Welcome to today's edition of the Rush 24-7 podcast.
Okay, look, I know there's fireworks out there all over the place, but you know what the biggest stack is today after exhaustive extensive show prep?
The biggest stack is still what's happening on campus.
Not just Mizzou, but all over the place.
All kinds of people weighing in.
It's a bigger stack than the and I know Trump.
Yeah, and Carson and the Washington Post says the establishment is hoping they can draft Romney.
Gee, whiz what live from the Southern Command in sunny South Florida.
It's open line.
Holy smokes.
It's Philip Rucker and Robert Costa.
Costa used to work at National Review.
Time for GOP panic.
Establishment worried Carson or Trump might win.
Thank you.
They really thought Trump would be gone by now.
What does this say?
You know that you got Rubio.
You have Cruz.
You have Christie.
You have Fiorina.
You have Huckabee.
You have Kasich.
To hell with philosophy.
And you've got Gindle.
You got Santorum.
None of them are any good.
You've got Scott Walker.
You go back to Scott Walker.
You've got Rick Perry.
You get Pataki.
Well.
Yeah, you do.
You get Gilmore.
You've got all these people that are still in the race.
What do you do?
You want to go back and get somebody who's already lost?
You want to go back, the establishment wants to go back and get Romney.
Now, really, the headline of the story, time for GOP panic, establishment worried Carson or Trump might win.
You have to get to the end of the story before you find out the idea here is Romney.
But here's a very telling paragraph.
The party establishment's paralyzed.
Big money's still on the sidelines.
No consensus alternative to the outsiders has emerged from the pack of governors and senators running.
And there's disagreement about how to prosecute the case against them.
Recent focus groups of Trump supporters in Iowa and New Hampshire commissioned by rival campaigns revealed no silver bullet.
Meaning, in all the things that Trump has said and done and been places he's been, there's not one thing establishment focus groups say that you could point out about the guy that would make them abandon him.
Now all of this happened.
This story obviously uh ran it got it posted at 1007 last night, so it was written all during the day yesterday.
Most of it was written before the Trump tirade in Iowa against Carson and ISIS and uh and Carly, whatever her last name is, he said.
And the drive-bys are looking at that, what in the heck did we just see here?
First place Trump was 40 minutes late.
His hair was disheveled and out of place.
He seemed ticked off from the moment he got there.
He started attacking Iowa voters for not making him number one in the polls.
How can that possibly be?
So the drive buys are thinking, well, this is, and you'll hear them coming.
This is it.
We've reached it now.
This is a tipping point.
Trump is caving.
Trump is imploding.
Trump can't deal with not being number one.
This is it.
The moment we've all been waiting for.
The problem with that is, let's say it's true, just for the sake of discussion.
The problem with that is the establishment just blew themselves up by letting everybody know that if if Trump doesn't make it, they're not interested in Carson or anybody else.
They want to go back and get Romney.
Which might say, well, we might have to overlook what Trump did here.
You never know.
And folks, this is not even you wait till we get to January and votes are right around the corner.
If you think the fireworks are happening now, you just wait till after the holidays are over.
And everybody gets back to the new sense of normalcy following the holidays in January, with the Hawkeye Cawkeye happening on February 1st.
If you think it's intense now, I've even heard not very many people.
I've heard a couple people say, okay, this this confirms Rush what I, they talk about themselves, have known all along.
Which, by the way, they never told me.
I love people that do this.
Something happens in the oh, yeah, I've been talking about this, thinking about this for two weeks.
I said, really?
It's the first I've heard of it.
Yeah, the theory is Trump doesn't want to win.
This is Perot II.
He doesn't want to win.
He's He's very upset at being at the top, and he's got to sabotage himself since he can't, since none of these other schlubs can overtake him, he's got to take himself out.
And he doesn't really want to win and doesn't want to quit.
Trump's not a quitter, so he's got to make it look like he's imploding and this kind of thing.
I mean, that theory is going around out there.
I don't know how widespread it is.
We're learning all kinds of still learning things about what happened at University of Missouri that add to all of the hoax theories.
This new president, they've got a new interim president out there at the uh University of Missouri.
And what did I what have I always been saying?
Well, that's an unfair question.
Let me remind you, one of the things I've been pointing out is that the universities have been teaching this anti-American clap trap for I don't know how long, and here it is coming home to roost.
