Pubdate: Wed, 19 Nov 2003 Source: Herald, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 The Herald Contact: http://www.heraldonline.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/369 LIMBAUGH IS BACK ON THE AIR Rush Limbaugh is back, and so are his listeners -- at least for the first day. No telling whether his addiction to painkillers will affect the size of his audience. Limbaugh returned to the air Monday, apparently in good spirits after five weeks of intensive drug rehabilitation therapy. Some estimated that nearly twice the normal 15 million listeners tuned in to hear the typical Limbaugh boilerplate -- harangues against Sens. Edward Kennedy and Hillary Rodham Clinton -- and his assessment of his therapy. He called it a "wonderful process," saying he felt "reborn," and he admitted he could not overcome his addiction through "force of will." "I tried to detox myself twice," he said. That is a helpful admission. It could spur other addicts to seek treatment. But Limbaugh still has some sticky legal problems that he says he is unable to comment on directly at this point. And there is the issue of hypocrisy. While he claims he would like to be "blunt and open" about the legal issues, he certainly was not very forthcoming until the National Enquirer broke the story that he was under suspicion of involvement in the distribution of black-market prescription drugs. Nor did he offer up his usual song and dance about how all drug addicts should be treated as criminals. Perhaps that makes no difference to loyal Limbaugh fans. But they may be disappointed in the end. A reborn Limbaugh may be a chastened Limbaugh to whom the world may not seem as black-and-white as it once did. That old, hard-hearted Rush may be gone forever. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman