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Jan. 25, 2013 - Rush Limbaugh Program
37:48
January 25, 2013, Friday, Hour #2
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Hi, folks.
Greetings.
Great to have you here.
Rushland Boy Ever Attentive.
Paying attention 120% of the time, all the time on Friday.
Live from the Southern Command in sunny South Florida.
It's open line Friday.
Rayo, here's the telephone number if you want to be on the program 800-282-2882.
The email address, illrushbo at EIBNet.com.
And it's Friday, which means that whatever you want to talk about in Hunky Dory, My Name Dandy does not have to be anything that I particularly care about.
I do want to reiterate something.
By the way, grab Sunbay number nine.
Have it ready.
Numbers can get confusing on the radio.
This story about the penalty on smokers that kicks in one year from now, Obamacare.
I mentioned that, and the story says it's an AP story, 55-year-old person that smokes.
The penalty will be $4,250 a year.
That penalty, so there's no misunderstanding, is added to your already existing health insurance premium, whatever that is.
The penalty is $4,000.
If you smoke, there's a smoker's penalty, $4,200.
For a person of 55, that's what they average out what the premium would be.
Then calculate the penalty.
For somebody 60 years old, the older you are, the higher your premium is going to be.
Therefore, the higher your penalty.
So a 60-year-old might end up paying a penalty or will end up $5,100 on top of.
Now, a lot of you were saying, well, so what?
I don't smoke.
And hell with smokers.
None of smokers are among the most hated people in our country, even though I think they deserve a medal.
I think smokers deserve national gratitude.
The sales tax revenue from cigarette sales is funding child health care.
Cigarette smokers are abused.
They are shunned.
They are discriminated against.
They're true second, third-class citizens.
There has been a genuine hatred ginned up against smokers.
It's not enough that you might disagree with what they do.
You see somebody smoking other than in a movie.
If you've seen a movie, it looks kind of cool.
If you see a TV, hey, it looks kind of cool.
You see somebody light up near a restaurant.
You're going to, you just hate them.
You get mad because this has been the objective.
And yet, these people continue to put up with the abuse if they're told they can only smoke in sub-freezing weather outdoors in the wintertime.
They do it.
It's them.
It is they who are primarily funding a couple of children's health care programs.
So you say, well, I don't care.
I don't smoke.
Hell with them.
They deserve it.
They're stupid.
What happens?
See, Obamacare has limitless power.
What happens if the Department of Health and Human Services wants to attach a similar penalty to people overweight?
Not obese, just overweight.
There's nothing stopping them from doing it.
There's nothing in Obamacare that stops them.
Obamacare is wide open.
So it may be that they go after smokers first and you say, I don't care.
That's cool.
But then if you're overweight.
Or some other thing that they think you shouldn't be.
Some other way you live that you shouldn't do.
That they say, okay, we're going to penalize you.
Your health care premium just got a penalty.
Nothing stopping them from doing this.
Linebacker, Baltimore Ravens.
I hope I pronounce his last name right.
Brendan Ayanbedeo has long been an advocate for gay rights and gay marriage.
And he's a little unique.
He's an athlete who has joined a political cause.
As we've discussed on many occasions, athletes stay away from this stuff.
Athletes earn a lot of money.
I don't know if this guy does, but a lot of them earn money via endorsements.
So you don't want to anger a segment of the population.
Well, Brendan, it's either Ian or Ayan Bedeo, has decided to hell with it.
And he got hold of some people in me.
He said, how can I help my cause with all the media attention that we're going to be getting during the Super Bowl?
How can I help advance and further the cause of gay marriage in connection with the Super Bowl?
This is according to a New York Times columnist, Frank Bruni.
And you may pronounce it Brunei.
It's B-R-U-N-I.
According to this guy in the New York Times, Ayan Bedeo awoke early Monday morning after they had beat the Patriots and he wrote an email message to Brian Elner, a leading marriage equality advocate with whom he had worked before, and Michael Skolnick, the political director for Russell Simmons, a hip-hop mogul who has become involved in many issues.
And the Ravens linebacker said, anything I can do for marriage equality or anti-bullying over the next couple weeks to harness the Super Bowl media?
He woke up at 3.40 in the morning with this idea.
And he was on the radio in Baltimore yesterday talking about this.
For me personally, I just see it as a human rights issue.
It's not gay rights.
It's just equal rights.
