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Nov. 10, 2015 - Rush Limbaugh Program
37:15
November 10, 2015, Tuesday, Hour #2
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Greetings, welcome back.
Great to have you here, Rushland Bohr.
Doing what I was born to do.
Having more fun than a human being should be allowed to have.
It's great to have you here.
As usual, half my brain tied behind my back so as not to scare people and keep things fair and not to make anybody feel unsafe.
Everybody listening to this program always feels safe and secure.
That's one of the selling points here.
It's great to have you.
Telephone number, if you want to be on the programs, 800-282-2882.
Just a couple of more things here.
And as I, we'll move into the Republican presidential campaign and Carson Trump and Jeb Bush specifically as we lead him to the debate tonight on the Fox Business Network.
You know, I was a student back in the 60s when stuff like is happening now was happening then, too.
I wanted no more part of it then than I do now.
And honestly, folks, the reason why this stuff is so important to me, this is totally destructive.
We now have those students that were protesting in the 60s, those malcontents, you name it, whatever motive, they're running the country now.
If you wonder why things are in such a mess, the 60s protesters and their heirs, remember Obama has lamented that he missed them.
He feels very bad that he missed them.
The people that hate this country, people that despise it, people who grew up being taught what a rotten place this was all the way back in the 60s through today are running the country now.
That's why it matters to me.
They're tearing it apart.
They are destroying this great country as it was founded.
It isn't going to be long.
You're going to start seeing pieces, journalistic, you're going to see news stories, commentary on all the things Obama did that changed America for the worse.
As we move beyond his terms of office, you're going to start seeing these kinds of things.
People are going to write about it once it's safe to do so.
Because there isn't any question, no matter how you look at, no matter how you examine it, there is an unsettledness about the future of the country and its legitimate feelings people have, differentiated from the feelings that exist on college campus.
These feelings, these kids on college campus, they're just asking to be shielded from the reality they are making.
As I said yesterday, these universities somewhat deserve this.
They've been teaching this garbage.
They have been teaching this crap.
What do they expect after so many years of indoctrinating students with this kind of propaganda?
What do they think the students are going to do?
What do they think the students are going to think?
When you have years and years and years to get into young skulls full of mush and tell them what a rotten place their country is and how life's unfair and how they're never going to amount to hill of beans, the deck's totally stacked against them and they don't have a chance.
What do you think they're going to do?
Exactly what they are doing.
But these people and the faculty and everywhere think they're teaching in a vacuum or in a bubble where it isn't going to have any impact on them.
But it's destructive.
This is not useful for these students.
It's not furthering their humanity.
It's not improving very much about them at all.
It's endorsing their cowardice.
It is keeping them perpetually childlike.
It is shielding them from a world that they can't change.
They're never going to be able to get rid of mean people.
And the problem here is that they're defining people as mean and whatever who really may not be.
It's a quest for utopia that can't be found because it doesn't exist.
So they are built in, disappointed.
The disappointment, the crushing disappointment is built in to the way they're being raised.
They're not being raised with any optimism.
They're not being educated with any.
They're not being educated with the ability to overcome adversity and obstacles, which everybody has to.
Everybody always has.
Listen to the hunger strike leader.
His name is Jonathan Butler.
This is last night on Anderson Cooper 360 on CNN.
Anderson Cooper said, you were really prepared to go that far, meaning you were going to die of your hunger strike.
You were going to starve to death over this.
I've been facing issues on this campus as an undergrad since 2008.
And now as a graduate student here, I've been facing these issues.
As an undergraduate, you were saying you've been facing these issues going back to 2008.
Did you feel unsafe on campus?
I felt unsafe since the moment I stepped on this campus.
Why are you still there?
Eight years, why are you still there?
This is the only place you get in.
It's the only place you don't have to pay to get in.
Why are you still there?
Eight years and you don't like it?
Eight years, you feel threatened?
Eight years, you don't feel safe.
Why are you still there?
And I imagine if old Jonathan was sitting here, his answer is, because I am committed to change.
I am committed to overthrowing the racism and the bigotry, whatever it is that's making you feel unsafe.
I am committed to revolution and transformation.
Really?
Sounds like you just want to be safe.
Sounds like you've willingly kept yourself in places that you don't feel safe.
I would love to know what it is that's made him feel unsafe.
How many of you feel unsafe how many times a day?
How many times do you feel unsafe when you're driving?
Something happens.
You look like you're driving defensively.
