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Nov. 11, 2013 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:56
November 11, 2013, Monday, Hour #1
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Welcome to today's edition of the Rush 247 podcast.
Yeah, I thought it might work out this way.
I had a little fun on Friday.
Oh, you got them.
They just came in.
All right.
Well, open a dudes up and bring them in here.
You don't have to open them now, Snurgley.
We got a we got a program here.
Well, I'm not going to take any calls.
Go ahead and open them up.
Because I'm not going to be taking any calls in the next half hour and open them up.
Every day is an adult Christmas here for me, folks.
L. Rushball, the EIB Network, Limbo Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
Hope you had a great weekend.
On Friday, I uh I thought I'd have a little fun with something just to see what would happen.
Just to see what would happen.
And I don't know that we've learned anything substantively, but we might have an indication.
By the way, phone number if you want to be on the program is 800-282-288-2.
Now let's go back.
Uh what?
During the Ted Cruz effort, the Ted Cruz and Mike Lee effort to defund or delay or repeal Obamacare.
The Republican establishment was at odds with Senator Cruz, if you'll recall.
They said, look, this thing is just going to implode.
All we've got to do is stand aside and get out of the way.
It can't possibly work.
It's too convoluted.
It's too complex.
It's too big, and it's being run by the government.
There's no way it can work.
Just we don't have to do anything.
Just stand aside.
And they threw out the old adage that when your enema is uh enemy is committing suicide, you just stand out of the way and let it happen.
There's a variation of that uh on talk radio.
When you have a caller that's a fun idiot, stand out of the way and let it happen.
You know, you don't offer any assistance because you don't need to.
So I um I detected I detected a change in the establishment's view of Obamacare at last week, middle of last week, when uh all of these cancellations started happening, and Obama had to go out there and and apologize.
He didn't really, we dealt with that.
He apologized that you feel the way you feel.
He apologized that that that uh but he's not changing anything.
Well, he might not.
Might give an opportunity to play Santa Claus, but get to that in a second.
So I thought what I would do is take a position on Friday that agreed with a two or three-week old establishment Republican theory.
Because there was talk about the Republicans agreeing to delaying the individual mandate.
Now that it's such a mess, and they can't possibly get this website fixed by the end of the year.
There was talk in establishment Republican circles.
Well, you know, let's let's just because uh help the Democrats, not help them, but it would end up helping them.
Let's just delay the individual mandate.
Because somebody said if you do if that's the guts of Obamacare, if you delay the individual mandate, you're stripping the guts out of it.
But you're not if you're just delaying it.
And if you're delaying it in the midst of this nightmare.
I mean, this is exactly what they said they wanted to happen, right?
Get out of the way.
Obama's committing political suicide.
The Democrats are committing suicide.
This thing doesn't work.
People are losing their doctors, they're losing their insurance.
They are learning Obama lied to them.
And then all of a sudden the Democrats start, the Republicans start talking about how, well, well, let's let's let's agree maybe we need to delay this, which would only help the Democrats.
It would solve their problem.
Delaying the individual individual mandate now, after all of this disaster has struck.
So I thought that I would assume the position of the establishment, albeit three weeks ago.
So on Friday, it's audio soundbite number one.
This is what I said right here on the EIB network.
It would be a gross error to delay the individual man.
I think I think what the Republican Party said.
Don't do anything, Ted.
Leave it alone.
It's going to implode.
All right, fine.
Do not let them delay this mandate.
Do not go along with that.
You make everybody live with this debacle.
Exactly.
It's a Democrat debacle.
It's now starting to implode.
The establishment establishment said, Ted, don't do anything.
It's going to implode.
Let's just sit back and watch it.
Starts to implode, and then there's talk about delaying the mandate.
So I thought I would agree with the establishment, just see what happened.
And it I'm told I didn't hear anything over the weekend, because I didn't turn on the news.
I never do on the weekend, short of a nuclear detonation somewhere.
I I just don't.
I don't learn anything from it anymore.
You know, I I start prep on Sunday night.
So, but I'm told Cookie told me that this is creating a lot of buzz out there because this position I took happens to agree with the establishment.
Well, I don't know about the buzz.
I'll trust her if she says there's buzz out there that the pundit class will be buzzing about it than they are.
So this morning, on the Fox News channel, Martha McCallum brought in Jonah Goldberg, who oftentimes will tell you what the establishment thinks.
