I HAVE Taken the Limbaugh Challenge
He goes on:
Whenever I interrupt a liberalīs anti-Limbaugh rant to point out that the ranter has never actually listened to the man, he always says the same thing: "Iīve heard him!"
On further questioning, it always turns out that by "heard him," he means heīs heard the selected excerpts spoon-fed him by the distortion-mongers of the mainstream media. These excerpts are specifically designed to accomplish one thing: to make sure you never actually listen to Limbaughīs show, never actually give him a fair chance to speak his piece to you directly.
Klavanīs insight here is right on par with that of astrologers and tarot card readers. Itīs also a very popular, very comforting notion clutched tight by pundits all across the right wing of the political spectrum, from Mark Levin to the increasingly insufferable Dennis Miller. Itīs a crutch on which Millerīs political piece of mind leans particularly hard. He calls it animus in absentia, and cites it to explain away critics of Ann Coulter and Fox News Channel.
Itīs easy to see why this is such a popular notion. Itīs reassuring to believe that the only reason people disagree with you is that they just havenīt heard you yet. If they only gave you a chance, only took the time to really understand, theyīd have no choice but to surrender to your self-evident wisdom — or that of Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, name your own right-wing talking head. Andrew Klavanīs faith in this heartening little bit of self-deception is so strong that he doesnīt even allow for the possibility of the contrary. Writing about the readers of his own newspaper, who subsidize his income, he says,
Youīre not a moderate or you wouldnīt be reading this newspaper. Youīre not tolerant of a wide range of views; you are tolerant of a narrow spectrum of variations on your views. And, whatever you claim, you still havenīt listened to Rush Limbaugh.
Jesus, no wonder newspapers are in freefall. But at least Klavan still thinks enough of his audience of "yellow-bellied, lily-livered intellectual cowards" to issue them the following challenge:
Listen to the [Rush Limbaugh] show. Not for five minutes but for several hours: an hour a day for several days. Consider what he has to say — the real policy material under the jokes and teasing bluster. Do what your intellectual keepers do not want you to do and keep an open mind.
Quite the dare from Mr. Klavan. The one problem I detect is this: Iīve been taking the Limbaugh Challenge for fifteen years. I started listening to Rush Limbaugh on the radio in 1992, when I was twelve years old. By eighth grade I had read both his books, The Way Things Ought to Be and See, I Told You So. When his television show was on the air, I rarely missed an episode. During the summer when I wasnīt in school, and over vacations and sick-days, I routinely listened to all three hours of his radio show. I was familiar with Rush Limbaugh and the "real policy material" beneath his "jokes and teasing bluster" before there even was such a thing as Media Matters or ThinkProgress to spoon-feed me distorting excerpts. Remember back during Clintonīs first term, when Rush started wearing a lapel ribbon made out of a rolled-up dollar bill, both to mock the practice of wearing AIDS and breast cancer awareness ribbons and to allow the dittoheads in his audience to more easily identify each other in public, like conservative gay-dar? I wore one of those to school for months. I wrote an article for the teen page of the Herald-Mail and was photographed wearing the thing.
I donīt disagree with Rush Limbaugh because Iīve never really heard him. I donīt oppose his politics because I just havenīt taken the time to understand them. Iīve heard him plenty. I understand him perfectly. Thatīs why I oppose him. It wasnīt always this way. It took a few years. I had some growing up to do. The more I opened myself up to a wider range of views — and not merely a narrow variation of my own views, as Andrew Klavan writes, perfectly describing the phony broad-mindedness of which many conservatives are guilty, it seems to me — the less what I was hearing from Limbaugh made sense. Once I had read Voltaire, Carl Sagan, Thomas Paine, the wisdom of Rush Limbaugh looked trivial at best. Once I had read and heard from Mark Twain, George Carlin, Richard Pryor, the humor of Rush Limbaugh hardly seemed to exist at all. I have no intellectual keepers. No one has shaped my opinion on Rush Limbaugh other than Rush Limbaugh. The more I heard him as an adult rather than an adolescent, the more I came to see him not as insightful, funny and wise, but as tiresome, clownish, self-serving, and oh, just the tiniest bit hypocritical.
Take a moment to consider how arrogant this is, presuming that the only reason anyone would argue with Rush Limbaugh or take offense with anything heīs ever said is because they just havenīt given him a chance. Limbaugh is many things, but a serious thinker he absolutely ainīt. Think of the intellectual giants of conservatism — Thomas Hobbes, Edmund Burke, John Locke, Adam Smith, all brilliant men. Writers and philosophers have been debating and arguing about their ideas for centuries. Am I really supposed to believe that an informed disagreement with Rush Limbaugh is impossible? Thatīs arrogance exacerbated by insanity.
Check out Klavanīs big finish:
The mainstream media (a.k.a. the Matrix) donīt want you to listen to Limbaugh because theyīre afraid heīll wake you up and set you free of their worldview. You donīt want to listen to him because youīre afraid of the same thing.
Donīt believe me? Well, then, gird your loins. Gather your courage. Accept the Limbaugh Challenge. See what happens.
I dare you.
I accepted the Limbaugh Challenge before there was such a thing. Listening to Limbaugh doesnīt take courage; it takes patience, and tolerance. I donīt listen to him much these days. I tune him in every couple weeks, usually just for a few minutes at a time before switching back to Dennis Miller, or Fred Thompsonīs new show, or NPR if Iīm not feeling masochistic that day. I rarely listen to Limbaugh not because Iīm afraid of him, but because Iīm bored by him. He rarely has guests — and almost never a guest who disagrees with him — and he regularly goes long stretches without even taking a call from his worshipful audience. Itīs just a series of unbroken, repetitive diatribes. If Iīm going to listen to conservative radio, Iīd rather give my attention to someone like Hannity, whose politics I find just as ridiculous and repugnant as Limbaughīs, but who at least makes an effort to appear open to dissent.
So there ya go, Andrew. I took the Limbaugh Challenge. Now I can barely bring myself to listen to him at all. Thatīs what happened. Youīre right about one thing, though. He woke me up. I owe him that much, though I guess thatīs not something heīd want the credit for.

