Of course. And as basso says Rush is a slime, but for some reason basso will try whitewash Rush's words to clear his name. The guy has called soldiers who have served and given their life in that service "phony", but bass only mentions that Rush called soldiers who supposedly claimed to serve when they didn't "phony".
Nope, but he was against the illegal war that everyone now acknowledges is a failure. Probably what got him shot.
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FACT CHECK: "Phony Soldiers" and Limbaugh's Revisionist History Radio Talk-Show Host Falsely Claims Comments Taken Out of Context; Records Show Otherwise Washington, DC - As the controversy over Rush Limbaugh's "phony soldiers" comments continues to grow, Media Matters for America would like to highlight the falsehoods that Limbaugh, America's top conservative talk-radio host, has used to claim that he was taken out of context. Limbaugh claims he referred only to Jesse MacBeth, but smeared other veterans Misinformation: On September 28, Limbaugh asserted that his "phony soldiers" comment was a reference to Jesse MacBeth, who pleaded guilty to one count of making false statements to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs for pretending to be an injured Iraq war veteran. Fact: Limbaugh did not refer to MacBeth during his September 26 broadcast until 1 minute and 50 seconds after making his "phony soldiers" comment. Indeed, at no point during his September 26 radio show did Limbaugh refer to any soldiers he considered to be fake prior to making his "phony soldiers" comment. Moreover, as the blog Crooks and Liars and Media Matters noted, in the September 28 broadcast, Limbaugh expanded the group of "phony soldiers" to include Vietnam veteran Rep. John P. Murtha (D-PA) and Pvt. Scott Thomas Beauchamp, who is currently serving in Iraq. In asserting that he was originally "talking about a genuine phony soldier," Limbaugh went on to state: "And by the way, Jesse MacBeth's not the only one. How about this guy Scott Thomas who was writing fraudulent, phony things in The New Republic about atrocities he saw that never happened? How about Jack Murtha blanketly accepting the notion that Marines at Haditha engaged in wanton murder of innocent children and civilians?" According to Murtha's biography on his congressional website, Murtha joined the Marines in 1952 and volunteered for service in Vietnam, where he was awarded the Bronze Star and two Purple Hearts. Limbaugh claims he was only speaking about one soldier, but used the plural Misinformation: Limbaugh twice claimed that rather than speaking generally of soldiers who support withdrawal from Iraq, that he was "talking about one soldier with that 'phony soldier' comment, Jesse MacBeth." Fact: As the transcript makes clear, Limbaugh actually referred to "phony soldiers," plural. Responding to a caller's statement that supporters of withdrawal "like to pull these soldiers that come up out of the blue and talk to the media," Limbaugh responded, "The phony soldiers" [emphasis added]. Limbaugh claims to be a victim of "selective" editing, then aired edited clip and posted edited transcript Misinformation: Limbaugh further asserted that "Media Matters had the transcript, but they selectively choose what they want to make their point." To support this claim, Limbaugh purported to air the "entire" segment in question from the September 26 broadcast of his show. Prior to airing the edited clip, Limbaugh said: "Here is, it runs about 3 minutes and 13 seconds, the entire transcript, in context, that led to this so-called controversy." After the clip ended, Limbaugh stated: "That was the transcript from yesterday's program, talking about one phony soldier. The truth for the left is fiction that serves their purpose, which is exactly the way the website Media Matters generated this story." Fact: In fact, the clip he aired had been edited. Excised from the clip was a full 1 minute and 35 seconds of the 1 minute and 50 second discussion that occurred between Limbaugh's original "phony soldiers" comment and his reference to MacBeth, the full audio of which can be heard here: http://mediamatters.org/items/200709280010
0: Number of Republicans who signed Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid’s letter to Clear Channel’s CEO condemning Rush Limbaugh. Forty-one Democrats signed the letter. In contrast, 72 senators voted to condemn MoveOn.org’s New York Times ad. the letter
The funny thing is that we now have numbers coming out that make it appear that Petraeus doctored the numbers he used, so the MoveOn.org ad appears to have some merit. Rush calling soldiers including Jack Murtha, the soldier who suffered brain injury in Iraq, and other soldiers who gave their lives serving in Iraq, "phony soldiers" would indeed be a partisan kerfluffle. So I guess you are right when talking about the one having merit and the other being a kerfluffle is about right, I just don't think you know which is which. Rush edited his tape to save his face, and has since lied about his statement in the first place, and now the numbers appear to back up the MoveOn.org ad.
Limbaugh Compares Purple Heart Recipient In Vote Vets Ad To A Suicide Bomber In response, Limbaugh today attacked McGough, comparing him to a suicide bomber and suggesting that someone “pumped him full of these lies about what I said“: In McGough’s case, Rush’s comments are especially tactless. McGough’s injury in Iraq “resulted from a real-life suicide bomber.” On DailyKos, McGough responds to Limbaugh: http://thinkprogress.org/
Rush, basso, Coulter, Hannity, O'Reilly are really showing their support for our military. Despicable. The video by the wounded soldier is pretty to the point, and makes it well. I can't believe Rush would compare him to a suicide bomber, and then folks like the Fox News crowd would defend Rush, and people like basso would defend Rush here, and claim his statements have merit. It is sad indeed.
Genuinely, after watching the video of Mr. McGough the first question in my mind was who was taking a larger dossage of oxycontin/opiates - the soldier in the hospital with the brain injury, or Rush scoring his next fix? A bit of a cheap shot, I know.