A driver looks like he's going to go through a red light or you see somebody on their phone in your rearview mirror.
You say, oh my gosh, I hope they're paying attention.
Do I have to put the brakes on?
I mean, how many times do you feel unsafe?
How many times do you feel unsafe when you are part of a crowd at a sporting event?
Who knows what?
I mean, feeling unsafe is part of life.
Adapting to it is what we have the ability to do.
This attempt here to avoid feeling unsafe.
I don't know.
It's unrealistic to me.
And therefore, the demands that come with it are totally unrealistic.
And yet the adults cave to it.
Everybody's caving to this stuff.
I feel unsafe because what happened in Ferguson?
What happened in Ferguson?
Well, a gentle giant was shot in the back when he was running away after being stopped illegally by a cop who was a racist and just wanted to murder him.
Now, what happens if I tell you that none of that happened?
What happened was that the gentle giant had just robbed a convenience store.
Do you realize that would make them feel unsafe?
Telling them the truth about what happened at Ferguson would make them feel unsafe.
You know, one of the excuses given for all this rabble rousing at Columbia?
The grand jury decision in Ferguson.
Because the grand jury totally exonerated the cop.
They felt unsafe 120 miles away.
They didn't feel secure.
They felt unsafe.
Yeah, yeah, I know.
The hunger strike began on Friday.
This is another thing.
This butler guy begins his hunger strike last Friday.
It goes through the weekend, and all during the weekend, the media is acting like some giant medical emergency is in the process of taking place here.
He looks like he's in his 40s to me, the hunger striker, the student for eight years on the Missoula campus who feels unsafe.
He's a big guy.
I don't know why he would feel unsafe.
Frankly, I'm not even convinced he does.
I think this is all just something to say.
You have professors running around.
Our campus has been in crisis for years now.
Our campus is, you take your camera away.
You can't come in here.
You can't.
You can't.
You can't bring your camera in here.
Play that soundbite again.
This is combine number two.
This is the mass media professor at Melissa Click and a videographer, means a photojournalist, tried to get in the midst of the protests yesterday.
I'm Media.
Can I talk to you?
No, you need to get out.
You need to get out.
No, I don't.
You need to get out.
I actually don't.
All right.
Hey, you want to help me get this reporter out of here?
Help me get this reporter out of me feel unsafe.
Help me get this reporter out of here.
Try being a conservative with the media running around you.
Try being Ben Carson for five seconds.
You want to know what unsafe is?
I don't know.
Folks, I hope I'm not making too big a deal of this.
I just, I think if half of this stuff could be stood up to and stopped, we would save ourselves a lot of agony down the road in the future.
I'm just letting the inmates run the asylum.
And you know what I see?
I see microcosms here.
This is exactly how the Republicans deal with the Democrats.
Scared to stand up to them, let them have whatever they want.
Believe the notion that if you do criticize them, if you stand up to them, somebody's going to hate you.
And I'm sure these adults on campus at the University of Missouri think if they stood up to the bullies that somebody would say bad things about them and they can't win.
The football team joining the fray was the last straw.
Here's Rachel Nichols, by the way.
She was also on Anderson Cooper last night.
And he said there's number six.
There are a lot of, obviously, a lot of factors involved here, Rachel, but it's undeniable the power that this football team has.
I mean, they bring in tens of millions of dollars in a screw every year.
Within 48 hours of the football team making an announcement, that's when we saw these resignations.
Look, there are more people who watch football games in this country than go to church.
There are more people who watch football games in this country than vote.
This is where we have a lot of our national conversations.
We've seen LeBron James get active in the Trayvon Martin case.
We've seen the NFL and NBA players in the I Can't Breathe Eric Garner shirts.
We saw the Clippers say they refused to play for their own team owner, Donald Sterling.
And now we can count the Missouri football players among those athletes.
Right.
And they're so excited now because Rachel and her buds in the media, all excited.
They've been hoping and praying to be able to get these athletes involved in the political process because they think they're unstoppable.
And they think because of what she just said, more people watch football and go to church.
You worship an athlete and he comes out and says, vote Obama, thinks it's probably worth 10 million votes.
So many people idolize athletes.
Up to now, athletes have been reluctant to do that because kids of both parties happen to buy t-shirts or tennis shoes, sneakers, or what have you.
And athletes have been reluctant to alienate half of the buying public, but that hasn't stopped the drive-by sports media from trying to lure them in and get them involved in the political process.
Because, of course, the drive-by sports media is as liberal, if not more so, than the standard everyday drive-by media.
