Last night on the Impact Segment of the OReilly Factor Dick Morris explained to Bill OReilly that Herman Cain needs to know that time is on his side -- that the sexual harassment charges will be forgotten in a week or two if he is patient that time is the way to fight this. Morris, recalling his Bill and Hillary scandal days, said he was in Europe when Bill Clinton called saying he was getting hit simultaneously with the draft question and the Jennifer Flowers affair.
Morris said he told Bill that the draft thing would kill him but the Flowers thing wouldnt. He told him to get out there with Hillary and do an interview with the press (which they did with the famous 60 Minutes interview). Morris assured them it would end the story and that the draft story would die too. Morris seemed to feel Cain's accusations about Rick Perry were okay because he was on the defensive.
Morris explained that a well handled scandal can insulate Cain eclipse future problems with the presumption of innocence unless theres a smoking gun. Morris was truly in his element, excitedly recounting this episode with the Clintons. He said that Hillary and Bill taught him that time is on your side, if you just let it play out. The smiling Morris was energized the political fire horse sharing his war stories and expertise. No mention that after Bill Clinton was elected all the other shoes dropped.
Suggesting that lessons learned from Bill and Hillary on how to handle sexual harassment charges, and that this could playing to Cains advantage over time, hardly made Cain look good.
Between the bizarre Mark Block appearance with Bret Baier and Dick Morris appearance on the OReilly Factor, it is clear that this story isnt dead.
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first 1-20, 21-24 next last
To: Cincinatus' Wife
No proof, both people running their mouths about this work for perry. Just like you.
2 posted on
11/03/2011 3:12:36 AM PDT by
org.whodat
(Just another heartless American, hated by Perry and his fellow demorats.)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Between the bizarre Mark Block appearance with Bret Baier and Dick Morris appearance on the OReilly Factor, it is clear that this story isnt dead.Only because you Perrywinkles keep it alive because there's nothing else good to report regarding freefall Perry.
3 posted on
11/03/2011 3:18:02 AM PDT by
bcsco
(A vote for Cain will cure the Pain!)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
4 posted on
11/03/2011 3:18:22 AM PDT by
org.whodat
(Just another heartless American, hated by Perry and his fellow demorats.)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
7 posted on
11/03/2011 3:20:48 AM PDT by
org.whodat
(Just another heartless American, hated by Perry and his fellow demorats.)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
As far as I can see, the Perry campaign is dead.
Romney, Cain and Gingrich are the only ones still standing. The media has been desperately trying to kill Cain this week -- I don't think they have succeeded. Gingrich is getting a new look from a lot of people, but there is no question that he has baggage (I for one am overlooking his baggage: he's too smart, and I cannot ignore him).
I think Cain is the best man in the race right now, with Gingrich being the only other real choice. As I see it, the media wants to destroy everyone but Romney (whom they will destroy later).
Of course, at the GOP convention, if everyone is looking hopeless, we could suddenly choose a dark horse candidate -- but it's been a long time since that approach has actually worked.
11 posted on
11/03/2011 3:25:02 AM PDT by
ClearCase_guy
(I won't vote for Romney. I won't vote for Perry.)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
BO wins, out of all of these attacks, and that’s all that matters to the left.
14 posted on
11/03/2011 3:30:02 AM PDT by
johnthebaptistmoore
(If leftist legislation that's already in place really can't be ended by non-leftists, then what?)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
The irony in this is the very people accusing Perry have themselves accused Perry of some pretty outlandish things. What goes around comes around. Maybe Cain should have released the story himself and declared it untrue before it got to this point. Nah its easier to blame someone else.
16 posted on
11/03/2011 3:32:41 AM PDT by
linn37
To: Cincinatus' Wife
It didn't take long. A few 'non-debates' where they call each other names and then some crazy opposition research to lynch Cain, a magazine cover making Bachmann look like an empty-head fool, some rambling incoherent sound bites by Perry, and the entire GOP field looks like a bunch of circus clowns!!!!!!!!!
