1 00:00:00,120 --> 00:00:02,960 Speaker 1: So I think it's pretty obvious as we see the 2 00:00:03,040 --> 00:00:07,000 Speaker 1: decline of our society when you have the left that 3 00:00:07,080 --> 00:00:09,720 Speaker 1: supports a boarding babies up until the moment of birth, 4 00:00:10,200 --> 00:00:13,720 Speaker 1: they support castrating a young boy, giving a young girl 5 00:00:13,800 --> 00:00:16,479 Speaker 1: a double missectomy, when of course they can't consent to this. 6 00:00:16,640 --> 00:00:19,480 Speaker 1: They don't know what they want to be, who they 7 00:00:19,480 --> 00:00:23,040 Speaker 1: want to be. I mean, kids have imaginary friends, and 8 00:00:23,079 --> 00:00:26,000 Speaker 1: so we see this destruction of our our country made. 9 00:00:26,079 --> 00:00:27,880 Speaker 1: I think it says everything about a nation and the 10 00:00:27,920 --> 00:00:32,000 Speaker 1: way they treat children, the most vulnerable, and their society. 11 00:00:32,080 --> 00:00:33,840 Speaker 1: So it says a lot about where we are now. 12 00:00:34,440 --> 00:00:37,440 Speaker 1: And I think it's no secret that that correlates with 13 00:00:37,560 --> 00:00:43,559 Speaker 1: the loss of religion in the country as well. And 14 00:00:43,560 --> 00:00:46,320 Speaker 1: then that really is what the Democrat the left policies 15 00:00:46,360 --> 00:00:49,680 Speaker 1: aim at. It's to devalue the things that have value 16 00:00:50,440 --> 00:00:54,080 Speaker 1: in life, to deprive people of meaning, to uproot people, 17 00:00:54,160 --> 00:00:56,800 Speaker 1: to to to deny them and deprive them of having 18 00:00:56,840 --> 00:00:59,200 Speaker 1: anchors in their life. Because if you have an anchor, 19 00:00:59,640 --> 00:01:03,520 Speaker 1: relate gin family, these things that actually have meeting in life, 20 00:01:03,520 --> 00:01:07,800 Speaker 1: you're not malleable, you're not easily persuaded. The government doesn't 21 00:01:07,800 --> 00:01:12,280 Speaker 1: own you. You're a harder person to control. So for 22 00:01:12,360 --> 00:01:15,320 Speaker 1: this episode, we're gonna have David Limbaugh, who's a friend 23 00:01:15,319 --> 00:01:17,720 Speaker 1: of mine also my attorney. You also know him as 24 00:01:17,720 --> 00:01:22,000 Speaker 1: a nationally syndicated columnists, a political commentator, a commentator. He 25 00:01:22,040 --> 00:01:25,800 Speaker 1: has written I believe, ten New York Times best selling books. 26 00:01:26,560 --> 00:01:29,160 Speaker 1: So we're gonna talk about, you know, what's going on 27 00:01:29,240 --> 00:01:31,440 Speaker 1: in this country with the loss of faith, the loss 28 00:01:31,480 --> 00:01:35,320 Speaker 1: of religion, the destruction that the left is intentionally bringing 29 00:01:35,720 --> 00:01:38,600 Speaker 1: upon our nation. And we're gonna talk about this new 30 00:01:38,640 --> 00:01:41,080 Speaker 1: book that he wrote called The Resurrected Jesus, And it's 31 00:01:41,080 --> 00:01:43,200 Speaker 1: really cool because he co wrote it with his daughter, 32 00:01:43,319 --> 00:01:46,760 Speaker 1: Kristen Limbaugh Bloom, who I actually met way before I 33 00:01:46,800 --> 00:01:49,800 Speaker 1: met David. She was an intern at Fox forever ago, 34 00:01:50,600 --> 00:01:52,440 Speaker 1: and I just thought she was lovely. She was just 35 00:01:52,480 --> 00:01:54,440 Speaker 1: the nicest person, and so we, you know, got to 36 00:01:54,520 --> 00:01:58,200 Speaker 1: talking and became friends, and now she's doing great things 37 00:01:58,200 --> 00:02:00,920 Speaker 1: in her life, like co authoring this book with her dad, 38 00:02:00,920 --> 00:02:03,000 Speaker 1: that Resurrected Jesus. So we're going to get into that 39 00:02:03,440 --> 00:02:05,600 Speaker 1: and how all of it ties together, sort of the 40 00:02:05,640 --> 00:02:08,760 Speaker 1: loss of religion, the destruction of the country, and why 41 00:02:08,800 --> 00:02:12,440 Speaker 1: this book is so important to him and his daughter. 42 00:02:12,600 --> 00:02:15,360 Speaker 1: We're also going to talk about his late brother, Rush Limbaugh, 43 00:02:16,120 --> 00:02:18,280 Speaker 1: uh and and you know, talk about what he misses 44 00:02:18,320 --> 00:02:20,639 Speaker 1: the most about him and and things that people maybe 45 00:02:20,720 --> 00:02:23,760 Speaker 1: don't know about him that they should. So that's what 46 00:02:23,800 --> 00:02:35,440 Speaker 1: we're gonna get in today, So stay tuned for David Limba. 47 00:02:36,560 --> 00:02:39,280 Speaker 1: All Right, David, I'm so excited to have you on 48 00:02:39,320 --> 00:02:42,400 Speaker 1: the podcast. Full disclosure for everyone at home, David and 49 00:02:42,440 --> 00:02:45,760 Speaker 1: I work together. He is my attorney, but there's nobody, 50 00:02:45,800 --> 00:02:48,280 Speaker 1: nobody better to work with. I'm I'm just so glad 51 00:02:48,320 --> 00:02:50,480 Speaker 1: to have you on my team, and honestly, like if 52 00:02:50,480 --> 00:02:52,440 Speaker 1: I ever get canceled, I know that you'll have my 53 00:02:52,520 --> 00:02:55,720 Speaker 1: back because you actually care about what's going on in 54 00:02:55,760 --> 00:02:58,320 Speaker 1: this country and we share the same views on things. 55 00:02:58,320 --> 00:03:00,320 Speaker 1: So I'm I'm very thankful that it to have you 56 00:03:00,360 --> 00:03:03,000 Speaker 1: as a friend and my attorney. So I appreciate you 57 00:03:03,040 --> 00:03:05,720 Speaker 1: joining the show. Thank you those both ways. I appreciate 58 00:03:05,800 --> 00:03:08,120 Speaker 1: that I appreciate David, and I also I got to 59 00:03:08,160 --> 00:03:10,040 Speaker 1: know your daughter before I got to know you, And 60 00:03:10,280 --> 00:03:12,600 Speaker 1: we'll talk about this awesome book that you guys wrote 61 00:03:12,600 --> 00:03:16,720 Speaker 1: together here in a little bit as well. But you know, David, 62 00:03:16,760 --> 00:03:19,519 Speaker 1: you and I often talk about you know, we look 63 00:03:19,520 --> 00:03:21,960 Speaker 1: at what's going on in the country. You'll you look 64 00:03:22,000 --> 00:03:24,919 Speaker 1: at you know, inflation and soaring gas prices, the loss 65 00:03:24,960 --> 00:03:28,960 Speaker 1: of liberty, open borders. It's all intentional from the left. 66 00:03:29,840 --> 00:03:33,520 Speaker 1: It's with intention It totally is. And it frustrates me 67 00:03:33,560 --> 00:03:38,400 Speaker 1: when I see our colleagues conservative commentators on Fox and 68 00:03:38,480 --> 00:03:42,920 Speaker 1: other places um act as though this is just a 69 00:03:42,960 --> 00:03:46,920 Speaker 1: matter of incompetence or so. I even heard one of 70 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:50,320 Speaker 1: the people who I otherwise respects say, we we share 71 00:03:50,360 --> 00:03:53,520 Speaker 1: the same goals as the left, we just don't want 72 00:03:53,520 --> 00:03:55,720 Speaker 1: to go about it different. That's so wrong, And if 73 00:03:55,720 --> 00:03:59,640 Speaker 1: we don't understand how radically different their goals are from ours. 74 00:03:59,800 --> 00:04:04,200 Speaker 1: That want to utopian our dystopian state. They want they 75 00:04:04,200 --> 00:04:07,880 Speaker 1: actually want to us or in cultural and governmental Marxism. 76 00:04:08,280 --> 00:04:11,280 Speaker 1: And they want the Green New Deal because they want 77 00:04:11,280 --> 00:04:15,960 Speaker 1: to use the government to destroy the domestic energy industry 78 00:04:16,320 --> 00:04:20,159 Speaker 1: and they want to ultimately leverage that into control of 79 00:04:20,200 --> 00:04:24,040 Speaker 1: the population. They want to shut down speech selectively of 80 00:04:24,360 --> 00:04:26,840 Speaker 1: conservatives because they want to control the narrative. They want 81 00:04:26,839 --> 00:04:30,359 Speaker 1: to control all power. They pretend to be compassionate, but 82 00:04:30,400 --> 00:04:34,400 Speaker 1: they don't care about anything except themselves and their virtue. Signaling, 83 00:04:34,400 --> 00:04:37,760 Speaker 1: and I think their religion is as morphed into some 84 00:04:37,839 --> 00:04:43,200 Speaker 1: kind of a virtue signaling green energy thing. And uh, 85 00:04:43,320 --> 00:04:47,120 Speaker 1: but they they have alienated us, that polarized us and 86 00:04:47,240 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 1: leverage race. They're they're dividing us on race. Race relations 87 00:04:51,279 --> 00:04:53,920 Speaker 1: now are worse than when during the sixties when I 88 00:04:53,960 --> 00:04:56,479 Speaker 1: grew up, when it was so bad. Uh, and it's 89 00:04:56,480 --> 00:04:59,440 Speaker 1: gotten better for so many years. And now they've reinstituted 90 00:04:59,440 --> 00:05:04,120 Speaker 1: SEGREA and they're they're they're trying to destroy the economy 91 00:05:04,520 --> 00:05:07,240 Speaker 1: this inflation. They act like, uh, they don't know what 92 00:05:07,279 --> 00:05:09,960 Speaker 1: they're doing. They know they're flooding the economy with the 93 00:05:09,960 --> 00:05:13,000 Speaker 1: money that we don't have, uh, too too much money, 94 00:05:13,080 --> 00:05:16,360 Speaker 1: chasing too few goods. This isn't a mystery, this isn't 95 00:05:16,400 --> 00:05:18,840 Speaker 1: something they can't figure out. They know, but their ideal 96 00:05:18,920 --> 00:05:23,200 Speaker 1: ideologically wedded to continue to spend this money. And you 97 00:05:23,200 --> 00:05:25,600 Speaker 1: could even argue that that they're doing that on purpose, 98 00:05:25,640 --> 00:05:28,039 Speaker 1: like the cloud Piven thing where they're trying to bankrupt 99 00:05:28,080 --> 00:05:31,240 Speaker 1: this and then pick up the pieces, re introducing their order. 