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May 4, 2009
Unconstitutionality of the Obama-Chrysler
Thievery
Thank goodness some of the secure-creditor victims of
Obama's unconstitutional Chrysler thievery have had the guts not to grab their
ankles and simply take it, and have filed suit in bankruptcy court to stop what
can only be chritably cast as criminal conduct.
The preliminary complaint filed in the case is not too
long, but it sets forth the essential elements of what is really one of the most
heinous examples of an unconstitutional power grab by officials of our federal
government since Roosevelt's New Deal. The Chrysler example is not unique,
but it is easily seen for what it is:


April 23, 2009
Lying Nancy Pelosi Should Go
Hot on the heels of the latest Democrat scheme to
politically "torture" the enemies of the Left (anyone associated with the
now-former Bush Administration), Nancy Pelosi and her cadre of varmints have
been denying knowing anything contemporaneous with the so-called "enhanced
interrogation" techniques employed by the CIA and the administration to,
successfully, keep us safe in the years since 9/11. From today's
Washington Post, just a hint of what is coming down the pike as the top
morons in Congress prepare to open a can of worms from which they'll never
recover, starting with the lies of Nancy Pelosi:
"We were not -- I repeat -- were not told that
waterboarding or any of these other enhanced interrogation methods were
used. What they did tell us is that they had . . . the Office of Legal
Counsel opinions [and] that they could be used, but not that they would,"
she said.
She said some officials, such as Goss, who went on
to become CIA director, argued the lawmakers should have known the
waterboarding would be used because they were told it was a legal practice.
But she said they had no way of knowing that for certain, and they were then
forbidden from talking about what they had learned so they could not work to
outlaw the practice.
She summed up the briefings this way: "This is what
they're doing. That's all they do. They don't come in to consult. They come
in to notify. They come in to notify. And you can't -- you can't change what
they're doing unless you can act as a committee or as a class. You can't
change what they're doing."
Ah, but what is the truth. To steal a phrase:
What did they know, and when did they know it?
Read on, McDuff:
In late 2002, Pelosi was the ranking member of the
House intelligence committee, while Porter Goss (R-Fla.) was chairman, when
they first learned of the general nature of the interrogation techniques
that were under consideration by the CIA's top officials. They were part of
the so-called "Gang of Four" briefings given to the top members of the
intelligence panels in the House and Senate. Pelosi continued receiving
highly classified briefings when she became Democratic leader in 2003, as is
custom to brief the top Democrat and Republican in each of the two chambers.
Republicans have repeatedly cited these briefings
to reject calls from Pelosi and many congressional Democrats to create a
"truth commission" to investigate alleged abuses in interrogations. Those
calls grew louder after last week's release of the legal memos that the Bush
administration used, from the Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel,
to explain what was allowed and what would break international anti-torture
laws.
"All of this information was downloaded to
congressional leaders of both parties with no objections being raised,"
House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Ohio) told reporters today,
specifically citing Pelosi as someone who received the briefings. "Not a
word was raised at the time, not one word."
Rep. Peter Hoekstra (R-Mich), the ranking member of
the House intelligence panel, argued the same point in an op-ed in today's
Wall Street Journal.
By the way, read what Pete Hoekstra says in today's
Wall
Street Journal.
Now, let's go back a couple of years, to a surprisingly
thorough piece in the December 9, 2007
Washington Post:
Hill Briefed on Waterboarding in
2002
In Meetings, Spy Panels' Chiefs Did Not Protest, Officials Say
By Joby Warrick and Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writers
Sunday, December 9, 2007; A01
In September 2002, four members of Congress met in
secret for a first look at a unique CIA program designed to wring vital
information from reticent terrorism suspects in U.S. custody. For more than
an hour, the bipartisan group, which included current House Speaker Nancy
Pelosi (D-Calif.), was given a virtual tour of the CIA's overseas detention
sites and the harsh techniques interrogators had devised to try to make
their prisoners talk.
Among the techniques described, said two officials
present, was waterboarding, a practice that years later would be condemned
as torture by Democrats and some Republicans on Capitol Hill. But on that
day, no objections were raised. Instead, at least two lawmakers in the room
asked the CIA to push harder, two U.S. officials said.
"The briefer was specifically asked if the methods
were tough enough," said a U.S. official who witnessed the exchange.
Congressional leaders from both parties would later
seize on waterboarding as a symbol of the worst excesses of the Bush
administration's counterterrorism effort. The CIA last week admitted that
videotape of an interrogation of one of the waterboarded detainees was
destroyed in 2005 against the advice of Justice Department and White House
officials, provoking allegations that its actions were illegal and the
destruction was a coverup.
Yet long before "waterboarding" entered the public
discourse, the CIA gave key legislative overseers about 30 private
briefings, some of which included descriptions of that technique and other
harsh interrogation methods, according to interviews with multiple U.S.
officials with firsthand knowledge.
With one known exception, no formal objections were
raised by the lawmakers briefed about the harsh methods during the two years
in which waterboarding was employed, from 2002 to 2003, said Democrats and
Republicans with direct knowledge of the matter. The lawmakers who held
oversight roles during the period included Pelosi and Rep. Jane Harman
(D-Calif.) and Sens. Bob Graham (D-Fla.) and John D. Rockefeller IV
(D-W.Va.), as well as Rep. Porter J. Goss (R-Fla.) and Sen. Pat Roberts
(R-Kan).
Individual lawmakers' recollections of the early
briefings varied dramatically, but officials present during the meetings
described the reaction as mostly quiet acquiescence, if not outright
support. "Among those being briefed, there was a pretty full understanding
of what the CIA was doing," said Goss, who chaired the House intelligence
committee from 1997 to 2004 and then served as CIA director from 2004 to
2006. "And the reaction in the room was not just approval, but
encouragement."
Congressional officials say the groups' ability to
challenge the practices was hampered by strict rules of secrecy that
prohibited them from being able to take notes or consult legal experts or
members of their own staffs. And while various officials have described the
briefings as detailed and graphic, it is unclear precisely what members were
told about waterboarding and how it is conducted. Several officials familiar
with the briefings also recalled that the meetings were marked by an
atmosphere of deep concern about the possibility of an imminent terrorist
attack.
"In fairness, the environment was different then
because we were closer to Sept. 11 and people were still in a panic," said
one U.S. official present during the early briefings. "But there was no
objecting, no hand-wringing. The attitude was, 'We don't care what you do to
those guys as long as you get the information you need to protect the
American people.' "
Only after information about the practice began to
leak in news accounts in 2005 -- by which time the CIA had already abandoned
waterboarding -- did doubts about its legality among individual lawmakers
evolve into more widespread dissent. The opposition reached a boiling point
this past October, when Democratic lawmakers condemned the practice during
Michael B. Mukasey's confirmation hearings for attorney general.
GOP lawmakers and Bush administration officials
have previously said members of Congress were well informed and were
supportive of the CIA's use of harsh interrogation techniques. But the
details of who in Congress knew what, and when, about waterboarding -- a
form of simulated drowning that is the most extreme and widely condemned
interrogation technique -- have not previously been disclosed.
U.S. law requires the CIA to inform Congress of
covert activities and allows the briefings to be limited in certain highly
sensitive cases to a "Gang of Eight," including the four top congressional
leaders of both parties as well as the four senior intelligence committee
members. In this case, most briefings about detainee programs were limited
to the "Gang of Four," the top Republican and Democrat on the two
committees. A few staff members were permitted to attend some of the
briefings.
That decision reflected the White House's decision
that the "enhanced interrogation" program would be treated as one of the
nation's top secrets for fear of warning al-Qaeda members about what they
might expect, said U.S. officials familiar with the decision. Critics have
since said the administration's motivation was at least partly to hide from
view an embarrassing practice that the CIA considered vital but outsiders
would almost certainly condemn as abhorrent.