These morons are the best we have to offer in America???? Get some perspective here boys. You're backing losers!!!!! This is already a major disaster. The lamestream media once again demonstrates that it can pick our candidates for us any time they want! I'm embarrassed by the entire field. Sitting this one out! Pathetic!
20 posted on
11/03/2011 3:55:22 AM PDT by
Doc Savage
("I've shot people I like a lot more,...for a lot less!" Raylan Givins)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
I'm a Cain guy but I'd stick a sock in the "perry campaign did it", even if Cain and his people know with certainty, that they did it.
It won't help Cain, will hurt perry, but it won't move Cain's campaign closer to the prize.
Block was the worst person to use as a TV spokesman, insecure, fumbling and mumbling {and those were his good points} and while he did fine in the smoking commercial, he looked too damn shifty to be accusing anyone of anything.
Who leaked the story is not important in the long view of the race.
21 posted on
11/03/2011 4:00:08 AM PDT by
USS Alaska
(Nuke the Terrorists Savages)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Notice the trend here?
No evidence, none facts, no paper trail. No evidence at all. Merely a string of anonymous sources making accusations.
The accusations are then "validated" by more hear say accusations by third party sources linked to other GOP campaigns. Most notably third party sources specifically tied to Perry's campaign.
The GOP machine better buy a clue. This stupidity on their part may just buy them a Tea Party presidential candidate in 2012.
27 posted on
11/03/2011 4:39:05 AM PDT by
MNJohnnie
(Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
To: Psalm 73
Congratulations you are reacting just as the GOPbot Machine wants you too.
Way to let them manipulate you with these slanderous "anonymous source" character assassination tactics.
40 posted on
11/03/2011 4:56:30 AM PDT by
MNJohnnie
(Giving more money to DC to fix the Debt is like giving free drugs to addicts think it will cure them)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
Cincinatus' Wife Shouldn't you put "PERRY 2012" in your tagline since you are the unofficial representative for the Perry Campaign on FR?
To: Cincinatus' Wife
I think a wiser politician would have handled these allegations in a better way, and time would have been on his side. The issue would have faded by itself, but when Cain changed his story and then placed the blame on Perry’s camp - he gave it new life. I think it will be his undoing. I’m glad it’s coming out now so that we can get this out of the way.
This is the big leagues and we can’t afford to have amateurs on the team. I’m glad Perry has remained above the fray, he’s only had nice things to say about Cain all of this time - too bad the same can’t be said the other way around.
To: Cincinatus' Wife
It will be (it will blow over) if Mr. Cain is VERY CALM, COOL and most importantly PATIENT, goes into Battle Dress mode, pivots and redirects the narrative. Difficult but do-able. Also, the drive by news cycle will change within a week. Furthermore, the real cream on the top of the pie, an Israeli attack on Iran and/or a European economic crash, most likely to occur now soon I am hearing, is going to wipe all of this off the front page quicker than you can say Jim Thompson. In the meantime, Camp Herman will continue to be raising money and holding their own in the polls I suspect. They just have to hang in there for the long term, the pack of rabid dogs will move on to something else. Their readership and listeners will grow tired of the story.
55 posted on
11/03/2011 6:06:08 AM PDT by
AmericanInTokyo
(No GOP Nominee Who Trashed Herman Cain By Vicious Smears Can Expect My Vote In The General Election.)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
I’ve grown to like both Perry and Cain these past months and shocked to see it how it has grown so ugly so fast! And Cain’s accusation will either sink him (if it’s false) or sink Perry (if it’s true).
I’m betting on Perry as Cain has been recently unpredictable in his words and actions. I know that Cain isn’t a “politician” but Perry isn’t stupid and he wouldn’t let his staff throw such an easily traceable political grenade at Cain’s campaign!
The faster this is over, the better, as we can move on and re-focus on selecting the right person to defeat the Zero. We will be one down, but stronger and one less surprise to jump at us during the general election.
To: Cincinatus' Wife
it is clear that this story isnt dead. But that drunk Perry's campaign almost is.
