Tag Archives: Barack Obama

Chris Matthews and Howard Fineman Have Mutual Obamagasm on Hardball

Chris Matthews and Howard Fineman on Friday had a mutual Obamagasm while cameras rolled on MSNBC’s “Hardball.” As the adorable couple chatted about the Koran burning scandal, and of course blamed the entire controversy on Republicans such as House Minority Leader John Boehner (R-Oh.), former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, and former Alaska governor Sarah Palin, the Newsweek columnist unashamedly started the love-fest. “Well, sitting there in the press conference today with President Obama, you could almost hear sort of the classical music in the background,” cooed Fineman. “It was a stately thing, and a mature discussion.” “I get you,” echoed Matthews. “This is an Oxford don, he’s so well-turned, he comes in there elegantly, presenting himself elegantly, presenting himself on a very high-level tone.” One imagines both of these so-called journalists needed a cigarette and a shower during the break (video follows with transcript and commentary): HOWARD FINEMAN, NEWSWEEK: Well, sitting there in the press conference today with President Obama, you could almost hear sort of the classical music in the background. You know, I don’t mean to be facetious… CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: No, I get you… FINEMAN: But, you know what I mean. It was a stately thing, and a mature discussion, you could agree or disagree, let’s all be reasonable about this… MATTHEWS: This is an Oxford don, he’s so well turned… FINEMAN: Yeah! MATTHEWS: …he comes in there elegantly, presenting himself elegantly, presenting himself on a very high-level tone… FINEMAN: And he gave a very… MATTHEWS: …against this menagerie… FINEMAN: Yeah! MATTHEWS: …that’s biting at his heals. FINEMAN: That’s why I’m saying, those people that you cited, Boehner and Gingrich and Palin, are not playing the same ballgame that Barack Obama is. MATTHEWS: I shouldn’t them the Three Stooges, they’re a lot smarter than that. I think they know it. They’re not stooges. FINEMAN: Sure they know what they’re doing. MATTHEWS: Stooges are the people that buy their act. Honestly, do you think anyone  at MSNBC is the slightest bit embarrassed to see male journalists gushing and fawning over the president this way? Or do the folks running this pathetic “news” outlet share such sentiments and therefore think men behaving like teenage girls is appropriate? 

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Chris Matthews and Howard Fineman Have Mutual Obamagasm on Hardball

NBC’s David Gregory Calls New Obama Stimulus Push ‘Cynical Politics’

Whenever President Barack Obama defends what his presidency to date, specifically on economic issues, he’ll speak of inheriting a bad economy from the previous administration, and then assures listeners of his intention to make the economy his top priority. So why hasn’t he done it? Why have there been other distractions like cap-and-trade, ObamaCare, bailouts, etc. and not a push for a real so-called infrastructure stimulus, like the president proposed publicly earlier this week.  On CNBC’s Sept. 10 “Squawk Box,” host Joe Kernen asked NBC “Meet the Press” moderator why the support from the president’s own party isn’t enthusiastic about Obama’s new stimulus proposal . “I am trying to figure out, where is the Democratic leadership?” Kernen said. “Were you not surprised that after the speech and after the proposals, I don’t know of a single person in a leadership position that said, ‘Yes Mr. President, that’s a great idea.’ All I saw was [Colorado Democratic Sen. Michael] Bennet using the s-word, which he isn’t supposed to use and isn’t that surreal? I mean it’s like – the president almost seems like he’s lonely at this point with some of this stuff?” Gregory wanted to know why, if these measures to strengthen the economy were so important, the president earlier. “Look Joe, I think you have to ask why, if the president felt so strongly about additional stimulus money or business tax breaks, he didn’t propose it at a time that it gotten it passed,” Gregory replied. “Because – to your point, Democrats don’t want to vote for more spending, they don’t want to vote for – I mean they may want to vote for tax breaks if it could come together, but Republicans don’t want to hand him that victory.” With this latest move by Obama, which comes almost two months before the midterm election, it appears to his critics to be nothing more than “cynical politics” on the president’s part, according to Gregory. “So you’re right, it is a lonely position,” he continued. “And again, if he felt strongly about these things, why didn’t he do that earlier in the term? I think that is a criticism being leveled at him saying, ‘Look, this is cynical politics on the president’s part.’ He knows they’re not going to get anything passed. This is all part of framing the political message.”

