I just tuned into Savage Nation to try to learn something. I just finished listening to Hannity’s show. Hannity was not for the bail-out. Rush Limbaugh was NOT for the bail-out. Michael Savage makes a lot of sense on many issues but he is dead-wrong about what he’s saying about Hannity and Rush supporting this. I gave Michael Savage the benefit of the doubt until I heard this. Today Rush Limbaugh said
“When the government fails to pass a socialism bill and the market goes south, let it go south.” Rush Limbaugh.
I really wanted to hear facts and got untruths. I really wish Savage will publicaly take this back. I have to turn the channel and listen to something that I can trust.
Upon further review I have rush mixed up with an earlier interview on local radio, with Rep. Tancredo, who had changed his mind and was supporting the new version.
On today's show, he spent much of the time talking about two angry confrontations he had today - one when he went shopping at Macy's for a $9 shirt he didn't need, and ending up calling the other shopper a "white cracker" to his face, and after he rode his bicycle to North Beach, he got in an argument at a restaurant he eats at about a dog that was tied up outside.
But near the end of the first hour he announced he wanted to end the show and go home early because he is too tired from his colonoscopy a week ago. Apparently, he has enough energy to go shopping at Macy's and to ride a bicycle around North Beach, but not enough energy to do his radio show.
Since I created StreamingRadioGuide in large part because of Savage being booted off of MSNBC and some radio stations, I can't tell you how disappointed I am with recent events with Savage.
Tonight, he also lashed out at his children for not appreciating his sacrifices for them, and talked in vague terms about psychiatric hospitals and drugs, but it wasn't clear how that was connected to anything else he was saying. The only call he got the entire show was someone suggesting he should be put on the Supreme Court. First savage needs to get a law degree and learn the difference between a "pleading" and a "brief".