Michael Sam, one last thing.
Michael Sam, in a story found at Newsbusters yesterday, said that he had personally experienced no racism at all when he played football for Mizzou.
Claims to have personally experienced no racism whatsoever.
Michael Sam has a lot to learn about being a radical liberal activist.
After the university president Tim Wolf resigned on Monday, Sam said, I don't know why I didn't experience any racial issues.
It didn't happen.
Everything was fine.
They gave me awards and the left-wing activists could not let this stand.
I mean, here's openly gay, award-winning linebacker for Missoula, African American, says he didn't experience any racism, and that's the whole reason all this hubbub is going on.
So they got hold of Michael Sam.
They took him somewhere and they got his mind right.
And the next story that came out on Breitbart was Michael Sam, the openly gay football player who competed at the University of Missouri of 2009 to 2013, tweeted his delight after the president announced his resignation on Monday morning.
Michael Sam said, if Mizzou is truly a family, then we all must stand by concerned student 1950.
Today was just one step forward, one more step forward, and it's true we can still come together in any circumstance.
So yesterday, hey, you know what?
I didn't experience any racism.
A few short hours later, he'd gotten his mind right and he became victim number one, as he should have always portrayed himself to be, and was off on the right path, finally.
By the way, one more thing about Michael Sam.
You know what he did?
He bombed out on the NFL.
Then he went to the CFL and it didn't work out there, so he left.
You know where he went?
He went back to Mizzou.
He went back to this racist, sexist, homophobic institution.
He went back where nobody feels safe.
He went back where there's anger and hatred all over the place.
That's where he went back.
He wanted to finish his studies.
He wanted to go to grad school or something.
He wanted to try to get a degree of some kind.
Why would he return to such a racist, filthy, unsafe, dangerous place when he could have gone anywhere else?
Okay, Dave in St. Louis, as we get started on the phones today, a little later than usual.
I appreciate your patience and welcome.
Great to have you here.
Dave, are you there?
He's not there.
Let's try Joe in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Joe, do you happen to be with us?
Are you there on the EIB?
I'm here.
Can you hear me okay?
Yeah, I hear you fine.
Slow down a little bit and we'll be cool.
Okay, okay.
I wanted to call, and Jay, for one, I'm a big fan.
I listen to you every day before I jog.
And then, two, what I wanted to say was I was kind of listening to the radio today, and I'm a big fan of yours when it comes to, you know, when you discuss economics, but not so much when you talk about social issues.
But as far as what's been going on at the University of Missouri, I understand the sentiment of the young people there, and I'm not necessarily in totally agreeance with a lot of this being mixed up with Ferguson and things of that nature.
But ultimately, I do, like I was showing you the screener, I really do feel that what they're trying to achieve is, you know, some more attention towards some of the social discrimination that goes on with the United States of America.
Like, during, you know, like I was talking to your screener.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, just say, you think that they're.
Okay.
You really think they're protesting against discrimination and racism on the campus of the University of Missouri?
I don't necessarily.
I feel like it's more they're trying to bring attention to the way they feel.
I feel that in today's society, whether it be the, it all kind of hit the fan, I believe, with the Trayvon Martin situation.
That was when that was kind of the catalyst.
But speeding it up.
What was the Trayvon Martin situation?
Wait a minute.
What was the Trayvon Martin situation?
What happened there?
Okay, well, you know, I mean, contrary to some belief, you know, a lot of people would believe that he was a criminal walking the streets and was, you know, about to perpetuate a crime and was killed by George Dennis, who was a good citizen.
In my humble opinion, I believe that he was afraid of this young man he saw walking the street, and he approached him.
Okay.
Let me stop it.
Whatever happened there, whatever happened, what does it have to do with the University of Missouri?
Anybody there?
I digress.
I digress.
Let me get back on point.
Okay, so what I wanted to say was this: during the times of slavery or segregation or Jim Crow, whatever you have, you take, you know, take for instance, if you were to get those people from that time, that day and age, they would look at today's society and say this is not what this is, this is totally unlikely.
Wait a minute.
Joe, do you actually think there are vestiges of slavery at the University of Missouri?
No, no, no, no, no, no, that's not what I'm saying.
What I'm trying to say is that we have to throw Trayvon Martin out.
We have to throw slavery out.
Let me just give you a main point, Rush, please.
My main point is this.
I just feel like they want more attention on the fact that there are racial disparities here in the United States.
That's it.
And I feel like you have to understand and appreciate their way of going about doing it.
