'Without Rush, you may not have Trump': David Limbaugh and Steve Deace drill down on radio legend’s legacy, faith



Rush Limbaugh, the founding father of conservative talk radio, succumbed to lung cancer on Feb. 17, 2021, at the age of 70.

The Medal of Freedom recipient, whose show aired to tens of millions of listeners for over three decades on hundreds of radio stations, has been credited by friend and foe alike with helping set the stage for a figure like President Donald Trump and activating multitudes of conservatives who previously felt politically isolated.

David Limbaugh, an attorney and conservative commentator, spoke to the host of BlazeTV's "Steve Deace Show" on the episode airing Tuesday about Rush Limbaugh's temporal journey to prominence and his ultimate journey to Christ.

Limbaugh underscored — now four years after his brother's passing — that Rush not only blazed the way for subsequent generations of conservative commentators but demonstrated how to wed authenticity and passion and how to endure terminal illness with great fortitude.

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Bequeathal

At the outset of the interview, Steve Deace asked Limbaugh what immediately came to mind about his older brother's legacy.

"He created a cottage industry. He actually created a genre of talk radio, conservative talk, and he had done this after honing his skills throughout his life and with many trials and tribulations," said Limbaugh.

Limbaugh noted that while there were signs early in Rush's life — perhaps now more apparent in review — that he was well suited for broadcasting and had a "genius" when it came to the recorded word, he faced expectations to chart a more conventional course professionally. Their father, for instance, apparently wanted Rush to become a lawyer or something of the sort. After all, the men of Missouri's Limbaugh family had in previous centuries often been judges, attorneys, and legislators.

Despite the urging of his father and other external pressures, Limbaugh indicated that Rush "knew what he wanted to do" and went for it.

In the end, he became something of an ideological tuning fork.

"Any time people wanted to know what true north was in a conservative sense, they could turn him on," added the attorney.

"His personal legacy, in my opinion, is overcoming all the challenges that were placed in his way because he had a passion, an irrepressible passion, to do what he wanted to do, and he fought through it, and he finally succeeded in a big way to become the best in the world at what he did," Limbaugh told Deace.

'[Rush] was never play-acting. It was sincere.'

Limbaugh suggested that by doing so, Rush "opened the floodgates" for others who admired what he was doing and understood the potential for emulation.

While Rush's show proved revelatory for other would-be conservative hosts, Limbaugh told Deace that it proved in many cases to be a wake-up call for listeners, revealing to Americans nationwide that they were not alone in their conservative outlook.

Limbaugh suggested that Trump's engagement with Americans, particularly those neglected by the mainstream media and deceived into thinking themselves ideologically outnumbered on issues such as immigration and gender ideology, greatly paralleled Rush's engagement with listeners.

"'I can't believe someone's got a national platform saying the things that I believe and finally contradicting the lies, and the deceit, and the insane liberal ideology that we hear on our news every day,'" said Limbaugh, articulating the initial response some listeners may have had to "The Rush Limbaugh Show" or possibly also to Trump in the 2016 Republican primaries.

A special ability to connect with those ignored or vilified by the mainstream was not the only parallel Limbaugh raised between Trump and his brother.

"[Rush] was never play-acting. It was sincere. Everything he did was sincere," said Limbaugh. "But he was so passionate about what he did, so loved broadcasting, so loved interacting with his audience. And he did understand his audience, I think, better than any host I've ever been around — and I've been around a lot.”

"He knew he had a bond with them," continued Limbaugh. "This really came to light — crystallized for me — when I noticed that he, ahead of many others, saw something in Trump, particularly the attraction he had with his audience and the bond that he forged with his audience. And Rush would say, 'There's only one person who could break the bond that Trump has with his audience, and that is Trump himself, because no amount of third-party attacks are going to influence that,' and that turned out to be prescient."

Limbaugh suggested that Rush's observation about the audience bond, whether intentionally or not, was also a little bit of projection on his brother's part.

Besides certain commonalities, Limbaugh suggested that his brother helped whet the appetite for Trump, stating, "I think without Rush, you may not have Trump."

"I don't want to be presumptuous and take anything away from Trump. I just think he opened the path for what has ultimately come to be here," added Limbaugh.

Following Rush's death, Trump said, "He was with me right from the beginning. And he liked what I said, and he agreed with what I said. And he was just a great gentleman. Great man."

"He was a very unique guy," continued Trump. "And he had tremendous insight. He got it. He really got it."

Inheritance

In their wide-ranging conversation, Deace appeared keen to discuss mortality and the manner in which Rush publicly approached his own.