Information about the use of waterboarding
nonetheless began to seep out after a furious internal debate among military
lawyers and policymakers over its legality and morality. Once it became
public, other members of Congress -- beyond the four that interacted
regularly with the CIA on its most sensitive activities -- insisted on being
briefed on it, and the circle of those in the know widened.
In September 2006, the CIA for the first time
briefed all members of the House and Senate intelligence committees,
producing some heated exchanges with CIA officials, including Director
Michael V. Hayden. The CIA director said during a television interview two
months ago that he had informed congressional overseers of "all aspects of
the detention and interrogation program." He said the "rich dialogue" with
Congress led him to propose a new interrogation program that President Bush
formally announced over the summer
"I can't describe that program to you," Hayden
said. "But I would suggest to you that it would be wrong to assume that the
program of the past is necessarily the program moving forward into the
future."
Waterboarding as an interrogation technique has its
roots in some of history's worst totalitarian nations, from Nazi Germany and
the Spanish Inquisition to North Korea and Iraq. In the United States, the
technique was first used five decades ago as a training tool to give U.S.
troops a realistic sense of what they could expect if captured by the Soviet
Union or the armies of Southeast Asia. The U.S. military has officially
regarded the tactic as torture since the Spanish-American War.
In general, the technique involves strapping a
prisoner to a board or other flat surface, and then raising his feet above
the level of his head. A cloth is then placed over the subject's mouth and
nose, and water is poured over his face to make the prisoner believe he is
drowning.
U.S. officials knowledgeable about the CIA's use of
the technique say it was used on three individuals -- Khalid Sheikh
Mohammed, the alleged mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks;
Zayn Abidin Muhammed Hussein Abu Zubaida, a senior al-Qaeda member and Osama
bin Laden associate captured in Pakistan in March 2002; and a third detainee
who has not been publicly identified.
Abu Zubaida, the first of the "high-value"
detainees in CIA custody, was subjected to harsh interrogation methods
beginning in spring 2002 after he refused to cooperate with questioners, the
officials said. CIA briefers gave the four intelligence committee members
limited information about Abu Zubaida's detention in spring 2002, but
offered a more detailed account of its interrogation practices in September
of that year, said officials with direct knowledge of the briefings.
The CIA provided another briefing the following
month, and then about 28 additional briefings over five years, said three
U.S. officials with firsthand knowledge of the meetings. During these
sessions, the agency provided information about the techniques it was using
as well as the information it collected.
Lawmakers have varied recollections about the
topics covered in the briefings.
Graham said he has no memory of ever being told
about waterboarding or other harsh tactics. Graham left the Senate
intelligence committee in January 2003, and was replaced by Rockefeller.
"Personally, I was unaware of it, so I couldn't object," Graham said in an
interview. He said he now believes the techniques constituted torture and
were illegal.
Pelosi declined to comment directly on her reaction
to the classified briefings. But a congressional source familiar with
Pelosi's position on the matter said the California lawmaker did recall
discussions about enhanced interrogation. The source said Pelosi recalls
that techniques described by the CIA were still in the planning stage --
they had been designed and cleared with agency lawyers but not yet put in
practice -- and acknowledged that Pelosi did not raise objections at the
time.
Harman, who replaced Pelosi as the committee's top
Democrat in January 2003, disclosed Friday that she filed a classified
letter to the CIA in February of that year as an official protest about the
interrogation program. Harman said she had been prevented from publicly
discussing the letter or the CIA's program because of strict rules of
secrecy.
"When you serve on intelligence committee you sign
a second oath -- one of secrecy," she said. "I was briefed, but the
information was closely held to just the Gang of Four. I was not free to
disclose anything."
Roberts declined to comment on his participation in
the briefings. Rockefeller also declined to talk about the briefings, but
the West Virginia Democrat's public statements show him leading the push in
2005 for expanded congressional oversight and an investigation of CIA
interrogation practices. "I proposed without success, both in committee and
on the Senate floor, that the committee undertake an investigation of the
CIA's detention and interrogation activities," Rockefeller said in a
statement Friday.
Sen. John McCain
(R-Ariz.), a former Vietnam War prisoner who is seeking the GOP presidential
nomination, took an early interest in the program even though he was not a
member of the intelligence committee, and spoke out against waterboarding in
private conversations with White House officials in late 2005 before
denouncing it publicly.
In May 2007, four months after Democrats regained
control of Congress and well after the CIA had forsworn further
waterboarding, four senators submitted written objections to the CIA's use
of that tactic and other, still unspecified "enhanced" techniques in two
classified letters to Hayden last spring, shortly after receiving a
classified hearing on the topic. One letter was sent on May 1 by Sen.
Russell Feingold (D-Wis.). A similar letter was sent May 10 by a bipartisan
group of three senators: Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.)
and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.).
In a rare public statement last month that broached
the subject of his classified objections, Feingold complained about
administration claims of congressional support, saying that it was "not the
case" that lawmakers briefed on the CIA's program "have approved it or
consented to it."
What a bunch of swampy scumbags are our elected
"leaders" in Washington, at least the scuzzy Dems at the top of the
Congressional dung hill.
We can only hope that these intellectual luminaries are
dumb enough to go ahead and try and persecute the Bush Admin lawyers for giving
their legal opinions. What a circuis that would be, and what a disaster
for those, like Pelosi, who are publically lying about their knowledge.
What a way to bring down a Congress.
February 28, 2009
In his first televised address to the nation, Rush Limbaugh has set the stage
for the conservative rebellion. No one knows better than Rush what needs
to be done. The only question is: Will enough real conservatives
pick up the mantle, act like conservatives, and take back the running of this
great nation from the imbecilic children on the left.
Rush's First Televised Address
to the Nation:
Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) Speech
RUSH LIMBAUGH: Thank you so much. Thank you. Thank you all very, very
much. Thank you all. I can't tell you how wonderful that makes me feel. It
happens everywhere I go, but it's still special here. [ Laughter ] If you all
will indulge me, I learned something, I guess, it's early Friday morning that I
didn't know. Friday morning is when I learned this. I learned that Fox, God love
them, is televising this speech on the Fox News Channel, which means, ladies and
gentleman, this is my first ever address to the nation. [Applause]
Now, I have someone in back taking phone numbers. In fact, I would like to
introduce to you my security chief, a man who runs all of my security. His name
is Joseph Stalin. Joseph, would you please -- [Laughter ] I am safe from any
liberal attack, in public, because they would be afraid of offending Stalin.
[Laughter] Now the opportunity here to address the nation, a serious one, it
really is. And I want to take it seriously. I want to address something. I know
that people are probably watching this who never have listened to my program and
may not even really know what conservatism is. They think they do based on how
they've been told -- the way we've been impugned and maligned and so forth. One
of the things that is totally erroneous about me -- and I just want to get this
up front -- is that I'm pompous. [Laughter]
And that I am arrogant. Neither of these things are remotely true. I can tell
you a joke to illustrate this. Larry King passed away, goes to heaven. He's
greeted by Saint Peter at the gates. Saint Peter says, "Welcome, Mr. King, it's
great to have you here. I want to show you around, give you an idea of what's
here, maybe you can pick a place that you'd like to reside." King says, "I just
have one question: Is Rush Limbaugh here?"
"No, he's got a lot of time yet, Mr. King." So Saint Peter begins the tour.
Larry King sees the various places and it's beyond anything we can imagine in
terms of beauty. Finally, he gets to the biggest room of all, with this giant
throne. And over the throne is a flashing beautiful angelic neon sign that says
"Rush Limbaugh." [Laughter]
And Larry King looks at Saint Peter and says: "I thought you said he wasn't
here."
