Goldman Sachs employees responded to now former Executive Director Greg Smith's New York Times editorial by referring to him as an unhappy lower-paid employee dissatisfied with his bonus. Goldman Sachs employees only look at those who make at least $750,000 annually as financial experts. CNBC journalists joked that Smith and Rolling Stone journalist Matt Taibbi, who frequently rips Goldman Sachs, would work together with Sesame Street characters to start a new media company.
About three years ago at this time, CNBC's Jim Cramer got into a media tussle with The Daily Show host Jon Stewart, who accused Cramer and the entire CNBC financial news network of poor reporting during the months prior to the September 2008 market crash. When Cramer was guest on The Daily Show, Stewart grilled him about shady practices from his days as a hedge fund manager and promoting overleveraged investments that threaten the economic stability of the U.S. He also criticized CNBC for seeing their main audience as being the Wall Street traders, not pension fund managers and the general public. Three years later, it seems like Stewart should take a second shot at CNBC reporters.
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/03/14/444514/financial-press-attacks-goldman-column/
The Occupy Wall Street Protests that started in September 2011 & and then spread across the nation have highlighted ongoing problems of massive unemployment & income inequality in the U.S. Elected officials, various members of the news media, & even a few of my own friends have mocked this movement. I believe that it is possible to find a different story for every day of the year that answers "Why They Occupy".
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