LYCOS RETRIEVER
Rush Limbaugh: Al Franken
built 216 days ago
One day, Rush Limbaugh died and stood before God for judgement, understandably speechless for the first time in his life. Satan, the accuser... stood there waiting to claim Rush's eternal soul. Jesus also stood by, not willing to let Rush's soul go without a fight. God motioned for silence and then nodded for the proceedings to begin.
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Rush Limbaugh dumps her, now this. Since being fired this year from CNN after twelve years of work, Daryn Kagan is planning to try her darnedest to turn the world on with her smile. Her new Web site will officially launch on November 13 and already comes with this sunny slogan:
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Rush Limbaugh's attorney argued that prosecutors should have used a subpoena, rather than a search warrant, to obtain the records. The court majority... noted that seeking subpoenas actually offers less privacy protection. Lawyers of all kinds, the judges said, once carried blank subpoenas in their pockets and could get them signed by a clerk if they wanted a crack at medical records. But to get a search warrant, prosecutors have to be much more scrupulous. They have to persuade a judge that there is probable cause — sufficient evidence — to examine the records. Mr. Limbaugh's name came up during an investigation into the widespread illegal sale of prescription drugs in the county.
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Limbaugh's conservative policy recommendations are in line with natural law. To change society government policy must start with the foundation of society, the family. Sound government policy must strive to foster strong families and yet remain in accordance with natural law. Children in poverty need a role model in order to learn self-sufficiency, so the government cannot continue to provide welfare in a way which substitutes itself for the father. Instead, Limbaugh recommends that the government provide incentives fathers to stay at home and allow them to to realize their full potential as human beings. He is characteristically vague on what incentives he would have the government offer, but presumably doing nothing would have some natural incentive.
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The first book about Limbaugh appears to be 1993's Rush Limbaugh and the Bible by Daniel J. Evearitt. One reviewer said "Dr. Evearitt is very uncomfortable sharing the label 'conservative' with Limbaugh" and notes that it contains chapters like "No Wife, No Kids Is This Man an Expert on Family Values?" Limbaugh is ... the subject of criticism in Al Franken's 1996 book Rush Limbaugh is a Big Fat Idiot and Other Observations.
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Rush Limbaugh professes Christianity, but like most professing Christians today, his faith is not based upon the Bible. In an interview with The Door magazine in 1993, Limbaugh testified that “Jesus holds the answers to all of the everyday problems that you face,” but he made it plain that he was not referring to a Christ who is Almighty God and who provided the blood atonement to save wicked, undone sinners from eternal Hell. Limbaugh described for The Door his liberal Methodist upbringing and explained that his father, who deeply influenced his thinking, studied the Bible but did not believe in Hell or the book of Revelation.
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