Rush Limbaugh did a lot in his short life.
Limbaugh not only became the poster child for mediocre white men boxing above their racist intelligence level, but he was also the king of radio racists, and on Wednesday after a battle with cancer, he died. He was 70 years old.
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Below is just a short look at some of the outrageously fucked up things Limbaugh said when he was alive:
âThe NFL all too often looks like a game between the Bloods and the Crips without any weapons. There, I said it.â
âI think itâs time to get rid of this whole National Basketball Association. Call it the TBA, the Thug Basketball Association, and stop calling them teams. Call âem gangs.â
âHave you ever noticed how all composite pictures of wanted criminals resemble Jesse Jackson?â
âThe NAACP should have riot rehearsal. They should get a liquor store and practice robberies.â
âIf any race of people should not have guilt about slavery, itâs Caucasians. The white race has probably had fewer slaves and for a briefer period of time than any other in the history of the world … And yet white guilt is still one of the dominating factors in American politics. Itâs exploited, itâs played upon, it is promoted, used, and itâs unnecessary.â
Limbaugh was nothing if not a man who stood by his word, so it would behoove The Root to act as if a king had fallen on this day. But what America loses with the death of Limbaugh is just a run-of-the-mill racist with a microphone. And maybe that was a special thing when radio was all the rage, but weâve got blogs, podcasts, and presidents, and members of Congress all willing to spout the same nonsensical racists babble that once made Limbaugh a shock jock. Basically, technology made Limbaughâs brand of racism obsolete. But letâs not act like the man, in his death, was some gift to America. He wasnât. He was just a racist with a platform, and weâve seen how powerful that can be when other low-minded individuals fall in line.
CNN called him a âconservative media icon who for decades used his perch as the king of talk-radio to shape the politics of both the Republican Party and nationâ because they donât want to call him a racist. I get it. Sometimes itâs easier not to call a thing a thing. Especially in death. But what if the person youâre talking about made a living off saying distasteful things? Shouldnât they be remembered for the legacy they left behind, especially if that legacy is a racist one?
This is not a beloved bread baker that America has lost: This was a man who accused Michael J. Fox of exaggerating his Parkinsonâs disease. This was a man who claimed relentlessly that Barack Obama couldnât be president because he wasnât born in America. He helped push the Trumpian lie that the coronavirus wasnât much worse than a âcommon cold.â He considered Donald Trump a friend and was awarded the Medal of Freedom before his death. The racist king literally knighted a racist for being a racist.
So a racist conspiracy theorist has died, and Iâd expect Alex Jones to grieve the loss and the gaping hole that was left in his heart, but letâs stop normalizing hate, even in death. Rush Limbaugh was not extraordinary and if weâve learned anything from the failed coup on Jan. 6, itâs that there are millions more just like him, and forgive me if I donât give a fuck if weâve lost one mediocre racist white man who can easily be replaced.
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