Welcome to today's edition of the Rush 24-7 podcast.
And here we are, my friends, rearing and ready to go.
Except for one thing I could not care less about.
Greetings and great to have you here, Rush Limbaugh behind the golden EIB microphone at the distinguished and prestigious EIB Southern Command, which happens to house the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
Telephone number, you want to be with us, as always, 800 282-2882 and the email address L Rushbow at EIBNet.com.
I want to thank everyone once again who donated, contributed to our 25th annual Curathon last Friday for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society for America, 25 years.
And every year the people in this audience, you just continue to come through.
We uh last I heard was that we had handily exceeded uh the amount that was raised last year, and we did so with even more donors.
The per capita donation was down, which is fine.
We shoot for the volume basis here, but there were more donors than ever.
And the uh the total was an increase over the previous year.
I want to thank uh also those of you who uh were unable uh to donate, of course, but you hung in and you listened to the program on Friday, and and it's uh it's because of everybody involved that we are able to do this and uh devote the amount of time to it we do.
It's still, if I might say so, it's still rather stunning the amount of money that we raise in essentially, you know.
I started putting it together.
We had a three-hour program here.
And what with uh newsbreaks and profit center timeouts, the actual programming, I don't uh almost feel like I shouldn't admit this.
Ah, what the heck?
If you listen to our podcast, you know it already.
Um the total content time for three hours here is about an hour and forty-five minutes.
And of that hour and forty-five minutes, probably on Friday, devoted about an hour to the fundraising effort for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, our Curaton.
So stop and think of this for a minute now.
In one hour, every year, we've done it for 25 years, in one hour, every year, we raise multiple millions of dollars, all because of you.
It uh it is it it twenty-five years, people in this audience, regardless the economic circumstances in the country, uh, regardless the uh I think 9-11, the year after 9-11 was the year that we were down, the one year that we were down or flat.
Other than that, every year has exceeded the previous.
But it just stuns me that in no more than an hour a year, we raise all this money.
And I want to I want to raise not raise, I want to make one other point.
Outside of this program, you never hear about this.
Now there are many reasons for that.
We do not hype it.
We do not publicize it uh only because we know what would be done to it, but we don't do it for that reason is the primary reason.
We don't do this for any accolades.
And we don't do it for press buzz or PR or any of that.
We do it for the cause.
And uh, and as such, the only people that know about it are the people that uh listen to the program and the people at the Leukemia Lymphoma Society and all the uh ancillary agencies involved with them.
So it's one of the best kept secrets around, even though the most listened to radio talk show in the country is is uh is behind it.
And I just want to make that point because it's it's a it's a project that is rooted totally in love and substance and reality.
And it's uh it's not about hype, and it's not about buzz and PR and good vibes and getting credit and all that.
It is about actually fighting the blood cancers and hopefully someday finding a cure.
So thanks again, once again to everybody who made last Friday and the past weekend another record breaking weekend at our radio curaton.
Something else I want to do a little housekeeping, not housekeeping, but but uh more so personal thing.
I just want to extend my congratulations to 21-year-old Jordan Speith, who won the Masters yesterday, and set numerous records in the process.
He was the leader in all four rounds.
He held the lead from front to back.
He was challenged by some of the game's best.
He has a mental toughness and commitment, obviously, that is extraordinary.
But I can't tell you I've I watched the whole thing on Saturday and Sunday, and I made it a point to hang around and watch the green jacket ceremonies.
And I was just really impressed with the with the class and the maturity and the manners of this young man.
It was actually inspiring for me.
It was uplifting to see that we in America are still raising people like this, still producing people like this.
I mean, you know that we are, but you don't see it as much.
Our focus in pop culture media today is on victims and people to whom we are told we should feel sorry.
People who've been victimized by one or other horrible aspect of this country, and it was just refreshing to see somebody who's well-mannered, raised well, loves his mom and dad and his sisters and brothers, and uh was devoted to being the best he could at the game and has an attitude commensurate with championship performance.
And it was just great to see.
I I I was I was really proud.
And I don't know this family, I've never met them.
I uh I don't even remember this young man from last year.
I was thinking, and they said he was in the final group last year.
And I I don't know what I was doing last year with the Masters.
I don't remember it.
I don't remember Bubba Watson winning last year.
I it the thing that bothers me, though, I can't I can't imagine not having watched the Masters ways, but I must not have.