100 00:05:31,520 --> 00:05:33,600 Speaker 1: But it doesn't even have to be Clard Pivn. They 101 00:05:33,640 --> 00:05:38,200 Speaker 1: are trying to uh spend us into oblivion because they 102 00:05:38,240 --> 00:05:41,000 Speaker 1: want to transfer wealth from the people. They can't stand 103 00:05:41,040 --> 00:05:44,159 Speaker 1: the people that are successful, except maybe the digital oligarchs, 104 00:05:44,200 --> 00:05:48,800 Speaker 1: the people on their side, and and just completely reorient society. 105 00:05:48,839 --> 00:05:54,680 Speaker 1: But look lesa beyond that, look at them at glorifying evil, 106 00:05:54,760 --> 00:05:57,160 Speaker 1: the murder of babies. It's not just like it used 107 00:05:57,200 --> 00:05:59,360 Speaker 1: to be safe, legal, and rare, which is always a lie. 108 00:05:59,680 --> 00:06:03,120 Speaker 1: It is glorifying the murder of babies and demonizing those 109 00:06:03,160 --> 00:06:06,760 Speaker 1: who champion life and biblical values. It is glorifying those 110 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:12,160 Speaker 1: who would mutilate young children in contravention of God's created 111 00:06:12,279 --> 00:06:16,400 Speaker 1: order that he created. Uh, people and men and women, 112 00:06:17,000 --> 00:06:19,679 Speaker 1: men and women. He created them gender specific. He didn't 113 00:06:19,680 --> 00:06:23,560 Speaker 1: create man and women to narcissistic lee identify as whoever 114 00:06:23,600 --> 00:06:27,479 Speaker 1: they wanted to identify. And so they're they're creating moral 115 00:06:27,520 --> 00:06:31,720 Speaker 1: and intellectual chaos. The open borders. They're denying that they 116 00:06:31,920 --> 00:06:33,960 Speaker 1: deliberately opened the borders, and we see it right in 117 00:06:34,000 --> 00:06:37,039 Speaker 1: front of our eyes. Uh. There are at least ten 118 00:06:37,160 --> 00:06:40,720 Speaker 1: existential threats to the United States that they are exacerbating 119 00:06:40,720 --> 00:06:45,839 Speaker 1: and accelerating, including China, who is building, buying land, building military. 120 00:06:46,120 --> 00:06:48,720 Speaker 1: We are downsizing our military and turning it into a 121 00:06:48,720 --> 00:06:54,800 Speaker 1: woke laboratory, emasculating it. I can't go on enough about 122 00:06:54,880 --> 00:06:57,640 Speaker 1: how they are trying to destroy the country. But I think, Lisa, 123 00:06:57,640 --> 00:07:02,120 Speaker 1: and I'll end this me andering soliloquy with this, I 124 00:07:02,160 --> 00:07:04,200 Speaker 1: don't think if the country dies it will be a 125 00:07:04,240 --> 00:07:06,599 Speaker 1: result of the left. I think it will be a 126 00:07:06,680 --> 00:07:11,400 Speaker 1: result of naive people on the right who are cowardly 127 00:07:11,840 --> 00:07:16,560 Speaker 1: or naive, are are not are are unwitting opponents, and 128 00:07:16,600 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 1: who don't realize what we're up against and therefore don't 129 00:07:19,440 --> 00:07:23,320 Speaker 1: fight like our survival depends on it. I really do 130 00:07:23,400 --> 00:07:26,480 Speaker 1: think it comes down to cowardice. If I'm being honest, 131 00:07:26,640 --> 00:07:29,120 Speaker 1: I think we have too many people who are cowards. 132 00:07:29,240 --> 00:07:32,240 Speaker 1: They want to be accepted by society, even though we 133 00:07:32,240 --> 00:07:34,440 Speaker 1: we look at society and we should be looking at 134 00:07:34,480 --> 00:07:37,160 Speaker 1: it with disdain. As you pointed out, we live in 135 00:07:37,160 --> 00:07:41,320 Speaker 1: a society that embraces the murder of innocent babies, embraces 136 00:07:41,400 --> 00:07:44,800 Speaker 1: the idea of castrating a young boy or or you know, 137 00:07:44,840 --> 00:07:47,560 Speaker 1: giving a young girl double massectomy. So I can't, for 138 00:07:47,600 --> 00:07:49,960 Speaker 1: the life of me, understand why anyone would want to 139 00:07:50,040 --> 00:07:54,360 Speaker 1: be accepted by that. And no, and it's pleasing man 140 00:07:54,400 --> 00:07:57,920 Speaker 1: instead of pleasing God. And I have to believe this 141 00:07:58,000 --> 00:08:03,200 Speaker 1: is spiritual warfare, because there is no logical explanation for 142 00:08:03,400 --> 00:08:07,040 Speaker 1: anyone defending this stuff with a straight face. And yet 143 00:08:07,080 --> 00:08:10,760 Speaker 1: our kids have been indoctrinated. All of the major institutions 144 00:08:10,760 --> 00:08:15,520 Speaker 1: are controlled by the left, from education pay through twelve, 145 00:08:15,680 --> 00:08:19,960 Speaker 1: and then then the universities, and then they own Hollywood 146 00:08:19,960 --> 00:08:24,400 Speaker 1: as we know, they own the digital uh conglomerates and 147 00:08:24,400 --> 00:08:28,840 Speaker 1: and the major media, and so it's it's an unreality. 148 00:08:28,880 --> 00:08:32,520 Speaker 1: It's a twilight zone on steroids. And you try to 149 00:08:32,559 --> 00:08:36,079 Speaker 1: approach I was thinking about this. Name me a Democrat 150 00:08:36,120 --> 00:08:39,320 Speaker 1: that you know, even in your personal life, who will 151 00:08:39,400 --> 00:08:43,160 Speaker 1: vote against what these people are doing, even though you 152 00:08:43,200 --> 00:08:45,800 Speaker 1: would think of these individual Democrats as not being radical, 153 00:08:46,480 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 1: yet they all enable and support. That's what discourages me. 154 00:08:50,040 --> 00:08:53,240 Speaker 1: I've got good friends who who don't don't either they 155 00:08:53,280 --> 00:08:56,120 Speaker 1: don't realize it, or they think that we are so evil, 156 00:08:56,480 --> 00:09:00,800 Speaker 1: that the Trump movement is so evil that they they 157 00:09:00,800 --> 00:09:03,240 Speaker 1: would There's not anything that the left would do that 158 00:09:03,280 --> 00:09:05,920 Speaker 1: they won't condone. That's what's horrifying. I can't imagine a 159 00:09:06,040 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 1: thing they will do that that that they will oppose, 160 00:09:09,320 --> 00:09:12,160 Speaker 1: and you can approach them and explain these things to them, 161 00:09:12,160 --> 00:09:17,000 Speaker 1: and they have some bizarre explanations or rationalization how they're 162 00:09:17,000 --> 00:09:20,480 Speaker 1: really not doing that, borders really aren't open, and and 163 00:09:20,720 --> 00:09:23,679 Speaker 1: I I don't think there's any relating to these people. 164 00:09:23,760 --> 00:09:26,960 Speaker 1: So as crazy as I said, I think it's demonic 165 00:09:27,240 --> 00:09:29,199 Speaker 1: in the end, because I think they're under some kind 166 00:09:29,200 --> 00:09:32,839 Speaker 1: of a bizarre spell and wedded to their ideology and 167 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:35,400 Speaker 1: pawns to some kind of evil force. And now I'm 168 00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:38,520 Speaker 1: not like the left saying all Conservatives are evil, are 169 00:09:38,559 --> 00:09:43,000 Speaker 1: all Trump? I'm saying the the forces behind it are evil. 170 00:09:43,040 --> 00:09:47,240 Speaker 1: I think most of them are unwinning dukes. But the 171 00:09:47,320 --> 00:09:50,120 Speaker 1: mainstream media, the Democratic politicians and all of them, they 172 00:09:50,160 --> 00:09:54,040 Speaker 1: know what they're doing. And so but it's a complex thing. 