It's just human rights.
And whether it's suffrage or, you know, go back to slavery or segregation, gay rights, it's all the same thing to me.
I've gotten a lot of scrutiny.
I'm officially known as the ambassador, the gay ambassador.
Gay ambassador in, and he's not gay.
I don't think.
Not that that matters.
I don't think he is.
So I just want to alert you that the NFL, which doesn't want anything to do with politics, ESPN, nothing to do with politics in sports, is going to make – and you watch because this issue, Gay Marriage, is a huge 18 to 24 young people issue.
It's going to be all over the place now.
I guarantee you, you're not going to be able.
My prediction is you're not going to be able to escape it.
So grab, I want to go back in soundbite order to Frank Rich, 7 and 8.
You just heard Brendan Ayanbedeo, linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens.
It's a human rights issue.
Not gay rights.
It's a human issue.
Equal rights.
You know, whether it's suffrage, you go back to slavery, segregation, gay rights, it's all the same thing to me.
Yeah, I've gotten a lot of scrutiny.
I'm officially known as the ambassador, the gay ambassador.
Oh, and he did say that instead of going to Disneyland after the game, if the Ravens win, he wants to go on Ellen's show and dance with her.
The linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens dying to go on Ellen DeGeneres' show and dance with her.
So it's gay rights.
It's suffrage.
It's human rights.
It's slavery.
And I'm sure that's how this young man's been taught.
I'm sure it's how he's been educated to equate gay rights with whatever you see in the movie Lincoln.
So, Frank Rich, last night on Piers Morgan tonight on CNN.
Frank Rich used to be at the New York Times now.
He's at New York.
Piers Morgan said, is it just me?
Am I basically not wise enough to America to understand why it's apparently not an infringement on the Second Amendment to ban automatic weapons, but it is to ban an AR-15 that can fire 100 bullets in a minute?
See, these guys are caught up in the totally irrelevant, meaningless aspect.
There's no such thing as an assault rifle anyway.
You and I are blue in the face.
But I want you to hear Frank Rich's answer to Piers Morgan.
Look at Frank.
Do I not know what I'm talking about here?
Am I so unattached to America that people don't understand these weapons we're talking about are mass killers and we not think we should have them?
There's no real logic to this sort of Second Amendment argument, although it's so deeply ingrained in the American character.
It's almost a religious thing.
So trying to apply logic to these arguments, they make no sense.
It's just they're coming to take away our guns.
It's an infringement on our rights.
The state, particularly, I guess, this particular president, are going to come and get us.
And the Founding Fathers wanted this.
The Founding Fathers wanted slavery, too.
I think that in some ways this gun culture is entrenched in the American psyche of slavery.
You see how this works, folks?
You who have an appreciation for the Constitution, the Second Amendment, and you who are concerned about the proper thing in all this, which is liberty and freedom.
This is not about guns.
These people going after your guns are not going after your guns.
They're going after your liberty and freedom.
And this is what you instinctively know.
The Piers Morgans and the other junkheads out there, it's no different than the people who know what they're talking about, the leadership level of the climate change.
They're not really talking about climate change.
They're talking about freedom and liberty and taking some of it away.
And that's just the vehicle for it by virtue of an expanded government.
And it's all rooted, again, in the fact that you don't know how to live your life.
You're not responsible enough.
You're not smart enough.
You don't have the right kind of compassion.
And now, look, you probably supported slavery, too.
This is what they're saying.
Second Amendment, you know, the Constitution, these founding fathers, this is what Frank Rich just said.
If founding fathers, they wanted it, they would believe in slavery.
Well, that Second Amendment is just, it's just some ways that gun culture is just as entrenched as slavery is.
Founding Fathers, a bunch of reprobates.
They believe in slavery, guns.
And so the people today who are very concerned about the erosion of their liberty are said to really be nothing more than supporters of slavery because that's the same thing.
That's what the founding fathers are really doing.
And these are the smart people.
These are the ruling class.
These are the elites.
These are the people in academia teaching your kids.
And you just heard how it works.
You get this linebacker for the Ravens, Brendan Ayambideo.
Oh, yeah.
Gay rights.
It's not gay rights.
It's human rights.
And I've got to fix this.
I'm going to use the media attention I get at the Super Bowl.
Don't care whether it's suffrage or go back to slavery or segregation, gay rights, all the same to me.