"He said, he's not, he's not. This is God's room. He just thinks he's Rush
Limbaugh."[Laughter] [Applause]
So you see I'm not pompous. [Laughter]
Now, seriously, for those of you watching on C-SPAN as well, and on Fox, I want
to tell you who we all are in this room. I want to tell you who conservatives
are. We conservatives have not done a good enough job of just laying out
basically who we are because we make the mistake of assuming people know. What
they know is largely incorrect based on the way we are portrayed in pop culture,
in the Drive-By Media, by the Democrat Party.
Let me tell you who we conservatives are: We love people. [Applause] When we
look out over the United States of America, when we are anywhere, when we see a
group of people, such as this or anywhere, we see Americans. We see human
beings. We don't see groups. We don't see victims. We don't see people we want
to exploit. What we see -- what we see is potential. We do not look out across
the country and see the average American, the person that makes this country
work. We do not see that person with contempt. We don't think that person
doesn't have what it takes. We believe that person can be the best he or she
wants to be if certain things are just removed from their path like onerous
taxes, regulations and too much government. [Applause]
We want every American to be the best he or she chooses to be. We recognize that
we are all individuals. We love and revere our founding documents, the
Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. [Applause] We believe that the
preamble to the Constitution contains an inarguable truth that we are all
endowed by our creator with certain inalienable rights, among them life.
[Applause] Liberty, Freedom. [Applause] And the pursuit of happiness. [Applause]
Those of you watching at home may wonder why this is being applauded. We
conservatives think all three are under assault. [Applause] Thank you. Thank
you.
We don't want to tell anybody how to live. That's up to you. If you want to make
the best of yourself, feel free. If you want to ruin your life, we'll try to
stop it, but it's a waste. We look over the country as it is today, we see so
much waste, human potential that's been destroyed by 50 years of a welfare
state. By a failed war on poverty. [Applause]
We love the people of this country. And we want this to be the greatest country
it can be, but we do understand, as people created and endowed by our creator,
we're all individuals. We resist the effort to group us. We resist the effort to
make us feel that we're all the same, that we're no different than anybody else.
We're all different. There are no two things or people in this world who are
created in a way that they end up with equal outcomes. That's up to them. They
are created equal, given the chance - -[Applause]
We don't hate anybody. We don't -- I mean, the racism in this country, if you
ask me, I know many people in this audience -- let me deal with this head on.
You know what the cliche is, a conservative: racist, sexist, bigot, homophobe.
Excuse me, ladies and gentlemen of America, if you were paying attention, I know
you were, the racism in our culture was exclusively and fully on display in the
Democrat primary last year. [Applause]
It was not us asking whether Barack Obama was authentic. What we were asking is:
Is he wrong? We concluded, yes. We still think so. But we didn't ask if he was
authentically black. We didn't say, as some Southern Christian Leadership
Conference leaders said: Barack is not authentic, he's not got any slave blood.
He's really not down for the struggle, but his wife is. So don't expect the race
industry to go away. Southern Christian Leadership Conference -- you may not
know this, because it wasn't reported in the Drive-By Media -- the racism, the
sexism, the bigotry that we're all charged with, just so you across the United
States of America know, and you'll see demonstrated here as the afternoon goes
on, doesn't exist on our side. We want everybody to succeed. [Applause]
You know why? We want the country to succeed, and for the country to succeed,
its people -- its individuals -- must succeed. Everyone among us must be
pursuing his ambition or her desire, whatever, with excellence. Trying to be the
best they can be. Not told, as they are told by the Democrat Party: You really
can't do that, you don't have what it takes, besides you're a minority or you're
a woman and there are too many people that want to discriminate against you. You
can't get anywhere. You need to depend on us.
Well. Take a look, someone has to say this -- I am thrilled for the opportunity
to say it in my first national address to the nation -- and I'm going to touch
on this in more detail in a moment, but this is just to get you thinking -- take
a look at all the constituency groups that for 50 years have been depending on
the Democrat Party to improve their lives. And you tell me if you find any.
They're still complaining, still griping about the same problems. Their problems
don't get fixed by government. And those lives have been poisoned. Those lives
have been cut short by false promises, from government representatives who said
don't worry about it, we'll take care of you. Just vote for us. [Applause]
For those of you just tuning in on the Fox News Channel or C-SPAN, I'm Rush
Limbaugh and I want everyone in this room and every one of you around the
country to succeed. I want anyone who believes in life, liberty, pursuit of
happiness to succeed. And I want any force, any person, any element of an
overarching Big Government that would stop your success, I want that
organization, that element or that person to fail. I want you to succeed.
[Applause] Also, for those of you in the Drive-By Media watching, I have not
needed a teleprompter for anything I've said. [Cheers and Applause ] And nor do
any of us need a teleprompter, because our beliefs are not the result of
calculations and contrivances. Our beliefs are not the result of a deranged
psychology. Our beliefs are our core. Our beliefs are our hearts. We don't have
to make notes about what we believe. We don't have to write down, oh do I
believe it do I believe that we can tell people what we believe off the top of
our heads and we can do it with passion and we can do it with clarity, and we
can do it persuasively. Some of us just haven't had the inspiration or
motivation to do so in a number of years, but that's about to change. [Cheers
and Applause]
For example, we gather here -- I understand that. I talked to David and Lisa in
the super exclusive private green room that nobody, but about 55 people were
allowed into, and they said that there's a sense of liberation here among all of
you that are attending CPAC. I understand what the sense of liberation is about.
But don't make the mistake at the same time of feeling liberated as thinking
we're better and we can do better as a minority. Because we're not a minority.
And if you start thinking of yourselves as a minority, you're going to be
defensive. And you'll allow the majority to set the agenda and the premise and
you're responding to it. The American people may not all vote the way we wish
them to, but more Americans than you now live their lives as conservatives in
one degree or another. And they are waiting for leadership. We need conservative
leadership. We can take this country back. All we need is to nominate the right
candidate. It's no more complicated than that. [Applause]
Now, let me speak about President Obama for just a second. President Obama is
one of the most gifted politicians, one of the most gifted men that I have ever
witnessed. He has extraordinary talents. He has communication skills that hardly
anyone can surpass. No, seriously. No, no, I'm being very serious about this. It
just breaks my heart that he does not use these extraordinary talents and gifts
to motivate and inspire the American people to be the best they can be. He's
doing just the opposite. And it's a shame. [Applause] President Obama has the
ability -- he has the ability to inspire excellence in people's pursuits. He has
the ability to do all this, yet he pursues a path, seeks a path that punishes
achievement, that punishes earners and punishes -- and he speaks negatively of
the country. Ronald Reagan used to speak of a shining city on a hill. Barack
Obama portrays America as a soup kitchen in some dark night in a corner of
America that's very obscure. He's constantly telling the American people that
bad times are ahead, worst times are ahead. And it's troubling, because this is
the United States of America. Anybody ever ask -- I'm in awe of our country and
I ask this question a lot as I've gotten older. We're less than 300 years old.
We are younger than nations that have been on this planet for thousands of
years. We, nevertheless, in less than 300 years -- by the way, we're no
different than any other human beings around the world. Our DNA is no different.
We're not better just because we're born in America. There's nothing that sets
us apart. How did this happen? How did the United States of America become the
world's lone super power, the world's economic engine, the most prosperous
opportunity for an advanced lifestyle that humanity has ever known? How did this
happen? And why pray tell does the President of the United States want to
destroy it? It saddens me.
The freedom we spoke of earlier is the freedom, it's the ambition, it's the
desire, the wherewithal, the passions that people have that gave us the great
entrepreneurial advances, the great inventions, the greatest food production,
the human lifestyle advances in this country. Why shouldn't that be rewarded?