173 00:09:54,120 --> 00:09:59,720 Speaker 1: And I think this unwillingness to recognize evil for what 174 00:09:59,800 --> 00:10:02,760 Speaker 1: it is, it is as to reiterrite the point we 175 00:10:02,840 --> 00:10:05,240 Speaker 1: made before. It's what's really going to cause our downfall 176 00:10:05,240 --> 00:10:06,760 Speaker 1: if we don't wake up and if we don't have 177 00:10:06,840 --> 00:10:09,280 Speaker 1: the guts to stand up against it. No, I really 178 00:10:09,280 --> 00:10:11,400 Speaker 1: agree with that. And and if we don't turn it around, 179 00:10:11,559 --> 00:10:15,000 Speaker 1: what really can I mean, we saw a president stand 180 00:10:15,080 --> 00:10:18,440 Speaker 1: up and a national primetime address and label seventy five 181 00:10:18,480 --> 00:10:20,240 Speaker 1: million Americans is an enemy of the state with the 182 00:10:20,280 --> 00:10:23,600 Speaker 1: military flanked behind him. And then what concerns me about 183 00:10:23,640 --> 00:10:28,200 Speaker 1: that this mothering of us of US conservatives. But we've 184 00:10:28,240 --> 00:10:31,600 Speaker 1: already seen sort of the dehumanization of just humans happened 185 00:10:31,640 --> 00:10:34,160 Speaker 1: as a society. Right, We we call babies a clump 186 00:10:34,200 --> 00:10:37,839 Speaker 1: of cells. We are treating children with such disdain and 187 00:10:37,880 --> 00:10:39,840 Speaker 1: the treatment of them. So it's it's we already have 188 00:10:40,000 --> 00:10:44,720 Speaker 1: this society where we don't really view human life as 189 00:10:44,840 --> 00:10:47,720 Speaker 1: this is this sacred thing. And then on top of it, 190 00:10:47,760 --> 00:10:50,240 Speaker 1: you have a president then dehumanizing on top of that, 191 00:10:50,320 --> 00:10:53,160 Speaker 1: seventy five million Americans, and then we see this you know, 192 00:10:53,280 --> 00:10:55,880 Speaker 1: young boy, the eighteen year old who is uh, you know, 193 00:10:56,120 --> 00:10:59,280 Speaker 1: driven down in a car. The guy killed him with 194 00:10:59,320 --> 00:11:03,120 Speaker 1: this car. You you had the prolaywoman who was going 195 00:11:03,160 --> 00:11:04,679 Speaker 1: to door door shot in her arm. And so I 196 00:11:05,000 --> 00:11:06,959 Speaker 1: just I wonder with all of that, in the back 197 00:11:07,080 --> 00:11:10,199 Speaker 1: drop where this goes, well, you know, and that's a 198 00:11:10,280 --> 00:11:14,920 Speaker 1: point a category of existential threat. I didn't mention in 199 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:18,400 Speaker 1: my litany a minute ago, the disintegration of law and order, 200 00:11:18,480 --> 00:11:22,280 Speaker 1: the deliberate disintegration of law and order, so that you 201 00:11:22,280 --> 00:11:25,720 Speaker 1: you have glorified the victims. I mean the perpetrators of 202 00:11:25,760 --> 00:11:28,800 Speaker 1: crime and demonized the victims of crime, refused to prosecute, 203 00:11:29,200 --> 00:11:31,959 Speaker 1: change the bail laws to let people out, change the 204 00:11:32,320 --> 00:11:37,080 Speaker 1: laws on prosecution. You have chaos in the streets of 205 00:11:37,120 --> 00:11:41,880 Speaker 1: the major cities. People are getting slaughtered, the subways aren't safe. 206 00:11:42,000 --> 00:11:45,000 Speaker 1: Old women and young women are being attacked by men, 207 00:11:45,559 --> 00:11:48,080 Speaker 1: and there's no condemnation from the left, and that the 208 00:11:48,160 --> 00:11:52,760 Speaker 1: media doesn't talk about it. And so uh you mentioned 209 00:11:52,800 --> 00:11:57,680 Speaker 1: a minute ago that that there's a diminution of respect 210 00:11:57,720 --> 00:12:00,200 Speaker 1: for life. That's what I mean by just being spirit Well, 211 00:12:00,240 --> 00:12:04,160 Speaker 1: God is about life. The Left is about death in 212 00:12:04,280 --> 00:12:07,839 Speaker 1: every respect. It's a movement of death. Even if you 213 00:12:07,880 --> 00:12:10,120 Speaker 1: want to talk about the environmental movement, they have no 214 00:12:10,240 --> 00:12:14,720 Speaker 1: respect for human life. They put plant life, uh, in 215 00:12:14,760 --> 00:12:17,679 Speaker 1: an elevated position to human life. Some of these wacko 216 00:12:17,840 --> 00:12:20,560 Speaker 1: people think the world would be better off without any 217 00:12:20,640 --> 00:12:24,080 Speaker 1: human beings, and so that the world could survive in 218 00:12:24,200 --> 00:12:27,800 Speaker 1: its inanimate form and we and and human beings are extinguished. 219 00:12:27,800 --> 00:12:30,520 Speaker 1: This is how psycho these people are. And and I 220 00:12:30,559 --> 00:12:33,040 Speaker 1: don't know why we don't call it for what it is. 221 00:12:33,240 --> 00:12:36,880 Speaker 1: What we're seeing on the news every day is beyond belief. 222 00:12:36,920 --> 00:12:40,960 Speaker 1: I can't even believe we're debating it. It's so abjectively wrong, 223 00:12:41,600 --> 00:12:45,760 Speaker 1: objectively wrong. There is no there is no re rational 224 00:12:45,800 --> 00:12:48,400 Speaker 1: debate for much of what is going on, and yet 225 00:12:48,440 --> 00:12:52,280 Speaker 1: the left uh supports it and condones it, and everybody 226 00:12:52,280 --> 00:12:55,080 Speaker 1: that follows the left, i e. The Democratic Party, the 227 00:12:55,080 --> 00:12:59,080 Speaker 1: media and all of them support it. So I am 228 00:12:59,120 --> 00:13:03,360 Speaker 1: I am beyond uh frustrated, beyond concerned of what could happen. 229 00:13:03,960 --> 00:13:06,640 Speaker 1: I don't see, I don't see how we get out 230 00:13:06,640 --> 00:13:09,920 Speaker 1: of this sort of a of a spiritual revival. And 231 00:13:10,440 --> 00:13:14,120 Speaker 1: I'm not kidding you because I don't see uh, any 232 00:13:14,120 --> 00:13:17,360 Speaker 1: indication that there's a stopping We went above thirty one 233 00:13:17,440 --> 00:13:20,880 Speaker 1: trillion international debt, and even the Republican Party doesn't say 234 00:13:20,880 --> 00:13:25,160 Speaker 1: anything about that. I mean, we're condoning spending at an 235 00:13:25,240 --> 00:13:28,679 Speaker 1: obscene level every day, and I don't see the Republicans 236 00:13:28,720 --> 00:13:32,280 Speaker 1: doing much about it either, do you? I don't. And 237 00:13:32,320 --> 00:13:36,120 Speaker 1: again it just gets to this this issue of cowardice, 238 00:13:36,280 --> 00:13:38,280 Speaker 1: of just the fact that I just you know, I 239 00:13:38,280 --> 00:13:40,559 Speaker 1: see it in the media. I see it in politicians, 240 00:13:40,640 --> 00:13:43,200 Speaker 1: of people just not willing to speak out when they 241 00:13:43,240 --> 00:13:45,960 Speaker 1: see what's wrong, or they wait until it's safe and 242 00:13:45,960 --> 00:13:48,880 Speaker 1: the damage has already done. And at that point, oh now, 243 00:13:49,000 --> 00:13:52,360 Speaker 1: maybe you know mass vaccinations are are bad or oh 244 00:13:52,480 --> 00:13:56,640 Speaker 1: now lockdown's are bad, but you'll waited until the damage 245 00:13:56,720 --> 00:14:00,360 Speaker 1: was done, you know, And so that doesn't really anything. 246 00:14:01,480 --> 00:14:05,280 Speaker 1: And and and you've always been an advocate or an 247 00:14:05,280 --> 00:14:08,600 Speaker 1: activist about these vaccines, and you you've been a herald 248 00:14:08,600 --> 00:14:13,360 Speaker 1: out there and right now, the left even though it's 249 00:14:13,480 --> 00:14:16,520 Speaker 1: known that these vaccines have caused all kinds of trouble 250 00:14:16,600 --> 00:14:18,920 Speaker 1: and at the very least we know they don't prevent 251 00:14:19,000 --> 00:14:21,720 Speaker 1: the spread of the disease. And yet you're still getting 252 00:14:21,760 --> 00:14:25,760 Speaker 1: people kicked out of the military, are prevented from coming 253 00:14:25,760 --> 00:14:29,840 Speaker 1: and playing sports in the United States because there's a 254 00:14:29,960 --> 00:14:33,480 Speaker 1: vaccination rule and we know it's absurd. And is there 255 00:14:33,600 --> 00:14:37,960 Speaker 1: some bureaucratic inertia that prevents us from changing these things 256 00:14:37,960 --> 00:14:41,280 Speaker 1: on the spot? And and and look at the military 257 00:14:41,400 --> 00:14:46,440 Speaker 1: which is now inhabited by all the leftists, and and 258 00:14:46,760 --> 00:14:50,800 Speaker 1: uh who who who implement these walk policies? Who are 259 00:14:50,920 --> 00:14:56,400 Speaker 1: are discouraging people by their policies from entering the military? 260 00:14:56,680 --> 00:15:00,080 Speaker 1: I don't know, it's it's I have never seen a 261 00:14:59,840 --> 00:15:03,600 Speaker 1: h more overt case of national suicide in my life. 262 00:15:03,840 --> 00:15:05,600 Speaker 1: We all knew we were on a slow march to 263 00:15:05,720 --> 00:15:11,160 Speaker 1: national suicide for the last probably fifty years, but now 264 00:15:11,200 --> 00:15:15,200 Speaker 1: we're on an accelerated path, and I just cannot believe 265 00:15:16,400 --> 00:15:18,560 Speaker 1: how difficult this is going to be to turn around. 266 00:15:18,600 --> 00:15:21,520 Speaker 1: I still remain optimistic, though, that we can turn it around, 267 00:15:21,680 --> 00:15:24,480 Speaker 1: because I have to be optimistic. I can't afford to 268 00:15:24,520 --> 00:15:26,400 Speaker 1: believe otherwise. I'm not going to give up on the 269 00:15:26,480 --> 00:15:29,480 Speaker 1: United States, you know, and I have hoped to, David. 