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The Truth About Rush Limbaugh
by Kurt Saxon
Many have suggested that I listen to Rush Limbaugh's radio show. He's
also on TV. Rush really knows what's happening and has the solutions to all the world's
problems; according to Rush, that is.
Rush has lots of information. He has all the facts, statistics and documentation at hand.
He's very good and he may be the best. But he's not original. In 1964-'65, while a member
of the John Birch Society I knew many Rush Limbaughs. They were just as up on current
events and knew where all the bodies were buried. There wasn't a scheme or a scam on the
Left that those Birchers didn't know about and couldn't second-guess.
But with the Communist menace about to overwhelm us, the only action members could take
was to engage in peaceful protest. We were to write our congressmen; those of us who could
write and to those congressmen who could read. We also wrote to and even phoned various TV
stations to tell them a previous program had been leftist. And after nearly thirty years,
sure enough, the Communist Empire collapsed!
Today a different enemy but the same style. A familiarity with every fear haunting anyone
with a job. Studied. Polished. That's Rush.
At one time he was a radio disc jockey. I suppose that was his foot in the door and he
became some sort of commentator while he practiced and perfected his act. His act was to
be the voice of anyone slightly right of center politically.
So Rush mastered telling Conservatives what they want to hear. A problem I've noticed is
that he has a hard time agreeing with everything in the Conservative platform. Like any
other group, Conservatives believe all sorts of things and so differ on many points. But
Rush must agree with every point so as not to lose one faction or another. So when he's
agreeing with an idea he doesn't agree with, it shows.
His stock in trade is hope. That's all he gives his audience and it's false hope, which
prevents action on an individual's behalf. He concentrates on national problems and
directs his comments to those locked into the system. If the system goes, they go with it.
Most of them are unable to adapt to any sort of self-sufficient lifestyle.
They can count on Rush to assure them that their system will continue to support them with
jobs, social services, and health care.
On the one hand, he does assure them. But on the other he paints a picture of almost
insurmountable political and economic problems. This skillful combining of hope and terror
to an audience of the individually weak is the way cults are formed. So what Rush has
going for him now, and growing, is simply a cult patterned on the John Birch Society.
Useless to the member but quite profitable to the cult leader.
Rush's main issues are politics and economics. According to Rush, nearly every problem we
face is the result of bad politics or economics, and especially the politics and economics
of the Liberals and their Democratic stooges.
Many in Rush's audience are Conspiracy Theorists.
They too, believe that most problems result from bad politics and economics. But they go
further with the comforting belief that the bad politics and economics are deliberate.
Economic failures are engineered by bad people who want to wreck the economy and take us
over.
They are indeed comforted by the idea of a great plot since a plot exposed is a plot
failed.
Rush is a soft-core Conspiracy Theorist. That is, he doesn't blame our troubles on the
Jews and barely touches on international plotters. But to hear him tell it, Clinton and
his gang of drug-crazed manipulators don't do anything without some evil purpose.
Of course, there are conspiracies and more conspiracies. There have been conspiracies and
conspirators ever since there have been two people to conspire against a third. When I
joined the John Birch Plot-of-the-Month-club, it was obvious the Communists would be in
power here by 1965. Why didn't the hundreds of plots and overall conspiracies come to
anything? Or is Clinton really a Commissar?
The fact is that most conspiracies are made up by people like Rush to scare the helpless
into supporting them. In actuality, whatever real plots there are don't come to anything
because they're stupid to begin with.
Things are indeed getting worse, not because of any conspiracies, but because people are
still guided by their animal natures instead of logic. They haven't yet risen above
instinct. A woman must bear children. No matter if she can't provide for them or is too
ignorant to raise them properly. Bear she must, like a cat or a dog.
A male must father children. It proves he's a man. No matter if he's a genetic farce and
other men must feed his children. Less and less children are Being born to mentally sound
adults.
Rush sees nothing wrong in this. Surplus, suffering, degenerate children are still a
market for diapers, baby foods, and little caskets. Moreover, he would force women who
wish to end unwanted pregnancies to bring such pregnancies to term, even though an
unwanted child is an automatically abused child.
Rush often speaks of freedom, but not for women or children. Nor does his ideas of freedom
extend to the terminally ill who wish to end their suffering. Every day they can be kept
alive, despite their agony, means dollars for doctors and hospitals. Whatever makes money
for anyone is fine with Rush as long as it contributes to the economy.
