fees to $14,000 a year.
It's a key plank in the government's deficit cutting austerity measures.
In London, university students and younger pupils in scrubal uniforms marched from Trafalgar Square toward the houses of Parliament, chanting no ifs, no buts, no education cuts.
Well, the chant is this.
No money, honey, pay it for yourself.
There isn't any the money isn't here.
These I'm not as upset by it as I was two weeks ago.
Two weeks ago, this really set me off.
As you who are here might uh might remember.
Just I just I leave people running around begging for everybody else to pay things for them.
It doesn't bother me as much today, but the protests are continuing.
President Obama has a live-in pastry chef.
But he was in Kokomo, Indiana the other day, and he went to a bakery.
The gingerbread house bakery.
He ordered pumpkin rolls, cinnamon rolls, apple fritters, and donuts.
The president had his daughters with him.
Malia and Sasha.
And he said that he and his daughters typically don't have dessert During the week, but with Thanksgiving just two days away, he said you gotta splurge a little bit.
So he bought all the stuff, even though he's got a pastry chef in the white.
He doesn't get to use the pastry chef because Michelle's in there, making sure the pastry chef doesn't work.
San Francisco lawmakers have voted to override Mayor Gavin Newsom's veto and have passed a law prohibiting fast food restaurants from including toys with children's meals that do not meet nutritional guidelines.
The city's Board of Supervisors gave the measure final approval at 8 to 3 vote yesterday, goes into effect on December a year from now.
The ordinance prohibits toy giveaways in fast food children's meals that have more than 640 milligrams of sodium, 600 calories, or 35% of their calories from fat.
No toys.
In such meals.
All right, here's the economic news.
Now, uh the first, let's go to the unemployment number first.
That's what's being touted here today as.
Yes, Michelle Obama has given permission to all of us to eat pie.
I've got it in the story.
Michelle Obama has granted permission for all of us to totally forget anything she says about eating because it's Thanksgiving.
It's okay tomorrow to go ahead and have pie.
It was in her interview with Barbara Walters.
Because it's Thanksgiving.
Eat whatever you want.
But on Friday, on Friday, you got to get back to what Michelle says you have to do.
The number of people applying for unemployment benefits fell sharply last week to the lowest level since July of 2008, a hopeful sign that improvement in the job market is accelerating.
Labor Department said Wednesday that weekly unemployment claims dropped by 34,000 sharply to a seasonally adjusted 407,000 in the weekending November 20th.
Wall Street analysts expected a much smaller drop.
Once again, an unbroken record here of always being wrong on the analyst side of things.
Now, for the record here, as usual, last week's unemployment number was quietly revised up to 441,000 from 439,000.
And this story AP fails to note that.
Every day or every week, the unemployment number gets revised upward.
The first number they put out is hocus pocus, just as this one is.
Labor department analysts said that weekly claims are volatile during the week between Veterans Day and Thanksgiving.
Key question is whether claims will remain this low in future weeks or bounce back.
Now they wouldn't be saying that in this news story.
They wouldn't even be posing the possibility of bouncing back unless they knew it was going to bounce back.
They're not gonna they're not gonna allow AP to run a story here.
It's gonna go back up unless they know.
So we're we're being prepared here for a large bounce back.
The number of people continuing to claim unemployment aid fell by 142,000 to 4.18 million.
This does not include millions of people receiving extended benefits under an emergency program set up by Congress during the recession.
Then the number of people continuing to claim unemployment aid may not have fallen at all, since many, if not most of them have long since begun collecting the federal extensions.
Which in most cases kicked in after the first 26 or so weeks of unemployment and extend all the way up to 99 weeks.
So it's a hocus pocus report, but it's won the regime wanted to get out there on the day before Thanksgiving, but there is other economic news.
Orders to U.S. factories for long lasting manufactured goods plunged in October by the largest amount in 21 months, reflecting widespread weakness in a number of areas.
Okay, so you keep this in mind.
The unemployment number, whoa, it's the best Number since July of 2008.
