How do the f#$k does Jon Stewart think he is?
That was the thought that went on over and over in my head as I watched Comedy Central satirist Jon Stewart interview - or, more properly, lectured with trash talking-points - CNBC host and former hedge fund manager Jim Cramer.
Jon Stewart is very angry that Jim Cramer had made some admittedly horrible calls on the market. Cramer, for instance, once advised his “Mad Money” audience to buy BearSterns stock days prior to the legendary bank collapsing and sold - via Federal Reserve intermediary - to Goldman Sachs. And many more other bad calls.
Stewart’s mockery of camera in the three days leading up to the interview were warranted and quite humorous. And his angry may even be justified; though I think since Cramer is not responsible for the bad investment that his audience makes since he dispenses advice, but they must ultimately be held responsible for their decisions to heed such calls. But in the liberal world of Jon Stewart, personal responsible is a non-existent concept. And he set his guns on CNBC generally and Cramer specifically.
Being a good sport, Cramer came on the show tonight. Stewart though did not reciprocate respectful behavior.
If Jon Stewart had just asked Cramer a few questions on his bad calls and his previous endorsement of legal but purposefully deceiving investment strategies. But instead on went on a self-righteous, patronizing and grossly ignorant rant that exemplified Stewart’s pompous perception of himself.
Stewart is a comedian, and with Cramer he positioned himself beyond his actual understanding of the topic. There is much critic, but I’ll just make a few and I recommend you watch it. First, Stewart tells Cramer that his failure to properly critic the market’s excesses isn’t a “fucking game” as if it were CNBS’ job rather than the Big Government Stewart loves so much to monitor Wall Street.
Then Stewart makes the absurd and ignorant assertion that 35/1 odds is an entirely unreasonable leverage and immediate proof, almost anyway, that an investment firm is cooking the books. Question: How the fuck does Stewart know that 35/1 or 35/whatever is unreasonable? What? Does Stewart think he is now in a position to judge the solvency of banks based on their published leverage? Apparently so. Then Stewart made the case that whenever an investor is posting 10-20% yearly returns that also reason enough to expect suspicion. Who does this guy think he is? It appears that he has self-appointed himself to the position of deciding what is an appropriate return or not.

[The Huffington Post.]
Stewart brought the interview to close by making the assertion that getting rich through investment is wrong, quite nearly a form of unholy Stalinism, and that actually “work” is the way to getting rich. Stewart’s contention is that it almost immoral and unAmerican for anyone to seek to get rich through investing rather than raw work. Alright. Then why is he not faulting those who invested rather than the investors who only serve as facilitators? And what kind of non-sense is that? Why is it wrong to make money, if not a living, through providing capital so that businesses can be started and expanded. That is where most investments go, there are, duh, invested in firms. Does a arrogant buffoon like Stewart not understand this simple fact?
Jon Stewart is funny and I like him a lot and watch his show frequently, but tonight his arrogant demeanor underpinned by great ignorance and Marxist dogma is proof that Stewart should leave the moral lecturing to others and stick to what he knows best: make quick jokes like the comedian he is.
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Why? Well for one Jim Cramer is a self appointed guru who rarely gets anything right. Why do you object to Jon Stewart pointing to this obvious fact?
I am sorry that the truth hurts. I bear you no ill will, but I learned at my momma’s knee to call a spade a spade.
BobLQ
Don’t mind Marco. He talks from both sides of his mouth. I still cannot figure out what he wants.
Government is bad, he says. But he blames government for not monitoring Wall Street.
The rich and the powerful are always right and should be allowed to do whatever they want. And then he complains that powerful Israel is killing poor Palestinians.
That the big and powerful New York Times is bias in its coverage of the Middle East. I do not get his politics at all. It is confusing to me.
He seems to belong to those who are ”either lost in the understanding of their confusion or are lost in the confusion of their understanding.”
Nobody is holding the likes of Cramer responsible for what he says. Jon steps in and our Marco goes off on Jon.
I do not get him.
I never said all government is bad, but Big Government is bad. There should be some regulation - and that includes Wall Street - but there is such a thing as too much regulation, too much taxation. Why do you view it as either or?
I never said the rich in powerful are always right or that they should be allowed to do what they want. Who do you interrupt my views through such an extreme lens? I said the rich should not be taxed more than anyone else. I believe in a flat tax. How is that advocacy synonymous to giving the powerful - as you term them - the right to do what they want. I, of course, have never advocated such a position. I do not know how you interrupt what you read. Furthermore, how is letting the ”powerful” control their money in anyway relevant to allowing powerful Israel occupy the Palestinians? How you merge tax policy with a military occupation is beyond me. Also, is there an innate contradiction between believing in the freedom of the Palestinians and the freedom to control one’s property?
For the record, I am against entitlements anywhere. The rich have no right to anything from the middle class anymore than the middle class has the right to demand the rich pay for programs it wants.
And, yes, the Times is biased in its coverage. Is that beyond debate? Why is that confusing?
You confuse yourself!
Further, I wrote in the piece twice that Cramer has made bad calls, but Jon Stewart was arrogant in his attacks against Cramer.
If you want to hang on the every word of a self-appointed pompous ”I know everything and I am always right” comedian then you sir are they fool.