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Oct. 16, 2014 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:49
October 16, 2014, Thursday, Hour #1
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Welcome to today's edition of the Rush 24-7 podcast.
You gotta be kidding me.
We're gonna send we're gonna send.
We're uh we gotta be kidding me.
For real?
Seriously?
We're gonna we're gonna send the National Guard to Liberia now.
We're gonna send more troops to Ice NBC News just says we're gonna send the National Guard to Liberia to uh to to to to fight uh Ebola?
The the greetings, my friends, and welcome.
Great to have you, Rush Limboy, and yet another excursion into broadcast excellence hosted by me.
Show prep for the rest of the media, and man, oh man.
Out of the clear boot, did I ever have a C I told you so yesterday with the monologue of my second hour?
This is this is overwhelming even to me.
And I'll get to that in just a second.
But man, the National Guard, am I reading this right?
Hey, let me click on this here, folks.
Let me just make Obama may send National Guard to Liberia to find a ball of sources, NBC News.
President expected to issue an executive order Thursday paving the way for the deployment of National Guard forces to Liberia to help contain the Ebola outbreak there.
Well, that's a good point.
Are they gonna fly commercially gonna go charter?
You know, uh some of some of the things that that Thomas Frieden said between the end of yesterday's program and today are mind-bogglingly confusing.
Contradict.
I don't see that's just it.
I didn't know you could shoot Ebola.
Well, I'm gonna tell you what this is.
They've they've got to try to maintain some sense of uh confidence in the American people before the election.
All of this is about the election.
And so you've got Frieden out there saying, no, we gotta contain it in Africa.
We gotta contain it in Africa.
That's why we can't contain it in Africa.
Which is what he's saying.
We have to contain it in Africa.
That's their buzzword.
We've got to contain it there.
Okay, well then why don't you ban fly?
Oh no, we cannot isolate countries.
That wouldn't be fair.
Because you see, lady, we're we're the United States is no different than any other nation in the world now.
We're just everything's global and we're no different than anywhere else.
There's nothing particularly special, nothing unique.
The fact that he's the president of the United States doesn't mean we're he's president of the world.
And we are just part of the world.
Pure and simple.
And so uh the there they're the the thought process does not even include I can't go that far.
But I mean this is just absurd.
They say there is no Ebola vaccination.
There the the I don't know.
I have look, you're asking me how the troops gonna be safe?
I haven't the slightest idea.
You would assume the purpose of the troops is to contain the populations in Africa, where Ebola is Well, I understand, look, I understand all that.
Don't talk common sense to me because none of this features any common sense.
You're asking me to address this rationally.
I know if the troops come in contact with people that have the disease, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And then we're even getting even more contradictory statements on how the disease is spread today.
It's just a mess.
It it literally is a mess.
But I was let me stick with Frieden here.
Because this I think is the opposite of the reason we're sending troops is because what everybody in this regime wants you to think is that the solution here is containing this in Africa, but that's not what they're doing.
If the solution is to contain it in Africa, then you ban flights from Africa to the United States.
But you can't Do that.
That wouldn't be fair.
That wouldn't be right for one nation of the world to treat another nation of the world that way.
That's not nice.
That's not fair.
That's us acting too big for our britches.
That's us acting more important than they are, and we're not more important.
They and we are all citizens of the world.
And there's no delineation or distinction.
So Frieden says we got to contain the disease in Africa.
And then somebody says, well, okay, let's ban flight.
No, we can't ban flights from Africa.
That would spread the disease.
And that is what he says, essentially.
On the one hand, we have to contain the disease in Africa.
On the other hand, when we offer ways of doing that, they're all rejected, such as banning flights.
So I'm telling you, this idea of sending troops over there is to create an image.
Is to create a picture that we are containing the disease in Africa, and we are using the all-powerful United States military, which still has an uncorrupted reputation.
Everything else in this regime has been corrupted is distrusted to one degree or another.
Military still isn't.
Obama can still go to it and fall back on it.
It's the National Guard troops, along with the 3,000 or 4,000 other troops.
You're not supposed to ask what are they going to do?
You're not supposed to ask how does this contain the disease in Africa?
What I what I want, you know, forgive me here, folks, but what authority does the U.S. military have in, say, Liberia to tell citizens there where they can and can't go?
Are we doing this in conjunction cooperation with their with their governments?
