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- From: jrs@netcom.com (John Switzer)
- Subject: Summary Thu 1/21/93
- Message-ID: <1993Jan23.052625.7904@netcom.com>
- Summary: Unofficial Summary for Thursday, Jan. 21, 1993
- Keywords: Unofficial Summary Rush Limbaugh
- Organization: Netcom Online Communications Services (408-241-9760 login: guest)
- Distribution: world,usa,alt,na
- Date: Sat, 23 Jan 1993 05:26:25 GMT
- Lines: 1098
-
- Unofficial Summary of the Rush Limbaugh Show
-
- for Thursday, January 21, 1993
-
- by John Switzer
-
- This unofficial summary is copyright (c) 1993 by John Switzer.
- All Rights Reserved. These summaries are distributed on
- CompuServe, GEnie, and the Internet, and archived on GEnie (NPC
- Roundtable) and Internet (cathouse.aiss.uiuc.edu). Distribution
- to other electronic forums and bulletin boards is highly
- encouraged. Spelling and other corrections gratefully received.
-
- Please read the standard disclaimer which was included with the
- first summary for this month. In particular, please note that
- this summary is not approved or sanctioned by Rush Limbaugh or
- the EIB network, nor do I have any connection with them other
- than as a daily listener.
-
- ******************************************************************
-
- January 21, 1993
-
- LIMBAUGH WATCH
-
- January 21, 1993 - It's now day 2 of "America Held Hostage" and
- 80 days after Bill Clinton's election and Rush is still on the
- air with 546 radio affiliates (with over 14 million listeners
- weekly) and 206 TV affiliates (with a 3.6 rating). His book has
- been on the NY Times hardback non-fiction best-seller list for 18
- consecutive weeks and is currently number one on the list.
-
- Highlights from the TV show that aired on Wednesday, January 20,
- 1993
-
- o Rush showed a clip from Bill Clinton's appearance with Mr.
- Rogers earlier this week. Clinton inspired the nation when he
- said, "You know, the Clinton family likes Mr. Rogers'
- neighborhood, and if we can make every neighborhood like Mr.
- Rogers' neighborhood, America will be a happier place."
-
- In honor of Clinton's visit, Mr. Rogers gave him a replica of the
- trolley that appears on his show. Rush pointed out that this
- trolley is used to take people "to the land of make-believe."
-
- o During the Inauguration's festivities, Edward James Olmos
- praised the concept of "inclusion," and stated that this was
- something he was personally familiar with since he "started out
- in Africa." From there his ancestors went to Asia and then ended
- up in the Mayan and Aztec civilizations. The Olmos DNA was
- completed when "Jewish/Hungarian/Spanish" immigrants from Europe
- came to the New World.
-
- Rush wondered why Olmos didn't just call himself an American and
- be proud of that; aren't we all just human beings? He points out
- that it is the liberals who talk about how skin color and
- ethnicities have to be ignored, yet they are the ones who make a
- big deal about these very characteristics.
-
- o The EIB TV studios evidently have had massive staff shake-ups,
- and the credits for tonight's show listed the following new staff
- members:
-
- - Head Writer: William Jefferson Clinton
-
- - Staff Writers: Al Gore, Carol Moseley-Braun, Joseph Biden,
- Patsy Schroeder, Tom Foley, Donna Shalala, Robert Reich, Lloyd
- Bentsen, Zoe Baird, Les Aspin
-
- - Special Material: Hillary Clinton, Jesse Jackson, Mario Cuomo
-
- MORNING UPDATE
-
- Now that the Bush Presidency is over, a lot of people are
- referring to it as a "transitional Presidency" which did nothing
- except provide a transition from the "archaic" World War II
- generation to the modern era. Rush disagrees, though, because he
- believes that the Clinton administration will turn out to be the
- real transition Presidency. Rush is confident that when Clinton
- leaves the White House, the influence and myth of the 60s flower
- children who came into power with him will also finally end.
-
- This will not happen any time soon, though, and Rush has an
- example that shows how pernicious the 60s-style mindset is
- getting. Anthropologist David Gibbons commented on the popularity
- of Inaugural events by saying, "We're all primates. Primates want
- to be physically close to powerful people and to see the Alpha
- Male in person." Gibbons also said that these sorts of events
- allow a type of "grooming" by "subdominant animals" of the
- powerful people.
-
- This is how people are describing the Clinton administration, and
- Judy Collins didn't say anything much better. Clinton's
- inauguration was "so heavenly," according to Collins, because it
- made her realize what the past 12 years have been. "My god," she
- said, "I'm lucky to have lived through this."
-
- Rush thinks Collins is off a bit about this. Clinton and his
- hangers-on will be in power for the next four years, which means
- that "if we live through the next four years, we're the ones who
- will be lucky."
-
- FIRST HOUR
-
- Items
-
- o Today is "Day Two of America Held Hostage," with 1460 days to
- go, and just as Ted Koppell was on the air each day of the
- Iranian hostage crisis, so will Rush be on the TV and radio
- airwaves to help the country through this one. Bo Snerdley asks
- Rush if he is ready to sacrifice in order to "revitalize the
- country."
-
- Rush calls that a good question - how can someone revitalize the
- country via sacrifice? Obviously, Clinton defines "sacrifice" as
- being willing to pay more in taxes. This shows the fundamental
- difference in Clinton's philosophy of governing and that of the
- Reagan/Bush administrations.
-
- Rush can say, in all honesty, that his radio show has revitalized
- much of the broadcast business, at least in the strict business
- sense, and this was done without any "sacrifice." Though Rush
- worked hard, and although he sacrificed perhaps in terms of a
- social life, he didn't sacrifice in the way Clinton means.
- Clinton thinks that those who are doing well and okay should be
- willing to give up more of the fruits of their labors to help
- those who aren't doing well. This is not the way to revitalize
- anything.
