BRETT: Let me start with a very, very important announcement. The Rush Limbaugh Show is continuing. We’ll be staying on top of current topics and keeping you informed while also revisiting Rush’s wisdom and words as they apply to present days news. Rush shared a lot of valuable insights with us, most of it very forward thinking, and we’ll include that when it rings true.
We’ll be doing this for a long time to come, and you are welcome to join us every day at the same time you tuned in to hear Rush’s thoughts and conversation. Rush lives on — past wisdom, today’s relevance — and he’s got some amazing analysis that we’re gonna revisit with you here today on all of today’s big events.
And our hearts, our prayers — and I know it’s a political sort of turn of a phrase that gets dismissed far too often. But, darn it, the country can use our prayers. The people of Boulder can use our prayers and our thoughts, and let’s hope the right, the appropriate action to ensure this does not happen again follows. But, sadly, folks, this is the second time in about a week — first in Atlanta, now in Boulder — that hearts have been broken and the community is mourning.
And we have to understand what that really means. The thing that oftentimes happens when these stories first break is you start to try to figure out what it is that happened here. What was the motivation for this? Why did this occur? We know who the suspect is. We know who the accused is in this case. He was taken into custody after being wound by the police.
I am loath to say his name, but it’s important to understand who did this. Ahmed Alawi Al Issa is the person that is responsible for what happened in Portland, and we’re starting to get a clearer picture of who this person was, who this person is. And yet the run to gun control, the one to politicking broke a land speed record yesterday and in the overnight hours.
Rush spoke extensively about this, but let’s set the table right out of the box. Politics rules the day always and forever. On CNN’s Out Front with Erin Burnett last night, she asked Senator Richard Blumenthal, Democrat from Connecticut, “Putting aside Republicans, if you don’t have Senator Manchin, are these gun control bills a non-starter?” Here’s what Richard Blumenthal said.
BLUMENTHAL: We shouldn’t be putting aside Republicans! They bear responsibility as well. That was the whole point of my exchange this morning with Senator Cruz because they are the ones who are ducking that responsibility and become complicit in all of these shootings.
BRETT: So the Republicans — the Republicans in the Senate — are complicit? “We shouldn’t be putting aside Republicans. They bear responsibility as well. That was the whole point of my exchange this morning with Senator Cruz because they are the ones who are ducking that responsibility and become complicit in all of these shootings.”
Back in 2019, there was a conversation about reforming gun laws and background checks and all of that, and that all occurred obviously in the wake of the terrible tragedy that was what happened in Dayton and happened in El Paso at the Walmart. We were having a conversation about that.
It was the Democrats who decided they were gonna filibuster and prevent the reforms that were necessary to take place. That’s a fact. But, you know, the reality is we’ve got a stack of gun laws already on the books. Back on April 18, 2013, Rush Limbaugh on all these gun laws that we have governing the ownership, the use of firearms. Go.
RUSH: We’ve already got countless laws that keep the guns out of the hands of criminals. I’m sorry, folks, but every gun control law proposed by any Democrat is gonna do nothing but take guns away from law-abiding people. We already have countless gun laws, just like immigration laws, that are not being enforced either properly or at all.
We’ve got more gun laws than you can imagine, and we don’t enforce existing law to make it look like we don’t have enough laws so that we can get more. Everything is political. Everything with the Democrat Party, everything is political, disguised as compassion.
BRETT: And let’s look at this now. Again, let me apologize for saying Portland. That was a slip of the tongue. It was Boulder — Boulder, Colorado — where this occurred obviously. I just want to restate that because I don’t want to leave that hanging out there. The fact of the matter is, if you go back to the horrible mass shooting incidents that we have seen in our nation’s history, even just in the last 20 years, there are a number of through lines that are a part of them.
Either they’re motivated by terrorism — we saw that with, of course, the shooting at Fort Hood, we saw that at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, we saw that when it was targeting the Tree of Life, we saw the targeting of the temple up there up in Wisconsin and Southern California and a number of these instances. San Bernardino comes to mind.
You have a through line that is terrorism, you have a through line that is madness, you have a through line that is evil, and you cannot budget… You cannot budget for those individuals that are going to do whatever it takes to go out and commit homicide by restricting legal, lawful gun ownership among the millions and millions and millions of people who do not commit these heinous acts.
Famously during the aftermath of the Sandy Hook murders that took place when it was the Obama-Biden administration there at the White House in Washington, you famously heard the exchange referred to behind closed doors between then Vice President Joe Biden and members of the NRA who were talking about the need to enforce the laws that are already on the books.
We need to enforce the laws that are on the books. It was shared with people in the post period of that meeting that Joe Biden essentially said to the folks who were gathered together there to try to solve this problem that we didn’t have time to enforce the old laws. We need new laws that are gonna stop this sort of thing. No. No.
Conversely, there are places that do have these epidemics of gun violence where you have people who are free to practice their Second Amendment rights without undo restriction. There are differences between communities. But at the end of the day and at the end of that discussion, here’s what it comes down to: Where you have a respect for life or not, whether you have a respect for your fellow man and woman or not.
Somebody who is willing to go into a supermarket or into a school or any other public facility and decide that they are going to go and commit murder are people that should not be out in polite company. They should not be out walking freely. Nikolas Cruz had a ton of warning signals, and yet they kept mainstreaming him, mainstreaming him, mainstreaming at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School at Parkland.
There were warnings and red flags going off. He went on social media and declared he wanted to be a school shooter! This individual in Colorado was apparently, at a minimum, a young person — 21 years of age — who was beset with some sort of a paranoid nature or somebody who may be suffering from a mental illness.
His family has been talking about it. His sister said that he had been walking around the house with a, quote, “machine gun” talking about how there was a round jammed in it. This is a person — and many times when people are interacting with folks like this, they are the first people to see the signs of mental illness or an inability to properly possess a firearm.
They are the people who ought to be reaching out. I’m not blaming the family, but these are the people who bear with them a responsibility as we all do with the great narrative that we have heard from 9/11 onward: “If you see something, say something. If you see something, say something.”
Get these people some help before innocent lives are lost, and sadly and tragically — once again — in the beautiful state of Colorado, an amazingly beautiful place with amazingly fine people we see violence of this magnitude taking place against the innocent. It’s not about disarming law-abiding gun owners.
This is about making sure those who should never be permitted to possess based on their behaviors… Not because of who they are but because of their behaviors. They’re the ones that need to be stopped, not overwhelming majority of law-abiding American citizens.
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