270 00:15:29,560 --> 00:15:33,440 Speaker 1: I do believe that Republicans will pick up the House 271 00:15:33,480 --> 00:15:36,200 Speaker 1: to set it and some gubernatorial races now, you know, 272 00:15:36,280 --> 00:15:38,840 Speaker 1: again our Republicans going to deliver on all the things 273 00:15:38,960 --> 00:15:41,600 Speaker 1: we want them to. Probably not, but I think it 274 00:15:41,640 --> 00:15:44,080 Speaker 1: can hold them off for a little bit until hopefully 275 00:15:44,120 --> 00:15:46,800 Speaker 1: we get a strong president in there and then you know, 276 00:15:46,840 --> 00:15:50,280 Speaker 1: further turn things around. But I haven't given up hope either. Yeah, 277 00:15:50,480 --> 00:15:53,280 Speaker 1: and and and we can't. But but we do have 278 00:15:53,440 --> 00:15:58,000 Speaker 1: to wake people up. People on Fox people. I really 279 00:15:58,040 --> 00:16:01,960 Speaker 1: like I earned somebody the other days toggesting that and 280 00:16:02,320 --> 00:16:06,000 Speaker 1: somewhat facetiously but not suggesting that Trump and Obama could 281 00:16:06,000 --> 00:16:10,680 Speaker 1: go negotiate this deal with North Korea and that's something 282 00:16:10,760 --> 00:16:13,640 Speaker 1: we can agree up. No If you think that Obama 283 00:16:13,800 --> 00:16:17,640 Speaker 1: and Trump share any kind of views as to foreign 284 00:16:17,680 --> 00:16:21,240 Speaker 1: policy that are reconcilable, then you don't get it. You 285 00:16:21,280 --> 00:16:23,560 Speaker 1: do not get the left, and you don't get Obama, 286 00:16:23,640 --> 00:16:26,280 Speaker 1: who was a leftist and he he would have been 287 00:16:26,320 --> 00:16:29,120 Speaker 1: even more extreme if he could have gotten away with it, 288 00:16:29,160 --> 00:16:32,040 Speaker 1: and he's probably one of the main principles running this 289 00:16:32,320 --> 00:16:35,920 Speaker 1: leftward leftward surge right now. I don't understand why people 290 00:16:35,960 --> 00:16:38,640 Speaker 1: on our side do not get it, even people you 291 00:16:38,680 --> 00:16:43,040 Speaker 1: think would get it. I think for me, COVID really 292 00:16:43,080 --> 00:16:47,120 Speaker 1: illuminated who gets it and who doesn't. Personally, Uh, a 293 00:16:47,120 --> 00:16:49,640 Speaker 1: lot of people I previously respected I lost respect for, 294 00:16:49,720 --> 00:16:52,360 Speaker 1: and then people I didn't maybe necessiate, you know, look 295 00:16:52,440 --> 00:16:55,360 Speaker 1: up to that degree, to to that degree, really prove it, 296 00:16:55,360 --> 00:16:59,160 Speaker 1: proved themselves to be uh understand, you know, just getting 297 00:16:59,200 --> 00:17:02,280 Speaker 1: it right and being strong voices on things. Quick commercial 298 00:17:02,320 --> 00:17:07,880 Speaker 1: break back with David Limbaugh. You know, we're really talking 299 00:17:07,920 --> 00:17:11,639 Speaker 1: about this good versus evil that's happening in society. And 300 00:17:11,680 --> 00:17:14,800 Speaker 1: I know that you're someone that you know you you 301 00:17:14,840 --> 00:17:19,600 Speaker 1: previously had doubts about your faith. Why why did you 302 00:17:19,680 --> 00:17:23,919 Speaker 1: and what turned it around for you? Well? I am 303 00:17:23,960 --> 00:17:27,840 Speaker 1: I always believed in God, because I can't imagine that 304 00:17:28,160 --> 00:17:32,680 Speaker 1: how anybody could think that this, that the world could 305 00:17:32,680 --> 00:17:36,680 Speaker 1: come into existence without a primary, uncaused cause. Does that 306 00:17:36,800 --> 00:17:39,640 Speaker 1: even make sense to me? Uh? And so they come 307 00:17:39,720 --> 00:17:42,800 Speaker 1: up with bizarre things like the multiverse or aliens. Dropped 308 00:17:42,840 --> 00:17:45,040 Speaker 1: this here, well, who created the aliens? And it's just 309 00:17:45,080 --> 00:17:49,080 Speaker 1: too absurd to contemplate. But I didn't necessarily subscribe to 310 00:17:49,119 --> 00:17:53,119 Speaker 1: the Bible or to the divinity of Jesus Christ. But 311 00:17:53,240 --> 00:17:55,720 Speaker 1: I wasn't a rebel in that sense. I always thought 312 00:17:55,960 --> 00:17:58,600 Speaker 1: I wanted to. I knew who the good team was, 313 00:17:58,640 --> 00:18:01,240 Speaker 1: the good guys, I knew the right team was. I 314 00:18:01,280 --> 00:18:04,720 Speaker 1: wanted to be on. I wanted to be a believing Christian. 315 00:18:04,760 --> 00:18:07,520 Speaker 1: But I had these doubts that so many have. Why 316 00:18:07,560 --> 00:18:11,359 Speaker 1: would an all loving God allow human beings to go 317 00:18:11,520 --> 00:18:14,280 Speaker 1: to everlasting punishment that kind of thing? And so I 318 00:18:14,280 --> 00:18:16,480 Speaker 1: had those doubts, and I didn't know whether to believe 319 00:18:16,480 --> 00:18:18,800 Speaker 1: the Bible. The real reason I didn't, I think, is 320 00:18:18,840 --> 00:18:21,359 Speaker 1: because I never gave it a real chance, despite growing 321 00:18:21,400 --> 00:18:23,400 Speaker 1: up in the Christian family and church and all that. 322 00:18:23,720 --> 00:18:26,560 Speaker 1: And so I started examining the evidence of reading the Bible, 323 00:18:27,119 --> 00:18:31,000 Speaker 1: and I came away with the the idea that there's 324 00:18:31,119 --> 00:18:35,960 Speaker 1: overwhelming proof for Christianity's truth claims. It is not as 325 00:18:36,000 --> 00:18:41,000 Speaker 1: the last or as the pagan secularist would would assume 326 00:18:41,359 --> 00:18:44,920 Speaker 1: and would claim a blind faith that we have. This 327 00:18:45,000 --> 00:18:49,200 Speaker 1: faith is based on real evidence. Uh that Jesus Christ 328 00:18:49,280 --> 00:18:53,880 Speaker 1: was here, that he was resurrected bodily, and uh that 329 00:18:55,240 --> 00:19:00,520 Speaker 1: uh five witnesses saw it. And these witnesses and these 330 00:19:00,560 --> 00:19:05,400 Speaker 1: disciples told these stories at the risk of their own death. Uh. 331 00:19:05,560 --> 00:19:09,960 Speaker 1: You you might have Muslims or other religious adherents, religious 332 00:19:09,960 --> 00:19:13,320 Speaker 1: adherents of other faiths willing to die for a cause 333 00:19:13,760 --> 00:19:16,439 Speaker 1: that that may or may not be true. But in 334 00:19:16,480 --> 00:19:18,879 Speaker 1: the case of the Christians, there's a distinct difference. The 335 00:19:18,920 --> 00:19:24,879 Speaker 1: early Christians, the disciples, they died, they were martyrs for 336 00:19:25,040 --> 00:19:28,120 Speaker 1: a cause. They would not have they would have not 337 00:19:28,119 --> 00:19:30,679 Speaker 1: not have died for something they knew to be false. 338 00:19:30,920 --> 00:19:34,439 Speaker 1: They were testifying to something. They witnessed, the resurrection of 339 00:19:34,520 --> 00:19:37,720 Speaker 1: Christ and his miracles. They saw these happen, and they 340 00:19:37,720 --> 00:19:41,399 Speaker 1: were willing to suffer unbelievable abuse. They would never have 341 00:19:41,480 --> 00:19:43,159 Speaker 1: done that if they thought it was a why they 342 00:19:43,200 --> 00:19:46,960 Speaker 1: had nothing to gain. And so these there's compelling effences, 343 00:19:47,040 --> 00:19:52,160 Speaker 1: including the supernatural uh, prophecies in the Old Testament, uh, 344 00:19:52,440 --> 00:19:54,200 Speaker 1: and all the way through the Bible, and I could 345 00:19:54,200 --> 00:19:56,520 Speaker 1: go on and on. So after I studied all the evidence, 346 00:19:56,880 --> 00:19:59,560 Speaker 1: I became convinced that it was true, that that the 347 00:19:59,600 --> 00:20:02,600 Speaker 1: Bible was the Word of God. And when I came 348 00:20:02,640 --> 00:20:05,800 Speaker 1: to that realization, it blew me away. I'm holding a 349 00:20:05,880 --> 00:20:09,080 Speaker 1: book that was actually written through human authors by God. 350 00:20:09,480 --> 00:20:12,920 Speaker 1: And so I became an ardent student of it. And 351 00:20:12,920 --> 00:20:16,000 Speaker 1: and since then, you know, thirty years later, I started 352 00:20:16,000 --> 00:20:18,399 Speaker 1: writing books about it, after teaching Sunday School and all that, 353 00:20:18,440 --> 00:20:20,960 Speaker 1: because I want to be able to reach people that 354 00:20:21,040 --> 00:20:23,639 Speaker 1: the pastor and theologian may not be able to reach. 355 00:20:24,000 --> 00:20:26,920 Speaker 1: People who are situated the way I was before. People 356 00:20:26,960 --> 00:20:30,119 Speaker 1: who can relate to a lay explanation of these things 357 00:20:30,280 --> 00:20:33,159 Speaker 1: and inspire people to read the Bible, to practice the 358 00:20:33,160 --> 00:20:36,800 Speaker 1: spiritual disciplines and draw closer to God. That that's my 359 00:20:36,920 --> 00:20:41,080 Speaker 1: real motive in writing these Christian books. How much do 360 00:20:41,119 --> 00:20:44,040 Speaker 1: you think, as we have previously discussed, the decline of 361 00:20:44,080 --> 00:20:48,320 Speaker 1: the country correlates with the decline of religion, um an 362 00:20:48,359 --> 00:20:56,600 Speaker 1: incredible amount, probably about I I find that we have 363 00:20:56,680 --> 00:21:00,639 Speaker 1: gotten away from Biblical values, and it's a direct correlation. 