-
- "Hard work and good, old rugged individualism" are the key for
- revitalization. Rush pointed out in last night's TV show that
- it's now okay for people to have ambition and a desire for a
- better life. This is quite a change from how liberals used to
- complain about the "evil and greedy 80s."
-
- o Rush mentions Zoe Baird and her confirmation hearings. A lot of
- people think that the US is an inherently biased and prejudiced
- country, and that this is why it has laws against the hiring of
- illegal aliens. This is not the case at all - when someone hires
- a person from a war-torn or economically ravaged country, that
- person will work for almost nothing, and this results in a
- lowering of the wage scale.
-
- Baird claims that she couldn't find anyone to be her children's
- nanny, but Rush doubts that. He suspects that Baird was unwilling
- to pay the going market rate for this occupation, and thus ended
- up paying a much lower wage to an illegal alien. This is why jobs
- get exported to foreign countries - the jobs pay less than what
- Americans are willing to accept.
-
- Rush also finds it interesting that if Clinton's nominee for
- Attorney General had been a man and a conservative, and had he
- done these things he would have never made it to the confirmation
- hearing room. He would have been run out of town, with a special
- prosecutor on his trail.
-
- Baird, however, has escaped all of these criticisms from those on
- the left, especially the feminists. Feminist leaders seem to care
- more about having a female attorney general than in having a good
- attorney general, and they are beside themselves making all sorts
- of excuses for Baird.
-
- Rush finds it interesting that Barbara Johnson, whom many
- consider to the conscience of the Democratic party, has called
- for Baird to be dumped because her activity is not in keeping
- with the job she is being considered for. Rush points out that
- Baird is a lawyer, as is her husband; she also asked another
- lawyer for advice in all this, and she still ended up breaking a
- number of federal laws.
-
- Rush returns to the economics of the matter, and notes that if
- the economy were really as bad as Clinton and Gore have been
- saying, some Americans should have been willing to take this job.
- However, it's clear Baird was not willing to pay the prevailing
- market wage.
-
- o Liberals are continuing to act as if they have just been freed
- from a concentration camp. Actor Ron Silver was at Sunday's
- inaugural celebrations, and he got mad that a number of jets did
- flybys over the Lincoln Memorial after Clinton had finished
- speaking. Silver at first was "aghast" at this clash of pacifist
- and military messages, "but then it came to me," he said. "Those
- planes are ours now - they're ours!"
-
- Rush finds that very curious - Silver has been an American as
- long as he's been alive, so why is he now thinking that these
- American planes are suddenly his? Rush has found other quotes
- along these lines, as well as a column by Bob Tyrrell on this
- subject.
-
- o NY Newsday has a phone number where people can call up and
- listen to Maya Angelou's poem. Rush admits that he is not a
- poetry expert, but he did not find one rhyme in her poem. He
- knows, though, that poetry can have a number of forms and so
- won't comment on its value as a work of art, especially as he
- can't figure it out. However, he has it on good authority that
- Iraqi intelligence officials are examining Angelou's poem because
- they think it is a secret coded message to US forces in the
- Middle East.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Rush thinks this is a very good time to be alive in America, and
- he points to how Barbra Streisand will finally have enough
- creativity and artistic freedom to film the movie "Prince of
- Tides." The EIB staff points out that Streisand has already made
- this flick, and Rush wonders how during the oppressive Reagan and
- Bush era she could have possibly had the artistic freedom to
- complete this endeavor.
-
- Since he is on the subject of films, Rush plays the trailers for
- the latest movies about the Clinton administration:
-
- <<Announcer, over dramatic but somewhat cartoony music>> First,
- there were Gremlins . . .
-
- <<Gremlin-type sounds>>
-
- <<Announcer>> Then . . . Goonies, and now someone new is coming
- to town. Washingtonian Pictures present . . . <<screams and
- giggles>> . . . "Lefties." They appear cute and unassuming, but
- feed their power-hungry appetites and they transform into little
- monsters. A university chancellor becomes the Health and Human
- Services Secretary!
-
- <<Lefty, with a high-pitched voice halfway between Tiny Tim and
- Alvin the Chipmunk>> Feed me! It's the way to be! Hee, hee, hee!
-
- <<Announcer>> A corporate attorney becomes a maniacal Commerce
- Secretary!
-
- <<Lefty>> Conflict of interest? What conflict of interest?
- Bwah-ha-ha!
-
- <<Announcer>> A former Carter administration official becomes . . .
- Attorney General!
-
- <<Lefty>> Really? I didn't know they were illegal aliens! Ha, ha, ha!
-
- <<Announcer>> And a wife and mother becomes First Lady!
-
- <<Lefty>> I'll have a say in everything!
-
- <<Announcer>> "Lefties" will scare you to death as they ravage,
- terrorize, and devour everything in sight.
-
- <<Lefties, en masse>> We need more tax money!
-
- <<Announcer>> And they're all led by the biggest lefty of all . . .
-
- <<Numero Uno Lefty>> Invest in America!
-
- <<Announcer>> And his little toad, Algore!
-
- <<Second Banana Lefty>> Let's go to the Senate! Hee, hee, hee.
-
- <<Announcer>> Lefties! No matter how much they beg, no matter how
- much they whine, never, ever feed their power-hungry appetites.
- Coming soon from Washingtonian Pictures!
-
- Next, "Taxula":
-
- <<Announcer>> In a castle, deep in the heart of Arksylvania,
- there lives an evil as old as the Democratic party itself.
- Terrormount Pictures presents Bill Clinton in Taxula!
-
- <<Algore>> Count Taxula, arise! It is I, your faithful servant,
- Algore. Your agenda requires that you feed!
-
- <<Count Taxula>> Thank you, Algore! Have you raised the CAFE
- standards?
