| 2-23-98
By Luke Ford
Dennis did his show from San Francisco today, and the sound quality
was bad.
DP said that he hoped that the UN agreement with Iraq works out,
but he does not trust Saddam.
Prager took a call from a man who blamed the Iraq crisis on American
defense companies. P. says lots of people believe things because
they emotionally need to. Evidence is irrelevant.
P. says that the Clinton legacy will soon be generally seen to
be a destructive one.
Prager felt sad for the man, Sergeant McKinney charged with 19
charges of sexual misconduct for unwanted hugs. One afternoon in
Florida in 1994, Sergeant Rita visited him at his lodging near Orlando.
She poured out her heart to him, then claimed that he tried to kiss
her.
Was that so bad? No. Would I do it? No.
This is sexual misconduct? Particularly in light of our President?
Prager has long said that he didn't want to know about Clinton's
sex life. However, you can't put the toothpaste back into the tube.
Prager spoke to a manufacturer's convention in San Francisco.
A woman came over to him afterwards. Her daughter is secretary of
the Junior class. Every officer is a girl except the President.
He said to the treasurer, I hope that you will take care of me like
the interns take care of the President. And if you don't, I hope
the treasurer will.
P. wants to know if the Clinton affair has had an affect on young
people, on the Armed Forces, and on the work place.
A caller said we do our children no favors by pretending that
these type of sexual scandals don't exist?
DP disagreed. At what age do we stop pretending? Stop protecting
them from knowing things?
DP says he is uncomfortable, (not a term he likes to use), with
that high school Junior Class president's statement. The guy is
thinking, women dig power, I have power, let me get some of those
perks.
P does not like the explicit terms flowing through the news media
about this scandal, and the Marv Albert trial.
For the last twenty years, the angry feminists have said that
consent does not matter when there is a disproportion of power.
It is an angry, anti-man, anti-Republican dishonest movement.
P: The Sergeant, he hugged one woman, asked her if she wanted
to kiss him, and she said no. Period. That's it.
A caller referred to a Ron Owens' show about a doctor who had
an affair with the mother of a patient. And caller after caller
wanted that doctors' credentials taken away.
P: And I bet these guys think the President is doing a great job
[and have no problem with the charges against the President].
DP says it will take a long time to unravel the Clinton scandal,
what really happened, is it important, its affect on children
DP is not surprised that the public is confused, as he believes
the Clinton scandal raises many difficult issues.
P says that NOW, NAACP, and the ACLU are leftist organizations
and they should stop posing as being for women, blacks, and civil
liberties.
Dennis took a very explicit call from a newly married man who
thanked Prager for making his deadend work between acting gigs,
survivable. He recalled a sleepover between his five year old and
another kid, who had fondled each other's genitals. The man told
about a party with a five year old girl and a couple of boys, who
had gone into a side room. The girl gave one of the boys a blowjob.
The caller wondered if that was an influence of the Clinton scandal.
It's surprising that the call was not bleeped.
Prager suspected that the call was a goof.
A female caller said her 14-year old told her, "Mom, I didn't
realize how many people fooled around." It's horrible.
Prager: I am torn between giving kids a vision of a good society
and a good leader, or telling the truth. I did not grow up as a
boy thinking that most men fooled around. It was good for me to
have as male models faithful men.
Caller and P complained about the lack of decorum.
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