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NBC’s David Gregory Calls New Obama Stimulus Push ‘Cynical Politics’

CNN’s Gergen: Obama is ‘Impressive,’ But Press Conference Was ‘Boring’

CNN’s David Gergen gushed over Barack Obama during CNN’s coverage of the President’s press conference on Friday, but was unimpressed by his performance: ” He impresses everyone with his competence …. The subtlety of his mind I think is very impressive . At the same time, I thought it was … boring .” Minutes later, Roland Martin replied to Gergen by rushing to Obama’s defense: ” He’s not an entertainer .” Anchor John King brought on some of the network’s ” best political team on television,” including Gergen and Martin, 19 minutes into the 12 noon hour, immediately after the President’s briefing concluded. King turned to the senior political analyst first and asked, “David, a lot of ground covered- what did you come away with?” Gergen, who once c ompared Obama to a damsel in distress , and was left in awe of how “articulate” the President was during an earlier press conference in 2009, immediately launched into his lauds about the President’s “competence” and “subtlety of mind,” but almost within the same breath, changed gears: GERGEN: Well, John, he- once again, he impresses everyone with his competence. He has capacity to deal with a range of issues. The subtly of his mind I think is very impressive. At the same time, I thought it was mostly passionless, and frankly, boring, as it went on and on until that last question on the mosque, and then it came alive. And I think the President- that’s going to be- his statements today- very passionate, controversial, but he took a much clearer stand in favor of the mosque going there than anything he said in the past. Four minutes later, anchor Candy Crowley theorized that “part of the reason that the administration held this news conference is the President has got to get all of those people who voted for him in 2008 to come out and vote for Democrats in 2010.” She then asked Martin, “Did you see anything in this news conference where you think voters went- yeah, I’ve got to get out and go to those polls?” Martin wholeheartedly agreed with Crowley’s theory about the press conference, and then replied to Gergen, acting as an apologist for the President, even while giving some mild critiques: MARTIN: Well, I think- first of all, remember, we’re in the midst of the NFL kicking off this weekend, and so, I’ll use a football analogy. He’s the quarterback- while doing that, go Houston Texans- he is the quarterback. He has to set the tone, and so, part of the problem here, he- the White House and Democrats have been off. And so, when he comes out and says- look, I will sign this bill this month, as it relates to middle class tax cuts, what are you going to do, what do you want to do? That’s the way of doing that. He also, I think, broke down, in a sense, what the Democrats have to articulate, and that is, how bad of a situation we were in walking to the door, and how we are on this road to progress. And I think he could have been more clear by saying- look, Republicans constantly have thrown up roadblocks, they constantly are saying no, blocking appointments- they want to block progress. That’s really what he was trying to do there. But let me also address something that David said. David talked about- well, you know, the nuance and what he said- you know, and it was boring. Well, you know what? He’s not an entertainer. And so, I never get the sense, watching the President, that the President really should be entertaining and really should come out- you know, guns blazing. He is going to talk about policy and these issues. And so, I listen to anybody out of Washington, D.C.- I’m really not looking for somebody who is going to just enamor me- you know, in terms of how great they are. They’re going to talk about things in a substantive way. And so, that’s really how I took it , and I think anybody who is wanting the President to say something- you know, when it comes to policy, you got that, not entertainment. It’s not surprising that Martin would respond this way, as he was one of CNN’s resident Obama spokesman during the 2008 presidential campaign.

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CNN’s Gergen: Obama is ‘Impressive,’ But Press Conference Was ‘Boring’

Wash Post’s Anne Kornblut: Why, Despite Obama’s Healing Efforts, Is There So Much Anti-Muslim ‘Resentment?’

