The Left's Moral Relativism Has Eaten Our Culture
Alive -- and Conservatives Have No Political Strategy to Stop It
June 26, 2015
RUSH: Look, I know everybody is trying to
understand this, and everybody's trying to explain it to each other.
Everybody's looking to everybody else for a deep meaning, an explanation that
makes sense. Because none of what's happening makes sense to people. So what's
going on? Well, hang in there. I'm going to give my shot at this today, folks.
The EIB Network and Rush Limbaugh, get
ready. Oh, yeah, that too. Open Line Friday, which could be juicy today. This
is where we try to emphasize callers a little more than we do Monday through
Thursday. Never know how it's actually going to play out. But the rule is on
Friday whatever you want to talk about, have at it. Telephone number is 1-800-282-2882.
And the e-mail address elrushbo@eibnet.com.
Ladies and gentlemen, not to be -- I don't
even know what the word is -- dismissive, the outcome of this case today has
never been in question. The fact that the Supreme Court was going to find gay
marriage as they did should not be a surprise. It doesn't mitigate the result.
I mean, just like yesterday we could all predict what was going to happen with
Obamacare, but being alive and seeing it happen and living through it, the
reality of it, it's crushing. Same thing here.
The only question on this one was going to
be the vote, was it going to be 5-4 or 6-3. It turned out to be 5-4. Now,
everybody's looking for an explanation. Everybody's reading dissent opinions.
Everybody's consulting. A lot of people calling each other, emailing each
other, "Gee, what?" I can't tell you the number of people who have
sent me e-mails with a simple theme, the same theme. "How do you
persevere? How can you go on the radio today? What in the world, how do you
even know anybody's going to be listening? Do you realize, all seems lost, what
in the world is there to say?"
Well, I'm here, and I'm going to do my
best to put this into some sort of perspective. One thing I'm not is in a state
of denial. I think there's a lot going on, and to try to put them in any kind
of priority, "Okay, this is the worst and then this is the next
worst." That's a futile exercise and ultimately meaningless. But I think,
folks, you can almost include Obamacare in this. In this decision today, the
court legalizing gay marriage, this is in a way Roe v. Wade all over again. The
country was involved.
As Scalia pointed out in a dissent, there
was a pretty robust debate going on, state by state, over gay marriage. It's
now been shut down. So once again, five justices have forced a way of life on
people, and many of them disapprove of it, do not support it, and have not had
a chance to vote on it. So I think we're faced with a future where a culture
will continue to be roiled much as it has been since Roe v. Wade.
I've heard commentators today on all the
cable networks, and they run the gamut. One of the seemingly common themes
among some quasi, so-called conservative commentators or analysts is,
"Hey, these are just people and they just want what's been denied
them," and it goes on and on. "They just want dignity and respect.
It's not asking for much, they just want --" and it's not about that in
all cases. The rule for gay marriage is not about joining anything, it's about
redefining.
I mean, if the move for gay marriage was
about joining, then a couple that walks into a bakery and wants a cake baked
for their wedding and proprietors say, "No, it's against our religious
beliefs to support gay marriage," then the gay couple would leave and go
find some other bakery to bake their cake. But that's not what happens. They go
to court and they try to get that bakery shut down, or that photography studio
shut down. So it makes me dubious of this idea that there's just an effort here
to join the majority. There's clearly an effort underway to up-end and redefine
and punish.
Take a look at what happened in Charleston,
South Carolina -- by the way, all this comes under an umbrella, which I'll
explain. There's a singular theme for all of this that's happening. And maybe
even pretty much a -- though you may not agree with it -- singular explanation
for it. But after the shooting in Charleston, look at how quickly that became a
Republican event. And look at how quickly people moved to banish the
Confederate flag.
The Confederate flag had nothing to do
with anything involved with the Charleston situation. It had nothing to do with
it. It was totally unrelated. An opportunity was made, seen and acted upon by
the Democrat Party to move their agenda forward. The Republican Party was
totally unprepared for it. The conservative movement was totally unprepared for
it, was left to either join it or be humiliated and held up for ridicule.