He's at National Review.
And Martha McCallum played that soundbite for Jonah and said, What do you think, Jonah?
At the national level, I'm very sympathetic to that, but it's also very difficult to ask a lot of congressmen and senators who didn't vote for this bill to tell their constituents, well, you just got to suck it up.
This thing is overturning your life.
It is costing you an enormous amount of money, it's sending your family into chaos, you're not going to have health insurance, and we Republicans need to teach the American people a lesson about how bad Obama is, so we're not going to do anything.
That's a hard political message for Republicans to sell.
Ted Cruz had said during the shutdown that he thought it would be immoral and outrageous to punish the American people just to show how bad Obamacare is.
All right.
Now, I've not a real big deal here, but I just uh I wanted to do a little test.
I want to see if if I adopted the position of the establishment, I wanted to see what the establishment would do.
And I don't know how representative of the establishment Jonah is.
Um but here it it appears from this comment that there's no there's no taste now for letting it implode because letting implode would hurt people.
Well, what's different today than a month ago?
If it was going to implode a month ago and it started imploding, why a month ago was it okay for it to implode and by definition cause pain and suffering, but now we can't let that pain and suffering happen because we can't we can't make the American people pay the price for learning how bad Obamacare is.
So why were they ever in favor of this?
I mean, is the establishment changing their opinion because I've agreed with them and they don't want me on their side?
Is it that they never had any stomach for letting it implode in the first place?
It was just something to say to oppose Ted Cruz.
But nevertheless, and again, I don't don't anybody out there start sending Jonah Goldberg email.
I don't know, I'm not, I'm not suggesting that Jonah is a is a card-carrying member of the of the Republican establishment.
Although National Review, in many instances, does adopt the GOP line on things.
Uh they're not as often as they used to be conservative first, GOP establishment first sometimes defines them.
Depends on the issue.
But I just have a little trick to play just to see what would uh what would happen.
And it is an interesting concept, is it not?
I mean, here we are in the middle of it imploding, Obama's embarrassed, he had to go on and apologize.
Look at the approval numbers.
Two different polls now have Obama at 41%.
A third poll has him at 37.
The um center for the people and the press, they bury their lead here, by the way, in a sense, uh, Because this is the worst approval rating Obama's ever had in their poll.
And his, by the way, this is another thing they bury.
Obama at 41% is exactly where George W. Bush was at this point in time in his second term.
And they don't talk about that.
They don't mention anything.
Drive-by's were shouting from the rooftops every time Bush lost a single point.
We've played for you at that soundbite, one of our all-time top ten favorites of Wolf Blitzer, telling the CNN audience for three straight hours, multiple times an hour that Bush's number had fallen to 36%.
So Obama, now here's here's the way the Pew Center writes this.
Barack Obama's had a difficult year since his re-election victory.
His overall job rating stands at 41%, down 14 points since last December.
A majority, 53%, now disapprove of the way he's handling his gig.
A latest national poll by the Pew Research Center, conducted October 30th and November 6, 2003 adults, finds that Obama's second-term job ratings have followed a similar downward trajectory as those of his predecessor, George W. Bush.
A year after his re-election, 36% approved of Bush's job.
It's funny, it's not being talked about the same way, though.
Yeah, Bush's approval number down to Obama approval number to 41%.
Next story.
Obama approval rate down to 41%.
Obama's got big plans to save health care.
That's the next story.
I mean, they're not hyping it.
They are reporting it, but they're not pounding it like they did uh Bush's Bush's number.
And it's not just the Pew Center for people in the press.
The NBC Wall Street Journal poll, the identical number.
41% of Americans view Obama in a positive light.
In a Wall Street Journal NBC News poll, 45% holding a negative impression of him.
That marked Obama's all-time low as president in their poll, and the first time more people saw him negatively than positively.
Well the NBC, the NBC poll.
I didn't read it far enough to know if they if they personal likability numbers up.
I didn't, I didn't uh I wouldn't be surprised if their poll shows that he's personally likable.
I mean, that's the trick here.
Anyway, so you got two polls at Bush of Obama at 41%, and they're reported, and they're plummeting, they're falling, the numbers are going fast, and it was it's the Gallup poll had him at 37 last week.
It's kind of a ho hummer.