Washington Post staff writer Anne Kornblut used her question at a White House press conference on Friday to worry that, despite Barack Obama making it a “priority,” anti-Muslim “suspicion” still existed in America. She queried the President, ” Nine years after the September 11th attacks, why do you think it is that we are now seeing such an increase in suspicion and outright resentment of Islam, especially given that it has been one of your priorities to improve relations with the Muslim world? ” [MP3 audio here .] Obama’s response seemed to echo his infamous 2008 comment about Americans being “bitter” and “clinging” to their guns. He proclaimed, “You know, I think that at a time when the country is anxious generally and going through a tough time, then, you know, fears can surface, suspicions, divisions can surface in a society. And, so, I think that plays a role in it.” On April 11, 2008 , the then-Senator condescended, “It’s not surprising then they get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations.” Of course, Kornblut had no follow-up and didn’t challenge Obama on his latest assertion. A transcript of the September 10 question and answer can be found below: 11:32 ANNE KORNBLUT: Thank you, Mr. President. Nine years after the September 11 th attacks, why do you think it is that we are now seeing such an increase in suspicion and outright resentment of Islam, especially given that it has been one of your priorities to improve relations with the Muslim world? BARACK OBAMA: You know, I think that at a time when the country is anxious generally and going through a tough time, then, you know, fears can surface, suspicions, divisions can surface in a society. And, so, I think that plays a role in it. One of the things that I most admired about President Bush was after 9/11, him being crystal clear about the fact that we were not at war with Islam. We were at war with terrorists and murderers who had perverted Islam, had stolen its banner to carry out its outrageous acts. I was so proud of the country rallying around that idea, that notion that we are not going to be divided by religion. We’re not going to be divided by ethnicity. We are all Americans and we stand together against those who would try to do us harm. And that’s what we’ve done over the last nine years. We should take great pride in that. And I think it is absolutely important now for the overwhelming majority of the American people to hang on to that thing that is best in us, a belief in religious tolerance, clarity about who are enemies are. Our enemies are al Qaeda and their allies who are trying to kill us, but have killed more Muslims than just about anybody on Earth. You know, we have to make sure that we don’t start turning on each other and I will do everything that I can as long as I’m President of the United States to remind the American people that we are one nation under God and we may call that god different names. But we remain one nation and, you know, as somebody who, you know, relies heavily on my Christian faith in my job, I understand, you know, that the passions that religious faith can, can raise. But I’m also respectful that people of different faiths can practice their religion, even if they don’t subscribe to the exact same notions that I do. And that they are still good people and they are my neighbors and they are my friends and they are fighting alongside us in our battles. And, you know, I want to make sure that this country retains that sense of purpose. And I think tomorrow is a wonderful day for us to remind ourselves of that.

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Wash Post’s Anne Kornblut: Why, Despite Obama’s Healing Efforts, Is There So Much Anti-Muslim ‘Resentment?’

Why Recalculating Health Care Costs For Our Aging Populations is a Green Issue

The age where this sign applies is older than it used to be… photo: Ethan Prater via flickr. While it might not seem at first that a new study, being highlighted by BBC News , on the overestimation of how much health care costs for our aging populations are likely to increase has an immediate connection to environmentalism, in fact realizing that we may have to spend considerably less money here, as people are productive at much older ages than they used to, has big … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Why Recalculating Health Care Costs For Our Aging Populations is a Green Issue

Whatever Happened to Obama’s Army?

What happened to Barack Obama's once vaunted political machine? The outfit that put upwards of 8 million volunteers on the street in 2008 — known as Organizing for America — is a ghost of its former self. Its staff has shrunk from 6,000 to 300, and its donors are depressed: receipts are a fraction of what they were in 2008. Virtually no one in politics believes it will turn many contests this fall. “There's no chance that OFA is going to have the slightest impact on the midterms,” says Charlie Cook, who tracks congressional races. Read more: http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,2016973,00.html#ixzz0z3QjwwLF added by: congoboy

Obama Aims $50 Billion Stimulus at Nation’s Transit

Image via California High-Speed Rail Authority In his Labor Day speech two days ago, the president announced plans for a $50 billion stimulus package that would take aim at updating the country’s lagging transportation infrastructure. He called for Congress to approve an infusion of funds for highway, air traffic control, and, yes, high speed rail projects, that would lead to the “immediate” creation of jobs and give a boost to the economy. Obama said that the bill would be paid for by eli… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Obama Aims $50 Billion Stimulus at Nation’s Transit

