All Episodes
May 3, 2012 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:41
May 3, 2012, Thursday, Hour #1
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Welcome to today's edition of The Rush 247 podcast.
I'm sorry, it just doesn't arouse any interest.
I don't know what to tell you, but I just don't care about it.
There's only one thing that interests me.
And that's not even a big deal.
Well, it's a bigger deal than the other barber.
No, Obama's girlfriend.
Folks, I I don't care.
You know, this is an example of how the media sets the narrative every day, and everybody follows suit.
Okay, so this uh this this Clinton uh biographer, David Moranis got this Vanity Fair story.
I guess he's got a book about uh about Obama's girlfriend, this composite girlfriend, uh Genevieve, whatever.
I sorry.
The only thing that interests me about this is why are we just learning about it now?
Why are we just learning about the fact that he composited a bunch of girlfriends into one?
I mean, he's been president for almost four years, three and a half years, and we're just now hearing about this.
See, Dawn's even yawning.
I gotta get off of this subject quick.
Hi, folks, greetings and welcome, Rush Limbaugh, the EIB network and the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
Telephone number is 800-282-2882.
Well, do you care?
Good.
800-282-2882 and the email address lrushbowl at eibnet.com.
All right, here we go.
The AP, we've got two stories on unemployment.
By the way, Osama bin Laden, still dead.
And the victory lap is still going.
There was there was an NBC infomercial last night.
Brian Williams.
Obama walking everybody through the minefield that was the decision to order the strike, to send a SEAL team into Pakistan, and to go in there and get Osama bin Laden.
I guess you do have to give Obama credit.
He had no choice and he made it.
What would you do if your president said the guy is a sitting duck?
He's right there.
All he's got in his hand is a remote control clicker.
Obama says, Well, it was a tough decision because you remember what happened to Jimmy Carter.
Jimmy Carter decided to go in there and rescue some people in uh in Iran and uh had a dust storm uh screw up the uh helicopters.
I mean, it could have could have been it could have turned out disastrously for me politically.
And I told you I had a source.
I had a source, couldn't tell you the source was.
Source told me to drag him off the golf course.
Well, he admits this in this little info merchant with Brian Williams.
He's made such a sacrifice that he only played nine holes.
He he admitted he played golf that day, came off the course after nine holes to be hustled into the situation room to uh sit there and and and watch this politically risky attack on Osama.
Yeah, he admitted it.
Well, we've I told Mike to forget it, but now we may as well hear grab sound bites one and two.
This is what I said.
This is uh Monday.
Uh wait a minute.
Yeah, I guess it was this Monday or last why I said this recently.
I wish I could cite my source for you.
I can't.
Sworn to secrecy.
But I'm just gonna tell you.
They had to go call the president off the golf course and get him in that situation room an hour and a half before the attack, so he was there for the photo op.
And if you'll notice, if you've seen the picture of Obama looking the deer in the headlight eyes at the monitor, supposedly at the optaking place, you see a golf shirt under that jacket.
Yeah, with a top button button.
It's a it's a white golf shirt.
And he he's sitting lower in his chair than anybody else in that picture in that room.
He's kind of hunched down and looking at what everybody else is looking at.
The only person in that picture that looks like she's got any emotion at all is Hillary.
She's got her hand over her mouth and her eyes wide open big, like the way she looks when Bill walks in the door at 7 p.m.
What's he doing here?
So last night on this NBC hour-long infomercial for Obama 12.
Brian Williams solemnly reports that Obama sacrificed for all of us that day.
Hit the soundbite.
The president played golf that morning.
Nine holes on the grounds of nearby Andrews Air Force Base.
Back at the White House at 2 p.m., he headed downstairs to join the others in the situation room.
I told you.
I told you he played golf that day.
But the great sacrifice is he only played nine holes.
And I'll tell you why he only played nine holes, because they had to they sent somebody out there to get him.
Because McRaven, General McRaven, Lieutenant McRae, whatever, we mentioned the guy's name earlier this week.
It's already Thursday.
You believe that.
On the Huckabee show, it's still Monday, but here it's uh it's sorry, folks.
Last night I got too much sleep.
What do you what's so what's what's you ought to see him?
You ought to see him on the other side of the glass.
Can't uh can't believe it.
So anyway, they dragged him off the golf course after nine holes.