So the military, the National Guard, we can't contain ISIS on the ground in Syria.
We cannot contain ISIS on the ground in Iraq, but we're going to contain a virus in Liberia and in Sierra Leone and in Nigeria.
And then we're going to contain sick Africans, because that's what this means, contain sick Africans.
But it's too late.
The only reasonable thing to do is to ban travel into the United States from outbreak countries.
And they're just not going to do that.
Now, this Frieden guy, the Centers for Disease Control guy, this stuff that we've learned with the nurse, the second nurse.
So he will allow a feverish nurse, a nurse with 99.8 degree fever, because she's not at the 101 threshold, so she's not symptomatic.
He will allow, get this, I want to put this in perspective for you.
The director of the Centers for Disease Control will allow a feverish nurse who is carrying the virus to fly on a commercial flight between Dallas and Cleveland, but he will not stop flights to and from Ebola stricken nations, and he will not allow New Yorkers to drink large soft drinks or eat salt or trans fats because that's a public health crisis.
Is something out of proportion.
This is the guy who implemented all of these crazy diet restrictions in New York City for Mayor Doomberg.
This is the guy behind the smoking ban outside in a cave anywhere because it kills.
This is the guy behind you can't buy anything bigger than 16 ounces that has coke or Pepsi or seven up in it because it'll kill you.
Too much sugar.
And you can't eat trans fats because that's a killer.
So all of these restrictions on things like smoking and eating and drinking, and no restrictions on Ebola patients traveling to and from this country.
Would someone try to explain that to me?
No, I know, I know, I know.
The nurse is now being dumped on.
The nurse is being blamed for lying to the CDC about her condition.
Let me ask, are you able to keep up With all of this.
Let me do my best to synthesize this for you as of this moment.
The news overnight was that Nurse Amy Vinson got permission from the CDC to fly from Cleveland to Dallas.
Back on Monday.
In fact, Ms. Vinson called the CDC several times.
Apparently, even she couldn't believe the CDC were giving her permission to get on a plane.
She called them.
We didn't know this yesterday.
She called them.
She described her condition.
She asked for permission to go.
She's getting married, and she wanted to get some things done on the uh on the ceremony.
And they let her go.
And she couldn't believe it.
Now, anyway, Ms. Vinson told them she had a temperature of 99.5 degrees, and yet they said it was okay for her to take that flight.
Because apparently the cutoff point for Ebola, according to the CDC, is 100.4 degrees.
If you have 99.5, it may not be Ebola.
99.8, 99.9, 100 might not be Ebola.
100.4, bingo.
Ebola.
She was less than one degree below that cutoff of 100.4.
Never mind her thermometer might not have been precisely accurate.
Hey, nurse Vinson.
You're nine-tenths of a degree under the limit.
Go ahead and fly.
Now let's keep in mind something here.
When Thomas Duncan first went to the ER in Dallas, he had a temperature of uh only six-tenths of a degree higher than Nurse Vinson's.
His temperature, I know these numbers that get this gets hard to follow, but I mean the point is that contradictory protocols or whatever you call them are all over the place.
When when Duncan first went to the ER, his temperature was only six-tenths of a degree higher than Nurse Vinson's.
In other words, his temperature was not even one degree higher.
His temperature at the time was 100.1 degrees.
Hers was 99.5 on the plane.
And yet the fact that Duncan was not immediately recognized as having Ebola is now considered to be the crime of the century.
Now everybody says, how do they not know?
I mean a guy walks in, he says from Liberia's got this fever.
How could they not know?
Even though Duncan's Duncan's temperature didn't reach the CDC's 100.4 degree Ebola cutoff either.
That's the point.
That is the point.
The Ebola cutoff is 100.4.
If you have that or more, they won't let you fly, and they're thinking you may have Ebola given every all uh every other circumstance out there.
But Duncan wasn't showing 100.4 when he first showed up.
He was showing uh 100.1.
In any case, John Roberts at Fox News is tweeting that the CDC is telling him that Nurse Vinson lied to them.
It's time now to dump on the nurse again.
This is the second nurse that they're dumping on, right?
That they're pulling the uh wheels out from under.
They're throwing overboard, if you will.
John Roberts at Fox tweeting that the Centers for Disease Control is telling him that Nurse Vinson lied to them when she called to get permission to take the flight back to Dallas from Cleveland.