Why is that now the focus of punishment? Why is that now the focus of blame? Why
doesn't -- Mayor Bloomberg the other day, ladies and gentlemen, resisting his
Governor's call for an increased tax on the rich in New York had some astounding
numbers. Eight million people live in New York. 40,000 of those eight million
pay roughly 60 to 70% of New York's operating budget. He was afraid that if he
raised taxes on those people some of them might leave. Mayor, one already has,
by the way. [Applause] Stop and think of this, though. Stop and think of this.
Forty thousand people out of eight million. He's right, if 10,000 of them leave,
or 5,000, they've got a huge problem. Because New York has its own welfare state
inside the one the federal government's created. They've got a dependency class
that has grown up and been educated that their entitlement is to be fed and
taken care of by these evil mean people who have more than they do. If New York
City, New York State or Washington, DC were a business, these 40,000 people
would be taken on golf tournament trips to Los Angeles, and they would be wined
and dined and they would be thanked and they would be encouraged to keep it up.
They wouldn't be told they're the problem. They wouldn't be told, except there's
-- I pride my accuracy rating. There is one other business where the customer is
always wrong and that's the media. Sorry about that. [Applause]
Have you ever called to complain about whatever they do? They say, yes, sir,
yes, sir, three bags full. They hang up and say you're too stupid to know how
they're doing what they're doing. You can't get it. You're not sophisticated
enough. So that's another business where the customer is always wrong. But,
seriously, the people who have achieved great things, most of it is not
inherited. Most wealth in this country is the result of entrepreneurial, just
plain old hard work. There's no reason to punish it. There's no reason to raise
taxes on these people. Barack Obama, the Democrat Party, have one
responsibility, and that's to respect the oath they gave to protect, defend and
follow the US Constitution. [Applause]
They don't have the right to take money that's not theirs, from the back pockets
of producers, and give it to groups like ACORN, which are going to advance the
Democrat Party. If anybody but government were doing this, it would be a crime.
And many of us think it's bordering on that as it exists now. [Applause]
President Obama is so busy trying to foment and create anger in a created
atmosphere of crisis, he is so busy fueling the emotions of class envy that he's
forgotten it's not his money that he's spending. [Applause] In fact, the money
he's spending is not ours. He's spending wealth that has yet to be created. And
that is not sustainable. It will not work. This has been tried around the world.
And every time it's been tried, it's a failed disaster.
What's the longest war in American history? Did somebody say the war on poverty?
Smart group. War on poverty. The war on poverty essentially started in the '30s
as part of the New Deal, but it really ramped up in the '60s with Lyndon
Johnson, part of the Great Society war on poverty. We have transferred something
like 10 trillion, maybe close to 11 trillion, from producers and earners to
nonproducers and nonearners since 1965. Yet, as I listen to the Democratic Party
campaign, why, America is still a soup kitchen, the poor is still poor and they
have no hope and they're poor for what reason? They're poor because of us,
because we don't care, and because we've gotten rich by taking from them, that's
what kids in school are taught today. That's what others have said to the media.
You know why they're poor, you know why they remain poor? Because their lives
have been destroyed by the never-ending government hay that's designed to help
them, but it destroys ambition. It destroys the education they might get to
learn to be self-fulfilling. [Applause] And it breaks our heart. It breaks our
heart. We lose track of numbers with all of the money, with all the money that's
been transferred, redistributed, with all the charitable giving in this country.
Ladies and gentlemen, there ought not be any poverty except those who are
genuinely ill equipped. But most of the people in poverty in this country are
equipped for far much more. They've just been beaten down. They're told don't
worry, we'll take care of you. There's nothing out there for you anyway; you'll
be discriminated against. Breaks our heart to see this. We can't have a great
country and a growing economy with more and more people being told they have a
right, because of some injustice that's been done to them or some
discrimination, that they have a right to the earnings of others. And it's
gotten so out of hand now that what worries me is that this administration, the
Barack Obama administration is actively seeking to expand the welfare state in
this country because he wants to control it.
George Will once asked Dr. Friedrich Von Hayek, tremendous classical economist,
great man, 1975, George Will, Dr. Von Hayek, why is it that intellectuals,
supposed smartest people in the room, why is it that intellectuals can look
right out their windows, their own homes and cars and look at their universities
and not see the bounties and the growth and the greatness of capitalism? And Von
Hayek said: I've troubled over this for years and I've finally concluded that
for intellectuals, pseudo-intellectuals, and all liberals, it's about control.
It's not about raising revenue. You think Obama has any intention of paying for
all this spending? Folks, if he had any intention of paying for it, he wouldn't
do 90% of it because we don't have the money. [Applause]
They don't care about paying for it. All that's just words. All that's just
rhetoric paying for it because he knows you have to worry about paying for it.
He knows we all have to be concerned -- oh, except, wrong again. Except the
words of Barney Frank and Chris Dodd who were given homes that everybody knew
they could never pay for, and now Barney Frank and Chris Dodd, the architects
along with Bill Clinton of the policy that gave us the whole sub-prime mortgage
crisis, get to sit around and act as innocent spectators to investigate what
went on when they largely had the biggest role in causing it. [Applause]
Congressman Frank's definition of affordable housing is you get a house you
don't have to pay for that everybody else in the neighborhood will pay for. Why?
Because it's unfair that some people can have a house and some people can't.
Geez, it's just unfair. So here we have two systems. We have socialism,
collectivism, Stalin, whatever you want to call it, versus capitalism.
Admittedly over on the right side capitalism there will be unequal outcomes
because we're all different. And some of us care more and have more passion and
we know what we want to do and others are still struggling for it. Some people
are just going to work harder than others. Okay. You get what you work for.
Those who have a genuine inability for whatever reason are taken care of. We're
compassionate people. On the left side when you get into this collectivism
socialism stuff, these people on the left, the Democrats and liberals today
claim that they are pained by the inequities and the inequalities in our
society. And they believe that these inequities and inequalities descend from
the selfishness and the greed of the achievers. And so they tell the people who
are on different income quintiles, whatever lists, they say it's not that you're
not working hard enough, you could have what they have, perhaps, if you applied
it. They're stealing it from you.
So what liberals do, and I say this again to the -- another thing, I know people
in the country are watching. I was watching a focus group after some event this
week. Might have been after Obama's State of the Union show. [Laughter] And they
had -- it was a typical, you know, Drive-By Media focus group. They round up
losers -- [Laughter] -- who hear Obama speak and think that the next day their
gas tanks are going to be filled up and get a new house and a new kitchen and a
new car. And so this one guy said -- oh, it was some guy responding to Bobby
Jindal. Oh, by the way did you hear about Joe Biden? Joe Biden was mystified how
Bobby Jindal got his shift off at 7-Eleven that night to make the speech. Wait a
minute. Wait a minute. Time out. Suspend speech for explanation. People watching
at home. I'm glad this happened. Glad this happened. You think I just made a
joke, an ethnic joke about Bobby Jindal, don't you? I didn't. I made a joke
about the bigotry of the Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden. It was
Joe Biden while walking through the train station he knows so well because he's
such a real guy, that he made a comment that you can't go into a 7-Eleven
without seeing some Indian guy behind the counter. They're all over the place.
Now, let a conservative say something like that and he's brought up before John
Conyers' committee with Pat Leahy wanting at you next. Many people think I lose
my place in these speeches because -- by the way what time is it? We have plenty
of time. We have to be out of here by -- [Applause] We have to be out of here by
6:00 -- okay, depends on how you behave. I'll decide as we go on. What
liberalism Democrat, for those of you in the country, I really want you to
believe this because it's the truth. I'm not saying it just because I believe
it. This is a core. I want the best country we can have. We want the most
prosperous people. We want to be growing. We want to lead the world. We want
everybody to come here legally. We want this country to be so damn great and we
just cringe to watch it -- basically capitalism be assaulted and our culture be
reoriented to where the people that make it work are the enemy. That's not the
United States of America. The people that make this country work, the people who
pay on their mortgages, the people getting up and going to work, striving in
this recession to not participate in it, they're not the enemy.
