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Ditto-ography: Zev Chafets gets it wrong on Rush

May 24, 2010 10:33 pm ET — 96 Comments

In his Rush Limbaugh biography An Army of One, which Media Matters obtained in advance of its release, Zev Chafets describes himself as a longtime Limbaugh admirer and listener who asked Limbaugh "hundreds" of questions over the past few years. Limbaugh appears to have rubbed off on Chafets, as his sympathetic biography is riddled with falsehoods, distortions, and misleading claims.

INDEX:

Chafets: Limbaugh a "satirist," not a liar

Chafets: Limbaugh "is polite to his callers"

Alleging that media hold a pro-Obama bias, Chafets falsely claims that Wright videos were "shown first on FOX News"

Alleging that media hold a pro-Obama bias, Chafets falsely claims that Fox broke Obama and Ayers story

Chafets absurdly claims that Newsweek "refrained from even publishing" Lewinsky story because the "mainstream media was with the Clintons"

Chafets distorts 2008 primary results to hype Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos"

Chafets repeats Obama teleprompter falsehood

Chafets distorts Gore's congressional testimony to suggest environmental hypocrisy

Chafets' claim that Branch Davidian members were "kill[ed]" "by federal agents" contradicted by former GOP senator's report

Chafets grossly distorts Limbaugh's "phony soldiers" comments

Chafets implausibly claims that Obama sent "a sign to his African American base" at WHCA dinner

Chafets gushes over Limbaugh

Chafets: Limbaugh a "satirist," not a liar

Chafets goes to great lengths to discount accusations that Limbaugh is a liar, writing on Page 139 that Limbaugh doesn't "lie," but rather "engages in hyperbole, sarcasm, and ridicule":

When I told Limbaugh that [Columbia Journalism School] Professor [Todd] Gitlin, a prominent faculty member of America's preeminent school of journalism, had called him a liar, Limbaugh seemed amused. "Anybody who talks for fifteen hours a week extemporaneously for twenty years makes mistakes, but I correct mine as soon as I can, for a very practical reason," he told me. "If people don't trust me, they won't listen, and I won't have any sponsors. I make my living selling advertising. I have no idea who Todd Gitlin is, but he obviously doesn't know anything about the media."

He also doesn't listen to Limbaugh. Rush, like any satirist, engages in hyperbole, sarcasm, and ridicule, none of which is meant to be taken literally. Only the most oblivious or humorless critic would confuse it with lying. On reflection, and after consulting the Media Matters archive, Gitlin himself contacted me and asked to amend "liar" to "bullshit artist." In the commentary business, "bullshit" is what you call the opinions of those with whom you disagree.

Despite Chafets' claims to the contrary, Limbaugh has a well established record of constantly inventing or repeating clear falsehoods. The following is a non-exhaustive list:

  • In February 2009, Limbaugh eagerly repeated Betsy McCaughey's false claim, made in a Bloomberg "commentary," that the House-passed economic recovery bill would create a new bureaucracy to "monitor treatments to make sure your doctor is doing what the federal government deems appropriate and cost effective." In fact, the legislation established no such authority, and McCaughey herself was forced to backtrack on the allegation. The next day, Limbaugh boasted that he was the one who discovered McCaughey's falsehood and took credit for spreading it "all over [the] mainstream media."
  • Following a February 10, 2009, presidential town hall event in Florida, Limbaugh attacked "a crying woman named Henrietta" who, Limbaugh said, "ask[ed] Obama for a car, for a new kitchen, and a bathroom." In fact, the woman, who was homeless, was saying that she and her family needed housing: "I have an urgent need -- unemployment and homelessness, a very small vehicle for my family and I to live in. We need urgent, and the housing authority have two years waiting on this, and we need something more than a vehicle and parks to go to. We need our own kitchen and our own bathroom. Please help."
  • Limbaugh claimed in early 2009 that President Obama's proposal to let the Bush tax cuts on Americans making more than $250,000 expire in 2011 constituted "a massive -- in the midst of a recession -- tax increase on small business" that would affect "[m]ost small businesses." This claim had already been repeatedly debunked -- the Tax Policy Center found that roughly 2 percent of small businesses fall in the top two income brackets that would be affected by the expiration of those tax cuts.
  • In March 2009, Limbaugh said several times that "not one Republican voted for the TARP bailout." In reality, 125 congressional Republicans voted for the bill that created the Troubled Asset Relief Program.
  • In July 2009, Limbaugh claimed that "Obama has yet to have to prove he's a citizen. All he'd have to do is show a birth certificate." Obama posted his birth certificate on his campaign's Fight the Smears website; the Hawaii Department of Health has confirmed that the birth certificate posted online by the Obama campaign is "a valid Hawaii state birth certificate"; FactCheck.org reported that it had "seen, touched, examined and photographed the original birth certificate" and determined that it is authentic; and Obama's birth was announced in contemporaneous editions of two Hawaii newspapers.
  • In October 2009, Limbaugh falsely claimed that Page 94 of the House health care bill "prohibits the sale of private individual health insurance policies beginning in 2013." In fact, Page 94 of the bill specifically allowed private individual health insurance policies to be sold through a Health Insurance Exchange.
  • In March, Limbaugh claimed that people "can't go fishing anymore because of Obama." PolitiFact.com rated Limbaugh's claims "Pants on Fire" false, and noted that the administration has not recommended a ban on recreational fishing.
  • In April, Limbaugh ran with Dick Morris' fabricated claim that Janet Reno blackmailed President Clinton into reappointing her as attorney general by threatening to "tell the truth about Waco." Morris' version of events, however, contradicted his previous writings on Clinton and Waco, and Morris himself later admitted that his conspiracy theory was merely "conjecture." That did not deter Limbaugh, however, who repeated the story even after Morris retracted it.
  • On his May 4 program, Limbaugh claimed of the alleged Times Square bomber: "Guess what? Faisal Shahzad is a registered Democrat. I wonder if this SUV had an Obama sticker on it. Faisal Shahzad is a registered Democrat." Media Matters for America contacted the offices of the registrar in Shahzad's hometowns and confirmed that he is in fact not a registered voter in those towns.

Chafets: Limbaugh "is polite to his callers"

Chafets claims that Limbaugh learned a "lesson" from his early days in radio and "to this day, Limbaugh is polite to his callers." Yet Limbaugh has berated and been dismissive of callers who have disagreed with him, such as recently telling a woman to take the "tampons" out of her ears.

From Page 37:

Insult comedy was coming into its own on the radio, and Jeff Christie [Rush Limbaugh] decided to try it. He describes the result in his book, See, I Told You So:

I found out something about myself . . . something that was quite disturbing. I found out I was really, really good at insulting people. For example, the topic one day was. "When you die, how do you want to go?"

"I want to go the cheapest and most natural way I can," one nice lady caller from Independence, Missouri, said.

My response was: "Easy. Have your husband throw you in a trash bag and then in the Missouri River with the rest of the garbage."

When I went home after a day of this, I didn't like myself.

