All Episodes

June 9, 2020 107 mins

PODCAST SUMMARY HOUR 1:

Mark Steyn guest hosts for Rush on Tuesday. Democrat leaders wear Ghana garb, kneel in condescending photo-op. Blackface is bad unless you are a Virginia governor or Justin Trudeau. Is there a big enough market for wimps to win in November? George Floyd’s final funeral this week is three hours. UberEats waives delivery charge if you order from black-owned restaurants. U.S. military going the way of the Boy Scouts. It’s not a good faith revolution and nothing good will come of it. Corporations should pay to rebuild the cities, not the taxpayer. Stupid gesture politics.

PODCAST SUMMARY HOUR 2:

We’re shrinking freedom of speech. The hypocritical state of redemption. Stupid gestures help no one. BLM Monopoly. White African American caller wonders if he needs to write a check or will receive one. Quoting Martin Luther King Jr. can get you in trouble on college campuses. Generals are a big reason Republicans became big losers. Mattis is being used and he should know better. Dems’ response to the mob could swing suburban voters to Trump. It’s V-NJ Day.

PODCAST SUMMARY HOUR 3:

Who knew the cure for COVID-19 was race riots? Blue Lives Matter site to be shut down. All over the world everything is being viewed through the George Floyd lens. Social media and human resources-like complaints have ushered in a dark era. The greatest thing we can do is live in truth. We went from the silent majority to the silenced majority. “Silence is violence” threatens speech and employment. D.C. National Guardsmen test positive for COVID-19 after deployment for protests.

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Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to today's edition of the Rush Limbo Show podcast. Yes,
America's anchor man is away and this is your Eiby
anchor Baby thrilled to be here, honored to be here
from the mountain vastness of far northern New England, just

(00:20):
a stone's throw from the Canadian border. It's the one
place in America, actually the Canadian border. It's the one
place in America where they're not throwing stones. That's just
a tip for any of you fleeing your looted and
burnt out downtowns if you're looking for somewhere to go to.
As you know, Rush is off for a couple of days.

(00:41):
He's at this treatment and he's went well and he's
just kind of unwinding and getting himself back together again.
He's taken the day off, doesn't want to be disturbed
by news, doesn't want to be disturbed by third rate
foreign guest host. He's just taking it easy with Catherine.
He will return later in the week. We have the
great Todd Herman for you. Yeah, all American, we got

(01:05):
we got one or two American guest hosts on the show.
It's called what do they call it? Bringing the supply
chain home. So enough with the cheap foreign content. We're
going to have an authentic all American guest host tomorrow
in the shape of Todd Herman. Wow, that photo opportunity
didn't go that well for the Democrat leadership. As you know, yesterday,

(01:31):
Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer and their Corkai got down on
their knees and actually getting down, getting down on your knees,
it's pretty impressive when you're Chuck and Nancy's age, it's
not to be underestimated. But they were taking a knee
at the Capitol, and for some reason they were wearing

(01:51):
these colorful priestly raiments around their next I wasn't quite
sure what was going on about that, but apparently it
was the kenty cloth, the colors of the kenty cloth
of the Ashanti people of Ghana. That's the Gold School,
the Gold Coast, if you're an old school imperialist like me.

(02:13):
It became Ghana in nineteen fifty seven under its first
prime Minister, Quame Nokruma, who didn't last long and precipitated
precipidated a chain of even more unstable governments. Anyways, the
kenty cloth of the Ashanti people, and on Twitter, Nancy

(02:34):
and Chuck were mocked for their cultural appropriation for basically saying,
as the author Orbia nuju Echiocha said, virtue signaling by
culturally appropriating their garb. It's totally condescending, she says, to

(02:55):
just say, Oh, Africans are so cute in all of
your colorful dresses. Well, some of these dresses and patterns
and colors and fabrics actually do mean something to us.
So I'm just all go, don't just order up a
job lot of cheap knockoff kenty cloth made from a
factory behind the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Don't just wear

(03:15):
some cheap Chinese knockoff Kendy cloth and culturally appropriators. Other
black Twitter users have compared it to the film get Out,
which came out I think two or three years ago,
in which the parents of a girl who's dating a
black guy he comes to she brings him to the
house to meet them, and they keep trying to show

(03:37):
how cool they are with it by raping about what
a splendid fellow Jesse Owens was at the Berlin Olympics.
So people have photo shopped the aged and wizened Chuck
and Nancy into the parents' roles in the film Get
Out twenty seventeen. They will look at there. To me,
it looked like that other film that film. Mister Snurdley

(03:59):
loves the Black Panther film, the Marvel Comics film about
the black superhero who comes from the Kingdom of Wakanda
in Africa, and Chuck and Nancy and co. Looked like
the tribal elders at a coronation in the Kingdom of Wakanda,
taking a knee as they play the national anthem of Wakanda,

(04:23):
which I think is Wakanda fool am i. Anyway, that's
what came to mind when I looked at Chuck and
Nancy on the Nakia. Davis says, this is black face.
This is the equivalent taking the kenty cloth of the
Ashanti people and dropping to your knee. It's like black Well,
the dropping to your knee is certainly like black face. Actually,
that's the next level. In Toronto, they had a big

(04:46):
Black Lives Matter demonstration and there's a white guy, and
you got to sympathize with the white guy. He apparently
has a few mental health issues, but we all do
if we're white. Because we got the white supremacy thing,
which is like the biggest mental health issue. The public
health guys just said that's like the most toxic widespread

(05:07):
public health is And there's no hydroxy chloroquin you can
you can't just chug the drain no down your throat.
The white supremacy is the biggest mental health issue in
the world. And this guy in Toronto had it. So
he got a bit confused because he's looking at all
these people. He's seeing all these people taking a knee

(05:28):
in the street, and he thinks, because it's so bad
to be white, because you got the white privilege, you
got the white supremacy. So he gets confused and too
show and actually likes black people. He actually put on
black face, this poor guy, and the Toronto police, of
course arrested him and dragged him away, which they never
did when Justin Trudeau blacked up and saying wake down

(05:51):
on the levy and nold alabam me. They never did
it with Justin Trudeau, but they're taking it to say that,
I'll tell you something else that's on. We all know
black face is bad unless you're a Democrat governor in Virginia.
Black face is bad or the Prime Minister Canada. Black
face is bad. Don't try black face at home, boys
and girls. It's extremely bad. But I saw something where

(06:12):
some young lady is trying to show her solidarity and
white co ed is trying to show her solidarity on
Twitter or Instagram with the Black Lives Matter things. So
to show her solidarity, she paints half her face black
and so, and you know, she's nineteen twenty. She's not

(06:33):
old enough to remember Al Jolson going mammy, so she
doesn't know anything about any of that. So she just
does the like the half the black face, and everyone's
going old this is so cool to show that we're
all one and everything. That's like what the first twenty
comments are, and then it all starts to head south
from there. But in a sense, black face is logical

(06:56):
if it's so. At one point white people blacked up
to condescend to black people. Right now, it's because they
thought they were superior. Was a form of superior condescension.
Now white people are carrying in shame and putting on
black face is their way of shot. I never really

(07:16):
wanted to be white. I can't do anything about it.
If I could, you could just give me a drug
and shoot it into my arm and then I could,
I could, I could, I could just turn black and
I'd really feel I fitted in and these demonstrations. But
In said no. But if you wanted a rationale for
blackface to make a comeback, then that guy in Toronto

(07:36):
may be onto something. I took a closer look at
the You know this twelve year old mayor of Minnesota
who agreed with everything at the demonstration except outright abolition
of the Minneapolis Police Department. And then they so then
they all boo him, and he just walks off and
that is the longest walk If you remember Bill Clinton

(07:58):
at the two thousand and Democrat convention where he was
the hero to that crowd, far bigger hero than al Gore.
So when they said ladies and gentlemen, Bill Clinton, he
started his walk on stage in something like sub basement
level twelve, and he walked through like seventeen miles of
corridor in whatever convention center that was, the Staples Center,

(08:21):
is that what it was. And the crowd is cheering
and cheering and delirious about him. And that's the longest
walk on I've ever seen. And al Gore would never
have tried it, and Hillary Clinton would never have tried it,
because you know, when you start in sub basement level fire,
the ladies and gentlemen al glare and he starts walking
down the court, the applause would die down after the

(08:43):
first six yards and he'd have the remaining twenty seven
miles to go with nothing to listen to but the
clack of his wingtips on the convention Center floor. And
that was the longest walk on this thing of the
twelve year old mayor of Minneapolis was the longest walk off.
This guy sculpt off in shame. And I said yesterday

(09:10):
that this guy is the love child of Justin Trudeau
and Elmo. People thought I was just joking, but that's
actually you can check the birth certificate. It's a complete fact.
He's the love child of Justin Trudeau and Elmo, this
twelve year old mayor of Minneapolis. And he looked like
Justin and Elmo had just told him to go to
his room. And if ever there was a time, now

(09:32):
this is the great This is the question. This is
actually shaping up to be the central question of the
election campaign. If you ever, if we ever actually get
to have an election campaign, is there really a big
enough market for whimps to propel this party to victory.