John Roberts says the CDC is claiming that Nurse Vinson did not tell them how sick she was, including the fact that she had been too ill to meet with her bridesmaids.
Remember, she went back there to deal with wedding planning.
So now it's Ms. Vinson's turn in the tank.
Now it's and I told you yesterday, I think, that somebody was going to be scapegoated here.
And at some point they're gonna have to scapegoat Freedon.
But maybe she called the first story, she called to get permission.
She wanted clarification.
And I guess from that we can assume she was trying to do the right thing.
Is that what you would think?
She's trying to do the right thing.
Look, I've got a fever.
Is it okay for me to come back?
I want to fly.
What's your temperature?
Uh my temperature was uh 99.5.
Ah, fine and dandy.
You gotta be in 100.4 for a problem, so sure.
Get on a plane.
She did what they said, and now they're telling us that she lied to them.
That she was sicker than she let on.
Do you know, folks, that you can get or you can give.
You can transmit Ebola on a bus, but you can't get it on a bus.
Have you heard that?
Well, okay, try this now.
Dr. Thomas Friedman, and I I assure you here, we're not laughing.
Not doing satire or parody here.
We're not taking advantage of this situation for that.
I mean, I'm shooting you straight here.
Dr. Tom Frieden, director of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a telephone press briefing yesterday that you cannot get Ebola by sitting next to someone on a bus.
But infected or exposed persons should not ride public transportation because they could transmit the disease to someone else.
Like someone sitting next to you on the bus.
No, no, you heard right.
You're out there saying, well, no, no, Russia had to make a mistake there.
That does contrary.
No, no.
You heard exactly right.
You can give Ebola, you can transmit it on a bus, but you can't get it on a bus.
Well, okay, if you can transmit it on a bus, but nobody on the bus can get it, then what's the big deal?
And if you can transmit it on a bus, but you can't get it on a bus.
Why do they suggest infected or exposed persons not ride the bus?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
See, this is I've got everybody shouting at me.
You mean to tell me that if I ride on a bus, I could give it to you, but you couldn't get it.
Yeah, that's what they're saying.
But then they're asking you not to get on the bus because somebody on the bus could get it.
If you're uh well, no, let's let's not make this any more complicated than it is.
In fact, let's take a pause.
Let's take a pause because this is challenging all of our brain cells, folks.
Just trying to stay even with this.
And one thing that might help in keeping track of all this is remember the objective, the November elections.
We'll be back.
Hey, before too much time passes by here, uh please indulge me on this.
This is somewhat personal to me, the Kansas City Royals.
In how about that?
A four-game sweep of the uh of the Baltimore Orioles, eight straight playoff wins, setting a major league baseball record.
They had the extra inning win over the Oakland A's, three games over the Anaheim Angels, and now four over the Baltimore Orioles.
And to the World Series, they host it starting Tuesday night in Kansas City at Kaufman Stadium, first time in 29 years.
I was not at the Royals in 1985.
I had just left town for Sacramento to uh set out on this journey, if you will.
I was I worked for the Royals from 79 through 83, so I was there for the 1980 World Series that they lost to the Phillies.
And it was exciting, and it was uh, you know, I had important jobs there.
I was a director of ceremonial first pitches, and I was director of escorting national anthem singers to second base before playoff games, and sometimes even let me pick the anthem singers.
Uh that was five years I spent there.
I wouldn't trade those five years for anything.
Uh it was my first five years outside of radio, which I started at age sixteen.
I met people I would have otherwise not met.
I learned things, experienced things I never would have.
And I had doors open for Me simply because I could say, hi, Rush Limbaugh from the Kansas City Royals.
People that wouldn't have given me the time of day, I'm talking about business people, would open their doors.
But it was also good for me because I found out that I'm not cut out for corporate conformity.
But I wouldn't trade those five years.
And it's just, it's so great.
And nobody in the professional baseball world in the sports media can believe this.
They're still writing about it even today in the New York papers as though it's a joke and it's illegitimate.
And they're making fun of the manager, Ned Yost is, you know, seriously?
Ned Yust?
What a bumbling.
All they've done is won eight in a row, and they've done it with a payroll that the New York Yankees spend on two players.
So I just I just wanted to uh I was looking at the game last night watching in that this stadium, they've done such a great job renovating it and keeping it new, and the place was buzzing.