Or if I did, my head must have been somewhere else because I didn't recognize until this year's Masters, I didn't think of I I know I'd never heard of Jordan Speith.
And yet he's in the final group last year.
And I didn't know that Bubba Watson won last year.
I knew Bubba Watson had multiple wins, so I spent a lot of last night trying to figure out where was I a year ago?
What was I doing a year ago that I didn't know what happened to Masters?
That's unreal.
Anyway, I I uh at the same time, I want to congratulate Augusta Nashadow.
They uh they have their traditions.
They are in the process, they modernize some of them and they they evolve on their timetable.
They've been pressured to be who they aren't for a long time, and they hang tough.
They have uh they have a tradition in this tournament that they have done everything in their power to maintain and protect.
And despite what comes and goes, in our country and our culture, the Masters is always what you expect it to be every year.
And everybody who goes, every player who plays has a reverence for the place and the uh and the tournament, and it hasn't changed.
It's mystique, in fact, uh even grows.
So for that reason, I just I feel the need to give out a couple of shots to Augusta National, and I just again want to congratulate Jordan Speith and his uh and his family, and just express what an absolutely joyful experience it was to watch yesterday.
Nicholson, I mean everybody that gave it a run.
Um Tiger had his best golf in I don't know how many years in a round yesterday, when everybody rose to the best, it rose to the occasion, and it was a just a great day.
And I felt uh I don't know why, but I felt inspired by it, and I felt that when it was over yesterday, I made a mental note, and if we write it down, I made a mental note to want to come in here and make mention of this young man.
But what class?
I mean, 21 years, I could not believe I was watching a 21-year-old when I was 21, I had no clue.
I mean, I had I'd left home, I'd been away from home for a year, but I didn't know anything.
I certainly didn't know how to handle myself in front of cameras with microphones and reports.
I had no reason to either, but I I had I had no I I had not any of the ability I saw in this 21-year-old.
And then he's not the only one.
Some of these young bucks on the PGA tour also, I've played with them.
Rory McElroy and Ricky Fowler.
They're all amazing.
They're so much more mature than I was at their age.
They know so much more of it that obviously, as golfers, they've been around the world, which is explanatory.
They all come from great families.
They all have uh uh a great sense of tradition that they are hoping to uh not only capitalize on but sustain.
So it was really cool.
It was really good.
And then it all came crashing down because after I finished with all of my avocational pursuits, it came time last night as it always does on Sunday to prepare because it's a school night.
Monday is a work day, and of course, you know what that meant.
I finally had you talk about a come down.
Talk about an ice cold shower.
Here I am on this upper and this high, and I'm feeling great, and I'm feeling joyful, and I'm feeling proud of everything I've witnessed at the Masters of Jordan Spith and his family and everything about it.
And then there's Hillary and her stupid announcement that she wants to be coronated for president again.
And I said, gee whiz, what a downer.
What an absolute crash this is to have to make that leap.
But we all did.
And I can tell you folks, I was telling Mr. Snerdley, Mr. Snurdley walked in here about uh, well, he came about an hour ago.
And I I looked up at him and I said, you know, I'm I'm I think it's beginning to happen.
He said, What do you mean?
Well, I don't know.
Oh, I just I don't care.
I actually literally, in fact, it's more than I don't care.
I angrily actively don't care about Mrs. Clinton and her presidential announcement and her campaign and everything associated.
I don't care what the media is saying about it.
I don't care who's excited and who I don't care a whit about it.
To me, Mrs. Clinton running for president is a microcosm of everything that's been wrong in this country since the mid-90s.
Coming back to life and trying to be reborn and reconstitute all of that negativism and all of that, and continue the batch of it that we're currently living through.
And I said, there has to be more to life than this.
Hillary Clinton, and then I then I, of course, duty called.
I spent time familiarizing myself with the stupid things like the van and announcing on Twitter, and then I saw that stupid map that the drive-by's created with Twitter lighting up people supposedly excited by Hillary's campaign.
Nobody's excited about Hillary's campaign.
That's the point.
They're having to create all of this excite.
There isn't any genuine excitement over Mrs. Clinton.
That's the whole point.
And that's what Bug, it's all manufactured.
Now, in the drive-bys, I imagine there's some genuine excitement.
I mean, the people who live and breathe and die this stuff on the left.
I'm I know that there's some genuine exception.
Most people out there across the fruited plain.
This is being forced on us.
And I resent that.
And I turn on a TV and I see how breathlessly excited the drive-bys are, and I resent that.