They're the people that hire you. They're the people that are going to give you
a job. They're the people that are going to give you a raise, the people that
need you to do work for them. [Applause] President Obama, and take your pick of
any Democrat, love to say we've tried it your way. Meaning Reaganism. We've
tried it your way. We tried it your way in the '80s and it didn't work. We tried
it your way eight years, the last eight years and it didn't work. Excuse me.
Excuse me. Have you ever noticed those of you watching around the world in my
first international address to the world, Fox is on some international
satellites. They're watching this in the UK right now going (cringing). When
Obama talks about past economies, he somehow always leaves out the recession of
the '80s as worse than this one. Why does he leave it out? Because you know why
he leaves it out, America? He leaves it out because we got out of that recession
with tax cuts. [Applause] For those of you watching at home, I'm not nervous
it's just really hot in here. These people are wired. We got out of the 1980s
recession with tax cuts. Do you know that President Obama, in six weeks of his
administration, has proposed more spending than from the founding of the country
to his inauguration?
Now, this is not prosperity. It is not going to engender prosperity. It's not
going to create prosperity and it's also not going to advance or promote
freedom. It's going to be just the opposite. There are going to be more controls
over what you can and can't do, how you can and can't do it, what you can and
can't drive, what you can and can't say, where you can and can't say it. All of
these things are coming down the pike, because it's not about revenue generation
to them, it's about control. They do believe that they have compassion. They do
believe they care. But, see, we never are allowed to look at the results of
their plans, we are told we must only look at their good intentions, their big
hearts. The fact that they have destroyed poor families by breaking up those
families by offering welfare checks to women to keep having babies no more
father needed, he's out doing something, the government's the father, they
destroy the family. We're not supposed to analyze that. We're not supposed to
talk about that. We're supposed to talk about their good intentions. They
destroy people's futures. The future is not Big Government. Self-serving
politicians. Powerful bureaucrats. This has been tried, tested throughout
history. The result has always been disaster. President Obama, your agenda is
not new. It's not change, and it's not hope. [Applause] Spending a nation into
generational debt is not an act of compassion. All politicians, including
President Obama, are temporary stewards of this nation. It is not their task to
remake the founding of this country. It is not their task to tear it apart and
rebuild it in their image.
(Crowd chanting "USA")
It is not their task, it is not their right to remake this nation to accommodate
their psychology. I sometimes wonder if liberalism is not just a psychosis or a
psychology, not an ideology. It's so much about feelings, and the predominant
feeling that liberalism is about is about feeling good about themselves and they
do that by telling themselves they have all this compassion. You know, if you
really want to unhinge a liberal it's hard to do because they're so unhinged now
anyway, even after -- but all you have to do is say you know that the things you
people do, the things you people believe in are cruel. That's the last way they
look at themselves. They are the best people on the -- they're the good people.
You tell them that their ideas and that their policies are cruel and the eggs
start scrambling.
I have learned how to tweak liberals everywhere. I do it instinctively now.
Tweak them in the media. And no reason to be afraid of these people. Why in the
world would you be afraid of the deranged? There really is no reason to be
afraid of them. And there's no reason to assume they're the minority. And
there's no reason to let them set all the premises and all the agendas to which
we respond to. I'm getting a little bit ahead of myself here but everybody asks
me and I'm sure it's been a focal point of your convention: What do we do as
conservatives? What do we do? How do we overcome this?
Well, the one thing, and there are many, but one thing that we can all do is
stop assuming that the way to beat them is with better policy ideas right now. I
don't want to name any names. It's not the point. But I talk to people about the
Obama budget or the Obama Porkulous bill or whatever else TARP 2 whatever it's
going to be, and they start talking to me in the terms of process and policy. I
say stop it. What do you mean? Who is setting the process or policy? They are.
You want to tweak it? No. This is philosophy, folks. This guy, I forgot -- the
guy in the focus group after Bobby Jindal said, I didn't want to hear him talk,
he said: Republicans and Democrats. Republicans and Democrats. Ladies and
gentlemen of the United States of America, that's exactly what your future is
about, who wins, Republicans or Democrats, conservatives versus liberals. The
notion of partisanship, false premise. Let me define bipartisanship for you.
Bipartisanship -- everybody seems to go orgasmic over the concept of
bipartisanship. Don't worry, I checked with Fox, that word's okay. [Laughter]
[Applause]
Remember, they covered the Lewinsky thing, so that's my -- bipartisanship occurs
only after one other result, and that is victory. In other words, let's say as
conservatives liberals demand that we be bipartisan with them in Congress. What
they mean is: We check our core principles at the door, come in, let them run
the show and agree with them. That's bipartisanship to them. To us,
bipartisanship is them being forced to agree with us after we politically have
cleaned their clocks and beaten them. And that has to be what we're focused on.
[Applause] Why would any of us in this room who hold the core beliefs we
believe, somebody tell me where is the compromise on all of this spending? Where
is the compromise on all this punishment of the achievers. I don't know.
[Laughter] [Applause]
Where is the compromise between good and evil? Should Jesus have cut a different
deal? Serious. From the standpoint of what we have to do, folks, this is not
about taking a policy or a process that the Democrats have put forward and
fighting around the edges. If we're going to convince the minds and hearts of
the American people that what's about to happen to them is as disastrous as
anything in their lives in peacetime, we're going to have to discuss philosophy
with them. We are going to have to talk about principles, because our principles
are not present in what's happening here. So where the hell do we go to
compromise what we believe in when our principles are not their principles,
they're just the opposite of what's happening? [Applause]
The American people -- it's a tough challenge. I admit -- I admit it's a tough
challenge, but it's worth it. It's worth it. The way I just defined
bipartisanship you could turn it around and liberals will define bipartisanship
when we surrender and say okay we give. We're not quitting. We are not giving
up. The country is too important. [Applause] There are certain realities. We
don't have the votes in Capitol Hill to stop what's going to happen. What we can
do is slow it down, procedure, parliamentary procedures, slow it down and do the
best we can to inform the American people of what's really on the horizon. I
know it's going to be tough. At some points, I don't think it can happen even
right now. This is still the honeymoon period, and there's a lot of devotion to
the Obama administration. It doesn't have anything to do with intellectual
thinking, it's feelings. It's going to take some time for this to play out. But
I spoke to David Keene, interviewing him for my newsletter. I asked him about
this. He said they're going to overreach. Wouldn't you say they have?
[Laughter].
They're going to overreach. At some point, at some point people have got to
realize none of this is possible. You can't have people living in homes they
don't pay for. You can't have people driving cars they don't pay for. I mean,
you can for a while. But after a while the people paying for it -- screw this.
We're not putting up with it. And you're going to see -- you're already starting
to see evidence of these. All the tea parties that are starting to bubble up out
there. Those are great. Fabulous. [Applause] And here's the big question. Here's
the big question. And I ask this again in the context of my first address to the
nation. [Laughter] You don't know how I love saying that, how excited I am about
this. Aside from the bastardization of the Constitution that the Obama plans
are, that TARP is, it's not constitutional. Aside from that, where is the
evidence that the people offering all of this have ever succeeded in any similar
plans before? There's none. There is no evidence it works. [Applause]
So you say how is he getting it done? Dumb down public education. Emotions. And
the ongoing -- this is why I think it's such a waste for a man as gifted as
President Obama with the communications skills, you know he could wipe out the
Republican Party. He can wipe out the Republican Party if he would inspire this
country to be the best it could be, but we don't have to worry about that
because that's not what he wants. He wants people in fear, angst and crisis,
fearing the worst each and every day because that clears the decks for President
Obama and his pals to come in with the answers, which are abject failures,
historically shown and demonstrated. Doesn't matter. They'll have control of it
when it's all over. And that's what they want. Because they think they can do it
better. They see these inequalities, these inequities that capitalism produces.