-
- <<Algore>> Yes, master!
-
- <<Count Taxula>> Shredded my draft record?
-
- <<Algore>> Yes, master!
-
- <<Count Taxula>> Good, good! Then I am off!
-
- <<Algore>> Happy hunting, master!
-
- <<Announcer>> He lays in waiting until his hunger calls. Then he
- pounces on anyone who makes over $36,000 per year, sucking the
- life blood out of every American taxpayer.
-
- <<Horrified townsman>> Sir! We found his paycheck lying here,
- drained of every penny!
-
- <<Outraged police officer>> How could anyone do this in good
- conscience? It's inhuman!
-
- <<Announcer>> All the while, using his charisma and slick
- character to hypnotize his victims.
-
- <<Count Taxula>> Just look into your television! Invest in
- America! Invest in America!! Invest in AMERICA!!!
-
- <<Announcer>> Bill Clinton is Taxula! He sleeps in the daytime
- and has been known to prowl at night.
-
- <<Southern belle>> Oh, Willie - do that again!
-
- <<Announcer>> Bill Clinton is . . . Taxula!
-
- <<Count Taxula>> Come on, Algore, let's go to Congress! I'm
- hungry! Bwah-ha-ha-ha!
-
- "It's a double feature, folks," Rush warns, "for the next 1460
- days!"
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Zoe Baird is still on the Senate hot seat, and Rush is still
- waiting for the "thoughtful, penetrating, and searing questions"
- that will come from Senator Carol Moseley-Braun, who was dragged
- fighting and screaming to this committee. Moseley-Braun, though,
- is "leading the charge" to find the Peruvian woman whom Baird has
- admitted hiring, and the Committee is even thinking of calling in
- Baird's husband and attorney.
-
- Senator Joseph Biden is being flooded with angry letters, though,
- because he has been very tough on Baird. Senator Hatch, however,
- is going very easy on her because she agrees with Dan Quayle on
- the need for tort reform. The liberals don't like this, nor do
- they like how Baird has not been a Legal Aid lawyer helping the
- homeless.
-
- Rush doesn't want to excuse the fact that Baird certainly and
- knowingly violated the law, but it is interesting to see how the
- left is treating her.
-
- Phone Charley from San Francisco, CA
-
- Charley is amazed that Rush is talking to her; she moved to
- California from New Jersey and was incredibly grateful when she
- discovered that Rush has similar opinions to hers. She is tired
- of people no longer being responsible for their actions, and in
- particular doesn't like how feminists are coming up with all
- sorts of excuses for Baird.
-
- Charley also doesn't think Baird did the right thing for her
- children; she has seen other career women who hire nannies and
- baby-sitters for their children, but they never want to pay the
- prevailing wage. Rush agrees - many of these people complain
- about how corporations don't pay "fair wages," but when it comes
- time for them to pay others a fair wage, they don't. Baird is a
- lot like Congress in that - they pass laws for everyone else to
- follow, but exempt themselves from the same laws.
-
- Charley thinks that people like Baird aren't willing to pay
- prevailing wages for child care because they don't think it is an
- important job. As to whether Baird should be approved, it is an
- interesting trade-off - is her desire for tort reform more
- important than her lack of credibility?
-
- Charley also says that her son is in the Marine Corps, and he had
- to sign an oath saying he didn't engage in homosexual activity;
- why isn't anybody talking about how all of the gays in the
- military have violated their oath in this? Rush says that this
- may soon become a moot point because it appears that Clinton is
- moving faster on the ban on gays than Rush had thought.
-
- According to reports, Clinton next week will issue a directive to
- Les Apsin, who is still probably answering the question on how he
- feels about lifting the gays on the military; the directive will
- instruct Aspin only to stop enforcing the ban. This will allow
- Clinton and the military to study the issue for a year or so
- before coming to any real policy changes.
-
- Rush says that Charley has a good point about how people are no
- longer responsible for their actions, and liberals in particular
- make all sorts of rationalizations for people like Baird.
-
- Phone Mark from Cincinnati, OH
-
- Mark has been thinking a lot about Zoe Baird's situation, and he
- thinks Clinton is being very slick about her nomination. Clinton
- knew of Baird's past and thus it is possible that he nominated
- her because he knows she won't be approved. If Baird is not
- confirmed, Mark thinks that Clinton can at least claim that he
- has tried to appoint a female Attorney General.
-
- Rush doesn't think any President would send a candidate up to the
- Senate knowing that she would be rejected out of hand. Clinton
- has already stated that he wants a female Attorney General, and
- Baird is his third choice. This shows what happens when you want
- quotas instead of searching for excellence in a nominee, and the
- hypocrisy of this situation is rampant, especially in the
- feminists who are making excuses for Baird.
-
- Clinton's administration is supposed to be blind to ethnicity,
- gender, and race, yet these characteristics are turning out to be
- the deciding ones for Clinton's appointments. This is why Clinton
- has embarrassingly ended up with someone like Baird for a
- prominent administration role.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Update Feminist (The Forester Sisters, "Men" with "in your face"
- slogan)
-
- While reading the news accounts of the first day of Baird's
- confirmation hearings, Rush came across a couple of paragraphs
- about how Baird knew what she did was wrong, "but she blamed much
- of the decision to break the law on her husband." Rush bets
- feminists everywhere will rejoice at this. Baird's testimony is
- why the Committee is now trying to bring her husband in to
- testify.
-
- Phone Russ from Greenwich, CT
-
- Russ called the Senate offices yesterday to send a message to
- Biden, but his secretary told him that they were not encouraging
- anyone to send mail. Instead, the secretary asked if Russ was for
- or against Baird's confirmation; Russ said he was against it, but
- he still wanted Biden's address. The secretary refused to give
- him that address and even hung up on him.