He gets in there at two o'clock in the afternoon, and and so I told you my source was irrefutable.
I just I still can't tell you who the source was.
But it's nobody in the regime.
It's uh nobody in the regime whatsoever.
There's Brian Williams.
And here, play sound by three.
You know what I just told Mike to forget this stuff, but I don't care about it.
Look at me.
Here, play sound by three.
If this had failed in spectacular fashion, it would have flown up your presidency, I think by all estimates.
Would have been your Waterloo and perhaps your water gate uh consumed with hearings and inquiries.
How thick did the specter of Jimmy Carter, Desert One hang in the air?
Oh, come on.
Does anybody think there would have been hearings?
Okay, so you order the mission.
If the mission failed their hearings.
My gosh.
We haven't had hearings on Fast and Furious.
We haven't had hearings on uh Cylindra.
Well, we have.
I mean, but but they've they've largely just been ceremonial.
Here's how, by the way, uh th the one answered the question of how risky and how potentially politically fatal this order could have been.
Certainly, we thought about the fact that if there was a failure here, it would have disastrous consequences uh for me politically.
We knew the examples of the uh Carter presidency, and we understood what happened there.
But I tell you, the only thing that I was thinking about throughout this entire enterprise was I really want to get those guys back home safe.
Yeah.
I'll tell you what this is, folks.
This is what I talked about.
This is the power of the presidency in an election year.
This is the stuff that Obama can do as president that no candidate can do.
Get on an airplane, hop over to Afghanistan, have a week-long celebration of something that happened a year ago, the death of Osama bin a lot, then get a network to give you a full hour campaign appearance, essentially, rehashing what you did, making you brave and courageous, uh, and and and all of these other things.
This is just the power of the incumbency.
Uh, there's so much that Obama can do, such as forgiving student loans the night before the election, uh, or forgiving underwater mortgages the two days before the election.
He can do that.
Or he can say he wants to do it.
And all Romney can do is suck his thumb.
That's uh any challenge.
That's all anybody could do.
That's it's uh it's one of the things that you should be prepared for.
And uh and and don't think Obama doesn't want a second term.
He does, and he's gonna use every bit of this power at his uh at his disposal.
Um now this show that this all happened on his Rock Center, and last night uh after the news came, is Brian Williams interviewing the one.
No.
Yeah, he's interviewing Hillary.
Take it back.
Now it's Hillary's turn to catch in here.
And Williams uh after the news came that bin Laden was killed.
They're all there in the situation room.
Brian Williams and Secretary Clinton had this exchange.
You have to start calling presidents.
Domestic.
Foreign.
Committee chairs.
Cabinet members.
All the people you wouldn't want to read about it in the paper the next day.
The president called former presidents, uh, asked me where to find my husband.
Really?
Bill didn't know anything.
I hadn't talked to anybody about it.
Uh so the first he heard was when President Obama called him.
Did she know where he was?
I mean, that's all I care about in that sound bite.
The president called Foy asked me where my husband was.
Williams, really?
And we don't.
Yeah, yeah, Bill didn't know anything.
Well, given where he probably was, how could he?
But she didn't know where's why I say he walks in at seven o'clock at night in their home in Chappachor, wherever they live now, and that look on her face, hand over the mouth, wise w eyes wide open.
My gosh, I've not seen this before.
Let's take a brief time out because AP, ladies and gentlemen, the Associated Press is predicting.
This is a news agency.
The Associated Press is predicting the unemployment rate will be below 8% by election day.
No, it wasn't making it up.
I don't care about the Obama composite girlfriend.
I'm sorry.
Just don't.
Greetings, great to have you back, Rush Limbaugh, the EIB network.
I tell you what, I'm reading a fascinating book.
I've got two, well, actually, I have three books going on.
I've got a novel going, and I'm I'm dabbling in this Robert Carroll book on LBJ.
And today we have some soundbites from LBJ back in the day.
If you have never heard him speak, if um LBJ predates you.
We got LBJ talking about his war on poverty and great society, and we have Ronaldus Magnus reacting to it.
Coming up on the program.
It's just it's it's it's fascinating.
So I'm dabbling in that, and Jay Nordlinger, National Review, uh, and also writes the new criterion has a book out on the Nobel Peace Prize called Peace, they say.
And it's uh it's a history of the Nobel Peace Prize, and why it turned so anti-American when it did basically can trace back to Reagan.
