Limbaugh’s $400 M contract
Rich reward their hateful lackeys
By
Caleb T. Maupin
Published Jul 10, 2008 9:24 PM
Big money never lacks a voice. The corporations and bankers are very good at
getting their message across. When it doesn’t come through headlines
attacking liberation movements across the globe, or nightly news broadcasts
painting pictures of “progress” in Iraq, there is always the
interesting world of talk radio.
Rush Limbaugh is known for his hateful right-wing rhetoric. His favorite
targets for verbal assaults include feminists, Black people, the LGBT
community, the poor, and anyone politically to the left of George W. Bush.
Limbaugh’s daily three-hour rants fill a range of topics, including
denial of global warming, downplaying poverty, and accusing those who disagree
with his views of being “un-American.”
The ruling class of bankers and capitalists has recently rewarded Limbaugh for
his hate speech. Through the Clear Channel network, which gets a lucrative
income from corporate advertisers, they gave him a contract valued at more than
$400 million.
This contract would award Limbaugh $38 million a year for the next eight years,
plus a “nine figure signing bonus,” but the official amount was
undisclosed. (Entertainment Weekly, July 3)
Radio journalist Mumia Abu-Jamal, who exposed this system rather than defend
it, was not awarded with such wealth but was framed up for murder. He sits on
death row.
Rev. Edward Pinkney of Benton Harbor, Mich., was not rewarded for his sermons,
which spoke opposition to the powers that be. He is now sentenced to spend
years in prison for daring to quote scripture in reference to a judge.
Even the liberal democratic voices of Air America were forced into
bankruptcy—not for lack of listeners, but because the private capitalists
whom the radio network depends upon for advertising income didn’t like
what they were saying.
This commentator was removed from his college newspaper’s staff last
spring, the only explanation being that he had “ravid [sic] political
opinions.”
But Rush Limbaugh, who spews the pro-Bush message, which according to the
latest polls reflects the views of less than 28 percent of the U.S. population,
at most, now finds himself on 600 radio stations. His ranting and raving reach
14 million people daily.
This should shed some light on the beliefs of those who think that in the U.S.
there is a “free marketplace of ideas.” While ideas are clearly
subject to a “marketplace,” the “free” part of this
common cliché deserves a bit of reconsidering.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
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