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rushlimbaugh-teachers-31220.jpg

As schools use distance learning amid coronavirus pandemic, Limbaugh promotes hiring fewer teachers, expanding homeschooling

Limbaugh: “That could open the door to … an entirely different curriculum than what you get in the public school system.”

Written by Eric Kleefeld

Published 03/13/20 12:01 PM EDT

On his March 12 radio show, Rush Limbaugh welcomed a possible benefit of the coronavirus outbreak — that is, when he’s not otherwise downplaying it as media hype — and the lockdown conditions that people have adopted: There could be fewer public school teachers to hire.

Limbaugh responded to a caller who speculated that “the professors and the big unions” had resisted online learning, because “when you’re online, don’t you need fewer teachers?”

“Yeah, I’ve been wondering that about a lot of things,” Limbaugh agreed. “What if it’s discovered that you don’t need to go half the places we’ve been going to get done what you do when you go there?”

Limbaugh also speculated about a further political angle: “But once the students stay at home then the teachers union may lose control of the curriculum and everything else. That could open the door to homeschooling, which teaches an entirely different curriculum than what you get in the public school system.”

Video file

Citation

From the March 12, 2020, edition of Premiere Radio Network's The Rush Limbaugh Show

RUSH LIMBAUGH (HOST): Mike in Cincinnati. Great to have you, sir. You’re next on the EIB Network. Hello.

CALLER: Rush, mega dittos from the queen city. It’s an honor to talk to you. Longtime listener and first-time caller.

LIMBAUGH: Thank you, sir, very much.

CALLER: Our friends describe you as the best friend that we’ve never met in person. So, anyway. I wanted to ask you, why do you think the teachers unions have been so silent about going to online learning? You know, the professors and the big unions, because after all when you’re online, don’t you need fewer teachers?

LIMBAUGH: Yeah, I’ve been wondering that about a lot of things. What if it’s discovered that you don’t need to go half the places we’ve been going to get done what you do when you go there?

CALLER: Right.

LIMBAUGH: What -- believe me, professional sports have been worried about this since the advent of television to a certain extent. It’s why the blackout rules existed as they did for a while. But you’re right about education. And not just the aspect of it you mentioned. But once the students stay at home then the teachers union may lose control of the curriculum and everything else. That could open the door to homeschooling, which teaches an entirely different curriculum than what you get in the public school system because you can’t tele-teach everybody.

You can’t put every classroom on a gigantic FaceTime, although they may be thinking about it. But again, in the case of many unions — not all — but what is the objective of many unions? Don’t make me say it. Figure it out on your own, folks. What is the objective, in relation to his call?

Limbaugh has often attributed nefarious political motives to teachers. In 2018, when a Georgia teacher fired gunshots at a school and barricaded himself in an empty classroom, Limbaugh speculated that the teacher must have been a “radical leftist” engaged in a fake attack — as no students were physically harmed — in order to discredit any efforts to arm teachers.

Limbaugh has long declared himself “all for losing public sector jobs, because those are a huge drain on the private sector.”

And he hasn’t just confined his opposition of public employees to teachers, either. “Look, as nice as they are to have — teaching jobs, firemen, policemen — they are all paid for with money out of the private sector. They are paid for with tax revenue from citizens,” Limbaugh said in 2012, also describing the alleged drain on economic growth from “the fire rolls, and the cops rolls, and teachers” as “Marxism 101.”

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In This Article

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  • Coronavirus (COVID-19)

    Covid-19 / Coronavirus

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