-
- Rush says that this is not a great way to treat the public, but
- he points out that Biden is getting a lot of flak for his
- treatment toward Baird. Russ says that he doesn't think someone
- who violated the US's immigration laws should be Attorney
- General.
-
- Rush admits this is a good point - immigration laws are a serious
- issue to many people in California, Florida, and such, and a lot
- of people will get very upset if a person who flaunted these laws
- becomes the nation's chief law enforcement officer. This issue
- doesn't get a lot of press in the country's heartland, but it
- does affect the people living on the coasts and borders.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Phone Lauren from Oceanside, CA
-
- Lauren says that Rush condemns Baird for not offering enough
- money to attract American workers, but then turns around and says
- that it's okay for American businesses to send their jobs to
- lower-paying Mexico. Rush says that businesses are in business to
- make a profit, and if Americans won't do these jobs for their
- real market wage, then companies have to send the jobs to foreign
- countries.
-
- Lauren says that she has been laid off from her job because the
- company sent their jobs to Mexico. She thinks that there are no
- other countries in the world whose businesses are so much against
- their own country that they send jobs to foreigners. Rush asks
- Lauren what kind of job she had, and she replies that she made
- $7.25 making women's clothing; these jobs are now being done by
- Mexicans for $4.25. She believes that this is stabbing Americans
- in the back for the sake of business profits.
-
- Rush asks Lauren if she was satisfied with her job, and she says
- that although the pay wasn't great, the job itself worked out
- well for her. Rush says that if the company that makes this
- clothing wants to remain competitive, is it bad for them to do
- what they need to in order to lower their wage costs? Lauren says
- that she wouldn't blame them if this were the case, but they were
- already making a profit before they moved the jobs south. Rush
- says that this issue will certainly come up again, and probably
- in the near future.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- SECOND HOUR
-
- Items
-
- o Rush just had an idea waft over him - Newt Gingrich's office
- just called to say that public pressure is mounting against Zoe
- Baird, and so if she doesn't get confirmed Clinton will have to
- come up with another choice. Rush recalls that Daniel Ginsburg
- was rejected for the Supreme Court because he once smoked dope;
- however, times have changed, and since character no longer
- matters, this may be Ginsburg's time and a prime opportunity for
- the nation to apologize to him by making him Attorney General.
- Rush thinks this would be a very "compassionate" thing to do.
-
- o Eric Brindle has a column in today's NY Post about the October
- Surprise. Rush points out that Congress has totally discredited
- this theory, and since Gary Sick has already made his small
- fortune, he doesn't need his credibility.
-
- Rush, though, finds it curious that Hussein is staying pretty
- quiet, now that Clinton is President. Is there any possibility
- that Clinton has worked out a secret deal with Iraq?
-
- Rush admits he has no evidence for this - not one shred of
- evidence exists for his theory. However, Congress had no evidence
- for their October Surprise investigation, and thus it is
- appropriate that Congress appoint a special prosecutor to look
- into this "January Surprise." Plus, is it coincidence that Iraqi
- intelligence officials, being totally unable to understand any
- part of Maya Angelou's Inaugural poem, are now considering that
- Angelou's poem is really a coded message to US troops in the
- Middle East?
-
- Rush adds that Warren Christopher, Clinton's Secretary of State,
- was a driving force behind the October Surprise investigations.
- According to Brindle, Christopher pushed for an investigation
- into Gary Sick's allegations. It's curious that he did this last
- year and is now Secretary of State.
-
- Phone Marilyn from Blackfoot, ID
-
- Marilyn has been watching the Baird confirmation hearings, and
- has already called the Senate to oppose her confirmation. She
- doesn't think anyone who broke the law like this should be
- Attorney General. Marilyn, though, asks if she should change her
- mind because Baird agrees with Dan Quayle on tort reform; Rush
- says that this really doesn't matter as to Baird's fitness for
- being Attorney General.
-
- Marilyn is glad to hear this, and notes that when Baird was asked
- by the Senate if she believes that punitive damages should be
- capped, she replied "no." Rush is amazed because this is 180
- degrees away from any form of tort reform, and it shows that
- Baird may be figuring out what she needs to do in order to get
- confirmed. Marilyn adds that she and her son have to fight over
- Rush's book and tapes, and Rush suggests a Solomon-style solution
- - "buy two copies."
-
- Bo Snerdley tells Rush that a "hysterical" caller yelled at him,
- telling him that Baird paid the Peruvian couple $2,000 a month
- and thus was paying them a decent wage. She then screamed "I hate
- Rush Limbaugh" and hung up. Rush, though, regrets that he wasn't
- able to get her on the air because ABC News is trying to get some
- footage of callers talking about this issue, and this would have
- been a great call to record. He hopes that this caller calls
- back, and if so he promises to put her on the air.
-
- Rush likes what Cokie Roberts said about all this; she noted that
- Baird made $660,000 a year as a lawyer and so "could afford to
- hire Mary Poppins."
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Phone Susan from Maryville, TN
-
- Susan says that Anna Quindlan has a great column out today, and
- Rush says that he did see it in the NY Times yesterday. Susan is
- tired of hearing about how working women can't afford decent
- daycare; she quit her $12,000 a year teacher salary so as to take
- care of her children. She thinks that working women simply aren't
- willing to pay enough to take care of their children, and Baird
- is a perfect example of this.
-
- Susan is angry, though, because Quindlan isn't mad at Baird;
- Quindlan doesn't think this is an ethics question at all, but
- believes that Baird represents the problem of daycare in America.
- Susan, though, wants to know what the answer is - if Baird
- couldn't afford daycare, what are the rest of the people supposed
- to do? Is the government supposed to assume this responsibility
- now?
-
- Rush likes the spin Susan has put on the issue, and regrets that
- the ABC News crew has already left because Susan has come up with
- some interesting thoughts on this.