Because I think they're faking it.
Everything about the Clintons is fake.
Plastic manana, good time rock and roll, in terms of, I mean, Mrs. Clinton trying to prepare herself as uh woman running for everyday people.
About the only thing that you can conclude here is that to me it looks like Hillary is going to run as Elizabeth Warren in a pantsuit.
And I don't know if she can pull that off or not, but that's at least what's happening.
Do you know what Thomas Friedman said?
Well, before telling you what Thomas Friedman said, do you remember what Ronald Reagan said when he was asked about policy toward the Soviet Union?
What is going on in there?
What?
Are you mad at somebody or are you excited at somebody?
Snurley started pointed and shouting in there, and I thought something's going nuts.
He's screening a call that he likes.
That's what it was.
Anyway, Ronald Reagan, when discussing policy, foreign policy regarding the Soviet Union, said my policy is very simple.
We win, they lose.
And that was another one of Reagan's statements since the left sent the left into orbit.
They thought it was simplistic.
They thought it was naive.
They thought it was impossible.
And they thought it was ill-advisable.
They didn't like getting rid of the second superpower in the world.
The left thought that two superpowers, us and anybody else at the time the Soviets was balancing.
That was good.
They had no concept of good guys and bad guys, therefore no concept of us as the good guys.
A lone superpower, even if it's us, that's not good.
That promotes destabilization in the world.
Reagan just laughed at him.
Thomas Loopy Friedman of the New York Times, back at it again, says that one of the great things, and contrast this with Reagan.
Reagan on foreign policy with the Soviets, very simple.
We win, they lose.
Thomas Loopy Friedman, describing Obama's foreign policy with Iran, says that, quote, Obama actually.
or uh uh uh Obama actually knows what America looks like from the outside in.
And Obama can actually see America even to some point from the Iranian perspective.
This is supposed to comfort us.
This lunacy is somehow supposed to tell us that we are being led by a leader and a president a cut many cuts above all of us ordinary plebes.
Obama can see America from Iran's perspective.
And that's why Obama is so good.
Now that can only mean one thing.
What is Iran's perspective of the United States?
I can sum it up in three words.
Death to America!
That's the Iranian perspective of the United States.
And here comes Thomas Friedman saying Obama's so brilliant he can see America from Iran's perspective.
Now I don't mean that Obama's out there shouting death to America.
What I mean is Thomas Lupe Friedman says Obama understands.
Obama has this ability to put himself inside the minds and the heads of the Ayatollahs.
And he understands their perspective on America.
What does that mean?
That Obama understands why we're hated?
He understands why we are considered to be such a threat?
What does that matter?
When you boil it all in, did it matter?
Does it matter?
That Barack Obama can see America from Iran's perspective.
Yes, Mr. Limboya.
This is the voice of Mr. Newcastradi.
Mr. Limboy, it would no doubtly a fifth the president is coming up with foreign policy and nuclear weapons, a policy that would work since he understands how the Iranian fief and knows what to do to make sure that we don't threaten him, right?
What caca?
What ab and this here's Thomas Friedman, one of the acknowledged elites.
He'll tell you he's one.
He acknowledged elites inside the New York Washington corridor, the best and the brightest, smarter than all the rest of us, can see things that the rest of us can't.
And the nuance that Obama can see America from Iran's perspective is somehow supposed to comfort us.
It's somehow supposed to tell us how special Obama is.
What does it matter?
It doesn't matter.
What the proper perspective would be if Thomas Lupe Friedman would write that Obama is able to understand what Iran is all about rather than preface it or predicate it by saying that Obama's real great quality is that he can see America from Iran's perspective.
And he can see it from Iran's perspective, he can see it from Putin's.
And he can see it from Raul Castro's.
And Raul Castro just over the weekend ripped the United States to shreds again, as you would expect him to do.
But he exempted Obama.
Oh, yes, Obamas had nothing to do with the bad America.
So we know what this means.
Obama, like Iran, like the Castros.
He sees America's flaws.
He understands and agrees the way these are seen.
No, no, I'm just saying I would rather have a president who sees issues from America's perspective, not Iran's.
Sorry.
I know I'm an oddball here, but I don't think it's any kind of a positive to say that Obama can see America from Iran's perspective.
That can't be good.
What in the world could that possibly lead to?
There's Tom Friedman, New York Times singing Obama's praises.
He's so good.
He's so smart.
He's so in touch, he can see America from Iran's so can we.
