Rush Limbaugh: Difference between revisions
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Limbaugh was attacked as destructive to the conservative movement by conservative commentators such as | Limbaugh was attacked as destructive to the conservative movement by conservative commentators such as David Frum,<ref name=Newsweek2009-03-16>{{citation | ||
| url = http://www.newsweek.com/id/188279/output/print | | url = http://www.newsweek.com/id/188279/output/print | ||
| title = Why Rush is Wrong: The party of Buckley and Reagan is now bereft and dominated by the politics of Limbaugh. A conservative's lament. | | title = Why Rush is Wrong: The party of Buckley and Reagan is now bereft and dominated by the politics of Limbaugh. A conservative's lament. | ||
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==Criticism by Obama== | ==Criticism by Obama== | ||
President Obama said, in an CBS News interview on 2 April 2010, in response to a question by co-anchor [[Harry Smith]] that "Well -- I mean, I think that -- when you've listened to Rush Limbaugh or | President Obama said, in an CBS News interview on 2 April 2010, in response to a question by co-anchor [[Harry Smith]] that "Well -- I mean, I think that -- when you've listened to Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck it's …" Smith interrupted and said "it's beyond that." | ||
<blockquote>It's pretty - apparent and -- it's troublesome. But -- you know, keep in mind that there have been periods in American history where this kind of -- this kind of vitriol comes out. It happens often when -- you've got an economy that is making people more anxious and people are feeling that there's a lot of change that needs to take place. But that's not the vast majority of Americans.<ref name=CBS2010-04-02>{{citation | <blockquote>It's pretty - apparent and -- it's troublesome. But -- you know, keep in mind that there have been periods in American history where this kind of -- this kind of vitriol comes out. It happens often when -- you've got an economy that is making people more anxious and people are feeling that there's a lot of change that needs to take place. But that's not the vast majority of Americans.<ref name=CBS2010-04-02>{{citation | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 06:00, 14 October 2024
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Rush Limbaugh (1951-2021) was an American radio host and right-wing political commentator. He hosted the nationally syndicated The Rush Limbaugh Show, which was broadcast for three hours a day on weekdays. In the past, he identified as an "entertainer", but increasingly presented himself as the leader of the Republican Party (United States) and American conservatism. The show had an estimated 13.5 million listeners per week. Limbaugh wrote two books - The Way Things Ought To Be and See, I Told You So. On his website, he described himself as
Media interactionLimbaugh fans often refer to themselves as "dittos" or "dittoheads". He explained the usage:
He had varied opinions about other conservative commentators. He did like Ann Coulter and her ability to outrage liberals. As far as Bill O'Reilly, “somebody’s got to say it,” he told me. “The man is Ted Baxter.” Sean Hannity, his one-time stand in and now perpetual No. 2 on the Talkers list was described with affectionate condescension. “I have no competitors...Hannity isn’t even close to me.” He considered Camille Paglia and Thomas Sowell as honest thinkers. Speaking of Christopher Hitchens, “He’s misguided sometimes, but when you read him, you finish the whole article.”[3] Comments about raceHe also hosted a television show from 1992 to 1996, and was a commentator for the ESPN sports cable channel on Sunday NFL Countdown, resigning after stating that Philadelphia Eagles quarterback Donovan McNabb received favorable treatment from the media because of his race.[4] In 2008, he told ABC News that Colin Powell had endorsed Barack Obama only because Obama is black.
Limbaugh deflected some criticism by saying he was an "entertainer" rather than a serious political commentator, as with his song "Barack the Magic Negro", and referring to Barack Obama as "Halfrican American". He said "magic negro" is a historical cultural term, a reference to benevolent African-Americans portrayed in old films, and was used by a black commentator in the Los Angeles Times. [6] Criticism from Republicans and conservativesIn March 2009, Republican National Committee chairman Michael Steele began calling Limbaugh's rhetoric "incendiary" and "ugly", and responded to Limbaugh's claims that he represented the Republican mainstream with "Rush will say what Rush has to say; we'll do what we have to do." After Limbaugh counterattacked, saying "saying the Republican chairman appears to be supporting President Barack Obama and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.... [Steele seems] obsessed with seeing to it President Obama succeeds. I frankly am stunned that the chairman of the Republican National Committee endorses such an agenda...I have to conclude that he does, because he attacks me for wanting it to fail." Steele said, to an online reporter, that he "was maybe a little bit inarticulate."[7] Limbaugh was attacked as destructive to the conservative movement by conservative commentators such as David Frum,[8] who argued that his policies were exclusionist, and were cutting the Republican Party (United States) and American conservatism down to a "base" of extremists that could not win elections. Frum, after the Democratic-sponsored healthcare bill passed, named Limbaugh as a reason for failure to work out compromises.
"Is something up?"Limbaugh himself suggested there should be suspicions, even when he himself said he had no evidence that an issue actually existed. In October 2008, Limbaugh referred to an April suit by an individual, Philip Berg, demanding that Obama produce his birth certificate. Limbaugh said he himself had no specifics, but cast suspicions:
Criticism by ObamaPresident Obama said, in an CBS News interview on 2 April 2010, in response to a question by co-anchor Harry Smith that "Well -- I mean, I think that -- when you've listened to Rush Limbaugh or Glenn Beck it's …" Smith interrupted and said "it's beyond that." Limbaugh replied,
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