68 posted on
11/03/2011 6:46:34 AM PDT by
McGruff
(Hold the House, take the Senate.)
Wake Up And Donate!
Click The Pic
Let's Make The Bar Yellow!
70 posted on
11/03/2011 6:55:42 AM PDT by
DJ MacWoW
(America! The wolves are here! What will you do?)
To: Cincinatus' Wife
When Cain accused Perry, which is a very stupid thing to do if he does not have real evidence...I got a very bad sinking sensation.
Who profits most from accusing Perry?
Romney.
I keep getting this unhappy idea that Cain is running for Romney's veep...
71 posted on
11/03/2011 6:59:30 AM PDT by
Mamzelle
To: Cincinatus' Wife
This is several groups of people trying to stop Herman Cain, for several different reasons, mostly about who's going to get the power.
Please read
The Herman Cain Saga from Rush Limbaugh.com.
RUSH: Okay, moving on now to the Herman Cain saga, last night I got a note from a friend. "Rush: The Politico website's gone nuts. They've just unleashed attack after attack after attack."
So I went to The Politico website, I looked at The Politico website, and I started laughing because my friend was right.
I just had a different interpretation. I looked at 'em as going over the edge.
There must have been five or six different links to Herman Cain storiesabout "the women,"
about lawyers for "the women,"
about how Cain has blown up the security or the confidentiality agreement,
about how the women want to come forward.
They can't wait to come forward, but there's in confidentiality agreement.
They're doing everything, and I couldn't stop laughing looking at The Politico website.
Then I found this. This is from a website called Northern Virginia Lawyer: "Based on a suggestion from a local blogger to look into political donors on the Board of Directors of the National Restaurant Association
for potential ties to presidential campaigns, I have attempted to identify anyone privy to inside information
about the National Restaurant Association who also has recent ties to any presidential campaign."
I'm reading from the website. Everybody's trying to figure out who leaked this to the Politico.
Was it Obama, was it another Republican? Who's responsible for this.
So that's why somebody here's trying to find outif there's a connection from the National Restaurant Association to a current Republican presidential campaign --and they found something.
(shuffling papers) They found something, ladies and gentlemen. "According to the October 2011 FEC report for ROMNEY FOR PRESIDENT INC. a gentlemen named Steven C. Anderson gave $1,000.00 on July 14, 2011.
Steven C. Anderson is the same gentlemen who took over the helm as Chief Executive Officer
at the National Restaurant Association (after a brief intermission) upon Herman Cain's departure in 1999."
I'm reading now from Northern Virginia Lawyer, the website."As CEO it is highly likely he would have been privy to details of litigation and threats about litigation from the immediately previous tenure of Herman Cain.
There is little more than a coincidence between the support for Mitt Romney and the likelihood
that Mr. Anderson knows the background of the sexual harassment threats.
"Nonetheless, watchers of this scandal endlessly pontificate about whetherPresident Obama or a rival campaign is the driving force behind the bombshell story that appeared in the Politico on Sunday.
Reporters should follow-up with Mr. Anderson to discern his knowledge.
At the least he likely knows the short list of people with inside knowledge about the sexual harassment allegations,"
and then there was an update posted at 11:15 last night:"Apparently as this post has taken on a life of its own I need to clarify a few things.
This truly is the exact same Steven C. Anderson at the same address that gave donations while at the National Restaurant Association in the early 2000s."
So they have found -- this is all it is -- a former executive of the National Restaurant Association who has given money to Romney.
That's all. No more, no less.But everybody's trying to figure out where Politico got this.
Nobody's talking, but everybody is trying to figure out who leaked it.
So this connection has been unearthed, and it's just another layer on top of all this.
Now that has started speculation obviously as these things do, and I forget where I saw this --it was this morning as I was eagerly prepping.
This guy Anderson, by the way, has also given money to Herman Cain, according to FEC records,
but he's not given money to any other candidates, just Romney and Cain.Now the speculation is really starting.
Again, as I say, I forget what I was reading this morning, but somebody was analyzing Romney (summarizing), "Who wants to be president so bad, he'll do anything.