Now, I think in the case of this gay
marriage decision today, the answer to this sadly is not going to be found in
politics or policy, because the problems and the truth go way beyond that. I
think we're dealing with a culture that is under assault and is deteriorating
rapidly. The truth is that all this transcends the Constitution. I think there
is a spiritual war going on where truth is no longer truth. There is no
objective truth. Everything is relative now, particularly morally. Words have
no meaning. Words can be whatever the most forceful group of people want them
to mean. Whatever the most intimidating group of people wants a word to mean is
what it will mean.
So the door's open for liberals and
oligarchs to do whatever they want to do. And I don't know that politics or
legal solutions alone are the remedy for what is happening. To me, a bigger
casualty than the healthcare debacle and the socialism aspects of Obamacare is
the assault on the Constitution and an even bigger casualty still was on the
truth itself. Words no longer mean anything. They're just tools for liberals to
accomplish whatever ends they want to accomplish.
Now, I'm going to get into some of the
words from dissenting justices on the case today, the gay marriage case,
because they're poignant, and they get to a point, make a great point. But I'll
tell you, folks, everybody's trying to understand the difference in John
Roberts, his decision today, his opposition to gay marriage compared to what he
wrote yesterday for Obamacare, is incoherent. The two don't make any sense side
by side. I have a theory.
I think I know or have a good idea of why
Obamacare survives, amnesty survives and will survive, and I think it's
basically fear. Fear of being the one, anyone in history, who dared oppose or
repeal anything accomplished by the first African-American president. I think
that has created a paralysis in the Republican Party and in the conservative
movement and at the Supreme Court and at Congress and at the Senate. I think
it's pervasive and I think it's going to be forever. I think that fear is going
to survive long after Obama has served his terms of office.
In other words, the effort to repeal
Obamacare in, say, 2017, 2018, I don't know who is going to have the guts to
actually do it. Somewhere along the line somebody is not going to want their
name attached to it because the historical notation that X was a leader in the
movement that repealed the act of Obamacare brought to us by the first
African-American president. My point is, I think there is more fear than we
have ever understood. I think there is a paralysis-type fear brought about and
brought on by the election of the first African-American president.
It is made even more intense by the fact
that people can see what the media does to you if you dare stand up in
opposition to Obama. And Obama has made it clear that after his terms in office
are over he's not going anywhere. He's going to have a residence in Washington
and one of the reasons for that is to protect his legacy. If anybody makes a
move to repeal anything, whatever it is, and we've still got a year and a half.
I told you in January of this year, folks, buckle up, these next two years will
be unlike anything you've ever seen. They're starting out that way. We're now
six months in. And it is the case.
But here's the thing, folks. When you get
right down to it, everywhere I look today -- yesterday, the day before, last
year, the year before that, the last decade, the decade before that. Everywhere
there's conservative anger -- everywhere -- over everything that's happened.
Today the anger is at the Supreme Court. Yesterday the anger was at the Supreme
Court. And that's all there is, is anger. There's never anything done beyond
expressing the anger. There aren't any policy reactions.
There aren't any efforts whatsoever to
deal with the assaults and the attacks that are relentless and daily from the
left. I mentioned Charleston. I mean, here you have a horrible, sad event in Charleston,
South Carolina. And within minutes it became the fault of the Republican Party!
It became the fault of the conservative movement. The media, as per usual,
began looking for any evidence that Dylann Roof had any tie whatsoever to the
Republican Party.
They focused on the Confederate flag. It
became yet another daily march of the Democrat leftist agenda, which has -- as
its number one objective -- to eliminate political opposition in this country.
I've said it for the past two days and I'm going to say it again. The biggest
threat that Obama and the Democrats have is us. They fear us more than they do
ISIS or the Iranians or whatever, because they view us as able to take away
from them their power via elections.
They're not worried about ISIS taking their
power away; they're not worried about the Iranians doing that. So we must be
destroyed. We must be attacked and annihilated and rendered irrelevant. The
Dukes of Hazzard, for crying out loud! A television show, because the
Confederate flag was on the roof of the car, comes under assault. There never
is any strategy to deal with this. We know what's coming -- at least I do! I've
made a career here out of warning everybody what's coming, and there never
is...