Concerning Rush's political and economic solutions to our problems, let me run some
figures by you. In 1850, for the first time in history, our species hit the one billion
mark. Only 80 years later, in 1930, it doubled to two billion. Then, by 1975, only 45
years, it doubled again to four billion. Now, in 1995, it's over five and a half billion.
Our species has become a plague on the land. It threatens nearly every other species.
Worse still, the lack of selection has caused downbreeding which has overrun the earth
with mediocrities at best and idiots at worst. Forty-seven million American adults are
functional illiterates. Twenty-eight percent of American births are illegitimate. In 1960,
it was only 5%. Among blacks today, it is 60%.
America has 35 million welfare recipients and 42 million on Social Security. There are
about 20 million Federal retirees. Counting prisons, nuthouses, etc., I'd say we have
about 100 million social dependents out of a population of 260 million.
You've probably read that less and less workers provide for more and more social
dependents. That idea isn't exactly accurate. It's misleading because the taxpayer doesn't
directly support the social dependents. The government prints checks which are tacked onto
the National Debt. It's the fantastic interest on the National Debt which must come from
the taxpayer. That interest is the reason for the increasingly higher taxes.
To put the problem in its proper perspective, consider Germany with its 1995 population of
80 million. Imagine all the productive Americans paying for the food, clothing, housing,
and health care of that whole country and more. What solution has Rush Limbaugh for that
magnitude of problem?
And do you see a plot in all this? Did Clinton and his cabinet impregnate those millions
of mainly retarded females on welfare? Did the Rockefellers and the Trilateralists (of
which Clinton is a member) run off with all the money? Give me a break!
As for political and economic solutions, there are none. In 1980, Reagan entered office
and promised a turnaround to that recession. At that time, America was the greatest lender
nation. After only four years of Reaganomics, America became the greatest debtor nation.
Reaganomics was a variation of the Trickle-Down-Theory.
The idea of Trickle-Down was that tax breaks were to be given to the wealthy, who in turn
would plow the savings back into their businesses. This would stimulate growth and
profits, which would lead to higher wages. The workers would then spend those higher wages
on industry's output and the economy would improve.
The Democrats believed in Trickle-Up. If the workers got the tax breaks, they would spend
their gains on industry's output and improve the economy. Six of one and half a dozen of
the other.
Rush promotes Trickle-Down, naturally, even though nothing did trickle down in the last
several years. The reason for that is, the wealthy didn't plow back their tax gains into
the businesses that got the breaks.
The wealthy of this generation aren't concerned with product development and improvement.
Their only concern is with profit taking. Their corporate heads aren't innovative
industrialists as in the past, but accountants. Also, those corporate heads are paid
fantastic salaries, even as a company's losses reach into the billions.
Another idiocy is diversification. Say General Motors invested millions in McDonald's. I'm
not sure GM actually invests in McDonald's, but that's an example of what most them do.
That really doesn't make GM and Chrysler competitive with Toyota and Nissan.
As for Democrats, Clinton is already raising taxes on the workers. Instead of giving the
workers those tax breaks to prove the Trickle-Up Theory, he's slating billions to raise
the standard of living of the unproductive. So both the Republicans and Democrats are
incompetent and neither understands the theories they campaign on.
Clinton promised that in two years he would abolish welfare as we know it. But instead of
billions in tax cuts to help the workers and middle class, there would be billions in even
higher taxes to train and motivate welfare addicts.
In 1969, after an accident, I was on County Welfare, then Aid To The Totally Dependent,
and then Supplemental Security Income (SSI). My only associates for three years were
welfare types. As in my childhood, when we moved into the slums, and found permanent
slum-dwellers and later left them there, I moved into the world of the welfare addicts and
finally left them all there.
I tried to convince them that they should develop skills. But they had already developed
the skill of working the Welfare racket. They had adjusted to a certain lifestyle whereby
they idled away their days and partied into the night. For the most part, they were
emotionally unstable, mentally defective, and bone-lazy.
Moreover, any job they might be offered or might be able to learn would pay them little
more than they got from the state. Say you got $400 a month on Welfare. You are offered a
menial job paying $500 a month. Would you give up a lifestyle of ease and freedom for what
amounted to $100 a month? You wouldn't? Neither would I.