But more importantly, as leftists, typified by Obama, you you name it, they all have chips on their shoulders.
They don't like this country.
I think it was unjust and immoral from our earliest days, from our founding.
And nothing that we've done since has ameliorated one sin this country's guilty of.
We haven't made one bit of progress.
America is not worthy of superpower status.
You've heard that riff, right?
Okay, so the new interim president is a guy named Middleton, Michael Middleton.
He's the interim chief at the University of Missouri, interim president.
He is African American.
He said, he's he's a Mizzou Grant.
He went to school at Mizzou.
He is, by all accounts, fabulously successful.
But nevertheless, Mr. Middleton says he felt marginalized at every phase of his career at Mizzou.
And he says that while he does not blame white people, oh no, no, no, no, no, of course not.
He is the pres.
He can't publicly blame white people.
So while he says that he doesn't blame white people, he does blame the ugliness of American history.
And there it is.
So the University of Missouri rabble rousers have succeeded in securing the appointment of an interim president who believes the same thing they do.
Same thing at Jeremiah Wright believes, same thing at Obama believes, that this country is inherently ugly, that it was structurally and is structurally ugly and racist and sexist and bigoted and homophobic.
And I'm telling you, don't doubt me, that is liberalism, or call it socialism if you want.
But that is what leftists think, and this is what the professors at these schools have been teaching.
Some really funny and crazy things are happening on campus.
There was a there was a brouhaha, either yesterday afternoon or last night.
A bunch of students actually demanded that the First Amendment be suspended for people that disagree with them.
They did not want to hear.
They made a claim.
They actually used the words can the First Amendment.
Suspend it, get rid of the First Amendment.
It should not apply to people disagree with us.
And there were some on campus who were taking it under advisement, taking it into consideration.
Now, let's take a little historical uh look at this.
I would have to say, listening to what I'm hearing be spoken on the campus at Mizzou and in the drive-by media, and at many other institutions of higher learning.
And what I saw and heard out of Ferguson, Missouri, what I saw and heard out of Baltimore, the Trayvon Martin case, you name it, Black Lives Matter.
Civil rights movement obviously is a complete failure.
And not only that, According to the left, blacks do not have civil rights.
They have yet to be granted civil rights, despite all that this country's done.
The level of oppression is unchanged.
In fact, it may be just as bad now as it used to be.
It may be even more intense now with media focus.
The degree of racism and bigotry and discrimination against African Americans is worse than ever.
But not only are we to conclude that African Americans do not have civil rights, according to some students at the University of Missouri, white people shouldn't have them either because of white privilege.
White privilege wrote the Bill of Rights, and therefore it is illegitimate.
The Bill of Rights, the First Ten Amendments Constitution doesn't count.
Needs to be thrown out.
People of white privilege wrote the Bill of Rights, therefore they are worthless.
To make things fair, only radical leftists.
That would include white people.
White people can join this movement if they are lunatics.
Only radical leftists should be allowed to move freely and speak their minds.
Everybody else is to be limited, jailed, silenced, some have you.
We also have to conclude, therefore, that the war on poverty has failed.
The Great Society has been a complete failure.
All of these programs, all of the $15 trillion spent to make amends, to pay reparations in one form or another, Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Civil Rights Act B of 1964, however, many civil rights acts there have been, all of them worthless.
All of them have meant nothing.
War on poverty, failure.
Great society, abject failure.
And in fact, you know, Jim Garrity, and I'm going to get into this in uh more detail as the program unfolds.
Jim Gardy at National Review Online makes the point that what's actually happening on this campus, these campuses, and if you want to look at it this way, it's all liberalism on these campuses.
I mean, from the executive offices to the faculty and the faculty lounge, the student assistants, in many cases, the athletic coaches, everywhere you go on every major American college campus, all you will find is liberalism and what is happening.
It's imploding.
It's failing everybody.
Once again, I would like to point out to any of you scratching your heads and watching all this, there aren't any Republican fingerprints at the University of Missouri.
They don't run anything there.
You don't have Republicans on the faculty.
You don't have Republican student advisors, nor conservative much less.
I'll develop this further as the program unfolds.
Garrety's headline is what if the left's campus meltdown reflects its growing sense of doom?
He actually quotes a writer over at commentary in expanding.
