Christopher’s initial response to Limbaugh was characteristically humble and gracious, so why would he then refuse to accept Rush’s apology? “Well, he owns up to not having read the original story, but then compounds that mistake by not reading my response to his mistake. Listen to the clip!”
Limbaugh’s apology is, unfortunately, of the “if I did something, then I’m sorry” variety, Christopher points out, adding “If he actually read my response, he’d know that he did get it wrong, no ifs or buts, and he wouldn’t still be attributing false quotes to me. ”
Limbaugh stated, in his
“Such a quote, or anything like it, appears nowhere in either of my two posts on the matter,” Christopher fumed, “nor anywhere else but the vivid imagination of Mr. Limbaugh.”
A review of both stories reveals that Christopher, indeed, is crystal clear in his denunciation of Ghosh’s remarks, and unequivocal in his opposition to Bible-burning.
In his initial response to Limbaugh’s misreading of his story, Mr. Christopher specifically asked that Limbaugh not apologize to him. It appears as though, in Christopher’s mind, Limbaugh still has not.
Editor’s note – yes, Tommy Christopher is both the author and subject of this post, and is employing the time tested style of writing about himself in the third person narrative.