How do they fix it? Do they try to elevate those at the bottom? No! They try to
tear down the people at the bottom. It's not fair you're up there. So they whack
us. That's not what made the country great.[Applause] And no evidence of it is
in play here.
John Kerry [Boos], who served in Vietnam. [Laughter] Think about this, and, by
the way, Barney Frank got involved with this, too. Northern Trust, a bank in
Chicago -- by the way, which holds the mortgage to the Messiah's house,
purchased by Tony Rezko, Northern Trust holds the mortgage. Northern Trust was
forced, like Wells Fargo was forced, to take TARP money. The Wells Fargo CEO
said they were taken into Paulson's room and they were given until 5:00 to sign
it. They weren't getting out until they did. They wanted it spread all over the
banking business. Northern Trust was in there. They didn't want it. They took
$1.6 billion. As you know, they went out and they sponsored the LA Riveria Open
two weeks ago that Phil Mickelson barely hung on and won. [Applause]
And we find out they hired some liberals to entertain, but it still wasn't good
enough. They hired Sheryl Crow. And they hired the rock crooner group Chicago,
but they had the audacity, Northern Trust did, to entertain their clients, to
try to reward their best customers, to get new customers, banking is in trouble,
Northern Trust is trying to do what they always do, what all businesses do, and
that is mine for new clients and reward existing good customers. Not since they
took $1.6 billion, I guess. The haughty John Kerry wrote a piece of legislation
said: He's getting sick and tired, sick and tired of these CEOs using taxpayer
money to throw all these lavish parties. And I'm saying where do you get yours,
Senator? [Applause]
Sad thing, sad thing is it works. They've created class envy in so many average
Americans that they love hearing that. Yeah, you get even with those bank guys.
How is it going to improve here? Let me ask a question for those of you watching
my first national address. Take the favorite villain you've got, maybe it's John
Thain at Merrill Lynch, because he used his own money, his company's own money,
his company's own money, to redecorate a bathroom in an office for $1.2 million.
By the way, to do that he had to hire a contractor. They got paid. Had to hire a
designer and buy furniture, that's called stimulus. And he did it.
But all of a sudden John Thain's thrown out. John Thain is thrown out. He's
humiliated and embarrassed; how dare he? He did it a year before they took the
TARP money. And all these Congressmen are standing up saying this is not going
to happen. We are not going to watch these people capping executive pay while
Obama tries to live like one. You know, he's trying to emulate the lifestyle he
is attacking. That's what liberals do. Two sets of rules: One for them; one for
everybody else. But it's coming. See, if you think that John Thain or the
Northern Trust CEO, if you love them getting attacked, if you love them being
ripped, ask yourself the next day, do you have any more money in your pocket? Is
your life any better because that guy got taken out or down by some haughty
senator from Massachusetts?
If you ask yourself this, you'll realize your life is no better off. That the
Democrats and Obama are asking you to feel better simply on the basis that
they're going to get revenge for you, but your life isn't going to improve,
somebody else's is just going to be destroyed and they want you to be happy over
that. That's sick. And that is not the United States of America. [Applause]
Besides, as far as John Kerry is concerned, if it wasn't for his varicose veins,
he would be totally colorless. [Laughter]
Now let's talk about the conservative movement as it were. We, ladies and
gentlemen, have challenges that are part and parcel of a movement that feels it
has just suffered a humiliating defeat when it's not humiliating. This wasn't a
landslide victory, 52 to, what, 46. Fifty-eight million people voted against
Obama. There would have been more if we would have had a conservative nominee.
[Applause] I don't mean that -- I mean that in an instructive way, as a lead-in
to what I'm talking about here. No humiliating defeat here. I can't -- sometimes
I get livid and angry. We do have an organizational problem. We have a
challenge. We've got factions now within our own movement seeking power to
dominate it, and worst of all to redefine it. Well, the Constitution doesn't
need to be redefined. Conservative intellectuals, the Declaration of
Independence does not need to be redefined and neither does conservatism.
Conservatism is what it is and it is forever. It's not something you can bend
and shape and flake and form. [Applause] Thank you. Thank you.
For the purposes of this occasion, I'm not going to mention any names, I bet
with you I won't have to. People watching my first address to the nation might
be curious what I'm talking about. They'll find out in due course, trust me on
this. I cringed -- it might have been 2007, late 2007 or sometime during 2008,
but a couple of prominent conservative but Beltway establishment media types
began to write on the concept that the era of Reagan is over. [Crowd Booing]
And that we needed to adapt our appeal, because, after all, what's important in
politics is winning elections. And so we have to understand that the American
people, they want Big Government. We just have to find a way to tell them we're
no longer opposed to that. We will come up with our own version of it that is
wiser and smarter, but we've got to go get the Walmart voter, and we've got to
get the Hispanic voter, and we've got to get the recalcitrant independent women.
And I'm listening to this and I am just apoplectic: The era of Reagan is over?
When the hell do you hear a Democrat say the era of FDR is over? You never hear
it. Not only that, the President of the United States today thinks he's FDR,
thinks he's Abraham Lincoln, and sometimes, Tuesday night, thinks he's Ronald
Reagan. Our own movement has members trying to throw Reagan out while the
Democrats know they can't accomplish what they want unless they appeal to Reagan
voters. We have got to stamp this out within this movement, because it will tear
us apart. It will guarantee we lose elections. [Applause]
We have to. You see, to me it's a no-brainer. It's not even something to me: How
do you get rid of Reagan from conservatism? The blueprint -- the blueprint for
landslide conservative victory is right there. Why in the hell do the smartest
people in our room want to chuck it? I know why. I know exactly why. It's
because they're embarrassed of some of the people who call themselves
conservatives. These people in New York and Washington, cocktail elitists, they
get made fun of when the next NASCAR race is on TV and their cocktail buds come
up to them, those people are in your party? How do you put up with this? It
would be easy to throw them overboard, so as to maintain these cocktail
party/Beltway/New York City/inside-the-Beltway media relationships. But I tell
you: This notion that Reaganism is dead, conservatism needs to be refined, let's
take a look at this. We've got to go get the Walmart voter. I opened my remarks
tonight by telling the people watching on Fox who we conservatives are. When I
look out at you in this audience, I don't see a Walmart voter. And I don't see a
black, and I don't see a woman, and I don't see a Hispanic. I see human beings
who happen to be fortunate enough to be the luckiest people on Earth since you
are Americans. [Applause]
Conservatism -- for us to make the decision that we've got to figure out
policies, to get the Walmart voter -- psst, we've got most of them already, is
the bottom line. Conservatism is a universal set of core principles. You don't
check principles at the door. This is a battle that we're going to have. And
there are egos involved here, too. When the situation like ours exists, there
are people who want to lead it. They want to redefine it. Their egos are such
that they want to be the next X, whoever it is. So there will be different
factions lining up to try to define what conservatism is. And beware of those
different factions who seek as part of their attempt to redefine conservatism,
as making sure the liberals like us, making sure that the media likes us. They
never will, as long as we remain conservatives. They can't possibly like us;
they're our enemy. In a political arena of ideas, they're our enemy. They think
we need to be defeated. Why do you think -- you all in this room know this. For
those of you watching at home, my first address to the nation -- [Laughter] --
I'm sure you paid close enough attention, that you knew at one time Senator
McCain was the favorite Republican of all the cable news networks and the Sunday
shows. And they would just -- I mean their tongues would be on the floor. The
media people (panting) when they knew McCain was coming. And they would treat
McCain as the greatest guy in the world. Did you wonder why? You were told he
was moderate. He was not strict. He was not an authoritarian, he was able to
walk to the other side of the aisle, able to get along with the enemy. And
everybody wants love and bipartisanship.