They hated Reagan, they despised Reagan.
And there are stories about all the people who won the prize, why they won it, what the reaction was.
For example, uh Henry Kissinger won the Nobel Peace Prize, I think it was 74, whatever the year was, but he had to share it with a North Vietnamese commandant by the name of Le Ducteau, who was a mass murderer.
He's in the pole pot club, and Kissinger tried to give his peace prize back, and they wouldn't take it.
It said it's non-returnable.
It's sort of like you go to the 7-Eleven and you buy something that's non-refundable, non-returnable.
Same thing with the Nobel Peace Prize.
Kissinger didn't want to share it.
Um there are fascinating stories.
And of course, who can forget Obama got his peace prize within the first what?
Well, he got free his first year, but it was announced in like three or four months, and his peace prize was was offered and awarded on the come.
He hadn't done anything yet.
Other than be who he was and uh and get elected.
So, and it's it's fascinating.
It's it's uh it doesn't just list the peace prize winners.
It's not just a uh hit piece on the whole concept of the peace prize.
It's a look at what went wrong with it and when and uh and why.
It's really good.
Now a couple of stories here from the Associated Press.
The first one, U.S. applications for unemployment aid drop sharply.
The number of people seeking unemployment benefits fell last week by the most in more than three months.
This is a seesaw.
Just yesterday we had the news from ADP that new jobs were paltry, 119,000.
Now, this report contradicts what ADP put out yesterday.
U.S. applications for unemployment drop sharply.
Means fewer people are supposedly out of work.
Now, we've told you before, both the AP and Reuters have made this claim for about six weeks.
Uh back on April 5th, month ago.
AP's headline, U.S. unemployment claims hit four-year lull, three hundred and fifty-seven thousand.
Today's headline, U.S. applications for unemployment aid drops sharply.
And the first sentence talks about it being lower than it's been in three months.
Reuters, on March 29th, jobless claims fall to four year low in latest week.
They keep talking about how great it is.
And then every week the number is revised.
Every week, which we don't hear about, well, you I you do because we tell you, but the revised number is never reported.
It's always revised up or worse.
The original report that we get from the BLS is never accurate.
Seasonal adjustments, uh revisions.
So this is a purely political number.
AP goes on to say this is a hopeful sign one day before the government releases the April Jobs Report.
Now there's another AP story.
And the headline of this story is AP Survey, steady job gains to sustain U.S. recovery.
Now there was a piece by Mortimer Zuckerman.
I didn't have a chance to share any of the details with you.
Morton Vuckerman is the uh publisher of the New York Daily News, and he's he's been writing negatively about Obama and the Obama economy and the recovery for a while.
He had a piece yesterday or the day before talking about how we may be headed to a double dip recession.
There's no indication here that we have a genuine real recovery to sustain, but that doesn't matter to the AP.
Look at the headline.
AP survey steady job gains to sustain U.S. recovery.
What steady job gains?
What recovery?
The economy has grown at the lowest rate after a recession ever.
Folks, the reason I'm spending time on this uh every week on Thursday with these numbers is twofold.
And again, I remind you, we have an amazing number of new listeners.
And so it's a it's an opportunity to catch them up so that they listen to each day's program in context.
The second opportunity here is an ongoing effort to teach people and instruct people about media and uh specifically how the media is aligning itself for Obama's re-election.
Lying, making things up, uh taking little bits of data and amplifying it beyond what's factual.
And that's what's happening and coming out with a story saying, and guess what?
We got a survey.
We went out and talked to economists.
Now, these are the same economists that every month say they are surprised or that the news was unexpected.
These are the same experts who are always wrong.
By virtue of AP's own reports.
Every report on jobless numbers, the AP has the words surprised or unexpected, meaning whatever the number is, everybody that they talked to prior is shocked at the numbers what it is.
So the experts they're talking to are always wrong.
And thus they've gone out and talked to these experts and they've surveyed their own experts.
And their own experts who are never right are now predicting the unemployment rate will be below eight percent by election day.
Now, why is that important?
Well, because no incumbent president has ever been re-elected with the unemployment rate below eight percent or above eight percent.
It's never happened.
And so it's now an objective.
Marching orders have been given.
The media must find a way to get the unemployment, and the regime too must find a way to get the unemployment number under 8% to satisfy this uh this statistic that has never been wrong.
