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Nov. 25, 2015 - Rush Limbaugh Program
36:57
November 25, 2015, Wednesday, Hour #2
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The views expressed by the host on this program dazzle and rivet the people of this nation.
The views expressed by the host on this program have generated universal love and support for the host.
The idea that it's love him or hate him, it's a bogus concept that's never been applicable to the people in this audience.
Live from the Southern Command in sunny South Florida.
It's open line.
Friday!
In fact, this program, I I even reject the idea this program's controversial.
Everybody listens agrees.
Where's the controversy?
But that's what they say it is.
So anyway, folks, a thrill and a delight to be with you.
Our annual Thanksgiving show today here on the Rush Limbaugh program at the Limbaugh Institute for Advanced Conservative Studies, 800-282-2882.
If you want to be on the program.
And just a reminder, uh, since it is open line Friday on Wednesday, and that's because this is the last live program of the week.
What do we, what are we doing tomorrow?
We have a we have a best of show running.
Right.
Uh that's right, Mark Standard Friday.
Who's going to be here on Monday?
Mark Belling is going to be here on Monday.
That's, I should be honest with you, folks.
I am, you know, I'm going to do what my staff does.
You know, my staff sends me their vacation schedule.
They think they're pulling tricks on me and fast ones on me, and they'll they'll give me the date range, and I'll look, and the end of the vacation is always a Monday with a return to work on Tuesday.
I say that's fine.
I don't mind being tricked.
I mean, if they're how am I really being tricked if I if I discover it.
Anyway, the point is I decided to trick myself this year.
And so uh rather than hustle a get back on Sunday when all the other plebs are.
We're gonna get back on Monday.
So Mark Belling will be here on uh on Monday, I'll be back Tuesday.
So the point is this is a last live program, but whatever you want to talk about, have at it and feel free.
It does not have to be politics, it does not have to be the news of the day.
It it it can literally be uh well, I mean, not literally any.
There's certain things that Snerdley will say no, like if you complain about the electric bill or you want to share a carrot cake recipe or something like that.
Yeah, we don't do that, but give it a shot.
Have at it.
Again, 800-282-2882.
The uh Washington Post.
Mike, and I I'm sorry if I'm gonna do this to you.
I know the answer is what's gonna be, and I should have prepared.
I didn't.
Do you by any chance could you think you could put your hands on that 47-second Casic Super PAC ad they ran against Trump that we played, it was soundbite number one yesterday.
I mean, I have to have it within seconds.
You can find it here in a you know, ten minutes or so.
Uh once we have it, it's in our archives.
The reason is the Washington Post has a story on it.
The headline, New Casic ad.
If Trump becomes president, you better hope there's someone left to help you.
Now we don't have this ad.
I'm just, I just wanted to play the ad they ran yesterday, or the first ad that has run.
The presidential campaign for Governor John Kasich put out a new ad.
This is the oh no, wait a minute.
This might be the Casick campaign, not the Super PAC.
The super PAC and the campaign are two different things.
Okay, he's got it.
Let's just review.
The Kasich Super PAC, which by law cannot communicate with the candidate.
By law, Kasich can't coordinate with them.
They can raise untold amounts of money.
There are very few limits on the super PAC, but at the same time, the campaign can't coordinate.
Kasich can't coordinate.
It's supposed to be hands-off and a very large distance.
The Super PAC announced that they were gonna go get Trump, that they're fed up and made up of establishment Republican types.
They thought Trump would have imploded by now.
Or they thought that efforts to take Trump out would have succeeded by now.
So they decide they're gonna do it themselves, and they have been raising independent money, money alongside whatever they're raising for the super PAC to fund an ad by of TV commercials and others that are supposed to warn people supporting for Trump, supporting Trump what a mistake they're making.
These ads are supposed to tell Trump voters or supporters just how bad Trump is, just how egregious he is.
It's a it's a it's supposed to wake them up and let them know that they're they're supporting a loose canon or whatever.