The lesson stayed with him. To this day, Limbaugh is polite to his callers who are, in any case, prescreened. He is still insulting, but his targets tend to be institutions, causes, and public figures who can defend themselves.

The following are some of Limbaugh's "polite" interactions with callers to his program:

Alleging that media hold a pro-Obama bias, Chafets falsely claims that Wright videos were "shown first on FOX News"

Chafets accuses the media of being pro-Obama, using as evidence that "[v]ideo clips of Reverend Wright's heated anti-American sermons about 'the USA of KKK' and American chickens coming home to roost on 9/11" were "shown first on FOX News and then, grudgingly, on other networks." In fact, as Fox News itself noted, ABC broke the story during the 2008 campaign.

Chafets writes on Page 61 that the Obama administration launched a campaign against Fox News after they broke "scoops" (such as the Wright story) about the administration: 

In the fall of 2009, not long after Limbaugh's speech, the White House launched a campaign against FOX News. Obama himself said that FOX was more like talk radio than a conventional television network. This was, obviously, a political judgment; FOX, at that time, was the only TV network actually engaged in adversarial journalism in the first part of the Obama administration. It had broken scoops about Obama's mentor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and played excepts from his incendiary anti-American sermons; revealed the political and professional connection between Obama and former Weatherman terrorist leader Bill Ayers; raised questions about Van Jones, a presidential adviser who had signed a petition accusing President Bush of collusion in the 9/11 terrorist attacks; and broadcast hidden-camera clips showing employees of ACORN -- the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, a left-wing group with which Obama had close ties -- advising a pimp on how to import underage prostitutes into the United States. These stories were profoundly embarrassing to the Obama administration -- the president had been forced to sever his ties with Wright, accept Jones's resignation, and watch as Congress cut off ACORN's federal funding. Naturally, the president wanted to discredit the network.

Chafets continues on Page 160:

Video clips of Reverend Wright's heated anti-American sermons about "the USA of KKK" and American chickens coming home to roost on 9/11 -- shown first on FOX News and then, grudgingly, on other networks -- made it clear who Obama's minister thought was the source of injustice.

ABC broke Wright sermon story on March 13. ABC broke the Jeremiah Wright sermon story during the March 13, 2008, edition of Good Morning America.

NY Times: Controversy came to light after ABC aired videos. New York Times reporter Jodi Kantor wrote on March 13, 2008: "On Thursday the attention shifted to the camp of Senator Barack Obama, after a report was shown on 'Good Morning America' on ABC, with clips of sermons by the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr., senior pastor of Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago."

Fox News itself credited ABC for story. During the March 13, 2008, edition of Special Report, then-host Brit Hume said: "The retiring Pastor of Barack Obama's church, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, Jr., said in a sermon five years ago that black people should ask god to curse America instead of bless it. ABC news reports the following from a 2003 sermon."

Alleging that media hold a pro-Obama bias, Chafets falsely claims that Fox broke Obama and Ayers story

Chafets accuses the media of being pro-Obama, using as evidence that Fox News "revealed the political and professional connection between Obama and former Weatherman terrorist leader Bill Ayers." While Fox News certainly engaged in unparalleled misinformation about Obama's supposed ties to Ayers, Fox did not break the story.

From Page 61:

In the fall of 2009, not long after Limbaugh's speech, the White House launched a campaign against FOX News. Obama himself said that FOX was more like talk radio than a conventional television network. This was, obviously, a political judgment; FOX, at that time, was the only TV network actually engaged in adversarial journalism in the first part of the Obama administration. It had broken scoops about Obama's mentor, the Reverend Jeremiah Wright, and played excepts from his incendiary anti-American sermons; revealed the political and professional connection between Obama and former Weatherman terrorist leader Bill Ayers; raised questions about Van Jones, a presidential adviser who had signed a petition accusing President Bush of collusion in the 9/11 terrorist attacks; and broadcast hidden-camera clips showing employees of ACORN -- the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, a left-wing group with which Obama had close ties -- advising a pimp on how to import underage prostitutes into the United States. These stories were profoundly embarrassing to the Obama administration -- the president had been forced to sever his ties with Wright, accept Jones's resignation, and watch as Congress cut off ACORN's federal funding. Naturally, the president wanted to discredit the network.

MSNBC, Bloomberg, others brought up Ayers before Fox News. According to a Nexis search, Peter Hitchens wrote about Ayers and Obama for the London Daily Mail on February 2, 2008. Bloomberg (February 15), The New York Sun (February 19), Politico (February 22), and CNN.com (February 24) followed Hitchens. Then-MSNBC host Tucker Carlson also brought up Ayers on the February 22, 2008, edition of his program. Ayers was first brought up on a Fox News program available in Nexis on February 27 by Sean Hannity and Dennis Miller.

Wash. Post: First mainstream article from Daily Mail. The Washington Post's Fact Checker blog wrote of the chain of Ayers articles:

The first article in the mainstream press linking Obama to Ayers appeared in the London Daily Mail on February 2. It was written by Peter Hitchens, the right-wing brother of the left-wing firebrand turned Iraq war supporter, Christopher Hitchens. Hitchens cited the Ayers connection to bolster his argument that Obama is "far more radical than he would like us to know."

The Hitchens piece was followed by a Bloomberg article last week pointing to the Ayers connection as support for Hillary Clinton's contention that Obama might not be able to withstand the "Republican attack machine." Larry Johnson, a former counterterrorism official at the CIA and the State Department, predicted that the Republicans would seize on the Ayers case, and other Chicago relationships, to "bludgeon Obama's presidential aspirations into the dust."

The London Sunday Times joined the chorus this weekend by reporting that Republicans were "out to crush Barack by painting him as a leftwinger with dubious support".

Chafets absurdly claims that Newsweek "refrained from even publishing" Lewinsky story because the "mainstream media was with the Clintons"

On Page 90, Chafets offers Limbaugh's take on the Monica Lewinsky scandal, writing:

It wasn't Hillary's finest moment. She looked foolish for denying what everyone else already knew. And the accusation about a right-wing conspiracy seemed paranoid. The mainstream media was with the Clintons; Newsweek had refrained from even publishing the Lewinsky story, which it had before Drudge, evidently out of a misguided belief that it could keep the story from going public.

Newsweek states it held the story because "there was insufficient hard evidence." From an "online exclusive" column published on Newsweek's website on January 21, 1998:

Because the magazine did not have enough time for sufficient independent reporting on Lewinsky, her credibility, and her alleged role in the drama -- and in hopes of learning more about the truth by not interfering with Starr's probe at a critical juncture -- Newsweek decided to hold off publishing the story last week. Above all, because Lewinsky's name had not surfaced, Newsweek's editors felt there was insufficient hard evidence to drag her into the media maelstrom.

Chafets distorts 2008 primary results to hype Limbaugh's "Operation Chaos"

Chafets writes at length about "Operation Chaos," Limbaugh's 2008 scheme to convince Republican voters to vote for then-candidate Hillary Clinton in the Democratic presidential primaries in order to prolong the nominating process and "bloody" Barack Obama politically. Chafets' discussions of Operation Chaos' effect on Texas' and Mississippi's primaries are undermined by polling data.

