Rush Limbaugh
Michael Ledeen Gets Scammed By The Right-Wing Nutjobs and Their Fake Obama Columbia Thesis
Barack Obama, Birthers, Brian Lancaster, Joe Klein, Michael Ledeen, Pajamas Media, Republicans, Right-Wing Douchebaggery, Rush Limbaugh, TeabaggersBy John Tully
October 26, 2009
The New York Herald Sun
If you were to wearily search The Goog this morning and entered “Michael Leeden thesis” after hearing that Rush, Joe Klein and the War-Crimes Apologists and Wife-Beaters at PJ’s Media were touting some Obama Columbia Thesis exerpts uncovered by some intrepid truth-seeker.
It turns out that, because of the obscure Brain Disease that affects the Right-Wing Torture-Apologists, they didn’t seem to figure out that they were reading, yes, SATIRE…
The NY Daily News has apparently never heard of one of the Right Wing’s Nuttiest Neocon Nutbags Michael Ledeen: ( Spelled Leeden)
Media Matters, that left-wing commie homo site – has all the pathetic details….
DESPERATELY FINDING WAYS TO HATE THEIR PRESIDENT
C’mon man…..
New Rules | March 13 2009 | Bill Maher's Real Time
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher With Sarah Silverman | March 13 2009 | We're F#cked Edition
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher Real Time | March 13 2009 | Andrew Breitbart and Michael Eric Dyson 3
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher Real Time | March 13 2009 | Andrew Breitbart and Michael Eric Dyson 2
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher Real Time | March 13 2009 | Andrew Breitbart and Michael Eric Dyson
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher With Steven Pearlstein | March 13 2009 | Real Time
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastBill Maher | March 13 2009 | Opening Monologue
AIG, Ben Bernanke, Breitbart, Citi, Drudge, Federal Reserve, GOP, Hank Paulson, Jim Cramer, Politics, Rush Limbaugh, Tim Geithner, TullycastMARCH 12 2010
Doughy Pantload Wants Obama to Fail
Doughy Pantload, Politics, Rush LimbaughWhat a surprise…
serious douchechills….

The tired war on Rush Limbaugh
The conservative commentator said he hopes Barack Obama fails. But what’s so radical about disagreeing with an agenda he doesn’t believe in?
March 3, 2009
Here we go again. Rush Limbaugh is public enemy No. 1.
Liberal bloggers and media chin-strokers are aghast at Limbaugh’s statement that he hopes Barack Obama fails.
Well, given what Obama wants to do, I hope he fails too. Of course I want the financial crisis to end — who doesn’t? But Obama’s agenda is much more audacious. Pretty much every major news outlet in the country has said as a matter of objective analysis that Obama wants to repeal the legacy of Ronald Reagan and remake the country as a European welfare state. And yet people are shocked that conservatives, Limbaugh included, want Obama to fail in this effort?
What movie have they been watching? Because I could swear that conservatives opposing the expansion of big government is what conservatives do. It’s Aesopian. The scorpion must sting the frog. The conservative must object to socialized medicine.
Besides, since when did hoping for the failure of ideological agendas you disagree with become unpatriotic? Liberals were hardly treasonous when they hoped for the failure of George W. Bush’s Social Security privatization scheme.
Regardless, the war on Limbaugh from the left is a tired rehash. In 1995, Bill Clinton tried to blame the Oklahoma City bombing on Rush. In 2002, then-Sen. Tom Daschle, the leader of the Democratic opposition, claimed that Limbaugh’s listeners weren’t “satisfied just to listen.” They were a violent threat to decent public servants like him.
In just the last month, Obama suggested that Republicans were in thrall to Rush. White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel has anointed him the GOP’s leader. Rep. Barney Frank complained that Republicans didn’t give Obama enough standing ovations during his address to Congress because they are afraid of Limbaugh and Sean Hannity.
Does anyone think that Republicans, absent fear of Limbaugh’s lash, would be throwing flower petals at Obama’s feet as he sells the Great Society II? If that’s true, I say thank goodness for Limbaugh’s lash.
Just because the Democrats’ shtick is old and often dishonest doesn’t mean it’s tactically dumb. Limbaugh and other right-wing talkers are popular with a third of the country. Fairly or not, they turn off moderates and self-described independents (and, for the left, conservative talk radio is the font of all evil). Most politicians would prefer to have 70% of the public on their side at the cost of losing 30%, even if that requires being less than fair to the 30%.
The more interesting war on Limbaugh comes from the right. My National Review colleague John Derbyshire has written a thoughtful article for the American Conservative disparaging the “lowbrow conservatism” of talk radio. His brush is a bit too broad at times. Some right-wing talkers, such as Bill Bennett and Dennis Prager, can be almost professorial. Michael Savage, meanwhile, sounds like the orderlies are about to break through the barricades with straitjacket in hand. Derbyshire is nonetheless right that conservatism is top-heavy with talk-radio talent, giving the impression the right is deficient in other areas and adding to the shrillness of public discourse.
Another point of attack comes from “reformist” conservative writers, such as blogger Ross Douthat of the Atlantic and former Bush speechwriter David Frum. They argue that conservatism is too attached to talk-show platitudes and Reagan kitsch. They want conservatives and Republicans to become more entrepreneurial, less reflexively opposed to government action. Hence, the New Reformers object to Limbaugh’s role as an enforcer of ideological conformity. What’s good for Limbaugh, many of them argue, guarantees that the GOP will become a powerless rump party only for conservative true believers.
I’m dubious about that, but I do have a suggestion that would help on both fronts. Bring back “Firing Line.” William F. Buckley Jr., who died almost exactly a year ago, hosted the program for PBS for 33 years. He performed an incalculable service at a time when conservatives were more associated with yahoos than they are today. He demonstrated that intellectual fluency and good manners weren’t uniquely liberal qualities. More important, the “Firing Line” debates (models of decorum) demonstrated that conservatives were unafraid to examine their own assumptions or to battle liberal ones.
As Democrats try to ram through the “remaking of America” (Obama’s words) by exploiting a financial crisis, we need those debates. PBS could actually live up to its mandate to educate and inform the public. It would be the kind of entrepreneurial government innovation even right-wingers could get behind.