So, Brendan Iambedale, 25-year-old linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens, I think he's 25, is now equating whatever opposition there is to gay marriage to people who wanted slavery and you who still want slavery, and that's why you want your guns.
He believes it's what he's been taught by people like Frank Rich.
And this is how the cycle happens.
This is how a 25-year-old linebacker for the Ravens ends up believing the things that he believes.
And it's how he ends up thinking that he's got a moral superiority about it.
Not only is he right, but he's way ahead of the game where you're concerned.
He's got morality on his side.
He's got righteous morality on his side.
You are a backward, old-fashioned, gun-toting, slave-supporting, anti-women's vote type guy.
And that's who he's speaking out against.
He hasn't the slightest idea what his advocacy is really all about.
He has no idea how and why he was educated the way he is.
He's been led to believe that his position is morally superior to yours and everybody else, and enlightened.
He is light years ahead of you.
You're just stuck back in the old-fashioned times opposing gay marriage.
You may as well be against women voting.
You may as well be for slavery.
You really can't blame him.
That's what he's been taught.
One more from Frank Rich.
Piers Morgan said, well, you know, I watched Lincoln the other day.
By the way, this Lincoln movie, this Lincoln movie is the prism through which every liberal sees the world right now.
So basically, every liberal is seeing the world through the eyes of Steven Spielberg, not Lincoln.
Anyway, what's his name?
Morgan.
I watched Lincoln the other day, the movie, incredibly hard for Lincoln to abolish slavery in America.
He really went on to live.
He really made a lot of deals.
He had to do a lot of things that he disagreed with.
He had to really make a lot of compromise.
I've got sick in the face listening to all this.
Anyway, question to Frank Rich.
The people in the Red States, Democrats, are more worried about kicked out of office by the NRA and other lobbyists going after them than they are about doing the right thing for the safety of Americans.
Keep in mind about Lincoln.
It's a very interesting analogy because Lincoln took a while to get there to look at the end of slavery as a crucial issue.
And he couldn't have gotten there without support, starting with, of course, from slaves and African Americans who were already taking matters into their own hands to the extent they could.
In the case of the gun debate, there's no real support except among people like us.
There's no real support for gun control, Piers, except among people like you and me.
The rest of the country, Piers, is against us.
And a bunch of idiots, Piers.
You know it, and I know it.
And we need a Lincoln right now to tell all these blockheads what's what.
I mean, this question that he asked.
What I'm concerned about with this debate is already you're hearing a number of Democrats in red states are more worried about kicking out of office by the NRA than safety for the American people.
I mean, it's just comical to listen to the abject, proudly raise your hand high in the air ignorance of people like Piers Morgan.
I got to take a break.
Phones next.
Yeah, it's just too bad that Abraham Lincoln did not have an armed guard with him at Ford's Theater.
Isn't it?
How would history be different today if Abraham Lincoln had had an armed guard?
Do you know the story of the Pinkerton Detective Agency?
It's a fascinating story, if I've got it right.
Lincoln was under threat of assassination after he was elected.
They disguised Lincoln as an aged, old, decrepit woman, put him on a train with a doctor, apparently a doctor.
It was actually some guy named Pinkerton.
And they had to get Lincoln to Washington for his inauguration under cover.
He just rode among the passengers on a train, but he was decked out as some very sick and decrepit woman that nobody wanted to get anywhere near, leaving odd-looking, deformed woman.
They did it up well.
And I think, doing this off the top of my head, the gentleman who traveled with him was Thomas Pinkerton.
And that obviously begot the Pinkerton Security Agency and so forth.
I think I've got that right.
So it's from a movie, so that could be some exaggeration in the story.
Anyway, Maria in Margate, New Jersey, we're starting with you on the phone.
It's great to have you here on the EIB network.
Hello.
Hi, Rush.
Make a 21st anniversary ditto the one I've been listening to you.
Thank you so much for taking my call.
You bet.
I was just calling because I heard you talking about Hurricane Sandy and how they're telling us everything's good.
We're all recovered.
My house still has no power.
Maria, it's not going to be torn down.
Maria, Maria, wait, it's not that they're saying everything's fine, that they're not saying anything.
I just assumed they had the concert.
Christy met with the president.
Cuomo said that he'd never seen any better response.
It couldn't have been happier with the attention the president has been giving the region.
And there hasn't been anything in the news about it.