CNBC’s Kernen Declares Obama’s Populist Tactics Proof He Advocates ‘Redistribution of Wealth’

To many, it’s hardly a revelation to most, but when someone keeps taking the same action over and over again, even to his detriment, it can reveal a lot about that individual’s belief system. This was an observation CNBC “Squawk Box” host Joe Kernen made about the Obama administration’s willingness to embrace a populist “soak the rich” tactic against the wealthy in the United States, even though it isn’t winning him favor with the American people, according to opinion polling. A new ABC News/Washington Post poll shows more people now think President Barack Obama’s policies have hurt the economy than have helped. And Kernen called the unwillingness to change course evidence of the president’s ideology – proof he does believe in the redistribution of wealth. “When push comes to shove, the left wins out with this guy,” Kernen said on the Sept. 8 broadcast of “Squawk Box.” “Axelrod calls the shots when push comes to shove. And this will make the case for a populist argument that these rich people – soak the rich – they do not need this and we’re going to cut for the middle class and we’re going to pay for it by soaking the rich. And it’s right down – but it also – he said it all along, but to his critics, those critics, it’s more evidence of a redistribution that when it all comes down to it, the overriding mandate of this administration – it’s a redistribution of wealth. ”  And even Kernen’s “Squawk Box” co-host Carl Quintanilla said it was obvious this wasn’t working. “If that strategy had worked since he came into office – talking down Wall Street, scolding businesses, fat cats – his poll numbers would be higher,” Quintanilla added. “So the question is, why isn’t he adjusting?” But Kernen says it’s deeper than just a soak-the-rich philosophy for the sake of short-term political expediency, but that this is a belief Obama has held for decades. “Because I think he really believes that wealth needs to be redistributed after the income disparity over the past 30 years ,” Kernen said. “I really think he believes and he’ll forego some near-term job gains and every thing else.” In his first column for The New York Times on Sept. 7 , Peter Orszag, Obama’s former director of the White House Office of Management and Budget, suggested that Obama should reconsider his administration’s stance on allowing the Bush tax cuts expire. Moody’s economist Mark Zandi, an expert the Obama administration had relied on heavily in 2009 to get the stimulus passed, also has questioned the administration’s wisdom . And even a Times Sept. 8 story , which are traditionally sympathetic to Obama’s causes, was also doubtful he could prevail, as Kernen pointed out. “It’s so obvious – even Orszag can figure that out,” Kernen continued. “Even Zandi – just about everyone can figure out that you don’t try to stimulate at the same time you’re sucking money out of the economy. It makes no sense. But even The New York Times – ‘It’s not clear that Mr. Obama can prevail given his,’ and this is The New York Times, ‘given his own diminishing popularity the tepid economic recovery and the divisions within his own party.’ It says a lot of nervous Democrats wish that he would give them some cover and say, all right, maybe we’ll …”

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CNBC’s Kernen Declares Obama’s Populist Tactics Proof He Advocates ‘Redistribution of Wealth’

Bozell Column: A Conservative Movie Initiative

The midterm elections this fall will feature young people born in 1992 – in other words, four years after Ronald Reagan left office. What do they know about this man? It’s quite likely that many of them have been told of Reagan’s firm resolve to win the Cold War. But it’s also likely they haven’t learned about the Reagan budget policies that led to a historic economic recovery. Instead, liberal revisionists are working overtime to assign to the Gipper’s tax cut policies the blame for deficits on his watch. Given the disastrous performance of Barack Obama, it’s time to give this man a serious look once again. Young Hollywood director and producer Ray Griggs has made a breezy and yet substantive documentary titled “I Want Your Money” that can educate young voters on the differences between Reaganomics and Obamanomics. Some might say that Griggs is trying to become the conservative Michael Moore, but that would be unfair, since Moore’s documentaries often depart from the classification of “nonfiction.” When Moore claims health care is better in Cuba than America, or that Iraq before the Iraq war was a placid kite-flying paradise under Saddam Hussein, serious filmmakers run from him. Griggs is talking about a real, gripping American disaster: our trillion-dollar deficits under Obama and the ever-increasing weight of the national debt. Conservatives in this film are appalled by the loose spending of George W. Bush and Congress over the last decade, and correctly so. But they know Obama is making those deficit years look like a nursery-school exercise in overspending. What’s emerging now is Tea Party anger, of conservatives who’ve been pushed too hard for too long. “I Want Your Money” is stuffed with weighty conservative experts – Steve Moore, Steve Forbes, Newt Gingrich, Ed Meese, Ken Blackwell, and more. But perhaps the most affecting visuals are the old clips of Ronald Reagan, speaking so clearly about the perils of liberal profligacy. There is Reagan at the convention in Dallas in 1984 joking “We could say they spend money like drunken sailors, but that would be unfair to drunken sailors…because the sailors are spending their own money.” It also has a “BS meter” which goes berserk when Speaker Nancy Pelosi claims that the Democrats will pass the Obama agenda, including ObamaCare, with “no new deficit spending.” The film not only discusses green-eyeshade budgeting, but the larger philosophical debate between capitalism and socialism. In an animated segment, the Reagan character lectures “Obama” about what kind of productivity you would get in a classroom if everyone was awarded the same grade, no matter how serious the effort: a dramatically reduced work effort from the productive people, while the lazy students would forever be lazy. It exposes a real contrast between presidents. As experts point out in the film, Ronald Reagan used clarity to teach you about the real world. Barack Obama uses eloquence to hide what he’s doing, because if his real agenda became clear, as it did with ObamaCare, it would be opposed by the majority. Griggs found a very nice film clip of the late Nobel Prize-winning capitalist economist Milton Friedman speaking to a dark-haired Phil Donahue in 1979. Donahue proclaimed that capitalism was all about greed. Why, Friedman wondered, was it that political self-interest was so much nobler than economic self-interest? A voter born in 1992 has probably never witnessed Milton Friedman’s television work, especially his “Free to Choose” documentary series (also in those paper-stuffed things called books). This kind of exposure could cause a rediscovery, just like this year’s new interest in Friedrich Hayek’s book “Road to Serfdom.” So how will this film get into theaters, since it’s not one of those left-wing documentaries? A national effort is being organized by Motive Entertainment, the company that promoted the grassroots campaigns for “The Passion of the Christ” and the first “Chronicles of Narnia” movie. In mid-September, they’ll begin organizing private screenings to celebrate Constitution Day on September 17. From there, organizers will prepare for an October 15 theatrical launch in more than 500 theaters from coast to coast. But this campaign to show box-office appeal won’t be successful without the same grass-roots energy that mobilized the Tea Party protests. The movie trailer on YouTube has more than two million page views. If everyone who watched the trailer would turn out for the whole movie, then theater owners would have no choice but to take notice. Perhaps, then, Americans will laugh when news anchors (like CNN’s Rick Sanchez) try to describe Obama’s campaign speeches as “Reaganesque.” We can’t even find a Republican who has fully earned that grand adjective, and it certainly doesn’t fit the socialist blather of the current occupant of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

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Bozell Column: A Conservative Movie Initiative

