Michael Savage
"Obama the anti-American just vetoed the Keystone XL pipeline," Savage said to his listeners the day the president unilaterally cancelled the project.
Savage reminded them that, "many in his own party – the unions and workers – understood that building this pipeline was a common sense move for America" (Free audio).
Speaking of Democrats, he had harsh words for long time Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif.: "She should retire already and open a brassiere shop. ... Now she and the Democrats are pushing millions more illegal aliens down our throats, all in the name of 'national security' and 'family values. ...Can anyone tell me the last time Barbara Boxer came out in favor of Christianity? What about traditional marriage? Those are true family values" (Free audio).
TRENDING: St. Patrick's role on the 'external hard drive'
Rush Limbaugh
"Net neutrality is Obamacare all over again," said Limbaugh as the controversial measure went into affect. "Without any convincing evidence of market failure, the Internet is a shining example of entrepreneurism on the march. It's a shining example of competition, technological advancement. ... No wonder the left wants control of it. People like it more than they like the government. People like the Internet more than they like Obama. Can't have that" (Free audio).
Limbaugh also had harsh words for the GOP, declaring, "The Republicans cave on everything."
The excuses the party's leaders give every time are, he complained, "'Well, this is what the donors want.' And to a certain extent that's true, but come on. Is the donor class of the Republican Party actually attempting to achieve the erasure of the Republican Party?" (Free audio)
Aaron Klein
Broadcasting from New York City, Klein breaks a story about a possibly game-changing development in the Jonathan Pollard spy case that may lead to his freedom. Also on the Middle East beat, he serves up in-depth analysis of ISIS and the possibility that they have cells inside the U.S. they are ready to activate.
Back by listener demand: National radio Rusty Humphries comes back on the show to recount (complete with shocking audio) the time he and Klein were detained by police and expelled from British parliament – after Klein called Hamas a terrorist organization!
PLUS: Pamela Geller on her new "Draw Muhammad" contest, which boasts $10,000 in prizes (Audio).
Mark Levin
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., wants his party to support the court battle against Obama's illegal amnesty plan, but doesn't want them to block the measure in Congress.
Needless to say, this strategy didn't impress Mark Levin, who called Republicans like Graham and Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., "morons" (Free audio).
Turning his attention to the president, Levin said that Rudy Giuliani's remarks about Obama – that he "doesn't love America" – were "exactly right: "I would add – and have said this many times on my radio program – when someone says they want to 'fundamentally transform' America, well then you must not love America. It's like saying I'm going to fundamentally transform my wife, or my girlfriend. That means you must not love you wife or girlfriend" (Free audio).
Laura Ingraham
Ingraham was literally applauded by an unlikely individual this week: MSNBC host Chris Hayes.
He said he agreed with her statement about ISIS: "I don't think we should jump every time the freaks with the ACE bandages around their faces put out videos."
"Amen, sister," Hayes replied (Free audio).
Ingraham's guests this week included Ron Fournier on the Clinton PAC accepting foreign donations that actually support terrorism; Navy SEAL sniper Scott Taylor, who blamed Obama and Hillary for America's foreign policy failures; and Bill Kristol, who advised potential GOP presidential candidates to adopt "bold agendas" to distinguish themselves from Jeb Bush (Free audio).
Glenn Beck
Mark Cuban joined Glenn for a full hour on The Blaze TV to discuss the impending decision on net neutrality. Cuban has been an outspoken opponent of net neutrality, and laid out the impact that the legislation could have on entrepreneurs.
"It's hard to destroy the Internet," Cuban conceded, "but at the same time, I think it's going to create so much uncertainty that we won't be able to progress as quickly as we have over the last 20 years" (Free video).