Now, I see today that all these people, you don't have heat and running water and gasoline and stuff.
I was shocked because I literally thought that it was done in the past, fixed, and everybody moved on.
Rush, if I wrote a book about all the fraud, the waste, the abuse, the lies, everything, I could feel Atlas shrugged.
By who?
I mean, who?
Before the storm.
Who's fraud and waste?
The government, you mean?
Government and just people who've taken advantage, people that are stealing things out of drop boxes and calling FEMA and saying people have insurance calling FEMA and saying they had these big losses and FEMA cuts them a check.
You're kidding.
Like I said, I could take your whole three hours and then stop telling you all.
I've not heard a word of this.
Oh, it's happening.
It's happening.
I haven't heard a word about FEMA.
I just assumed that the power was back on and that everybody thus had heat.
And Gastly said, that's why I was stunned today when I saw this story.
And the concert and the Red Cross and everything.
I called the people that had the concert asking where the proceeds were going.
And they said, not to individuals, to nonprofits.
I've called the Red Cross.
I've called the United Way because we didn't know what to do when we first found out we were homeless.
And they all said, well, you're not on enough government assistance to become on the priority list.
So we had to wait for shelter.
Wait a minute.
What do you mean money from the concert?
The concert itself was supposed to fix it.
What do you mean money from the concert?
They did the concert.
We had all these people up there who cared, and they sang songs, and the next day it was supposed to be a lot better.
I don't know.
I'm just sorry, Maria.
I thought it was better.
That concert that they did, headlined by the boss, Bruce Springstein, and the guys netted $30 million.
$30 million, the concert for Hurricane Sandy.
Well, I figure $30 million.
And we have not had one story about corruption in the cleanup effort.
Well, our last caller was describing some, but there haven't been any media reports of any corruption like we had for a full year after Hurricane Katrina.
I remember Wolf Blitzer.
I think it was Wolf Blitzer in the Katrina aftermath.
It might have been Shep Smith.
I don't know.
I get him confused.
But Shep Smith openly wondered why so many of the victims of Hurricane Katrina were African American.
Well, we haven't seen any stories in the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy about why so many victims are white.
We haven't seen anything about victims at all.
Not since the week before the election.
Look, I'm not trying to make you all in the Northeast feel bad.
I'm just, I'm telling you, I'm genuinely shocked when I saw the story today about how many of you, millions of you, still don't have power or running water.
Therefore, you don't have heat and a cold snap.
And I didn't know.
I guess I don't know what difference it makes now.
The election's over.
The immaculation has taken place.
So what difference does it make?
Jerome Bojer.
Jerome Bojer, National.
Run a little test here.
Brian, do you know the name Jerome Bojer?
You don't?
Okay, get ready.
Jerome Bojer has been named the referee for the Super Bowl.
Jerome Bojer, not that it matters.
I'm just a believer in all information possible, is African American.
It turns out that a whole lot of over 100 NFL officials are really upset about this.
There is a couple stories about this one on the NBC Pro Football blog.
Several officials told Eric Adelson of Yahoo Sports that they believe the league office first decided it wanted to give the game to Jerome Bojer and then changed his grades so that he would come out as the top referee in the league for the season and therefore earn the assignment.
In other words, the allegation is out there that Bojer did not have a good year as a ref, that he had a lot of demerits, if you will.
The officials are rated every week.
And the thought is that the league, for some reason, I don't know what it would be, wanted Jerome Bojer to ref the game.
And because they didn't eat, and apparently, I'm just telling you what's being reported.
Here's a quote from an official in this story.
It's disheartening.
And you never think at this level that it would happen.
The NFL, the creme de la creme.
You wouldn't think this kind of stuff would happen.
But it's the individuals running the show, i.e., the league office, who have created this mess.
If you talk to 121 officials, there'll be 100 plus who say the system is horrendous.
So the allegation is out there that Jerome Boger, the league wanted Jerome Bojer.
I have no idea why.
Couldn't possibly guess.
The league wants Jerome Bojer, but he didn't grade sufficiently well to earn the assignment.
And so other people are alleging that the league went back in and gave him better grades than he actually had earned so that he would earn the assignment.
So here, folks, it's just another slash at the end of.
I don't know if any of this is true.
I'm just telling you what's out there in the news today.
So you got the family of Junior Sayo suing for the fact that nobody told Junior he could get hurt playing the game.
