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RICK SANTELLI 'Best 5 minutes of my life' (The Original Chicago Tea Party)
Chicago Sun-Times ^ | September 19, 2010 | ABDON M. PALLASCH Political Reporter apallasch@suntimes.com

Posted on 09/19/2010 9:54:59 AM PDT by Chi-townChief

As a staunch capitalist and social liberal, Rick Santelli might not agree with everything being said at Tea Party rallies or this weekend's Right Nation convention in Hoffman Estates, but he's proud of what he wrought.

"People ask me if I'm the father of the Tea Party movement," the CNBC commentator said outside the Chicago Mercantile Exchange. "I was the spark ...that started it. If being the lightning rod that started the Tea Party is what's written on my tombstone, I'll be very happy."

But after his five-minute "rant" on CNBC 1½ years ago suggesting a tea party in Lake Michigan against government spending, Santelli let go and never exercised any control over the movement.

"The five-minute rant was the best five minutes of my life," Santelli says. "But beyond that, really four minutes in time, it's the Tea Party. My wife pointed out to me, 'You were there for the insemination, but you were not there to raise the child.' "

Does Santelli think he created a "Frankenstein's monster" that is toppling establishment Republicans such as Delaware Rep. Mike Castle in favor of Tea Party insurgents such as Christine O'Donnell?

"No, I don't think so, but then again, how it develops from here...," Santelli said without finishing the sentence. "So far, this has been a very proud moment for America. Over time, it will get more organized and police itself -- that's the way we hope it turns out."

There's little doubt the Tea Party groups of America, which operate pretty independently, got their start from Santelli's rant on Feb. 19, 2009.

"Rick Santelli went on, and he expressed frustration at the government," Fox News commentator Glenn Beck -- the headliner at Saturday night's Right Nation event -- said on his show Wednesday. "We're rewarding what he called bad behavior [with] the mortgage bailout. He said there should be a Tea Party. Wow, he said a mouthful, because that's where it started."

Santelli is an unabashed promoter of the free market and critic of government bailouts. He rants a lot on the air, he said. But the day he slammed President Obama's plan to bail out people who couldn't pay their mortgages, he got national attention.

"How 'bout this president and administration? Why don't you put up a website to have people vote on the Internet in a referendum to see if we really want to subsidize the losers' mortgages?" Santelli bellowed on the floor of the Merc. "At least buy cars, buy houses in foreclosure, and give them to people who might have a chance to prosper ...and carry the water, not drink the water."

Turning to the traders around him, he raised his hands and called out -- like Peter Finch in the movie "Network" -- "This is America. How many of you people want to pay for your neighbors' mortgage that has an extra bathroom and can't pay their bills, raise your hand!"

The traders shouted their approval of his argument.

"President Obama, are you listening?" Santelli asked.

Backers of the bailouts criticized Santelli's rant as a rising up of the "haves" against the "have-nots," the finance people who created the mess not wanting to fix it.

"I think we left a few months ago the adage that 'If it was good for a derivatives trader, that it was good for Main Street,'" Obama's press secretary Robert Gibbs sneered.

But Santelli said his is just "tough love" opposition to giving mortgages to people who can't afford them: "Owning a home should not be viewed as an entitlement," he said.

As Santelli stood in the middle of LaSalle Street outside the Board of Trade building Friday, traders saluted him, called him a hero, gave him the thumbs-up.

"You know, before the rant, I was really a lot more under the radar screen, but since Feb. 19, 2009, my daughters now hate to go out anywhere because, 'Dad, that guy is looking at you. He knows who you are!'"

Santelli lives with his wife and the two youngest of his three daughters in west suburban Wheaton. Yes, he confessed, he and his wife, Terri, have donned sunglasses and baseball caps to surreptitiously participate in Tea Party rallies near their home, not talking to anyone, not claiming any credit, just admiring democracy at work.

He has refused entreaties to run for office or endorse other candidates. He will not attend this weekend's Right Nation event.

Santelli, grandson of four Italian immigrants, was born near Taylor Street in the city's old Italian neighborhood. When he was 6, his father moved the family out to Lombard. Santelli's father was an electrical engineer and accomplished painter who studied at the Art Institute. Santelli says he's not a bad oil painter himself.