"He wants to be president so bad just like his dad wanted to be president, and he will do anything."
Of course, that doesn't prove anything. None of this proves anything.
This story exists almost in a vacuum. There are more questions than there are answers.
Every time something is learned or somebody says something, more questions pop up instead of answers.
Meanwhile, Herman Cain's raking in the campaign contributions.
Herman Cain on television appears unflappable about any of this.
He's answering questions from anybody who asks him. Sometimes he contradicts himself; sometimes he doesn't.
But he's always got that patented Herman Cain smile on his face as he answers all these things.
And he just continues to rake in the big bucks. Then there's this from the Washington Post: "A woman who accused Herman Cain of sexual harassment in the 1990s is ready for her story to come out,
says her attorney, even as the Republican presidential hopeful spent a second day trying to quell this controversy
and explain his conflicting recollections of the matter."
Now, you read a few paragraphs down in this piece and you see that ,b>this same woman is consulting with her family about whether she should go public or not.
She's consulting with her family about whether to go public,yet her lawyer is out there saying she's chomping at the bit to go public.
She can't wait to go public,
but the story says: Ehhh, not necessarily.
She's discussing it with her family whether she should or not.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Yeah, Herman Cain has violated this woman's privacy. That's the lawyer's point.
He's violated it by talking about this, which was supposedly not to be discussed because of confidentiality agreement --and now, this lawyer says his client can't wait -- just can't wait to go public.
But she's not going public yet.The Washington Post says she's discussing going public with her family.She can't wait to go public.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: I don't know. It's just all appearing funny to me.
I know it's serious stuff, but now it's starting to get laughable.
This lawyer for the woman -- I got it right here in the Washington Post:"Herman Cain's accuser wants to tell her side of the story, lawyer said."
But would you believe, however, the accuser's lawyer is out saying in public that he wants the National Restaurant Association to release his client from their confidentiality agreement so badly.
His client wants to talk, damn it! (sobbing)
She wants to talk, and there's a confidentiality agreement. Damn it, she wants to talk! ...
He hasn't even contacted them yet.
This lawyer, Joel Bennett, is out there making it look like this woman's got a bombshell. That's what this means.
He is laying the groundwork.
He wants everybody to think this woman's got the goods; this woman's got more than a pubic hair on a Coke can.
This woman can nail Cain, but she's being forbidden because of the confidentiality agreement -- and damn it, we want to be released!
... Except, according to the story, the lawyer hasn't contacted the National Restaurant Association yet to ask them if they will release his client.
He's doing it all in the media. He's trying to add all this pressure.
We're told that this woman? She's ready! (panting)
This woman is loaded for bear!
She is ready come out and she gonna take Cain out!
She gonna come out and she's got the goods, boy!
She is gonna destroy this guy!
She gonna take him out; she can't wait!
... Yet a few paragraphs later in the story we are told she's wary of her name becoming public, and that she is discussing with her family whether to make her story public.
The Post article says that her lawyer is"calling on the Association to wave the confidentiality agreement,"
and then a few paragraphs later we learn he hasn't yet contacted them.
I'm sorry, all I can do is laugh at this, at the picture that they are trying to create here.
When has a confidentiality agreement ever stopped anybody that really wants to talk and really thinks there's added money at the end of the trail here?
I would think if Cain's accusers really wanted to speak up they would have found a way by now, especially if they think --and (chuckles) I hate to say this but my family are all lawyers.
But obviously they think that there's a payoff at the end of the trail here. That is why this lawyer's involved.
Meanwhile, the news media is bashing Cain for not giving more details. (laughing)
So the lawyer says, "Oh, yeah, my client, she's got the goods! My client can take Herman Cain down!"
He's not saying that.
This is what everybody's being led to believe by the way the lawyer is handling this."This woman, she's got it all -- and it's juicy.
Oh! It's more than just a hand up on the chin.
It's something really, really bad out there.
She can't wait to talk about it!"
Except she doesn't want her name published.