That's not why they invited Senator McCain. They invited Senator McCain because
he happened to be the loudest at criticizing his own president and his own party
and that's what they want, is people from our side -- and there will be factions
in our movement, folks, who are going to make an effort to say we have to grow,
we can't stay stale, I think I heard the term used the other day. Nothing stale
about freedom. There's nothing stale about liberty. There's nothing stale about
fighting for it. Nothing stale whatsoever. [Applause] Freedom. Are you getting
tired of standing up, I don't blame you. By the way for those watching on TV you
think the standing -- people are just tired. They've been up and out of their
chairs 100 times here. [Applause] Thank you. Freedom -- freedom is the natural
yearning of the human spirit as we were endowed by our creator. And the United
States of America is the place in the world where that yearning flourishes,
where freedom is expected because it's part of the way we're created.
I loved it when the Soviet Union went down and the wall went down and the
liberals in our country said you know they may not be ready for freedom over
there. They've been oppressed -- yes, liberals will gladly tell you who can have
freedom and who can't. And that's what the pieces of legislation are all about,
folks, freedom, liberty, economic prosperity, they're all entwined here. We'll
have to as a conservative movement understand that our job, after we come to an
agreement among ourselves, which shouldn't be hard but it's going to be
difficult because the people that think they're smarter than everybody else are
going to be out there forging alliances with people that try to make themselves
look like new power brokers, and they will become the spokesmen, by the way.
By the way, explain that to you. This is a funny story. Show you how I can
hijack a news cycle even by doing anything. The Tuesday before the inauguration,
President Bush invited me to the Oval Office for lunch. And it was on and off
the record, some of the conversations. And he brought out, interesting, at the
end of it -- my birthday had been the day before. He brought out a chocolate
birthday cake, a microphone, and stood beside me with Ed Gillespie and sang
happy birthday. Photographers taking pictures. I wish my parents were alive. My
parents wouldn't believe my life. They came out of the Great Depression. They
didn't think it was possible for somebody who did not go to college -- and even
for people who did -- they didn't think this was possible. Life has changed so
much for the better in this country. That's why I cringe when I see what is in
store.
So as I'm flying home from lunch, I'm watching television and I see that the
word has leaked out that Obama is hosting a dinner with conservative media
pundits at the home of George Will. I said: I wonder who these people are?
[Laughter] In the media, one of them is going to have to leak it. Sure as heck,
one did. Now, we all know who were there. And let's see -- I can't remember all
the names, so I won't mention any. But let me tell you Obama's purpose. Does
anybody really think that Barack Obama had dinner with a bunch of conservatives
hoping they would change his mind?
CROWD: No!
RUSH: Hell, no. His purpose -- and his purpose really wasn't to change theirs --
his purpose was to anoint them as conservative spokesmen. These are the people
that Obama's willing to break bread with. These happen -- some of the people
there happen to be the people who think the era of Reagan is over, who believe
that conservatism needs to be redefined. Of course Obama would try to lure them
in. Well, all of a sudden I land. I get home about 5:00, and my e-mail is jammed
with questions from reporters, are you, is that why you took the day off today?
Is that why you're not on the air? Are you going to dinner with Obama? By the
way, I left out a crucial part of the story. Was this a Monday, Kit? It was a
Tuesday. I had forgotten to tell my audience that I was going to miss the next
day. I signed off the show saying I'll see you tomorrow. That's the last thing I
said. The staff reminded me you're not going to be here tomorrow. I came up with
a plan, that the guest host the next day would say that I was called out of town
to Washington at midnight the night before. Just an innocent little trick on the
radio audience. Everybody picked that up and thinks I'm invited to the Obama
dinner. So those people that were invited to it got less coverage than I did and
I didn't even know about it. [Laughter] It was fun. [Applause]
Conservatives are naturally happy. We seek happiness. We pursue it. It's part of
who we are. So what can you do? Live your life. I swear, folks, you do not know
in just the everyday life that you live in your homes, your neighborhoods, the
favorite word of this administration, your "communities." Remember the root word
there is "commune." [Applause] Be happy, live your life according to your values
and principles. Know you're going to fail, no human being is perfect, you're
going to make mistakes, but live your life -- you'll be stunned at how many
people you impress. Don't be afraid to tell children that they're wrong. They
don't know what you do. They simply haven't lived long enough. It's not their
fault, but they're being fed a bunch of garbage in school and don't be afraid to
tell them that they're wrong.
Don't go the Oprah route and say gotta be friends with my parents, my kids,
first and foremost. Understand they're going to hate you for a while and they're
going to rebel against you and someday they're going to think you're the
smartest person they ever met. But you owe them the truth. You owe them the
truth about things. You owe them the truth about morality. You owe them the
truth about values. [Applause] You owe them the truth about politics. Next
thing, we've got to stop treating voters as children. [Applause] Somebody says
they want something that's bad for them, do you give it to them just to be nice?
Or do you tell them, regardless of their age, no, you shouldn't have that? Well,
it's none of your business. Maybe not. And then you back out of it. But you
still have to have the ability to tell people what's right and wrong. And that's
not authoritative. That's not authoritarian. And it's not trying to deny
somebody a good time. It's not trying to interrupt somebody's hedonism,
pleasure, it's about all of us with shared values trying to make sure that
people live the highest quality lives they can. Ultimately, it's their decision
as to what they do. But the point is, don't treat them -- especially voters --
as kids just -- they say they want it okay we'll come up with a plan to give it
to you.
Have any of you seen the movie -- I'd never heard of it, but I happened to get a
DVD the other day. Anybody see the movie Swing Vote with Kevin Costner? You
know, it's kind of a moronic movie like most things out of Hollywood are. But
this is fascinating in the way -- tell you a short story, because a voter
screwup in New Mexico there's one voter who is going to elect the president. His
vote didn't count because his daughter voted for him. I won't give the whole
story away. But New Mexico's electoral votes, New Mexico's electoral votes
determined it. And they have a two-week period before this guy can vote again.
So the challenger and the president both relocate to where this guy lives in New
Mexico and they end up like the Democrat played by Dennis Hopper stands for
antiabortion. The Democrat candidate comes out with a commercial for life. The
Republican candidate comes out, because this guy is an idiot and doesn't know
what he believes, and every utterance that he makes these politicians react to
it throwing their principles on the floor, just to get his vote. Sadly, this is
what some of the conservative intellectuals in our movement want to do,
essentially. And that we cannot do. We've got to stand for what we believe and
treat people as adults and understand they can learn. [Applause] Go optimism.
Joe Biden, ladies and gentlemen, was watching CBS -- when did you start here?
Thursday. You might have seen this. The days run together. It might have been
Wednesday, but Biden was on the CBS Early Show. And he was asked -- the
anchorette -- sorry. I'm trying to change my ways. I've been doing women summit
programs so not to offend women. The anchor, Maggie Rodriguez, went out and got
some man-on-the-street questions. And one guy, woman, I think question for
Biden. What is in the stimulus package for small business? Biden was clearly
stumped because there isn't anything in the stimulus package for small business.