They're doing it in a peaceful manner.
They are just bringing attention to the fact that this exists.
Okay, then let me ask you that why do they keep voting Democrat then?
Because the Democrats are responsible for all this.
Democrats ran Ferguson, ran Missouri.
Democrats run the University of Missouri.
Democrats run Baltimore, Maryland.
The Democrats run the prosecutors and so forth in the Trayvon Martin case.
I mean, in the first place, I don't so much of this seems bogus to me and too convenient.
I think what the students want is no grades and no tuition.
They just want to be able to go to school, get a degree.
They want A's and they want no tuition and they want free meals and they get it by claiming they're discriminated against.
They feel unsafe.
They're being treated unfairly or what have you.
You know, this generation is actually a little smarter than the one.
Can you imagine the damage the 60s protesters could have done if they had figured out that they could have just stayed in bed and gotten the football teams at these campuses to boycott whoever's running these protests?
I mean, you've got to give them some credit for some smarts here and figuring out how to max what they're trying to do.
But I think most of it's bogus.
There isn't all this racism in this country they claim there is.
Heading back to St. Louis we go.
This is Chris.
Thank you for calling, sir.
You're next on the Rush Lindbaugh program.
Hi.
Good afternoon, Rush.
I guess it's good, if you want to call it that.
I'm from St. Louis, born and raised all my life.
Recently moved north into the country because of all the things that are going on.
I am an alum of Missoula.
I have had it.
The media today here in St. Louis, as I was listening in the morning, a lot of reporters were down there, which after the whole charade went on, they were able to try to get some interviews.
The kid that was doing the hunger strike, he couldn't give a reason why he was doing it.
And nobody even really knows if he was doing it.
And for Gary Pinkle to go out there with the team and to do this is a sham.
It's ridiculous if they were headed.
Now, wait a minute about Pinkle.
Pinkle, I've met Pinkle one time.
He wouldn't remember.
It was at Nebraska.
In fact, I was at a Missoula-Nebraska game.
In fact, Missouri is my home state.
And there was a Missouri student following me all over that stadium, shouting insults, and they finally had to kick him out of the place.
He wouldn't stop shouting insults at me.
My home state.
Sorry about feeling unsafe.
Pinkle, back to Pinkle.
Problem with him, if he doesn't join his players in this, they won't play for him.
I agree.
He can't recruit.
If he doesn't express solidarity with them, he loses them.
He's almost in a rock in a hard place.
Now, he may, I don't know what his personal feelings on this are, whether he's with them or not, but he had no choice but to be with him.
That's why it's kind of, you have to admit that involving the football team in this pretty brilliant stroke on the part of these rabble-rousers.
I agree.
Now, a couple more things.
I was a lifelong Democrat up until five, six years ago.
All right.
I will be the first to admit I did vote for Obama on his first term like an idiot.
Welcome home.
So, yes, I'm conservative now, really conservative.
The race tensions in the United States of America were never like this until he got into office, and he is just eating this alive and salivating at his mouth.
And he's the real problem.
The whole thing is, these kids don't even know what they're protesting about.
It's just so frustrating, and he is divided.
I'm going to tell you right now, St. Louis has become a very divided city now as far as race.
It is.
I mean, he's ruined this country.
I'm 42.
I have two little girls.
And we literally moved 75 miles north of St. Louis into the country on a couple acres of land because I don't want him growing up.
You know, I mean, it's sad to say.
I understand.
I agree.
I think Obama has sought to exploit racial strife and capitalize on it for his agenda, which is the transformation of America.
He must, in order to succeed in transforming, he must make the place look unjust, illegitimate, unfair.
The more racist he can make things appear, or the more racism he can stoke, the more unrest and disunity, the more need for Obama to fix the problem.
And that's an open recipe or invitation for him to further implement his agenda.
And one more thing I want to point out.
Well, this has also been coming across to me in St. Louis today.
A lot of the protesters down there weren't students at Mizzou.
It goes back to the whole Ferguson and Black Lives Matter thing in George Soros funding this.
The needs to stop now.
Well, I totally agree that a lot of the protesters are bought and paid for members of a rented mob.
But I want to go back to something you said a moment ago.
You don't even know what they're protesting.
They don't.
Well, in terms of specifics, I think you're right.
I think most of these children, which is what they are, and they're acting more and more childlike every day.
Yeah, the lawyers.
I think they're being manipulated by the very people you're talking about, Soros and his professional protesters and motivators who are ginning up the hatred and so forth.
