From Rush Limbaugh:
RUSH: Seems I've heard this before. Has Clinton not told this story before? It's hard to remember. But here's Bill Clinton during his eulogy for Rosa Parks yesterday in New Fallujah.
CLINTON: I remember as if it were yesterday that fateful day 50 years ago. I was a nine-year-old southern white boy who road a segregated bus every single day of my life. And I sat in the front. Black folk sat in the back. When Rosa showed us that black folks didn't have to sit in the back anymore, two of my friends and I who strongly approved of what she had done decided we didn't have to sit in the front anymore. (Laughter.)
RUSH: Oh, what a guy, what a guy, what a guy. Let me quickly go to Dave in Orlando because David's got the perfect take on this. Dave, welcome to the EIB Network.
CALLER: Oh, he just keeps giving, doesn't he?
RUSH: (Laughing.) What's he saying, what's he saying there?
CALLER: He is not saying that he's behind Rosa Parks. She is a great woman and she deserves all the respect our country can give her, he is saying I'm at least as good and I'm probably better. No, I'm definitely better, you just have to look closer.
RUSH: That's exactly right, it's an excellent point. Dave in Orlando nails it. With this story, Bill Clinton's pathology is clear. He goes to the funeral where the whole story is Rosa Parks. I mean, yesterday, the story is Rosa Parks, as it should have been, but Clinton has to make himself the story! He has to basically say, "I did the same thing she did, I was only nine. I was only nine years old, and my friends and I, when we saw what she did, we immediately decided we're going to sit in the back of the bus." So he's telling these people, "Hey, Rosa had nothing on me. I'm just as moral. I'm just as good as Rosa. I was only nine."