Tag Archives: rick santelli

Five for Five: Top Five News Stories Broken or Advanced by NewsBusters | Round 3 of T-Shirt Winners

Editor’s Note: For the list of NewsBusters T-shirt contest winners, skip to the end of this post. Click here to enter the contest . It’s time once again for “Five for Five,” this time our list of the Top Five News Stories Broken or Advanced by NewsBusters. We start with an honorable mention that just barely failed to make the cut, but is worth noting for its impact on the blogospher, Noel Sheppard’s August 1, 2009 post, “Obama Joker Poster Popping Up in Los Angeles.” As for our top five, they are blog posts that uncovered: The beginnings of ClimateGate [ “Possible Conspiracy to Falsify Temperature Data Uncovered” from Nov. 20, 2009]  The early beginnings of the Tea Party movement [ “CNBC’s Santelli Explains His Anti-Obamanomics Call for Revolt” from February 19, 2009] Audio of President Obama telling the San Francisco Chronicle of his desire to bankrupt the coal industry [November 2, 2008] MSNBC’s close-cropping video of a gun owner at a Tea Party rally so that you can’t tell he’s a black man — MSNBCers were insisting the rallies were racist [August 18, 2009] And perhaps our biggest news item of all, from March 18, 2008, when our very own Rich Noyes disproved Hillary Clinton’s claim of having come under fire in a 1996 visit to Bosnia. Here’s the 1996 news footage that Noyes dug up from the Media Research Center archive: And now, as promised, the third round of winners in our 5th anniversary T-shirt giveaway . Congratulations to: John D. of Anderson, S.C. Paul C. of Rockaway, N.J. Earl S. of Willis, Texas Vicki L. of Hinckley, Ill. Larry G. of Doniphan, Mo. Nathan M. of Jefferson Township, Pa. Carolann M. of Gaithersburg, Md. Roy D. of Burnsville, N.C. Benjamin S. of Hillsdale, Mich. Galen W. of Fayetteville, Pa.  John B. of Oakhurst, Calif. John P. of Cincinnati, Ohio Rick G. of Olympia, Wash. Sandra G. of Providence, R.I. Fred K. of Sandy Lake, Pa. Albert C. of Vinton, Va. Joe G. of Lockport, N.Y. Ruth S. of Phoenix, Ariz. Carmen M. of Woodruff, S.C. Joseph P. of Kearney, Neb. Stephen W. of Tacoma, Wash. Sandy C.of Niantic, Conn. Cliff P. of Fayetteville, Ark. Dale W. of Cannelburg, Ind. Mary H. of Rockford, Ill.

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Five for Five: Top Five News Stories Broken or Advanced by NewsBusters | Round 3 of T-Shirt Winners

Santelli’s Simple Answer to Deficit: ‘Stop Spending, Stop Spending, Stop Spending!’

If it were only that simple – that is the way CNBC’s Rick Santelli would have it. On CNBC’s June 28 “Squawk Box,” CNBC’s senior economics reporter Steve Liesman vigorously defended the need for higher tax rates as a measure to cut federal deficits. Others argued that government revenues would increase if tax rates were lower because it would stimulate growth. (h/t Real Clear Politics Video ) “Let me get this straight – all you guys want to cut taxes en route to bringing down the deficit?” Liesman asked. But according to Santelli, it has nothing to do with taxes, but the role of government in the economy. “No, I didn’t say anything about taxes, Steve,” Santelli shouted. “I want the government to stop spending! Stop spending, stop spending, stop spending, stop spending! That’s what we want, stop spending!” Liesman continued his defense of higher taxes, arguing they wouldn’t “pay for themselves,” but Santelli followed up with a suggestion for Liesman. “I just keep saying what the data show,” Liesman said. “The data show tax cuts don’t pay for themselves.” “You wouldn’t know data if it bit you on the nose,” Santelli, the CME Group reporter, said. “Go read some Austrian economists instead of the funny pages.” And Santelli suggested Liesman try a change of venue to get a better understanding of economics. “Go back to Russia where you understand the state and the citizen,” Santelli said. However, “Squawk Box” co-host Becky Quick said the government is occasionally needed to step and she alluded to the near financial collapse and ultimate passage of TARP in 2008. “I’m on Steve’s side on this,” Quick said. “There are times when the government has to step in. I think probably what happened two years ago was the time.” But that has caused a political backlash, demonstrated by European nations and their lack of willingness to employ government-spending policies. “Yes they did and a couple of trillion of dollars later they’re [the federal government] done because the taxpayers are the people voting and they’re done, Steve,” Santelli said. “Talk all you want, they’re done. Merkel’s done. Europe’s done because the voting electorate has said their done.” Liesman stuck to his line of reasoning argued the deficit was directly correlated to the economy and not as much as the amount government spending. “I don’t even care, Steve. Our deficit is too big and we need to knuckle under and we need to live too prudently, prudently,” Santelli fired back.

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Santelli’s Simple Answer to Deficit: ‘Stop Spending, Stop Spending, Stop Spending!’

CNBC Reporter Attacks Obama for Creating ‘His Own Sense of a Legal System’ over Oil Spill

There has been a lot of criticism hurled at President Obama over his handling of the BP oil spill. Some on the left are upset the president hasn’t been more forceful with the oil giant. Those on the right generally argue Obama’s leadership has been inadequate. Rarely has the president been criticized for specific actions on this issue. But on “Closing Bell” June 16 , CNBC’s Matt Nesto was asked whether BP acted appropriately by agreeing to the White House’s terms by cutting its dividend payments and agreeing to a $20 billion escrow account. Nesto argued that the administration was circumventing the legal system with such acts.  “I don’t think they [BP] had a [choice],” Nesto said. “In cutting the dividend or in joining up with that fund? I mean, cutting the dividend – yeah it is smart and prudent to save cash in the face of an unknown liability, but I’m very troubled by the fact, uh, that the President has once again created his own sense of, of a legal system.” Nesto cited previous instances where Obama has acted in an unprecedented ways to back up his claim and explained Obama was operating outside the presidency’s intended function. “He fired the CEO of General Motors. He circumvented the rights of bond holders in the GM situation and now he’s confiscated $20 billion from a private company – wait a minute – to set up, quote, ‘a financial and legal framework’ that already exists,” Nesto continued. “It’s not his job to create laws. It’s his job to enforce laws.” Although BP’s ability to stem the flow of the oil from the Deepwater Horizon well, the oil company has reacted to many of the government’s public requests, including suspending their dividend .  “They are doing that,” Nesto said. “Why do they have to have a gun to their head? There is a thing called due process my friends. There’s gonna be a lot of litigation, as there should, right?”