It was it's one of the best places in the country to watch a baseball game and be part of it.
And uh these are young players that don't know they can't do anything.
It's just it was great to see, and I just want to take a little brief moment here to congratulate them.
Welcome back.
It's Rush Limbaugh, this is the EIB network executing assigned host duties flawlessly, zero mistakes of what's happened, uh, what happens every day here.
One more observation about the the Kansas City Royals in the American League Championship series.
I've done something the past couple of weeks I haven't done in years.
I've been watching baseball games on TV.
And a realization hit me last night.
It's the way it used to be.
I didn't hear any talk of concussions.
I didn't hear the play-by-play announcers or the color commentators lamenting sexual abuse.
I didn't hear about whether some player had come out and was gay.
I didn't hear about any cultural this or that.
It was just baseball.
It was nothing more than the sport of baseball.
It was on television, it's what was talked about, and all of that side show stuff the media has dragged into football, and to a certain extent, basketball wasn't there.
It was uh they're gonna frown on me for this word, but it was pure.
And I by pure, I mean in the purest sense.
It was it was almost a throwback.
It was it was the way watching sports on TV used to be, long before the sports drive bias decided to go get political on everybody.
It's really great.
And and something else I was reminded, a Kansas City crowd, one of the best looking crowds in baseball.
Seriously.
I mean, I look, I know I've I'm I'm biased here.
I I lived there for ten years, and I worked at that team for for five years.
But that's I mean, it was respectful of the other team sportsmanship and all that, some clever signs.
It was uh just it was it was all good.
It was great TV, it was great baseball, and it was uh it was exciting, and I say I haven't watched baseball in years.
But I got the fever.
And I'm just I think it's I think it's great.
Again, I just wanted to take a brief moment to congratulate everybody.
It's it's so great uh for everybody in the organization because nobody gave them a chance to do it in.
I mean, here's Buck Show Walter, he's the manager of the Orioles.
He may as well be Bill Clinton.
No, no, no, no, no, no.
He may as well be Obama in terms of his brilliance.
This is the smartest guy in me.
This is the craftiest, the smartest guy.
Over here, you got Ned Yost, the bumbling idiot, bunting, sacrificing, doesn't know how to manage, doesn't know how to, and and the sports media, even though they've been purists, they just can't figure it out even today.
It doesn't make sense to them.
And you have to, you have to love that.
So congratulations to everybody.
Ground career even did a great job.
That place looked immaculate.
Uh last night, well, a whole series, in fact.
Here is, by the way, Thomas Friedman.
This is uh yesterday after this is the this is the how you can give it on a bus, but you can't get it on a bus soundbite.
And I realize some of you might have thought I was making this up.
I mean, that's how ridiculous this is, and I assure you, I just want to play the soundbite.
I'm not.
It was during the Q ⁇ A after they had their teleconference with reporters yesterday on the latest to do with Ebola, and a reporter said in a video message to countries in West Africa that are experiencing Ebola outbreaks, President Obama told residents at these countries in West Africa that they can't get the disease by sitting next to somebody on a bus.
Did the CDC vet that message before it was released and posted on U.S. Embassy websites?
And is it true that a person runs absolutely no risk of contracting Ebola on public transportation such as a bus?
Yes, CDC vetted the message, and yes, we believe it's accurate.
I think there are two different parts of that equation.
The first is uh if you're a member of the traveling public and are healthy, should you be worried that you might have gotten it by sitting next to someone?
And the answer is no.
Second, uh, if you are sick and you may have Ebola, should you get on a bus?
And the answer to that is also no.
You might become ill.
You might have a problem that exposes someone around you.
Wait.
Pal, you just said it's only a 30-second zombie.
You just said 25 seconds ago that can't happen.
He's doing this every time he opens his mouth.
He is contradicting himself.
I think this may be a record.
This time it was in 30 seconds.
You want to listen to this again?
I mean, I could read it to you, but I I no.
Let me let me parse it and then play it for you again.
Yes, we vetted the message.
We made sure that it was the right message for the West Africans.
And yes, we believe it's accurate.
Uh there are two different parts of the equation here.
See, the first is if if you're a member of the traveling public, what kind of talk is that?
If you are a member of the traveling puppet, where do where do you join the club?
What's the membership form?
Are your dues cards?
What do you mean membership?
If you're a member of the traveling public.
