Michael Savage
Savage talked about the emerging scandal surrounding Bill and Hillary Clinton's alleged "Tammany-like money operation" that is the subject of a controversial new book.
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"What the Clintons have done is so corrupt that in any other country there wouldn't just be an investigation," he said. "There would be an immediate arrest. ... But because the Republican Party is just as dirty, there will be no investigation (Free audio)."
Savage also slammed Bill Clinton for referring to ISIS as "the most interesting NGO [non-governmental organization] in the world today," as if they were on a par with CARE International or Doctors Without Borders.
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In the same speech, Clinton went on to explain that in previous times, Muslim rulers allowed Christians and Jews to live if they paid a fine.
"That sounds like Obama," said Savage. "He lets Christians and Jews live too, as long as they pay exorbitant taxes (Free audio)."
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Rush Limbaugh
This week, Limbaugh weighed in on an interview between HBO's Bryant Gumbel and University of Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh, in which Gumbel mocked the coach for calling football "the last bastion of hope for toughness in America in men, in males."
Limbaugh, a lifelong football fan, said to his audience: "Gumbel epitomizes the modern day cultural left. He simply epitomizes it, and to him, any notion of toughness in men, and a last bastion of hope, and football being representative and an example of toughness in America, is somehow unacceptable (Free audio)."
Earlier in the week, Limbaugh took a call from "a happy conservative black woman" who wanted to talk about "the gay agenda." She shocked the host by telling him: "Now, I'm going to let you in on a really closely-held secret about black America, Rush. I grew up in a housing project, and in that housing project – and in just about every poor black community in this country – everyone in the community always knew who the older black men were who were plying these young fatherless boys with gifts, with candy, with money, with toys, you name it. This has always happened (Free audio)."
Aaron Klein
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Aaron conducted an explosive interview with controversial Princeton ethics professor Dr. Peter Singer, who famously has justified killing severely disabled infants and argues it's better to kill a disabled human than a healthy horse.
Singer contended the health-care system under Obamacare should be more overt about rationing and that the country should acknowledge the necessity of "intentionally ending the lives of severely disabled infants."
Throughout the interview, Singer repeatedly referred to a disabled infant as "it."
Also this week, Klein investigated the possible connection between ISIS and Mexican drug cartels, who may be plotting terrorist attacks along the U.S. border.
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Listen to Aaron Klein's show ever week on radio (AM 970 The Answer in NY; NewsTalk 990 AM in Philly) or online at http://www.connectpal.com/aaronklein
Mark Levin
Other revelations about Hillary Clinton this week included an alleged deal between the Clinton Foundation and a Russian uranium producer.
Mark Levin called this scandal bigger than Whitewater, her email server controversy and any of the other unethical behaviors she's been associated with (Free audio).
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"We have an Islamo-Nazi problem inside this country," Levin told his listeners. He pointed to terror recruitment within Minnesota's Somali community as just one example, and called out politicians of both parties who refuse to address immigration reform (Free audio).
Laura Ingraham
Ingraham called the Clinton donation scandal the most explosive issue of this campaign to date, saying: "Hillary Clinton has not revealed, nor has Bill, the full extent of both donations from foreign individuals and foreign governments that track their time in government and the time in which she was planning to run for president. ... Did policy change because of donations or promised donations? If this is not a legitimate topic in governance today, I don't know what is (Free audio)."
As far as the GOP is concerned, Ingraham wondered why Marco Rubio "is now the darling of the Republican Party."
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"I like Marco," Ingraham added. "But, you know, a friend of mine emails me last night at like four in the morning. [S]he said, 'Tell me again how Marco Rubio is different from [Democrat] Lindsey Graham on any issue?' And I said, thinking to myself, 'I don't know' (Free audio)."
Ingraham's guests this week included Pat Buchanan; Marco Rubio fan David Brooks; and Michael Berry, talking about the "increasingly hostile work environment for Christians in the U.S. military (Free audio)."
Glenn Beck
"The time is here. It is now here."
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Beck issued an ominous alert to his audience at the start of the week.
"We've been talking about this for five, ten years, that this will come and persecution will come, the persecution of the Jews and persecution of the Christians," he said. "The promise I made to myself was, 'OK, I'll do something about it. I will stand. I will hide those people. I will stand with those people.'"
Talking about the atrocities being committed by ISIS, Beck offered listeners options for fighting back in their own way: "I think we can [get involved]. I think you can call your congressman. I think we can change our Twitter image to '#IAmCoptic.' You know, little things we can do that we're not doing (Free audio)."
After interviewing Wisconsin Republican Gov. Scott Walker, Beck said, "I loved him. I was really impressed with him, really liked him. [I] thought he had great answers for everything. We didn't push him to the wall on things, but it's our first meeting and I thought he had really reasonable answers (Free audio)."