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Limbaugh Ranks Among Conservative Greats
Human Events ^ | The Week of December 3, 2001 | Mark R. Levin

Posted on 11/30/2001 12:24:12 PM PST by Jean S

As far as I’m concerned, the giants of modern day conservatism are William Buckley, Milton Friedman, Ronald Reagan, and Rush Limbaugh. While much has been said and written about the contributions of the first three men, not enough attention has been paid to Rush’s accomplishments.

Yet today Rush’s influence on the conservative movement and the public debate is unparalleled. He has a unique ability to move from issue to issue, from the complex to the every day, with uncommon ease.

On any given day, Rush provides his 20 million listeners with insight into a wide variety of subjects.

During the first hour of a three-hour program, he might discuss the principles of America’s founding with specific references to the Declaration of Independence and the Revolutionary War, the Articles of Confederation, the Federalist Papers and the U.S. Constitution, to the Civil War, the New Deal, World War II and the Civil Rights movement.

In the second hour he might talk about the federal budget and government spending, entitlement programs, capitalism, the Federal Reserve and supply-side economics.

In the third hour, he might address cultural issues, the environment, the feminist movement, politics, an injustice in some part of the world, or share a personal experience.

At all times, Rush is well prepared, thought-provoking and entertaining. And the common theme that underlies all he discusses, and to which he is committed, is an abiding belief in individual liberty, limited government, and the rule of law—the three cornerstones of our republic.

Impeachment: Rush was a guiding light during Bill Clinton’s impeachment. Despite the fact that this was only the second presidential impeachment in American history, Rush was able to walk his listeners through some of the most arcane issues of constitutional precedent and congressional procedure.

When some contended that Clinton’s offenses were not "high crimes and misdemeanors," Rush proved them wrong. When certain members of Congress and even some conservative pundits were urging the Senate to forgo an impeachment trial for a resolution of censure, Rush was the most outspoken opponent of this extra-constitutional ploy. To this day, Rush admonishes the Senate for failing to conduct a serious trial and thereby failing to uphold its constitutional responsibility.

Sen. John McCain: When John McCain’s presidential candidacy was gaining legs, with the mainstream media’s support, after a primary victory over George W. Bush in New Hampshire, Rush was both thoughtful and tenacious in his opposition to McCain’s brand of Republicanism. McCain, he pointed out, backed numerous liberal policies, from so-called campaign-finance reform to opposing serious tax cuts. Rush also challenged McCain’s frontal assault on the religious right and the National Rifle Association, and his campaign’s smear tactics in South Carolina and Michigan.

Gov. George W. Bush: While Rush made no apologies for his preference for George Bush, he was, as always, intellectually honest in his analysis of Bush’s positions.

During an early campaign speech in New York, for example, Bush made a derogatory reference to Robert Bork. Rush was the first to criticize Bush for seeking political capital at the expense of a renowned conservative. Bush never repeated the mistake.

Presidential Recount: The Bush-Gore presidential race proved to be one of the most controversial, complicated and constitutionally challenging elections in U.S. history. In the five weeks following election day—while trial lawyers, state and federal courts, and the media grappled with the election process—Rush was a voice of clarity helping his listeners work their way through a maze of historical, legal and political questions.

Rush described the intricacies of the Electoral College, the role of the Florida legislature as the final authority in determining the awarding of the state’s electoral votes under Article II of the U.S. Constitution, and the limitations of judicial review (especially by the rogue Florida Supreme Court). And Rush was not altogether comfortable with the U.S. Supreme Court’s reliance on the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause in its final ruling—a view he shared with his audience.

Sen. Thomas Daschle: Rush was the first to label Sen. Tom Daschle (D-.S.D.) "the illegitimate Senate majority leader" when Daschle seized the leader’s position from Trent Lott by persuading Vermont’s Jim Jeffords, who had just been reelected as a Republican, to leave the GOP in exchange for a committee chairmanship and support for continuing milk price supports. Rush has also been one of the most effective counterweights to Daschle’s dishonest rhetoric and liberal agenda by denouncing his efforts to thwart Bush’s tax-cut plan, judicial nominations, energy bill and—prior to September 11—increased defense spending.

Rep. Bill Thomas: Rush was a vocal critic last spring of the timidity of the GOP House tax-cut plan, authored by Ways and Means Committee Chairman Bill Thomas (R.-Calif.). Thomas, having been cowed by the class warfare propaganda of the Democrats, rejected conservative efforts to cut retroactively all income tax rates—including those in the higher brackets.