-
- Susan adds that she is a stay-at-home mom and bakes cookies, in
- spite of what Hillary might think about this. Rush notes a bit of
- hostility in Susan's voice toward Hillary and finds it
- interesting that many people still are antagonistic towards Mrs.
- Bill Clinton. He adds that the latest news reports indicate that
- Hillary Clinton will lead and oversee the advisory team that is
- coming up with plans to reform America's health care industry.
-
- According to news reports, this is "an unprecedented role" for a
- First Lady. Supposedly, Clinton's advisory team told him on
- January 11th that their plans wouldn't save much money on health
- care costs; Clinton went ballistic and thus put his wife in
- charge to whip these guys into line. Clinton staffers report that
- Hillary's role will be similar to that of a chairwoman of a large
- company, while Ira Magaziner will be chief executive officer in
- charge of day-to-day operations.
-
- Rush says that his TV show showed a clip of Clinton's appearance
- with Mr. Rogers who presented the President with a "trolly to the
- land of make-believe." One clip that Rush didn't get around to
- showing was of a child asking Clinton how he avoids losing his
- temper. Clinton replied that he never gets mad and instead counts
- to 10; Rush promises that he will save this clip until Clinton
- shows his famed temper in public.
-
- Rush promises that after the break, Bo "Angelou" Snerdley will
- read his soon-to-be famous Inaugural poem.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Rush now proudly introduces Bo "Angelou" Snerdley, EIB's official
- poet laureate, who is even wearing a coat and African-print tie
- for his poetry reading. Rush asks Bo if he has heard Angelou's
- Inaugural poem yesterday, and Bo replies "I've been spared, sir."
- Rush is aghast at this, but Bo explains that he hasn't had time
- to listen to Angelou's artistic oeuvre because "thankfully I've
- been keeping my attention focused on THIS program."
-
- Rush accepts this explanation, and Bo notes that he has read
- excerpts of Angelou's poem. Rush admits that he has never liked
- poetry, and in fact has a most active dislike for the art form.
- He suspects that the reason is because back in the fifth or sixth
- grade he had to write his first poem about seeing a guy get hit
- by a car. Bo starts guffawing, and Rush is disappointed that
- someone with Snerdley's sensitivity would laugh at such a thing.
-
- Rush says that he actually saw a guy get hit near his school, and
- he ended up writing a poem about it. The poem was actually
- printed in the hometown newspaper. Rush, though, has never been a
- big fan of poetry and readily admits he is not a student of this
- art. He is still mystified by Angelou's "The Rain, the Park, and
- Other Things," especially since "there's not even one rhyme in
- there."
-
- Rush acknowledges that poetry does not have to rhyme, but he
- states, with a bit of bitterness over the past creeping into his
- voice, "when you're a student and they make you do these things,
- it damn well better rhyme." However, once you leave school you
- can do anything you want and have it considered as poetry.
-
- Rush, though, still doesn't understand the point of Angelou's
- poem, which he summarizes as "the Apache, the Sioux, and the
- Shrew, and the Native American and the un-Native American, and
- the black, the woman, the gay, and the straight standing on rocks
- and watching the river go by, and the tree dumps some leaves on
- them."
-
- Rush is certain that the stuff-shirted literature snobs are
- screaming at their radios right now, and he hastens to add that
- he's not making fun of Angelou's work. He does bet, though, that
- if Dan Quayle had written her poem, the snobs would still be
- laughing at it.
-
- Rush finally gets around to Bo's poem, and so "in the spirit of
- the times, the Zeitgeist," he turns the stage over to Bo
- "Angelou" Snerdley, who states that his poem will be dramatic.
- Rush first wants to set the scene by pretending to be Clinton
- finishing his inaugural address and so, in a suitably
- Presidential fashion, he states "you suckers." Bo takes over from
- there, and reads his copyrighted composition:
-
- "Surrounded by splendor, befit for a king,
- With pomp and sheer arrogance, Sir William marched in.
- As Hollywood stars sang his praises with joy,
- The news anchor persons saluted their boy.
- But amid all the hoopla, with courage to change,
- Are promises broken, and goals rearranged.
- A jog before breakfast, a snack before lunch,
- Let's stop by the White House, it's waffles for lunch!
- His cabinet offers a chance to see why
- The best or the brightest don't need to apply.
- A quota will do it, a look for success,
- Don't worry about it, we'll hire some illegal immigrants to clean
- up this mess.
-
- A middle class tax break? A deficit cut?
- Forget that I said it - the Bush numbers went up (slightly).
- The Haitians are coming, they think I said what?
- No, no, fellows, stay home - you're just . . . out of luck.
- Now don't get your hopes up, that talk of health care,
- See, it wasn't a promise, it's just goals that we share.
- Hey, Algore, don't pout, you'll be kept in the know.
- Just don't you forget - Hillary's running this show!
- Go play with those wackos, who love spiking trees,
- Or write some legislation, bring big business down to its knees.
- The left-leaning liberals say they're all filled with hope,
- The rest of us wonder - has fate pulled a joke?
-
- But fear not this nightmare of Clinton and Gore,
- The nation has suffered a Carter before.
- But this time it's different, there's a voice on the right,
- On radio by day and on TV at night (except in Washington, DC).
- So when Democrats attempt their huge spending spree,
- This time we have Rush Limbaugh, telling them the `Way Things
- Ought to Be.' "
-
- "What a touching poem," Rush tearfully states.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- "What a poem, what a tremendous poem of true, heart-felt
- compassion - a depth of understanding previously unknown to exist
- in Mr. Snerdley," Rush states, having regained his composure. "I
- was moved," he adds, and suggests that not only should this poem
- be put on the 900 EIB listener caller line, but Bo should read it
- on tonight's TV show.