Have you heard, ladies and gentlemen, of the story percolating in Hollywood?
There's this A-list, male star.
A list, who apparently runs around and has sex with virtually anybody.
And it was learned recently that he's HIV positive.
Story started out a dead spin, and it kind of showed up at uh it's been a bunch of different places.
Drudges had links to it for the last week or week and a half.
And everybody's trying to figure out who it is.
Who is this?
Because none of the people who know are naming the A-List male star.
Supposedly in his 50s, middle age.
But nobody wants to name him, And this is making a lot of people nervous.
A porn star who had sex with this Hollywood actor.
Secretly battling HIV fears and epidemic as she reveals that he has slept with at least 50 adult actresses and transsexuals.
Rumors are rampant that this major Hollywood star has been diagnosed as HIV positive, a 27-year-old porn star who had sex with the unnamed actor.
Spoke to the UK Daily Mail online exclusively.
She fears he may have infected dozens of women.
It's really got the town rocked because some know who it is, others don't.
Everybody else is trying to guess who it is.
And it's all because there's HIV positive in this.
And the actor, no, is not reputed or ever thought of or reported to have been gay.
I mean, the guy's just like a satyr.
Male version of a nympho.
S-A-T-Y-R.
Look it up.
All right.
Brief timeout, we come back.
We'll get into Trump's tirade in Iowa, the media reaction to it.
Your phone calls, you don't want to miss.
You don't want to miss, folks.
You don't want to go anywhere.
Donald Trump lit into Ben Carson yesterday.
Um it will be interesting to see.
Uh there have been countless times in the past where Trump has behaved in ways people found questionable and thought that would be the end of it.
He's gonna blow up.
He's gonna implode.
The polling date is gonna show he's gone too far.
People think he's gone too far.
So people saying that again yesterday over what Trump said about Ben Carson and others.
Let's go to the sound bites, see what you think.
Last night, CNN's Aaron Burnett denied, or tonight.
She said, on questions about Dr. Carson's past.
Do you believe he's being truthful now that uh you've heard his answers?
Pathological is a very serious disease.
And he said he's pathological.
Somebody said he has pathological disease.
Other people said he said in the book, and I haven't seen it, I know it's in the book, that he's got a pathological temper or temperament.
That's a big problem because you don't cure that.
I could say, as an example, child molester.
You don't cure these people.
You don't cure a child molester.
There's no cure for it.
Pathological, there's no cure for that.
Well, we've called many people in this program pathological liars.
You know what the definition of a pathological liar is?
I mean, there are many definitions, but just to give you an idea of what's being discussed here.
Um I've often said that Clinton is pathological lying.
And by that I mean he really believes what he's saying is true.
Either pathological liar actually believes his own lies.
He's so good at it that his lies to him are real, reality.
Uh and and there are others just as adept at lying who are fully aware what they are doing.
Now, there I don't know in this tirade that uh Trump gave an eyeball last night.
I don't I I haven't seen anything in his tirade that he hasn't said before.
But last night apparently it was total stream of consciousness.
Didn't seem to be any breaks anywhere.
I mean, guardrails or or uh any any speed bumps, let's uh let's put it put it that way.
And it seemed many people think Trump does that all the time, but this seemed a little bit more disjointed than usual.
Carson has come out, by the way, press conference.
Donald Trump did not call me a child molester.
We have that coming up.
But first, return to Trump last night, Fort Dodge, Iowa.
This is Trump speaking about uh questions regarding Dr. Carson.
Give me a break.
The knife broke.
Let me tell you, I'm pretty good at this stuff.
So I have a belt.
Somebody hits me with a belt going in because the belt moves this way.
It moves this way.
It moves that way.
He healed the belt up.
Anyone have a knife you want to try it on me?
It ain't gonna work.
You're gonna be successful.
But he took the knife, he went like this, and he plunged it into the belt.
And amazingly, the belt stay totally flat.
And the knife broke.
How stupid are the people of Iowa?
How stupid are the people of the country to believe this crap?
There you have it.
That one sound bite is what has everybody out there going, oh, this is above and beyond even what we're accustomed to from Trump.
What do we do with Oh my God, he said crap?
Oh my God.
And now, and now he's a Carson lied about the knife because he goes in this whole dissertation about the belt buckle and so forth.
And then how stupid are the people of Iowa.