And their first ad was just a series of um Trump sound bites.
Things Trump has said either on the stump or on television in interviews or at campaign appearances.
They even went back, they got one from 2006 with Meredith Vieira talking to Trump when he was on the view 2006 and nine years ago, in their first ad, they had to go back nine years to find something to give this thing 47 seconds.
Here is the ad.
He's not a war hero.
Five and a half years ago.
He's a war hero because he was captured.
If Ivanko weren't my daughter, perhaps I'd be dating her.
Oh, it's so weird.
I have a great relationship with the blacks.
I have I've always had a great relationship with the blacks.
The blacks.
Well, I just don't respect her as a journalist.
You know, you can see there was blood coming out of her eyes, uh, blood coming out of her, whatever.
Somebody's doing the raping, Don.
I mean, you know, it's I mean, somebody's doing the just say it's women being raped.
Well, who's doing the raping?
The belt moves this way.
Moves this way.
How stupid are the people of Ireland.
Anyway, so that ad is designed to wake Trump supporters up and realize that Trump, the guy they're supporting, is this loose candidate says all of these outrageous mean things, and if you once you find out there's no way you're gonna stick with him.
Now the ver the Meredith Vieira clip from 2006 in the View, that's that's when Trump said if uh if Anka weren't my daughter, I'd probably date her, and that's when Meredith Vieira is so weird.
Six years or nine years old it is.
So anyway, that's the first ad.
There are more like that coming.
So the Washington Post story on all of this says there's a new Kasich ad, and the message in the new Kasich ad is if Trump becomes president, quote, you better hope there's someone left to help you.
The presidential campaign of John Kasich put out a new ad lashing out directly at Donald Trump with a harsher tone than any other candidate has taken thus far.
The gloves are off in the fight between Kasich and the Trumpster.
Well, technically they've been off since last Friday, but the Casick campaign released a web ad Tuesday directly attacking Trump with a darker tone than any other candidate has used so far to go after the business mogul.
The commercial features retired Air Force Colonel Tom Moe speaking at an event in Ohio the same day Trump held a rally in Columbus.
Colonel Tom Mo, who the Casey campaign identifies a former Vietnam POW, paraphrases a quote from the Protestant pastor Martin Niemulder, taken from his lectures after World War II.
Here is the paraphrased quote.
You might not care if Donald Trump says Muslims should register with their government because you're not one.
And you might not care if Donald Trump says he's going to round up all the Hispanic immigrants because you're not one.
And you might not care if Donald Trump says it's okay to rough up black protesters because you're not one.
And you might not care if Donald Trump wants to suppress journalists because you're not one.
But think about this.
If he keeps going and he actually becomes president, he might just get around to you.
And you better hope there's someone left to help you.
This is a takeoff on the the old when they came for the Jews, I didn't care because I wasn't a Jew.
And when they came for the diamond merchants, I didn't care.
And when they came for me, there was nobody left to help me.
It's an old German Nazi philosophy.
So Kasich has run an ad here saying that we're looking at a dictator.
And this dictator, this Trump guy is going to get rid of anybody he doesn't like, and he's going to use the full force of the federal government to get rid of them, to nullify them, to disappear them, or what have you.
And eventually he's going to get to you.
And when he does, there's not going to be anybody left to help you.
So again, this is this is not the super PAC.
This is right from the Kasich campaign.
The new spot came just a day after the Super PAC supporting Kasich released a pair of spots attacking attacking Trump and hours after their most recent Twitter spat.
Now, I don't know.
You want me to go through and parse this thing sentence by sentence?
Because I mean, there's some this is it's it's kind of crazy.
You might not care if Donald Trump says Muslims should register with their government because you're not one.
But that that's that's a gross exaggeration of what Trump has said.
And by the way, it takes me to this story.
It's a column, it's an op ed.
The Hill.com today by Travis Hale, who's a contributor.
And I just want to read to you how he opens the piece.
In the summer of 1992, Rush Limbaugh saved me from myself.