And so the AP is basically telling us, get ready, this is what we're going to do.
No matter what the facts are, we're gonna have this thing under 8% by the time you go into the voting booth in November.
And they're gonna do it by hooker by crook.
One of the ways the regime is doing it, and I beg your indulgence in repeating this again.
The U.S. job market is missing two million jobs since Obama was inaugurated.
There are two million fewer jobs overall available to be filled in this country since Obama took office in January of 2009.
So if the universe of jobs available is down by two million and growing, by the way, then the unemployment number expressed as a percentage is always going to come down if you if you make smaller the universe against which the calculation's being made, which is precisely what's happened.
And this has been documented and illustrated by James Peffic Cookis at the American Enterprise Institute.
Brief timeout, much more straight ahead.
Don't go away.
Check the email during the bottom of the hour break.
How do you know, Mr. Limbaugh, these experts being used by the Associated Press are always wrong?
I read the AP reports.
Here, let me give you just an example.
From the AP story headlined by steady job gains to sustain U.S. recovery.
This is the story that predicts that the unemployment rate's going to be 7.9% by election day.
The story mentions that no president has ever been elected with an unemployment rate of 8% or above.
And they say that they've got their survey here of a bunch of economists, 32 leading economists who foresee a gradual, a gradually brighter jobs picture, despite higher gas prices, Europe's debt crisis, and a weak housing market.
Despite all that, they see a gradually brighter jobs picture.
It's a miracle.
It's wonderful.
Despite worsening economic circumstances, unemployment's going to tick.
And how do they know this is going to happen?
Because the game is rigged.
Here, this is classic.
Because they're getting sloppy.
The AP is getting so scared they're getting sloppy.
This article cites one of the leading experts, one of the leading economists.
An economist by the name of Philip Swaggle from the University of Maryland, who says in the story, quote, businesses are finally confident enough to hire and invest.
Now we just had a call yesterday from a woman who just got laid off at a construction company and a number of other people have called here who have said the businesses for which they work or the businesses they own are not hiring and are not making capital investments because they don't know what the future holds.
They're worried about Obama being re-elected.
They're worried about what's going to happen to the tax bill that they have.
They are holding on to their capital, their money.
They're not spending it, they're not hiring people.
This is just, there's no evidence for this claim from this professor.
Businesses are finally confident enough to hire and invest.
We're getting pure propaganda in the media.
None of it's believable.
And I just want to remind you of it every day, because it's an onslaught.
We're surrounded by it.
It's easy to succumb to it.
But ten paragraphs later, after Mr. Schwaggle says, a professor Swaggle, excuse me, and says businesses are finally confident enough to hire and invest.
Ten paragraphs later, the same Professor Swaggle is quoted as saying, there's still a ton of uncertainty about the future of tax and regulatory policy.
Business that might be tempted to expand say, I don't know what my taxes will be in three years.
Can I read these two quotes back to back without putting ten paragraphs between them?
Here is one of the 32 experts that the AP found to predict the unemployment rate will be below 8% on election day.
Philip Swaggle, University of Maryland.
Businesses are finally confident enough to Hire and invest.
But there's still a ton of uncertainty about the future of tax and regulatory policy.
Businesses that might be tempted to expand say, I don't know what my taxes will be in three years.
This is hilarious.
The guy just cancels himself out.
But you don't know that if you don't read ten paragraphs, not sentences, but ten paragraphs.
So again, it's just an example of what is an ongoing media smother job being performed on this whole country.
We we're literally being smothered with this propaganda.
Here, look at this story.
Have you ever heard of reverse coattails, folks?
You deal with coattails are.
Coattails are a candidate being assisted by election results elsewhere.
A vice presidential nominee can have coattails.
A president can have coattails.
A number of uh other issues on a ballot can have coattails.
People who might not care about the presidency show up to vote on a later sewer tax.
And since they're there to vote on the sewer tax, they vote on the presidency and what coattails can be defined.
But I've never heard of reverse coat, just like I'd never heard of a white Hispanic until this year.
Oh, speaking of, do you know how Elizabeth Warren knows that she's one thirty-second Indian?
High cheekbones.
Her no no kidding, her grandpappy, her grandmom, whatever had high cheekbones just like all the Indians do.
Damn right it's profiling, it's stereotyping too.
How the hell can she do it?
She's a woman.
