RUSH: Here is Edward in southwest Missouri. Edward, nice to have you here.
CALLER: Yes, good afternoon, Mr. Limbaugh. It’s an honor to speak with you.
RUSH: Thank you, sir.
CALLER: I’m a 30-year member of the Armed Services, and, sir, appreciate all that you do for the Armed Services.
RUSH: Thank you, sir. Appreciate your service.
CALLER: My comment is this, it seems, and it’s only my perception, that many of the elder statesmen of the movement, of the equal-rights movement, are reluctant, even fearful, that Senator Obama could even have a chance to attain the presidency. And my question is, why?
CALLER: Correct.
RUSH: They’ve thrown in with the Democrat Party for the entirety of their careers. In that process they have gained their power. The Democrat Party is an amalgamation, if you will, of several different coalitions. You’ve got feminists, you have blacks, you have Latinos, you have union members, they’re just a disparate bunch of groups, it’s a very loosely knit coalition. The civil rights coalition gets its seat at the table of power in the Democrat Party by supporting the Democrat machine. So these guys that you’re talking about owe their allegiance, they owe their careers, they owe their power, however they perceive it to be, to the Democrat Party and its machine. So that’s why they’re throwing in. It’s personal. It’s all about themselves. Now they disguise it and say it’s about loftier things, but it’s about loyalty and it’s about being loyal to those who gave them a chance to have power and sit at the table of power and so forth.
Your question helps me to illustrate exactly how irrelevant to these guys race really is. They use it as a means of driving a wedge between the American people, but when faced with doing what they have demanded all the rest of us do throughout our lives, they abandon the black guy. They abandon the black guy, while they tell us all of their careers that we’re the ones that have been doing this and that we’ve been stepping on them and we have been denying them equality and fairness and all this. It’s they now who are doing this, one and all to see. It’s simply because they have no loyalty to Obama. Obama threatens ’em. Obama doesn’t owe ’em. They didn’t make Obama. And so he doesn’t owe them anything.
CALLER: I agree in that regard.
RUSH: If he’s successful, he’s not going to owe them because they will not have helped. So all of these reasons combine into the answer.
CALLER: I certainly agree with that, and I see that also they — well, it’s certainly power, and people want to hold onto whatever power they have. And they will claim allegiance to whatever gives them the power.
North Port, Florida, Janet, you’re next on the EIB Network. Hello.
CALLER: Rush, could you play the Dallas Sopranos singing Puccini in your honor? I’d love to hear that again, if you would.
RUSH: Oh, yeah. We’ll find a way, maybe not today —
CALLER: Okay.
RUSH: — hopefully today, but we’ll try to get it in soon.
CALLER: Okay. You’ve been pointing out for more than a decade now, I guess, that the political instincts of the Clintons, they’re often wrong. So isn’t it a miscalculation on their part in moving the caucus and primary season up so early, because I understand they were the architects of this strategy, thinking that Hillary was a sure thing.
RUSH: Well, yeah, they wanted to move it up and have all these primaries early on because it would afford Hillary the chance to expose herself the least. The longer she’s out there, the longer she’s out talking and making speeches, the bigger the chances are that she’s going to screw it up. But the front-loaded primaries are actually not new. They’re just more concentrated this year than they have been for a long while. But I do think that they’re stunned. They did have this sense of inevitability that this was a mere coronation, and they’re off track, and they are in chaos right now. There is no question about it. But they can’t change it, they gotta deal with it, and they deal with it the only way they know how, and that’s destroying Obama.