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Neal Boortz

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A "Fox News alert" broke the shocking news Friday that Rush Limbaugh was criticizing President Barack Obama's handling of the economy.

"The President of the United States is winning his war against the private sector," the network quoted Limbaugh as saying. "He is destroying it. That is his mission."

"I'm glad the godfather has been reading my program notes," conservative radio host Neal Boortz told Fox News host Alisyn Camerota. "I've been saying that for quite a while. It is Barack Obama's intention."

"If people vote for Barack Obama next year, it's like strapping on an economic suicide vest and giving the detonator to your ex-wife," he declared.

"Neal, wow," Camerota said chuckling. "I'm glad you're not mincing any words this morning."

Boortz added that there was no way Obama would be re-elected unless Republicans did something "stupid" like nominating Sarah Palin.



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Ann Coulter wasn't the only one at last month's Media Research Center's "Dishonor Awards" making extremely bad jokes and insulting remarks. Red State blogger and now one of CNN's "best political team on television" was there to lob some insults at the "lamestream liberal" media as well. I wonder if his new employer had any issues with this? Since he's still on the air helping them do their best to become Fox-lite, it doesn't appear they did.

After awarding Newsweek's Evan Thomas the "Obamagasm Award" for an appearance of his on Hardball where he said "I mean, in a way Obama's standing above the country, above the world, he's sort of god" host Neal Boortz brought on Erickson to accept it.

While I think that Evan Thomas' remarks about President Obama and his speech in Cairo were silly and that it's ridiculous to compare any politician to "god" for any reason (and all he did is feed the right wing with another reason to repeat their ridiculous "messiah" insults of Obama), I don't think that justifies the type of childish, hyperbolic remarks made by Erick Erickson here about Thomas, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney and the crew over at Media Matters.

ERICKSON: I want you people to know I called Evan Thomas and I asked Even Thomas what he wanted me to say and he said first of all thank god the award came out before Fineman made that statement last week about Obama Biblically proving himself to be an effective commander in chief. Then he said to thank the academy because that's what you do in times like this, whether there is one or not and also that it was really funny that he would be given an award called the Obamagasm Award because truth be told that he's gone through wet wipes like the parent Of quadruplets in the past two years. About the only person who uses them more is Jay Carney watching The West Wing and imagining what a real White House Press Secretary looks like.

In all seriousness Evan Thomas wanted me to convey his sincere thanks to David Brock and his crack team Media Researchers. He said they spent hours each day eating box after box of Twinkies, drinking Red Bulls, finding clips on people like Evan Thomas who are able to combat radical Republicans and racists teabaggers and their racist political allies like Nikki Haley, Bobby Jindal, Tim Scott and Herman Cain, but for the fine efforts of Media Matters he would not be able to do his job.

And I had to stop him say Evan it's not Media Matters, it's the Media Research Center. Uh, he said Brent Bozell can go to hell and thank you very much.



Neal Boortz Attacks AZ Sheriff Dupnik

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Looks like someone hit a nerve with the right wingers. Don Lemon brought on wingnut radio host Neal Boortz to attack Arizona Sheriff Clarence Dupnik for his remarks at the press conference on Saturday.

That's one major case of projection we got from Boortz here. I expect we'll see a push to get that sheriff fired now for daring to tell the truth about his state being a bastion of right wing hatred and fear mongering.



Bill Moyers Journal: Rage on the Radio

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Here's one for the memory banks from Bill Moyers Journal, September 2008, talking about the rise of hate talk on right wing radio, and Glenn Beck saying he'd like to kill Michael Moore along with some other right wing screechers doing their best to incite violence in the name of keeping their ratings up.

RICK KARR: Michael Savage isn't the only right-wing talk-radio host who launches blistering, even violent, verbal attacks on people and groups he doesn't like. Glenn Beck, for instance, fantasized about murdering a liberal filmmaker.

GLENN BECK: "I'm thinking about killing Michael Moore and I'm wondering if I could kill him myself, or if I would need to hire somebody to do it. No, I think I could. I think he could be looking me in the eye, you know, and I could just be choking the life out of him. Is this wrong?"

RICK KARR: Michael Reagan, son of the former president, suggested that people who claim that "nine-eleven was an inside job," a U.S. government conspiracy, deserve to die.

MICHAEL REAGAN: "Take them out and shoot them. They are traitors to this country, and shoot them. But anybody who would do that doesn't deserve to live. You shoot them. You call them traitors, that's what they are, and you shoot them dead. I'll pay for the bullet."

RICK KARR: Neal Boortz went after victims of Hurricane Katrina.

NEAL BOORTZ:"That wasn't the cries of the downtrodden. That's the cries of the useless, the worthless. New Orleans was a welfare city, a city of parasites, a city of people who could not, and had no desire to fend for themselves. You have a hurricane descending on them and they sit on their fat asses and wait for somebody else to come rescue them."

RICK KARR: Muslims are some of Boortz's favorite targets.

NEAL BOORTZ:"It's Ramadan and Muslims in your workplace might be offended if they see you eating at your desk. Why? I guess it's because Muslims don't eat during the day during Ramadan. They fast during the day and eat at night. Sorta like cockroaches."

RICK KARR: Reverend Chris Buice says he's heard that kind of language before.

REVEREND CHRIS BUICE: If you look at the history of like situations like in Rwanda in 1994, the talk radio was a big part of leading to the conditions that created a genocide. The Hutu radio disc jockeys would call the Tutsi cockroaches. There's the sense that these aren't human beings. You know, they're not human beings with children or grandchildren. These are cockroaches. And when you hear in talk radio that liberals are evil, that they are traitors, that they are godless, that they are on the side of the terrorist. That's hate language. You don't negotiate with evil people. You don't live in community with people you consider to be traitors.

RICK KARR: Millions of Americans tune in to right-wing talk radio every day. Rory O'Connor is a media critic and a liberal himself who's written a book on shock-talkers. He says not all of these broadcasters use violent language. But they do all share a predilection for outrage and, he says, they're all practically addicted to constantly cranking up that outrage.

RORY O'CONNOR: Here's the real problem. When you shock somebody, if you come back the next time and you apply the same stimulus, it's not shocking any longer. It's already happened. So you have to ratchet it up a little bit. So how do you cut through? How do you really shock? I think that in order to continue to outrage, you have to constantly be jacking up the pressure. And ultimately, there's gonna be some deranged person out there in that audience who's gonna say, "You know what? That's a good idea. Let me act on that."

GLENN BECK:"The fusion of entertainment and enlightenment."

RICK KARR: Entertainers — that's what a lot of the shock-talkers call themselves. O'Connor says, maybe. But their words can motivate their listeners to act.

RORY O'CONNOR: Now first and foremost, we have to recognize that many of them are employed across multiple platforms. So they may say something on their radio show, but they may repeat it on their television show. They may then repeat it in their newspaper column. They may repackage the ideas into their best-selling books.

Keith Olbermann said he was looking for everything anyone can find on Glenn Beck. Maybe this one makes the list on his show this week.



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Neal Boortz makes Ed Shultz's Psycho Talk for his latest hate filled screed comparing Katrina victims to "debris". I hope this means Boortz won't be making any more appearances on Ed's show.

From Think Progress: Neal Boortz: If New Orleans is rebuilt, the ‘debris that Katrina chased out’ will return.