Anyway, if you're a member of the traveling public and are healthy, should you be worried that you might have gotten it by sitting next to somebody?
Answer is no.
Second, if you're sick and you may have Ebola, should you get on a bus?
The answer to that is also no.
You might become ill.
No, no, if you have Ebola, you are ill.
What is this you might become ill?
Because he just he just said, Oh, is that what he means?
Oh, okay, let me somebody just gave me a heads up here as to what he might really mean.
So let me read it again and say it as he intended it.
Second, if you are sick and you may have Ebola, should you get on a bus, the answer to that is also no.
You might vomit.
You might have a problem that exposes someone around you.
But you can't get it sitting next to somebody on a bus.
So if you get on a bus, somebody on the bus has Ebola, not a problem.
But the person with Ebola shouldn't get on the bus because he might expose somebody around him.
Here it is again in Dr. Frieden's own lingo.
Yes, CDC vetted the message, and yes, we believe it's accurate.
I think there are two different parts of that equation.
The first is uh if you're a member of the traveling public and are healthy, should you be worried that you might have gotten it by sitting next to someone?
And the answer is no.
Second, uh, if you are sick and you may have Ebola, should you get on a bus?
And the answer to that is also no.
You might become ill.
You might have a problem that exposes someone around you.
Who you just said can't get it by being near you.
Now, I want to explain something at this point to those of you I try to constantly keep in mind that we have people listening for the first time every day.
And those of you who are veterans understand fully that it requires a minimum of six weeks listening to this program in order to have just the basic understanding of what happens here and how it happens, and to have a chance at understanding the context in which events happen and comments are made, because we don't start from ground zero every day.
The assumption by me is that everybody in the audience has a base level of knowledge.
That is assumed, and we start from that point.
But if you're new, you don't have that base of knowledge because you haven't been here.
So I always have to keep that in mind.
So in that light, let me make something clear.
Yesterday afternoon on Fox News, Shepard Smith decided to get all preachy and can condemn the loud voices on the radio and the loud voices on TV and the loud voices in print for unnecessarily spreading a panic, that there's no panic, that there's no spread of Ebola going on.
You only got two people in the country that have it.
There's no outbreak.
You don't need to be worried about anything, and do not do not fall prey to these loud voices on radio, TV, and print that might benefit with higher ratings because they're trying to get you to panic.
This is the guy who spent how many hours in a row on the air in New Orleans during Hurricane Katrina raising panic cautions and whatever else about whatever wasn't happening there.
But I want to stress here to all of you, you veterans and those of you who are new, there is no desire here to spread a panic.
And I am not secretly harboring a belief that we have a wide outbreak and they're not telling us.
I don't believe that, not yet.
My concern is what it always is.
The one thing you can count on, whether you're a newer rival here, whether you're a veteran, the one thing you can count on for me is consistency.
And if there are people who are fearful of a panic out there, or if there are people who think they're not being told the truth, it's because we have a level of incompetence I have yet to see in my life prior to this.
What the point that I'm trying to make with all of these things I highlight is the utter incompetence of the people that you think are trustworthy in these institutions that everybody counts on.
The CDC has automatic credibility and authority.
People just believe in it.
It's the centers for disease control and prevention.
It's part of the government.
People have an unquestioning belief in the integrity of the presidency and in most of government.
And when those positions are filled with people who have no business being there because they're not competent, because they are not qualified, then we've got a major problem.
And that's what we are facing today.
What I'm trying to simply trying to point out to you in all of this is how what you're hearing is making no sense whatsoever.
It is senseless.
And that the reason for it being senseless, the reason they can't tell you the truth.
I mean, I'm watching some of the testimony before a congressional committee that's happening now.
And there is a central theme.
In order to stop the spread of Ebola, we must contain it in Africa.
Everybody in the government is saying that.
We must contain it in Africa.
And then when you propose ideas how to accomplish that, they reject them.
Well, you mean like banning travel from Africa that, no, no, no, no, we can't do that.
Why that would spread the disease.
How does that spread the disease?
If you're going to contain it in Africa, and then you take steps to keep it in Africa, how does that spread the disease?
We just we just can't do it.
And my point to you is, just like with Obamacare, and just like with a number of other things with this administration, the election coming up in November is crucial, and whatever is really known about this is not going to be shared with us until after that point.