And anybody else that played.
They never told them they could get brain injuries, never told them that they could get hurt.
They hid that from all the players.
All these players and playing this game never knew that they could get injured.
So you got that lawsuit.
You got thousands of other NFL players in a class action lawsuit saying the same thing.
And you got this Jerome Boger thing now.
I don't mean to pick, look, folks, I didn't write the story.
It's just out there.
And there are, oh, and then they got these two guys, Tim Brown and Jerry Rice, accusing the coach of the Raiders, throwing the Super Bowl 10 years ago.
That the Bucs really weren't going to win that game.
That Bill Callahan, the coach threw it, sabotaged his own team.
Now, this story at NBC, the blog there says, in fairness to Jerome Boger, should be noted that we don't know if these anonymous officials have an axe to grind themselves.
And if it's really true that more than 100 referees think that the grading system is broken, then the officials themselves deserve some of the blame because they voted to ratify the current collective bargaining agreement at the end of their lockout in September.
Spokesman for the NFL told Yahoo there's no merit to the suggestion that Jerome Boger's grades retreated differently from those of any other official.
But it's clear that the other officials, the 100 other officials, don't believe that.
No, I don't know.
I have no idea why the league would want to pick one official over any other to referee the game.
I have no clue.
I couldn't possibly tell you that.
Here's John in Corsicana, Texas.
Great to have you on Open Line Friday.
Hi.
Hey, Rush, longtime listener, and I'm honored to speak to you.
Thank you very much, sir.
We deal a lot with disaster relief.
I started in it in 1967.
We began the Southern Baptist work in 1970.
And let me tell you, I have never seen a government that could put a bean on a plate.
It's your faith-based organizations that come in after a disaster that get into the nitty-gritty of the personal work.
I love that.
You've never seen a government that could have put a bean on a plate.
So you say it's the private sector groups that come in after disasters and really get the nitty-gritty done.
Oh, yeah.
Red Cross, of course, is the first responder.
And then Salvation Army, which is the religious group, is a second major responder.
Southern Baptists are the third largest responder.
We have 1,500 units and 85,000 trained volunteers.
Yeah, yeah.
And we do most of the cooking for Red Cross wagons that go out there and deliver stuff.
Well, what group are you?
What group are you with?
I'm with the Texas Baptist Men.
Oh, okay.
So that's Texas Baptist Men.
That's when you say we deal in disaster relief.
That's your group.
Yeah.
Well, had you?
Under the Southern Baptist Convention is the organization that's overall.
Okay.
And we do international disaster relief as well as domestic.
You guys take guns to your disaster relief shifts?
No.
No, but when I was working in Iran, I saw an awful lot of the wrong end of AK-47.
I bet.
You worked in Iran?
What do you mean you worked in Iran?
What did you do there?
Well, during the Dead of the Storm, I was in the mountains of Iran working with the Kurdish people.
Were you military or were you over there in humanitarian efforts?
A humanitarian effort.
And you had your gun with you then.
No, I didn't have gun either.
He's from Texas.
He's from the South.
Disaster relief.
You can imagine if I asked him about slavery.
Do you still believe in North Korea quite a bit?
Also, go ahead.
Do you still believe in slavery?
No, absolutely not.
Really?
A lot of people surprised at that.
Well, okay.
John, had you heard anything?
I'm serious.
It's three months since that hurricane hit the Northeast.
Have you heard anything in the news about power not being restored yet?
Not in the news.
But FEMA has to work through contractors locally.
And the contractors, for instance, one contractor had to wait two hours for a union carpenter to do a 15-minute job on a house.
Yeah.
So they're being held up that way.
So basically, FEMA really doesn't do anything.
They need to subcontract everything, right?
Right.
That's right.
So it's the subcontractor's fault that nothing got done.
It's not the government's fault.
I know some of them, and they're working as hard as they can, but they're limited by the work rules.
Right.
So you don't take your gun to disaster relief like after Hurricane Katrina and you don't believe in slavery?
No.
Okay.
Good.
Just checking.
I worked in Bosnia, Serbia, Herzlovia.
I worked in North Korea.
And I never take a gun.
Don't need one.
I think it's as close to heaven from wherever I am as it is from Dallas.
Well, God bless you.
And I appreciate your call.
Thanks very much, John.
I appreciate it.
You're welcome.