-
- "I'm troubled by the emotions that poem brought forth," says
- Rush, adding that Bo's poem clearly shows that America is being
- "held hostage - day two."
-
- Phone Rick from Peoria, IL
-
- Rick is a registered Republican who voted for Clinton as an
- anti-Bush statement; he looked at the three candidates and voted
- for the "evil of the three lessers." Perot was out of the
- question because he was a "little dictator," and Bush proved
- Clinton's statement that "we can do better."
-
- Rick thinks Bush characterizes the arrogance of the elitist
- establishment wing of the Republican party; Bush seemed to think
- that being President and looking Presidential was good enough for
- the American people, but this was not good enough for Rick. Bush
- didn't seem to stand for anything or want to accomplish much.
-
- Rick is not particularly fond of Clinton, although he is somewhat
- hopeful for two reasons. First, at least Clinton recognizes that
- there is a domestic side to the job of President, and second,
- Clinton comes from a much humbler background than Bush. Rick thus
- thinks Clinton can understand the problems of Americans better
- than Bush.
-
- Rush understands how Rick could think that, but he disagrees.
- Bush's problem was not that he didn't understand the problems,
- but that he couldn't communicate this to the people. On domestic
- issues, the Bush administration had some great ideas, especially
- on education, and as far as the economy goes, it was far better
- than Clinton and Gore were saying throughout the campaign.
-
- Rush asks Rick if character matters to him, and whether
- Presidential lies are important. Rick says "read my lips" is a
- biggie, but there are others. Bush built up Hussein in Iraq and
- then turned around and said he was a greater monster than Hitler.
- Rick adds that Bush did not give the country a "kinder, gentler
- nation."
-
- Rush thinks Bush did provide that sort of nation, but it's clear
- there are some different standards being used for Bush and
- Clinton. Bush lied once with his tax pledge, but Clinton has
- already gone back on his word several times. Rush does understand
- people's complaints about Bush, but just because Clinton feels
- people's pain doesn't mean he can do anything about solving the
- problems that cause that pain.
-
- "This is real simple," Rush says. The Clinton administration is
- going to fail because "their ideas do not work." Rush repeats
- that simple phrase several times and then adds that socialism,
- central planning, and a larger, more intrusive government (i.e.
- liberalism) have been tried across the world, but these ideas
- simply do not work. People can hope all day, but their ideas do
- not work. Americans are being held hostage to a number of ideas
- that do not work.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- EIB has been inundated with calls about who the mystery voice was
- during yesterday's contest - it was "H. R. Halderman."
-
- Update Timber (Jackyl, "Lumberjack" with a musical chain saw and
- the sounds of falling trees)
-
- Rush has bad news for Algore and other tree-huggers - Alpine and
- subarctic forests may be culprits in global warming. Scientists
- at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, CO
- have discovered that vast boreal forests at the high latitudes
- may increase global warming because dark green vegetation can
- absorb up to three times as much solar radiation than white snow
- or bare ground.
-
- The boreal forests cover more than 11 million square kilometers,
- and raise both summer and winter air temperatures in comparison
- to simulations which replace the trees with snow-covered tundra.
- So what is the solution to this problem? "We chop it down," Rush
- suggests, "because we, after all, must save the planet. Somebody
- tell Algore!"
-
- *BREAK*
-
- THIRD HOUR
-
- Items
-
- o Rush has been perusing his CompuServe mail and found an
- interesting note from Rick of Toledo, who writes that Clinton's
- Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary opposes building any new nuclear
- power plants because they are uneconomical and hampered by public
- opposition.
-
- Rick asks how liberals can be against every possible form of
- power production - coal is too dirty, oil is too dirty and also
- makes too many people rich, solar power takes up too much land
- area, windmill power is not aesthetically pleasing, hydro power
- kills "little fishies," incinerators pollute the atmosphere, and
- nuclear is no good.
-
- o Rush returns to Clinton's lifting of the ban against gays in
- the military. Early next week Clinton will reportedly tell Les
- Aspin to stop enforcing the ban and to stop prosecutions of
- homosexuals in the military. Thus, Clinton won't lift the ban but
- will simply stop enforcing it. Then after a year or so, during
- which military officials can study the issue, Clinton will lift
- the ban.
-
- Gay groups are happy about this because this will prove that
- there is no desire on the part of homosexual militants to use the
- military as their next activist playground. Plus, after a year
- people will see that fears against having homosexuals in the
- military are unjustified. Rush agrees that this probably will be
- true since people do get used to things over time.
-
- Rush has not been alone in being perplexed and angry about the
- attitude shown by some of the people attending Clinton's
- Inauguration. These people are acting as if they have just been
- freed from some terrible oppression and slavery. Bob Tyrrell's
- column today quotes some of these people; for example, Luther
- Vandross' manager Sheff Gordon said that Clinton's election has
- "mobilized the whole entertainment community - we feel like we
- can be heard again after all these years."
-
- Rush wonders how anyone could think nobody has been hearing the
- left. After all, did the Reagan/Bush years stop Barbra Streisand
- from making her movie "The Prince of Tides?" Just because
- Republicans didn't want to spend taxpayers' money to fund artists
- who spread chocolate over their nude bodies didn't mean that
- "artists" couldn't pursue such ventures; it's just that they or
- someone else would have to pay for it, not the government.
-
- What restrictions have these people been under for the past 12
- years? Maya Angelou said that it was only Clinton's election that
- had released her from "a long period of captivity or exile or
- something or other that had made life hell." Rush wonders what
- hell Angelou has been going through, except perhaps that she
- "felt" other people's suffering. Yet, aren't people still
- suffering, in spite of Clinton's election?