(09:52):
Does total self abasement of the kind we saw in
the capital, culturally appropriating the kenty off of the Ashanti
people to drop to your knees for eight and three
quarter minutes what being booed and walking shamefacedly off instead
of turning round and saying, no, I'm not going to

(10:13):
walk off. I don't believe we should abolish the Minneapolis
Police Department. And I'm the mayor, so I'm gonna stay
here because it's my city and you can boo all
you want, but I ain't getting off the stage. And
dared them, and dared them to storm the stage and
beat his fetching twelve year old body to a pulp,

(10:37):
and he, in the end chose to just walk off.
I saw in Philadelphia they just tore down the statue
of Mayor Rizzo, the guy used to run as the
big Bambino, the former mayor of Philadelphia in the old
days when the Democrats were tough racists and proud of it.
And he was the one his campaign slogan when he

(10:59):
ran for mayor that he was running in order to
make Attila the hun look like a and then he
used a rude term for a person of the homosexualist persuasion.
And that was what Democrats were back when they were
tough guys and racists. And now they've gone the whole way,

(11:20):
and the new mayors of these Democrats cities have lost
control of these cities, like the twelve year old mayor
in Minneapolis just shamefacedly walking off. I talked yesterday about
the real problem for the black community, which is that

(11:41):
blacks keep getting killed by other blacks. And I mentioned
some names like August Gills, who was eighteen years old,
had his whole life ahead of him in Chicago, and
he just happened to be standing at the wrong intersection
when a car pulled up looking for some people to
shoot for no particular reason, just because that's what there
is to do on a weekend. And I suppose since

(12:01):
the lockdown and the closing of all the movie houses
and the bars and the restaurants has even less to do,
which maybe why May the thirty first was the worst
day for violence in modern Chicago history. And as I
said yesterday, eighteen people died that day. And I said,
why do we never talk about this why do these
black lives not matter? And people think that's just an

(12:22):
argument that sophisticated racists make. So I saw some guy
on TV saying, that's not the subject under discussion. The
George Floyd thing is under discussion, and the black and
black violence is just a fact of life. It's just
something that isn't you can't do anything about it. You know.
That's actually the way they used to talk about slavery

(12:44):
two centuries ago, which was true. It was as normal
a feature of life around the planet since man first
got up on two feet, as the earth and sky,
just a fact of life to be told. Now the
blacks killing blacks in Chicago is just a fact of life.
Is to get to the heart of this thing, which

(13:06):
is that this is not a good faith revolution. It's
not like the guys in Hong Kong, the peaceful protesters
wanting to keep the liberties they have, knowing well what
those liberties are. This is a bad faith and dishonest
attempted revolution. And even the abolition of the police departments

(13:27):
is just cynical and bad faith, because you know what's
going to happen in these cities, in these democrat cities
with Democrat mayors and Democrat councils and Democrat police chiefs.
The minute you abolish so called the police chief and
the police department, then everywhere is going to look like
that block in Chicago where poor eighteen year old August Gills,

(13:50):
whom nobody cares about, whose black life doesn't matter. Every city,
in every Democrat run city in America is going to
look like the block August Gill's got fatally shot at.
One eight hundred two eight two eight eight two. Love
to hear from you Black Lives Matter, Antifa, radical revolutionary

(14:10):
tear it all down types. If you take ten minutes
out from tearing down a Confederate General statue and give
me a call, because I can't wait to hear from you.
One eight hundred two eight two eight eight two Mark
Stein in four rush. I should say that George Floyd's

(14:30):
final funeral of the week is taking place right at
the moment. It's going to go on for three hours.
I would caution if you think, well, it's a three
hour funerals, I'll be able to dip in and out
of it. That if you're at work and your boss
catches you're not walk watching the George Floyd funeral conducted
by the Reverend Al Sharpton with special video appearance by

(14:53):
Joe Biden. Then you'll probably be fired. You'll lose your
Twitter account and all the rest of it. So if
you've got me and you're listening when people think you
ought to be watching the last of the George Floyd funerals,
and people say, what's that foreigner you're listening to? Oh, oh,
I thought I thought i'd listen to the foreign coverage
of the funeral because it's it'll be less racist. Just

(15:14):
try something like that, But I'm warning you you'll likely
be fired if they catch you not following that. Uber eats.
Uber eats is waiving the delivery charge if you order food.
This is a servi as you call up Uber and
you say, I'm a bit hungry, could you send round
some food, and they go and get it from the

(15:35):
restaurant and then they bring it to your house. Uber
eats is now waiving its delivery charge if you order
from any black owned restaurant anywhere in the United States
or Canada. So if you're in racist Minneapolis and you
fancy some dinner from a black owned restaurant in white

(15:56):
Horse in the Yukon or Akalloit in Unavut in Canada's
far northern wastes. Then Uber Eats will wave the delivery
charge for you. So that's great, We've got sets. It
would warm the cockles of Robert C. Bird to know
that a segregated restaurant industry is back. It took half

(16:19):
a century, but it's back. No word yet. If you
decide to go and eat in on these restaurants that
Uber waves the delivery charge on whether you get to
sit and the good seats at the lunch counter or
you're in the lousy seats at the lunch counter. But
it's good to know we now have a segregated dining
industry again. That's great news from Uber Eats. The US

(16:40):
Army to get the feeling, by the way, in the
increasing feeling that the US military is going the way
of the Boy Scouts, just another formerly masculine institution that's
now been totally hollowed out by suicidal political correctness. Political

(17:00):
correctness unto death. The US Army has announced this has
got the approval of the Secretary of the Army and
his boss, the Defense Secretary, the one who's had a
little bit of a contretemps with the President Trump, and
probably will be heading for the door at some point
or other, probably before the election, so that he can

(17:22):
write a piece in the Atlantic attacking President Trump as
being divisive. Anyway, the US Army is going to be
renaming its basis because many of its bases in the
South are named for Confederate generals, for example, like Fort
Bragg and oh yes, look at this Fort Hood. Fort
Hood named after John Bell Hood. So they're going to

(17:45):
now rename those bases. They may even rename with all
the generals attacking Trump, they could just as easily, you know,
rename them after General Mattis or General Powell or General Kelly,
because those Confederate guys who could lose a war in
four years tops General Mattis and General Powell and General

(18:08):
Kelly can string out losing a war for twenty years,
which actually is impressive. And so they may rename those
may named Fort Hood as Fort Mattis. That of course,
was the place where Major Hassan killed fourteen people. I
think it was thirteen people and an unborn baby. Major

(18:30):
Nidal Hassan. He's the first mass murderer in history to
have given a PowerPoint presentation on what he was planning
to do, and all his superiors, including possibly a general
or two in that room, didn't dare to do anything
about it in case they were tied up in sensitivity

(18:51):
training hell for being Islamophobic for a few weeks. So
maybe they should just remove the name of John Bellhood
from Fort Hood and cut to the Bason remain and
rename it Fort Hassam. The military is in a poor way. Yeah,
Rush is out today. We got Todd Herman, the Great

(19:11):
Todd Herman will be here tomorrow. Don't miss that and
rush back to close out the week. But you know,
there's there's things you can do to mitigate the absence
of Rush, and one of them is to go to
Rush Limball dot com. There's you'll see a little button there.
I think actually that you have to click the drop

(19:31):
down menus. It may not be entirely obvious, but you'll
see the words Limball Letter there and you think, oh,
what's that. It's America's number one news magazine. You can
get it in print, you can get it in digital,
you can get it in both. It'll probably be the
last print publication in the United States. When you look
at the suicidal behavior of the New York Times, New

(19:55):
York Magazine and the Philadelphia Inquirer at al as I
was talking about Yes today, and it's always got great
things in it. I always like the little it's roundup
of the little stories you might not have heard of,
like transitioning jailbirds and the world condom shortage caused by

(20:16):
the lockdown of Malaysia during the pandemic. That's things. There's
those little spirit of the age stories that actually are
often more revealing of the world we're living in than
all the big important stuff. And it's a terrific read
when it comes. I always get it out and just

(20:36):
start at the first page and work my way through.
And as I said, I'm always tickled by those little
They're the stories you used to find at the foot
of page fifty eight in your local newspaper, but now
they're all conveniently rounded up in one place. To become
a subscriber, all you got to do is go to rush,
limboor dot com. It's a terrific present. Father's Day is

(20:57):
coming up in about a week and a half, and
you don't want to be giving him flowers in a
box of chocolates because it's rather lame gift to give
a big butch bloke, So why not give him a
subscription to the Limball Letter or give him the most
Limbaugh allowed by law. That's a subscription to the Limball

(21:18):
Letter plus a Rush twenty four seven membership, and then
he will never need be discombobulated by a sinister foreign
guest host again, because you'll be able to listen to
Rush at any hour of the day or night and
read the Limball Letter. You can find out all about
that special offer. It's the perfect Father's Day gift if
you go to Rush Limbaugh dot com. My position on

(21:43):
what's going on on the streets is that this, as
I said, it's not a good faith revolution, and I
mean that, and it gives me no pleasure to say it.
But I contrast it with what's happening on the streets
of Hong Kong, where a third of that territory's population
over air, but more than two million people have been

(22:04):
out on the streets protesting against the most brutal and
repressive government on the planet. It happens to be the
dominant power on the planet. We all pretend there are
no moral questions attaching to getting your crappy T shirts
and socks and underwear made in China, But in fact
there are China kills more people, according to the statistics,

(22:28):
than every other regime on the planet combined. So if
you can believe this, the Chinese politbu I know this
is hard to believe. The Chinese politbuau are even worse
than the Minneapolis Police Department. And yet over two million
people on the streets of Hong Kong have defied them
and managed to do it without a lot of looting
and burning and lighting up the sky. And what I

(22:53):
don't know is what these guys actually want. There is
I have no I said this yesterday, and I think
this is true for any almost any foreigner in the
United States about the norms of policing here. At the
time of the Ferguson thing, when there was a spate

(23:15):
of a little spade of police killings, it wasn't just
the guy in Ferguson. I think there was a white
elementary school teacher who had been killed somewhere else the
week before, and some old guy who'd been pulled over
for speeding and he was reaching for his cane and
the cop thought he was reaching for his gun. And
shot him. And I'm told by police officers that all

(23:39):
these things are by the book, and it's the book
I have a big problem with. And so in that sense,
Rush Rush said eight days ago when he was talking
about George Floyd, he said, you only get one life,
and when it's taken away from you, you know you
can't come back. The only man who has ever come

(24:01):
back from the dead is Jesus Christ, and that's not
going to be happening to George Floyd. And I said
yesterday that if you can't arrest, if a person cannot
survive arrest, and I saw some clever clogs point out, well,
you know, John Dillinger, he was shot dead while they
were trying to arrest him. When they're not trying to

(24:23):
arrest this guy. They've arrested a guy for trying to
pass a twenty counterfeit twenty dollar bill and they had
him in cuffs at which point, according to most of
the police regulations, once you've got the cuffs on the guy,
your freedom of maneuver is rather less than it is previously.
So I'm with Rush. I agree with Russia's thing on