And it's all because of Obama here.
By the way, folks, you know, last week had a bunch of Democrat senators troop up there to meet Obama in the White House.
Remember that big meeting?
And it wasn't because Chris Christie won, and they're worried about that.
Had nothing to do with that, folks.
Nothing whatsoever.
It had to do with Obamacare and Virginia and how they thought they were going to be winning that in a landslide.
So we're back to what opened the hour.
What should the GOP do?
What do you want?
Obamacare's imploding.
It is hurting people.
People, let me here's the thing about this that I would say Jonah Goldberg.
It doesn't matter.
Everybody's going to get hurt by this if it is fully implemented and as it is now the law of the land, it stays that way.
Everybody's going to get hurt by this.
Or the vast majority, not just eight or nine million, and not just 15%.
Everybody's going to be negatively impacted by this.
But I'm just, I'm just struck here because three weeks a month ago, when Ted Cruz was out there trying to marshal support for defunding this thing or delaying it, the establishment will say, oh no, no, no, no, no, no.
We just won't do anything.
It's going to implode.
This thing is horrible.
Just get out of the way, let it happen.
Now that it is imploding, it appears that there's not the stomach for letting that happen.
Because the establishment thinks, well, it's not a good lesson for the American people to have to suffer and be in great pain just to learn how bad Obama cared.
Why not if they voted for it?
We can't protect them from being in pain anyway.
That's that's the whole government can't do that.
Government doesn't care.
Government coerces.
I gotta take a break.
I could get on that riff again and take the next 25 minutes.
Sit tight, my friends.
We'll be back.
Don't go away.
And we're back, Rush Limbaugh, America's real anchor man.
Real truth detector, the famous and well-known doctor of democracy.
Here behind the golden EIB microphone.
You know this pews center for people in the press poll.
Also found that Obama is losing independence in droves.
Obama is losing the precious independence, and that's why independence aren't precious anymore.
You independents, your salad days are gone.
The Democrats, if you don't vote for them, they're not going to make anything special.
You're just the latest group of dorks.
Romney won the independence big.
Uh Cucinelli won the independence.
Remember that old saw what the Democrat consultants always used to tell the Republicans and they would believe it?
I'll never be.
You know, folks, this is worth mentioning again.
The Republican Party gets tricked so easily.
They get tricked into not criticizing Obama.
They get tricked into not being for what they should be for, and they even get tricked into campaigning for only 20% of the vote.
Ever since I've been dabbling in this, I've heard every year that you don't win unless you get the independence.
You have got to win the independence.
Base are going to vote for you.
A Democrat base going to vote for it.
And so the consultants go to all these Republican candidates and sell themselves on the ability, I'm the guy that can get you the independence.
And what do they do?
They turn these candidates into squishy linguini-spined moderates.
On the theory that's how you get the independence.
Another thing we're always told, do not criticize Obama.
Do not criticize Democrats.
Do not raise your voice.
The independents don't like that.
Remember?
If you do that, if you raise your voice, if you criticize Obama, the independents are going to run in droves to the Democrats because they don't like all this bickering.
Now the Democrats can call us terrorists and rapists and murderers and muggers, and that doesn't ever seem to bother the independents.
But if we criticize Democrats, so the Republicans have been tricked into shutting up.
And every four years they've been tricked into campaigning for 20% of the voting public.
The independence.
And they're winning the independence, and they're losing elections.
You know why?
Because they are abandoning their base.
And the assumption is the base is always going to be with you.
The Tea Party not the case.
So Obama is losing big.
I mean, in this pew poll, only 32% of independents approve of Obama's job performance.
Sixty one percent of independents disapprove.
He's losing them.
And so you don't hear about the independence anymore, do you?
You don't hear the media tell Republicans what to do and how to do it regarding the independent.
You don't hear about them at all, because since they've abandoned Obama, they don't matter anymore.
The independence, you pray I know who you are, and you independents know who you are, and you were made to feel special by the media.
You were portrayed as the really smart people.
You weren't ideologues.
You decided things issue by issue.
You had open minds, not closed minds.
You weren't bigots like the Tea Party.
No, no, no, no.
You independents, you were the cream of the crop until you stopped voting for Democrats.
Now you're dirt.
Now you're scum.
Now you're not even worth being talked about because you are abandoning Obama.
