Posted on 08/16/2017 3:43:43 PM PDT by Kaslin
RUSH: As I said, CBS News devoted 100% of their broadcast to Donald Trumps press conference yesterday 100% and, of course, that 100% was spent in total outrage, anger, disbelief. There is now a mad dash all across the country to take down statues. A Chicago pastor has asked Rahm Emanuel, the mayor of Chicago, to remove a George Washington statue. Confederates were taken down in Baltimore overnight. A Brooklyn Army base has been urged to rename streets honoring Confederate generals.
The Dallas mayor called Confederate statues propaganda, and a Hollywood cemetery has succumbed to threats and has removed a memorial. And this is just a short little list of some of the events that are occurring now in what looks to be a mad dash to comply with the latest conventional wisdom and to make sure that you are seen on the correct side of it. Have to take a break here. Well come back, we will continue in mere moments.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Heres Kathy in Providence, Rhode Island, as we kick off the phones today. Welcome. Great to have you here.
The Dallas mayor called Confederate statues propaganda, and a Hollywood cemetery has succumbed to threats and has removed a memorial. And this is just a short little list of some of the events that are occurring now in what looks to be a mad dash to comply with the latest conventional wisdom and to make sure that you are seen on the correct side of it. Have to take a break here. Well come back, we will continue in mere moments.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Heres Kathy in Providence, Rhode Island, as we kick off the phones today. Welcome. Great to have you here.
CALLER: Thank you, Rush. I listen every day. You have a lot of good stuff to say and original ideas. I get a lot of out of it. But today I have to censor (sic) you just a little bit censure you, that is. For one thing, I think youre kind of overdoing in your discussion the left and the right. Were all just Americans, really, and I know some of us really identify with those as political parties or whatever. But for a lot of people, its just ideas and values that we cherish. So I think that one good idea if you dont do that so much would be to understand that for a lot of people this discussion about taking down the statues and the whole racism thing.
Its really about slavery, and thats another thing I havent heard you mention very much, but probably I assume that you, like most Americans, are very, you know, sad and ashamed of years of slavery and considering human people as property and able to sell and buy and many of most of them were of color. And so, you know, its come down through the centuries that, you know, these traits linger in the lives I had a black friend in California I had more than one, but she was telling me that her family, her mother, and her mother knew their mother. This is about 20 years ago.
RUSH: Right.
CALLER: They knew their parents, but they didnt know their grandparents or their great parents, great-grandparents. They had no family from before slavery. Back then people werent people. Their births werent recorded at the local county office. You know, it was just a whole different world. So we today, we have this heritage of people being treated very, very poorly and horribly and killed in some cases and lynched in some cases, and I just think that when we talk about these issues that verge on slavery, I hope that we will be a little more direct in being honest about what it was really all about. That was a long sentence.
RUSH: Well, do you know that the Native Americans were slaveholders? Did you know that Christopher Columbus, the ostensible discoverer of America
CALLER: Yeah.
RUSH: it was the order The United States was not in any way unique in this. In fact, what makes the United States unique is that we are the first serious major country, population that ended it. We went to war to end it, and 500,000 citizens of this country died in that effort. Nobody here denies slavery. Nobodys denying it at all. But theres a missing sense of proportion about this and I have to disagree with you on one thing, Kathy.
This is ideological. Every bit of this is ideological. It is left versus right, centrist versus whatever. It is. And the fact that a lot of people dont see that is, I think, what permits much of this to happen. Anyway, Im glad you called. I appreciate it. I conclude our call in all sensitivity to you, but I must go because of the constraints of time.
Soros’s Controlled Demolition Initiative
They touch any Columbus statues in NYC or try to change Columbus Circle’s name, a LOT of Staten Islanders and folks from Bay Ridge will be there.
And we’re not faggot metrosexuals from Manhattan.
All you do is take the “non FR” position and argue it on every single thread.
Where do I disagree with you on the removal of these monuments?
And if we agree, how can we argue?
Today I decided my garden gnomes were pissing me off and offending me. I went out and tore them down and spit on them as I was cussing foul words at them.
>>if you think they will stop at this. YOU BETTER THINK ABOUT IT.
As someone commented on another thread, it’s going to be really difficult dynamiting two of the busts at Mt. Rushmore while leaving the other two in place.
These people are so dumbed down and illiterate, and can’t/don’t read books, it is their version of book burning (credit to Lionel).
I hope you beat them with the bottom of your shoe. They deserved it.
I was barefoot, but I tied a rope around their necks and dragged ‘em around a bit. Not putting up with their BS anymore.
#SaveTheStatues
Where are the Hollywood types defending the Arts?
Where are the Historians decrying the destruction of history?
Where are the pols decrying “the rule of the mob?
(Yeah, I know they never were serious people in the first place)
There were 2 million Union soldiers and 800,000 Confederate. The boys in gray were mostly poor illiterate farmers - many conscripted. Most soldiers were not slave owners (if a southerner owned 15 or more slaves they were exempt from serving) and were more concerned about their family and fields than politics. The statues need to stay because people need to know what happened. People need to put themselves in my g-g-grandmothers’ shoes - her brothers fought for the Confederacy while her husband died for the Union.
If we could just get people to pause and think...
Will streets named for Martin Luther King be renamed?
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