Such was the outcry over Thomas’s plan after Rush questioned it that the chairman called Rush on the air in a futile attempt to defend his position. Rush politely yet persuasively dismantled the congressman’s arguments. No one has been more consistent and vocal in advocating tax cuts than Rush.

Terrorism: The Bush Administration has been attacked for its antiterrorism policies by certain conservatives and liberals. First, after only a few weeks of battle, the armchair generals complained that the President had not introduced thousands of ground troops into Afghanistan, a move they claimed was necessary to win the war. Rush insisted otherwise, arguing that the U.S. military had destroyed most of the Taliban and al Qaeda’s infrastructure in short order, that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and his commanders were highly experienced warriors who knew what they were doing and, besides, that the U.S. could not support such a large deployment so early in the campaign because it lacked forward bases in the region for launching such an operation.

Shortly thereafter, the U.S. began ratcheting up its bombing runs and increasing coordination with the Northern Alliance. The Taliban and al Qaeda forces have been on the run ever since. The armchair generals’ defeatism was misguided, just as Rush had said. Others are now questioning Bush’s order reestablishing military commissions to try non-citizen combatants (terrorists) and the administration’s detention of several hundred aliens who either have ties to al Qaeda or have violated federal law. Again, Rush has been at the forefront of this debate. Both on his radio program and in a widely applauded Washington Post op-ed piece, Rush described the historical and legal justifications for the President’s actions.

Moreover, Rush dared to tread where others would not. Both on the radio and in a Wall Street Journal op-ed, he exposed the failure of the Clinton Administration to take effective steps in response to repeated acts of terrorism committed by this same al Qaeda network, dating back to 1993 and the original bombing of the World Trade Center. Rush confuted Clinton and his minions who had been appearing on television and in print rewriting the record of their miserable failures.

With a combination of seriousness and humor, Rush has been devastating in his commentaries on a host of other subjects: the radical environmental movement ("environmental wackos"), the extremist feminist movement ("feminazis"), campaign-finance reformers ("anti-free speech crowd"), gun-control advocates ("gun confiscation advocates"), the trial lawyers, the anti-tobacco lobby, the teachers’ unions, political correctness, abortion, cloning and stem cell research, and on and on.

Rush’s success is not due solely to his knowledge and intellect. He has also succeeded because his audience identifies with, and relates to him. As Rush likes to say, he confirms what his listeners and so many Americans believe in a time when tradition and common sense are often turned on their heads. He is a voice of reason and sanity to many.

And unlike many in his profession, Rush does not use his golden "Excellence In Broadcasting" microphone to ridicule or abuse his callers in order to make himself look clever. He is positive, polite, respectful and a gentleman. He not only tolerates dissent, but liberals are given preference when they call his show.

As someone who is privileged to count him as a good friend, I can attest that Rush is selfless, considerate and compassionate. He’s a genuine article. I marvel at his strength and fortitude in dealing with his sudden hearing loss. What would have devastated most people has energized him. I have no doubt that, as Rush likes to say with tongue in cheek, his talent is on loan from God. But I know for a fact that his character comes from the heart.


TOPICS: Editorial; Politics/Elections
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To: gorush
Rush is great, but Pat Buchanan is 'Mr Conservative'. He belongs on the top of the list!
41 posted on 11/30/2001 3:59:22 PM PST by duckln
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To: JeanS
Impeachment: Rush was a guiding light during Bill Clinton’s impeachment

Levin is in spin mode here, all I heard Rush say through it all was that, if 'you can't take down the king', take a pass. Hyde, bless his heart said it he had to be impeached whether we had the Senate votes to convict or not.

Check the record, Rush was against the house impeaching Clinton, he didn't think they would convict, and on that he was right.

42 posted on 11/30/2001 4:07:48 PM PST by duckln
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To: JeanS
Long before I was ever interested in the web, I listened to talk radio- Rush, Ken Hamblin, the 2 Mikes ( Reagan & Medved ), Neil Boortz- I ran a wrecker service, and between the too-few calls & fixing the darn truck, I had a lot of idle time for listening.

Several times I've lost web access due to Win 95 crashes, ISP problems, etc., and I still find talk radio "the poor man's Internet"- an oasis of rationality and thoughtful comment in the desert of the major media.

People forget that many folks have little exposure to "our way of thinking" until they hear someone like Rush expound on it.

43 posted on 11/30/2001 4:12:00 PM PST by backhoe
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To: veronica
"Mega-dittos and an EIB bump for the all-knowing all-seeing Maha Rushie. My guru. Long may he prosper and have all of his hearing returned when he has his surgery."

. . .and my grateful 'Mega-dittos' added to your 'mega-dittos' for Rush. . .

. . .wonderful of Mark Levin to note his Rush's talents and contributions. . .