She's so eager to talk about it her lawyer hasn't even called the NRA and asked 'em for permission yet to break the confidentiality agreement.
Meanwhile, the media are bashing Herman Cain (laughing) for not giving more details,
at the same time attacking him for violating the confidentiality agreement.
So he's not saying enough while he's saying too much;
and now CNN, for what it's worth, is accusing Herman Cain of "getting testy with reporters" this morning as he tried to make his way around Capitol Hill.
He had to push his way through a phalanx of reporters who were pestering him about the sex harassment charges;
and I don't know about you, if you look at the video clip, it looks like he was being very polite to me.
I didn't see Herman Cain getting testy, but I guess "testy" is in the eyes of the beholder.
From this Washington Post article: "In a statement the Restaurant Association said that it had not been approached by Bennett but that it would respond as appropriate.
Asked whether he had violated the nondisclosure agreement by divulging details about the matter,
Herman Cain responded in a Fox interview that he had not because he didn't reveal the complainant's name."
Okay, so there's that."Lawyer: Contain Accuser Wants to Tell Her Side of the Story."
Then the New York Times weighs in. "Cain Accuser Got a Year's Salary in Severance Pay.
"The National Restaurant Association gave $35,000, a year's salary, in severance pay to a female staffer in the late nineties
after an encounter with Herman Cain, its chief executive at the time, made her uncomfortable working there,
three people with direct knowledge of the payment said on Tuesday.
Now, note the New York Times calls this "severance pay."
Severance pay is not a settlement for sexual harassment claims,
and since the Times says it, that's now the official truth -- that it was severance pay -- and that's what Herman Cain has said all along.
The New York Times calls it "severance pay."
I have it right here in my formerly nicotine-stained fingers, not a settlement for sexual harassment claims --
and that bears out Herman Cain's statements.
He said he was only aware of one claim which the Times article calls the second claim.
The first settlement for 35 grand was a severance settlement with a sex charge thrown in to sweeten the pot
which is what Herman Cain said this was.
Yet the article tries to make it sound like they've got Herman Cain in a lie.
But the size of her severance does not refute Cain's initial description of the matter at all.
He said the woman had been given some kind of severance pay; he didn't know how much.
The New York Times cites this woman's anonymous "friends and colleagues," quote, unquote, who say that she told 'em at the time "she was deeply uncomfortable about the situation."
Now, I have been fired seven times, and each of those times (just my own personal experience here), I have been uncomfortable about the situation.
And I have, in talking to friends and family, expressed my anger, my discomfort, and my grievances and how I was wronged.
There's nothing unique here.
Everybody who gets fired... (interruption)Well, no, there weren't any physical gestures when I got fired.
You mean when I got fired?
No, no, no. (sigh) I don't remember any physical gestures.
No, no, no, no. But... (sigh)
You got me thinking about one instance where I did get fired 'cause I told a psychopath that the jig was up and everybody knew the truth about the guy;
that's why I had to go there.
I just couldn't take the lies anymore;
I just couldn't take the lies, and I confronted the guy on the lies,
and I got home 30 minutes later and the owner of the radio station called me and said,"You know, we gotta get rid of you. You're unstable. You're causing mucho problems."
So I figured the guy had covered his bases with a phone call to the owner after I had blown the whistle.
Anyway so that happens, and I called my dad and said, "I just got fired again," and it was always my fault, by the way, with my dad.
The boss was always right when we were growing up.
The boss was always right, the teacher was always right, the principal was always right.
Authority was always right. That's what you learned. (interruption)
Well, that's what you learned when you grew up the Great Depression.
That's what you learned when you went through World War II and you flew P-51s.
You took orders!
When you had an authoritative father, authority was right.
It was the last word on anything.
So, anyway, my point is: There's nothing unique here.
A women gets fired, she tells people she's uncomfortable about it, big deal.
Everybody that gets canned or leaves in undesirable circumstances doesn't run around and talk about how happy they are.
Everybody hates the boss. Everybody's got bad things to say about the boss.
The Times goes on to admit that the situation with the second woman "appeared to be more in keeping with a standard settlement related to harassment allegations."