All we have to do is listen to them.
Death to America.
They build IEDs, kill our soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.
We know who they are.
We know their state sponsors of terrorism.
We know their best buds are Hezbollah.
We don't need any brilliant president to see America their perspective.
We already know what it is.
What would be great would be to have a president who sees issues from America's perspective.
I can't believe I even have to point that out.
But I do.
Saturday Night Live, I didn't see it, but but Saturday Night Live apparently ripped Hillary to shreds in a skit.
In an opening skit.
I don't know what about.
I don't know what the details were.
I just read that it happened.
I don't know that it means anything.
I know a lot of people are going to write that it does.
A lot of people are going to say, hey, you know what, Saturday Night Live, no conservatives show that.
And if they start ripping into Mrs. Clinton, that's pop culture.
You know, a lot of young people watch Saturday Night Live.
That can't.
I even had somebody suggest to me.
Mrs. Clinton was late yesterday, announcing her stupid campaign.
She's been.
What's the big deal?
Everybody's known this is going to happen.
To treat this as though it's some shock and surprise, pleasant or otherwise, it's just disingenuous because everybody, it's a fate accomplishment.
She's late.
Fact of the matter is, she delayed announcing until she got all of her paid speeches in, as she acts like an everyday American.
Mrs. Clinton hasn't the slightest idea.
And neither does Barack Obama.
And most in the Democrat Party, despite their claim they stand for the little guy, they really don't know what everyday Americans, ordinary Americans, I prefer to call them the people to make the country work.
They literally have no idea what life is like for most of those people today.
They live in their cocoons.
They tell themselves they got a great economic recovery going.
They tell themselves they've got a great foreign policy going.
They tell themselves that because life is great for them inside the beltway, and a little cocoon, it's good for everybody.
They have no idea.
They have no idea of student loan debt.
They have no idea of the literal panic that's out there over Obamacare.
They have no idea people being downsized from full-time work to 30 hours a week just to keep health care.
They have no idea.
And they don't want to understand it.
And they keep making it worse.
They keep flooding the market with illegal aliens hoping to be granted amnesty that'll flood the ordinary American market and dilute it even more.
It offends me.
I don't know.
Mrs. Clinton comes along and had the liba big dead broke when they left the White House, stole furniture, leaving the residents, try to pass themselves off as average ordinary Americans, ordinary, everyday people, when their best friends are the richest people they can find.
And every friendship the Clintons have is tied to money.
I think the Clintons are classic people.
Who, if they didn't have money, if they weren't able to offer things in exchange for money, I don't know how many friends they'd really have.
Let's face it, folks, they're just certain people.
We have all kinds in America, as does the world.
And you've known these people as well as I do.
Some people have to purchase their friends.
They have to buy their love.
Because left to their own devices, they're just not going to attract that many people.
And I think the Clintons are classically in that camp.
I think they're Hollywood buddies or whoever they are, their international intrigue, foreign policy buddies.
It's all involving money.
People giving the Clintons money in exchange for something.
They're not giving the Clintons money because they love them.
They're not giving the Clintons money because they uh want the next invitation.
They're not giving the Clintons money for personal reasons.
They're giving the Clintons money because of what the Clintons will be able to do for them or to prevent happening to them.
So, in terms of real meaningful personal relationships.
I don't think it's that many.
I think one of the telling things is all the people close to Hillary.
It's happened to me too.
They take you aside and they tell you who the real Hillary is.
Oh, yeah, the real Hillary, she loves having a beer.
She loves going to bars and playing darts.
Oh, the real Hillary, she laughs and said, why do you even have to tell us this?
Because it isn't obvious who the real Hillary is.
The real Hillary comes across as a detached, mean-spirited, aloof, arrogant, elitist nurse ratchet.
That's why they have to tell us who the real Hillary is.
Oh yeah, behind this, and you ought to see.
I've had it happen to me personally.
I've had friends of hers describe back in the 90s.
You don't understand her.
She's really, she's a she's the life of the party.
I said, right.
Well, she is.
She loves, you know what?
Hillary loves umbrella drinks.
I actually had somebody tell me that.
So what?
In some people's worlds, in fact, the world they run around in, umbrella drinks are embarrassing.
And you wouldn't be seen, you would be caught dead drinking one.
I mean a pina colada with a with an umbrella in it, or no, no, no.
Those are the but that's the kind of stuff they have to tell people that Hillary does when we don't see her.