You're praying for data in our family.
Thank you.
I really do appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
We'll take a brief timeout and be right back.
Don't go away.
Okay, here's the latest on the Jerome Bojer situation.
Jerome Bojer, an African, in fact, he will be the second African-American official to referee the Superbike.
Mike Carey was first.
Wild guess, but I think it was Mike Carey, who is a great official.
But the controversy is at Jerome Bojer did not grade out high enough to win this assignment.
And this allegation is being made by other officials in a Yahoo sports story.
These other officials are upset that Bojer got it.
They claim that his grades were revised upward after the fact by the league.
No, I have no idea why the league would want to put Bojer in there over anybody else.
How can anybody possibly know that?
What possible reason could anybody come up with to explain that?
Anyway, the league is saying, no, we didn't go in after the fact and change Jerome Bojer's grades.
Now the league is saying, wait a minute, the top graded official does not always get the Super Bowl.
That's something misunderstood by people.
It's not true that the highest graded referee every season gets the Super Bowl assignment.
So plot is thickening on this story as details come out.
I don't know if you heard about this.
There's a guy who lives in Pendleton, Indiana.
His name is Ray Fox.
He's just an average, ordinary, run-of-the-mill football fan.
And he had an idea.
He went out and made some t-shirts and hats with the word Harbowl in honor of the two Harball guys as the head coaches.
He did this actually last year.
He went out and made some t-shirts and hats with the word Harbowl, and then he wanted to sell them for extra cash in case it ever happened.
Well, it has happened.
And the National Football League has sent its army of lawyers out to Roy Fox's house and told him he'd better not do this or they're going to sue him into oblivion.
NFL lawyers threaten costly legal battles and thus have pressured poor Roy Fox, just an ardent fan, into abandoning his trademark.
The NFL says, you can't trademark Harbaughl.
We own that.
Well, we should own it.
You can't.
And under the threat of big-time corporate legal pressure, Roy Fox gave up the trademark early this season.
See, this is the kind of stuff he had this average, ordinary American run-of-the-mill guy, ardent fan, probably drinks Bud Light, maybe smear no face, sits there every Sunday on his couch, loves the NFL, probably can't afford to go to a game, and there probably isn't one in Pendleton.
Indianapolis would be the closest.
Who knows?
Anyway, just he wanted to make some Harball stuff.
And it comes in evil, mean, selfish, greedy corporation.
Everybody knows corporations aren't people, and this proves it.
So you go out there and they tell this guy, you can't come up with that term.
We're going to come up with it.
We're the NFL.
Harbull is us.
You can't infringe.
Super Bowl is trademarked.
There is no such thing as the Harbowl, and we're not going to let you create it.
The little guy constantly gets shot down in this country by major big-time corporations, which aren't people.
It's not fair.
Poor old Roy Fox never got a fair shot, never got a fair break.
Certainly, there's no balance here.
I have no clue.
I don't know.
Here's Eric, Bloomington, Delaware.
You're next on Open Line Friday.
Hi.
That's Wilmington, Delaware.
Wilmington?
Yes, sir.
Sorry about that.
I didn't think there was a Bloomington there, but I took a shot anyway.
My comment today is that we should have a, like Michael Moore and all them put movies out there that, you know, tear down our people and our causes and stuff.
We should have a couple movies out there right now.
One on Benghazi and have Glenn Close or Hillary channel Glenn Close in it.
And also, we should have another movie on the life and times of Obama where he Frank Marshall as his mentor, the high school days of the Chung, and his college days, and also his dealings with Reverend Wright trying to bribe him $150,000.
So you think all in movies.
You think doing a movie about all this would be a great way of getting the message out?
Yes, to the low-information voter because they like docudramas, and they sit there and they watch those things.
So that's my comment.
Okay.
Well, it's, I don't know, about the Glenn Close Frank Marshall with the Ven Benghazi movie.
Now, there's potential there.
I mean, we've had The Hurt Locker, Zero Dark 30, about how Obama single-handedly got Vin Laddie.
Of course, that movie doesn't say that, but do a movie on Benghazi.
I kind of like that.
I don't know what difference it makes now.
A knockdown drag out brawl.
A full-fledged fight broke out at the food stamp office in East St. Louis, Illinois.
We have the details coming up as Open Line Friday continues unabated.
Fastest three hours in media.
The next one coming right around the corner.
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