I was an 18-year-old has screwed graduate about to begin college, too impatient to wait for adulthood to come to me.
So instead, I went in search of it, the only way I knew how, by engulfing myself in presidential politics and the fascinating campaigns that summer between Bill Clinton, George Bush, and Ross Perot.
So he openly credits me for helping him understand politics and to see the conservative way.
And he goes on to credit me in this piece as being the conservative voice.
In other words, if if you're in America and you want to know what conservatism is, then you listen to Rush Limbaugh, which is what he says he did.
Now the headline of the piece, Rush Limbaugh's a hypocrite when it comes to Trump.
And he has this five areas here.
Is it five or so?
I hate second page.
Six, yeah, five areas where he says, Travis Hale says that I'm being hypocritical and not true to my own identity and principles.
As it's related to this campaign and the way the Trump campaign is treated on this program, which I am the program, so that would mean the way I am treating Trump.
And the five areas that he thinks I'm being hypocritical are these.
The polls, my oft-used phrase that words mean things, big government, the Kardashian efication of American politics, and the limbaugh theorem.
He thinks that he he supports and believes all of those and thinks I'm violating every one of them.
Because he believes that I have tacitly endorsed Trump.
I have endorsed no one.
I never do in primaries.
Just the other day, after my appearance on Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace, I was During the lightning round, I was asked for a quick reaction to several people.
And one of those people was Ted Cruz.
What I said about Ted Cruz has ended up on a major fundraising appeal that the Cruz campaign has sent out.
And in it, they say that I, your host, Il Rushbo, made a major move to cruise on Fox News Sunday.
But I haven't endorsed Cruz either.
I haven't endorsed anybody.
When I was asked about Trump on Fox News Sunday, I said the great service Trump is performing.
And by the way, the Trump campaign put that quote out and they tweeted that all over the place, too.
Which is fine.
Don't misunderstand.
Not complaining about that.
What I said about Trump was paraphrasing myself here, the great service he's performing is to show that you, as a Republican, don't have to be afraid of the media.
You can be courageous.
You don't have to worry about what the media is going to say about you, and you don't have to worry about what the Democrat Party is going to say about you.
You can triumph, you can win, you can lead without worrying about what the media is going to say.
That's a huge thing.
I was hoping that a whole lot of Republicans in the field would see this.
I mean, look, we've got a I've got a story here in one of the other stacks here.
Guess what?
If I've seen this headline once, I've seen it a thousand times.
You know what we're facing?
Right when January shows up and the holidays are over, and Congress comes back to say, you know what you're facing?
A government shutdown.
Oh, yeah.
Because of the budget.
So once again, the media is already in consort with the Democrat Party, trying to intimidate and bully the Republican House into giving Obama yet again another and another budget deal exactly what he wants, otherwise the government's going to be shut down.
And you're going to see all be long before every Republican strategist and consultant is all over Fox News warning that we can't do this, we can't shut down the government.
That'll be the end of the Republican Party's presidential hopes.
Cycle repeats.
Trump is showing you don't have to be afraid of any of that.
But saying that is not endorsing Trump.
The other thing I said is Trump is demonstrating that you do not have to fear violating political correctness.
That you can spit on it, you can violate political correctness, as long as you have built a bond with your audience, you will not lose them.
You will not be harmed.
You can thrive.
But none of that adds up to an endorsement.
And yet, Mr. Hale is afraid that it does.
Don't misunderstand, don't get mad at Ms. Mr. Hale is afraid for me.
It's actually a piece that he has written out of concern.
He is afraid I'm betraying myself.
And he doesn't want me to betray myself.
He thinks that I am abandoning some of my own rock solid philosophies in order to endorse Trump, which, again, I haven't done.
And talking about this Kasich ad they're putting together.
You support Trump.
Trump's going to get rid of everybody.
He's going to get rid of everybody he doesn't like.
What I want to know is.
Why hasn't there been an ad like this run about the Democrats?