Texas. On Page 116, Chafets writes of the Texas primary:

The next day, Hillary Clinton won Ohio and Texas (although Obama took the caucus and won the delegate count, 99 to 94). The national media, which hadn't paid serious attention to Limbaugh for years, was shocked by the result, especially in Texas, which Clinton won by 100,000 votes. Various exit polls had contradictory findings, but Karl Rove, who knows more about Texas politics than anyone on earth, told me that 120,000 or so Republicans had crossed over in the open primary and won it for Clinton.

Chafets offers no examples of national media outlets expressing "shock" at the Texas primary results. Clinton won the contest narrowly, edging Obama by about 3.5 percentage points. That closeness was reflected in the polling immediately prior to the election, which, according to Pollster.com's average, put Clinton ahead by two percentage points.

While Chafets touts Rove's claim "that 120,000 or so Republicans had crossed over in the open primary and won it for Clinton," CNN's exit poll showed that more self-identified Republicans voted for Obama than voted for Clinton -- nine percent of voters in the Democratic primary identified themselves as Republicans, and they favored Obama 53-46.

Mississippi. Chafets writes of the Mississippi primary:

Limbaugh wrung a week's worth of hilarity out of this situation. On March 11, Mississippi held its primary. Obama won, but Clinton got far more votes than predicted. Once more the media reacted with alarm.

Chafets' claim is not supported by the facts. Obama registered a lopsided 61-37 win in the Mississippi primary. Polls posted on Pollster.com leading up to the primary showed Obama in the mid-50s and Clinton in the high-30s, meaning that it was Obama who had outperformed expectations.

Chafets repeats Obama teleprompter falsehood

Chafets congratulates Limbaugh for noticing that "Obama was not much of an extemporaneous speaker" and cites as evidence the false story that "Obama accidentally read the speech of his guest, the Irish prime minister, instead of his own."

Chafets writes on Page 163:

Limbaugh was quick to notice that, despite his reputation for eloquence, Obama was not much of an extemporaneous speaker. In fact, the new president rarely spoke without a teleprompter. After Obama accidentally read the speech of his guest, the Irish prime minister, instead of his own, Limbaugh developed the conceit that the teleprompter, not Obama, was in charge.

Daily Telegraph editor: Obama was actually making a "good-natured and well received joke." As Daily Telegraph U.S. editor Toby Harnden explained, it was actually the Irish prime minister who accidentally began reading Obama's speech off the teleprompter before realizing his mistake, saying "Why don't these things work for me?" After the prime minister finished his remarks, Obama stepped to the microphone and jokingly said "First, I'd like to say thank you to President Obama."

Harnden wrote:

That was pretty clear: there was a teleprompter mix up and the fall guy was Cowen. Obama stepped in after Cowen's five-minute speech to make a good-natured and well-received joke at the Irish premier's expense.

Ironically, therefore, Obama was ad-libbing rather than mindlessly reading the wrong speech from a teleprompter.

I've exchanged emails with [National Journal reporter William] Englund and he confirmed this was the case and kindly supplied me with an audio file of the event that removes all doubt.

Chafets distorts Gore's congressional testimony to suggest environmental hypocrisy

On Page 67, Chafets writes of Al Gore:

In 2008 Limbaugh rebroadcast part of his debate with Gore. The ex-vice president had since won an Oscar and a Nobel Prize for his environmental endeavors. He had also become an environmental businessman and investor, parlaying his high profile and Washington connections into a multimillion-dollar empire of "green" enterprises.4

Chafets' footnote states:

In 2009, while testifying before Congress, Gore was asked if he would personally benefit from policies he was advocating for. Gore said he was proud to be in business and invest his money according to his beliefs. "If you believe the reason I have been working on this issue for thirty years is greed, you don't know me." Like all self-testimonials, this was not dispositive.

In suggesting that Gore is profiting from his "multimillion-dollar empire of 'green' enterprises," Chafets omits Gore's statement that he donates "every penny" back to his nonprofit. During the same exchange that Chafets quotes from in his footnote, Gore stated that "every penny that I have made, I have put right into a nonprofit, the Alliance for Climate Protection, to spread awareness of why we have to take on this challenge."

Chafets' claim that Branch Davidian members were "kill[ed]" "by federal agents" contradicted by former GOP senator's report

Discussing the Clinton administration, Chafets writes that Waco, Texas, was the site of the "killing, by federal agents, of fifty-one [sic] members of the Branch Davidian cult in Waco, Texas. The massacre was unintentional, but women and children had burned to death, and the country was in an uproar." However, in his final November 2000 report, former Republican Sen. John Danforth concluded "with certainty" that the "government of the United States and its agents are not responsible for the April 19, 1993, tragedy at Waco" (emphasis added) and "did not cause the fire." Danforth wrote that certain members of the cult were instead responsible. From the report:

The government of the United States and its agents are not responsible for the April 19, 1993, tragedy at Waco. The government:

§         (a) did not cause the fire;

§         (b) did not direct gunfire at the Branch Davidian complex; and

§         (c) did not improperly employ the armed forces of the United States.

Responsibility for the tragedy of Waco rests with certain of the Branch Davidians and their leader, Vernon Howell, also known as David Koresh, who:

§         (a) shot and killed four ATF agents on February 28, 1993, and wounded 20 others;

§         (b) refused to exit the complex peacefully during the 51-day standoff that followed the ATF raid despite extensive efforts and concessions by negotiators for the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI);

§         (c) directed gunfire at FBI agents who were inserting tear gas into the complex on April 19, 1993;

§         (d) spread fuel throughout the main structure of the complex and ignited it in at least three places causing the fire which resulted in the deaths of those Branch Davidians not killed by their own gunfire; and

§         (e) killed some of their own people by gunfire, including at least five children.

While the Special Counsel has concluded that the United States government is not responsible for the tragedy at Waco on April 19, 1993, the Special Counsel states with equal certainty that an FBI agent fired three pyrotechnic tear gas rounds at 8:08 a.m. on April 19, 1993, at the concrete construction pit approximately 75 feet from the living quarters of the Davidian complex. The pyrotechnic tear gas rounds did not start the fire that consumed the complex four hours later.

From Page 85:

Lacking legal recourse, Clinton decided to delegitimize Limbaugh as a racist, and to do the job personally. On May 1, 1993, the president was the featured speaker at the White House Correspondents' Association Dinner at the Washington Hilton. The dinner was held in the shadow of the killing, by federal agents, of fifty-one members of the Branch Davidian cult in Waco, Texas. The massacre was unintentional, but women and children had burned to death, and the country was in an uproar. Congressman John Conyers of Detroit, who is black, attacked Attorney General Janet Reno's mishandling of the entire affair. On the air, Limbaugh came to her defense.

Chafets grossly distorts Limbaugh's "phony soldiers" comments

Chafets grossly distorts Limbaugh's infamous "phony soldiers" comments, falsely suggesting that Limbaugh was referring to individuals that had actually lied about their military service.