When he's in Iowa, he was at Fort Dodge.
So you know, some people say he's clearly, clearly bothered that Carson's ahead of him in Iowa, doesn't understand it, and is blaming, like Democrats do, actually, the voters.
And their stupidity will be back.
Welcome back, folks.
It's open line Friday.
Rush Limbaugh here at the Distinguished Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies.
And that means that when we go to the funds, uh, have at it.
Whatever you want to talk about, whatever is on your mind, generally is okay.
Monday through Thursday, it has to be things that I'm either interested in or am talking about, because my not getting bored is the key requirement.
I get bored, everybody listening is gonna get bored, and that ain't good.
But on Friday, that's the risk.
I will take the great career risk of turning content over to people who are not highly trained.
That would be you, rank amateurs.
Lovable, adorable rank amateurs.
It's fun.
Do it once a week.
800-282-2882.
Donald Trump on ISIS.
Now, this is this is after he asked how stupid are the people of Iowa for believing anything Carson's saying about his past.
How stupid are the people of Iowa because they somehow prefer Carson.
And how can they believe this crap?
Now the next bite, this also from Fort Dodge, this is Trump, but what he would do about ISIS.
I know more about ISIS than the generals do, believe me.
I would bomb the out of him.
I would just bomb those suckers.
And that's right.
I'd blow up the pipes, I'd blow up the refined, I'd blow up every single inch.
There would be nothing left.
Audience loved it.
Audience liked hearing it.
There's some conflict over whether or not we've actually killed the ISIS head honcho.
It's fascinating to me.
All of this time, ISIS has been out there doing whatever they've been doing, and we officially, from the regime, have been acting like we care a little bit, and we're gonna do something about it, but we gotta be very careful.
No boots on the ground and all that.
Putin comes along, starts talking tough, starts making bombing runs, starts making attacks.
Putin's dominating a news cycle.
Putin this Putin had three weeks of that, and all of a sudden we've killed Jihad John.
But now David Cameron of UK said, uh, uh, uh, uh, not so fast.
Maybe the U.S. didn't.
We gotta take this under advisement, meaning we necessarily can't trust uh Barack Obama and his apparatus, claiming that they've killed somebody here.
So that's the latest in that.
Anyway, Trump just wants to.
He doesn't want to bomb those suckers.
He's gonna bomb the bleep, bleep, bleep, bleep, bleep, bleep out of them.
The audience goes, yay, dude, right on.
But they were also people shocked in the audience last night.
Here's Carson in uh Greenville, South Carolina, not playing the outrage game at a press conference.
Reporter said Donald Trump last night on CNN compared things that you've said about having a pathological temper to being a child molester, saying those things are incurable for life.
Do you find this appropriate dialogue from your presidential front runner in the Republican race at this point?
Well, it's not the kind of dialogue that I would ever engage in.
And uh I'm hopeful that maybe his advisors will help him to understand the word pathological and uh recognize that uh that does not denote incurable.
It's not the same.
It simply is an adjective that describes something that is highly abnormal.
And something that fortunately I've been able to uh be delivered from for a half a century now.
So a half century ago, he was pathological, but he isn't pathological anymore, proving that you can cure abnormal pathologies.
But it's wrong for Trump to say that pathologies or pathological characteristics are incurable because they're not.
And a female reporter said he called you a term molester, he called you a term molester.
Do you believe he owes you an apology?
I don't believe he called me a child molester.
He compares your pathology to child molestation.
Well, you know, I always find it a little amusing what people in the press like to say.
You compare this, and therefore you said they're the same.
I don't buy all that stuff.
So those are questions we should ask Donald Trump.
Well, let's go back.
Grab audio sound bite number seven.
As Carson may be right about this, not that it's a big deal, but I Trump employed a uh uh verbal trick here.
And I'm sure that a drive-by media person in full-fledged bias mode would be capable of hearing something that wasn't said because she wants to hear it, or he.
It's on Aaron Burnett last night on CNN.
And she asks Trump if he believes that Carson's being truthful now about stories regarding his past.
Pathological is a very serious disease.
And he said he's pathological.
Somebody said he has pathological disease.
Other people said he said in the book, and I haven't seen it, I know it's in the book, uh, that he's got a pathological temper or temperament.
That's a big problem, because you don't cure that.
I could say, as an example, child molester.
You don't cure these people.