364 00:21:00,920 --> 00:21:03,639 Speaker 1: You see right now, for example, in our society, you 365 00:21:03,680 --> 00:21:08,399 Speaker 1: see the parading of transvestites, are drag queens in front 366 00:21:08,400 --> 00:21:11,960 Speaker 1: of children. We see the promotion of pedophilia. We see 367 00:21:12,119 --> 00:21:19,399 Speaker 1: now the the advocacy of uh, this new polyamory, polyamorous 368 00:21:19,440 --> 00:21:22,640 Speaker 1: relationship where you got let's say, two men and one 369 00:21:22,680 --> 00:21:27,520 Speaker 1: woman in a relationship. These are abhorrant moral developments, objectively 370 00:21:27,760 --> 00:21:30,600 Speaker 1: evil things in my view. And yet we are on 371 00:21:30,760 --> 00:21:35,359 Speaker 1: such a slippery path of moral relativism that anything goes now, 372 00:21:35,600 --> 00:21:39,239 Speaker 1: anything goes for the left except for political conservatism and 373 00:21:39,680 --> 00:21:43,879 Speaker 1: biblical traditional Christian values. That is what it is shown. 374 00:21:44,040 --> 00:21:48,080 Speaker 1: That's how you know these people are. They will support anything, 375 00:21:48,200 --> 00:21:53,400 Speaker 1: including Muslims being mean to homosexuals, as long as it's 376 00:21:53,400 --> 00:21:57,919 Speaker 1: not Christians, so that the common denominator is they opposed 377 00:21:57,920 --> 00:22:02,000 Speaker 1: the Judeo Christian ethic, the j O Christian worldview, and 378 00:22:03,000 --> 00:22:06,920 Speaker 1: anything else, anything else is fine. And so right now, 379 00:22:07,040 --> 00:22:11,320 Speaker 1: the disintegration these moral values has resulted in an abandonment 380 00:22:11,600 --> 00:22:16,040 Speaker 1: of our constitution because the Constitution is built on those values. 381 00:22:16,440 --> 00:22:19,159 Speaker 1: And for example, I'll give any example that you know 382 00:22:19,440 --> 00:22:23,600 Speaker 1: they they the Framers said the Constitution is made only 383 00:22:23,680 --> 00:22:26,399 Speaker 1: for moral and religious people. And I think what they 384 00:22:26,480 --> 00:22:29,399 Speaker 1: ultimately meant by that was if you if you treat 385 00:22:29,480 --> 00:22:32,399 Speaker 1: the Constitution as if it doesn't stay what it means, 386 00:22:33,040 --> 00:22:35,560 Speaker 1: then it doesn't mean anything, and then it disintegrates. And 387 00:22:35,600 --> 00:22:39,680 Speaker 1: that's what judicial activism, leftist judicial activism is. If you 388 00:22:39,760 --> 00:22:42,560 Speaker 1: say the separation of powers doesn't really mean anything, if 389 00:22:42,600 --> 00:22:47,080 Speaker 1: you say that you can rewrite the Constitution to say 390 00:22:47,160 --> 00:22:52,240 Speaker 1: that it requires abortion be allowed, when there's nowhere in 391 00:22:52,280 --> 00:22:56,040 Speaker 1: the world in the Constitution there's the numbers are emanations, 392 00:22:56,040 --> 00:22:58,440 Speaker 1: and they just make this up from whole cloth. Then 393 00:22:58,520 --> 00:23:01,239 Speaker 1: you no longer have any eating and you have no 394 00:23:01,480 --> 00:23:05,760 Speaker 1: order to your life. You when when the left says 395 00:23:05,840 --> 00:23:09,520 Speaker 1: that you can identify as a plant, or as a man, 396 00:23:09,680 --> 00:23:12,560 Speaker 1: or as a woman, you're they are going directly against 397 00:23:12,600 --> 00:23:17,040 Speaker 1: God's created order, which is to have created man, created 398 00:23:17,280 --> 00:23:20,600 Speaker 1: human beings as men and women, not as those, not 399 00:23:20,720 --> 00:23:23,639 Speaker 1: as creatures who could identify who as whoever they wanted to. 400 00:23:24,040 --> 00:23:28,080 Speaker 1: So throughout the entire spectrum of our cultural and political life, 401 00:23:28,560 --> 00:23:32,200 Speaker 1: you see an attack in an undermining of Christian principles, 402 00:23:32,200 --> 00:23:35,040 Speaker 1: and you also see it within the church. The churches 403 00:23:35,520 --> 00:23:39,560 Speaker 1: is breaking down because it doesn't stand for the Gospel anymore. 404 00:23:39,840 --> 00:23:42,640 Speaker 1: I mean some churches do. Many churches don't what they 405 00:23:42,640 --> 00:23:45,480 Speaker 1: really stand for. They claim that Jesus was just a 406 00:23:45,600 --> 00:23:48,480 Speaker 1: nice guy that didn't care. He was tolerant about sin. Well, 407 00:23:48,520 --> 00:23:52,000 Speaker 1: read the Sermon on the mount Sometimes he had less 408 00:23:52,040 --> 00:23:54,920 Speaker 1: tolerance for sin even than the God of the Old Testament. 409 00:23:55,320 --> 00:23:57,040 Speaker 1: It is the same God, by the way, but just 410 00:23:57,160 --> 00:24:01,760 Speaker 1: different revelations and new revelations. In the New Testament, Jesus 411 00:24:01,800 --> 00:24:06,520 Speaker 1: expanded on the moral teachings and they're actually were held 412 00:24:06,560 --> 00:24:09,800 Speaker 1: to a higher standard in under the Christian ethic, even 413 00:24:09,800 --> 00:24:11,919 Speaker 1: though it's not a matter of following rules. It's a 414 00:24:11,920 --> 00:24:14,520 Speaker 1: matter of love and obedience to the triune God of 415 00:24:14,560 --> 00:24:18,159 Speaker 1: the universe. But you read the the standard that we 416 00:24:18,240 --> 00:24:20,639 Speaker 1: are held to in the Sermon on the Mountain, and 417 00:24:20,760 --> 00:24:23,800 Speaker 1: and and tell me that Jesus is indifferent. He was 418 00:24:23,840 --> 00:24:27,240 Speaker 1: not indifferent to the idea of God's created order, or 419 00:24:27,640 --> 00:24:32,919 Speaker 1: or the way that the Left has redefined sex and gender. 420 00:24:33,400 --> 00:24:36,439 Speaker 1: He was strong about all these things. And there's no 421 00:24:36,480 --> 00:24:38,360 Speaker 1: difference between the God of the Old Testament the God 422 00:24:38,400 --> 00:24:41,280 Speaker 1: of the New Testament. Same God. God doesn't change, God 423 00:24:41,320 --> 00:24:47,240 Speaker 1: doesn't lie. And so uh, I find that people want 424 00:24:47,320 --> 00:24:52,120 Speaker 1: to rewrite the Bible, rewrite doctrine, just like they did 425 00:24:52,480 --> 00:24:55,160 Speaker 1: right at the beginning after Paul planted all these churches 426 00:24:55,440 --> 00:24:58,680 Speaker 1: in the Mediterranean basin and they introduced small Stockton to 427 00:24:58,760 --> 00:25:02,159 Speaker 1: say Salva was not by faith in Christ alone, but 428 00:25:02,240 --> 00:25:06,000 Speaker 1: by faith plus works, faith plus circumcision, faith plus adherence 429 00:25:06,040 --> 00:25:09,560 Speaker 1: to ritual rights. Or that Jesus wasn't fully human and 430 00:25:09,560 --> 00:25:13,200 Speaker 1: fully divine. He couldn't have been fully human because human, 431 00:25:13,560 --> 00:25:18,640 Speaker 1: because material existence is evil. So the the his death 432 00:25:18,680 --> 00:25:21,840 Speaker 1: on the cross was an illusion. No, it was real. 433 00:25:22,040 --> 00:25:25,200 Speaker 1: Christ became a human being. He condescended the human form 434 00:25:25,240 --> 00:25:28,480 Speaker 1: to suffer the indignities of human existence so that he 435 00:25:28,520 --> 00:25:32,000 Speaker 1: could die in our place and be bodily resurrected, so 436 00:25:32,040 --> 00:25:34,480 Speaker 1: that those with faith in him could then also be 437 00:25:34,560 --> 00:25:38,040 Speaker 1: bodily resurrected and live with Him and the Triune God 438 00:25:38,040 --> 00:25:41,080 Speaker 1: and eternity. These people want to break down all of 439 00:25:41,080 --> 00:25:43,160 Speaker 1: those rules, and they want to claim and all those 440 00:25:43,200 --> 00:25:48,600 Speaker 1: realities and claim that uh, Christianity doesn't stand for that. 441 00:25:48,680 --> 00:25:52,399 Speaker 1: Every there's millions of ways to God, and it doesn't 442 00:25:52,440 --> 00:25:55,000 Speaker 1: matter what way you choose. Christ said on the way 443 00:25:55,080 --> 00:25:57,119 Speaker 1: the Truth in the Life, there's no other way to 444 00:25:57,200 --> 00:25:59,640 Speaker 1: the Father except through me. He didn't say you can 445 00:25:59,640 --> 00:26:03,040 Speaker 1: do it for transiental meditation, Buddhism, Islam, or any of 446 00:26:03,119 --> 00:26:06,120 Speaker 1: the others. And we're not being We're not suggesting that 447 00:26:06,160 --> 00:26:10,640 Speaker 1: we be intolerant to other people, are disrespectful. We are saying, if, 448 00:26:10,800 --> 00:26:15,000 Speaker 1: if if truth is that, if Jesus is the truth, 449 00:26:15,200 --> 00:26:18,000 Speaker 1: which he said he was, and he says he's the 450 00:26:18,040 --> 00:26:22,160 Speaker 1: only way, then we're not judging. People were saying, that's 451 00:26:22,160 --> 00:26:25,520 Speaker 1: what we believe, and we're doing you a favor by 452 00:26:25,600 --> 00:26:28,520 Speaker 1: telling you that's what we believe, and that's that's what 453 00:26:28,560 --> 00:26:31,159 Speaker 1: we think. The evidence points to that it's the truth. 