Why haven't any Republicans decided to run ads like this against Democrats who actually are in the process of doing some of these things that Kasich is accusing Trump of wanting to do.
Anyway, I'm up against it on time.
I have to take a break here.
Sit tight.
Much more.
Your phone calls as well.
Open line Friday on Wednesday continues when we get back.
You know, stop it.
How insecure must today's liberals be?
They have to send out a little bunch of brown shirts to Thanksgiving dinner all over the country.
Well, I mean, that's what they're doing.
All these advice pieces in the New York Times and Washington Post and the DNC website on how to deal with these nutcase conservatives at your family, the little brown, brown-sherted propagandized.
But you know, these these Republican establishment, this this this Casic ad, you might not care if Trump says Muslims should register with their government because you're not one.
And pretty soon he's going to come for you.
You better hope there's somebody there to care for you to help you.
This ad really is just another illustration of, I think, how disconnected the entire Washington political establishment is with the rest of the country.
And totally missed the point of Trump versus the Republican establishment right now.
Governor Kasaker and any of the rest of you, right now, Americans don't feel safe.
Right now.
Right now, Americans don't feel safe.
Not economically.
They don't feel safe from a national Security standpoint.
And there's one guy in the campaign who is talking as though he understands that and intends to do something about it.
There's one guy in this entire campaign consistently thematically talking about making this country great again.
Which would include making it safe again.
You can say what you want about Trump supporters from now until the sun goes down, but I'll tell you what they think.
Trump's supporters think that Trump is going to fight the SOBs coming after them, whoever they are.
And so the Casey people run this ad where Trump's going to be going after everybody and snatching everybody off the street and putting them somewhere.
And when he comes for you, there ain't gonna be anybody left to help you.
The Trump supporters think that Trump is already fighting the people who are trying to do that.
Euphemistically.
Whether they're in Washington, whether they're south of the border, whether they're in the Middle East.
There are already people coming for us, is what Trump supporters believe.
We're already under siege.
We're already victims of an invasion.
They don't think Trump is the guy that's gonna start the invasion.
They think Trump is the guy that's gonna stop it.
That's what they so ads like this are not they're not gonna help the people running them.
Here is what the uh this is what the Casic ad against Trump is uh is based on it.
It's uh it's by Reverend Martin Niemoler, and it's uh written about the Nazis, and here's how it goes.
And you you've heard this.
This will ring a bell when I start.
First they came for the socialists, and I didn't speak out because I was not a socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists, and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist.
And then they came for the Jews, and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.
And then they came for me, and there was no one left to speak for me.
So now I guess it's okay for a Republican campaign to run an ad comparing another Republican to a Nazi.
Because that's clearly what the Kasich ad is is built on or influenced by the ad against Trump.
All right, to the phones we go back.
Jerry, Marysville, California, great to have you.
Thank you for waiting, too.
Hello.
Oh, thank you.
Yeah, I'd like to make two quick points on uh the word Islamophobia.
Yeah.
Uh the first being that word was made up by Islamists so they would have a slur to paint their opponents with.
And it is meant as a slur.
Uh secondly, a phobia is an unrealistic fear.
Well, given that Mohammed Flatt said it's their duty before Allah to conquer the world, fearing him in his ways is not a natural, it's actually a rational uh self-defense.
Yeah, but you know you're right, because it's saying for homophobia, it is a term designed to tag somebody as a bigot uh or racist or sexist, something like that.
Yeah, if you don't have the facts on your side, call people names.
Right.
Well, it's it's I'll tell you what, it's it's what you're saying here is akin to one of my all-time favorite phrases.
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you.
This is so true.
So you can be just because you're an Islamophobe does not mean that they're not out to get you.
There's no such thing as an Islamophobe.
It's a phony term.
It's not real.
Yeah, it looked in ignorance.
Well, I know, but that's not the way to deal with it because it's used and it's gonna be used, and and we're not gonna it's like feminazi was not a word till I made it one.
And and now it is, and of course the feminaz don't like it.