Yep, yep, yep, yep, yahoo.
Orders to U.S. factories for longstanding manufactured goods plunge in October, largest amount in 21 months.
The number of people applying for unemployment benefits fell sharply.
Labor Department said Wednesday weekly unemployment claims dropped by 34,000.
Once again, here is the comparison.
And this doesn't include millions of people receiving extended unemployment benefits, meaning there hasn't really been any drop.
Businesses and other employers added jobs in 41 states in October, the best showing in five months.
California added nearly 39,000 jobs in October, still its unemployment rate remained at twelve point four percent as more people looked for work last month.
So they might have added nearly 39,000 jobs, but the unemployment rate didn't change at all.
But consumers remain gun shy about embarking on a big holiday spending spree.
And AP why is that?
Well, AP poll suggests Americans are more disciplined about using their credit cards this year, deep into a stubbornly harsh economic downturn.
Resisting all of the efforts by the administration to fix it.
The stubbornly harsh downturn continues to be stubborn.
More people than last year say they pay off their balances right away, and fewer say they make credit card purchases if they lack enough money at the time.
Just nine percent in this AP poll said they plan to spend more this year on holiday purchases than they did a year ago.
And the reason for that is that they're not working.
There's no steady income.
Sales of previously owned homes slipped in October as the housing markets struggled in the face of high unemployment and tight credit.
The National Association of Realtors said yesterday that sales of previously owned homes dipped 2.2% last month to a seasonally adjusted rate of 4.43 million units.
It surprised the analysts.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So great economic news.
It's a sign we're coming out of the depression.
Everywhere you look.
Americans earned more and spent more last month, a hopeful sign for the economy ahead of the holiday buying season, but we just heard that more people aren't going to be buying during the holiday season.
Consumers boosted their spending 0.4% in October, according to the Commerce Department.
That was up from 0.3% in September.
But even with the pickup, consumers are still shying away from the type of spending needed to dramatically lower the 9.6% unemployment rate.
Whoa!
What is that uh uh.
Consumers are still shying away from the type of spending needed to dramatically lower the unemployment rate.
I thought government was going to lower the unemployment rate.
I I had a stimulus package, porculus one porculus two, uh, all those massive Obama tax cuts, TARP and all that.
I thought that was supposed to lower unemployment.
Now, AP tells us that it's going to be consumer spending, i.e., customers.
Now they tell us.
The Federal Reserve officials there have become more pessimistic in their economic outlook through next year and have lowered their forecast for growth.
The economy will grow only 2.4% to 2.5% this fiscal year, Fed officials said yesterday in an updated forecast.
But the uh unemployment news out there, really, really good.
I mean, it's not been this good since July of 2008.
It's a hopeful sign that may be the recession's ending, except for all this other news.
Happy Thanksgiving to all of you from all of us here at the EIB network.
We go to the phones now.
Knoxville, Tennessee.
This is Michael.
Great to have you here, sir.
Hi.
Thank you for taking my call, Rush.
I just wanted to comment on the Native American versus white men casualty comparison that you had.
Yeah.
Um, if you are To blame the the white man.
Well, if you were to blame the Native Americans for the white man smoking cigarettes, first of all, the Native Americans never had a choice whether to stay here or to be killed or not.
And second of all, we've always had a choice to smoke cigarettes or not.
We've had a choice to smoke.
Now, if we're going to blame Native Americans for white men smoking cigarettes, then we need to blame the white man for every gun crime that's ever been committed because we invented the gun.
So is it fair to compare to do you not have to be able to do that?
Well, that's you know, look at I can't disagree with you.
I I think whoever invented the wheel.
Uh look how many people have died because of that, uh, the automobile.
I think you're getting somewhere here.
It's it's individual choice.
The choice is a problem.
You can't blame that on Native Americans.
No one's not a good thing.
Well, they invented the product if they hadn't.
Look at somebody had to figure out what to do with tobacco, just like somebody had to figure out what to do with a coffee bean.
Now, and it was the Indians that did.
And they and we got here, we saw them smoking it, and we said, Well, that looks good.