But more than that, I'm just trying to alert you to be curious, and to question some of these things that you're hearing because it's nonsensical.
And I think it's not too powerful to say it's tragic that we have such levels of incompetence in positions of leadership that are really important.
Now I know why we have such a high degree of incompetence.
It's because of the people that are choosing those to lead these institutions are themselves incompetent and have never really done anything.
They've not accomplished anything.
They're a bunch of theoreticians and philosophers who've sat around all their lives criticizing everything everybody else has actually done while they haven't done anything.
And they sit around super egos thinking they could do it better, they're smarter, they're brighter, they care more.
Now they are the ones in leadership positions and they're clueless.
And as such, it's dangerous.
The things that are being said, not dumping on the nurse now.
Wait till you hear I got to take a break.
Wait, wait till you hear why we can't allow anybody to get on commercial, but we can charters.
And then wait till you hear that Friedan said the nurse from Cleveland to Dallas should have taken a charter.
She shouldn't have flown commercial.
She should have taken a charter if she wanted to come back.
Uh I don't think your average nurse is even going to contemplate chartering a jet for personal travel.
It's not in their realm of reality or possibility.
Wouldn't know how to do it because they know they can't afford it.
What do you mean charter a jet if you're a nurse and you need to get to Dallas from Cleveland?
She should have chartered a jet.
Who do these people think they're dealing with?
It may be easy for them to dial up a jet.
They're at the government.
The nurse should have chartered a jet.
Well, what about the crew on that jet?
Anyway, I have to take a break.
Be patient, my friends.
Much more still ahead, as is always the case.
Shep Smith was crying so much during his reporting from New Orleans and Hurricane Katrina, his mascara was running.
So, But we need to dial it all back here.
Radio, TV, and print, uh loud voices seeking ratings, of course.
And I think.
Who is it's always touting their ratings, by the way, isn't it, Fox?
Anyway, uh one other thing, folks, about the criticism here.
I just want you to understand this the same people who are illustrating their blatant incompetence in all of this.
They're the same people telling you that there's global warming.
They are the same people telling you you're not paying enough in taxes.
Same people promised you shovel ready jobs with stimulus spending.
These the same people that told you you could keep your doctor.
Same people told you could keep your insurance plan if you liked it, lied to you about that, same people.
Same people told you you can't have a 32-ounce soft drink in New York.
Same people told you that you can't smoke because smoke kills in New York City and elsewhere.
Same people that said you shouldn't eat trans fats because that'll kill you.
Same people demand calorie counts on menus at fast food restaurants in New York City.
Same guy.
Same people are telling you that uh don't worry, uh you can't get Ebola sitting next to somebody on a bus.
But if you have Ebola, you shouldn't get on a bus because you might spread it.
Same people telling you that global warming is happening.
That's my only point in all this.
I just I'm uh hope that you would at some point see the light about these people and stop granting them this automatic credibility you do.
Here's uh here's Jamie in Trenton, Michigan.
Hi, Jamie.
Welcome to the EIB network.
Great to have you first up today.
Hey, thanks, Rush.
Uh I just wanted to make a quick point in regards to this uh uh this whole temperature thing uh in regards to this nurse having a temperature.
Yeah.
The CDC claiming, well, you know, it's uh the 99.5 temperature, nobody has anything to worry about.
Well, that's when she called in.
Who's to say she called in an hour before her flight, and lo and behold, two, two and a half hours later, mid-flight, her temperature could be 102, 103.
Yeah, exactly right.
So I don't understand the point of saying the temperature was only 99.5.
It's the protocol.
It's the protocol.
The protocol superses everything, common sense included.
Right.
And and and at what point do they start saying, okay, well, you know, every time we say something, you know, we're off, or you know, some somebody else is getting it.
And at what point do they start mandating that these these patients that uh are these people that are actually coming down with it and everyone else around them that were in close contact can't go anywhere until those tw until those twenty-one days have passed.
At what point do they start mandating this?
Uh well, I I I the my fear is they're gonna mandate a lot more restrictions than that at some point.
Uh my fear is they're gonna use this for a whole host of things that they otherwise don't think they would have the chance to do.
We'll see.
Hope I'm wrong.
Appreciate the call back after this.
First hour is in the can on the way over to Limbaugh Broadcast Museum at Rush Limbaugh.com, but you sit tight, my friends.
Much more straight ahead.
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