Well, this seminazi has uh has a legitimate value, islamophobe.
Yes, sir!
That's exactly exactly right.
Well, look, I appreciate your thinking.
I I understand exactly Uh what you're saying.
And Islamophobe is a contrived word.
And it is a way to silence people.
It's a way to intimidate or bully them.
And the uh the the same thing with with uh with homophobe.
Plus, it's it's not even accurate.
You know, people opposed to gay marriage are not homophobes.
They just happen to believe that marriage is a certain thing.
And don't believe the definition ought to be bastardized.
Words mean things.
Uh, in the words.
Anyway, Jerry Thanks, this is uh Emily in Dallas.
It's great to have you.
You're next.
Hello.
Hi, Mr. Limba.
Hi, Emily.
Oh, oh, Emily is I forgot she's eight years old, folks.
I forgot to make it.
Emily, it's so wonderful to have you on the program here today.
How are you?
Good.
Well, what's up?
What can we talk about?
Um, I like to talk about Rush Rear Liberty.
Well, that's a wonderful topic.
That's one of my favorite things to talk about, Emily.
It really is.
Um, I like I like all the books, and I read all four of them.
Wait, you're eight years old and you've already read all four books.
Yes.
Did you notice that?
Yes.
I mean, she was dead certain that she's read all four.
There's no no equivocation.
Well, we have all four books at our house.
You have all four in your house.
You have a favorite.
Um, no.
I like all of them.
I like all of them.
Well, can you I don't mean to put you on the spot here, but you could help me.
You know, I I my wife and I write these.
Could you tell me what it is you like about these that would help us as we do more?
What is it you like about them?
I like uh Liberty, I like how Liberty is very funny.
Like when he ate so much beans every time he stepped, he flirted.
And when he when he um ate too much fake goes, the attracted the British Navy and nobody wanted to go in there.
Yeah, yeah.
We researched this.
We know what young people we we young people are fascinated with with that that aspect of uh of digestive system.
And we knew that uh written about in the right way that our readership would really, really enjoy that and you you are you are making that point for us.
Ate too much, attracted the British Navy, and nobody wanted to go back.
It's so great, Emily, because we're so hoping that that'd be the reaction that that young readers had.
Um, like how you kind of transform it to make to make it really fun, because my dad said that it could be really boring when it's just history.
Well, it can be.
Uh because it happened so long ago and you weren't alive and you weren't there, and it's it's tough to uh make what happened so long ago seem interesting to today, and that's the challenge that we had.
That's why the books are written the way they are, so that you when you read the book, the books, and it Liberty Time travels everybody back to these events.
You're actually there.
You we take you right back to those events where you are actually in the moment when these great events happen.
See, you uh I can tell that you have uh a good family, you're you your parents are great, and you're getting a good uh education at home about this country, but believe me, Emily, it's the greatest place that has ever been devised for people to live.
It does it's the greatest, and did the that's not to be critical of others.
It's just it's true in what it is, and and we're just so uh we we want so badly for every young people young person to understand how this country started and and why it's great.
So you've made my day here.
The fact you've read all four and you get them, and uh they make you laugh.
This is a great Thanksgiving present you've given me.
I appreciate it.
I want to return that.
I I want to send you a stuffed plush liberty doll animal.
Just say thank you.
Yes, if you let you if you love liberty, this is made to order for you.
That'll be awesome.
That would be awesome, but I already have one.
You already have one?
Yes.
Gee.
Um my little brother Ryan could use one.
Your little brother would like one?
Okay.
How old is your brother?
Um five.
He's five years old.
Your brother is five.
My gosh, you've got there's got to be I know that we have some stuff on our little gift packages that you probably don't have.
If you'll hang on, Emily and let Mr Snerdley get your address if it's okay with your parents, we'll send you some stuff out.
Okay.
And and uh thank you very much.
You are more than welcome.
I'm just so happy to have uh people like you enjoying the books and reading them.
You really did make my day.
Mine do thank you.
Mine too.
You're welcome.