It smells good.
We want to know how to do it.
We started smoking.
Look what happened to us.
Well, they didn't they didn't flood them with chemicals either, like the white man's decided to do to the cigarettes nowadays either.
It was much better.
Doesn't matter.
The chemical the chemicals just make the product burn without going out.
The carcinogens are not amped up because of the chemicals in there.
Well, the chemicals keep the bugs off the plants.
The chemicals are what keeps the animals from eating.
But it's also what keeps the tobacco burning in the cigarette, so you don't have to relight it.
A cigar, you have to constantly relight it because they don't put any chemicals in it.
They've taken those chemicals out.
If you notice cigarettes now, they burn out.
They don't stay lit anymore, Rush.
Well, I wouldn't know about that, but I don't I've not heard anybody say that.
Well, it's the truth.
I'm a smoker, but I'm not going to blame Native Americans for me smoking cigarettes.
Look at it.
It's a think piece out there.
I mean, we're bombarded every day with how we committed genocide on these people.
The white man is being blamed for every evil on this planet.
Well, yeah, yeah, that's right.
But it's it's about getting the point that you just you can't blame whole groups for individual choices.
Look at Barack Obama.
I mean, look how how look how the Republicans are all the all the Democrats because one guy can't stand up to do what's right and what he promised, the nation he would do.
You know, it it's it's a sickness of the whole country, Rush.
Wait a second.
What is this about Obama can't stand what run that by me again?
Well, it's just it's the simple point that people in nature have this urge to blame an entire group for a poor decisions for one person.
Oh, so Obama's not responsible for No, he is responsible, but we don't hold him accountable.
We hold the Democratic Party accountable.
It's the same thing, Rush.
I see, I see.
Well, what would you say?
What would you say about the Indians contributing to gambling addiction via their casinos?
I think that uh they have a right to gamble.
Uh, just like some the Islamic people have a right to build a mosque.
Granted, I don't believe in that.
Believe they should be able to, but they have the freedom to do so.
Well, I know they have the freedom to do it.
They have it, but they're opening the doors on who are their customers.
Us.
Not all of us.
There are black people that they go in the casinos.
That's my point.
It's not just it, but it's not the Native Americans.
They're the ones who own the casinos.
We gave them the casinos.
Well, we're the ones that gave it to them.
You just admitted it yourself, Rush.
So how are you gonna blame that on Native Americans when we're the ones that gave it to 'em?
I'm just saying.
These are these are all make no sense to be.
This is this is simple.
I just like to make people think about things.
It may make no sense.
It may make no sense to you because you have a bias and a prejudice against the white guy.
It's obvious.
What?
I am white well, I'm half white.
I got a lot of Indian in me.
But I don't hold prejudice uh I don't hold no prejudice against any race.
I hold individuals responsible for their own actions.
A lot of people don't know when they're prejudiced and biased, and you may be one of them.
It's something enough, people most people don't think they are, but you can hear it in them when they speak.
What about you, Rush?
Are you prejudiced and biased?
You speak against um everything Democrat.
No, and I'm not, because I am well thought out in the reason my job to be right.
But you're not always right, are you?
Yeah, well, 99.7% of the time almost.
Documented documented to be.
Uh William Shatner asked me, how do you know?
Because I do.
To uh to know.
Now here, I have from the 20th Century Atlas, the historical body count.
We looked it up here.
According to actual causes of death in the United States, 2000, Journal of the American Medical Association, 435,000 people died because of tobacco in 2000 alone.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, tobacco use is responsible for one in five deaths annually, 443,000 deaths per year in the U.S. World Health Organization says that worldwide tobacco use causes more than five million deaths per year.
Ward Churchill, the pretend Indian plagiarist, said that 12 million Indians were killed by the white man.
You compare 12 million once to five million per year for how many ever many years?
And I can see what I'm talking about here.
According to Ward Churchill, the pretend Indian plagiarist, controversial professor.
He's a professor of ethnic studies, University of Colorado.
