RUSH: Let’s take a phone call from Lorain, Ohio. It’s Brian. I’m glad you called, sir. You’re up next.
CALLER: Good afternoon, Rush. Nice to talk to you.
RUSH: Yeah. I’m just waiting for the music to end so I can hear you.
CALLER: I’m sorry.
RUSH: Okay, it’s over.
CALLER: Can you hear me now?
RUSH: I can hear you now, yeah.
CALLER: Got a quick question for you regarding the situation with the hospitals in Florida.
CALLER: Yeah.
RUSH: If they are indeed overwhelmed by patients with the —
RUSH: Yes.
CALLER: — swine flu or Asian flu or Hong Kong flu or whatever, and you have a seven-year-old child sitting there and a person that’s dying, that’s terminally ill with cancer, okay? Which one would you like treated? There’s only one bed left in the hospital, you got a seven-year-old sitting there with the flu that needs treated, and you’ve got a person that’s terminally ill with cancer and, you know, they’re there for whatever reason.
CALLER: So what you’re saying is their preparedness is a farce, them preparing for this possible eventuality?
RUSH: No. I’m saying that their announcing it and making a big news story out of it is part of an overall campaign to keep people on edge and full of angst over this.
CALLER: Okay, who’s making it a news story, though? The television, radio, you know, the talk show hosts?
RUSH: No.
CALLER: The apparatus that you’re part of is making the story.
RUSH: No, no.
CALLER: They’re passing papers between themselves saying, ‘You need to be prepared for this eventuality.’
RUSH: No, no, no. Wait a second.
CALLER: And you’re blowing it out of proportion using your —
RUSH: No, wait a minute, now.
CALLER: — own apparatus —
RUSH: This is how this…? (laughing) I’m to blame! I’m to blame for spreading the false quotes about me. I’m to blame for spreading this news. Okay, sir, I get it. I’ll agree with you. I’ll agree. This is Brian in Lorain, Ohio, and I’ll agree with you. Robert B. Reich said it: ‘We’re just going to let the old people die.’ I’ll agree with it. That’s what we’re going to do. A 7-year-old versus a 75-year-old, no question about it: the 75-year-old dies. There! Problem solved. Thank you, President Obama.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: An excellent point from the e-mail. It’s not often that I miss making the best point to be made, but I did here. The guy who called from Lorain, Ohio, and wanted to know, ‘Well, who would you choose, the seven-year-old or the 75-year-old with cancer?’
You know, I got sidetracked on telling him, ‘Look, you’re missing the point, folks, gang, guys,’ but the point here is I’ve never seen a story like this reported before. They’re all just setting up crisis, chaos, and so forth. The answer is that we in the United States of America ought never have to face this question because we would all hope that the government would be looking at ways to expand health care for everybody, not ration it; to find a way to have a bed for all who needed it. This is the government! We have a liberal government looking only at limitations and getting rid of people that they think are not worthwhile, valuable, or whatever.