Okay.
That's Emily in Dallas, eight years old and a great example of why you ought to feel great about the future of America.
Already has a Liberty doll.
Hmm don't worry folks we have other goodies that we can package in there and we'll do it.
In the meantime a quick timeout Okay.
Emily told Snerdly to tell us all happy thanks that's great.
Ret reminder we've got the true story of Thanksgiving coming up.
It's a tradition here from my first book uh the way things ought to be back in nineteen ninety two.
We always do that in the in the uh third hour and some other importants about Thanksgiving we always do that on this day and they're coming up stay right where you are folks 800 two eight two eight eight two here is uh here's Dawn in Windsor Ontario Canada.
It's really great to have you here.
Yeah hi thanks for taking my call you bet.
I just uh I'm retired now and I listened to you Monday through Friday get my American history lesson.
Wow just want to thank you for that and you're a very good presenter.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
I wanted to know what do you mean by the drive by media?
All right let me do you know what a drive by shooting is what happens in a drive by shooting probably it's someone in a car and then they just they're gonna aim at somebody maybe that they want to shoot at it could even be random.
They just pull up either stoplight or on the highway and they blow out a window and shoot somebody and they just keep going.
Right.
Down the road where they do it again.
They hit cause havoc maybe do some damage and just keep heading on down the road while other people are left to clean up the mess they made.
Okay.
That's the drive by media.
Okay.
With news events and people they want to destroy people they want to harm people they want to criticize they flood the zone they all come in they all say and do the same things they fire with the same ammo they create chaos wherever they go and then there's a mess made and they're down the road on the way to s to the next spot where they're gonna do the same thing while whoever they shot at has to clean up the mess and try to repair the damage that's been made.
Okay I get it now.
I appreciate that I'm glad you asked you know because they have all these terms that I use and I assume that everybody knows what they are because I assume they've been here for a long time listening but there are people tuning in every day new who may not know so you uh yeah that's it's true so I say you need six weeks steady listening to actually get this program be able to have enough context to understand how things happen but well I've been going now for two years so it's just been great.
Two years what did you do?
You said you retired what was I retired nurse.
Ah but my husband has listened to you for over twenty five years wow where's is he from Canada as well?
Oh yes we're in Canada we're right you know next to Detroit on WJR.
WJ R. Mm-hmm this is terrific I just uh appreciate appreciate your show a lot it's uh it's a b just one of the best I'll give you enough recognition there.
Thank you very much.
And I watched you on T V on um this past Sunday too on the Fox.
Yeah.
Yeah that was just just great.
Well and I asked you if I I have another question if I can about but do you vote by the way do you cross the river to vote?
No we vote in Canada.
Damn okay.
But I wondered about your books the children's books are they in Canada or just in the United States?
Uh you know that is I I'm gonna have to find out.
I don't know if we have Canadian distribution on those.
We should we darn well should.
But doesn't matter.
Can you order from Amazon?
Yes, I could.
Well, does Amazon deliver in Canada?
I'm I've never ordered from them, but I'm gonna because they're a big company, I'm assuming they they do.
I'm sure they do.
Barnes and Noble, are there barns and noble shops in Canada?
Uh not in our area.
Really?
But I know in Detroit there is.
Right.
Well, you live close enough to Detroit that even if they're not available in Canada if you wanted to.
But let me what w do you have grandkids or something?
You want me to Yes, I I do.
I have uh two in Windsor and one in Ireland.
Well heck f let me let me send you some here.
What how many how many how many grandkids do you have?
I have three altogether.
What are their ages?
What are their ages?
Oh, they're just uh two, two and a half, almost three.
Yeah, I was gonna say you don't sound I mean, like a retiree.
Well, I'm lucky I'm now I will be sixty-one pretty soon.
Sixty-one.
That's spring, Chickenville.
Let me tell you.
It was thirty-seven years of nursing.
It was, you know, wonderful.
Let me tell you, sixty-one, that's when life opens up.
That's what I found.