There doesn't ever appear to be any
awareness of what's coming and there certainly isn't any strategy to deal with
it. And that is one of the reasons why I know you're frustrated and maybe
despondent. You have invested in everything you think you can do. You've
donated. You've purchased. You've voted. You've gotten out the vote. You've
done everything you can. You have called. You have emailed. You have faxed.
You have let your opinions be known, and
you hear everything you want to hear during campaigns -- and that's the last
time you hear it. The fact of the matter is a Republican Congress is helping
Obama build his power base by not stopping any of it, by not opposing any of
it. I continue to see no opposition strategy. Gay marriage, Obamacare. Both of
these, particularly Obamacare, the best I can tell the Republican strategy has
been, "We're not going to fight Obama because he's the first black
president.
"We're just not going to do it. Say
what you want, conservative voters, but we're not going to do it. There's no
future in it. The media will kill us. They will call us racist. We'll let the
Supreme Court deal with it." For military base closings back in the late
'80s, Congress would go out and hire Blue Ribbon commission members -- former
Congressmen, retired people -- to do this and that, to do the heavy lifting of
closing military bases rather than get their fingerprints on it.
Campaign finance reform?
Same thing.
Everybody you talked to in the Republican
Party said, "It's unconstitutional. We can't support that!" President
Bush signed it. They said, "Let the court fix it." The court didn't
fix it. They found it constitutional. "We'll let the court deal with
Obamacare. The Supreme Court will fix it. We'll go to the court. We'll sue.
That's what will happen." And we keep losing every time we go to the
Supreme Court because we do not have a political strategy. Nor is there a
political will to even devise a strategy.
Everything is, "Wait until the next
election. We'll get them in the next election! We'll get them in 2017." We
have a year and a half to go until 2017! Who knows what kind of destruction
will take place between now and then? But yet, folks, there's a conservative
apparatus all over Washington, DC. There are conservatives everywhere. There's
an entire TV network made up of 'em. Conservative talk radio is made up of
conservatives. There's no shortage of conservatives. They're everywhere.
We've got conservative think tanks here,
think tanks over there. We've got conservative analysts; we've got conservative
advisors. They're everywhere!
Raising money...
Fundraising...
Writing books...
Promising...
Nothing changes.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: It's Open Line Friday. I'm going to
go to the phones, and the only way to do this is to be disciplined about it. I
say provocative things all the time, and I've just gotten started today, folks.
Hang in there. Be tough. That was just the open monologue. That was just
warming up. I'm going to go to the phones, though. Ovi in Orlando. Great to
have you on the program, Ovi. Hi.
CALLER: Actually, it's O-z-z-i-e, like
Ozzie and Harriet. (chuckles)
RUSH: All right.
CALLER: But in any case, I was going to
disagree with you a little bit. I don't think Republicans are so much afraid of
challenging what Obama does because he's the first black president. I think the
real issue for Republicans is they don't know what to do with those 30 million
Americans that -- if they change Obamacare -- would be uninsured.
RUSH: Ozzie, they're not insured now.
Ozzie, they're not insured now.
CALLER: Mmm?
RUSH: Obamacare is an absolute disaster.
Obamacare deserves to have been thrown overboard years ago. Obamacare is
destructive. Obamacare is going to destroy people's ability to end up with
disposable income in their lives and get ahead. Obamacare is an absolute
disaster like much of everything this administration has brought us. It has not
insured any significant millions of uninsured. Now, I understand the theory.
The theory is, "The Republicans don't
want to throw Obamacare overboard because that means they'll have to fix
it." That's exactly my point! I made the point yesterday that the
conservative movement has become not a party of opposition, not a movement of
opposition, but a movement of fine tuning. And what does it fine tune? Democrat
proposals! Democrat ideas! Instead of rejecting them, instead of throwing them
overboard and proposing to the American people -- who are smart enough to
understand -- alternative ideas, we fine tune socialism and call it
conservatism.
Sorry, that's not the answer.
