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- Subject: English --Book Report/Review (See I Told You So, Rush Limbaugh)
- It is not very often that a person has his own national television show,
- radio show, and two books that have been on the New York Times Best Seller
- List. Rush Limbaugh happens to be one of these unique people, his radio
- show is popular, his television show has the largest audience for a program
- of its type and his new book is one of the best of its kind. Limbaugh always
- backed up his comments with facts or statistics. While the book was
- informative and factual, it was also very humorous. See, I Told You So was
- definitely a conservative use of 363 pages.
- Without question, Rush Limbaugh is a spokesperson for a conservative
- majority within the United States. His book follows what he says on his
- radio and television programs, which is a conservative and republican view on
- issues. A few of the things he stresses in his book are that conservatives
- are the silent majority and President Clinton cannot ruin this country in
- four years. Although he stresses that conservatives are the majority, he
- says that liberals are trying to regain control by forcing the public schools
- get rid good things like the Bible and competition, and replace them with
- Outcome-Based Education. Most importantly, we need to motivate people to
- pursue excellence and not feel sorry, pity and coddle underachievers.
- While the purpose of his book is to express these views, he also covers
- many other topics from the environment, to Dan's Bake Sale. The spectacle
- was enough to drive a stake through the heart of liberalism (p.101), says
- Rush Limbaugh about Dan's Bake Sale. Sixty-five thousand people flocked to
- Fort Collins, Colorado for what was called Rushstock '93. This all started
- as a quest for Dan Kay to make $29.95 for a subscription to The Limbaugh
- Letter and escalated to a full day event that even Limbaugh attended.
- While Rush Limbaugh discusses many different controversial and serious
- issues, he manages to make it entertaining. He makes these serious issues
- amusing by sarcastic comments and pionting out the irony in government today.
- Parts of the book are made for just entertainment like the Politically
- Correct Liberal Dictionary and the Lies, Lies chapter in which Limbaugh
- backs up his theory that, the Clinton administration, has cataloged an
- avalanche of false hoods with 7 pages of Clinton's major contradictions.
- Rush Limbaugh makes many controversial comments throughout his book, but
- instead of just commenting, he supports what he says. An example is, when he
- talks about the environment. He uses references to scientific studies, other
- than just speculating. Limbaugh states, Most scientists say a supernova
- 340,000 years ago disrupted 10 to 20 percent of the ozone, causing sunburn in
- prehistoric man.... Man has never done anything close to the radiation and
- explosive force of a supernova.... if prehistoric man merely got a sunburn,
- how are we going to destroy the entire ozone with our air conditioners and
- under arm deodorants and cause everybody to get cancer.... (p.178)
- I thought this book was very intresting. I attribute this sucesss to the
- fact that rarly has there been a radio/TV commentator who consistently makes
- sense on so many subjects: taxess, environmentalism, animal rights, crime,
- education, the inner cities, extreme feminism, government regulation and
- Congress. See, I Told You So is a serious and important book, but Rush
- Limbaugh, whatever your opinion of his politics, is an marvelous entertainer.
- <br><br>
- Words: 578
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