He said the reduction of the North American Indian population from an estimated 12 million to 1,500 in 1500 to barely 237,000 in 1900 represents a vast genocide.
The most sustained on record.
So even by Ward Churchill's preposterous calculations, the number of deaths from tobacco dwarf those, because it's five million a year since the pilgrims arrived.
I mean, I mean, it's it's talking tens of millions here.
Tobacco deaths.
Now, most sane historians put the number of Indians in all tribal areas north of Mexico at the time of European arrival at a little over one million, not 15 million.
Our previous caller, obviously a tobacco apologist, you heard him, suggested that we invented the gun, and uh that led to a lot of Indian deaths too.
It was the Chinese, we might have invented a gun, but we couldn't do anything with it until the Chicoms invented gunpowder.
Everybody knows this.
And here's something else.
How many of you have been taught, or how many of your kids have come home telling you that Columbus and his band of marauders brought syphilis with them and also infected the Native Americans with it?
And the flu and all that, it's just the other way around.
Columbus and his boys caught syphilis here, and they took it back to the old world with them.
January 15, 2008, by Gia Rui Chong.
Add syphilis to Columbus's discoveries.
Study says Columbus and its crew likely brought the bacterium out of the New World, leading to its global spread, a genetic analysis finds.
That conclusion hotly debated, of course it is, because it goes against conventional wisdom.
The spread of syphilis across the globe was probably sparked by Christopher Columbus and his crew, who ferried it, or a version of it, from the new world to the old world, according to a new genetic analysis published a couple of years ago.
And this does not even include Gongreta.
This this is just this is just syphilis.
So when you start adding all this up, we gave them smallpox, yeah, small change compared to syphilis.
When you start adding all this up, I think we're all owned a bunch of casino chips.
And a couple pack of cigarettes and no taxes.
What do you mean?
How did how did the Indians have syphilis?
Well, oh, how do they have syphilis?
Because they were pure at one with the earth.
Well, I don't know.
I'm just a new gen. Genetic study.
Well, the earth obviously has the earth has everything.
Earth has syphilis, earth has cancer.
Uh yeah.
The earth is air.
Atmosphere and all of that.
Uh who's uh oh, you got an email.
Dear Rush.
It occurred to me this Monday when you came back that you did not thank Mark Stein For hosting for you.
As a matter of fact, I can't ever remember you ever thanking anybody who subs for you.
You're a better person than that.
They're doing you a favor.
And I'm I'm sure we would appreciate a public thank you.
This is from Elaine Beck.
I routinely thank these guest hosts.
And Elaine, they get paid.
It was just one of the largest thank yous that anyone could give someone.
And they are invited back.
And they are promoted as going to be here when I'm gone.
Tremendous gratitude is shown.
How many of them now have their own shows?
Uh out there all across the uh fruited plain.
Do they thank me?
I wouldn't know because I don't listen.
Do they thank me?
Most of the guest hosts thank me.
Well, that's as it should be.
All right.
Uh Mike in uh Brownstone, Indiana.
Great to have you on the EIB network.
Hi.
Hi, Mr. Lomendol.
Uh I'd like to talk about the turkeys.
You go right ahead.
It's Thanksgiving Eve.
Oh, those turkeys.
Any anyway, uh, I'm uh a Purdue graduate from uh West Lafayette, Indiana, and uh that was in the 70s.
I'm uh 57 years old now, and uh and I uh still in in agriculture but no longer uh raising livestock.
When you look back on your college years, how how valuable to you was your degree?
Um it really didn't uh become that valuable until uh twenty years ago.
Uh I went back to the family farm and whatever dad done, we just followed Ry along and then I used that education to to further the farm.
He sold the farm uh twenty years ago, and uh I switched gears and went into the lawn business.
And um I'm a chemical uh a lawn specialist.
Uh I I'd like to say an environmentalist to some extent.
Well, uh if you want if you want to be called that, I mean go for it.
I'm not a tree hugger necessarily.
That's what they all say.
Yeah.
