Read Pinheads and Patriots Online
Authors: Bill O'Reilly
O'Reilly:
Okay. Uh, United States and Poland, putting the missile shield in Poland.
Obama:
Mm-hmm.
O'Reilly:
All right? Putin doesn't like it.
Obama:
Right.
O'Reilly:
Are you gonna keep that missile shield in there?
Obama:
I think that we have to make sure that, uh, uhâand I have said this before. The Russians are playing a game, and they pretend that this missile shield is directed against all their interests.
O'Reilly:
Yeah, it's ridiculous. It's a defensive thing.
Obama:
It's, it's a defensive thing. And weâ
O'Reilly:
So you are gonna keep it there then?
Obama:
And, and given, given what has happened in Georgia, I think that we have to send a clear signal that Poland and other countries in that region are, are not gonna be subject to intimidation and aggressionâ
O'Reilly:
Okay, so I just want to get this on record. If you are elected President, you are keeping the missile shield in Poland?
Obama:
I believe that the missile shield is appropriate. I want to make sure it works, though. I want to make sure it works.
O'Reilly:
Well, we are testingâ
Obama:
And that's one of the problems that we have got.
O'Reilly:
So Putin, uh, comes out last week and he says, “Hey look, uh, we are gonna reimpose our dominance on all of the countries that surround us. And we don't care whether you like it or not, because you are tied down in AfghanistanâIraq and Afghanistanâand we are gonna do what we want to do.”
Obama:
Sure.
O'Reilly:
Such a nasty little guy, number one.
Obama:
[
Laughs.
]
O'Reilly:
And would you agree with that assessment?
Obama:
[
Laughs.
] Well, thatâI'll agree with the assessment that, uhâI wouldn't look into his soul and, uhâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah.
Obama:
âand think I know him.
O'Reilly:
And I'll put a cowboy hat on the guy.
Obama:
Yes.
O'Reilly:
This is gonna be a problem, all right?
Obama:
Oh, this is a huge problem.
O'Reilly:
Okay. And, and you are gonna have to confront Putinâ
Obama:
And we are going toâand that's exactly right.
O'Reilly:
Maybe not militarily, and maybe you can do it other ways. But Europe is weak and Europe is cowardlyâ
Obama:
Right.
O'Reilly:
You know, what are they gonna have? Another meeting? Yeah, Putin is quaking, aren't they? Isn't Putin quaking about that? They are gonna have another meetingâ
Obama:
Well, you know what? And here, here, here is the one thing I would sayâ¦. There are, there are two things where we can have some leverage over Russia. Number one is that, commercially, they are tied up with Europe, and they are increasingly integrating. Their stock market has taken a beating since they went into Georgia.
O'Reilly:
Yes.
Obama:
But thatâ
O'Reilly:
Like they care.
Obama:
Well, Putin may not care, but there are a whole bunch of folks that areâ
O'Reilly:
They do. Right.
Obama:
There are a whole bunch of millionaires in Moscow who do care, all right? So that's a leverage point. And the Europeans can be helpful in applying that leverage point, and that's point number one. The second thing that we have to do is actually defensive: We have got to get our energy policy straight. As long as they are getting over $100 a barrel for oil, then they are gonna be able to actâand that's the biggest problem we have.
On September 17, 2009, President Obama announced that the United States would scrap the planned missile defense shield for Poland and the Czech Republic. Notice in the interview that Mr. Obama said the missile shield was
“appropriate,” but that it has to “work.” He did not swear he would keep it. He danced.
President Barack Obama, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (
left
), and Czech Republic President Václav Klaus (
center right
) share a toast at a luncheon before signing the New Start START Treaty on April 8, 2010. So what exactly are we celebrating?
White House
Photographed by Pete Souza
The President gave into Vladimir Putin's paranoia about the shield because he wanted the wily Russian leader to lay off Georgia and Ukraine. This was one of those Chicago backroom deals. Putin got the shield shelved; Obama got less aggressive Russian military expansion. Poland and the Czechs got hosed.
Welcome to the real world.
Republicans, of course, screamed about the President's “sell-out” to Putin, but since the situation is below the radar (sorry), most Americans couldn't care less about it.
For the record, the Obama administration says it isn't giving in to Russian demands; it is just shifting the missile
strategy around. According to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, a Patriot, the United States will now deploy Navy Aegis ships equipped with SM-3 interceptor missiles in the eastern Mediterranean Sea in order to block any aggressive action by Iran. Down the road, Gates says, the United States might install the interceptors in Poland and the Czech Republic as well.
Again, few of your fellow citizens care about this. If you do, you can make the call as to whether or not it's a Pinhead move.
O'Reilly:
Yeah, let's get to the economy. I want you to react to a couple of steps that I, that I pulled outta here. You are a big “tax the rich” guy.
Obama:
[
Laughs.
] Yeah.
O'Reilly:
Aren't you?
Obama:
Just you, Bill.
O'Reilly:
I know.
Obama:
I think you are making too much money.
O'Reilly:
You and Hillary both, you just want to take my money.