So once again the Times is admitting that the first settlement, the one that we know of for $35,000 was not a typical sex harassment case.
Now, that again supports Herman Cain's claim that he was not aware of an additional harassment claim in that instance;
and you got four reporters on this story, including Jim Rutenberg, Jeff Zeleny, and Mike McIntyre.
That's more reporters than they ever had on Clinton and Lewinsky.
Then we go to the AP. Now, this story is by Nancy Benac at the AP and what's striking about this --and it's striking because the AP is seldom a news outfit anymore.
They're total agenda-driven. But this one is over the top.
I mean, this is not a news story in any way, shape, manner, or form.
What they have done here... I guess Chris Lehane has made some comments about that, and they simply have dressed up Chris Lehane's comments (you know, he's a Democrat activist for Clinton and Gore)
and they presented them as if they were a legitimate news item.
"Cain's Line in the Sand: Denials Invite Scrutiny" is the headline. "Herman Cain drew a line in the sand, and now he has to hope it sets like concrete.
Cain ... has responded to allegations of sexual harassment with a series of definitive statements that invite closer scrutiny of his past conduct."
Now, if he had been vague or wishy-washy, would that have "invited closer scrutiny," too? No, no.
What is "inviting closer scrutiny" is that Herman Cain is a Republican.
That's what's inviting all of this scrutiny.
Now, Cain is out there violating the advice of Condoleezza Rice.Condi's out there saying, "Don't play the race card."
Herman Cain's playing the race card.
Herman's out there saying this is happening because he's black. (interruption)No, Condoleezza Rice said, "Don't play the race card."
A lot of the former Bush administration Republicans are saying, "Don't play the race card."
But Herman is his own guy; he's out there playing the race card.
Let's go to the audio sound bites on this.
In fact, this is Herman Cain talking about the race card.
He was on Special Report on Fox last night, center seat segment; and Charles Krauthammer said,"Do you think that race -- being a strong black conservative -- has anything to do with the fact that you've been so charged?
And if so, do you have any evidence to support that?"
CAIN: I believe the answer is: Yes.
I am an unconventional candidate running an unconventional campaign and achieving some unexpected, unconventional results in terms of my -- the poll.
We believe that, yes, there are some people who are Democrats, liberals, who do not want to see me win the nomination -- and there could be some people on the right who don't want to see me
because I'm not the, quote, unquote, "establishment candidate."
No evidence.
Relative to the left I believe that race is a bigger driving factor.
I don't think it's a driving factor on the right.
This is just based upon our speculation.
RUSH: So pretty much... (interruption)You do? You like that answer?
What do you like about the answer?
Let me guess what you like about the answer:"Oh, we can't prove it but that's what we think"?
Just being bold as you can be."Yeah, we think it's racism.
I can't give you any evidence of it;
of course that's what we think,"
and... (interruption) Yeah, he did.
He points out that it's...
Really the racial aspect of this is coming from the people on the left, no question -- and it's getting to them.
They're terrifically bothered by this.
We have sound bites to prove it. Here's Condoleezza Rice.
She was on the Early Show today. Former NBC correspondent, now traitorous Norah O'Donnell over at CBS. She said,"Herman Cain predicted he would be the victim of 'a high-tech lynching.' What do you think of that when you hear that?"
RICE: I don't care much more incendiary language and, um,
I actually am someone who doesn't believe in playing the race card on either side.
I've seen it played, by the way, on the other side quite a lot, too -- and it's not good for the country.
I don't like the race card when people say that, uh, people are criticizing President Obama because he's black.
I don't like that very much.
He's being criticized because he's president.
RUSH: And we'll be back.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Folks... Folks, get this. The Washington Post story that I have been citing liberally here for the last ten to 15 minutes?
There are two versions of that story.
There is a story that appeared online yesterday and a second version where something has been omitted.
I have here what has been omitted near the end of the story as it ran yesterday on the Washington Post website.
Are you ready? (shuffling paper) Ahem. Ahem.