But uh the the point was uh I had some animal science uh classes, and uh this was in the 70s, and uh they uh we butchered we all got opportunity to watch them butcher hogs right there at on campus.
And and they took the this meat and then laid it out, and they had five different hogs laying there, and they pointed out, especially that light-colored meat, and explained the uh the the texture of it and how watery it was, and and uh some of us boys were gonna go back to this to the food industry with the.
Well, why was this?
Pardon me?
Why was this?
Okay.
Why was it pale?
Why was it watery?
Well, uh, it was a genetic issue.
Some of the livestock was perfect.
You mean it had nothing to do with global warming.
Gosh, you know, this guy who's ever talking about that needs to do some research because this is in the 70s before any global warming was.
Yeah, back then it was global cooling.
It was an ice age was coming.
Tell me something isn't it?
Isn't the biggest problem with raising poultry is trying to keep them warm, like chicks.
I mean, you put them in incubator, you want to keep them warm, right?
That's correct.
Well problem solved.
It can't be global warming then.
If if if heat is needed to keep them alive and surviving, this is all I can't believe that they would do this.
Then the Discovery Channel, this is the place where that environmentalist wacko tried to blow them up.
Took some hostages in there.
So this probably is a story designed to keep further wackos from bugging them.
But to say, I mean, do a story on the day before Thanksgiving that global warming climate change is going to destroy the Thanksgiving meal.
That's preposterous.
And you can attest to it.
Yes.
Yes, it it was information to help us take back to the farm or those of us that are going to be in the meat industry to pick these things out and see, you know, maybe that's um the Packer, our feeling as a farmer was to buy the meat as cheap as they could, and and they would we would sell it to them on grade and yield, and then they would pick out these bad things, and then our price for our product we'd get less for.
So if we could upgrade our genetics, get a better quality animal, then we could make more money.
Well, but then you gotta start playing God.
That's true, but that's that's the way AG has been.
Well, no, I have a friend, I have a friend who raises tilapia fish.
Steve Abernathy, and I call him the fish god because his problem, he needs as many females as possible laying eggs.
And he turns, he takes he takes tilapia and he turns them into females.
He's with genetic altering called a fish god.
Well, I'm I'm a capitalist.
And I and and I and and the key thing is to want to want to get better, want to try and support my family and and uh Yeah, and uh I guess I have to pay my taxes.
Well, you know, Mike Ditka was on the ESPN pre-game show recently.
Uh and uh they were talking about some team, something they had to do.
And Ditka says there's only two things in life you have to do die and pay taxes.
And that's it.
So you've focused.
You're fo you're you're trying to to uh do what's right for your family.
I would, but I want to I'm gonna take advantage of your experience.
Uh you you're you're uh uh agriculturist, you understand animals.
You've studied them, right?
Right.
Does a fish know it is wet?
Uh it'll die if it's not in water very long, so I'm sure it does.
A fish knows it's wet.
The fish knows it lives in water.
We'll be back.
It's uh stomp the caller.
Dear Rush, this is from the subscriber email at Rush 247, the website, Dear Rush.
For the first time since I have been listening to you in the 80s, I'm turning you off today.
I'll be back when you're on a subject you know something about.
Well, I can only guess.
Well, this is Dwayne.
I only guess what has Dwayne riled up.
And I look at I am I I will admit the the Thanksgiving stories that we've had today probably skew to the harsh.
Uh probably uh took you in a direction you weren't expecting to go, things you didn't expect to learn today.
And perhaps even viewpoints that you certainly didn't expect to be exposed to.
So let me let me take this email uh and and use it as a lesson.
I'm want to transfer now to more heartwarming Thanksgiving stories.
To celebrate the wonderfulness of the day.
Uh the heartwarming story about Thanksgiving, the the kind of thing that we can never get enough of.
The kind of stories that just make us all feel better inside.
It's a story from the New York Times.
On Tuesday, Representative Charles Wrangell seemed almost willfully upbeat as he strode into his old Harlem political club to hand out turkeys to needy constituents, a Thanksgiving ritual that allowed him to speak publicly about something other than his political future, if only for a moment.