Besides, consider the greatest burden, the unwed mother. She may have four, eight, or even
ten children by the same number of males. Almost without exception, she's unresponsive to
arguments for productivity. She's already a producer. She has her own brand of
self-respect, rejecting all others. She's usually mentally defective and unemployable by
anyone's standards.
For this unproductive class, Clinton would tax American workers and the middle class. He
doesn't understand economics. Aside from being an expert manipulator of those with like
ambitions, he doesn't understand politics. He doesn't understand our system, period.
Neither does Rush Limbaugh. Neither does anyone else.
What people fail to realize is that systems, economic and political, are entities, not
machines. People create systems and give them life. But it takes the kind of people who
gave them life to keep them alive. We all know of brilliant, ruthless, strong-willed men
who've created giant companies. How come, three generations later, the heirs let the
business go to pot if faced with real competition?
It doesn't have to be and doesn't always happen. But it's certainly happening today with
most of our industries facing competition from stronger, younger competitors, especially
the Japanese.
When it comes to political entities, most people tend to idealize their founding fathers.
Ours have come down to us as noble, freedom-loving patriots. In actuality, they were
ruthless and self-serving. They had a good thing going on this continent and wanted it all
for themselves without sharing with the Crown or putting up with British interference.
They wanted freedom and liberty. But the freedom and liberty to do as they pleased with
what they could create and produce. They had no concern for lesser folk. Only property
owners could vote. An owner of ten slaves had two votes, or three if he had twenty, and so
on. A slave, a black person, counted as one-tenth of a person, and not even to himself but
to his owner. Women had no vote and few rights. Indians were vermin to be crowded out or
exterminated. Children were the property of their fathers.
The fine words of the Constitution were mainly to get the support of the people. The Bill
of Rights was the rights the founders wanted as opposed to what the British had allowed
them.
Even so, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights are among the most just and perfect of
any such written for any people. Also, their authors were among the strongest, most
purposeful, honest and intelligent men of their time.
But no objective historian can deny that our founding fathers were only for the rights of
the productive. The issue was always the productive commoner against the parasitic British
aristocracy, who believed they were born with the right to be supported in idleness.
The founders of our political and economic systems created a major advance in the
evolution of civilization. But it was certainly not intended for the unproductive, the
predatory, and the incompetent. Two hundred years ago, very few of the unfit survived long
enough to reproduce. The village idiot scrounged for food, did odd jobs, and died young.
The predatory were killed almost automatically. The stupid seldom could afford wives and
their offspring usually perished.
Medical science was primitive. The average life span was about 45. The rate of infant
mortality was high and childbirth was hazardous. It wasn't unusual for a man to bury three
wives and a dozen children during his lifetime. So our founding fathers could not have
foreseen our surplus population with the hordes of morons and criminals we have today.
They couldn't have known that in successfully throwing off the tyranny of one set of
parasites, they had failed to prevent the rise of another set. The rights they fought for
were the rights of the productive to keep the fruits of their labor. That was the main
principle of their struggle. How odd that the unproductive, the parasitic, and the
predatory quote these very heroes in demanding their rights to live at the expense of the
productive.
Our founding fathers were men, not gods. They were practical, not idealistic. By the same
principle of freeing the productive from the parasitic, had they foreseen our era, they
would have added at least three amendments to the Constitution. One would have been to
abolish slavery and return the blacks to their homeland. Another would have been that no
one without obvious potential could be kept alive at public expense. A third would have
been that only the productive could reproduce.
The big problem with modern politicians and economists is that they don't understand the
roots of our system and operate on grade-school idealism and wishful thinking. They even
take pride in denouncing the greatest product of our founding fathers, the "Robber
Baron".
The so-called robber baron was often ruthless in taking what he needed to create his
fortune. The railroad tycoons, the coal men, the cattlemen, the grain merchants, the oil
men. They were great! They were indeed unscrupulous, exploitive, monopolistic and greedy.
They were often excessive, in keeping with our violent growth period. But they created the
wealth that made our nation the greatest in history. And they were doing exactly what our
founding fathers paved the way for them to do.
Calvin Coolidge said, mainly in their defense, "The business of America is
business". He was a real politician who knew his true function. He was a power
broker, combining the functions of business with government.