Limbaugh suggested that whereas he himself had intellectual doubts early in life about Christ, his brother did not have the same problem, though he may not have been especially engaged faith-wise early on. In any event, Limbaugh observed in his brother a "deep interest" that continued to grow over course of his life.

The attorney indicated that whatever the state of his brother's faith in the first six decades of his life, it was abundantly clear that in his final years, especially after his terminal diagnosis, Rush "totally accepted Christ."

'I have no question of where his eternal destiny is.'

"He talked about it openly. He talked about how he prayed every day," said Limbaugh. "He actually talked to God 24 hours a day like we're supposed to."

Despite the knowledge that he was dying, his brother seemed to be at peace, Limbaugh indicated.

"He really was optimistic, and he wasn't fatalistic, and he wasn't negative about his own impending death," said the attorney. "And he knew — he knew he was going to die.”

David noted that his brother suffered terribly in his final year, especially since the chemotherapy treatments he was undergoing didn't take, leaving him with him with intolerable swelling and other side effects.

"He suffered so much physically during that period, during the last year of his life, that it is a tribute to his fortitude and his commitment to his audience, his commitment to the country that he powered through and kept doing it," said Limbaugh. "The way he fought cancer and the way he insisted on doing what he does and staying true to the audience — that was just an inspiration and remarkable to me."

Limbaugh emphasized to Deace, "He came very close to Christ during those years, so that I have no question of where his eternal destiny is."

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JD Vance DESTROYS the left’s ‘weird’ narrative; defends Trump’s ‘chameleon’ attack on Kamala Harris



JD Vance is making the rounds after former President Donald Trump picked him as vice presidential running mate — and he’s absolutely destroying the left’s image of him, as well as the left's image of Trump, in the process.

“He’s pushing back on the left’s characterization that he’s weird,” Pat Gray of “Pat Gray Unleashed” explains.

“The people who call me weird want to give hormone therapies and sterilize 9-year-olds,” Vance said on the "Full Send Podcast." “A lot weirder than me just living a normal life with my kids and my wife.”

“But this is what they do, I think, is they latch onto a message and they try to sell it even if it’s fake,” he continued.

He then went on to champion the former president.

“Trump’s superpower in politics is he just doesn’t give a s**t, right? He doesn’t care what they say about him. He’s going to be himself, he’s going to tell jokes, he’s going to say things that drive some people off a wall,” he said, noting that when you actually listen to what he’s saying, it always makes sense.

Keith Malinak is under the impression that everything Vance said on the podcast, like Trump, makes a lot of sense.

“To JD Vance’s point,” Malinak comments, “you’re the party that wants to change the sex of children. Who’s weird?”

When JD Vance was then pressed by a CNN reporter to denounce Trump’s comments on Kamala Harris’ race — as the father of three biracial children himself — he continued to impress.

“All he said is that Kamala Harris is a chameleon. She goes to Georgia two days ago, she was raised in Canada, she puts on a fake southern accent. She is everything, everybody, and she pretends to be somebody different depending on which audience she’s in front of,” Vance calmly shot back.

“I think it’s totally reasonable for the president to call that out, and that’s all he did,” he added.




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Donald Trump RUINS Kamala Harris in hilarious new political ad



Democrats have been proudly calling Kamala Harris the “border czar” to highlight her role in immigration for years.

However, it’s become increasingly obvious that the title isn’t one to gloat about — as it appears she has done absolutely nothing to remedy the very clear crisis at the southern border.

And a new Donald Trump political ad highlights just how bad the “border czar” has been.

The ad opens with a video of Harris dancing in a brightly colored button-down shirt as a voice says “This is America’s ‘border czar.’”

“She’s failed us. Under Harris, over 10 million illegally here. A quarter of a million Americans dead from fentanyl. Brutal migrant crimes and ISIS, now here,” the voiceover continues.

The ad then plays the now famous clip of Harris admitting to a reporter that she’s never been to the border by saying “And I haven’t been to Europe.”

Gray has one criticism of the ad, but it’s not much.

“Whether or not you want to split hairs, but that wasn’t her title. It wasn’t an official title, everybody knows that. But she was placed in charge of the border,” Gray says. “She was placed in charge of border security. That’s just a fact that they are trying to eliminate from the American psyche.”

While the stats on the border couldn’t be clearer, it seems that Harris doesn’t understand them.

“I will proudly put my record against his any day of the week,” Harris said about immigration in a recent rally.

“Do it,” Gray says. “You will lose.”


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