(24:45):
this that George Floyd did not deserve to die even
if he was guilty of passing a counterfeit twenty dollar bills.
So I'm not I'm not going I'm not someone who defends,
you know, my constabulary right or wrong. I think there
are reforms, and I think in fact some of the
reforms that are being proposed, for example, the loss of

(25:06):
qualified immunity for police. In fact, I would favor the
deunionization of police, because they're one of the people who
put in the interminable delay that makes it ruinously more
unlikely that you will ever be able to get a
policeman convicted of anything. So there are plenty, There are

(25:30):
plenty of reforms that could be made, but nobody is
that's We've the conversations moved way beyond that now to
in fact, reducing the downtowns of many other American cities
to the state of that block in Chicago where eighteen
year old August Gills got shot simply because a guy

(25:51):
pulled up, A couple of guys pull up in a
car and they're looking for people to shoot, and they
shot him and the woman he was with and she
survived and he didn't. And he's a teen years old.
And this goes on and black lives don't matter because
nobody cares about it. Nobody cares about it because there's
the two relevant statistics here, and I look at all
this thishonest thing showing the rate of incarceration among the

(26:14):
black population versus the rate of incarceration among the white
The relevant statistics here are that blacks commit more crime,
and partly because of that, you have the complementary statistic
that blacks are overwhelmingly the biggest victims of crime, which

(26:36):
is why all the polls, all the surveys that have
ever been taken, show that blacks, actually black Americans, want
more policing. It's cute if you're in anti five, if
you're some like little white trust funding liberal progressive who's
had such a charmed childhood that you're bored by it
and you want to tear the whole of society down,

(26:59):
and this last ten days off as a perfect opportunity,
the perfect pretext for that. It's cool for you, it's
groovy for you that little trusty, fundy white liberal girley
can go out rampaging through the town and demand the
complete abolition of police. And then you can go back

(27:20):
to mummy and Daddy for the summer and live in
the gated community. But the first victims of reducing policing
are always the black neighborhoods because the police retreat because
that's where the crime is. And so if you've got
fewer resources to fight crime, and you've got fewer policemen
to fight crime, the policemen that are around go to

(27:43):
the quiet, wealthy neighborhoods, and every block in democrats cities
will wind up looking like the block on which August
Gills was shot at in Chicago over the weekend. Eighteen
years old. Eighteen years old, I quoted Stalin yesterday. One

(28:05):
death is a tragedy. A million deaths are a statistic,
and in a media age that's even more so so.
George Floyd is a tragedy. And all the people the
eighteen people shot on Sunday, May the thirty first in
Chicago fatally shot, the people non fatally shot. I think

(28:27):
that was up around eighty five. But the eighteen people
fatally shot in Chicago are just the weekend statistics. As
Stalin said, you don't even need a million. You don't
even need a million, even when only five people were
shot like August Gills and four of his fellow Chicagoans

(28:49):
this Sunday, even when it's just five. They don't fit
the narrative. You could remember them if you want to.
They didn't have to be statistics, as Stalin said, They
could actually be tragedies if Black Lives Matter was a
sincere slogan. But it's not. And that's why this revolution.
No good will come of this revolution, no matter how

(29:12):
many gutless, fearful Democrat leaders, the octagenarian, the wizard, Jerry,
wizened geriatric leadership of the Democrat Party, fearful of the
forces it's unloosed, unleashed, the editors and columnists at liberal
newspapers who can't quite get with the programmer burning it down.

(29:35):
The so called generals turning on Trump because he's a
divide and he's not uniting us by doing what Mitt
Romney is doing, and cowtowing and abasing himself before them.
All no good, no good will come from this so
called revolution. Mark Stein for us. We'll take your calls
in just a moment. Mark Stein in for Rush behind

(29:59):
the Golden EIB microphone. First up today is Lana from
Saint Augustine, Florida, where Ray Ray Charles went to the
School for the Blind in Saint Augustine, Florida. Don't know
whether that's still there. But Lana, it's great to have
you with us on the show today. What's What's on

(30:20):
your mind? Thank you so much much. Mark, it's really
a pleasure to talk to you. M My comment is
it just it seems to me if black lives really
matter to Hollywood, Nike, the NFL, Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc.
They would be donating money to rebuild the cities that

(30:42):
were destroyed. I don't think the American taxpayers should have
to pay for the incompetence of mayors and governors. No,
that that's that's what's that's what's being proposed. Lana. You
make a good point, actually, because it's these wealthy cyber
global cyber companies they now say they want to help

(31:02):
with what's going on. What's going on is that the
downtowns have been destroyed and a lot of those stores
aren't coming back. We're already hearing that there's one in
Minneapolis that employed fifty people. It's not going to rebuild
because those guys were in the building and watched the
fire truck sitting outside. But having been instructed not actually
to put out the fire unless it provoked the mob.

(31:25):
So these businesses aren't coming back, and they need it.
But if you think about it from Amazon's point of view,
if you're one of these global internet brands like Amazon
who've been responsible for shutting all the shopping malls, then
actually burning down the downtown's actually whether you favorite or not,
it's it's in the interests of your business model because

(31:45):
it closes all the mom and pop businesses, which are
the ones that are If you've seen these scenes like
the one that the clip they keep showing of the
female black owner of the small business weeping and wailing
because you can't figure out what burning down her business
has got to do with protesting George Floyd Lana, that's

(32:10):
exactly the kind of people that people should be going
it should be giving their money to. And that actually
would be more useful than bailing out people who've been
arrested for burning down black owned businesses. It would be
more useful than Uber Eats offering free delivery for black
owned businesses. Larna, thank thank you, thank you very much

(32:32):
for your call. You're as I said, this is not
a bad this is a bad faith revolution. It's not
thought out properly. I mean, it's really cool, isn't it.
If you're if you are the little white trusty fundee
ANTIFA person who burned down that black woman's business and

(32:52):
you get tossed in jail, How cool is it that
you're gonna get bailed out of jail by Steve Carrell,
the guy from the office. All the Hollywood celebrities are
chipping in money to get the people who did the butt.
And again I don't get it. We give all these
these protests are largely peaceful. That's largely peaceful. That's very reassuring,

(33:18):
isn't it. And yet, oddly enough, it's the people who
are arrested because they're doing something that's not peaceful. Who
are the ones that Hollywood and Joe Biden staffers are
attempting to bail out. And I thought about just to
throw this point in quickly because it bears thinking about.

(33:38):
I was bemoaning yesterday the uselessness of a lot of
the rights institutions, and we see that in the silence
at best, or equivocation at worse, the way the virtue
signaling types like Mitt Romney. Mitt Romney, the guy who
promised to be severely conservative. Yeah, that sounds fun when

(34:01):
he was running for president in twenty twelve. Now ostentatiously
marching with a Black Lives Matter down that DC street
in which those huge letters for Black Lives Matter have
been painted down the street and passed the newly renamed
Black Lives Matter Plaza. I had an email from Mike,

(34:24):
and Mike says, I wish some Republican mayor would have
the guts to have hashtag black Lives Matter painted on
the street right outside the local planned parenthood abortuary. Yeah,
there's the silence of the right heirs, I said, we
have the right staying silent, so there's no countervailing narrative.

(34:48):
So we have the assumption from Amazon and co. That
this is not a cultural fault line that we are
that that Black Lives Matter represents, but in fact it
is something on which there's universal agreement. Deblasio, Bill Deblasio,
the most loathed man in the state of New York.
There isn't anyone who likes this guy in New York.

(35:11):
This guy is loathed by the governor, he's loathed by
the police, he's loathed by all the Black Lives Matter crowd.
Even though his daughter is actually on the streets, joining
in all the jamboree each night, even though she got arrested,
Even though Bill Deblasio is actually married to a black woman,

(35:33):
but he's not. They loathe him, and now they're still
going to loathe him, even though he said the street
in every New York borough will be renamed Black Lives Matter.
So the stupid gesture politics one of the reasons, the
stupid gesture politics that does nothing for nobody, goes on

(35:53):
and on, so they'll He's got to five up the
mayor in DC who just renamed named one Black Lives
Matter Plaza. He's gonna rename five streets in one in
every borough. It's not enough, Mayor, you're still a wars
Why not ten in every borough? Let's rename every street.
Fifth Avenue, what kind of racist name is that? That

(36:15):
should be Black Lives Matter Avenue? And likewise Park Avenue,
that fancy, while the hoyty toyty white folks live that
should be Black Lives Matter Avenue too? And what about
sixth Avenue? They call it the Avenue? And the Americas?
Who cares about all those Latin Americans that renamed that
one Black Lives Matter Avenue? Any decent mayor in New

(36:36):
York would be running on a program of renaming every
avenue black Lives Matter avenue. We gonna go Mark Stein
in for us. Don't touch that dial. We got lots
more still to come on America's number one radio show,
The Rush Limbo Show. Yes, America's anchorman and is a

(37:00):
way but never fair. We're bringing the supply chain home.
Enough with the cheap foreign guest hosts. We have an
all American made in America. Look for the label. I
won't tell you where the label actually is on Todd Herman,
it might embarrass him, but Todd Harman, the All American
guest host. He's going to be here for tomorrow's show.

(37:24):
Russia is going to come back a later in the week.
As said yesterday, he's been giving listeners more details about
his medical condition than I think I'd be comfortable doing.
But I do understand that the last few days have
gone well, and he's resting up, and he's going to
be back on the air just the way you like it,

(37:47):
and he will have plenty to say about what's been
going on these last few days. Always, for me, almost
every issue becomes a freedom of speech issue because we're shrinking, shrinking, shrinking,
shrinking the parameters of what it is that's acceptable to
say in ways that I think even seriously ideological totalitarian

(38:09):
societies would have a problem with it. By the way,
if you're one of these left it I always say this,
I'd love to hear from the left wing guys. If
you're on the side of what's happening on the street,
if you're on the side of the cancel culture, do
come on and make your case. I'd love to hear it.
One eight hundred two eight eight two. James Woods, the

(38:30):
actor and energetic Twitter James Woods was saying in the
early hours of this morning that his Twitter account had
been taken down because he'd been posting the names of
those police officers killed in the line of duty so
far this year. I believe there's ninety six of them

(38:51):
around the country. And that's That's not a contentious issue.
Is it that you might think it's disrespectful to the
memory of George Floyd for this guy over here on
Twitter to be mentioning other people who are dead, But

(39:11):
is it a reason to be banned? Is that the
sign of a normal, healthy society with a generous culture
free speech, of course it's not. Now. This guy, he's
another Hollywood guy, Terry Crews, and unlike James Woods, he's black.
He's the host of America's Got Talent, and he's an

(39:32):
actor who's in a show called Brooklyn ninety nine. And
he tweeted this on Sunday, defeating white supremacy without white
people creates black supremacy. Equality is the truth. Like it
or not, we are all in this together. So he wants,
how's this for real hate speech? He believes in equality.

