MARK LEVIN: Folks, the president of the United States, he's manipulative, he's a political demagogue, and you know, I'm very honored, I'm very lucky; I served under a president who was not those things, Ronald Reagan. When Ronald Reagan talked about America, a nation he had traveled when he did commercials for GE, a nation he had traveled when he would speak for conservatives, when he ran for governor, when he ran several times for president. He loved every corner of the country. All those diners he would visit in rural America. He'd go in the inner cities -- oh, yes he did -- meet as many people as he could. He just loved this nation. It was in his heart, it was in his soul, it was in his mind.



And when he spoke and he talked about America, he was so inspiring. The greatness of America and how much greater we could be, and how we could be an all inclusive society. Spreading wealth not by government, but by acknowledging, preserving private property rights and promoting it. Free market capitalism.



When he went overseas he never apologized for American. He would remind foreign leaders about how great America was in so many other cases how much American blood was spilled on their soil and those nations. Ronald Reagan didn't have to be told to wear a flag lapel pin the way Obama did, he always did. He didn't have to be reminded to put his hand over his heart when singing our national anthem like Obama did, he always did he always did. Ronald Reagan love this country to its core. Speech after speech, he would talk about the magnificence of the American people, the magnificence of our heritage; the shining city on the hill. A man of optimism; a man that wouldn't take no for an answer; a man that tried to break down the barriers and the obstacles to success for all Americans, all walks of life. The man didn't have a bigoted bone, a class act, a statesman.



And now we have Barack Obama, a man who is endlessly ripping at the fabric of the nation. He talks about an America that I don't know, that most of us don't know. Oh, it's not a black, white, green, brown thing. He lies. The Zimmerman case wasn't about white on black or black on white. Don't you have to have a white guy to have that? But even so, ladies and gentlemen, we if people pouring over our borders, the majority of whom aren't white. The majority of whom are minorities, foreigners from Central and Latin America, from the Caribbean, from Africa. Why would people -- non-whites -- come into this country if we are the country that Barack Obama talked about today. The country that may be in his head, but not that country he leads.



How can Barack Obama campaign for president, twice, go all across the country, see with his own two eyes what a great people we are. See with his own two eyes how tolerant we are of each other, regardless of our races and our religions and our differences of politics. How can he see this and pretend that he doesn't? Why must he lower himself and go in the gutter with Al Sharpton? And his Attorney General do the same. Why must he go behind a microphone today, unexpectedly, and give a speech that's intended to rile up people so Sharpton, with his hundred different protests across the nation, could turn out more and more people? This president doesn't stand for anything that I stand for. Nothing. He talks about an America that doesn't exist. He projects his politics onto our society, and he's extremely manipulative.



Now all weekend long on the Sunday shows, on the news shows, he will be the subject of the news. His comments, his lectures his condescension to the American people. Does Barack Obama sound to you like somebody who is honored to be president of the United States? Is he honored to be our leader? No he doesn't. He sounds resentful and condescending and contemptuous. We're a great country, we're a great people. We've done so many great things, I can't even list them. Not just here but throughout the world. But you wouldn't know that listening to this man. We've overcome many things in this country: slavery, segregation, state discrimination. We've come very very far, no thanks to Barack Obama and Eric Holder. No thanks to Al Sharpton. No. I'm ashamed of this president, I think he's a disgrace. I'm ashamed of this Attorney General, I think he's a disgrace. They have no respect for you, I don't care what your color is. They have no respect for this country. None. (The Mark Levin Show, July 19, 2013)