Liberals and the Violence Card
Conservative protest is motivated by a love of what America stands
for.
The latest liberal meme is to equate skepticism of the Obama
administration with a tendency toward violence. That takes me back
15 years ago to the time President Bill Clinton accused "loud and
angry voices" on the airwaves (i.e., radio talk-show hosts like me)
of having incited Oklahoma City bomber Timothy McVeigh. What
self-serving nonsense. Liberals are perfectly comfortable with
antigovernment protest when they're not in power.
From the halls
of the Ivy League to the halls of Congress, from the antiwar
protests during the Vietnam War and the war in Iraq to the anticapitalist protests during International Monetary Fund and World
Bank meetings, we're used to seeing leftist malcontents take to the
streets. Sometimes they're violent, breaking shop windows with
bricks and throwing rocks at police. Sometimes there are arrests.
Not all leftists are violent, of course. But most are angry. It's in
their DNA. They view the culture as corrupt and capitalism as
unjust.
Now the liberals run the government and
they're using their power to implement their radical agenda. Mr.
Obama and his party believe that the election of November 2008
entitled them to make permanent, "transformational" changes to
our society. In just 16 months they've added more than $2
trillion to the national debt, essentially nationalized the
health-care system, the student-loan industry, and have their
sights set on draconian cap-and-trade regulations on carbon
emissions and amnesty for illegal aliens.
Had President Obama campaigned on this
agenda, he wouldn't have garnered 30% of the popular vote.
Like the millions of citizens who've
peacefully risen up and attended thousands of rallies in
protest, I seek nothing more than the preservation of the social
contract that undergirds our society. I do not hate the
government, as the left does when it is not running it. I love
this country. And because I do, I insist that the temporary
inhabitants of high political office comply with the
Constitution, honor our God-given unalienable rights, and
respect our hard-earned private property. For this I am called
seditious, among other things, by some of the very people who've
condemned this society?
I reject the notion that America is in a
well-deserved decline, that she and her citizens are
unexceptional. I do not believe America is the problem in the
world. I believe America is the solution to the world's
problems. I reject a foreign policy that treats our allies like
our enemies and our enemies like our allies. I condemn the
president traveling the world apologizing for America's great
contributions to mankind. And I condemn his soft-peddling the
dangers we face from terrorism. For this I am inciting violence?
Few presidents have sunk so low as Mr.
Clinton did with his accusations about Oklahoma City. Last
week—on the very day I was contributing to and raising more than
$3 million to fight leukemia and lymphoma on my radio
program—Mr. Clinton used the 15th anniversary of that horrific
day to regurgitate his claims about talk radio.
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Former President Bill Clinton smiles as he receives a medallion from Cathy Keating, wife of former Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating, as a part of the Reflections of Hope Award ceremony in Oklahoma City. |
At a speech delivered last Friday at the
Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C., the former
president said: There were a lot of people who were in the
business back then of saying that the biggest threat to our
liberty and the cause of our domestic economic problem was the
federal government itself. And we have to realize that there
were others who fueled this both because they agreed with it and
because it was in their advantage to do so. . . . We didn't have
blog sites back then so the instrument of carrying this forward
was basically the right-wing radio talk show hosts and they
understand clearly that emotion was more powerful than reason
most of the time."
Timothy McVeigh was incensed by the Clinton
administration's 1993 siege on the Branch Davidian compound in
Waco, Texas. It's no coincidence that the bombing took place two
years to the day of the Waco siege. McVeigh was not inspired by
anything I said or believe and to say otherwise is outright
slander. In the aftermath of the bombing, I raised millions of
dollars for the children of federal employees killed in that
cowardly attack through my association with the Marine Corp Law
Enforcement Foundation.
Let me just say it. The Obama/Clinton/media
left are comfortable with the unrest in our society today. It
allows them to blame and demonize their opponents (doctors,
insurance companies, Wall Street, talk radio, Fox News) in order
to portray their regime as the great healer of all our ills,
thus expanding their power and control over our society.
A clear majority of the American people want
no part of this. They instinctively know that the Obama way is
not how things get done in this country. They are motivated by
love. Not hate, not sedition. They love their country and want
to save it from those who do not.
by Rush Limbaugh
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