(39:55):
He's got the old Bennetton ad thing, the I'd like
to teach world to sing thing going on where he
wants us all to live together in perfect harmony, black
and white and yellow and red and brown, all the
races living in a great harmonious rainbow. And that's hate
speech now. So the minute he said, like it or not,

(40:16):
we're all in this together. Equality is the truth, Terry Crews,
there were calls to cancel him, getting booted off of
America's Got Talent and booted off of Brooklyn ninety nine,
and to be driven out of show business for good
for saying that, like it or not, we are all
in this together. We got to draw the line at
that kind of hate speech. Arizona State University had this

(40:41):
lady in mind to take over as dean of the
Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and chief executive officer of
Arizona PBS. She's had the offer revoked because she tweeted
that she supports good police officers. Uh and uh, And

(41:05):
now people are saying that that's that kind of talk
is completely unacceptable. So he's she's got to go. M
the editor of born Apperte. You know that the gourmet
food magazine you buy it, big glossy magazine from Conde
Nas the people who do Vogue and Vanity fam and
all that they do born Apperte. So you don't have

(41:27):
to eat all this vulgar food like cheeseburgers. You can
dine like a Frenchman with all the fabulous recipes they
got in there. It's called bonn Apperty. They found some
tweat this guy had done, I think in the year
twenty thirteen, and because of that treat, he's now out
of a job and people are saying he's he didn't
have enough soul food in bonn Apperty. He sounds like

(41:48):
the parody ads on rush that there wasn't enough that
I'm thinking about that one we did just before the
Oscars a few years ago when people were lady there
weren't enough black movies nominated and weird one of those
parody promos that said there was no soul soul food
in True Grits. That's actually the complaint they're ALBETI about

(42:11):
bon Aperty that this edit he just like had all
this fancy French an Italian cuisine and there was there
was not enough diverse food in there. So he's gone
for a tweet. He for a tweet he tweeted in
twenty thirteen. And again the contrast with George Floyd is
striking because George Floyd has done things in his past

(42:35):
that don't show the man in the best light. He
stuck a gun in the belly of a pregnant woman
when he was part of some robbery a few years ago.
But people say, well, he's turned his life around the
last five years. He's turned his life around, and that's great.
It's wonderful to be able to turn your life around.

(42:56):
But the guy with the bad tweet from twenty thirteen,
there's no possible ability of redemption for him. No way
a man like that can turn his life around. He
can't turn his life around the Democrat governor of Virginia
when he's capering around in black face, he's capable of redemption.
He can turn his life around. Justin Trudeau capering around

(43:16):
in his black face in black face multiple times. He's
basically a career mammy singer. But it doesn't matter. He's
capable of redemption. But this guy, because he's too He
and the Governor of Virginia are too important for the
Left to lose. Because Justin Trudeau, as you would call Obama,
endorsed him. He was basically Justin Trudeau is Obama's brother

(43:41):
from another mammy. So that's okay, he gets a pass.
This guy tweets incorrectly in twenty thirteen, so he has gone.
And you know, the saddest thing for me is the
way very few people are actually willing to draw the
line here to say no, this is wicked. This idea

(44:04):
of totally destroying people for a single tweet, This idea
of saying demanding somebody to be kicked off his TV show,
loses livelihood, kicked out of his editing job because he
tweeted incorrectly because he said, we're all in this together,
and we can't. That's triggering. What's interesting to me is
the way the language of censorship now has merged with

(44:31):
the language of human resources. So, for example, there were
dozens and dozens of people who complained about Tom Cotton's
op ed in the New York Times, dozens and dozens
of employees of the New York Times. I'm actually surprised
that The New York Times can still afford to employee
dozens and dozens of people, but they do. And what

(44:52):
was interesting it was an organized campaign and it used
the language of a of corporate human resources as a
cover for censorship, in which people complained that they felt
that having Tom Cotton now, he's like some senator. He
lives several states away. He works in Washington, d C.

(45:15):
Which is at the other eye end of the train
ride out of Penn Station in New York. So he's
he's not going to be there on forty first Street
threatening you when you come out and decide to go
for lunch from the nice cart over and get a
kebab from the cart over on the corner in Times Square.

(45:36):
He's not going to be there. He lives several states away.
He works at the end of the Acella line out
of Penn Station. You don't have to worry about it.
But they all claim that in this By running this,
Tom Cotton orp ed the editors, he did an unsafe
work environment for these New York Times journalists, journalists journalists.

(46:03):
But we shouldn't be under any illusion just because they're
using the language of human resources. We shouldn't be under
any illusion about what's going on. It's about censorship. It's
about censorship, and it's about the constant shriveling of free
speech in order that you can only talk about things
on the left's terms. And that's actually been a disaster.

(46:27):
If you're wondering why Republicans can't win, and even when
they win, they can't win a popular majority in presidential elections,
it's because, in case you haven't noticed, for a generation now,
all the issues have been framed in Democrat terms. So

(46:47):
you can only talk about until Donald Trump came down
that escalator, you could only talk about immigration in terms,
in left wing terms. All we need to bring these
we need comprehensive immigration reform to bring these people out
of the shadows. You can never talk about immigration as
public policy, and like any other public policy, something that

(47:09):
should be determined in the interests of the people who
are already in the country, in the interests of your
own citizens, in the interests of your own population, which
is how traditionally functioning societies used to discuss public policy.
And the reason you couldn't is because of the demand

(47:30):
that it be constantly framed in left wing terms, so
that if you try to go outside that you would
be a racist. Now you're a racist. If you are
a bit squeamish about abolishing the police, now you're a racist.
If you're a black actor who says we're all in
this together, nobody wants to hear that tomorrow. Tomorrow is

(47:52):
going to be the strike for black lives. More than
seventeen hundred physicists, astronomers, and other academics have pledged to
forego research classes meeting so they'll even be less for
the board lethargic students to do in an American universities

(48:12):
because even the virtual classes or the zoom classes are
being shut down. They're complaining about anti black racism in
academia and their local and global communities, and these physicists
have started a website like real revolutionaries do, called particles
for Justice, Particles for justice. This strike is being held

(48:38):
in conjunction with the shutdown STEM and shutdown Academia. Okay,
I can't tell the difference between between brilliant parody and
the real thing anymore. But apparently the anti far left
in among the physicists and astronomers are going to be
striking tomorrow, strike for Black Lives in or to shut

(49:00):
down STEM. These are this is renaming streets, renaming five
streets in every street apiece, in every New York borough.
These are gestures. And what is going to change with
your stupid gestures? You know? So instead of hanging a
left at Robert E. Lee Street, you'll be hanging a

(49:21):
left at Black Lives Matters Street. What does that do
for anybody? What does that do for anybody? Give me
a call one eight hundred two eight two two eight
eight two build a blasio. Renaming five New York streets
as Black Lives Matter Street. Actually, I tell you, if
the Democrats were serious about this, they'd rename everything in

(49:43):
West Virginia that's named after Robert C. Bird About eighty
five percent of streets in West Virginia are named after
Robert C. Bird about eighty five percent of public buildings.
If they renamed all them, all of those Black Lives
Matter street, it would be stop. Let's go to Peter
in Hickory, North Carolina. Peter, you're alive on the Russian

(50:05):
Embo show. What's on your mind today? Hey, Marcus, an
honor to talk to you. UM, also want to letting
Russia know there are millions of people praying for him
right now for his recovery. Yep, that's that's that's great.
Mega Press, Mega Press for US, preys, Mega Press for us.
I'm a real quick before I did have I need
to ask you a question. It's regarding the reparations. I'm

(50:27):
a little conflicted. I do have a little bit of
an issue. But if you if you bear with me
one second, I'm an entrepreneur. I just had an idea
for something based on your rename of streets comments. Okay,
I think we should have a new Monopoly game where
all the different streets are Black Lives Matter. They go
down and value as you go around the blocks. Every
time you pass go you lose hundred dollars. Yes, Um,

(50:49):
he lands on your property, you have to pay them not,
they pay you, and maybe as soon as you build
four houses, they all spontaneous League Nite exactly, and whenever
they do spontaneously ignite, you get a get out of
jail free card. All the cards, every one of the
cards would be a get out of jail free card. Perfect.

