Louis Rukeyser
Louis Rukeyser was an American financial columnist and television commentator.
Sourced
- Roaming the world as a foreign correspondent for more than a decade, I was able to observe how a variety of vastly different nations organized themselves economically. The inescapable conclusion was that no politician anywhere on the planet has ever actually created a rupee's worth of prosperity.
- Louis Rukeyser's Wall Streetnewsletter, Nov 96
- Trees don't grow to the sky.
- On the inevitablility of down markets as well as up markets
- July 26, 2002, Louis Rukeyser's Wall Street
Unsourced
- Fifteen cents of every twenty-cent stamp goes for storage.
- On bureaucratic efficiency
- Good Evening, I'm Louis Rukeyser. This is Wall $treet Week... Welcome Back.
- Only liberals have trouble understanding that if you subsidize sloth and fertility, you get more; and if you penalize hard work and thrift, you get less.
- On welfare reform and tax policy
- "What's It All About, Alfie?" This was the title of a song from the popular Michael Caine movie of the same name. Louis Rukeyser enjoyed quoting the title often, usually as a means of introducing new subject matter on his show WALL STREET WEEK.
- "Remember, it's only your money. It's not your life."
- On maintaining a sense of perspective
- "Wink!" At the end of every WALL STREET WEEK, just as the final credits would roll, the TV audience received a warm wink from Mr. Rukeyser, which was a sign of his solidarity and charm. A trademark of his, perhaps, more indelible to his viewers than anything he could ever have articulated.