Santelli graduated from Willowbrook High School in Villa Park, then studied economics and pre-law at the University of Illinois in Champaign. After having lunch with a friend's father who traded pork bellies, Santelli signed up to be a runner for Shearson. He skipped law school and traded for 20 years, then went on-air for CNBC full-time in the '90s.

Does he see any problem injecting his own opinions into his broadcasts?

"I'm a capitalist," Santelli said. "I believe capitalism is the best system to allocate resources, to allocate jobs. I am prone to very passionate spots. I rant a lot. The markets to me are really very exciting, the greatest Rubik's Cube ever created by man."

Is there any part of the rant he'd take back?

"When I said 'losers,' that's the one thing sometimes I wish I could change," Santelli said. "But people misinterpret -- I wasn't saying, 'You're a loser.'

"I'm a market guy. Everything is a winner or a loser. I believe there's only one regulation in life that works: failure. We had 800 regulators on top of AIG. How did that work out? What keeps banks and entrepreneurs and capitalists from going too far is the fact that if they do, they may fail. If you take that away, you affect the whole system. I think that's what bugs me the most."

The New Yorker magazine offered evidence that the Tea Party movement has actually been funded and organized by corporate elites such as oilmen Charles and David Koch. But Santelli sees an organic, grass-roots movement akin to the Colonial-era tea party.

What advice does Santelli have for Tea Partiers and activists at Right Nation?

"Keep their strategies simple, keep their platforms short, keep focused, fiscal discipline, watch the spending, further the notion of individualism, they already have done that in my opinion."


TOPICS: Breaking News; Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 15minutes; 2010; chicago; cnbc; right; santelli; teaparty
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"People ask me if I'm the father of the Tea Party movement," the CNBC commentator said outside the Chicago Mercantile Exchange."

Rick, if you're reading this, you awakened the Sleeping Giant. The Nation owes you a debt. Or at least a Boilermaker. I'm buyin'.

41 posted on 09/19/2010 1:37:32 PM PDT by StAnDeliver (/)
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To: AnglePark
How can you be a staunch capitalist AND a social liberal?

Pretty easily, if by "social liberal" is meant a laissez-faire concept and not a brief for welfare.

42 posted on 09/19/2010 2:24:13 PM PDT by Erasmus (Personal goal: Have a bigger carbon footprint than Tony Robbins.)
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To: Chi-townChief

I like him.

He never really has tried to take the spotlight or control a movement. He said what he said and let go. How many people would have the humility to do that?


43 posted on 09/19/2010 2:46:42 PM PDT by Soul Seeker (“I was there when we had the numbers, but didn’t have the principles.”---Jim DeMint)
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To: Frantzie

No. The town hall confrontations came during the summer. This rant came before maybe a couple of months before tax day earlier in the year.


44 posted on 09/19/2010 2:49:52 PM PDT by Soul Seeker (“I was there when we had the numbers, but didn’t have the principles.”---Jim DeMint)
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To: AnglePark

FWIW, I think Santelli’s positions on social issues are more libertarian than liberal. The MSM likes to deliberately confuse the two.


45 posted on 09/19/2010 3:00:58 PM PDT by mewzilla (Still voteless in NY-29. Over 400 roll call votes missed and counting...)
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To: taildragger
Nope. Santelli started it. Within days people were organizing "Chicago Tea Parties" -- mainly through the Don't Go Movement, and within two weeks the first national tea parties were held on February 27, 2009.

Santelli said it right. He was the lightening rod to a nation groping for a response.

46 posted on 09/19/2010 3:47:44 PM PDT by GVnana (I'm a Mama Grizzly)
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To: Chi-townChief
IMHO the tea party movement is just a first step to rid this country of scumbag leaders and socialist power hungry politicians.

I wanna know who is going to step up to the plate for act 2 and announce to the sheeple we are going to abolish the IRS and the income tax.

Until we accomplish that, we are ALL slaves to this so called government of WE THE PEOPLE.

47 posted on 09/19/2010 3:52:48 PM PDT by unixfox (Abolish Slavery, Repeal The 16th Amendment!)
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To: OneWingedShark

Were we supposed to be getting paid. Tell David and Charles Koch to pay up.


48 posted on 09/19/2010 4:14:26 PM PDT by CPT Clay (Pick up your weapon and follow me.)
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To: Chi-townChief

I heard that rant that morning and it truly was a rallying cry
for people who were then already tired of the Marxist and his minions
trying to take down this country with their spending frenzy
and their support of all that is WRONG with America..namely
the unions and the great unwashed who take, take, take!

