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Monday, February 15, 2021

Rush Limbaugh In Dire Straits!

Limbaugh's last days are coming.

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PROTECT BLACK WOMEN! 

WEAR A DAMN MASK! SAVE A LIFE!

HOLD THEM ACCOUNTABLE NOW!

GOOGLE'S BLOGGER IS TRASH!

WHITE PRIVILEGE IS REAL!

YOU CAN'T FIX STUPID!

It appears that Rush H. Limbaugh III's chemotherapy treatments aren't working. It seems like we're within days or weeks before we hear the news of this far-right agitator's passing. I don't wish death on people but the world might be a better place knowing this divisive character is out of the picture.

Since 1989, Limbaugh was the vanguard of talk radio. He is the No. 1 most listened to talk radio host.

He has an audience of 20 million listeners. 

Now he's finding himself at a place where he can't be the "valiant resistance" to President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.

He announced on his radio show that he had Stage IV lung cancer. He said that he would take time off his radio show to get treatment. Since his return, he saw the election loss of Donald J. Trump.

Trump given Limbaugh and the ilk of far-right radio millions of listeners and promotion.

Producer James Golden, who is known by his pseudonym Bo Snerdley to millions of Limbaugh’s listeners, provided a brief update on Twitter.


The 70-year-old Limbaugh learned he had advanced lung cancer in January 2020 and was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Trump at the State of the Union address shortly afterwards. The talk pioneer has missed shows to undergo treatment on a regular basis, but he has returned to his golden EIB microphone whenever possible.

Back in December, Limbaugh opened up his final broadcast of 2020 by thanking his listeners and supporters for supporting him throughout his career and his health struggle. 

"My point in all of this today is gratitude," he said. "My point in all of this is to say thanks and tell everybody involved how much I love you from the bottom of a sizable and growing and still-beating heart."
America's most controversial talk radio host may pass away soon.

Limbaugh said he was originally stunned by his diagnosis and added it had been as hard on those in his orbit as it was on him personally.

"I can't be self-absorbed about it, when that is the tendency when you are told that you've got a due date," he said, choking up. "You have an expiration date. A lot of people never get told that, so they don't face life this way."

In October of last year, the conservative icon told listeners who was "under a death sentence" because of the illness.

"It’s tough to realize that the days where I do not think I’m under a death sentence are over," Limbaugh said. "Now, we all are, is the point. We all know that we’re going to die at some point, but when you have a terminal disease diagnosis that has a time frame to it, then that puts a different psychological and even physical awareness to it." 

Limbaugh is considered one of the most influential media members of the past 50 years and has played a consequential role in conservative politics since his radio show began in 1988. The program has grown into the most listened-to radio show in the United States.

"The Rush Limbaugh Show" first aired in 1988 and has earned a variety of awards and honors. Limbaugh is a five-time winner of the National Association of Broadcasters' Marconi Award for "Excellence in Syndicated and Network Broadcasting," a No. 1 New York Times best-selling author and a member of the Radio Hall of Fame and National Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame.


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