So what Biden said, honest to God, what Biden said was: Well, if there's a
bridge to your small business, we're going to make sure that bridge stays open
so that you can get to your small business and your customers -- honest. I kid
you not. Now, of course, the media today is a bunch of hacks, they're out there
as PR agents; they're starting to get a little embarrassed. Maggie Rodriguez
says, Senator Biden, there's a website that answers all these questions. What is
the name of the website and Biden says I don't know. He looks off stage. "Does
somebody have the website number?" [Applause] I realize those of you watching at
home during my first address to the nation, you have never heard liberal
Democrats be made fun of in this way. Get used to it. [Applause]
Two other things and we'll get out of here contractually over time. The
president's stimulus package, the TARP, the whatever, the budget, relies on one
thing for its success. Well, aside from authoritarian government power. It
relies on the complacency of the American people. It relies on their belief that
they can convince the American people that there's such a crisis that only
government, the only entity that can fix it is government, as Obama has said. So
they get complacent and they sit around and they wait. See, this is something
liberals will never understand about the United States of America and it's right
under their noses, right in front of their faces, we are a competitive people.
We strive, enough of us do, to be the best. We strive to win. We strive to avoid
defeat. Enough of us still do. Don't believe otherwise. The liberals have made
efforts to shut that aspect of our nature down. Wherever you live, I am certain
that you, when you were a child or your kids today in youth sports are told not
to keep score, because the losers, it's just not fair. They'd be humiliated,
especially if one girl's basketball team can defeat another one 100 to nothing.
And let's fire the coach who put that game together. It's so unfair. So let's
not keep score. Well, here's the dirty little secret. The kids are keeping
score. [Applause] You know they are. They don't want to lose. They know what
winning and losing is. They're saying, well, why go out there and put on the
pads and play football or T-Ball if the objective here is to not keep score. So
they're keeping score. They get in the car with mom and dad and they tell mom
and dad: Yeah, we kicked their butts tonight. Wait a minute, I thought you
weren't keeping score. They weren't officially. They keep score. We're
competitive people. Adults are doing the same thing.
It didn't take long for people to get fired up when they figured out that
they're going to be paying mortgages for people who should never have been lent
money in the first place for the bogus excuse of maintaining property values in
the neighborhood. This is something that -- the complacency of the American
people is something they're going to rely on along with their authoritarian
efforts to control it. But they will not succeed at this. Because we're not
quitters. We don't acquiesce. We're not going to give up the American dream and
watch idly while it is restructured and transformed.
[Applause]
As I say, we want the best: Happiness for everybody. Now, about my still-to-me
mysteriously controversial comment that I hope President Obama fails. I was
watching the Super Bowl. And as you know, I love the Pittsburgh Steelers.
[Cheers and Applause] So they have this miraculous scoring drive that puts them
up by four, 15 seconds left. Kurt Warner on the field for the Cardinals. And I
sure as heck want you to know I hope he failed. I did not want the Cardinals to
win. I wanted Warner to make the biggest fool of himself possible. I wanted a
sack, I wanted anything. I wanted the Steelers to win. I wanted to win. I wanted
the Cardinals to fail.
This notion that I want the President to fail, folks, this shows you a sign of
the problem we've got. That's nothing more than common sense and to not be able
to say it, why in the world do I want what we just described, rampant government
growth indebtedness, wealth that's not even being created yet that is being
spent, what is in this? What possibly is in this that anybody of us wants to
succeed? Did the Democrats want the war on Iraq to fail!
CROWD: Yes!
RUSH: They certainly did. They not only wanted the war in Iraq to fail, they
proclaimed it a failure. There's Dingy Harry Reid waiving a white flag: [doing
Harry Reid impression] "This war is lost. This war is" -- [Cheers and Applause]
They called General Petraeus a liar before he even testified. Mrs. Clinton --
[Crowd Booing] -- said she had to, willingly suspend disbelief in order to
listen to Petraeus. We're in the process of winning the war. The last thing they
wanted was to win. They hoped George Bush failed. So what is so strange about
being honest to say that I want Barack Obama to fail if his mission is to
restructure and reform this country so that capitalism and individual liberty
are not its foundation? Why would I want that to succeed? [Applause]
Let me add a caveat here. My friends, I know what's going on. I know what's
going on. We're in the aspects here of an historic presidency. I know that. But
let me be honest again. I got over the historical aspects of this in November.
President Obama is our president. President Obama stands for certain things. I
don't care, he could be a Martian. He could be from Michigan, I don't know --
just kidding. Doesn't matter to me what his race is. It doesn't matter. He's
liberal is what matters to me. And his articulated -- his articulated plans
scare me. Now, I understand we can't say we want the President to fail, Mr.
Limbaugh. That's like saying -- this is the voice of the New Castrati, by the
way, guys who have lost their guts. You can't say Mr. Limbaugh that you want the
President to fail because that's like saying you want the country to fail. It's
the opposite. I want the country to survive. I want the country to succeed.
[Cheers and Applause] [Crowd Chanting "USA" ]
I want the country to survive as we have known it, as you and I were raised in
it, is what I mean. Now, I have been called -- and I can take it. Pioneers take
the arrows, I don't mind what anybody says about me, any time ever. I don't have
time for it. I don't give other people the power to offend me. And you shouldn't
either, by the wasted time being offended.[Applause]
I mean, there's some people you can't say you want the President to fail. Ladies
and gentlemen of the United States, the Democrat Party has actively not just
sought the failure of Republican presidents and policies and now wars for the
first time, the Democrat Party doesn't stop at failure. Talk to Judge Robert
Bork or Justice Clarence Thomas about how they tried to destroy lives,
reputations and character, and I'm supposed to say I don't want the President to
fail? [Applause] We're in for a real battle. We are talking about the United
States of America -- and there will always be an America, don't misunderstand me
-- we're talking about it remaining the country we were all born into and reared
and grown into. And it's under assault. It's always under assault. But it's
never been under assault like this from within before. And it's a serious,
serious battle.
So as you leave here, as you leave here optimism, confidence, not guilt, it's
not worth it. There's nothing to be guilty about. Don't treat people as
children. Respect their intelligence. Realize that there's a way to persuade
people. Sometimes the worst way is to get in their face and point a finger. Set
up a set of circumstances where the conclusion is obvious. Let them think they
came up with the idea themselves. They'll think they're smart that they figured
it out. Who cares how you persuade them, the fact they can be persuaded is
factually correct, it's possible. But the main thing to do here is stop thinking
that we are a minority. Stop thinking that it is being in the minority that
liberates you. It is your beliefs. It is your core principles, it is your
confidence that liberates you. It's not being in the minority.
In fact, for those of you watching my first national address and still hanging
in there, we really are not that happy about being a minority and we're out to
change it. [Applause] So I have -- I've gone over my allotted time by an hour.
[Applause]
I want to thank all of you so much for everything that you have meant to me and
my family in my life.
CROWD: Thank you.
RUSH: I understand it's mutual. And I hear people -- you have made my heart grow
so much that it barely fits in my chest cavity here tonight. But the things that
by virtue of your listening to my radio show and being active in this movement
that we all cherish and love, you have meant more to me, my family and my life
than whatever it is I might mean to you, even though I know that's considerable.
[Applause] You still can't outdo the absolute joy and awe and thanks I feel for
all of you. I've been doing this for 20 years and the numbers just keep growing.
And I can't tell you how appreciative I am and proud to be in a movement with
the same passions, desires and core beliefs that all of you have, because we
know that it's right for the country, and we know it's right for people. It's
not something that has to be forced on them. It's not something that has to be
authoritatively pressed on them. We are what is, and that's why we are an enemy
because we're effective. The people that do want control look at us as the
enemy. We're always going to be -- don't ever measure your success by how many
Drive-By Media reports you see that are fair to us. Never going to happen. Don't
measure your success by how many people like you. Just worry about how they
vote. And then at the end of the day how they live, but that's really none of
your business once they close the doors. Thank you all very much. It's been
great.
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