And I just maintain that if somebody has to come along and tell you who the real Hillary is, the real Hillary that you never see, that's not the real Hillary.
Anyway, all of this to me is um it's concocted.
Every bit of it's manufactured.
I have a real problem with things that aren't real, and I have a I have a wall up.
Boundaries, if you want to call it that what are just, I'm suspicious of manufactured anything.
Public relations, buzz, you you name it, and I just think all of this is.
Anyway, this Saturday Night Live skit, I had people telling me, you know, Rush, this doesn't happen.
I had one guy say, you know, she was late announcing her candidacy on Twitter by a couple of hours, and there was some speculation going on that they were really shocked by what happened on Saturday Night Live, had to make some adjustments for it.
I've seen some outtakes, some excerpts, and they did savage her.
They made total fun of her, which you really don't see much on shows like Saturday Night Live.
Now I want to take you back to me back in December.
The date exactly December 5th of 2014, and this was issued as a warning.
Now I happen to care about all this stuff back on that day.
I mean, I really don't, folks.
I I'm I mean may I have to explain what I mean by not care.
It's it's not that I don't care that she might be elected and cause havoc.
I just I'm the the whole daily Washington media soap opera, the narrative, the template, the reporting on Hillary, it's a yawner to me because it's all fake, it's all manufactured, none of it's real, and I don't care.
And I I don't care enough to be afraid of her.
I don't care enough to be intimidated by her candidacy.
And I don't understand anybody else who is.
But back in December, early December, I needed to warn some people about the millennials, because everybody's focusing inordinate attention on the millennials.
This is another thing that I have noticed, by the way.
And I don't have enough time to give you a full explanation of it right now.
I'll have to do it sometime after the coming break.
But what the millennials think and what they might do, I sense is of greater importance to their parents and grandparents' generations than it has ever been.
In previous generations, people in their 20s or 30s were looked at as still children who had a lot of growing up to do, a lot of life experiences yet to have, and give them a few years, and then what they say will matter because they will have lived enough to have learned opinions.
That's out the window.
Now, many people look at the millennials as gospel.
What they think is where we're headed.
What they want is what we better give them.
What they think the future is going to be is what it's going to be.
And I'm finding this trend in baby boomer parents.
Baby boomer parents, I can't tell you the number of them I have run into who have changed their opinions on things in life based on what their kids think.
And they're proud to say so.
I've had some people that I have known for 20 years, have been as conservative as I was.
Their kids go away to school, and in two years, these friends of mine are run-of-the-mill liberals.
Their kids have talked about that.
It's not that their kids actively tried to talk about it being conservative, it's just that it happened.
That used to not happen, but it's it's happened with something about the baby boom generation being unsure of itself and me, me, me focused and so forth.
It's fascinating.
The influence people's kids are having on them in terms of shaping their own worldview.
To me, it's unprecedented, at least in the modern era.
But anyway, this is what I said back on December 5.
When it comes to these millennials, these HDD, HDHD millennials.
Short attention spans, hip-deep into pop culture.
I don't think they're gonna find it.
I think Hillary Clinton is already one of the least interesting people in public life.
She's awkward, she's unoriginal, she has the improvisational skills of a parrot, and she's photogenic on like the 23rd take.
And I'll tell you something else.
You wait, you wait until these millennials find out how she enabled her husband to sexually whatever, abuse one of all of these women.
They weren't alive when that happened.
They weren't alive during Paula Jones and Jennifer Flowers and Kathleen Wheeler.
They weren't old enough to remember it.
Lewinsky and all that, wait till they find out.
Let me put it to you this way.
Today's millennials, if, if, don't misquote me on this.
If they found out that Obama was run around serially involved in adulterous relationships and Michelle Obama was in charge of ruining the reputations of the women involved.
Do you think the millennials would put up with it?
Well, wait till they find out that Hillary ran the bimbo eruptions.
This generation of young people, gay marriage, all of this stuff, fine and dandy feminism totally runs their show.
You wait till they find out Hillary's role in what she did to other women.
I'm telling you.
They don't know yet.
That's why it's going to be up to the Republican candidates to get that story out.
It's going to be up to Republican candidates to tell everybody who doesn't know who Hillary Clinton is.
She's not the Hillary Clinton of the Obama years.
She's the Hillary Clinton of the Clinton years.
And people in the millennial age group simply don't know.
They weren't alive or they weren't old enough to remember.