On the other hand, though, I have to be honest, I think a whole lot of people in this country, Chris, are scared for the future, all walks of life, because of the state of the economy, because of what you just said, the disunity, the strife.
There used to be, I mean, we've always had divisions and we've always had disagreements, but the lines that are dividing us have gotten wider and bigger and more pronounced.
And it all just doesn't feel right to a lot of people.
People who have lost their jobs fear they're never going to find another one that pays them what they were earning.
People who have jobs fear they're going to lose theirs.
People fear they're going to lose their health care and not be able to afford it.
People fear this.
And this is on purpose because when you have this kind of fear, and these students are illustrating it, when you have this kind of fear, where do you turn to?
You turn to the biggest source of money you can find.
In this case, it's the government.
You turn to the biggest source of power you can find.
You don't turn inward and rely on yourself because you think it doesn't matter.
These kids have been told the deck stacked against them.
They got no chance because of racism or bigotry or what have you.
Other people don't think that they've got a fair shake because of whatever this or that.
But whatever it is, people know that things are not right.
Something just doesn't feel right.
This is not the way the country deals with problems.
It's not the way we've always solved problems.
The whole idea of the American dream now being in decline, I mean, this unsettles people.
The students are unsettled and frightened and scared, they say, I think, over ridiculous things that are largely made up.
But it doesn't mask the fact that there is an unsettledness that's that's spread over many people in this country.
I agree.
I do agree with that.
I just think that it's just so frustrating to watch this happen over and over.
It's like every week something is going on.
And there's four instances that did happen at Missouri over the last couple years.
One with the CT walk in the bathroom.
The one with the drunk frat guy getting up on stage, saying the M-word.
He was expelled the next day.
The president did take care of that guy and the cotton balls.
But when you ask, like, I'm going to go back.
You can probably Google it and find a video of the kid that was doing the so-called hunger strike.
He couldn't give a reason why he was doing it.
Well, if you look at their demands, if you look at the list of grievances, there are any specifics in those either.
No, it's ridiculous.
You want him to go up and say he has white privilege?
Where does this come from?
I don't, I don't, I what reprehend I don't understand it.
What do you mean, where does it come from?
You just said where it comes from.
You know exactly where it comes from.
It's home today as the Democrat Party.
The Democrat Party, in any of these circumstances, ask who benefits, who benefits from all of this.
Somebody does, or it wouldn't be happening.
In another sense, and I know that this frustrates you too.
I can hear it in your voice.
Why doesn't somebody stand up and stop this?
These are kids.
Why are kids being allowed to run the show?
Because nobody's got the guts to stand up if political correctness is involved.
Nobody has the guts.
The university president, what's the worst thing that could have happened if he would have stood up and defended himself and the university?
He'd have been fired, which he was anyway.
I see microcosms in this.
The reason why I've spent an inordinate amount of time on this is because to me, it's instructive, a teachable moment.
Everything we're seeing in this little microcosm of the University of Missouri is exactly what's going on inside the Beltway in Washington with the Republicans versus the Democrats.
And there's no pushback to any of this.
The left just seems to be able to intimidate, impugn, destroy whoever they want.
And nobody does a thing to stop them.
And it gets really, really frustrating and irritating.
And the more localized it is for you in St. Louis, this University of Missouri, then the more impact it has on you.
Far more impact than whatever's going on in Washington, which is why I try to make the point that it's the same thing.
But I appreciate the call.
Must take a brief time out here for our obscene prophets that we are known for.
We'll be back and continue after this.
Fret not, my friends, the Republican presidential campaign and the debate and some really great sound bites on how the media is admitting that Ben Carson is beating them back, all coming up in the next hour.
Just some questions that I have.
We are told that there is systemic racism at the university.
Hell, we're told there's systemic racism everywhere in the country.
The governor of Missouri is a Democrat.
His name is Jay Nixon.
The governor appoints the board of curators, which is the governing body at the university.
Claire McCaskill, a long-standing Democrat senator from the state of Missouri, who is out there saying That these protests at Missoula will be an impetus all across the country.
McCaskill argued that the protests at Mizzou will be an impetus across the country and how diverse the faculty is is a problem all over America.
The diversity of the faculty?
Are you kidding me?
Look at the curriculum.
The curriculum has been perverted and polluted and corrupted by the American left.
Who cares who's teaching this rotgut?
The fact that it's being taught ought to be success enough for the left.
You look at diversity.
How about the football team?