This has been deleted:"Because the case is more than a dozen years old, Bennett," the woman's lawyer,
"said he no longer has the file nor does he have the confidentiality agreement.
He said that he had not even remembered the name of the Association official who his client had accused.
He said he doesn't remember going to the Association offices.
He thinks the matter might have been handled over fax and telephone quite expeditiously."
It was that insignificant!
That has since been deleted from the Washington Post story that is now, at present, running.
Let me read it to you one more time."Because the case is more than a dozen years old,"
that would be 12 for those of you in Rio Linda,
Bennett, Joel Bennett,"the woman's lawyer said he no longer has the file,"
doesn't have the case file, he doesn't have "the confidentiality agreement.
He said that he doesn't even remember the name of the Association official who his client accused,"
meaning he didn't even remember it was Herman Cain!"He said he doesn't remember going to the Association offices ever to handle this matter.
He thinks the matter might have been handled over fax and phone quite expeditiously,"
meaning rat-tat-tat, couple faxes, couple phone calls.
Yep, 35 grand? Fine. We're done here. See ya --
and it's 12 years old and couldn't even remember that it was about Herman Cain.
And doesn't have the confidentiality agreement, and the Washington Post has stricken that from their only version of the story.
This was on their online version of the story yesterday. Not there now.
But Diana Schneider, editrix of the Limbaugh Letter saved the cache file of it (c-a-c-h-e, for those of you in Rio Linda)
so that we have it in perpetuity;
and this lawyer is running around making it sound like this woman's got the goods. "Oh, yeah, she can't wait to talk!
She's gonna nail Herman Cain!
It's not gonna be pretty. We can't wait!
It'll be big bucks! Wait 'til you hear it!"
Yesterday, he didn't even know who this was about.
Okay, where we going next, Kevin to Columbus, Ohio. Great to have you on the program, sir.
Hello.
CALLER: Yeah. Your disdain for the poor never seems to amaze me.
RUSH: My disdain for the poor?
CALLER: Anyway, my point was about Mr. Cain that you keep vigorously trying to defend while we know he's lying about what happened.
Of course this woman doesn't want to come out because look what it will do to her family.
RUSH: Wait a second.
CALLER: (talking continuously)
RUSH: Her lawyer says she can't wait to come out. Her lawyer says she can't --
CALLER: -- that you guys will never nominate.
I don't know why you guys are leading him on that way.
I'd love to see two black men duke it out for president.
That would be more history.
RUSH: Sir, are you on a cell phone?
CALLER: Yes, I am.
RUSH: Well, I can't talk to you, because you can't hear me.
CALLER: Yeah, you don't want to take the point! That's what that is.
RUSH: Uh, no. I've been talking to you the whole time.
You just can't hear me --
CALLER: Yeah! (garbled)
RUSH: -- because I've got a phone system that doesn't work with cell phones --
CALLER: (talking)
RUSH: -- like I'm talking to you right now and you can't hear me.
CALLER: (talking) -- that's all you do is talk.
RUSH: Look, we're gonna have to interrupt you. We can't take cell phone calls.
I can't talk to 'em. This is just absurd, and it's 23 years we've had this problem and we can't fix it.
Anyway, I guess what this guy's point is that I'm attacking the woman when it was Herman Cain who started it.
Sir, it wasn't Herman Cain that started this.
It was the Politico that started this.
If you've got a beef with anybody for talking about it, blame it on the Politico, 'cause everything was hunky-dory fine until Sunday night when they came along;
and you say this woman wants to talk?Her lawyer says she doesn't want to talk, but then her lawyer is out there saying just the opposite.
She can't wait to come forward, which is not true.
Anyway, who's next?
Santos in Yuba City, California. Great to have you on the program.
CALLER: Oh, hi, Rush. Mega dittos.
RUSH: Thank you.
CALLER: I don't know why I find this hilariousthat they go to Condoleezza Rice to criticize Herman Cain for playing the race card.
I mean, what is it about her that her opinion on this carries so much weight?