(51:09):
That's exactly exactly. You don't really need a professional for
the You could run with this dag until the end
of the show. The new but the new tickets. There's
a market for this. Yeah, the new blout something non
flammable so you can't destroy them. No, that's that's true.
That may be the floor in the design plan, but

(51:30):
it could be like those birthday candles where they reignite. Yeah. Yeah, yeah,
that's an excellent idea. Peter. Don't let Parker Brothers or
whatever snaffle that one away from you. You've got the copyright.
If you mind, If I could, I could ask you
for real quick advice regarding the reparations. Um, my life

(51:51):
story is basically I was born in Prade, Czechoslovakia, right
in sixties sixty four. You ran away from the Russians
in nineteen sixty eight when they were all through talent,
decided that we were now under the Russians, right through
a refugee camp in Austria. After a few months, landed
in South Africa, where I became a proud citizen in
South Africa, grew up there for fourteen years, had a citizenship,

(52:12):
went to school there during the holopartheid thing, and basically
saw changes happening over there, and also watched the communist
menace heading down through Mangola, Zambia's and Bobwe. I was
there when where Dja the kim Zimbabwe. Okay, we literally
saw one one day they're shipping food north, you know,
they're exporting. The next time they're basically starving. Yeah, that

(52:34):
was mister r Oh. Yeah, by the way, he did
say it's going to fair elections two years later. He's
still there forty years later, so that, yeah, I know
he's he eventually he eventually got false stout, but it
was only when he was like ninety seven or something
he lostened. Yeah, a lot longer than the aforementioned mister Nakruma,

(52:55):
who we were talking about in West Africa a couple
of hours we did. Yeah, we did actually finally make
it to the United States, to the greatest country on Earth.
We find We got here legally after twelve years on
a waiting list, and the paperwork came through. We landed
in California, lived there for thirty years and saw the
socialism our beloved Governor Jerry Brown and all that weird

(53:16):
taxes and everything happening more and more, and finally we
became refugees of California moved over to beautiful, normal North Carolina.
Don't spread the word we like it here, okay, and
I do, But I do have a question regarding the
whole reparations issue since technically, before I became a United
States citizen, I was an African American and I am

(53:37):
prachnically an African American. Yes, why write a check? Do
I receive a check? I'm not sure? Well that works
all right? Myself A little man. Teresa Heinz Carey, she
said she would be the first African American lady when
they ran in two thousand and four, John Carey's missus,
who's from Mozambique. She said they she would be the

(54:00):
first African American first lady. And people didn't like that
when she started using that line, so they're not. So
it's not going to work for you because there's a
there's a subtle difference, Peter, in being an African American
and a South African Americans. That's what you're gonna that's
what you're gonna be. If I were you, if I

(54:21):
were you, I would propose, see if you can get
your your town in North Carolina that you have like
a South African American Day in Hickory, North Carolina, and
you have a parade down your main street as the
as the entire South African American community, and see how
many people turn out for it and what kind of

(54:42):
reaction you get there, Peter, that'll be the way to
gauge whether you're going to be getting a check or
taking a check. But this is actually Peter, Peter is
absolutely right here. This is the fault line of society
as to who are the approved groups and who are
the unapproved groups. And as Peter was saying, even though
he's from Czechoslovakia and just wound up in South Africa,

(55:06):
he still bears the burden of generations of the National
Party going back to nineteen forty eight in there, just
because he happened to a pass through them. But that's
the difference the approved groups and the non approved groups. Yes,
Rush is out today, and as Peter mentioned, we are

(55:28):
sending him mega dittos or mega prayers, however you wish
to phrase it. If you want to send a longer
greeting to Rush, you can go to Rush Limball dot
com and it's the menu bar. It's right at the
top of the page, even before it says the Rush
Limbaugh show the show logo in big letters, unless that's
been blacked out for Black Lives Matter like all the

(55:50):
other fashionable logos. But right at the very top of
the page, above the logo, there's a menu bar and
you click I think it's the third one along, and
it's special messages for Uss. You can leave your greeting
for Rush, and if you want to, if you want
to send him a photograph or an amusing greeting card
or some other visual distraction in there, you can actually

(56:13):
upload that as well. You can upload a JPEG or
a jiff or whatever you call it, and Rush we'll
see that too, and he does read those messages and
he's always very touched by them. I said that it's
the most innocuous things can get you under threat of

(56:34):
cancelation mentioned earlier, the poor guy from America's Got Talent
who made the mistake of tweeting that we're all in
this together. We're not all in this together. He's black too.
He's a black guy, so he's one of the goodies.
He's not even like a white guy claiming we're all
in this together, exercising his white privilege by claiming false solidarity.

(56:56):
But in a he's a black actor and he's trying
to get him kicked off America's Got Talent because he
says we're all in this together. Here's a thing from
UCLA in Los Angeles, the University of California in Los Angeles,
and they're investigating a lecturer w ajax Paris or perhaps

(57:19):
w iax Paris. I'm not sure he might be Dutch.
I'm not sure how he pronounces that w iax Paris
or w ajax Paris. Anyway, Professor Paris read out Martin
Luther King's famous letter from Birmingham jail. Unfortunately, the letter
contains the N word, and he did not think it

(57:43):
his place to bowdlerize Martin Luther King or by changing
the word, and so he has been referred to the
university's discrimination Prevention Office, which is also urging students to
come forward with complaints. He's also been faulted for showing

(58:04):
a documentary to the class in which a lynching is described.
It's a documentary in which a lynching is described, because
lynching happened in America, so it's part of history. It's
one of the historical facts of the world. But unfortunately
this documentary made the mistake not of showing a lynching,

(58:27):
but of describing a lynching, and so the professor is
under attack for doing that. So even quoting Martin Luther
King now can get you into trouble on an American
university campus. One of the most reprehensible things I thought

(58:48):
about General Mattis is a piece in The Atlantic. This
coordinated you know, the Left is very cunning, and nothing
happens by accident. It's not just one general, it's not
just two generals, not just three generals. There's half a
dozen generals now who are attacking Trump mysteriously all of

(59:09):
a sudden. And the idea that this isn't in a
certain sense coordinated, half from anything else that shows the
bloated nature of the US general staff. This surfeit of generals.
Normally you only need one general. But there's a whole
bunch of them trying to take out Trump at the moment.
And I was pretty withering about generals yesterday, about American generals,

(59:34):
because it's a long time since any of these guys.
They could be career generals, and good for them. I
don't begrudge them that, but they've generally been serving in
a general sense, in an entirely dysfunctional military that hasn't
been capable now for decades, for over half a century,

(59:56):
for three quarters of a century, if you want to
go back to Vay and v J Day, of actually
winning any wars or effectively prosecuting any wars in the
national interest. And this is one of the reasons why
the Republicans became big losers. Everybody was stunned after nine
to eleven, which was a huge assault from a generally

(01:00:22):
barbaric and primitive part of the world, that's to say,
upcountry Afghanistan. Fellas who live in caves managed to put
together a plot that took out three thousand people in
the two most important East coast cities in America. And
when America went to war, we supposed that they were

(01:00:43):
serious about prosecuting that war, and the war degenerated, It
didn't degenerate instantly. There were some brilliant things done in
the early days. For example, the use of Northern Alliance
Troupe basically guys on horseback using GPS technology to call

(01:01:03):
in air strikes on Taliban targets in Afghanistan. Brilliant, brilliant
technological innovation. And then it all bled away into this
twenty year occupation where every once in a while you think, oh,
is that afghan thing still going on? Oh? Yeah it is.
Here's some of the police and army we trained turning

(01:01:25):
their guns on us and killing the troops who trained them.
It's a disgrace and I don't know how anybody. And
one of my problems with the never trumpers is that
the essence of the never trumpers, the heart of the
never trumpers, is the military industrial complex. Basically, it's people

(01:01:45):
like Bill Crystal, the so called neo con wing, who
were in favor of these wars. But to be in
favor of a war, you've got to have a coherent
national strategy involved moving all elements of national power. And
in the end we turned into a bunch of idiots,
giving every officer shipping out to Afghanistan, a copy of

(01:02:09):
that fraudulent book Free Cups of Tea, peddling all this
sentimental hooey about how once you've had Free Cups of
Tea with a pushtoon warlord, he's your friend for life.
And the book is a croc it's a fake. But
the Pentagon, which is all out of ideas, and it
is possibly the most the most stupid building on the planet,

(01:02:29):
certainly in terms of the funding it receives, kept giving
it to soldiers who were shipping out to Afghanistan. So
now we have these, so I said yesterday, and it
sounds like a cruel line that if there's one group,
you shouldn't be listening to its generals, and we'd be
better off listening to hairdressers or listening to nail sound

(01:02:50):
on owners or whatever. But I look at this thing.
I'm reading General Mattis's piece in The Atlantic, and I'm
trying to take the guy seriously. He's the guy who
everyone called mad Dog mad Dog Mattis, which makes him
sound kind of butch and tough, but he didn't actually
have the guts to call out the perpetrators of nine

(01:03:12):
to eleven on the anniversary in twenty seventeen, he soft
soaked it by saying maniacs in religious in false wearing
false religious garb. How does he know? He's not an
expert in Islam? But he now says, you know, oh well,
he's complaining about Trump's reaction to these riots, and he's saying,

(01:03:36):
oh well, there were only they were overwhelmingly peaceful protests
with just a few outbreaks of scattered outbreaks of violence,
just a few outbreaks of violence. Has he seen the
pictures from Minneapolis, a shattered downtown. They burned the third
Precinct House to that they chased the coppers out and

(01:03:57):
burned the third Precinct House to the ground. In Washington,
d C. They set Saint John's Church on fire, and
it's only by pure luck that they managed to save
that building before any serious damage was done. And that's
right across from the White House. That's how far they
got to the seat of power. So General what I well, okay,

(01:04:19):
I'll put it in a nutshell. General Mattis belongs to
that group of parade generals as they as they used
to call them in the Canadian and broader British tradition.
These are the people that the war starts and you
find yourself with generals who aren't actually terribly good at
winning a war, and then you hope to be able

(01:04:40):
to move them sideways and get some real guys in
who know how to win a war. But basically, America's
generals have spent twenty years doing the world's longest slow
motion defeat, certainly in modern history, in Afghanistan, and now
we're supposed now they General Mattis is actually making the

(01:05:03):
same miscalculation about what's going on on the streets of
American cities as America's generals have made these last twenty
years about what's going on on the streets of Afghan
cities and Iraqi cities and Libyan cities and all the
other places they want to have boots on the ground on.
So now, having managed to lose in worthless bits of

(01:05:28):
sod on the other side of the planet, General Mattis
is now advising Trump on how to actually lose on
the home front too. There is something there is. And
the other thing I mentioned yesterday about General mattisist thing,
the Nazi comparison, How dare you, sir? You're not some
little university snowflake. You're not some polytechnic Marxist from the

(01:05:52):
Department of Transgender Studies. You know this, sir. You've studied war.
I take it. You've studied war, and you know well
the nature of the enemy that the civilized world faced
between nineteen thirty nine and nineteen forty five. And you know, sir,

(01:06:12):
what you're doing when you compare President Trump to the
Nazis awaiting Allied forces on d Day in nineteen forty four,
June sixth, nineteen forty four. You take that, which, as
I said, is about the last time America one a
war because it wasn't led by General Mattis and General

(01:06:33):
Powell and General Kelly, because it had real general's back
then who put together a coherent invasion force that went
all the way to Berlin. So you took something a
great victory June sixth, nineteen forty four. And you compare
the current president of the United States to Nazi ideology

(01:06:54):
and claim that that's what the president is you is
using You're being You don't you get that You'll never
be anyone to them. You'll never be anyone to them,
neither you nor Kelly, nor Powell, nor any of them,
nor any of you they're just using you, just in
the way they've used anything to try and take out

(01:07:15):
Trump these last three years. But you don't have the
same excuse as the professor of transgender studies at Bennington
College or Middlebury College or whatever it is. You don't
have the same excuse because you've studied war and you
know the president isn't a Nazi, and you know that
that's the cheapest insult, oh to compare someone to Hitler.