Chafets writes on Pages 107-108:

On September 25, 2007, Limbaugh used his daily "morning update" to talk about Jesse MacBeth, who had been appearing at anti-war rallies as a former U.S. Army Ranger and combat veteran, and as an eyewitness to American military atrocities in Iraq. He reported that MacBeth was a fraud who had been convicted of falsifying a Department of Veterans Affairs claim. "Yes, Jesse MacBeth was in the army," Rush said. "Briefly. Forty-four days. Before he was washed out of boot camp. MacBeth is not an Army Ranger; he is not a corporal; he never won the Purple Heart; he was never in combat to witness the horrors he claimed to have seen. But don't look for retractions, folks-not from the anti-war left, the antimilitary Drive-By Media, or the Arabic Web sites that spread his lies about our troops. Fiction serves their purposes; the truth, to borrow a phrase, is inconvenient to them."

The following day, Limbaugh got an on-air call from a man named Mike in Olympia, Washington, who had a complaint about the mainstream media. "They never talk to real soldiers," Mike said. "They pull these soldiers that come up out of the blue and spout to the media."

"The phony soldiers," said Rush.

"Phony soldiers," said Mike. "If you talk to any real soldier, they're proud to serve, they want to be over in Iraq, they understand their sacrifice, and they're willing to sacrifice for the country."

"They joined to be in Iraq," Limbaugh said. Then he retold the story of Jesse MacBeth.

Within a short time, Media Matters, a "progressive" watchdog group founded by Democrats (including Hillary Clinton) to monitor and discredit Limbaugh and other conservative commentators, reported that Rush had referred to military personnel who objected to the war as "phony soldiers." [emphasis added]

Chafets' defense of Limbaugh's comments is completely wrong. Chafets writes: " 'They joined to be in Iraq,' Limbaugh said. Then he retold the story of Jesse MacBeth." This is false. More than a minute-and-a-half elapsed between Limbaugh saying, "They joined to be in Iraq," and Limbaugh's first reference that day to MacBeth. During that time, Limbaugh and the caller discussed weapons of mass destruction, the surge, and Democrats' efforts to extricate the United States from Iraq. In other words, Chafets' account makes it sound like Limbaugh's "phony soldiers" comment occurred at the beginning of a discussion of MacBeth, when in fact the MacBeth discussion occurred much later.

Additionally, Chafets' selective editing of Limbaugh's remarks is nearly identical to Limbaugh's own efforts to doctor transcript and audio to cover up what he had really said. As Media Matters exposed at the time, Limbaugh responded to the controversy by purporting to air the "entire" segment in which he had referred to "phony soldiers." In fact, the clip he then aired omitted a full 1 minute and 35 seconds of the 1 minute and 50 second discussion that occurred between Limbaugh's original "phony soldiers" comment and his reference to MacBeth.

In a footnote, Chafets compounds his false claims, writing:

Media Matters tried to correct its initial mistake by saying that Limbaugh had referred to phony soldiers (plural). Limbaugh responded by posting an ABC News Report titled "Phony Heroes"; the story of Pvt. Scott Thomas Beauchamp, whose grisly first-person accounts of the war in Iraq were challenged, causing the New Republic to admit that it couldn't stand by the articles it had published; and the fact that one of the spokesmen for Vietnam Veterans Against the War had later admitted lying about his service record.

It is simply not true that Limbaugh was referring to multiple actual military impostors when he made his original comments. Indeed, Limbaugh admitted as much in his initial response to the controversy when he repeatedly claimed -- also falsely -- that he was talking about only "one" soldier. A transcript posted on Limbaugh's website shows him emphasizing that he "was talking about one soldier with that phony soldier comment, Jesse MacBeth" [italics, bold, and underline in original].

After being confronted with the fact that he had originally referred to "phony soldiers" (plural), Limbaugh changed his story to claim he was actually talking about more than one military impostor -- a direct contradiction of his original false explanation.

And while Limbaugh did at one point in his response include Beauchamp in his evolving list of "phony soldiers," he also included decorated Vietnam veteran John Murtha. Limbaugh's description of Murtha as a "phony soldier" further disproves Chafets' suggestion that Limbaugh was simply referring to individuals who lied about their military service.

Chafets implausibly claims that Obama sent "a sign to his African American base" at WHCA dinner

In a section addressing the 2009 White House Correspondents Association (WHCA) dinner, at which comedienne Wanda Sykes was the featured entertainer, Chafets claims that Obama, in sitting at the dais while Sykes was performing, was sending "a sign to his African American base ... that the president was not dropping hot sauce for mayonnaise." From Page 165:

This time the comedian-in-residence was Wanda Sykes. It was an interesting choice. Sykes is a black, openly-lesbian comedienne who works in the misanthropic style of the great Jackie "Moms" Mabley. Obama's presence on the dais with her was a sign to his African American base -- much louder and bolder than "we straight" -- that the president was not dropping hot sauce for mayonnaise.

Yet Obama was on the dais because that's where the president sits at the WHCA dinner, not because he was sending "a sign." Additionally, it was the WHCA -- not the White House -- that asked Sykes to perform. A February 12, 2009, Associated Press article reported that AP reporter and WHCA president Jennifer Loven "chose Sykes because of her fresh style and engaging stage presence."

Chafets gushes over Limbaugh

Chafets showers praise on Limbaugh throughout the book. The following are a few examples:

"Limbaughesque." From Page 87:

The spectacular Republican gains of 1994 had an obvious influence on the Clinton agenda. The Democrats no longer controlled Congress, and both the president and the Congress had to consider the election of 1996 in light of what had happened. Clinton's liberal agenda slid toward the center. Even before the 1994 election, he signed the Limbaughesque Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act, which built prisons, expanded the death penalty to dozens of federal offenses, and provided funding for one hundred thousand local cops.

Muhammad Rush. From Page 8:

[Muhammad] Ali was also controversial and dead serious about his political beliefs. He became a Black Muslim when it was dangerously unpopular to do so, and he paid for it. He was willing to face prison time rather than serve in a war he didn't support. And yet, despite it all, white reporters couldn't quite take him seriously. When he said alarmingly incorrect things, like calling Joe Louis an Uncle Tom, dubbing his fight with George Foreman in Zaire "the rumble in the jungle," or mocking Joe Frazier as a gorilla, they thought it might be just part of the act. He couldn't really mean those things, could he?

Limbaugh is the Ali of the air, the all-knowing, all-seeing Maha Rishi who defeats his enemies in intellectual combat with half his brain tied behind his back, "just to make it fair." He also happens to be the most important and influential conservative in the country, the one indispensable Republican voice. This can be confusing, which is the way Limbaugh wants it.

Logic vs. good lines. From Pages 114-115:

Limbaugh's idea of a sufficiently relaxed president is Dwight Eisenhower. "Ike was great. When he found out he couldn't shoot Congress like he had Germans, he went to Augusta and played golf." Of course, Eisenhower had been exactly the kind of moderate, compromising Republican that Rush despised, but I didn't mention that. Sometimes you don't want to let logic stand in the way of a good line.