I really couldn’t believe someone on the floor of the stock
market would be so honest...and obviously neither did his
fellow broadcasters. They were just about speechless! LOL!


49 posted on 09/19/2010 4:39:21 PM PDT by luvie (DIMs?......start packin'--you're fired!....I can see November from my house!)
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To: GVnana

GV thankx!!!!


50 posted on 09/19/2010 5:09:42 PM PDT by taildragger ((Palin / Mulally 2012 ))
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To: LUV W

The chyron on the bottom of the video showed this:

The Highest Dow Jones closing: 14,164 in October 9, 2007.


51 posted on 09/19/2010 5:17:57 PM PDT by sodpoodle (Despair; man's surrender. Laughter; God's redemption.)
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To: Chi-townChief

I actually watched that one.


52 posted on 09/19/2010 5:51:35 PM PDT by SouthTexas ("Global Climate Disruption" = More bovine excrement)
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To: RatsDawg

I am glad they put the man yelling at Specter in this video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=662R2awSwPQ

Specter got his just desserts.....


53 posted on 09/19/2010 8:23:13 PM PDT by RummyChick
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To: StarFan; Dutchy; alisasny; BobFromNJ; BUNNY2003; Cacique; Clemenza; Coleus; cyborg; DKNY; ...
Excerpt from article:

As Santelli stood in the middle of LaSalle Street outside the Board of Trade building Friday, traders saluted him, called him a hero, gave him the thumbs-up.

"You know, before the rant, I was really a lot more under the radar screen, but since Feb. 19, 2009, my daughters now hate to go out anywhere because, 'Dad, that guy is looking at you. He knows who you are!'"

Santelli lives with his wife and the two youngest of his three daughters in west suburban Wheaton. Yes, he confessed, he and his wife, Terri, have donned sunglasses and baseball caps to surreptitiously participate in Tea Party rallies near their home, not talking to anyone, not claiming any credit, just admiring democracy at work.

Original FR thread in response to Rick Santelli's rant on February 19, 2009:

CNBC Floor Commentator Outburst "Obama are you Listening?"(SILENT MAJORITY ALERT)

The rant that inspired the modern-day Tea Party movement! Here's the video:

YouTube video: Rick Santelli's "Rant of the Year" (CNBC, February 19, 2009)

54 posted on 09/19/2010 10:22:09 PM PDT by nutmeg (September 13, 2010 - My 10-year FReeper anniversary. WOO HOO!!!)
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To: Chi-townChief

Santelli is one of my heroes!


55 posted on 09/20/2010 2:00:03 AM PDT by NotJustAnotherPrettyFace
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To: WallStreetCapitalist

If this poster is the fellow running for office in his tagline, I’d vote for him in a heartbeat! Way to go, sir!


56 posted on 09/20/2010 5:00:11 AM PDT by Rosamond
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To: Nateman

“America finally sees the knife the RATS and RINOS are plunging into it’s heart and is fighting back! It’s like seeing the American revolution again without the bullets. (So far)” Yep!


57 posted on 09/20/2010 6:12:48 AM PDT by Shane (When Injustice Becomes Law, RESISTANCE Becomes DUTY.----T.Jefferson)
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To: AnglePark; Toddsterpatriot
How can you be a staunch capitalist AND a social liberal?

Remember, it's the reporter's description and not Santelli's. For all we know Santelli simply doesn't see a problem with gay marriage, for example. That would make him a "social liberal" in the eyes of the reporter. (And gay marriage really isn't a threat to capitalism, rather one has little do with the other).

In any case, good article. And nice to see a boy from Little Italy make good.

58 posted on 09/20/2010 6:15:45 AM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: Lou Budvis

Santelli is the de facto founder of the TEA party movement. If he didn’t make that rant, nobody would have budged.


59 posted on 09/20/2010 7:32:52 AM PDT by max americana (I post 1st..and show up last)
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To: KarlInOhio
Similarly with capitalism and gay marriage or abortion

Wrong. Positive capitalism's (not greed, which is a vice) cornerstone is Marriage, Family and Life.

60 posted on 09/20/2010 7:48:22 AM PDT by frogjerk (I believe in unicorns, fairies and pro-life Democrats.)
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