So I'm telling you, nothing special about you independent anymore.
And the word that will be used to replace independence is moderates now.
Because the trick must continue.
Even though the independents now are siding against Obama.
And that means usually with Republicans, but not always, but at least they're turning on Obama.
Well, the trick must continue to be played on the Republicans.
And now moderates will replace independents.
And the Republicans will be told you're not going to win anything unless you convince the moderates to vote for you.
And the only way you can do that is come out for amnesty and uh and abortion and getting rid of guns.
If they don't do that, you'll never win.
Ha.
Hi, folks, how are you?
Great to have you here, Il Rushball and the Excellence and Broadcasting Network.
And we go to the phones.
By the way, Sarah Palin diced and sliced Mount Wower today on the Today Show.
And we've got the audio sound bites coming up.
It won't be too long.
But I want to start in Floyd, Iowa, on the phone today.
This is Jennifer, thank you so much for calling.
Great to have you.
Hi.
Hey Russ, it's so good to talk to you.
Um I just called and I hope I can make it through without crying, but your book really has just touched our hearts.
And um and just how you talk about um when they were on the Mayflower and when the man was, you know, he fell overboard and they were pulling him up by the rope.
And I think Rosh Vivar said, Well, you're sure lucky um to be alive.
And I and I think it was William, he said um that it was a miracle, and I'm just so touched that you're just bringing God so much into um this history and reminding people that um God has a divine plan and that nothing happens by accident, and I'm just I just start crying this morning.
You know, I I want to uh uh Jennifer, I want to thank you for noticing that.
Um Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims is unashamedly pro-truth.
Mm-hmm.
And William Bradford and the pilgrims were purists.
They were Victorians in a sense.
They were early Victorians, but they were God-fearing people, and they they came here to be able to worship God their way.
They had to escape the Church of England.
They had to escape the king.
They were not being allowed to worship the way they wanted.
That's why they came here.
She's describing a scene where somebody on the Mayflower goes overboard, and they they do manage to save his life and uh people thought, well, that was lucky.
Well, I was and then William Bradford said, no, no, no, no.
That was God.
And and they took that uh as a sign that their that their voyage was blessed, that they would make it.
They didn't even know that they would make it when they when they set out.
I mean, that people today can't relate.
You get on a boat, even though they've been done.
I mean, the ocean by then had been crossed many times, but still you put a hundred and some odd people on board of uh basic a tiny boat, really.
Uh and and it's it's crapshoot, uh, no matter no matter how many times prior to that it had been done.
And I really appreciate you noticing that because we were unafraid in in making sure that that people, readers understood how much God was part of this journey and how much God was part of the pilgrim.
So I'm really I'm I'm I'm flattered that you noticed that.
And I just wanted to tell you too, my little girl, she's enjoying it liberty so much.
She just laughs when he comes in the story, she just laughs.
So just thank you for writing a book that is entertaining but tells the truth, and that you're not afraid to tell the truth.
So thank you so much.
Never have been.
I've got the I've got the I've got the scars to show it.
But they're all worth it.
Well, uh Jennifer, I I appreciate thank you.
Thank you.
You know, I tell you what, hold on, I'd like to send you a uh how old is your daughter, By the way.
She's five years old.
Five.
So she can't read it, right?
No, she can't.
I read it to her.
Well, you know what?
I I'm gonna enclose an audio copy of the book, too.
It's four CDs, takes about four and a half hours, and I read the whole thing.
That's so sweet of you to love it.
Yes, I know.
Isn't that wonderful?
So let me let me let me put you on hold, Mr. Snerdon.
You'll get your FedEx address and we'll uh as soon as I'm able to we've got a lot of stacks here I'm signing, as soon as I get to it, we'll get it out to you.
You'll have it this week.
Oh, thank you so much.
Uh thank you.
I I uh this this folks, if I if I may say.
This character, Liberty, the talking horse, the time traveling talking horse is a smart aleck.
A lovable, funny, humorous, breaks the tension kind of smart aleck.
And kids are loving this horse.
This horse is getting email out the wazoo, fan mail at our two if by tea dot com website.
So we have uh we've got special plans for the uh for the horse.
Um and I I talked, you know, revere, Rush Revere told me getting a little jealous uh that that Liberty is getting, I mean, far more fan mail than Revere is getting.
And Revere thinks he's the star of the book.