Professional man of substance. From Page 121:

I actually hadn't been wondering why he had so many cars. Rich people tend not to stint on transportation. What I did wonder is why all of them were black. He told me that he likes black cars, which made a kind of sense. Limbaugh is old-fashioned, even elegant, in his personal furnishing. Flashy cars are for hip-hop artists and arrivistes; professional men of substance ride in dignified black automobiles.

Biting and sophisticated political satirist. From Page 204:

Limbaugh is a biting and sophisticated political satirist whose own taste in humor runs to mother-in-law jokes told by Borsht Belt tummlers like Myron Cohen to Professor Corey.  

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    • Author by cpinva (May 25, 2010 12:03 am ET)
      12 1
      no doubt your critique is correct. no doubt, it doesn't matter. limbaugh's fanboys, and those who would actually purchase this tome aren't interested in facts. they tune in to hear their own predjudices reinforced, and that's what he gives them.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by jcelia (May 25, 2010 1:31 pm ET)
        6  
        Yes, but I still give MMFA kudos for putting it all together. Maybe someone out there in Rush land will come across it and reconsider.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by Andy Kreiss (May 25, 2010 1:18 am ET)
      22  
      Oh, this sh*t is hilarious.

      Limbaugh is the Ali of the air, the all-knowing, all-seeing Maha Rishi who defeats his enemies in intellectual combat with half his brain tied behind his back, "just to make it fair."


      His enemies ? Crude strawmen and people who aren't there to defend themselves? I don't remember Muhammud Ali ever boxing a young girl dressed up as Joe Frazier, or sitting in a room by himself explaining how he could beat up somebody.

      Limbaugh is a biting and sophisticated political satirist


      I'll agree that he bites, but Boss Hogg is about as sophisticated as a spatula.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by worrierking (May 25, 2010 8:49 am ET)
        11  
        "No Viet Cong ever called me fatass."

        - Rush Limbaugh
        Report Abuse
        • Author by jediknight65 (May 25, 2010 9:23 am ET)
          5  
          like he would know what one looked like....
          Report Abuse
        • Author by coldteablues19577325 (May 25, 2010 11:33 am ET)
          6  
          ""No Viet Cong ever called me fatass."

          - Rush Limbaugh
          " --worrierking


          Errrrrrmmmmmmm, Rush, you ninny, wouldn't you have had to have been in country in order for a Viet Cong to have called you fat s$$? Something tells me that you played by the same rules as Gingrich, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Starr, etc. and opted out for deferrment.

          Ummmmmm, something about a cyst on your fat a$$ wasn't it? Oh, and an old high school knee injury. How's that golf game going?
          Report Abuse
    • Author by magnolialover (May 25, 2010 8:04 am ET)
      13  
      Heard this guy being interviewed on NPR this morning. What a joke. This is just a gushing fanboy homage to Limbaugh. It's not objective by any reasonable assertions. Which, I guess, is fine. It happens.

      When the history of Rush is written, the REAL history, whoever writes that book, it won't be kind.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 1:30 pm ET)
        4  
        Our local paper, The Oregonian, carried a column by this guy on Sunday. It's incredible that they publish columns by Paul Krugman and Joe Conason, then find this drivel as some kind of balance.

        Fact-based opion vs. toxic sludge...oh yeah, that's equivalent. Sheesh.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by nerzog (May 25, 2010 9:02 am ET)
      5  
      I knew this book was a sycophantic reach-around when I saw the cover. Sometimes, you can judge a book by its cover.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by nerzog (May 25, 2010 9:06 am ET)
      11  
      Limbaugh is old-fashioned, even elegant, in his personal furnishing.


      Oh, so that explains why he paid millions for a foppish, tastelessly gaudy apartment.

      [http://www.farleftside.com/misc/2010/limbaughs-house.jpg]

      Report Abuse
      • Author by usp (May 25, 2010 9:30 am ET)
        11  
        hey wait, isn't that "Mary Worth's" NYC apartment?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by wwjbd (May 25, 2010 11:28 am ET)
        6 16
        Are you jealous?
        Cause I know Al Gore aint.
        Ya seen his new pad? $9,000,000. Ocean Front.

        But don't forget: Gore stated that "every penny that I have made, I have put right into a nonprofit"

        And why Ocean front when his movie said the ocean levels are going to rise?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by Tbone Slickens (May 25, 2010 12:50 pm ET)
          3 14
          Now, now...you're going to destroy Gore's carefully crafted meme that he lives on an energy hog plantation in Tennessee!
          Report Abuse
          • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 1:36 pm ET)
            11  
            Oh yes, the Al Gore distraction. You do know that that quote referred to any profits from his work to address climate change, right?

            He has other sources of income and doesn't lecture people about living in voluntary poverty, but the right wing attack machine decided to demonize him as a distraction for anti-reality folks.

            Limpballs just carries water for the distractors.
            Report Abuse
            • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 2:00 pm ET)
              10 1
              Fact: Gore donates all of the proceeds from both the book and DVD of An Inconvenient Truth to environmental causes. He also donated 100% of his Nobel Peace Prize award as well as the salary from his venture capital firm, Kleiner Perkins Caulfield & Byers, to the Alliance for Climate Protection.
              http://www.ecosalon.com/top-10-global-warming-denier-arguments-debunked-part-1/
              Report Abuse
            • Author by wwjbd (May 25, 2010 3:04 pm ET)
              1 6
              Hardly a distraction. He was exhibit #8 in mmfa's case.
              Al Gore doesn't lecture people about "reducing their carbon footprint" aka "living in voluntary poverty"?

              None of the mmfa clones have answered this:
              When his movie clearly shows that his new property will be under water, why did he buy there? Does he not believe his movie or is he just renting?
              Report Abuse
              • Author by MiddleLeft (May 25, 2010 3:59 pm ET)
                8 1
                RE: Gores new property

                When his movie clearly shows that his new property will be under water, why did he buy there? Does he not believe his movie or is he just renting?

                There is no address in Montecito, CA that is not more than 200 feet above seal level. It's an "ocean view" not beach front property. When most of Florida is under water, Al's carpet will still be dry.

                Report Abuse
                • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 4:28 pm ET)
                  6  
                  Many thanks for noting that.

                  Additionally, reducing one's carbon footprint is NOT the same thing at all to living in voluntary poverty.
                  Report Abuse
        • Author by sjw (May 25, 2010 1:41 pm ET)
          7 1
          And what does this have to do with the Boss Hog lovefest? Oh, that's right, absolutely nothing!