(01:07:38):
In the future, everyone will be Hitler for fifteen minutes,
to the point that even a man who wears the
uniform of the men who defeated Hitler is not above
that shameful, shabby comparison. To hell with matters, mad dog,
What a what a whimpering, preening little poodle of a
mad dog? That guy turned out to be Mark Stein
for rush lots more still to come. P has just

(01:08:04):
treated me that General Mattis is not a mad poodle
because poodles are tough. Yeah, some of these French poodles
are very vicious, and p says General Mattis is more
like a mad shit suit. So there's some dispute about
which dog breed he most accurately resembles. Let's go to
Tony in Greenville, South Carolina, Tony Alive on the Russian

(01:08:26):
and Bush. It's great to have you with us. Mark,
It's a great honor and a pleasure to talk to.
You're my favorite fill in host. Oh, thank you, thank
you very much. Then, Oh, you're quite welcome. All I
wanted to talk about is something's occurred to me is Democrats,
quite often, I think, overplay their hands, and I'm not
sure that this would happen, but I think it's a

(01:08:46):
scenario that could happen. With the pressure from the Black
Lives Matter and the far far, far left wing of
the Democrat Party that wants to eliminate police forces is
going to put people like Polos, the Biden and all
the other semi mainstream Democrats into a position They're either
going to have to cave in and agree to it,

(01:09:08):
in which case I think they may well alienate some
of their more conservative based regular people that don't hate
the police, or if they continue to resist and say
they are not in favor of eliminating the police, the
Black Lives Matter movement at the far left wing is
going to go out of their minds. Maybe Third Party
I don't know what would happen, but I just think

(01:09:31):
they may be painting themselves into a corner by not
taking a stand one way or the other on this
Black Lives matter, because I think a lot of their
supporters are going to turn on them. Not Black Lives Matter,
excuse me eliminating the police. A lot of their supporters
are going to turn on them regardless of what they do.
What do you think, Yeah, I think I think there's
a danger of that they do go too far once

(01:09:53):
they get as I said yesterday, the blood lust is
in their nostrils. If you think about it, that scene
with the mayor being booed off stage and walking away
like a little boy being told to go to his
bedroom and just walking off like that. He's the elected
Democrat there and the mob has just one one over

(01:10:14):
the elected democrat and shamed him and made him look
like their poodle. To go back to the canine metaphors.
And there's a danger of that too in what Nancy
and Chuck and the rest of the gang we're doing
at the Capitol yesterday. So there is a danger that.
And if you look at what Trump lost in the

(01:10:35):
mid terms, which was basically women in the suburbs. You know,
one way to get those women back is to appear
to be on the side of the mob and to
appear to be the party that's pandering to the mob,
which is what Nancy and Chuck and that twelve year
old mayor in Minneapolis look like right now. And there

(01:10:56):
is a real danger about because basically the energy of
the party, the octagenarian leadership is like trying to buy
off the mob. They're old white Democrat party leaders and
they're having to pretend that they're down with all the
BLM Antifa types just to maintain their street cred. Well,

(01:11:18):
that's actually not where suburban women who abandoned the Republicans
in the twenty eighteen election are tony. So you're right,
it could just swing enough people back in the right
districts to bring this thing back for the Republicans in
those times. You've got You've got a good point there.
The mob does tend to overplay their hand a bit.

(01:11:39):
That's why they're a mob, because they're impatient. They don't
want to go to the trouble of sending out flyers
and organizing. They've got They want it to happen now,
and it's easier to make it happen now if you
just rampage through the streets. But most people even today
are not rampages, and there is peril for Nancy and

(01:12:00):
Chuck in linking their brand to the people rampaging in
the streets. Thank you for that, Paul. We got lots
more straight ahead. I was speaking about v VJ day.
It's actually n J day to day. New Jersey is free.
Governor Phil Murphy has lifted the stay at home order. Meanwhile,

(01:12:22):
in Dallas, the city officials in Dallas have declared that
protesters are a high risk population, just like the elderly
population if you're out rioting, looting, and so forth. And
due to this new status, that means that protesters now
qualify for federally subsidized coronavirus tests. So that's good. If

(01:12:44):
you're like out looting a CVS or a target and
the looter next to you isn't observing social distancing, you'll
now be entitled to a federally subsidized coronavirus test if
you're out and about testing on the streets of the
city of Dallas in Texas. Mark Stein in for Rush

(01:13:07):
on America's number one radio shows, stay with us. Yes,
some America's anchor man is away and this is your
undocumented anchor man, no supporting paperwork whatsoever. We are in
the middle of George Floyd's funeral. It's very interesting. For

(01:13:30):
the last three months people have not been able to
bury their dead. There have been restrictions on holding funerals
at all, and even in the jurisdictions in which funerals
are permitted, there've been terrible restrictions on the number of
people who can attend two four five maximum. There are

(01:13:51):
over five hundred people in the church for George Floyd's
funeral right now. Because racism whites premisey is the greatest
overwhelming public health issue. If you're one of those people
who has not been able to mourn your own loved
ones for the last three months, you may have mixed

(01:14:12):
feelings about that. Janice Dean, who many will view will know,
does the weather on Fox and Friends in the morning,
Janis lost my fellow Ontarian. In fact, when on the
rare occasions I'm in their live for that show, Janis
and I will be in the corner talking about minor

(01:14:35):
aspects of Ontario politics. To the bewilderment of those around
us in the green room. Janis lost both her parents
in law to COVID nineteen and was not allowed to
see her father in law see her mother in law
in their final day's final hours, and not allowed to

(01:14:57):
hold funerals for them. And now suddenly it's okay to
hold a funeral with five hundred mourners. In fact, multiple
funerals in different states with hundreds of mourners. The governor
of Michigan, the person who went to war on seventy
seven year old barbers who only wanted to admit one

(01:15:20):
person to the barber shop at a time to cut
their hair, said no, no, no, you're in trouble. We
got to send the cops after you. Is out in
the street taking a knee, knee to knee with other protesters, knees, adjoining,
adjoining knees with Governor Whitmer in Michigan. It's amazing. Who
knew that the cure for COVID nineteen is race riots?

(01:15:43):
It just cleared up boom like that. Nobody cares anymore.
The Blue Lives Matter website is to be shut down.
Apparently employees of certain fashionable and woke publications such as
maxim I think that's the men's magazine and Sports Illustrated.

(01:16:05):
They're so woke. I believe they have transgender models now
in the Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition. Not sure what Maxim
is doing on that front, but they discovered that their
corporate boss also hosted the Blue Lives Matter website, which
is dedicated to highlighting assaults on police officers and offering

(01:16:28):
support for their families. As I said, something like ninety
six police officers have been killed in the line of
duty so far this year, in the first five months,
and with most of the population in lockdown for the
last three months. But even having a site called Blue
Lives Matter is offensive. So it's the journalists at Maxim

(01:16:51):
and Sports Illustrated demanded because sports. As Rush told me
a couple of years ago, when I professed ignorance of
all American sports, he said, I don't worry about it
because they've been completely chickified. They're now totally woke, and
so they don't want to be associated with a corporate
owner who also owns the Blue Lives Matter site. So

(01:17:15):
the Blue Lives Matter site is to be shut down.
George Floyd's family is going to petition the United nations
to help disarmed police. In the United States, we're going
to have maybe we should have Jimmy Carter and the
election observers come in for November to see if their
elections are free and farewell they're at it. The statue

(01:17:36):
of Belgium's King Leopold the Second, the world's worst imperialist.
He ran the Congo with slave labor. He was a
fairly disgusting and totally incompetent imperialist. And his statue has
now been removed in Antwerp today, the King King Leopold

(01:17:57):
the Second statue has now been taken down all over
the world. Everything now is being seen through the prism
of George Floyd. Don't treat Africans like kids, says Twitter,
erupting as they watch Nancy Pelosi and co. Taking a

(01:18:18):
knee for eight and minutes and forty six seconds. They say,
the virtue signaling is off the charts. But you're just
treating us as children. And as I said, they're objecting
to Nancy and Co. Culturally appropriating the kenty cloth of
the ashanty people. Shame on you, Nancy and Chuck taking

(01:18:42):
the cloth of the ashanty people. Tea. Do you think
tea has been basically non political since the Boston Tea
Party not anymore. A right wing vlogger based in Yorkshire,
Laura Towler Yorkshire Tea because it had not yet commented

(01:19:03):
on the Black Lives Matters protests as all the other
woke corporations had. They tweeted back, please don't buy our
tea again, because they stand against racism and there with
Black Lives Matter. Their tea is disgusting. Don't drink it.
I hope they're not a corporate sponsor of this show,
but leave. I'm safe in saying that their tea room

(01:19:26):
in Harrogate in Northern Yorkshire, Betty's, is very nice, but
I certainly intend to boycott it. They've said, they've said
to this woman they don't want her buying their tea
because she's right wing. PG Tips, which is also disgusting tea,
and in fact, in its commercials it has chimpanzees drinking

(01:19:48):
the tea. They make the pot of tea their chimpanzee workman,
and they drink the tea. They make the pot of tea,
they drink the tea, and the chimpanzees love the tea.
But if you're a human being, it's not a Planet
of the Apes thing. It's just their commercial But if
you're actually a human being, it's revolting tea. You don't
want to drink that at all. It's owned by Unilever,
are the same people who own Ben and Jerry's, And