I'm putting today in front of me, Wrangell told reporters curbside at 128th Street and Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
Boulevard as dozens of bundled up and mostly elderly women, the lucky holders of about a hundred and twenty tickets given out by several community groups, waited inside, bundled up, waited inside for Congressman Wrangle to start loading their grocery carts with the freebie turkeys.
Now, for the record, it was sixty-one degrees in New York on Tuesday, but bundled up makes for a nicer sounding story and for m people in great need.
Bundled up inside on a 61 degree day.
Wrangle said, These people here are not the least bit concerned about anything but how they're going to get their families together on Thanksgiving.
It just seems to me that I have a moral obligation to take care of them.
And then when I get to Washington to take care of me, at least he's honest about it.
He wants to take care of himself.
And who can deny he's done that over the decades?
Inside the political club, as photographers captured his forced smiles, Mr. Wrangle loudly took charge, herding recipients toward the free groceries and whistling with two fingers to clear a path to the door.
For about 20 minutes, he handed out 18-pound butterballs donated by the uh donated by the nearby Fairway supermarket, a uh club member said.
Also bags of fixings, accepting heartfelt thank yous.
So he didn't give them away.
A grocery store did.
Well, he handed them out, yeah, but as he strode into his uh to hand out turkeys, but the story clearly, I mean, you have to re-dig deep here to find out if there's a grocery store that donated the turkeys, and under what circumstances did that happen.
So I love these heartwarming stories.
Here's a congressman who just got censured for all kinds of depravity and corruption and so forth.
Uh great example here of Democrat ward healing politics at its worst.
And an indictment of the low state of politics in our bluest cities and states.
So here's a congressman who is found by his peers to be corrupt and censured, given the max punishment, shaking down a neighborhood grocery store so he can hand out turkeys in front of reporters from the New York Times.
Apparently putting his woes behind him and making sure he's taking care of the freezing bundled up old ladies inside on a 61-degree day.
That's the kind of heartwarming Thanksgiving story I like to see.
And I love sharing with you.
Now, aides choreograph this to look like a spontaneous show of support.
Wrangle called the turnout a very pleasant surprise, but the the stage craft suggested a calling it of debts.
This is in the New York Times.
That's in the story.
But you have to dig deep to get to that.
The New York Times did their best to take the heartwarming out of the story.
But you have to dig deep.
Now, full disclosure, Fairways advertises on the Rush Limbaugh Show in New York on our flamethrower affiliate AM 77 WABC.
And they do great community work here.
And they even let the congressman hand out the stuff.
120 butterballs, 1218-pound butterballs.
Plus the turkeys.
Philip in Tupelo, Mississippi.
Welcome to the EIB network.
Hello, sir.
Happy Thanksgiving, Rush.
Thank you, sir.
I finally joined the ranks of those who won life lottery.
Well, welcome.
Thank you very much, sir.
You posed the question earlier.
Uh, what did people do with all the government agencies?
And I wanted to point out that during our era of Western expansion, people did without government at all.
There's an article on the net called The Not So Wild Wild West that describes the uh wagon trains, the gold rush, and the cattle companies and how they got along.
Creating an orderly society that protected property rights, even though there was no government.
Uh you know, formal government.
Yeah, that was my exact point.
This is exactly what happened when the pilgrims arrived.
There wasn't any fish and game, there wasn't any FDA, there wasn't any natural resources defense council, there were no environmentalist wackos, nobody had to get permission to go hunt, nobody had to get a permit to do anything, and it all worked out.
Everybody survived, everybody lived, and we uh ended up with a great country out of it.
Uh, and the Native Americans also got fed.
Along with everybody else.
Worked.
Okay, it's our annual pre-Thanksgiving Day show here on the Excellence in Broadcasting Network, and we cover all the bases here.
Uh, We go beyond the bounds of tradition and public knowledge, so-called truth, and dig deep and explain to you the real stories of Thanksgiving and the resulting meaning that comes from the celebration of the holidays.