BREAK TRANSCRIPT
RUSH: By the way, here we are right on
schedule. Right on schedule. Here is a headline from the Washington Examiner:
"Poll: 72% Fear Economic Crash, Concern 'Highest Ever'." What the story
is about, if you read it, the GOP pollsters are telling Republicans,
"You've got to let go of those social issues, they're killing you. It's
the economy, stupid people, you've got to drop the social issues."
It is my contention that Republicans
aren't doing a damn thing on social issues. The Democrats are the ones forcing
social issues on everybody. Today, the latest example, it's the Democrats
forcing these things and average, ordinary Americans are trying to defend what
they believe in. There is no aggressive behavior on the part of Republicans or
conservatives. Everybody is in a defensive posture. Everybody is just standing
by trying to hold on to what they believe in and what they have left.
Every bit of the aggressiveness, every bit
of the offense, every bit of whatever is being undertaken is from the Democrat
Party. And yet, here we go, the Republican candidates for president are being
told, "Get rid of social issues, let them go. It's the economy, the
economy is the way to win." And letting go of the social issues is how our
culture is being corrupted. It's another one of these things that's 180 degrees
out of phase. And the social issues, I know what it is, folks, I know, I know.
It's a bunch of moderate Republicans who think they're losing on abortion.
They're losing on everything. And they
just don't know it. They're losing on everything. You think they're winning on
the economy? We live in the most disastrous economy since Jimmy Carter, and the
Republicans may be winning elections. Is there any pushback on any of this?
There's a lot of talk. There's a lot of requests for donations. There's a lot
of fundraising going on. A lot of people promising you that they're enacting
policies or thinking about policies and they're going to do this and they're
going to do that. The moment of truth comes and they don't do it, and they kick
the can down the road because it's not the right time.
It's never the right time. There isn't any
opposition. Those of you that are feeling lost today, those of you who feel like
it's over, you're at your wit's end, we're winning nothing, we're losing
everything, you're still the majority. That's what's got you so bedraggled.
That's what's got you so ticked off. You're still the majority. You know it.
Less than two percent of the population is bullying its way through the country
and nobody is doing anything to stop it because of fear or what have you. And
that's what's got you upset.
What good is winning elections? That's the
big truth. The big, final, ultimate act is going and voting and you succeed in
winning landslide victories in 2010 and 2014, what have you got to show for it,
nothing. That's why you're mad. Tired of feeling like losers? Tired of feeling
like there's no recourse. The way the game is being played right now there
isn't. The Supreme Court, throw them in the mix, depending on the issue, and
they'll pretend they are the federal government, lock, stock and barrel. The
other two branches don't even count and don't even matter.
A story from yesterday: "Christian
Farmers Fined $13,000 for Refusing to Host Same-Sex Wedding Fight Back -- The
owners of a small family farm in upstate New York fined $13,000 for
discriminating against a same-sex couple for refusing to host a wedding on their
property are fighting back."
Too bad they'll lose, especially with the
court's decision today. All resistance to the militant gay agenda now is just
officially just a rear guard action. It's a lost cause, like the Confederacy.
Pretty soon, like the Confederacy, all this is gonna be a hate crime to even
remember.
"In an appeal filed today before an
appellate division of the New York Supreme Court, a lawyer for Cynthia and
Robert Gifford, owners of Liberty Ridge Farm near Albany, N.Y., argued that
when finding them guilty, the court did not consider their constitutional
freedoms and religious beliefs. '[The decision] violates the Giffords' free
exercise of religion, freedom of expressive association, and freedom of
expression protected under the United States and New York Constitutions,'"
according to their lawyer. Plus it was their property.
There isn't a freedom of religion in the
US anymore. Not for Christians. That's the point. "The Giffords were found
guilty of 'sexual orientation discrimination' by an administrative law
judge," and have been told that they must attend sensitivity training
classes.
END TRANSCRIPT
==========================================
I've been troubled for a long time now about the state of this country. This week has thrown it farther down the hole. People have praised Obamacare. Have they seen the deductible amount? People can't afford it!
Free speech gone. Black vs white prodded to a new high. Words have NO meaning. No one is responsible for anything. Gimme, gimme and gimme some more! It seems this country is going backwards instead of moving forward. I don't know what the answers are?