44 posted on 11/30/2001 4:12:15 PM PST by cricket
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To: duckln
"Levin is in spin mode here, all I heard Rush say through it all was that, if 'you can't take down the king', take a pass."

. . .have you had yourself checked lately for 'mind deafness'?

Sounds like you have all the symptoms. . .

45 posted on 11/30/2001 4:14:19 PM PST by cricket
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To: JeanS
Rush deserves enormous recognition for the voice he has given conservatives. That voice has prevented those leaning left from marginalizing the voice of the right, and Rush has been great to push in a way that makes conservatism mainstream, not the fringe the opposition would rather make us to be.

Sometimes he frustrates me, sometimes he is too good natured when I want him to be angry, sometimes I don't want to hear another golf story, but I take a few days off and when I return, I am happy as ever to still hear his voice.

I will never forget election night, checking in on Rush's website when the media finally announced Bush's victory. Rush had the vote counter and I watched Bush's lead disappearing, knowing before the big boys that something was terribly wrong.

46 posted on 11/30/2001 4:15:39 PM PST by Dolphy
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To: A CA Guy
That's a good one. I wonder how many people remember George Putnam. Remember the "One Reporter's Opinion" segments? Classics. I'd love to see them again.
47 posted on 11/30/2001 4:15:50 PM PST by christianswindler
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To: Chuckster
Sorry, Nixon was not impeached.
48 posted on 11/30/2001 4:18:47 PM PST by NTegraT
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To: holdonnow
"What would have devastated most people, has energized him".

YES, Mark, I noticed that also.

Rush is an amazing man, and he need not look further than his own mirror to find that "hero" he is always looking for. He's one of mine :~)

sw

49 posted on 11/30/2001 4:18:58 PM PST by spectre
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To: FreeTally
"She sounds just like Katie Couric and such."

Veronica appreciating Rush, sounds like Katie Couric. . .and you are not convinced as the the 'who' of Mark Levin. . .?

. . .besides Republican politics, you have other interests?

50 posted on 11/30/2001 4:22:59 PM PST by cricket
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To: capt. norm
When news gets hot, Rush is at his best.
51 posted on 11/30/2001 4:24:46 PM PST by Rocko
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To: JeanS
Can Milton Friedman really be called a Conservative? Seems more like a libertarian to me, but hey, what the heck do I know?
52 posted on 11/30/2001 4:25:47 PM PST by Huck
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To: JeanS
I don't listen as often as I use to......but RUSH is still da MAN!! A mega ditto BUMP!
53 posted on 11/30/2001 4:28:23 PM PST by PISANO
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To: ml/nj
Correction. Twenty Million listeners is the number of different listeners who tune in at some time during EACH day (not week). He has five million listening at any one time.
54 posted on 11/30/2001 4:37:16 PM PST by jonboy
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To: jonboy
Correction. Twenty Million listeners is the number of different listeners who tune in at some time during EACH day (not week).

It helps to know what your are talking about to participate here at FreeRepublic.

Consider this excerpt from a recent Time Magazine article (emphasis added by ML/NJ):

Not many of these have Limbaugh’s gifts. He can slip the stiletto with a smile; he leavens his diatribes with goofy sound effects; he knows that the primary goal of a radio man is not to indoctrinate but to entertain. Sometimes, he does both, and confects great radio. This talent has kept him at the head of the wolf pack: his is the most dominant voice in radio, with 20 million listeners weekly. And now, it appears, he will have trouble hearing himself.
ML/NJ
55 posted on 11/30/2001 5:52:28 PM PST by ml/nj
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To: blackbart1
His bravado is part of his radio program demeanor.

But sometimes he gets carried away. Not that often, but the golf stuff drive me nuts!

56 posted on 11/30/2001 5:56:04 PM PST by Jean S
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To: Rocko
"When news gets hot, Rush is at his best."

With half his brain tied behind his back.

57 posted on 11/30/2001 6:03:42 PM PST by shetlan
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To: FreeTally
he has corporate bosses to answer to.

You are full of crap. He answers to no one but himself and his audience. You're just peeved because he disagrees with you.

58 posted on 11/30/2001 6:11:01 PM PST by M. Thatcher
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To: Huck
Can Milton Friedman really be called a Conservative? Seems more like a libertarian to me, but hey, what the heck do I know?

Depending on your definition of "conservitive", Friedman may be the only true conservative on the list.

59 posted on 11/30/2001 6:14:49 PM PST by eskimo
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To: duckln
Rush was against the house impeaching Clinton

Wrong. Get a clue.

60 posted on 11/30/2001 6:15:03 PM PST by M. Thatcher
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