The sports team.
You want to talk about diversity there?
See, there isn't a diversity problem when it's majority African American.
Nope, it's not a diversity, or it's not a diversity problem if it happens to be majority gay.
But now we've got a diversity problem in the University of Missouri.
This is going to be an impetus for this type of thing happening all over the country.
Well, my question is, how can there be such anger in a place dominated by liberal Democrats?
The faculty has to be all liberal Democrats, or 95% of it.
The administration, whether they're liberal or Republican or conservative or not, they may as well be liberal because if they're conservative, they don't have the guts to stand up and show it.
So for all intents and purposes, they're liberal Democrat.
Wherever you go on this campus or any other campus, it's majority liberals who are running it.
Why is there such anger?
Why is there so much fear?
Why do the students, the precious children, our future, oh my gosh, our treasure?
Why do they feel so scared?
Why?
When it's the village, Hillary Clinton's precious village, raising them.
How can there be such anger?
How can there be such palpable fear?
Why is there the need for hunger strikes?
Why do they need to protest this or that?
Why, if the liberals run the show, is anybody allowed to drive around with a Confederate flag on their car anyway, decal or otherwise?
With the liberals and the Democrats running the show, running a town, running the state, why is somebody running around shouting the N-word in the first place?
What happened to the utopia?
If I didn't know better, I would think the archenemy of these people happened to be running the university, but it's their own people, the people they vote for, the people they believe, the people they trust.
With liberals in charge, the lesson is clear.
There isn't a safe space anywhere in this country.
Even people who embrace liberalism feel unsafe.
Even people that embrace liberalism and vote for it feel scared and unsettled.
So universities have become the home.
Universities have become, in fact, what I would call the safe spaces for community organizers, for community rabble-rousers, for shakedown artists, the people the president cheers, the people the president encourages to continue doing what they're doing.
Anti-intellectual bullies who cannot stand for diversity of thought, who will not tolerate diversity of opinion.
Organizing young radicals and turning them against their parents and turning them against the United States of America.
That's the passion of the modern-day Democrat Party and its figurative titular head, Barack Hussein-O.
And what we have on parade, if you've ever wondered what I mean by young skulls full of mush, just turn on your TV and listen for five minutes to an interview of anybody on campus at the University of Missouri or now at Yale or at Harvard.
Speaking of Yale, Yale students march over concerns about racial insensitivity.
Yale!
You talk about a haven of liberalism.
How can this be?
Hundreds of Yale students and supporters marched across campus yesterday to protest what they see as racial insensitivity.
The March of Resilience is being called.
Followed several racially charged incidents at Yale, including allegations that a fraternity turned a woman away from a party because she wasn't white.
Students held signs, including one that read, don't look away.
Which is a reference to the horrific email sent by a Yale dean who cautiously, callously said that if a Halloween costume offends you, look away.
That was this female student, a female professor who tried to tell these little children, hey, if you see somebody wearing a skeleton suit for Halloween and it scares you, just turn away.
Don't look at it.
And they mocked her.
It's easy for you to say, but we are frightened by the first sight we see.
It leaves an indelible mark on our young brains.
So that's why the don't look away signed.
And then Yale students protest, disrupt, and have a pro-free speech event, which is exactly the opposite of what they're really seeking.
They don't want free speech.
They want to punish any speech they don't agree with or that makes them feel hurt or makes them feel angry or makes them feel unsafe.
And this is a different story.
This is a different story than the last one about racial insensitivity.
This is a story displaying the real diversity and tolerance enjoyed at Yale and other colleges.
And then, is there one more in this Yale?
Oh, yes, Million Student March aims to fight for free college tuition and cancellation of student debt.
And this is really what a lot of it's all about.
They want to get all A's without having to attend class.
They don't want that to cost anything.
They don't want to have any student loans, free tuition, cancellation of student debt, million student march.
They want freedom and diversity in grades.
They want much more tolerance for marginalized students, meaning if you don't want to go to class, you shouldn't have to go to class.
What an unfair and rigid requirement.
That's at Yale.
No matter where you look, every place in this country that is run by liberal Democrats and has been for years is an abject total disaster with unchecked misery and unhappiness and anger and rage.
How can that be?
Yeah, just wait till healthcare is run 100% by Democrats.
Imagine how much happiness is going to be there.
You talk about orchestrated, calculated chaos.
Anyway, two down, one to go.
Broadcast excellence, yet another excursion into same.
And the Republican presidential campaign is up next.
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