She's a woman, she's a minority.
She can say this stuff.
You don't believe me.
All right.
Let me here, grab, grab, grab audio sound bite number 10, grab grab 10 and 11.
And I got, you know, I don't just make claims here.
We got the backup.
This is uh yesterday Braintree, Massachusetts.
Elizabeth Warren held a press conference.
This is what she said about her Native American heritage.
My Aunt B has walked by that picture at least a thousand times, remarked that he that her father, my papa, had high cheekbones, like all of the Indians do.
Because that's how she saw it, and she said, and your mother got those same great cheekbones.
And I didn't.
She thought this was the bad deal she had gotten in life.
What have I always told you about liberals?
Well, many things I know.
They categorize people.
They make moral judgments on people on the basis of surface matters.
They don't see the humanity of an individual.
They see the skin color, they see the sex, the gender, the orientation, and from there they make their judgments on people.
And here's proof of it.
She is an Indian, one thirty-second of an Indian, because her papa had high cheekbones.
And all Indians have high cheekbones.
Every one of them.
Every Indian out there has high cheekbones.
I know she denied putting this on her Harvard application.
Then she decided that she would put it on there as a means of having friends, having people like her.
Here's the that's the next soundbite.
This is uh she explains why she listed herself as being Native American in a law school directories.
I was listed because I thought I might be invited to meetings where I might meet more people who had grown up like I had grown up, and it turned out that's there really wasn't any of that.
So she lists that she's a minority, she's an Indian because she thought she might meet more people.
She might be invited to more stuff.
Obama what?
Yeah, oh yeah.
Yeah, I think that's right.
This is the woman Obama wanted to run a consumer fraud division or what have you.
But what reservation this woman grow up?
What woman's the last reservation she was at?
What's the last pack of cigarettes with no sales tax that she bought?
But this is who they are.
Oh yeah.
I am no, she's not being run out of the race.
Well, we're laughing at her.
I don't know if they're laughing at her in Massachusetts.
But but and but I tell you what they're doing.
They're, you know, Scott Brown has a daughter who is still on his health insurance plan, and they're criticizing him for that in Massachusetts.
I thought that was one of Obama's great things in the health care plan.
They said your kid can stay on your insurance plan until X26.
So they're ripping Scott Brown for keeping one of his daughters on his insurance plan.
Meanwhile, Elizabeth Warren, this is the woman who says nobody ever got anywhere on their own.
It never happened.
You rich people, if it hadn't been for everybody building the road to your factory and building your factory, uh, you wouldn't have amounted to anything.
All in here, Greg, somebody number 10 again.
I can't say it any better than she says it.
And my Aunt B has walked by that picture at least a thousand times, remarked that he that her father, my papa, had high cheekbones, like all of the Indians do.
Because that's how she saw it, and she said, and your mother got those same great cheekbones.
And I didn't.
She thought this was the bad deal she had gotten in line.
Look at how these people look all Indians have high cheekbones.
But somebody here, I lose track of she's talking about Mama, Papa, Aunt B. I don't know.
She didn't talk about Barney or Andy.
But somebody didn't get high cheekbones.
And so their life was over.
The life was ruined.
They got when the high cheekbones were being passed out.
What'd they get?
Big ears instead?
I don't know.
But it didn't work out well, and so this woman spent her life miserably because she didn't get the high cheap, but all Indians have.
Somebody needs to ask this woman, well, what characteristics do all African Americans have?
I'd love to ask her, what characteristics do all white people have?
What name one, just one characteristic, because all Indians have high cheekbones.
Did you hear her say it?
Anyway, anyway, reverse coattails.
Republican-leaning areas in states vital to Obama's re-election prospects are drawing top-tier Democrat congressional candidates who, even if they lose could help turn out the vote and boost Obama's chances of winning.
Best example, former Iowa First Lady Christy Vilsack challenging GOP Representative Steve King in Iowa 4.
Christy Vilsack, the wife of the former Tutum Governor Tom Vilsack, now Obama's agriculture secretary, moved more than a hundred miles away from her home to run in a largely rural tract of GOP heavy northern and western Iowa where Obama lost in 2008.
Tad Devine, senior advisor to John Kerry said, that race a great example of one that'll help the president.
It's going to be a strong correlation between Obama and Vilsack voters.
It's about the composition of the electorate.
So reverse coattails.