Our modern politicians and economists have turned back the clock. The arguments of the
Tories in favor of British rule echo in the halls of Congress today in behalf of our own
parasites.
As I listen to Rush Limbaugh, I can see that he knows little of objective history. He
carries on the myth that our founding fathers were really concerned with everyone, not
just their own upper class.
Their system was never perfect. It was for white men only and mainly, propertied white
men. All it gave anyone else was the freedom to earn what he could and keep what he
earned. that's all it was meant to do.
But Rush promotes the nonsense that our system owes a living to anyone who at one time was
a working part of the system. No matter that he did only what he was paid for and got what
he earned and put nothing by. In harsh reality, he's part of the surplus population.
Rush doesn't acknowledge a surplus population. In fact, he encourages the birth of even
more. Any unwanted pregnancy must be brought to term, regardless of the fate of the
unwanted child or the burden on our already overburdened welfare system. This, of course,
contradicts his concern for the tax payer. Rush knows this.
But contradictions don't seem to bother him. Rush denies not only the population explosion
but the danger to the ozone layer, dwindling natural resources, deforestation, pollution,
the Greenhouse Effect and all the other threats to the environment with an impatient shrug
and gets his audience focused back on the Clinton administration. He would have his
audience believe that all their problems were caused by the Democrats and more are being
caused by Clinton.
Clinton was governor of Arkansas for twelve years and never caused anything. It takes a
strong person to be a cause and Clinton is not strong. He won't cause anything as
president.
But Clinton and his Democrats aren't causes, anyway. They are effects. An effect can't be
blamed for what causes it. Fifty and more years ago, the cause for most of today's
problems was addressed. Medical science was at a stage where all fertile social
dependents, criminals, and the insane could have been sterilized. It was suggested and
argued. But commercial interests and misplaced compassion won the day.
The self-centered Conservatives, generation after generation, seeing morons and
degenerates only as a market and a cheap labor pool, allowed them to multiply and swamp
the system. Those millions of non-productive and predatory are the cause. Clinton and his
mob are only the effect.
Rush Limbaugh's broken-record ranting against the Democrats is simply boring. What I most
object to is his disinformation. According to Rush, the individual must work hard to
convince his nearest politician that Rush's solutions will save the system. He tells his
audience of twenty million that the system can indeed be saved, that it's really in good
shape, except for the manipulations of his main scapegoat, Clinton.
This gives false hope to those who are aware enough to seek alternatives to a lifestyle
they stand to loose. Rush is certainly aware. I can tell from listening to him that he has
an excellent frame of reference and so must know that this Disneyland for dummies is about
to close down and doom most of his "ditto heads".
His audience trusts him. They really believe his assurances that their lifestyles will be
secure if they only follow his economic advice and rattle the chain of this or that
political hack.
I listen to his callers and realize that most of them are intelligent and successful. I
hear the worry in their voices and realize he's feeding them garbage, misdirecting their
efforts away from self-sufficiency and toward more trust in a doomed system.
I've never heard him discuss self-sufficiency as such. Nor have I heard him discuss
anything important from the standpoint of individual effort as opposed to ineffectual
group protest.
He undoubtedly has as part of his audience, some of the best of our species. If he was as
free and outspoken as he boasts, he could urge this segment of his audience to learn the
self-reliance of their ancestors, just in case. But he's neither free nor outspoken. His
advertisers permit him to denounce the bureaucracy. This is always safe, no matter how
radical it may seem.
But let him just once explain that our system is on overload and is going to sputter out
and he'd be off the air in twenty four hours. Let him advise his audience to buy a Corona
grain mill and otherwise direct their efforts toward self-sufficiency and he'd be off the
air just as fast. His advertisers wouldn't want his audience to realize they could do
without their products.
No, friends, Rush isn't the man on the white horse. He doesn't have any practical answers.
He's just another wealthy huckster with a flock of sheep to shear. His message of unified
political action is just as phony and self-serving as Clinton's "We're all in this
together" hypocrisy.
The main difference between Limbaugh and Clinton is that they are on opposite sides of the
same coin. Neither feels threatened by what he sees in store for their respective
followers. They think their wealth will save them. But there will come a time, and soon,
when each will wish he had a Corona grain mill.
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