CNBC Money Honey Exaggerates Job Growth to Boost Obamanomics on Meet the Press

Erin Burnett, one of CNBC’s famed “money honeys,” exaggerated the relative strength of the economy Sunday in order to boost the success of President Obama’s stimulus plan. Appearing on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Burnett several times characterized this economic recovery as not only far stronger than any of the indicators suggest, but also “faster” than those in the recent past. “Our recovery started more quickly than after any other recession in the past 25 years,” the CNBCer told David Gregory and his panel. Burnett later elaborated on this preposterous claim as fellow panelist Rich Lowry of the National Review shook his head on screen (video follows with transcript and commentary): DAVID GREGORY, HOST: And big picture, the president maintains, in response to the jobs numbers, “Look, we’re going in the right direction here. We are part of the solution, not part of the problem.” But as I suggested to David Plouffe, there is a–an economic record there that is tough to run on. ERIN BURNETT, CNBC: Yes, very tough to run on. He’s right, though. I mean, I call it the “tortoise economy.” The economy’s growing. The numbers are coming out. We’re getting better – in fact, after this recession we have – our recovery started more quickly than after any other recession in the past 25 years. So it’s accurate to say we’re growing and we’re going in the right direction. Politically, though, how do you spin a 9.6 unemployment rate to have it be positive? That’s incredibly difficult. And it’s very hard politically to see how they’re going to make that case. ————————- MR. GREGORY: But, Erin Burnett, the big question on unemployment, if, if–and in 30 seconds, when is there a meaningful dent in the unemployment rate that can help these political fortunes? MS. BURNETT: Well, I think it’s interesting, because by the way, I don’t think the stimulus has been a failure, and I think that you are correct that it is perceived that way. But I don’t think it’s actually true. Without that stimulus, we would be significantly worse off than we are right now. There, there’s really no question about it. You can ask any economist on Wall Street or any CEO. I see you shaking your head, I know you disagree. But, but, but, but my reporting would show otherwise. E. J. DIONNE, WASHINGTON POST: Keep going. MS. BURNETT: I – look, I, I, I think the problem is you have the fastest job creation in this recovery than you have in any recession in 25 years, but it is still not enough. You aren’t going to win this on jobs, and that is the problem. It’s going to take a long time. I don’t know how you get around that problem, but technically speaking, this recovery has not been tepid. Really, Erin? And exactly how did you come to such a conclusion? Let’s begin our analysis of Burnett’s claim by first recognizing that the organization responsible for determing when recessions begin and end – the National Bureau of Economic Research – has yet to announce when the last recession concluded. In fact, as Fortune reported on August 6, NBER may be delaying its announcement to see if the economy double-dips: The National Bureau of Economic Research is known to be slow at declaring the starts and stops of a recession, but it looks as if it might have been right to hold off on any bold declarations this time around, potentially proving many policymakers and Wall Street analysts wrong. Many economists say the recession ended over a year ago — last June or July — even while NBER (the ones tasked to make the formal call) has hesitated from doing so. As early as April, the organization’s committee of academic economists said that it would be “premature” to declare an end to the recession that started in December 2007. Who knows when the NBER will declare the end of this latest recession. Whatever date it falls on, last summer certainly didn’t feel like the end of the recession even while many economists argue that it was. And in the coming year, it might feel even less like it. The NBER has never declared a double-dip recession, but believes it is basically one continuous recession with a period of growth occurring and then a slip back to a downturn. At the rate we’re going, it looks like a double-dip is plausible. As such, it is possible that months from now, the NBER data may indicate we are currently still in a recession making Burnett’s argument Sunday totally absurd. On the other hand, as the Gross Domestic Product did start growing in the 3rd quarter of 2009, let’s operate from the premise that the recession ended in June of last year. As NBER believes the recession started in December 2007, that means its duration was 18 months.  According to NBER, the early ’90s recession went from July 1990 to March 1991. Depending on how you calculate it, that’s a duration of eight to nine months. NBER views the early ’00s recession as going from March 2001 to November 2001, also a duration of eight to nine months. With this in mind, if the most recent recession ended in June 2009, it took at least twice the time to get out of it than the previous two recessions thereby completely refuting Burnett’s claim. As for job growth coming out of a recession, this “recovery” is by no means something to brag about. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in the fourteen months since this recession theoretically ended, non-farm payrolls have decreased by 329,000. Even if you look at the “private sector” numbers the administration and their media sycophants have been trying to focus the nation’s attention on, this has shown a decline of 205,000 jobs since the recession “ended.” To be sure, both of these figures are better than what we saw during the early ’00s recession. However, non-farm payrolls increased by 45,000 in the first fourteen months following the end of the early ’90s recession while private sector employment declined by 220,000. If Burnett wants to hang her hat on this 15,000 private sector jobs “improvement” as a sign that this recovery is faster and stronger than the one in the early ’90s, it seems certain given all the data she’d be skating on thin ice. Of course, she’d certainly look good doing it, a fact that even Chris Matthews noticed three years ago: Yes, it appears something other than Barack Obama gives Matthews a tingle up his leg – at least that was the case in August 2007. As for Burnett, given that she represents one of this country’s foremost financial news networks, it would be nice if she did her homework before making such sweeping claims about the economy.

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CNBC Money Honey Exaggerates Job Growth to Boost Obamanomics on Meet the Press