-
- Tyrrell writes that the talk about "reclaiming America" and
- "national salvation" also happened after JFK's election, although
- not at the scale currently being seen. Tyrrell points out,
- though, that "the millions shoveled out by corporate America" for
- the inaugural festivities add irony to the left's complaints that
- Reagan and Bush were corporate flunkies.
-
- The best point Tyrrell makes, though, is about how the Democrats
- would have whined and screamed had Reagan in his 1981
- Inauguration speech claimed that Republicans were "reclaiming
- America." Rush recalls how the liberals reacted with panic and
- sheer hysteria when Buchanan during the Republican convention
- talked about "reclaiming our cities." The left exploded with
- panicked, knee-jerk reactions and they accused Republicans of
- using tactics that smacked of "Nazism" and "fascism."
-
- The left, though, is now doing the same thing - their guy wins
- the election and they are running around talking about reclaiming
- America. Are they saying that they have more of a right to
- America than anyone else? Are they questioning the right's
- patriotism and values? These are the complaints the left makes
- whenever Republicans say anything about reshaping the nation.
-
- Tyrrell points out that the hypocrisies of the Clinton
- administration were so many that even before the Inauguration the
- press was growing restless, and Tyrrell says that even the media
- can take only so much. Tyrrell quotes a number of celebrities,
- such as Christopher Reeves who stated last night "for the past 12
- years, those in the arts were forced to take up the battle lines
- and defend our existence. With the Clinton/Gore ticket, the life
- of the artist is not something to be ashamed of anymore."
-
- Rush comments that this sounds a bit paranoid to him. Christine
- Laughty stated, "We were turned into human pancakes last night,
- but I didn't care. What impressed me was that everyone last night
- felt like `it's our turn!' Finally the needs of the people are
- going to be listened to and acted upon. I had a headache this
- morning because I cried so much - I was so moved by the whole
- thing, especially by Michael Jackson and that song he wrote for
- Ryan White."
-
- Rush asks what people Laughty is referring to? People like her
- have millions of dollars, so what do they do about the people
- they claim to care so much about? Ron Silver echoed these
- feelings by remarking that he was at first bothered by the jet
- flybys, but then realized that "those are our planes now!"
-
- Amy Pagnazi writes in today's NY Post "you don't have to be
- convinced that Bill Clinton's ascension to the Presidency is the
- beginning of anything to know what it is the end of - the end of
- Presidentially-endorsed attacks on gays, single mothers, career
- women, and people of color. It is the end of
- Presidentially-endorsed neglect of poor people, homeless people,
- and sick people. It is the end of Presidentially-endorsed
- isolation of all those who are privileged."
-
- "I tell you, folks," Rush states, "we have some sheer idiocy,
- paranoia, and hypocrisy, all rolled into a bunch of people who
- are so captivated with symbols that they have absolutely lost
- touch with all reality or anything reality-based."
-
- *BREAK*
-
- The comic strip "Non Sequitur" has an interesting cartoon today -
- a woman is standing in a dark doorway at the head of some stairs.
- The light from behind her barely illuminates a dark basement in
- which two eyes can be seen. The woman says, "It's official, dear
- - the Reagan era is over. Now turn off Rush Limbaugh and come
- back to the real world."
-
- Rush marvels at the viciousness that's being showed by the left
- nowadays, but points out that the Reagan era ended in 1988.
-
- Update Jack Kevorkian ("Scared of Dying")
-
- Jack "the Dripper" Kevorkian assisted his ninth suicide, Jack
- Miller, who was suffering from bone cancer. Kevorkian's lawyer
- insisted that "more will come." Kevorkian helped Miller, 53, to
- inhale carbon monoxide in Wayne County township. The district
- attorney has not yet commented on whether Kevorkian will be
- indicted for this.
-
- Rush points out that Miller is Kevorkian's first male victim; his
- previous eight "patients" were all women.
-
- Phone Paul from Manhattan, KS
-
- Paul congratulates Bo for his "exquisite" poem, and he wants a
- printed copy of it for framing. Rush says that Bo will probably
- read his poem on the television show tonight, so Paul can have a
- video copy of it soon. Paul thinks that will be something to
- treasure.
-
- Paul thinks Rush's last caller, Rick, really doesn't understand
- the ideological battle going on in this country, and his
- sentiment was sort of like saying "well, I traditionally vote for
- American political beliefs, but I'm now going to vote for the
- Nazis." Paul didn't like everything Bush did, but that still
- doesn't mean that he would vote for Clinton.
-
- Rush agrees, and notes that even if people like Clinton himself,
- they still have to look at who he's bringing to Washington with
- him. Rush holds Paul over the break.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Phone Paul from Manhattan, KS (continued)
-
- Rush says that the ideological differences between conservatives
- and liberals are profound, and it's a major thing to casually
- cast them aside. Paul agrees and says that in his conversations
- with liberals, they routinely trash Republicans; however, every
- once in a while he hears "Jack Kemp, he's not so bad." However,
- Paul hasn't been able to find out why the liberals seem to feel
- more kindly toward him.
-
- Rush says that Kemp does have an aspect that liberals like, but
- it's slipped from his mind for the moment. He'll cogitate about
- it some, though, and he's certain it will come. Paul then asks
- about the possibility George Bush will take on Ann Richards for
- the governorship of Texas. Rush doesn't think this is a likely
- possibility since it seems certain that Bush considers his
- political career to be over.
-
- Also, Rush suspects that Bush will probably try to spend more
- time with his children, making up for the time lost while being
- Vice President and President. In particular, Bush thinks that his
- sons Neil and Jeb have been unfairly targeted by his political
- enemies, and Rush agrees with that. Rush knows Bush has a great
- affection for his children and since he holds himself responsible
- for some of the troubles they have encountered, he'll probably do
- what he can to help them recover their names and careers.
