Erin Burnett. She goes on Joe Scarborough and she really likes Rush! Oops, she might get fired! ;-) Ladies and gentleman: what a talented and classy infobabe CNBC's "Street Signs" has!
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Erin is my favorite of the CNBC street sweeties ...and they have quite a few to choose from!
Gee, Fox Business News won’t have a CHANCE!! Erin has a Millionaires Show that is pretty good.
She and Rush are both wrong about China. The trade imbalance is hemmorhaging our wealth and giving the Chinese the funds necessary to overtake us militarily.
Actually, prices would only go up about 5-10% before the Chinese items could be replaced on the shelves by items made in the USA. Temporarily giving the illusion of holding down our fiat currency inflation is a very sorry excuse for selling the soul of our country to Red China!
Limbaugh referred recently to Joe Kiernan's tough interview with Laurie David and Cheryl Crow. The subject was Gore's global warming tour: Kiernan had actual facts and challenged their platitudes, leaving them only able to sputter that he needed to watch An Inconvenient Truth! Crow later whined on her blog that they were treated unfairly.
Michelle Caruso Cabrerra once nearly agitated Barney Frank to the point of walking off the set because she constantly interrupted him to correct his lies on taxes. Their head economics reporter Steve Leisman angrily told Pete Stark that he "took offense" when Stark, in his typically moonbat fashion, had just called President Bush a "fascist" and denied a truly blockbuster GDP report Liesman had just reported.
If you haven't watched them in the daytime, pick a day when there's some momentous economic or political news expected and check it out. I think most here will be pleasantly surprised.
btt
While channel surfing on the radio yesterday, I head an interview with Sara Bongiorni, author of A Year Without "Made in China": One Family's True Life Adventure in the Global Economy on NPR of all places. Interesting.