Radio station hushes Rush amid ‘phony soldiers’ feud

By Art Moore


Rush Limbaugh

After receiving a barrage of e-mails and phone calls from listeners upset with radio host Rush Limbaugh over allegations by Democrats that he smeared anti-war troops, a tiny Oregon radio station decided to give the listeners what they asked for and replaced the No. 1-rated show with music.

Paul Mitchell, general manager of KAST Radio in Astoria, told WND he’s a long-time supporter of Limbaugh and explained he simply was trying to prove a point to people who said they would rather listen to CDs.

“It was a great opportunity to cause a little excitement,” said Mitchell, who estimates his market is about 30,000 people in the community at the mouth of the Columbia River on the Pacific.

While Mitchell said he received about 200 e-mails and calls from people upset with Limbaugh, after suspending the program yesterday the station was hit with some 800 messages from listeners who wanted the talk-radio giant back.

The show returned to KAST’s schedule today.

“I guarantee you, our audience doesn’t like listening to Perry Como,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell said he wouldn’t offer an opinion about whether Limbaugh or congressional Democrats were right in the controversy over whether the radio host called all anti-war troops “phony soldiers.”

“Our thing is about giving our audience what they want,” he said. “We’re not tree huggers who want to ban Rush. Politics is not a question here.”

A transcript from Limbaugh’s Sept. 26 show suggests the “phony soldiers” remark specifically addressed the case of Jesse MacBeth, an anti-war activist who claimed to have witnessed atrocities as a Purple Heart recipient in the Army Rangers.

MacBeth, however, never served in Iraq. He was expelled from the military after 44 days in uniform.

Nevertheless, last week Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid sent a letter, signed by 41 Democrats, to Clear Channel Chief Executive Officer Mark P. Mays demanding he repudiate Limbaugh’s comments and extract an apology from him. Mays responded the same day in a letter to Reid defending Limbaugh’s right to express his opinions openly on the airwaves.

But Reid did not drop the matter.

In an e-mail to Democrats, he urged the public to inundate Mays with similar demands.

“I normally ignore Rush Limbaugh, but his comments last Wednesday went too far for me to remain silent,” Reid wrote. “It’s one thing to call me ‘Dingy Harry’ – it’s another to insult our men and women in uniform, calling those who oppose the war ‘phony soldiers,’ as Rush did during his Sept. 26 broadcast.”

During the broadcast, Limbaugh said MacBeth “became a hero to the anti-war left. They love phony soldiers, and they prop ’em up. When it is demonstrated that they have been lying about things, then they just forget about it. There’s no retraction; there’s no apology.”

Limbaugh spent the better part of a week on his daily, three-hour radio program explaining his remarks .

Nevertheless, the “phony soldiers” remark was posted on the website of the left-leaning watchdog Media Matters, where it was alleged that Limbaugh characterized all anti-war military personnel that way.


Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.

Reid also had made a speech on the Senate floor accusing Limbaugh of making a “hateful” and “unpatriotic” attack on U.S. troops opposed to the war in Iraq.

Limbaugh, contending he was “smeared” with false charges, demanded Reid come on the radio program, confront him “like a man” and “stop hiding behind the speech-and-debate clause and your Senate immunity.”

“You want to come on this program and call me unpatriotic, come on this program and call me unpatriotic,” Limbaugh said. “You want to call me a liar, you want to tell me that I did not say what I said, you come on this program and you tell me to my face that I said what I did not say.”

Democrats seized on the issue as a counterattack to criticism from Republicans over a MoveOn.org ad that referred to Gen. David Petraeus as “General Betray Us.”

Reid, demanding Limbaugh apologize to U.S. troops, told his Senate colleagues: “Last week, Rush Limbaugh went way over the line, way over the line. While I respect his right to say anything he likes, his unpatriotic comments I cannot ignore. During his show last Wednesday, Limbaugh was engaged in one of his typical rants. This one was unremarkable, indistinguishable from his usual drivel, which has been steadily losing listeners for years, until he crossed that line by calling our men and women in uniform who oppose the war in Iraq, and I quote, ‘phony soldiers.’ This comment was so beyond the pale of decency, and we can’t leave it alone. And yet he followed it up with denials and an attack on Congressman Jack Murtha, who was a 37-year active member of the Marine Corps, combat veteran.”

Limbaugh called Reid’s speech “Kafkaesque,” noting he had just finished an interview with Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, “talking about the lies and stuff spread about him during his confirmation hearings, and now I, little old private citizen, Rush Limbaugh, the subject of Senate action, the subject today of House of Representatives action, all based on a purposely told lie, which they know is a lie, and yet they are persisting in this.”

Many elected officials, mostly Democrats, expressed their displeasure with talk radio following the defeat of what President Bush called his “Comprehensive Immigration Reform” legislation – a plan characterized by many talkers as “amnesty.” There were a number of calls for reinstating the Fairness Doctrine – which has also been called the “Hush Rush” bill.

The 41 Democratic senators who signed the challenge to Limbaugh’s network were:

  1. Harry Reid, majority leader
  2. Richard Durbin, assistant majority leader
  3. Charles Schumer, vice chairman, Democratic Conference
  4. Patty Murray, secretary, Democratic Conference
  5. Daniel Akaka
  6. Max Baucus
  7. Joseph Biden
  8. Barbara Boxer
  9. Sherrod Brown
  10. Robert Byrd
  11. Benjamin Cardin
  12. Tom Carper
  13. Bob Casey
  14. Hillary Rodham Clinton
  15. Kent Conrad
  16. Christopher Dodd
  17. Byron Dorgan
  18. Dianne Feinstein
  19. Tom Harkin
  20. Daniel Inouye
  21. Edward M. Kennedy
  22. John Kerry
  23. Amy Klobuchar
  24. Mary Landrieu
  25. Frank Lautenberg
  26. Patrick Leahy
  27. Carl Levin
  28. Blanche Lincoln
  29. Bob Menendez
  30. Barbara Mikulski
  31. Bill Nelson
  32. Barack Obama
  33. Jack Reed
  34. Jay Rockefeller
  35. Ken Salazar
  36. Bernie Sanders
  37. Debbie Stabenow
  38. Jon Tester
  39. Jim Webb
  40. Sheldon Whitehouse
  41. Ron Wyden

In another example of government officials going after talk radio programming, last week the San Francisco Board of Supervisors condemned nationally syndicated host Michael Savage for comments he made about illegal aliens. They characterized his remarks as “hate speech.”


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Art Moore

Art Moore, co-author of the best-selling book "See Something, Say Nothing," entered the media world as a PR assistant for the Seattle Mariners and a correspondent covering pro and college sports for Associated Press Radio. He reported for a Chicago-area daily newspaper and was senior news writer for Christianity Today magazine and an editor for Worldwide Newsroom before joining WND shortly after 9/11. He earned a master's degree in communications from Wheaton College. Read more of Art Moore's articles here.