You don't cure a child molester.
There's no cure for it.
Pathological, there's no cure for that.
Okay, so technically he didn't call Carson a child molester.
He wanted people maybe to think that he was comparing temperaments here, but he didn't come out and declare Ben Carson a child molester.
He's not he's not even a good child molester.
I know child molesters that are really good.
He's not even a good Trump would have said if he were calling Carson a child molester.
But he actually didn't.
But if you're a media person and you want to hear, Trump enabled it.
What do you think I'm wrong about this?
Well, that's what I'm saying.
That he did he didn't call him a child molester, but he he created let's call it the illusion.
You know, in magic acts.
There's there's uh there are various stages of the act, and one of the stages is called a prestige, and it's an illusion, and he cre he what he's is he's tricking people.
He's he's he's uh actually how would you say this?
He's uh he's openly purposefully keying in on everybody's lack of really hearing things.
He just knows it's gonna be very easy.
He's talking about Carson over here and temperaments, and then all of a sudden pathology and how it's incurable.
Throw the two words up, child molester.
By God, he just called him a child.
Did you hear that, Mabel?
Did you hear that?
He is calling him a child when he really didn't.
But it served the purpose.
It made people think I'm not no, no, no.
I'm I'm stickler for language.
You know me.
I'm uh mayor of Realville.
So let's go to the drive-bys.
Because I said earlier, the drive by's think this is it again.
This is it.
The establishment inside uh Beltway, Republican establishment, they're gleeful.
They're probably regretting this Washington Post story now about Romney, but they'll get over that.
They are just ecstatic.
They think this is it.
The big moment that they've just known was gonna happen.
It happened.
It happened on CNN last night, it happened in Dodge City, Iowa.
Uh, with Trump blowing up, or Fort Dodge blowing up over Ben Carson.
First a montage from a bunch of drive-bys.
Titanic tirade.
Donald Trump sounds off during an epic 90-minute rant.
Trump's tirade, the Republican candidate going off.
Donald Trump unleashed a 95-minute tirade.
95-minute just tirade.
Donald Trump's tirade last night.
This tirade by Trump last night.
He achieved sort of orbital escape velocity in that tirade.
An epic tirade.
His tirade was some colorful language.
Trump going on another tirade.
One of the longest and most eyebrow-raising tirades from Trump yet.
So it was a tirade.
I guess we gathered that from the drive-by.
So somewhere from where it went out, you all are going to describe it as a tirade.
And they all dutifully described it as a tirade.
And they did so happily.
Up next, CBS this morning, White House correspondent Major Garrett reporting on the Republican campaign and Trump and his speech in Fort Dodge, Iowa.
One of the questions that has long surrounded Donald Trump's surprising resiliency as a Republican front runner, could his temper and ego withstand long-running political competition?
Well, last night, just north of here in Fort Dodge, Trump delivered an answer laced with profanity and insults that may mark a turning point.
Yes, it's may mark a turning point.
If it does, folks, I just want to remind you, I may not be the first to have reminded you, but if not, I was among the early ones.
If there is a shakeup at the top of the Republican field, and if Carson and or Trump fade, who is the guy I told you to keep your eyes on?
That would be Cruz.
And ever since then, more and more people, even today, there are another stories about keep a sharp eye on Cruz.
Ted Cruz.
Ted Cruz positioned well to pick up any pieces that fall apart.
So there's Major Garrett.
John Sununu this morning on CNN's New Day, Allison Camarata.
Governor, what do you think?
What do you think of Trump's plan?
What do you think of his speech?
What do you think strategically of what he did last night in Fort Dodge?
That whole rant in Iowa is the reason that we should not have a reality show star as President of the United States.
It was irrational, it was rude, it was crude, and frankly, politically, it was dumb.
And this is the problem.
It applies equally to the fact that every strategy that Mr. Trump puts on the table is dependent on hot rhetoric to get the emotional response from the voters, but has no rationality or substance behind it in terms of being able to be implemented.
I do think that what you saw in Iowa yesterday is the beginning of the unraveling of the loudmouth campaign.
They can't wait.
They just they just can't wait.
This is it.
They knew it.
It was always going to happen, except yesterday they were getting panicked, so they fed some lines to the Washington Post about trying to get Romney redrafted or reinterested.
Sit tight, my friends.