Obama:
[
Laughs.
]
O'Reilly:
And you can have it; I mean, I don't care if I live in a hut.
Obama:
[
Laughs.
]
O'Reilly:
All right. And you want to “tax the rich.” Under President Bushâ
Obama:
Yes.
O'Reilly:
âthe governmentâthe federal government derived 20 percent more revenue than under President Clinton. Did you know that?
Obama:
Well, the, uhâ
O'Reilly:
Did you know that?
Obama:
The, the economy grew, Bill.
O'Reilly:
It grew. That's right.
Obama:
The economy grew, soâ
O'Reilly:
Under President Bushâ
Obama:
âso, so of course, uh, the, uh, theâ
O'Reilly:
âthe, the economy grew 19 percent more than Clinton.
Obama:
Right.
O'Reilly:
See, this is what I am not getting about you Democratsâ
Obama:
No. No, no, no, no. Hold on, Bill.
O'Reilly:
Nineteen percentâ
Obama:
Wait, wait, wait, wait. Don't, don'tâhold on a second now. I mean, because you know, you, you, youâyou know the famous saying about “There areâthere are lies, damn lies, and statistics”?
O'Reilly:
Yeah.
Obama:
I mean, well, you and I canâwe can play a statistics gameâ
O'Reilly:
I know, I know it's bullâI know it isâ
Obama:
So, so, so whatâ¦. Well, let's, let's, let's be clear on the record, all right?
O'Reilly:
All right.
Obama:
The, uhâ¦. During the Bush administrationâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah?
Obama:
âthere was economic growth. Not as fast as during the 1990s, okay, but there was growth during the Bush administration. But what happened was, that wages and incomesâfor ordinary Americansâthe guys who watch your showâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah.
Obama:
âthe guys who you advocate for and you speak for on this showâ
O'Reilly:
Right.
Obama:
âtheir wages and incomes did not go up.
O'Reilly:
Why?
Obama:
They went, they went down.
O'Reilly:
Do you know why?
Obama:
And the reason they went downâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah?
Obama:
âis because most of the corporate profits and increased productivity went to the topânot just 1 percentâbut the top one-tenth of 1 percent.
O'Reilly:
All right. Let me submit to you that you are wrongâ
Obama:
And as part of, as part ofâ
O'Reilly:
Let me submit to you that you are wrong, okay?
Obama:
Right, okay, make your argument.
O'Reilly:
We have been studying this issueâbecause we want to be fair and balanced and give all sides.
Obama:
Right.
O'Reilly:
The reason the wages have been depressedâand they are not that much: it's about four or five hundred dollars, uh, for the Bush administration, real wages up; and about two thousand under the Clinton administrationâis because there are 10 million immigrantsânew immigrantsâin the workforceâmost of whom are illegal aliens.
Obama:
Billâ
O'Reilly:
Those 10 millionâ
Obama:
âI totally disagree with youâ
O'Reilly:
âwith their, with their salariesâ
Obama:
Yeah?
O'Reilly:
âhave brought it down. But again, that's statistics, yes.
Obama:
But, but, but, butâ
O'Reilly:
But let's get back to “tax the rich.”
Obama:
All right, but, but whatâso let me just finish making my point.
O'Reilly:
All right.
Obama:
The fact is, for people in your income bracketâand mineâ
O'Reilly:
Right.
Obama:
Now, we, we, we both come from humble beginnings and we worked ourâand we were talking before the show. And the fact that, only in America, could we have this success.
O'Reilly:
Absolutely.
Obama:
And, and Iâand I am not somebody who begrudges that success. I want people toâ
O'Reilly:
But you want 50 percent of my successâ
Obama:
No, I don't want itâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah, you do.
Obama:
No, I don'tâ
O'Reilly:
That's your tax rate.
Obama:
That is not trueâ
O'Reilly:
Fifty.
Obama:
What I amâ
O'Reilly:
Fifty.
Obama:
What, what I have said is, is that, uh, uhâ¦. Now let's be clear about thisâ
O'Reilly:
Payroll tax and, and income taxâ50.
Obama:
Well, listenâlisten up. Now, let meânow, let me make sure that we are clear on, on the facts here. I would take your marginal rate back to what it was under Bill Clintonâ
O'Reilly:
Yeah, and that was 39.
Obama:
And that wasâyou go back to 39.
O'Reilly:
Right.
Obama:
You can afford that. That's point number one. Well, you can't deny that you can afford it.
O'Reilly:
Yes.
Obama:
It's not gonna hurt you.
O'Reilly:
I am not gonna deny that.
Obama:
All right? In exchange, I am cutting taxesâfor 95 percent of Americans. Ninety-five percentâ
O'Reilly:
Well, guess what? Well, that's class warfareâ
Obama:
It's notâ95 percentâ
O'Reilly:
Andâ
Obama:
âis not class warfare.
O'Reilly:
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
Obama:
And I am saying that 95 percent of the American people are getting a tax breakâthree times the amount of tax relief under my plan than John McCain's. And that's not my statisticâ