One Month Later, Rush Inspires Us: We Will Never Give Up!
BRETT: His beloved Kathryn has shared a message from Rush, videotaped earlier this year, capturing him in a moment where he's reminding us to never give up.
BRETT: His beloved Kathryn has shared a message from Rush, videotaped earlier this year, capturing him in a moment where he's reminding us to never give up.
BRETT: None of this is new, and certainly Rush led the way when talking about the fact that this border crisis will manifest again and again.
BRETT: The old trope that the Democrats are the party of the little guy and that the Republicans are the party of the rich? We know that hasn't been true in decades.
BRETT: Rush pointed out regularly, they are constantly focusing on advocacy and not journalism. Let's take a trip back.
BRETT: I would be shocked if former president Trump didn't hear that message in 2014. I would be stunned, because Rush perfectly encapsulated what was the secret of Reagan.
BRETT: One of my favorite things is Rush's sense of humor. It was absolutely top-notch, and there were certain things he would do that were just so special, including inventing terms.
BRETT: Bless you. All the best. That's Ron in Alabama, 29 years spent listening to the Rush Limbaugh Show. You keep listening, Ron. We're gonna keep doing this for a very, very long time.
CALLER: He did an imitation of William F. Buckley, and then I did my imitation. Rush was just a nice, regular guy.
BRETT: One of the people who admired Rush so very much was legendary American economist Milton Friedman. Well, Milton Friedman was somebody that Rush also admired tremendously.
BRETT: Rush always said, "I'm just a guy on the radio," but he was more than that to a lot of us.
BRETT: This morning on ABC's Good Morning America, cohost George Stephanopoulos asked President Biden about whether or not Cuomo should resign.
BRETT: Isn't it incredible to look at the narrative that's been put together by the Biden team over these last couple of months, arguing that the cupboard was bare.
BRETT: The charitable efforts of the EIB. That, ladies and gentlemen, is the enduring legacy of the message of conservatism and love that Rush Limbaugh brought to the airwaves.
Brett Winterble guided today's program. Check out Brett's Stack of Stuff.