454 00:26:31,520 --> 00:26:34,399 Speaker 1: So we're doing you an eternal disservice if we're the 455 00:26:34,440 --> 00:26:37,159 Speaker 1: sake of trying to please man instead of God, we 456 00:26:37,280 --> 00:26:39,680 Speaker 1: tell you, oh, no, you can believe whatever you want. 457 00:26:39,720 --> 00:26:41,359 Speaker 1: What I mean, I mean, you can't believe whatever you 458 00:26:41,840 --> 00:26:45,520 Speaker 1: but it doesn't matter what you believe because God is 459 00:26:45,520 --> 00:26:47,960 Speaker 1: a God of love and it doesn't matter. Now, Yes, 460 00:26:48,040 --> 00:26:49,840 Speaker 1: God is a god of love that he deals with 461 00:26:49,880 --> 00:26:52,720 Speaker 1: sin and he's a perfectly just God. And if we 462 00:26:52,920 --> 00:26:55,040 Speaker 1: if we tell people that they can believe whatever they 463 00:26:55,080 --> 00:26:58,960 Speaker 1: want it doesn't matter, then then we we're not really 464 00:26:58,960 --> 00:27:01,399 Speaker 1: doing them any favor, and that's what we're seeing throughout 465 00:27:01,680 --> 00:27:07,080 Speaker 1: throughout our society today. No, I mean that makes complete sense. 466 00:27:07,320 --> 00:27:10,600 Speaker 1: You know, David, you've written seven New York best selling books. 467 00:27:10,760 --> 00:27:12,879 Speaker 1: Now I think it might be more than that. But 468 00:27:13,440 --> 00:27:16,639 Speaker 1: what makes your latest book special, The Resurrected Jesus. You 469 00:27:16,680 --> 00:27:20,080 Speaker 1: wrote it with your daughter, Christen Limba Bloom, who I 470 00:27:20,160 --> 00:27:23,000 Speaker 1: met a long time ago when she was interning at Fox. 471 00:27:23,040 --> 00:27:26,320 Speaker 1: Now she's doing big things. She's such a lovely person 472 00:27:26,359 --> 00:27:28,600 Speaker 1: to love. You know. I know you love your daughter 473 00:27:28,680 --> 00:27:31,320 Speaker 1: very very much, but you raised an awesome daughter who 474 00:27:31,400 --> 00:27:34,480 Speaker 1: is now a mother and you're a grandfather. But talk 475 00:27:34,480 --> 00:27:37,080 Speaker 1: a little bit about this book, The Resurrected Jesus, and 476 00:27:37,119 --> 00:27:39,600 Speaker 1: how special that had to have been to work with 477 00:27:39,640 --> 00:27:41,640 Speaker 1: your daughter on this, who I know you love so much. 478 00:27:41,880 --> 00:27:44,520 Speaker 1: This is the eleventh book I've written, and all the 479 00:27:44,520 --> 00:27:47,320 Speaker 1: first ten were New York Times bestsellers. This one was 480 00:27:47,359 --> 00:27:50,600 Speaker 1: on the public what you call it, publishers weekly list 481 00:27:50,880 --> 00:27:54,440 Speaker 1: number ten the first week, and so objectively should have 482 00:27:54,480 --> 00:27:55,639 Speaker 1: been on the New York Times that they have some 483 00:27:55,640 --> 00:27:57,960 Speaker 1: bizarre thing. I don't care, it's it's just I wish 484 00:27:57,960 --> 00:28:01,119 Speaker 1: it could have got on for Christen's sake, but five 485 00:28:01,119 --> 00:28:03,040 Speaker 1: of the books have been Christian and the others have 486 00:28:03,119 --> 00:28:06,680 Speaker 1: been political. This book is special because, as you say, 487 00:28:06,760 --> 00:28:09,679 Speaker 1: wrote it with Kristen, and it was a collaborative effort 488 00:28:09,720 --> 00:28:13,960 Speaker 1: where we we go through seven of Paul's epistles uh 489 00:28:13,960 --> 00:28:18,520 Speaker 1: and to the churches and to his colleagues Timothy and Titus. 490 00:28:18,720 --> 00:28:20,679 Speaker 1: We go through chapter and verse of the Bible, and 491 00:28:20,680 --> 00:28:23,719 Speaker 1: we either state the verse or paraphrase it, and then 492 00:28:23,760 --> 00:28:27,080 Speaker 1: we had commentary and insights from early church fathers and 493 00:28:27,119 --> 00:28:30,800 Speaker 1: commentators all throughout church history. But we've had an additional 494 00:28:30,840 --> 00:28:33,359 Speaker 1: element that I didn't have in my first four Christian books, 495 00:28:33,400 --> 00:28:37,879 Speaker 1: which is prayer. Christen is a prayer warrior, spirit filled 496 00:28:38,000 --> 00:28:42,240 Speaker 1: person who who really gets the heart part of Christianity. 497 00:28:42,280 --> 00:28:44,400 Speaker 1: I'm more of the headside of it, and I've study 498 00:28:44,480 --> 00:28:48,320 Speaker 1: all the time, but she is a person who who 499 00:28:48,560 --> 00:28:51,360 Speaker 1: believes that I mean, I believe it as I don't 500 00:28:51,400 --> 00:28:53,800 Speaker 1: mean to suggest my belief as any less that she 501 00:28:54,880 --> 00:28:58,080 Speaker 1: has such a connection with God and with Christ and 502 00:28:58,120 --> 00:29:01,280 Speaker 1: the Holy Spirit, and she had a facility for prayers. 503 00:29:01,280 --> 00:29:04,480 Speaker 1: So I wanted to add these prayers because it will 504 00:29:04,520 --> 00:29:07,720 Speaker 1: help readers interact with the content of the Bible and 505 00:29:07,800 --> 00:29:11,240 Speaker 1: with the content of the book, which is about the Bible, 506 00:29:11,640 --> 00:29:14,520 Speaker 1: and so every three or four pages we have prayers 507 00:29:14,560 --> 00:29:18,280 Speaker 1: that are directly related to it, and Christen mostly authored 508 00:29:18,280 --> 00:29:21,480 Speaker 1: those prayers and in addition to helping on the rest 509 00:29:21,520 --> 00:29:25,360 Speaker 1: of the book. And I just very I'm very gratified 510 00:29:25,480 --> 00:29:28,360 Speaker 1: with with how this has gone. She's written op eds 511 00:29:28,400 --> 00:29:32,080 Speaker 1: for Fox on Christian themes, and I wanted to give 512 00:29:32,120 --> 00:29:34,920 Speaker 1: her a jump start in the book writing world because 513 00:29:35,040 --> 00:29:38,000 Speaker 1: so many people open doors for me Rush and John 514 00:29:38,080 --> 00:29:40,960 Speaker 1: Hannity and others without whom I probably never would have 515 00:29:40,960 --> 00:29:43,560 Speaker 1: had those doors open. So I want to try to 516 00:29:43,560 --> 00:29:46,120 Speaker 1: help other people in that same way, and especially my daughter, 517 00:29:46,520 --> 00:29:49,200 Speaker 1: And so she's just risen to the occasion. I feel 518 00:29:49,280 --> 00:29:52,640 Speaker 1: really good about the final product, and I think I 519 00:29:53,200 --> 00:29:56,200 Speaker 1: humbly hope that it helps people if they read it, 520 00:29:56,440 --> 00:30:00,920 Speaker 1: draw closer to God and inspires to read the Bible 521 00:30:01,040 --> 00:30:03,080 Speaker 1: more and to pray more. Well. And you can really 522 00:30:03,080 --> 00:30:05,120 Speaker 1: see that light in your daughter, because she truly is 523 00:30:05,200 --> 00:30:09,080 Speaker 1: just a special person. She's just a lovely woman. Um 524 00:30:09,160 --> 00:30:11,440 Speaker 1: So you can see that in her. She's just a 525 00:30:11,440 --> 00:30:14,360 Speaker 1: beautiful person. Uh. And I've really enjoyed getting to know 526 00:30:14,400 --> 00:30:20,320 Speaker 1: her quick break more with David, you know you mentioned 527 00:30:20,400 --> 00:30:25,080 Speaker 1: your brother. It's been over years since his passing. What 528 00:30:25,120 --> 00:30:27,920 Speaker 1: do you miss the most about your brother? Rush? Uh? 529 00:30:28,560 --> 00:30:32,440 Speaker 1: His presence in my life. I we probably texted back 530 00:30:32,480 --> 00:30:38,040 Speaker 1: and forth times a day, and so I would share 531 00:30:38,040 --> 00:30:42,200 Speaker 1: with him so many things every day, and a lot 532 00:30:42,240 --> 00:30:44,760 Speaker 1: of these are just mundane things, and so I guess 533 00:30:44,800 --> 00:30:47,800 Speaker 1: I could say he was my best friend. And even 534 00:30:47,840 --> 00:30:50,479 Speaker 1: though we didn't talk on the phone much because he 535 00:30:50,520 --> 00:30:53,440 Speaker 1: had and that hearing problem that everyone knew about, so 536 00:30:53,520 --> 00:30:57,880 Speaker 1: we always would text and so many times. Still less 537 00:30:57,880 --> 00:31:00,400 Speaker 1: than it used to be, but still I have these 538 00:31:00,440 --> 00:31:03,640 Speaker 1: thoughts every day. I gotta share this with Russian then, 539 00:31:03,920 --> 00:31:06,320 Speaker 1: and then the microsecond later I realized that he's not 540 00:31:06,360 --> 00:31:09,160 Speaker 1: here and I can't share it. So that's a you know, 541 00:31:09,280 --> 00:31:12,480 Speaker 1: that's a loss, and the whole thing is an avoid 542 00:31:12,520 --> 00:31:14,680 Speaker 1: in my life. And it kind of set me for 543 00:31:14,720 --> 00:31:18,760 Speaker 1: a on a on a tail spin there for a while. 