And it's turned out that the horse is uh is rivaling Revere.
Revere told me this.
I mean, he's he's an honest guy.
He didn't he didn't hold anything back.
So that's Jennifer in uh in Floyd, Iowa.
You know, folks, this is Veterans Day, and it's uh traditionally it's been one of those holidays nobody told me about.
Uh one of those three-day weekends that we show up here and I find out everybody else is taking the day off, but that I'm here, and that the and that the staff somebody hid that from me, because you know I might I'm tunnel visioned in terms of uh in terms of work.
Anyway, this is Veterans Day, and since I mentioned uh two if by tea, I want to take a moment once again to to mention our association with the Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation.
I was there at a um uh a Rockville Center Long Island home where the idea for the thing came together.
A bunch of ex-Marines, FBI agents and executives decided to start this foundation which would provide college scholarships for the children of Marines killed in action.
And this was back in the uh it was the mid-90s sometime.
So we started the tea business.
We decided that we would sponsor M. Clef.
And it's uh because it's it's close to uh to our hearts as well.
And everybody's uh purchase of the tea over the years has has resulted in sizable uh donations to M. Clef.
But since it's Veterans Day and uh Marine Corps birthday is around this time of year every uh anyway, I wanted to uh acknowledge our association with M. Clef.
There's a great, great uh bunch of people.
And like I mentioned last week, it's basically a pass-through.
There nobody is making a living running this charity.
There is nobody involved.
It's I mean, it the amount of money that goes through, I mean, the only thing that gets expensed, I think, is postage.
A couple of things are some golf tournaments here and there, but I mean, nobody is earning a living.
There is no executive director making a six-figure salary with a with an expense account or any of that.
The money all goes to the uh to the recipients.
Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation.
And speaking of that, uh I'm reading a book.
You know, I'm a huge fan of the Pittsburgh Steelers, and I lived in Pittsburgh from 1970 to 1975, and that was when the Steelers dynasty was beginning.
And it was special.
I was just twenty years old when I moved to Pittsburgh when I left home.
And I've always been a sports fan.
Uh St. Louis Cardinals and Los Angeles Dodgers were my baseball teams, but I was never really a gung-ho football fan.
I mean I loved watching it on TV, but in terms of having a team, I really didn't until Pittsburgh.
And I uh I think about those years off in the 70s and the kind of decade they were economically.
I mean, it was it was tough times in a lot of ways.
Richard Nixon imposing wage and price controls because inflation was out of control at 3%.
We had these concocted energy crises with long lines at gasoline stations.
The price of gasoline was skyrocketing.
It was it was uh it was it was in in many ways it was gray days, like an overcast cloudy, threatening to rain or snow, 40 degree kind.
That's my memory of some of the 70s, not all, but certainly the uh the first half of the decade.
In the midst of all that was the Steelers dynasty forming.
And if you lived in Pittsburgh, then they it it it totally captured everybody.
You know, I've since then I've uh actually have studied how entire cities can derive their self-esteem, and I mean that, entire cities can derive their self-esteem from the performance of a local sports team, baseball team, football, even hockey in a in a town like Pittsburgh or Buffalo can really affect it.
It was it was fascinating to uh uh to be part of it, and and but it that was a long time ago.
There's a guy who's written a book, Gary Pomeranz, who's been at the Washington Post any number of places, who has written a book that I'm reading called Their Life's Work.
And it's about the 70 Steelers, which, by the way, for those of you that are not Didden Well fans, the 70s Steelers are acknowledged as the best football team ever.
The 49ers people disagree, the Cowboys people disagree, but in terms of dynasties, you couldn't have a team that stays together as long as that team did now with free agency and salary caps and that kind of thing.
But it was special, and to be in Pittsburgh for those five years when it was all forming and beginning, is that I even now I feel a connection to it.
And reading this book, learning things that were going on in the town I lived, that I had no idea of.
It's all behind the scenes stuff, but it's about it's about what it is like to be on a championship team of anything.
I I think you know, most people do not ever know what that's like.
Not just football, not just baseball, not just sports, but a winning team doing anything.
It's probably the same kind of feeling people have at Apple right now.
They're winning big.
Uh Google may have this same kind of team thing, although they're so big, it's maybe maybe not, but it's something most people will never experience, but everybody loved them.