-
- Phone Andre from Cherry Hill, NJ
-
- "Bo felt my pain," Andre says, and he asks how Clinton managed to
- blow his "honeymoon" with Saddam Hussein. Rush suspects that
- Hussein is simply trying to test the new US President; Clinton
- recently stated during a press conference that "American policy
- is American policy" and that things with Hussein would not change
- just because the US has a new President.
-
- Phone Dave from Geneva, NY
-
- Dave would like Rush to clarify his position on Zoe Baird, and
- Rush replies that just because he mentioned Quayle's name with
- Baird's doesn't mean he supports her. Rush brought up Quayle to
- explain in part why the Democrats are going after her so hard
- while the Republicans are not. Rush, though, thinks that the
- Senate should reject Baird, and in fact Clinton should not have
- even considered her.
-
- Baird broke the law, and the country does not need an Attorney
- General who can feel that she is above the law. Dave agrees
- totally with that and asks Rush if he thinks any woman can do the
- job of Attorney General. Rush replies "sure," and he bets that
- there are many women out there who can do the job. However, when
- the President decides that he's going to consider only women,
- that shortchanges the country which may not be getting the best
- person for the job.
-
- It's even worse that Clinton is applauded for deciding that his
- Attorney General must be a woman; this is more of the "get even,
- it's our turn" mentality that is showing up so often now. Rush is
- amazed that so much bitterness, anger, and resentment is
- motivating so many people on the left who have now become
- empowered. They seem to feel that it's now their time for all the
- perks and goodies.
-
- This is why the ideological battle does matter; although Clinton
- is not as far left as others in the Democratic party, he's
- brought many of the far left along with him, and these guys are
- feeling their oats now.
-
- Phone Dan from Dixon, IL
-
- Dan asks what the difference is between Zoe Baird's disregard for
- the law and what liberals think the Iran-Contra defendants have
- done; why is Baird okay for breaking the law when liberals have
- complained that Iran-Contra was all about Republicans thinking
- they are above the law?
-
- Rush points out that Iran-Contra was all about criminalizing
- foreign policy, while Baird is guilty of breaking immigration
- laws, which are essential to the proper functioning of the United
- States and its economy. Illegal immigration is causing all sorts
- of problems for California, which is paying welfare to many of
- these people, and Baird has shown some great insensitivity to
- this problem.
-
- Dan heard that Baird also gave money to other illegal aliens to
- help them come into the country. Rush hasn't heard this, but if
- this is true, then it compounds what Baird has already admitted
- doing. Rush thanks Dan for calling and restates his opinion on
- Baird - she broke the law and nobody is above the law. Rush
- doesn't care if she is a feminist or if she agrees with Quayle
- about everything, she broke the law and thus should not be
- Attorney General.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Rush notes that on next Monday and Tuesday he will be doing the
- radio show from EIB's San Francisco affiliate. Rush, as a
- "dominant and glamorous" TV star, has to attend the National
- Association of Television Programming Executives convention so
- that he can "glad-hand" his way through an endless number of
- station managers and other executives. This means that next
- week's TV show will consist of reruns, although the radio show
- will continue to be live on Monday and Tuesday.
-
- However, there will be a "Best of Rush" show on Wednesday because
- Rush will be moderating a panel at the convention on a subject he
- knows nothing about - relations between networks and their
- affiliates. Rush has nothing to do with this, but he will be
- moderating it anyway. The producers even want him to pick up the
- microphone and go into the audience a la Phil Donahue. Rush has
- to wonder why he was chosen for this, but he's glad to take the
- job.
-
- Thursday and Friday, however, Rush will be back in New York and
- things will go back to normal. This, of course, assumes the US
- airline industry can get him back on time without hassle. He
- remarks that every time he tells an airline story, he gets buried
- by mail and faxes from airline employees who anxiously ask "it
- wasn't our company, was it?"
-
- Phone John from Toms River, NJ
-
- John wants to respond to Kim Basinger's comment that a nation is
- gauged by how it treats its animals. He found a quote in one of
- his old school books; he doesn't know who originally said it, but
- it goes "judge a nation by the heroes it honors." Rush thinks
- this is a great statement, but bets that the animal rights people
- will now start coming up with a bunch of animal "heroes."
-
- Since John has brought up Basinger, Rush digresses for a minute
- to define "coyote ugly," and John remarks that he has never
- experienced this personally. He adds, though, that a common
- tactic of the environmental extremists is exaggerating in order
- to get people's attention. Rush says that "extremism in the
- pursuit of liberty is no vice" has been taken to heart by these
- people, except that they are pursuing their pet cause instead of
- liberty.
-
- Rush, though, thinks that this path eventually begs the question
- of at what point do people get concerned about not telling the
- truth about what they're saying? Rush would prefer to believe
- that "the truth is always the safest refuge." H. R. Kit Carson,
- however, disputes this because "the truth won't work if you just
- got married."
-
- Rush, though, still stays fast to this belief, but the problem
- with it is that the truth makes many people defensive and nervous
- and so it's a challenge to present the truth without getting
- people's dander up. However, the truth is what Rush's show is all
- about, and he plans on continuing down that path.
-
- *BREAK*
-
- Rush would like to end the program by doing something he should
- have done earlier this week: thank Dan Patrick and his staff at
- Houston's EIB affiliate, KSEV, for sending him a great birthday
- present - a Houston Oilers home jersey with the number 42, which
- is his current age. This is an official jersey and not the cheap
- merchandise the regular public buys. Rush states that he will
- proudly wear this jersey, in spite of what happened to the Oilers
- this year.
-
- --
- John Switzer | 1/21/93 - Clinton fails to follow through on promise
- | to have economic legislation ready the day after the
- Compuserve: 74076,1250 | Inauguration. Programmers rejoice because he gives
- Internet: jrs@netcom.com | them an excuse to further slip their schedules.
-