i m planning on having a good time as long as i can. smoke pot with your kids, then you ll understand why the kids are happy. it s a giant love-in. people should be uninhibited in their sexual expression. you cannot ignore it, a change in morality. they re fascists. they don t like hippies. and they don t like the things we do. we do have to maintain law, order and decency on the streets. what we re thinking about is a peaceful planet. we re not thinking of anything else. they re trying to do what no one else has ever done before, find a new way for humanity. america in the early 60s, it was a real good time of prosperity, but it was also kind of a stagnant time in terms of spiritual growth. things were kind of at a standstill. the baseline culture was materialism, and also the feeling that the culture itself didn t honor the human spirit and didn t honor creativity. the early 1950s, the nation recognized in its midst the social movement calle
find a new way for humanity. america in the early 60s, it was a real good time of prosperity, but it was also kind of a stagnant time in terms of spiritual growth. things were kind of at a standstill. the baseline culture was materialism, and also the feeling that the culture itself didn t honor the human spirit and didn t honor creativity. the early 1950s, the nation recognized in its midst the social movement called beat generation. a novel titled on the road became a best-seller. when kerouac s book comes out, it became a revolution, defined a new generation of what being beat means, and it defined it as a spiritual revolution. that if we re living in an age of conformity, if everybody s trying to work for the corporation, that you re losing a sense of self. i was traveling west one time at the junction of the state line of colorado. i saw in the clouds huge and massed above the golden desert of even fall, the great image of god with four fingers poi
meant to them and the country. she made it cool to he made it cool to be a patriot. he showed people how to stand up to tierney. there is no talk radio, as we it with rush limbaugh. without rush limbaugh. it changed the life of americans single-handedly. rush was a happy warrior. so many times, people wanted to give up on conservativism. rush was the person you could turn on the radio and realize we are america. he is a legend. to those people that listened to him every day, it was like a religious experience a lot of people. his fans, they wouldn t miss him. a very unique person. dana: going to spend some time with our reflections. jesse watters, i ve always loved your story about the summer job you had when you first got introduced to rush limbaugh, and the impact that had on your life. i thought i would ask you if you could retell that story. jesse: i don t remember exactly what the story was, dana, but i remember listening to him in college and got hooked i
a peaceful planet. we re not thinking of anything else. they re trying to do what no one else has ever done before, find a new way for humanity. america in the early 60s, it was a real good time of prosperity, but it was also kind of a stagnant time in terms of spiritual growth. things were kind of at a standstill. the baseline culture was materialism, and also the feeling that the culture itself didn t honor the human spirit and didn t honor creativity. [ applause ] in the early 1950s, the nation recognized in its midst the social movement called beat generation. a novel titled on the road became a best-seller. when kerouac s book comes out, it became a revolution, defined a new generation of what being beat means, and it defined it as a spiritual revolution. that if we re living in an age of conformity, if everybody s trying to work for the corporation, that you re losing a sense of self. i was traveling west one time at the junction of the state line
maryland that are having record high hospitalizations. they even have an emergency declaration there. new jersey s largest hospital system also bracing to break 2020 records and 1,000 military medical experts have been deployed to try to deal with overcrowding in the icus, with cases exploding, dr. fauci says more trips to the hospital will be a key indicator to watch. very often, you can t just forget about the number of people who are infected because that s the forewarner of what might happen with hospitalization. as you get further on and you see less severity, clearly hospitalization is the important thing. against this backdrop, the cdc is defending the way that it has changed the guidance for isolation time, cutting it in half, for people with few symptoms. today, meanwhile, the president of the american nurses association saying this. we believe that the guidelines are premature given what is known about omicron. it seems to tip more towards economic needs as op