Well good, that's a good one.
Oh man, yeah, yeah.
I've always wanted to be older, and it's been every year it's been I I always when I was young, I wanted when I was fifteen, I wanted to be twenty-one.
Twenty-one, I wanted to be thirty.
When I was thirty, I wanted to be forty, because everybody that was older than me seemed to have more independence, more freedom, more success.
And every year's been better for me.
It actually has been.
So I'll tell you what, if you'll hang on, because I know that we can ship to Canada one way or the other.
If you will hang on, um Mr. Snerdley, the nice man who answered your call.
We'll get your address, and we'll send you a whole bunch of stuff out for your grandkids.
They're young, they're not gonna uh qualify yet to read, but you can keep them for when they are.
We'll send you audio versions that uh that that I have recorded.
And uh we a couple of Liberty dolls thrown in too for they'll love those.
Oh, just awesome, Rush.
I can't tell you how much.
I'm just so happy to get through on the phone.
I'm just it made my day too.
Well, thank you, Don.
I appreciate that.
I really do.
Now don't don't hang up.
So we can find out where to ship stuff to you.
So two grandkids in Canada, one in Ireland.
Spreading the word here, folks.
Tentacle by tentacle.
Henry, Mount Olive, North Carolina.
Open line Friday, your next hi.
How are you doing, sir?
Well, I'm I'm great.
Thank you.
First time caller, long time listener, and appreciate you going for our country.
I appreciate you.
Thank you for calling.
And uh I want to get away from all the doom and gloom with going on the country.
Think about try you know, some pause of the holidays coming in.
And I just wanted your opinion on how the Carolina Panthers are doing this year.
You well what that they're uh what is it, nine or ten and oh?
I forget if they had their ten and oh.
I mean, that pretty much says all there needs to be said.
They've not had a puff piece schedule.
Um they just win and and and they win with a combined team effort.
Um, you don't have I mean you got Cam Newton a star, but defensive side uh you've got your great linebacker look there, but I'd say it's a it's a it's a team effort.
You've got a very, very patient owner in Jerry Richardson, and uh a great temperament coach.
Why are there some problems with the Panthers that I don't know about?
Is that what you're asking me?
Or you just want a general analysis of them?
No, everybody always the the Panthers are always underscored.
Every time I do something, it's always well, they got a weak schedule.
I know that they're the underdog coming up against what are they playing Dallas tomorrow night or tomorrow afternoon?
I think they're underdogs and they're n they're mad about it.
Rivera went out and said he's mad about it.
I mean they're 10 and oh.
Why are they underdogs of the cowboys?
It is the cowboys they're playing tomorrow, right?
Yes, a 425 game.
And I don't think Rivera cares other than to fire the team up.
Hey, we don't deserve to be underdogs.
We're 10 and oh, we're playing a team at head and won but three games.
What what the heck here?
So it's I think it's great bulletin board material, great way to fire them up.
But I hope it's not a trap game.
You know, they're looking at Dallas, they've only won three Dallas Thanksgiving, uh short week.
I'm hoping the can't the Panthers keep winning.
I really do.
You should you should uh I think we'd let loose and not have any worries.
I haven't looked at their schedules.
I don't know what their closing games are, to be easy to do.
But uh I don't want to jinx anything by saying it's obvious they've secured a playoff spot, but they could, I think, with a win this weekend or next.
But he's right.
They're Carolina.
That's Charlotte, North Carolina, and Raleigh.
They're state Panthers, not a city Panthers, and they uh don't.
Dallas, New Orleans, and Atlanta is how they f Dallas, New Orleans, Atlanta.
Yeah.
They could uh they can give the Patriots a run for their undefeated money.
They did a little research, Dawn in Windsor, Ontario.
The Rush Revere books are available at Chapters Indigo Bookstores.
I knew we had Canadian distribution of theirs, the Chapters Indigo bookstores.
And Rush Revere and the Brave Pilgrims, our first book two years ago.
Ideal for this season, as they all are.
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