A Democrat running in a Republican district with a popular name of a former governor will somehow help Obama.
Somebody way down the ticket.
Reverse coattails.
I gotta take a break, folks.
Sit tight, coming back.
Hey, check this headline from Yahoo News.
Ready for this?
Dan Rather on George W. Bush report.
We reported a true story.
That's why I'm no longer with CBS News.
CBS News fired me for doing a true story.
Dan Rather won't give it up.
Dan Rather's still claiming that he had the goods on George W. Bush.
Which is funny, but it's also kind of sad.
Imagine how deluded you have to be to believe that the executives at CBS were out to protect a Republican president.
Can you Dan, do you realize what you are asking us to believe?
That the executives at CBS News got rid of you to protect a Republican president.
There's simply nobody gonna believe that, Dan.
But this is where the uh the new characterization of news began.
Fake but true.
The documents might have been fake.
Dan wants to break that story, but still it was true story.
But the documents were fake.
They were forged, but still the story was true.
And I think it's just hilarious that Dan Ratter's out there trying to.
I got canned because I told the truth, the CBS decided to protect a Republican president.
Okay, Junior Seyao, Junior Seao suicide.
I met Junior Sayao just one time, and it was uh one year at the Bob Hope Chrysler Classic Golf Tournament, Dean Spanos, uh the Chargers owner was playing in the tournament, and I was playing with Fuzzy Zeller and his crew that year, and we all had dinner one night after um after that day's round.
And Junior Sayao's everything everybody was saying about him.
Everything everybody is saying about him.
He was uplifting, he was funny, he was in a great mood.
Um he he kind of got in my face humorously over politics.
Uh he he was a big believer in uh government doing as much as it could to help the poor, this this kind of thing.
Uh but it was it was just uh one of these people you like being around.
So now why to explain the suicide.
I am I have to tell you, I am amazed.
I every channel I go to, there's either a sports doctor or a psychiatrist, or somebody explained it had to be all a concussions from playing in the NFL.
Just had to be.
There can't be any other reason.
Well, I did hear one other reason that he just couldn't adjust to not being in the spotlight, to not being on stage.
The football field's a huge stage.
He was a big star.
Just could not adjust to being a comparative nobody.
He didn't leave a note so nobody knows.
Here, San J gooped us on CNN so nobody heard it.
That's why I want you to play this one.
Uh he's on with Anderson Cooper uh 210 last night, which nobody saw.
So we'll play the soundbite here for you.
Anson Cooper said, Sanjay, several NFL players have committed suicide in recent years, brain-related injuries they sustained while playing have been blamed.
Impossible to know what was going on in Junior Sayo's mind at this point.
Impossible to know.
But still, what was going on in his mind?
It's impossible to know, Sanjay.
We all know it's impossible to know, but is it possible?
Even though it's impossible to know, is it possible that past head traumas could have played a role in in in Seyous taking his own life?
It's impossible to know what was going on in his mind.
But nevertheless, I want you to answer the question of why he did it.
We have enough evidence to say yes, because uh you're starting to see a pattern of exactly what you're describing here, Anderson, this idea that the previous blows to the head, uh trauma, uh, for example, sustained on a football field can accumulate over time and lead to something known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
C T E. Dave Doerson.
You remember you and I talked about him last year in 2011.
He shot himself in the chest as well.
That's a very unusual way, uh, a rare way for one to commit suicide, and it's just hard to talk about, but in Duerson's case, he had left that note that Paul was sort of alluding to, saying, I shot myself in the chest, I'd like my brain to be studied.
Dewerson's brain was studied, and in fact he did have exactly what he was concerned about.
CTE.
That was confirmed, you know, when they studied his brain.
Now, Sayao did not leave a note asking for his brain to be studied.
Already doctors are asking for the brain of Sayao to study it.
But I'm I know how many of you laughed at me when I told you some months ago that maybe not in our lifetimes, but it's gonna be close.
Somebody is seriously going to suggest banning game Of football.
You can see we're heading in that direction.
Now, every suicide is due to the game.
The game is killing people.
That's already been established here.
So what's next, folks, when liberals in charge?
Holding here in my formerly nicotine stained fingers in my left hand.
For those of you on the Ditto Cam, the new flavor of two if by tea to be announced later today on this program.
New label, and it has me not on a horse as Rush Revere, but in a plane.
Export Selection