          Don't worry, you can always try out for the kindergarten JV debate team...
          Report Abuse
        • Author by mikehuck1976 (May 25, 2010 4:48 pm ET)
          5  
          So, you are extremely jealous of Al Gore's wealth? Interesting how that cognitive dissonance never even occurred to you. Truly fascinating.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by DAWUSS (May 25, 2010 9:16 am ET)
      5  
      And somehow this book will still climb to #1 on multiple bestseller lists...
      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (May 25, 2010 9:29 am ET)
        5  
        I'd be surprised if it isn't already.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by jediknight65 (May 25, 2010 9:58 am ET)
        8  
        because newsmax and human events will buy up all the copies they can and sell them at deep discounts. maybe even throw in some gold to go with it.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by nerzog (May 25, 2010 10:10 am ET)
          8  
          Or give them away as premiums for subscribing to something.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by skatscan5624 (May 25, 2010 2:05 pm ET)
            3  
            and twelve copies will be left outside the apartment for anyone to grab. The problem with this strategy is that he may return to find 16 copies outside his door.
            Report Abuse
    • Author by NiceguyEddie (May 25, 2010 9:16 am ET)
      17  
      I once read that "The people who worship Ayn Rand are the ones who don't understand George Orwell."

      Apparently the people who worship Rush Limbaugh are the ones who don't really understand anything.

      --------------------------------------------------
      This just makes me sick. Chafet's is such a whore. What a useless, meaningless and uneccessary piece of garbage he's created.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by RiffRabbit (May 25, 2010 10:28 am ET)
        8  
        People who worship power in general bother me. That's why I enjoy George Orwell and agree that this guy is full of it.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by AB-001 (May 25, 2010 9:54 am ET)
      8  
      Is any of this really a surprise?

      Two predictions:

      1. Soon to be at the top of many bestseller lists (if not already there)thanks to bulk buying by the usual suspects and dittoheads eager to read the tome

      2. Soon to be heavily stocked on a remainder book shelf in a Borders or Barnes & Noble (or other store) near you.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Major Tom (May 25, 2010 9:55 am ET)
      11 3
      Sickening. In any other country on the planet he would be in prison, or seen as another Adolph Hitler wannabe. America home to Glenn Beck, and Rush Limbaugh. Canada is looking better and better.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 10:02 am ET)
        6 16
        Geez Private Tom, a little harsh don't ya think? In jail for what? Good luck up North though.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by Major Tom (May 25, 2010 11:02 am ET)
          14 3
          Lying to the American people for the sake of political gain; perpetrating countless hoaxes on the citizenry with carfully crafted propaganda to delegitimize elected leaders in order to game the system to benifit private industry to the detriment of greater society. But I guess you think it's all in good fun right? Especially if it gets your side elected.

          btw you misspelled midget.
          Report Abuse
        • Author by DellDolly (May 25, 2010 3:13 pm ET)
          2 5
          This guy is an old troll with a new name. Not sure which one - it doesn't matter. What matters is that he's trying to recreate himself to get some more negative attention.

          Please look out for this name, and don't feed the returning troll when he makes troll posts.

          A troll post is one that is NOT intended to further the discussion, and is not emblematic of someone interested in participating in a fair and reasoned debate.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 9:58 am ET)
      6 19
      Talk about minutiae! Gimmie a break! A few very minor things out of thousands of hours of broadcast in over 20 years! If only MMFA could be as accurate.

      Liberals will never understand Rush. He is simply above your pay grades. But it's a blast how he gets under your skin!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by nerzog (May 25, 2010 10:11 am ET)
        20 1
        You forgot the sarcasm button... oh, wait.... you're f***ing serious?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by jediknight65 (May 25, 2010 10:15 am ET)
        14 3
        rush has never been acurate. only in the sense that he hates and is a bigot is he accurate. and your defense of his actions is pathetic.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by magnolialover (May 25, 2010 10:32 am ET)
        14 3
        We don't understand Rush? Hmm, I think we understand him very well as a lying POS. He seldom, if ever, tells the truth about, well, anything. Very few minor things? You are apparently a dittobot, who doesn't understand that just because Rush told you something, doesn't mean it is true. Actually, very little of what Rush says, is ever true.

        Report Abuse
      • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (May 25, 2010 10:40 am ET)
        14 5
        We understand Rush completely.

        Rush is a big fat liar.

        He gets paid his millions for his ability to talk dimwitted authoritarian worshippers (raise your hand, "onementalgiant") into voting for people (Republicans) who are going to take these same voters (along with the rest of the country that doesn't fit the description "tycoon class") for every penny they've got.
        ~
        Report Abuse
        • Author by magnolialover (May 25, 2010 10:44 am ET)
          15 1
          The fact that his most loyal fans call THEMSELVES Dittoheads is explanation enough of the people who listen to him.

          As in, they don't question, well, anything. They just agree, and nod along with Rush as he runs through all of his rhetoric day after day. Most of it, false, and misinformed.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by skatscan5624 (May 25, 2010 2:11 pm ET)
            7 1
            Ditto, Rush was created because his listeners are unemployed losers who are too lazy to give coherent kudos to him.
            Report Abuse
        • Author by aerdna (May 25, 2010 2:21 pm ET)
          5  
          THAT was a pretty good book by Senator Al Franken (before he was a senator)
          Report Abuse
        • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 6:07 pm ET)
            4
          "Rush is a big fat liar."

          I know you are, but what am I?

          or

          Na, na, na, na, na, naaaaaa!
          Report Abuse
          • Author by political_left-religious_right (May 26, 2010 12:46 pm ET)
            2  
            "Go back to reform school, you little nose-picker." (Compliments of W.C. Fields)
            Report Abuse
      • Author by eweston8542983 (May 25, 2010 10:43 am ET)
        9 2
        Limbic represents the toxicity and reach of rightwing discourse. Who among his many targets does he consider worthy of having a legitimate opinion, or a public voice? He's been short on national voices of opposition for too much of his career.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mattcable250650 (May 25, 2010 11:06 am ET)
        8 2
        Nothing to "understand." Limbaugh is a Republican Party whip, doing unofficially on the outside what Eric Cantor does, officially, on the inside. He "gets under our skin" because moronic idiots in the traditional press corps (Palin's "lamestream media") take him seriously as someone who has something intelligent to say. We're FAR more upset with them than we'll ever be with Limbaugh. Like a scorpion, Limbaugh does what he does because, well, he's a scorpion.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mattcable250650 (May 25, 2010 11:06 am ET)
        5  
        Nothing to "understand." Limbaugh is a Republican Party whip, doing unofficially on the outside what Eric Cantor does, officially, on the inside. He "gets under our skin" because moronic idiots in the traditional press corps (Palin's "lamestream media") take him seriously as someone who has something intelligent to say. We're FAR more upset with them than we'll ever be with Limbaugh. Like a scorpion, Limbaugh does what he does because, well, he's a scorpion.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by markslp7013 (May 25, 2010 11:14 am ET)
        12 1
        "Talk about minutiae! Gimmie a break! A few very minor things out of thousands of hours of broadcast in over 20 years!"

        You obviously don't listen to Rush. He says the same thing every day, so even a few 'minor things' are representative of his daily spewing. I listen to Rush just about daily (I have to do it in small doses so I don't lose my lunch!) and his show is typically:

        This is who has talked about me.

        Obama, the dems, and the libs are evil, un-patriotic, hate the military and are anti-capitalism.

        Obama is a man-child or some variation thereof.

        PMS-NBC, the NY Times, etc are left-wing liberal wackos.