Proving my point, this is Sunday morning CNN State of the Union, fill-in host Dana Bash, speaking with senior political correspondent Brianna Keeler about Clinton running, question everybody's talking about how this time they're going to see the real Hillary.
This time she's going to let her personality show, which is why she's doing these smaller venues, not a big speech, where she's maybe a little bit more accessible.
These millennials that are coming of voting age, and I've gone to a number of these events where there are young people there.
It's anecdotal, but you talk to them, and they have a completely different perception of Hillary Clinton.
They just aren't at all in touch with the 90s.
They don't have that baggage.
So when they think of Hillary Clinton, they know that she was a senator, but they mostly think of her as she was Secretary of State.
Yeah, she ran against President Obama, but then they got along, and she's this kind of huge, larger than life, almost political celebrity.
See?
See, it's exactly, and that's what the drive-bys want to be able to report that there is no Hillary in the 90s.
Okay, I gotta take a break.
Be back in a moment.
Don't go.
Here's the um audio of the Saturday Night Live skit on Saturday night.
Kate McKinnon does Hillary on this show, and they brought back Daryl Hannah from way back when the uh in the 90s.
He did Clinton back in the 90s.
They brought him back to play Bill in this skit.
I am running because I want to be a voice for women everywhere.
Did someone say women everywhere?
Hillary would make a great president.
Thank you.
And I would make an even greater first dude.
Hillary, isn't it crazy that phones can take videos now?
I mean, if they could have done that in the 90s, I'd be in jail.
Great Bill, I love jokes about that.
Okay, I get it.
This election is about you.
I don't want to haul your limelight.
I'm leaving.
Look at me go.
Bye.
I'm gone.
Aren't we such a fun, approachable dynasty?
Yeah.
See, there's the reference in there to the 90s.
If they'd had those camera phones back in 90s, I'd be in jail today, dude.
And that's true.
There wouldn't have been any need for Ken Starr.
We wouldn't have needed Ken Starr whatsoever back then.
Now, Dana Bash, as you know, is a Democrat operative disguised journalist at CNN.
And she was just part of the soundbot I played with uh with uh well, what if the cookie?
I don't remember the name.
When they were talking about how the millennials don't know first thing about Hillary the 90s.
They really have no idea.
After that was finished, it's just this this is Dana Bash, CNN, um, using uh this imaginary Democrat friend of hers to express what she wishes Hillary would have done.
You know, and I was talking to a Democratic friend of mine who said, you know what, why not go to Seneca Falls in her adopted home state of New York, the women's suffragist museum, and just if you're gonna go in, go all in on, especially on sort of the idea that she would be the first female president.
Are you kidding me?
See, the gender wars and the media was expecting Hillary to go all gender all the time as she went ordinary, everyday American.
And they w Seneca Falls?
Really?
That's what you were hoping that Hillary would troop up in her adopted home state of New York, adopted, and head up to Seneca Falls to the women's suffrage museum, and make her announcement there.
I don't know, folks.
It's all so manufactured, and I I know I'm gonna get frustrated because nobody's gonna see it.
The millennials until they're informed, and even beyond that, we don't know, are gonna fall for it.
You remember when Dick Morris, who used to work for the Clintons, wanted them to go on a camping vacation after studying polls.
Their vacations were polled.
Their wardrobe was polled.
Do you remember?
You millennials don't.
Do you remember right before the Monica Lewinsky announcement was made on the Drudge Report?
The Clintons knew it was coming.
There was a picture of Bill and Hillary, both in their swimsuits.
Ugly picture, dancing on the beach at a Virgin Island.
One of the Virgin Island, and that's not a joke.
Turns out, staged, totally staged, because they knew the Lewinsky story was about to drop.
There wasn't even any music.
It was a totally staged thing.
Dick Morris actually wrote that he did polling data, focus grouped, and found out that Clintons, In order to get back in good graces at whatever time this was, should go on a camping vacation.
I gotta take a timeout here.
It's not nothing's real, is the point.
Nothing.
Not a single thing.
They can't afford, just like Obama, none of the Democrats.
They can't afford for it to become known who they really are.
Like ISIS.
ISIS has posted job offerings.
You believe it?
There are job openings for ISIS, press officers, teachers, and bomb makers.
Well, Marie Harf, Bill Ayers, Bernadine Dorn.
They want you.
Sit side, my friends, uh, back with more when we get back for a top of the hour break.
I'm not kidding, ISIS has posted job offers online.
They're asking for PR people, press officers, teachers, and bomb makers.