544 00:31:18,800 --> 00:31:22,200 Speaker 1: I think I actually was depressed, you know, not clinically 545 00:31:22,240 --> 00:31:26,600 Speaker 1: depressed like people have from chemicals, chemical imbalances, but just 546 00:31:26,720 --> 00:31:29,800 Speaker 1: situationally depressed. When you can go through grief, I guess 547 00:31:29,800 --> 00:31:32,760 Speaker 1: that leads to depression. I snapped out of it, but 548 00:31:32,840 --> 00:31:36,200 Speaker 1: it is tough and um, and you know, it's tough 549 00:31:36,240 --> 00:31:38,600 Speaker 1: losing your parents, but when you lose a sibling, I mean, 550 00:31:38,640 --> 00:31:40,840 Speaker 1: you're you're in the foxhole together from the time you're born. 551 00:31:40,880 --> 00:31:43,920 Speaker 1: I knew Russ since I was born, my whole life. Obviously, 552 00:31:44,080 --> 00:31:46,600 Speaker 1: he's two years older. And then he died almost a 553 00:31:46,720 --> 00:31:49,320 Speaker 1: year and a half ago, and so that that that 554 00:31:49,360 --> 00:31:53,200 Speaker 1: can never be replaced, and it's uh tough and and 555 00:31:53,240 --> 00:31:55,560 Speaker 1: but but the the good thing about it is that 556 00:31:56,200 --> 00:32:00,520 Speaker 1: what I learned is I knew how talented viously he 557 00:32:00,680 --> 00:32:03,800 Speaker 1: was from the very beginning, from the time we were kids. 558 00:32:03,840 --> 00:32:06,960 Speaker 1: So gifted as a broadcaster, and he did it. He 559 00:32:07,040 --> 00:32:11,040 Speaker 1: broadcasts TV and radio shows when he he was seven 560 00:32:11,120 --> 00:32:15,480 Speaker 1: years old, simulating broadcasts in our house. But we we 561 00:32:15,560 --> 00:32:19,520 Speaker 1: all knew and everybody felt their own views. Conservatives felt 562 00:32:19,520 --> 00:32:23,120 Speaker 1: their views validated when Rush got his national audience. Why 563 00:32:23,200 --> 00:32:26,480 Speaker 1: somebody's out there giving voice to things I believe but 564 00:32:26,520 --> 00:32:29,040 Speaker 1: I never hear in the media, and so and and 565 00:32:29,280 --> 00:32:33,440 Speaker 1: Rush was universally recognized as a unique talent, and even 566 00:32:33,440 --> 00:32:37,680 Speaker 1: the people that hated him gave him that credit. But 567 00:32:38,080 --> 00:32:40,560 Speaker 1: so I knew that in space, But what I didn't 568 00:32:40,960 --> 00:32:44,280 Speaker 1: realize was the extent to which there was an intimate 569 00:32:44,720 --> 00:32:48,360 Speaker 1: bond with his audience where they actually considered him to 570 00:32:48,400 --> 00:32:51,040 Speaker 1: be family members. I bet a family member. I bet. 571 00:32:51,040 --> 00:33:00,760 Speaker 1: I've received no exaggeration, uh ten thousand communications, whether on twitters, uh, Twitter, 572 00:33:00,960 --> 00:33:06,320 Speaker 1: or email, personal letter, phone calls, Facebook. People say he's 573 00:33:06,360 --> 00:33:09,840 Speaker 1: the best friend they never met, that they feel wounded 574 00:33:10,040 --> 00:33:12,320 Speaker 1: and grieving every day still. I mean, you can look 575 00:33:12,320 --> 00:33:14,600 Speaker 1: at my Twitter mentions. You can't believe it. It is 576 00:33:14,680 --> 00:33:19,360 Speaker 1: overwhelmingly heartning and so to me, that is uplifting to me, 577 00:33:19,760 --> 00:33:23,280 Speaker 1: that that he meant so much to them, And it 578 00:33:23,880 --> 00:33:26,800 Speaker 1: connects all of this because Russ stood for the values 579 00:33:26,880 --> 00:33:29,000 Speaker 1: that you and I are talking about today, and he 580 00:33:29,040 --> 00:33:30,840 Speaker 1: stood against the left, and he was the tip of 581 00:33:30,840 --> 00:33:33,200 Speaker 1: the spirit. He was the guy that took all of 582 00:33:33,240 --> 00:33:38,560 Speaker 1: the backlash from the media matters and the other hateful liberals, 583 00:33:38,560 --> 00:33:43,440 Speaker 1: the gay activists initially, who were held bent on destroying him, 584 00:33:43,680 --> 00:33:46,600 Speaker 1: and he stood there alone, really and took all the 585 00:33:46,800 --> 00:33:49,760 Speaker 1: arrows so that those of us in his wake would 586 00:33:49,800 --> 00:33:53,320 Speaker 1: be better situated and and empowered to stand up against 587 00:33:53,360 --> 00:33:55,800 Speaker 1: them too. But I I people have no idea. I 588 00:33:55,880 --> 00:33:57,800 Speaker 1: guarantee you people have no idea. But I was there, 589 00:33:58,400 --> 00:34:01,720 Speaker 1: uh behind the scene with him the whole time, trying 590 00:34:01,760 --> 00:34:05,680 Speaker 1: to support him throughout, and he was tough. I if 591 00:34:05,760 --> 00:34:08,040 Speaker 1: I were in his place, I don't know that I 592 00:34:08,080 --> 00:34:11,279 Speaker 1: could have withstood all the arrows that he took. And 593 00:34:11,719 --> 00:34:13,600 Speaker 1: so I'm proud of him. It will always be proud 594 00:34:13,640 --> 00:34:15,759 Speaker 1: of it. Did that come from your parents, because you 595 00:34:15,760 --> 00:34:19,040 Speaker 1: guys are both like that in terms of you know, 596 00:34:19,719 --> 00:34:22,480 Speaker 1: standing up for your beliefs and being able to stand 597 00:34:22,520 --> 00:34:25,279 Speaker 1: strong in the face of that opposition. Did that Did 598 00:34:25,280 --> 00:34:26,839 Speaker 1: that come from your parents or why do you think 599 00:34:26,880 --> 00:34:29,640 Speaker 1: both of you guys kind of had those values instilled 600 00:34:29,640 --> 00:34:34,200 Speaker 1: in you so strongly. My dad was a conservatives conservative. 601 00:34:34,280 --> 00:34:37,440 Speaker 1: He was a Goldwater Conservative in sixties, was against Nixon 602 00:34:37,520 --> 00:34:40,960 Speaker 1: for and four gold Water back when Goldwater was you know, 603 00:34:41,000 --> 00:34:46,920 Speaker 1: the quintessential conservative. Yeah, and he was very sharp. My 604 00:34:47,000 --> 00:34:50,640 Speaker 1: dad was gifted, especially when it came to law and politics. 605 00:34:50,719 --> 00:34:53,080 Speaker 1: He was a lawyer like everybody in my family. And 606 00:34:54,480 --> 00:34:57,080 Speaker 1: it's like my dad used to hold court. You know 607 00:34:57,960 --> 00:35:00,359 Speaker 1: a lot of kids in high school and when they 608 00:35:00,360 --> 00:35:02,160 Speaker 1: go out and go out and party and all that 609 00:35:02,239 --> 00:35:04,200 Speaker 1: and go out to girls, and we all did. But 610 00:35:04,320 --> 00:35:06,960 Speaker 1: one of the favorite pastimes of Russia's friends and my 611 00:35:07,040 --> 00:35:08,960 Speaker 1: friends was to come to our house and listen to 612 00:35:09,000 --> 00:35:11,480 Speaker 1: my dad hold court in our living room, and he 613 00:35:11,640 --> 00:35:14,279 Speaker 1: just start doing his monologues. And so when I see 614 00:35:14,280 --> 00:35:17,680 Speaker 1: what Rush Rush did, it was like he's my dad 615 00:35:17,760 --> 00:35:20,880 Speaker 1: writ large now within that and he had a national 616 00:35:20,880 --> 00:35:24,440 Speaker 1: audience to do, to pontificate like my dad did in 617 00:35:24,480 --> 00:35:26,719 Speaker 1: our front room, and and it's a shame my dad 618 00:35:26,800 --> 00:35:29,480 Speaker 1: never had that kind of audience. But on the other hand, 619 00:35:29,560 --> 00:35:32,400 Speaker 1: it wouldn't have worked with my dad because he didn't 620 00:35:32,440 --> 00:35:35,080 Speaker 1: have a sense of humor when it came to politics. 621 00:35:35,480 --> 00:35:40,040 Speaker 1: My mom was hilarious and just a just a class clown, funny, 622 00:35:40,080 --> 00:35:42,439 Speaker 1: and so Russ got the best of both worlds. I'm 623 00:35:42,440 --> 00:35:44,440 Speaker 1: a I'm a class clown too, I'm just not when 624 00:35:44,480 --> 00:35:47,120 Speaker 1: it comes to politics. I'm too serious. You can tell me. 625 00:35:47,640 --> 00:35:50,600 Speaker 1: I couldn't ever, even if I had Russia's talent, I 626 00:35:50,600 --> 00:35:53,600 Speaker 1: couldn't do his show because I'm always mad at what 627 00:35:53,680 --> 00:35:56,560 Speaker 1: the Left is doing. I'm so outrage I'm perpetually outraged 628 00:35:56,600 --> 00:35:59,160 Speaker 1: by what they're doing. Not that Rush wasn't that he 629 00:35:59,239 --> 00:36:01,560 Speaker 1: had a way of the unique way of lampooning him 630 00:36:01,600 --> 00:36:03,799 Speaker 1: which made him that much matter, And he used to 631 00:36:03,880 --> 00:36:06,279 Speaker 1: laugh at me. David you're you're like Rush. We call 632 00:36:06,360 --> 00:36:09,200 Speaker 1: my dad Rush, not him. We didn't call I didn't. Well, 633 00:36:09,239 --> 00:36:11,840 Speaker 1: I later called him Rush, but he wasn't Rush growing up. 634 00:36:11,880 --> 00:36:15,000 Speaker 1: He's rusting. So we always joked about my dad after 635 00:36:15,080 --> 00:36:17,920 Speaker 1: he died, well, Rushed get this and that and Rush 636 00:36:18,080 --> 00:36:20,279 