        If I can work in a Clinton reference in, usually with sexual innuendo, I will.

        Feminazis, environmentalist-wackos, Barack the magic negro, socialists, communists, fascists, or whatever, etc.

        I'm sure I've forgotten something, but that pretty much sums it up.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 4:40 pm ET)
            4
          So where's Rush wrong markslip? Every one of your points are ligit.
          Report Abuse
        • Author by internet soldier (May 26, 2010 6:32 am ET)
          4  
          You obviously don't listen to Rush. He says the same thing every day, so even a few 'minor things' are representative of his daily spewing.


          Markslip, I think you're missing something about omg; he thinks these Limbaugh teachings are deep, complex thoughts that require that require great mental effort to grasp. Because Rush's daily round of playground namecalling seems irrudite to omg, omg thinks he's a genius for understanding it, and the fact that we liberals don't appreciate Rush's brilliance means we just don't understand El Rushbo's deep, challenging lectures.
          Report Abuse
      • Author by coldteablues19577325 (May 25, 2010 12:00 pm ET)
        8 3
        "Talk about minutiae! Gimmie a break! A few very minor things out of thousands of hours of broadcast in over 20 years! If only MMFA could be as accurate.

        Liberals will never understand Rush. He is simply above your pay grades. But it's a blast how he gets under your skin!" --onementalgiant


        Hahahahahahahahahahahaha!

        This is the best laugh I've had in days. I don't know which is funnier ... the post or your screen name.

        Hahahahahahahahahahahaha!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by DellDolly (May 25, 2010 1:55 pm ET)
        4 2
        This is an old troll with a new name - please don't feed the troll!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by peebs755 (May 25, 2010 2:12 pm ET)
        3  
        onementalgiant (not!) is a pretty funny guy in spite of himself.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 4:43 pm ET)
            3
          Thank you peebs for your kind compliment about me!
          Report Abuse
    • Author by jbrantow (May 25, 2010 10:44 am ET)
      14  
      which chapter chronicles the draft dodgers illegal oxycontin partying and cigar box money carrier? Does the maid get any quotes?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 11:05 am ET)
      3 17
      As I anticipated, here come the snobby, condescending, and profane remarks from the "oh so tolerate" liberals! You folks are so predictable.

      And by the way, Rush has been proven to be accurate 99% of the time.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by historygeek001 (May 25, 2010 11:31 am ET)
        13 1
        "And by the way, Rush has been proven to be accurate 99% of the time."

        No, he hasn't. He's been proven to be a liar so often that claiming otherwise is a joke and only illustrates your lack of critical thinking skills. Here's a hint: MMFA quotes Rush in context and illustrates the falsehoods in what he says every day. Follow the links. I understand that as a dittohead you deliberately ignore anything with which you disagree, but expecting other people to go along with your delusions is just pathetic.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by HardJustice (May 25, 2010 11:33 am ET)
        11 1
        Proven by whom? Where are your facts to back up this claim of 99%? Cite your sources.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by congero6189599 (May 25, 2010 11:52 am ET)
          9  
          I don't think you will get a reply from mentalmidget other than you folks are so predictable and Rush is right 99% of the time. So predictable.
          Report Abuse
        • Author by skatscan5624 (May 25, 2010 2:13 pm ET)
          6  
          By Rush himself dontcha know. And since he's right 99% of the time he must be right about being right 99% of the time.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by HardJustice (May 25, 2010 5:45 pm ET)
            5 1
            Rush likes to claim that they (dems and libs) can't beat him on ideas. Yet he never actually lets anyone challenge his ideas. Sure, he'll let Hannity or Wallace pitch softball questions (tee-ball, actually) but Rush will never EVER have a face-to-face debate with a real opponent.

            His ideals are flawed. His is factually bankrupt. He will never debate the likes of Maddow, Krugmann, or (as annoying as I find him (Olbermann). Or even minor players like my personal favorite - Joe Lyles. Limbaugh is a coward. Instead he lets his dittoheads fight his battles for him. And when they get trounced they just run back to their radios to hear him tell them they're right.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by robbo24 (May 25, 2010 11:34 am ET)
        8  
        Oh, sure, 99% of all people strung out on oxycontin believe Rush is accurate.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by New Frontier (May 25, 2010 11:43 am ET)
        8  
        As I anticipated, here come the snobby, condescending, and profane remarks...
        Yes, Limbaugh has been dishing out the hatred and intolerance to liberals every day for the past 20 years, and... Oh, hold on a minute, I didn't finish reading your comment:

        from the "oh so tolerate" liberals!
        Huh???? WTF???!!?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 4:51 pm ET)
            4
          And also thanks to New Frontier for not understanding a liberal's ability to be tolerant (I assume he would NEVER be petty enough to criticize one for an obvious typo).
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Old_Benjamin (May 25, 2010 5:27 pm ET)
            5  
            I suggest you stop digging - I don't think NF was critizing your spelling, just your stupidity.

            Or maybe that's just the way I read it.
            Report Abuse
          • Author by Johaely (May 25, 2010 8:09 pm ET)
            2  
            apparently your idea of tolerance is to take evry insult with a smile.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by coldteablues19577325 (May 25, 2010 12:03 pm ET)
        7  
        "And by the way, Rush has been proven to be accurate 99% of the time." --onementalgiant

        Proof please ... oh wait, that's your opinion right, and that's ALL the prove we need.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by congero6189599 (May 25, 2010 12:15 pm ET)
        8 1
        Duh... it is predictable that when you make dumb,uninformed and obviously stupid comments you will receive comments calling you dumb,uninformed and stupid. Great observation Sherlock or is it dittohead?

        Maybe in your world you can go around saying stuff like Rush is right 99% of the time without back-up but you rightfully get called on it here. You can believe what you like but without facts to back them up it's just your fantasies. Sorry I don't believe in fairytales and if you actually thought Rush was speaking the truth as opposed to speaking to what YOU wanted to hear ,you'd present the facts and let them be scrutinized and argued here. I know it's alot easier to call names and charge others with intolerance then present an argument.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by pilotx (May 26, 2010 11:54 pm ET)
          2  
          I guess that 1% was when he said Sen. Sherrod Brown was a Black man because in his racist mind only a person of color could be named Sherrod. I had to stop listening to him that day because of his bigotry and inability to admit when he was wrong.
          Report Abuse
      • Author by sjw (May 25, 2010 1:50 pm ET)
        8 1
        Now, now - give this guy a break. He obviously has dain bramage - he transposed two letters in his name and added an extraneous "I". It really is spelled "onementalgnat" (a cautionary tale of what listening to Boss Hogg does to your brain).

        Question - when you are having a conservation with an adult, do you have to wear a red triangle road sign? You know, for slow moving vehicles?

        Only in some alternate reality is Rush 99% accurate.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by peebs755 (May 25, 2010 2:15 pm ET)
        7  
        And by the way, Rush has been proven to be accurate 99% of the time.

        Now THAT'S really funny. Like I said, in spite of yourself.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by ConstanceRifleII (May 25, 2010 2:19 pm ET)
        5  

        And by the way, Rush has been proven to be accurate 99% of the time.