(01:20:10):
they say, if you're boycotting teas that stand against racism,
you're gonna have to find two new brands now, Black
Lives Matter, Solid dary tea, So you can't have a
cup of tea now without Black Lives Matter and racism.
Tea tea has become an issue of racism as well.
They're telling people who do not support Black Lives Matter,

(01:20:32):
don't drink our tea. Both those teas are rubbish brands.
If you want to drink tea, drink Twinings or Fortnum
and Mason. I don't know what their politics are. They'll
be totally woke up the wazoo as well, but at
least they haven't as yet told people that if you're
right wing, you can't drink our tea. Don't buy our tea.
Don't drink our tea. This is what it's There is

(01:20:53):
no aspect of life. This is the triumph of the left.
For the left, everything is political. So for a while
it was just show business that somehow turned political. Do
you remember Tony Bennett saying, oh, we should just do
everything Obama tells us to do. He's like he was
prostrating himself before baraque Obama. So he just say, oh,

(01:21:17):
you know, maybe I won't buy the new Tony Bennett
duet CD because they're all rubbish anyway, maybe I'll just
put it to one side. It was show business. Now
it's corporations, which is a lot which is a lot
more extensive. You can't buy a pair of socks without

(01:21:37):
it now being a political act from someone who's virtue
signaling their way. Sky Jackson, she's an eighteen year old actress,
but she's also an activist, and she was chastising someone
called Dylan for a racist song on Twitter, and unfortunately
she picked the wrong Dylan and so she sent the

(01:22:00):
Twitter mob all after the wrong Day's Please I didn't
do this. I'm not that Dylan. I'm a totally other
different Dylan. But it's too late now they've all clabbed him.
If he's still I don't know whether the guy's still
got a job, the size still got a life. But this,
this is this combination of social media censorship claims presented

(01:22:24):
as human resources complaints basically work pet place complains, which
is what you see at the Philadelphia Inquirer now, which
is what you see at the New York Times now,
which is what you see at New York Magazine. We
are moving into a very dark era. The whole idea
shut up, shut up, shut up. You started a police

(01:22:45):
website that just lists the policeman who've been killed and
injured in the line of duty, and you want to
commit your support to the families. Blue Lives Matter, Nananana,
you can't have that. You can't have that. Wet taking
that down, that's unacceptable. You're a black actor and you
want to say we're all in this together and you

(01:23:07):
believe in equality or equality for all is just racist
code words. Now we know you're black. That just shows
how cunning these racist code words are, because you're now
the dog doing the dog whistling as a coded word
to all the clansmen out there. That's how slick this
operation is. We live in an insane world. No good

(01:23:28):
will come of this, and no good will come of spineless,
gutless conservatives hoping to buy themselves a little bit of
time in front of the huge, great crocodile of totalitarianism
that's coming for them who don't dare to speak up
about this. The biggest single thing we could all pledge

(01:23:49):
to do right now is to live in truth. They
talk about I think it was John Hinderaker that Powerline
was talking about this, that Nixon talked about the silent majority.
There was a silent majority then. The reason it was
silent is because at that point there was no basis
for public self expression. There was no Facebook, there was

(01:24:11):
no Twitter. You couldn't launch a blog or anything like that.
So the silent majority, unless it could persuade a commissioning
editor at the New York Times to publish something, was silent.
And Powerline I think it was John Hinderaker over there
was saying that it's now the silenced majority because these
people all of Twitter accounts, these people all of Facebook accounts,

(01:24:34):
these people all of Instagrams. But they know that if
they say anything, they're going to be jumped on, and
if they're jumped on forcefully enough, if they say what
they think forcefully enough in a way that it goes
viral and zips around the Internet. They'll lose their jobs
over it. And that's why we have gone from the

(01:24:54):
silent majority to the silenced majority, which is not an improvement.
And that is just one of the things that has
happened in the age of the Internet. You know that
Rush was big on the Internet, far more than suddenly
than I was, and many other people on the radio

(01:25:15):
or He saw the implications of it. He was onto
it about many things, including online purchasing. He was getting
a piece of the action with his club get Mo
T shirts and all the rest of it. He saw
the possibilities of the Internet, but he also saw that
with that convenience comes a risk and a downside. As

(01:25:37):
Rush has told us many a time. You know, my friends,
every day that you're online, you're likely to put your
information at risk on the Internet. By information, I mean
you're private stuff, credit card numbers, driver's license number. I
mean you may even screw up and put your Social
Security number out there somewhere. There's all kinds of data

(01:25:59):
that you enter into numerous databases every day on the Internet.
Because you're trusting and you're confident in your business with
a bunch of various different online businesses, something as simple
as placing an online order can lead to your information
ending up in the hands of cyber criminals. These are

(01:26:20):
identity thieves. They're looking constantly for new ways to illegally
access databases of customer information. I mean, they're constantly inventing
new ones, new types of phishing attacks, denial of service,
massive attacks, any number of things they try. You have

(01:26:40):
to protect yourself and the best way to do that
is with LifeLock. LifeLock are the leaders in online identity
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(01:27:04):
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not engaging in the activity. Now, no one company can't
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(01:27:24):
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(01:27:46):
Do it at LifeLock dot com, and make sure you
use my name when you sign up, because that'll save
you a gigantic and huge twenty five percent off your
first year using my name as the promo code life
dot com. Use Rush Banadette from Bucks County, Pennsylvania. You're

(01:28:07):
alive on the Rush Limbull Show. Great have you with us?
Oh my gosh, Mark, it's such an honor and prayers
for Rush, you know, we really need him this year.
We have to get Chump back in. Absolutely. I want
to absolutely I want to talk about peer pressure. You know, kids,
you hear peer pressure and you think about kids and
nowadays a big peer pressure they face with their peers

(01:28:28):
is the profile pick. They have to put that black square,
they have to put the pride flag on their social
media or their friends and classmates called them out. And
it's a big pressure. Now people my age, we don't
face the same things, or we haven't yet. I have
gotten thrown into face a Facebook jail for you know,
speaking truth and finding a job is sometimes hard to find.

(01:28:52):
If they go onto my personal Facebook and they say, oh,
she likes Trump, she likes Rush, she's pro life, they
just don't hire you. And as you said, people are
being fired for what they said about Black Lives Matter.
But something is new that I just saw the other day.
A woman who apparently works for a big company was
called into her boss's office for her silence. In other words,
her sin was that she had not posted anything about

(01:29:15):
George Floyd or Black Lives Matter on her personal Facebook page,
and apparently her boss and co workers notice. And I've
seen some of these signs even here locally. Silence is violence,
and it just frightens me to my core that our
first Amendment is under a huge attack right now. You're
absolutely right there, Bernadette, all my life, and I've fought

(01:29:39):
lawsuits on this against I got a law changed in
Canada about this a decade or so back. I've fought
against state ideology. And it doesn't matter whether the state
ideology is fascism or communism, or whether it's a fluffier
thing like multiculturalism or climate alarmism, or what's going on on.

(01:30:00):
What's going on right now. Black Lives Matter and its
allies hold radical positions that in a free society people
are entitled to have different views on. And the correct
response to someone not putting a Black Lives Matter thing
up on their Twitter handle or whatever is that you

(01:30:21):
could be It could be anything. Could be that you're
not really interested in it, You're more interested in stamp collecting.
Could be that you're opposed to some of the radical
positions they take. Could be anything. The idea, particularly a
bosses at your workplace in effect demanding that a condition

(01:30:41):
of employment now is that you sign on to the state,
the new state ideology. And as you say, for children,
this has been the story of children throughout this century.
That they have to show that they care about climate change,
then they have to show that they clear about LGBT
querity issues. Then they have to show that now they

(01:31:02):
have to show that they care about black Why don't
we just issue people with a list of all the
positions they're meant to hold on everything when they're in
the maternity ward and we can actually pin it, we
can pin it to their little onesie as they leave
the hospital. Because that's basically what it's coming down to. Bernadette,
you're quite you're quite right about that, and it's and

(01:31:24):
it's deeply disturbing. I hope, I hope you don't suffer
from it because people go and they see you listen
to Rush or whatever on your Facebook page, and I
hope you manage to stay out of Facebook jail on
this as well. But you're absolutely right, And as you say,
what's most disturbing, Bernadette, is that it's the silence. Is
that it's not you can just it's it's not even

(01:31:48):
that you are opposed to something, you just don't say
anything about it. And the fact that you don't say
anything about it is now taken as proof that you're
an evil person. Thank you very much for your call, Bernardette.
That may be actually the most important call we've taken
today because it gets it gets to the heart of

(01:32:09):
the ugliness of what's going on here. There is nothing nice.
There's nothing virtuous about actually threatening people who do not
support what you support. There's nothing nice about it at all.
And it's deeply weird. It's deeply disturbing, and it's the
kind of hysteria that somewhere down the continuum leads to

(01:32:30):
what went on in Cambodia and other totalitarian societies. Microsoft
replaced its human journalists with robots and so now on
the Microsoft news site, they illus, they took. They ran
a story about the singer Jade third thurl Walls personal

(01:32:54):
reflections on racism. If you don't know Jade Thurlwall, she's
one of the new fellas, not like Randy Backman. She
belongs to the mixed race band Little Mix. And Jade
Thurwall gave some reflections on racism to MSN dot com,
which is Microsoft's news site, and they illustrated it with

(01:33:16):
a picture of her fellow band member lee Ann Pinnock.
And she's furious show she posted on Instagram. If you're
gonna copy and paste articles from other mediaite that she
might want to show, you're using an image of the
correct mixed race member of the group. This is artificial intelligence.
It's so primitive. Microsoft's artificial intelligence is so primitive that,

(01:33:39):
just like actual human racists, all black people look alike
to the artificial intelligence robots. Can you believe that Microsoft
have actually loosed racist robots upon the planet. That's how
bad it's getting. Artificial intelligence just as racist as old

(01:34:00):
kind of intelligence. Now you may have heard this was news.
I mentioned yesterday that the WHO, the World Health Organization,
that's China's lapdog. They issued a statement yesterday that asymptomatic
spread of coronavirus is very rare. In other words, if
you work that through, the last three months have been