You get to weigh in when we get back.
Open line Friday, L. Rushbow.
Executing assigned host duties flawlessly, zero mistakes, because that's I'm the one that assigns.
So if I'm assigning the duties, how can they possibly be mistaken or flawed?
Uh, Kathy in uh Santa Paula, California.
Great to have you.
You're first today.
Welcome to the program.
Thank you.
Um, I just been thinking about these students in Missouri, and I guess students all over the country that are upset and frustrated with um their difficult life and the hardships they endure as student body presidents and student body vice presidents and scholarship football players.
And um I just wanted to comment that I bet you there's a lot of young people in countries like um Sierra Leone and Boca Haran.
Um People who are dealing with these kinds of slavery issues that would be thrilled to trade places with them.
Well, they've got those handled.
You're talking about Boca Haram and the kidnapping of women and uh they do they deal with that.
These students do with hashtags.
They go to Twitter and they put hashtags up and then they've done they've they've dealt with Moharem.
And the hashtag I met a young man who um who immigrated with his father from the Congo.
Um, had lived his whole life in refugee camps, and was able to was able to come here and was thrilled to just be here.
Um I just I think we don't realize what privilege really is.
Uh who doesn't.
Most of us.
I think most of us are privileged to be here, to be able to go to college, whether it's a top rate college or a uh a community college.
I think we're privileged.
Well, I agree with you that a lot of people take a lot for granted, uh, particularly being born to it.
I mean, you don't know anything else but freedom.
Well, you think that's what it is.
You don't know life in a refugee camp.
You don't know life in Tierney.
It's one of the frustrating things, frankly, if I may be bold and honest, in in trying to explain to people, it's why I'm doing these history books for kids.
It's why I spent so much time talking about how unique and exceptional the United States is.
Never before or since in human history has there been a nation formed under such principles.
Life for most every living human being.
Well, it's contradictory or duplicative.
Life for everybody.
This the the story of human life is bondage and tyranny and suffering, enslavement, hunger, poverty.
The vast, vast, vast majority of people who have lived on this planet, have never known anything like life in the United States.
That's why so many people do not understand all of these spoiled brats running around talking about this place being the home of oppression, this place being the home of racism or sex, all these other isms and all this destructive stuff.
They're spoiled, rotten little kids who haven't the slightest idea what toughness really is or hard lives really are.
If they think the things they have got to live through, the daily obstacle course of their lives, if they think that's tough, they're really out of touch and ignorant.
But they've been educated this way.
They've been educated to be softies.
They have been educated to go through life as children.
And I was thinking earlier today, all these kids on campus want these safe zones.
They don't want to go anywhere where there's anything at all that they see that makes them uncomfortable, that they read that makes them uncomfortable, that they hear that makes them uncomfortable.
And I think back, you know, my parents, and I'm sure most of your parents raised us just to be the exact opposite.
They wanted us to learn how tough it was out there.
They wanted us to learn to deal with it.
That was part of being raised, that was part of being educated, is to understand that there isn't a utopia.
Nothing is fair.
There is nothing idyllic out there.
It's all up to you and what you make of it.
But these kids act powerless.
These kids are scared, they're they're still immature attitudinally, and they act like there's nothing they can do other than to either sequester themselves or to get rid of that which they disagree with, don't like, makes them uncomfortable, whatever.
But the point is they're not being educated, trained, taught to deal with things that are unsafe, with things that present challenges and pose problems.
And that was always part of growing up.
Uh for me, anyway, weren't coddled.
Um we're not I mean, it's a it's a it's a fine line, you know, parents protecting children at some stage, but at some point you have to grow up and learn to take care of yourself, and that's what's not happening here.
And not only is that not happening, they're they're being given and offered excuses for not taking care of themselves.
And the big excuse is you can't.
The deck is so stacked against you, the rich, the one percent, the people with white privilege, they're all aligned against you.
Everything's a rate against you.
You don't have a chance at a fair shot, no matter what your age, no matter what your sex, no matter what your gender.
That's the message for youth people and young people on college campus.
Anyway, Kathy, I appreciate the call.
I'm out of time.
First hour zip by.
Back with much more after this.
Hang in there, my friends.
We've only just begun the fastest three hours in media, Rush Limbo, and open line Friday.
We've got the latest Reuters numbers, five day rolling average, and Trump is up.