        Uhm...that's according to Rush, who you obviously do not listen to carefully enough, because (again, according to him) he's right 99.5% of the time. Snerdley always backs him up on that.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by DellDolly (May 25, 2010 3:15 pm ET)
        2 3
        As I anticipated, here come the snobby, condescending, and profane remarks from the "oh so tolerate" liberals! You folks are so predictable.

        --- OneMentalGiant

        This troll poster is a rerun of some old screen name.

        As such, his dishonest post which suggests that he has NOT previously posted here, and therefore only "anticipated" that we'd react to his nonsense in this way, is very, very hypocritical on his part.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by mattcable250650 (May 25, 2010 11:08 am ET)
      8  
      Limbaugh is polite to his callers who are, in any case, prescreened.
      Very interesting to see this admitted so frankly. I remember back in the 1990s, this was a controversy.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by coldteablues19577325 (May 25, 2010 11:15 am ET)
      10 1
      Sadly, I doubt that Samuel Clemens is rolling around in his grave laughing. Oh, wait, perhaps he is ... at the stupidity of anyone classing Limbaugh as a satirist. Oh, the irony of it all!
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Bulletproof Air (May 25, 2010 11:44 am ET)
      9 1
      I don't understand the point of the book.....

      Just to defend the extreme right?

      What's the deal with these wingnuts and their constant needs to be involved in a 24/7 self pep-talk?!!


      It's almost like they need a reason to justify the misinformation they are knowingly spreading.....
      Report Abuse
    • Author by draftedin68 (May 25, 2010 12:44 pm ET)
      8  
      Eric & Simon,

      What a magnificent piece!

      Please e-mail this to every member of the Corporate Controlled Media you have in your address books.

      There's a chance (slim, but still...) that one of them may still have an ember of journalistic integrity still smoldering within their souls and their conscience may bring them to expose this hate-spewing liar for what he is.

      It's worth a shot.

      Again, great work!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by goshzilla (May 25, 2010 12:49 pm ET)
      6 2
      There isn't really anything we need to know about Ruch Limbaugh's biography, so instead I'll just quote Roger Ebert's film review of Dice Rules.

      "Dice Rules" is one of the most appalling movies I have ever seen. It could not be more damaging to the career of Andrew Dice Clay if it had been made as a documentary by someone who hated him. The fact that Clay apparently thinks this movie is worth seeing is revealing and sad, indicating that he not only lacks a sense of humor, but also ordinary human decency.

      ...Of course any subject can theoretically be made funny, but just to stand and point is not the same thing as developing a humorous point of view.

      he is simply pointing, and making fun, like a playground bully.

      He has many other targets. The handicapped. The ill.


      Minorities. Women. Homosexuals. Anyone, in fact, who is not exactly like Andrew Dice Clay is fair game for his cruel attacks.


      "Dice Rules" was filmed in concert (what a word) at Madison Square Garden, which the comedian was able to fill two nights in a row. It is eerie, watching the shots of the audience. You never see anyone just plain laughing, as if they'd heard something that was funny. You see, instead, behavior more appropriate at a fascist rally, as his fans stick their fists in the air and chant his name as if he were making some kind of statement for them.

      Comedians have long been a lightning rod for society, drawing down the dangers and grounding them. Some of the most brilliant comics of recent years - Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor, George Carlin - have dealt with taboo words and concepts. But they bring insight and an attitude to them. They help us see how we regard them. They provide a form of therapy, of comic relief. Not Clay. Strutting and sneering, lacking the graceful timing of the great stand-up talents, reciting his words woodenly, he creates a portrait of the comedian as sociopath.


      Fits Rush Limbaugh to a perfect T.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by The_Cat (May 25, 2010 1:38 pm ET)
        7  
        Actually, I was just thinking, based on this posted critique of Dice Rules, that Glenn Beck is what you get if you take Andrew Dice Clay as a leader rather than a comedian. Of course, it also fits Limbaugh to a 'T' as well. Excellent post!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 1:49 pm ET)
        6  
        Now that is spot on. Thanks.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by tman418 (May 25, 2010 1:38 pm ET)
      5  
      Limbaugh's biographer will then claim that Limbaugh doesn't mock people with Parkinson's disease.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by union (May 25, 2010 2:14 pm ET)
      4  
      This book is going to s*ck. I bet the library carries a bunch of copies, just like they do of that Glenn Beck cr*p. The shelves will probably fall off from sheer depression.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by The_Cat (May 25, 2010 2:26 pm ET)
      5  
      This should've occurred to me much sooner, but here it is now, for what it's worth. Of COURSE this book was going to be full of lies and distortions! Look at the TITLE! Army of one? One what? One butt-boil-flavored chickenhawk? Limbaugh was too big a coward to ever truly serve his country. Too fwightened to put his butt on the line.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by eekeller (May 25, 2010 2:37 pm ET)
      5  
      "An Army of One" by Zev Chafets, or "Why I gave Rush a Public BJ."
      Report Abuse
    • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 6:57 pm ET)
        4
      Here's the proof everyone has been asking about regarding Rush's accuracy. Read it and weep:

      The Rush Limbaugh Show is the most listened to radio talk show in America, broadcast on over 600 radio stations nationwide. It is hosted by America's Anchorman, Rush Limbaugh, also known as: America's Truth Detector; the Doctor of Democracy; the Most Dangerous Man in America; the All-Knowing, All-Sensing, All-Everything Maha Rushie; defender of motherhood, protector of fatherhood and an all-around good guy.

      There is a "consensus" among the American people, who have made this the most listened to program, that it is also the most accurate, most right, and most correct.
      People who disagree with this are Rush Deniers.

      http://www.rushlimbaugh.com/home/about_the_show.guest.html
      Report Abuse
      • Author by mary59 (May 25, 2010 7:13 pm ET)
        6  
        Now that's funny! Proof, from his own web site, no less.
        Thanx for the laugh.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by onementalgiant (May 25, 2010 8:13 pm ET)
          1 2
          You're welcome! I figured I'd get a few chuckles outta that.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by Andy Kreiss (May 25, 2010 8:49 pm ET)
            3  
            So you were just kidding the whole time ? Was that "satire" ? I'd suggest you refer to Poe's Law.
            Report Abuse
      • Author by HardJustice (May 25, 2010 11:29 pm ET)
        3  
        So Rush is right because his show is popular?

        FAIL
        Report Abuse
    • Author by johnbrown (May 25, 2010 7:52 pm ET)
      8 1
      I think Al Franken's Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot is a more accurate read.I hear people dismiss Limbaugh as a comedian or an entertainer but to me he is a hate monger who exploits well meaning peoples fears for his own profit and fools them into voting against their best economic interests.Why the "mainstream" media has given him a free pass all these years is a mystery to me.
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      • Author by goshzilla (May 26, 2010 1:10 pm ET)
        3  
        Being a comedian, or an entertainer doesn't make him immune to criticism. One could easily criticize his brand of humor and demonstrate why it fails to be funny.
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