(01:34:21):
a complete waste of time. They locked us down on
the basis that asymptomatic people could spread coronavirus, and so
you couldn't just quarantine the sick people. You had to
quarantine everybody. So they had to tank the global economy
and to ruin all our lives and put tens of
millions of people out of work and make everybody broke,

(01:34:43):
and close all the restaurants and close all the shops
because asymptomatic people could be spreaders of the COVID nineteen.
And then yesterday Maria van Kirkhova, who is the head
honchet when it comes to the coronavirus. So we're not
talking about that communist goon from Ethiopia who heads the organization,

(01:35:06):
and it's China's guy there, that ghastly doctor Ted Ross
fellow Beijing Bob. We're talking about one of the actual
experts there, who in fact is American. I believe Maria
van Kirkhova Dutch name, but I think she's a US citizen.
And she said that the asymptomatic spread a coronavirus is
very rare. There's very little evidence that anybody asymptomatic has

(01:35:29):
ever given this thing to anybody else. In other words,
we tank the global economy for nothing, and we destroyed
people's lives for nothing. For these last three months. Now
she's issued a clarification saying that there's been some misunderstandings
and she was relying on two or three studies and

(01:35:49):
that she regrets using the phrase very rare. And she
now says that some models could show as much as
forty percent of transmission. So the lockdowns on again, because
no one knows nothing. This has been the biggest failure
of public health expertise in stars the who behaved appallingly,

(01:36:14):
but the CDC, the Centers for Disease Control, which is American,
behaved rather well. During the SARS epidemic. They both destroyed
their brands completely during this thing. She was also saying
that clarifying a distinction she made between truly asymptomatic people

(01:36:34):
and people who might be pre symptomatic how do you
know you're pre symptomatic. I mean, certain things are certain
in the sense that I'm technically alive right now, but
I'm pre dead. But how do you know you're pre symptomatic?
No one knows anything. She announced that asymptomatic people couldn't

(01:36:58):
didn't generally transmit the disease yesterday. She's walking it back today.
This organization is a joke, and Trump is right to
call it a joke. If you want to know, I
said at the top of the show, at top of
the hour, that the one thing, it turns out, the
one thing that clears up COVID nineteen eliminates a global
pandemic is race riots. And I don't just mean in

(01:37:20):
the United States, because these things are going on all
over the planet. As I said, they taken down King
Leopold's statue in Antwerp in Belgium. There they took down
the mob, tore down a statue in Bristol, England, and
tossed it into the River Avon. These things are going
on all over the planet, and mysteriously, it turns out

(01:37:40):
that wherever you are on the planet, the one thing
that clears up COVID nineteen, you'll be feeling right as rain,
you've been under the weather, you've had a bit of
a coffee, you're a bit wheezy. Goard and have a
race riot you'll feel great. And as the city of
Dallas has just declared, if you go out and riot,
you'll be at greater risk of COVID nineteen. But don't worry,

(01:38:02):
because you get you entitled to the federally subsidized COVID test.
It's all rubbish. The same experts who tell us that
we had to it's unsafe to go to a hairdresser,
it's unsafe to go to a nail salon, now tell
us it's perfectly safe to go and burn down a
police station in Minneapolis. The same public health experts, as

(01:38:23):
Rush noted on Friday, Sir Isaac Newton, the fellow who
developed the three Laws of motion, the apple fell on
his head. Sir Isaac Newton coming up for auction is
his proposed treatment for the plague. This is not COVID nineteen.

(01:38:44):
It's the old school black death. He said, what cheers
the black death is toad vomit lozenges. He's got a
two page recipe for it. First, you need a toad
and you have to suspend them by its legs. This
is the recipe spot on the Russian and War Show.
It's a new regular feature, so we're doing toad vomit today.

(01:39:07):
You suspend a toad by its legs in a chimney
for three days until it vomits up earth with various
insects in it. You have to catch the vomit on
a dish of yellow wax. When the toad dies, you
grind the body into powder, mix it with the vomit,
and then make it into lozenges and this will drive

(01:39:29):
away the contagion and draw out the poison. This is
Sir Isaac Newton. He's a great guy, Law of gravity
and all the rest of it, and he's come up
with this recipe of toad vomit lozenges as a way
to treat the black death. He did this in sixteen

(01:39:50):
sixty seven, but his notes are now coming up at
auction at Southby's in Portsmouth in England. The bidding is
currently at sixty five thousand dollars. And I don't know.
I'm to the best of my knowledge, I've never had
a toad vomit lozenge, but right now I would bet

(01:40:11):
on that rather than any of the advice coming out
of the World Health Organization or the CDC. No one
knows nothing. It's quite extraordinary. Three months into this thing.
Oh it's on surfaces. Oh no, it's not on surfaces.
You don't need to wear a mask. Oh it's a
crime now if you go out without a mask. Oh,

(01:40:31):
don't worry. Asymptomatic people, the ones who were the reason
we all are to be locked up for the last
three months. Now we've found out, We finally found out,
after three months of you being in house arrest, that
in fact, asymptomatic people don't translate it. Oh did we
say that. Oh it's twenty four hours later and we're
now turning on a dime and reversing that. Stick with

(01:40:51):
the toad vomit lozenges, folks, Sir Isaac Newton knew what
he was talking about. Mark Stein for rush, Your call
straight ahead, Mark Stein in for rush. Behind the golden
EIB microphone, DC National Guard members called out to respond

(01:41:11):
to the Black Lives Matter protest in the National Capital.
They were deployed around the White House in response to
the rioting after the death of George Floyd. They've now
tested positive for the coronavirus. A spokeswoman for the Guard
told McClatchy newspapers that more than one positive case has

(01:41:34):
been conserved confirmed among Guard members, though she did not
specify how many. But apparently the DC National Guard is
now stating, according to Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Brooke Davis,
that members of the DC National Guard have tested positive

(01:41:54):
for COVID nineteen following their deployment on the street in
response to the death of George Floyd in those riots.
Let's go to Jason in Kensington, Maryland. Jason, you're live
on the Rushlyn Bull Show. Great, have you with us?
Did Mark A? Hey, I'm you You're from Queensland in Australia. Yeah,

(01:42:20):
that's that's right. Yeah yeah. Queen's Queensland are the deplorables
of Australia. And after the last Australian election, where Queensland
provided the majority that denied the left wing climate crazed
loonies kept them out of power, all the left were
saying they should saw Queensland off the Australian continent and

(01:42:42):
floated out, floated out to the Pacific to join Hawaii
or something. That's what we need put Hawaii. Back at
the Red State Cab. What's on your buy today, Jason.
I just have got quick thing about the Black Lives Matter.
I got to a young lady here in Washton, DC
about seven eight years ago, African American lady, nice lady,

(01:43:06):
and she lost her daughter to a drive by shooter
had driven through her neighborhood and fed into the house
and struck her two year old daughter and killed her.
And I don't know through a news story because I
do artwork, and I did a portrait, small portrait of
her daughter for her and just showed up on a
doorstep one day and decided to give her this portrait.
So we've been in touch over the years, and when

(01:43:27):
this all sort of started bawling over, we sort of
got back together again. And I mean both her and
I sort of agree that this has all just been
a big crop and she's just soaked over the Black
Lives Matter as well as me, and I'm sort of over.
I just told her I'm over the Black Lives Matter
white brigade as well. Obviously I'm not part of that
brigade that's got the white fists in the air as well. Said,

(01:43:49):
you know, we just we're just normal people who get
along and pretty each other with respect and and sort
of you know, it's if you treat me nice, to
treat you nice. But the liberal cloud, I don't. I
don't so less interested in that sort of thing. I
would dread the thought of me and who had got along. Well,
it's because in the most heartless terms, it doesn't fit

(01:44:12):
the narrative. That's a heartbreaking story. You lose a two
year old daughter entirely by random, just because of a
culture of violence that is so routine that nobody even
talks about it on the television news or in the
newspapers or anything. And I I was a fairly terrible

(01:44:34):
sentimental father when my kids were at that age, just
before nursery school and grade school. I couldn't bear to sit.
I couldn't bear to sit in movie theaters where where
there was a film that kids died, I'd just find
tears streaming down my face. And I feel the same
way when I read about the actual lives, not just

(01:44:55):
the the teenagers that I mentioned earlier, but even younger
than that, us children, people who's people who's whose mature
selves haven't even formed yet, and just some bullet comes
through the wall of your frame house or whatever and
you're or you're standing on the wrong corner at the
wrong moment and you're dead. Your your friend has my sympathy,

(01:45:16):
and I do not understand the heartlessness and indifference of
the professional agitators when it comes to victims year ago.
This virtue signaling has just become old. It's very embarrassing, really,
and you know it's just it's just nothing genuine about
it at all. Well, it's it's very it's very selective.

(01:45:38):
It doesn't afford the same opportunities and the death of
a two year old girl in the situation you've described
is horrifying. But but for for the the professional grievance
mongers that afflict our society, it doesn't provide the same
opportunities for feasting and exploitation. And it's a U do give.

(01:46:01):
Do give your friend our best. That's a terrible thing.
A two year old daughter and somewhere and no matter
how many years go by, that stays inside you, and
that grief and that emptiness and that hole in your
heart is permanent, Jason, So do do give your friend
our best. From everyone here at Rush, thank you for
your call. That's Jason from Kensington, Maryland via the Great

(01:46:25):
Australian State of Queensland. In Her Majesty's Commonwealth of Australia,
Mark stein In for Rush. We're going to close things
out in just a moment, Mark stein In for Rush
on the excellence in Broadcasting network. Turbulent times, turbulent times
in America. But it is always an honor to sit

(01:46:49):
behind the golden EIB microphone if you happen to be
a foreign chappy like me. I thank as always mister Snerdley,
the guiding hand of this show in Russia's absence, and
I thank Keith and Mike in disease ridden, riot stricken
Midtown Manhattan for helping me in my little distant corner

(01:47:13):
of the North Country try and hold things together. We
have great news for you. The one and only Todd
Herman is going to be here with you for three
hours of home grown excellence in broadcasting. It's okay, you know,
having this little bit of FIGN Exchange student stuff, but
once in a while you want the real deal. Todd
Herman here tomorrow. Rush back later in the week,

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