Speaker 1: was he said, you're like Rush, you gotta light nup, 637 00:36:20,560 --> 00:36:22,879 Speaker 1: and I can't. I'm just I can't. When it comes 638 00:36:22,880 --> 00:36:24,759 Speaker 1: to politics, it's so hard for me to light that. 639 00:36:25,040 --> 00:36:27,640 Speaker 1: Russia had that gift where where he could he he's 640 00:36:27,760 --> 00:36:29,960 Speaker 1: just as outraged as I am, but he that he 641 00:36:30,000 --> 00:36:32,880 Speaker 1: could make fun of him and make everybody laugh and 642 00:36:33,000 --> 00:36:38,880 Speaker 1: happy and and still without without diminishing the seriousness of 643 00:36:38,920 --> 00:36:41,239 Speaker 1: the issues at hand. So that was another gift that 644 00:36:41,640 --> 00:36:44,560 Speaker 1: that I am vy, but but I realized I don't 645 00:36:44,600 --> 00:36:48,120 Speaker 1: have it well. And also a fierce independence to be 646 00:36:48,160 --> 00:36:51,040 Speaker 1: able to stand strong when you're you're taking so much incoming, 647 00:36:51,239 --> 00:36:54,560 Speaker 1: Oh unbelievable. And you know, there are times as his 648 00:36:55,560 --> 00:36:59,760 Speaker 1: lawyer that I was really worried that they would finally 649 00:36:59,800 --> 00:37:02,480 Speaker 1: be to cancel him. And there are times when I 650 00:37:02,520 --> 00:37:06,560 Speaker 1: would try to talk him into backing off in certain 651 00:37:06,560 --> 00:37:09,600 Speaker 1: issues where he literally could not win, and they might 652 00:37:09,640 --> 00:37:12,800 Speaker 1: have been able to destroy him, And there were probably 653 00:37:12,800 --> 00:37:15,839 Speaker 1: only two of those in the history of our relationship 654 00:37:15,880 --> 00:37:18,520 Speaker 1: where I was actually trying, not not as a matter 655 00:37:18,520 --> 00:37:21,120 Speaker 1: of cowardice, but as a matter of pragmatism, to fight 656 00:37:21,160 --> 00:37:24,600 Speaker 1: another day, because I they they these people are vicious 657 00:37:25,000 --> 00:37:27,040 Speaker 1: and they distort what you say, and we saw it 658 00:37:27,040 --> 00:37:30,240 Speaker 1: throughout the Trump there two and but he had such 659 00:37:30,239 --> 00:37:33,759 Speaker 1: good instincts and he that so he would hear me 660 00:37:33,800 --> 00:37:36,759 Speaker 1: out and I never wanted him to back down, but 661 00:37:37,200 --> 00:37:39,879 Speaker 1: sometimes I was worried that they would finally be able 662 00:37:39,920 --> 00:37:42,200 Speaker 1: to get him. But he had an antenna, he kind 663 00:37:42,200 --> 00:37:45,640 Speaker 1: of had. He was uncanny, Unlike so many hosts. He 664 00:37:46,080 --> 00:37:49,000 Speaker 1: knew how far he could go. Only a few times 665 00:37:49,400 --> 00:37:52,720 Speaker 1: did he really get in trouble, and even there that 666 00:37:52,800 --> 00:37:57,080 Speaker 1: those things were distorted mostly so um it was a 667 00:37:57,200 --> 00:37:59,920 Speaker 1: fascinating thing to watch because he put his whole career 668 00:38:00,040 --> 00:38:02,160 Speaker 1: the line. He could have loved. He was making millions 669 00:38:02,160 --> 00:38:04,040 Speaker 1: and millions a year. He could have been he could 670 00:38:04,040 --> 00:38:05,880 Speaker 1: have that could have all been taken away from him. 671 00:38:05,880 --> 00:38:08,279 Speaker 1: But he believed so strongly in what he was doing. 672 00:38:08,440 --> 00:38:11,080 Speaker 1: And this wasn't a matter of personal pride, honestly, it 673 00:38:11,160 --> 00:38:13,960 Speaker 1: was a matter of him bleeding so fiercely and what 674 00:38:14,600 --> 00:38:17,959 Speaker 1: he what he was advocating that he didn't he wasn't 675 00:38:17,960 --> 00:38:19,680 Speaker 1: going to be shut down. He wasn't going to allow 676 00:38:19,760 --> 00:38:24,000 Speaker 1: them to to censor him. Uh and you know that 677 00:38:24,000 --> 00:38:26,280 Speaker 1: that that's I don't know if people have talked about 678 00:38:26,320 --> 00:38:29,320 Speaker 1: that as much when they talked about him, but it 679 00:38:29,760 --> 00:38:33,600 Speaker 1: is uh so admirable, and I think some and it's 680 00:38:33,640 --> 00:38:35,879 Speaker 1: a different thing as somebody does on a local show 681 00:38:35,960 --> 00:38:38,200 Speaker 1: because they're not a big enough fish to go after. 682 00:38:38,280 --> 00:38:41,879 Speaker 1: Rush was the big fish, and so he every time 683 00:38:41,920 --> 00:38:44,960 Speaker 1: he did something like that, he he was risking his career, 684 00:38:45,040 --> 00:38:48,359 Speaker 1: and he didn't matter. He was undaunted and kept going 685 00:38:48,960 --> 00:38:52,440 Speaker 1: and the result was the most successful show in the 686 00:38:52,480 --> 00:38:56,240 Speaker 1: history of radio broadcasting. And he created a new genre 687 00:38:56,320 --> 00:39:03,160 Speaker 1: conservative talk from which thousands of people have benefited. You know, you, me, 688 00:39:03,480 --> 00:39:07,360 Speaker 1: everybody who's out there commenting. There wasn't this industry before. 689 00:39:07,400 --> 00:39:10,040 Speaker 1: There was a very small padre of people, you know, 690 00:39:10,080 --> 00:39:13,480 Speaker 1: the mclaughlain group, Bill Buckley, those people. When I was 691 00:39:13,520 --> 00:39:16,520 Speaker 1: growing up, you weren't even born yet probably and there. 692 00:39:16,880 --> 00:39:19,440 Speaker 1: But but now look at how many of us there are, 693 00:39:19,800 --> 00:39:22,759 Speaker 1: and that's pretty encouraging. I just wish there would be 694 00:39:22,840 --> 00:39:25,520 Speaker 1: less ego on on on, so many of us on 695 00:39:25,560 --> 00:39:29,520 Speaker 1: our side and people trying to up to you know, 696 00:39:29,960 --> 00:39:32,080 Speaker 1: compete with each other. We need to we need to 697 00:39:32,120 --> 00:39:35,520 Speaker 1: stand together and fight this left which always seems to 698 00:39:35,560 --> 00:39:37,959 Speaker 1: be united. Well, feel free to send me a text 699 00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:40,960 Speaker 1: if I ever do knock me down a bit or Actually, 700 00:39:41,120 --> 00:39:43,319 Speaker 1: my parents, I'm not worried about I'm not worried about 701 00:39:43,320 --> 00:39:46,120 Speaker 1: you parents. My parents are there for that. They're the 702 00:39:46,120 --> 00:39:50,160 Speaker 1: ones that they the second anything got at the hand, 703 00:39:50,200 --> 00:39:53,320 Speaker 1: they would shut me down. Yeah, but you're fierce too 704 00:39:53,640 --> 00:39:58,000 Speaker 1: and very it's very admirable that that, and you've you've 705 00:39:58,000 --> 00:40:00,360 Speaker 1: been I know you. People have tried to shut you 706 00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:03,560 Speaker 1: down and get you to stand down from your place 707 00:40:03,640 --> 00:40:06,600 Speaker 1: and you've refused to do it, and uh, that is 708 00:40:06,680 --> 00:40:09,240 Speaker 1: just so admirable. I can't tell you. Well, I'm thankful 709 00:40:09,280 --> 00:40:11,960 Speaker 1: to have you by my side. Um, you're a friend, 710 00:40:12,160 --> 00:40:15,319 Speaker 1: my lawyer, and the co author with your daughter of 711 00:40:15,360 --> 00:40:17,839 Speaker 1: the Resurrected Jesus. I hope it continues to be a 712 00:40:17,880 --> 00:40:21,319 Speaker 1: massive success. You're an amazing guy, You've raised an amazing daughter, 713 00:40:21,960 --> 00:40:24,120 Speaker 1: and well you've raised five kids, but I've only met one, 714 00:40:24,160 --> 00:40:27,040 Speaker 1: so I can I can only speak to Kristen, but 715 00:40:27,120 --> 00:40:30,120 Speaker 1: I'm sure the rest are great. The books just out everywhere. 716 00:40:30,120 --> 00:40:32,840 Speaker 1: People can get it on you know, Amazon or bookstore 717 00:40:33,320 --> 00:40:37,320 Speaker 1: or wherever else. David Limba, thanks so much for joining. 718 00:40:37,719 --> 00:40:39,920 Speaker 1: I'll talk to you soon. Have a great day. Thank you. 719 00:40:51,080 --> 00:40:54,520 Speaker 1: That was David Limba. I appreciate you guys for listening 720 00:40:54,680 --> 00:40:57,239 Speaker 1: to the show every Monday every Thursday, but you can 721 00:40:57,280 --> 00:40:59,560 Speaker 1: listen throughout the week. I want to thank Drew Steele 722 00:40:59,640 --> 00:41:03,240 Speaker 1: for stepping in for John and putting this podcast together, 723 00:41:03,320 --> 00:41:06,080 Speaker 1: and of course for you guys for listening. Feel free 724 00:41:06,080 --> 00:41:08,640 Speaker 1: to leave us a review, rate us five stars on Apple. 725 00:41:08,760 --> 00:41:10,480 Speaker 1: I read those that I love hearing what you guys 726 00:41:10,520 --> 00:41:12,320 Speaker 1: have to think or reach out to me on social 727 00:41:12,360 --> 00:41:14,520 Speaker 1: media as well, and at least and rebooth on Twitter 728 00:41:14,600 --> 00:41:17,399 Speaker 1: and Instagram as well. H take care until next time.