I mean, she was secretary of state.It would be one thing if she was a past president of the National Restaurant Association
or maybe she has been excused of sexual harassment herself
or she was a victim of sexual harassment.
So the only reason they went to her is because she's black.
RUSH: No, she's got a book out.
CALLER: In a way --
RUSH: No, no. No, no. She's got a book out.
I've got it over here. It's called No Higher Honor and she's out doing a book tour
and so since they've got her they ask her about this; and since she's black, they're asking her about the race card and stuff.
CALLER: That's what I'm saying. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
In a way they're using her to play the race card against Herman Cain playing the race card.
RUSH: Well --
CALLER: You know what I'm saying? I guess that makes it funny to me. Why of all...?
Is this something that's covered in her book, sexual harassment?
RUSH: No! No, no, no. Well, I don't know.
I haven't read the book yet. I just got it a couple days ago.
I don't know if she talks about sexual harassment in the book or not,
but one of the reasons why they asked her is that they know what she's going to say.
They know that she's going to deplore the actions of a black Republican. So she's useful in that regard.
They're pretty confident that she's not gonna approve of what Herman Cain's doing, so that's a gold mine.
Pure and simple.
You never hear them ask Condoleezza Rice what she thinks about Al Sharpton. You never hear her ask what she thinks of the Reverend Jackson.
They didn't ask her about any of the Democrats' cartoonistswho were drawing some of the most racially offensive single panel and multi-panel cartoons about her when she was secretary of state.
They didn't go talk to her and ask her what she thought of some of the jokes people were tellingabout how she got the job as secretary of state and the sexual favors that she had to perform on George W. Bush.
They never asked her about that, but she's got the book out now,
and so it's a perfect time to ask her what she thinks of all this.
They're pretty confident. As far as the media is concerned:Yeah, only blacks can, with credibility, decry playing the race card. Herman Cain...
Look, another reason here that they want her to answer this in a certain way
is that they are playing the race card, and the left is and the media.
We're turning it around on 'em, and it makes them very uncomfortable.
Their standard operating procedure is to play the race card.
So we come along and play it on them, that's, "Time! Oh-oh, time-out! Time-out!
We need to stop playing the race card!
We really need to stop playing the race card."
When they're playing it and they're called out,"Time-out, time-out, time-out, time-out,"
and they go find a bunch of people on our side who will agree because they want to sound worthy. "Yes, we agree, it's time to stop playing the race card,"
and everybody stops playing the case card for a couple hours until the next time the left does it.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: Here's a sound bite mentioned earlier that Herman Cain on CNN said he was "testy," testy with reporters on Capitol Hill today.
We've got the audio of that and you be the judge.
CAIN: Let me say one thing:I'm here with these doctors, and that's what I'm gonna talk about.
So don't even bother asking me all of these other questions that you all are curious about, okay?
Don't even bother.
REPORTER 1: It's a good question, though!
REPORTER 2: Are you concerned about the fact that these women do want to...?
Uh, that...? Perhaps one that wants to come forward?
CAIN: What did I say?
REPORTER 2: Are you concerned about...?
CAIN: Excuse me.
REPORTERS: (chattering)
CAIN: Excuse me!
REPORTERS: (chattering)
CAIN: What part of "no" don't some people understand?
RUSH: "What part of 'no' don't some people understand?"
He's losing it now, folks! The media is telling us,"He's getting very, very, very testy! Very testy."
END TRANSCRIPT
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So you see how the
LAME Stream Media is trying to spin this?
81 posted on
11/03/2011 7:30:45 AM PDT by
Yosemitest
(It's simple, fight or die!)
To: Cincinatus' Wife; RoosterRedux; jonrick46; deepbluesea; RockinRight; TexMom7; potlatch; ...
Perry Ping....IF you'd rather NOT be pinged FReepmail me.
IF you'd like to be added FReepmail me. Thanks.
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84 posted on
11/03/2011 8:17:44 AM PDT by
shield
(Rev 2:9 Woe unto those who say they are Judahites and are not, but are of the syna GOG ue of Satan.)
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