And everybody that loves football wonders what it would be like.
And that's why there's so much interest in this incognito and Jonathan Martin stuff with the Dolphins, because nobody knows what goes on in the locker room.
Nobody really everybody wonders what it would be like.
And this guy, Pomerans has just done a terrific job writing about the city, the Roonies, everybody that mattered on that team, the players and what they've done, what they've what's become of them and so forth.
It's just it's it's fascinating.
And I ran across a quote near the end of the book.
I finished it late Saturday night.
And it's a quote from the and here's in fact, this is how it's written in the book.
I think of the author and rugged individualist Jack London.
Just weeks before his death in 1916, Jack London was interviewed by a San Francisco journalist who quoted him as saying, I would rather be ashes Than dust.
I would rather that my spark should burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should be stifled by dry rot.
I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of me in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet.
The function of man is to live, not to exist.
And I shall not waste my days trying to prolong them.
I am going to use my time.
Now, if I can't, this has no bearing on the Steelers, it has no bearing on the book.
It it has it has everything to do with what life is becoming in America to me.
That especially this, the last line, the function of man is to live, not to exist.
I shall not waste my days trying to prolong my days.
I'm gonna use my time.
That rings, folks, you know, we only get one life, a favorite phrase of mine.
And this is what I mean by it.
There's only one, there isn't a do-over.
You can maybe do over a day, or but there you you can't do your life over.
And what are we, what are we occupied with in America, right?
Exactly.
Trying to prolong our lives by not living them.
Don't take any risk, don't eat that, don't drive that, don't do this.
Sit around and don't do anything.
Don't take any risk, don't put yourself in any danger, don't make yourself miserable, don't make yourself uncomfortable, don't make yourself mad, don't hurt anybody's feelings, don't get your feelings hurt.
Just sit around.
Everything is oriented toward never dying, and everything is oriented toward not living.
I've got to take a break.
I'm talking about liberalism.
I'm talking about the idea that it's the people who are living life that often are criticized the most.
They're the ones doing things.
While we have a culture that's been conditioned to do nothing, to sit around and wait for something to happen and hope it's good.
But don't do anything that might hurt.
Don't do anything that might harm, and don't do anything that might exhilarate because that isn't gonna happen.
You're only gonna get hurt.
And it's this is I tell you, the whole thing rings true to me.
So I've gotta go, though.
Sit tight.
Jack London.
And I I also like the fact that he is referred to here as a rugged individualist.
And the quote is from 1916.
The function of man is to live, not to exist.
I shall not waste my days trying to prolong my days.
I shall use my time.
He said this just weeks before he died in 1916.
And it just it just rings home to me.
I folks, this this this is this is why practically every liberal argument scares me, frightens me, that people fall for it.
Because it liberalism coerces people, convinces people just to sit on their butts and do nothing.
And then tells them that's the safest route to take.
And then tells them what to eat and what not to eat, and what to drive, what not to drive, what to drink, what not to drink, and how much of it you shouldn't drink and how much you're allowed to drink.
It's absurd.
They get certain foods banned.
It's none of their business.
They use government for these purposes, which are nothing but mechanisms of control because the liberal doesn't care about your life and how long it is the liberal cares about controlling your life as long as you live.
Doesn't matter how much soon you die or how long you live.
They don't care about any of that.
They're just they're sick people think that everybody should live the way they do, and if you don't, you're an enemy.
And they're gonna make sure that by fiat, government regulation or the power of the state that you're not gonna do what they don't want you to do.
And they've just they've got so many people sitting around watching TMZ and living their lives vicariously through all of these.
Really mind numbed celebrities.
People sitting around getting their jollies through others who are living their lives, and everybody said, gee, I wonder what That'd be like.
Gee, I wonder what that's like.
Gee, I wonder what that instead of going out and trying it.
Instead of going out and doing it.
You know, the cure for almost any malady other than bed ridden illness, but the cure for any psychological problems, action.
Action that makes you stop thinking about yourself.
And that's all the left wants you to do.
Think about your misery and having somebody else fix it for you and then don't take any more risks because we can't stand the pain of failure.
Can't stand the pain of other success.
So nobody gets to do anything.
It's a crock, we're being screwed.
Sarah Palin had wower for lunch today on the Today Show.
We have the audio sound bites coming up and obviously a whole lot more, too.
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