Wednesday, 10/22/2008 Print Version |
Governor Schwarzenegger Discusses the Economy with Warren Buffett at the 2008 Women's Conference
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: The stock market dropped
350 points this morning. What should people do here, do now, today, as they make
their investment decisions from here on out, Mr.
Buffet?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, I have no idea
what the stock market is going to do in the next day, week, year. There's no
question in my mind that stocks 10 years from now will be appreciably higher
than they are now and there's no question in my mind that people that leave
their money in cash equivalents are going to own something of less value at that
time. Now, I can't time when you get in but if you own something that's destined
to become worth less with cash equivalents and you have a choice to swap it into
something that's destined to be worth more -- when you do it is up to you.
I don't think people can
time it, so I believe in doing it promptly. And as I mentioned last week, I
actually, in my personal portfolio, was going from 100 percent governments into
100 percent stocks, as stocks are going down.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: So still, what we hear
from our managers -- and we always hear the same thing -- stay in the
market?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Yes. Well, in this
country in the 20th century we had the Great Depression, we had two World Wars,
one of which it looked like we were losing for a while and we had the flu
epidemics, we had the resignation of a president, we had about a dozen
recessions and panics. The Dow started that century at 66 and it ended at
11,497. This country works. It can get gummed up from time to time, the economy
but this country works. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Governor Schwarzenegger,
before we get to public policy I want to talk to you about the way I know you
started off. As a business guy, right?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Right.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: I want to ask you just a
really basic question. Why is it better to be your own
boss?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, first of all, let
me just say that I'm very happy to be back here again at the Women's Conference.
And I just want to say thank you again to Maria, to my wife, who was working on
this all year long to make this a great conference and to have so many women
show up, so let's give her a big hand for the great job that she is doing.
(Applause)
And I also want to thank
the 14,000 women that are here today for supporting this conference and I also
want to thank the sponsors for coming here and supporting this and putting their
money behind it. So, thank you very much. (Applause)
I always have enjoyed
having my own business. I started at the age of 10 -- Warren and I were talking
about this backstage, because Warren said the most important thing to be a
successful businessman is that you start early and that you get it early, of
what it takes to be an entrepreneur. I started at the age of 10 selling ice
cream and I made 150 to 180 schilling every weekend when I ran around the lake
where I grew up in Austria selling ice cream. And every
year during school vacation I always went out and worked and tried to run my own
little businesses.
So it was just something
that was in my blood. I don't know where it came from, because no one in my
family was into business, no one had their own business but I always enjoyed
that. And so, when I grew up I ran a gym in Munich at the age of 19 and when I came to America
I started my own mail-order business. And so everything was always involved
around running my own business.
Also, I think when you
are a person that believes in taking risks and not just relying on a safety net
-- I came to America because there were great
opportunities here. But it was not a safety net that was underneath there. You
were out there and you took the risk and if you fall, you fall. And I like that,
I like to take the risks, because the bigger the risks the greater the gains but
the greater the fall is also, at the same time, so you have to recognize that.
So I always enjoyed that.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: You know, the word
'socialist' has been used in this campaign as a negative, it's been thrown at
the Democratic candidates. You came from a socialist country. You were out there
selling ice cream as a capitalist, a young capitalist, sort of challenging the
system. What are your thoughts?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, I can tell you one
thing, that I didn't pay taxes. (Laughter) I was 10 years old, no one collected
any taxes from me. But I tell you one thing, that I left Europe because of the
socialistic kind of environment and the way countries were run and the way
government was on your back and therefore stifled the opportunities in Europe
and that's why I came to America. (Applause)
So I hope -- and that's
why I've been always involved in campaigning for political leaders that I
believe in, because I wanted to do everything that I can to make sure that
America doesn't go back to those days of 40 years ago when I left Europe, that
we go back to that system of redistribution of wealth that some people are
talking about. There is no redistribution of wealth. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: I love the way we poll
the audience like this. We have just heard from the Republicans. (Laughter) I
know. And now we're going to -- just to do my Hardball number, which is what I
get paid to do, I'm going to ask you a question which doesn't contradict but
complements what the Governor just said.
You have spoken out
against what you see as the disproportionate money that people make in American
corporate life, that the top person makes exponentially what other employees
make. (Applause) What do you think about that as a counterpoint, to some extent,
to what we just heard?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, I think that a
great many of the CEOs do deserve what they're being paid; they get paid very
well and they produce a lot for the country. So I have no quarrel with people
making a lot of money. I do have a quarrel with people failing and making a lot
of money. (Applause) Lately it's sort of been the bigger they are the softer
they fall and I don't really like that. (Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Well, what do you think
of this sort of top-down socialism where, if you're a big financial firm and
somebody likes the cut of your jib at the Fed or the Treasury Department, you
get saved and if somebody doesn't like the cut of your jib, you're Lehman
Brothers, for example, you fall? What do you think of that form of government,
that form of economic society?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, I think it's a
tough decision, if you're the chairman of the Fed or the secretary of the
Treasury, to decide whether the fall of a given institution is going to produce
a tsunami throughout the rest of the economy. And I think that, looking back,
probably what happened to Lehman was a mistake. But I can understand why they
made that decision. They were under a lot of criticism for what had happened in
Bear Stearns. They didn't really bail out those firms, if you look at where the
stock of Bear Stearns ended up, or you look at where the stock of AIG ended up,
or that sort of thing.
What they were really
trying to do was keep a virus from spreading throughout the system. And I think,
in the case of Lehman, when they didn't do it, they got some unexpected effects
that made them very cautious about what they could do in the future. We really
have an enormously interconnected system and if you have millions of derivative
tickets outstanding, as they did at Lehman or at Bear Stearns and the firm
fails, it clogs up the system for a long time.
You shouldn't save the
top people, though. The idea that people walk away with tens or hundreds of
millions of dollars after destroying an institution
--
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Well, how do you throw
the baby out and keep the bathwater?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, I think if you've
got a choice you save the baby and the baby is the system.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: What about this? Do you
think when you were selling ice cream in Austria
that you would have liked it, when winter came and they weren't selling so well,
that the government came along and helped you out?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Absolutely not.
(Laughter) Let me just tell you, that would be the biggest mistake, because that
will make me lazy in being creative. (Applause) That is the problem.
What it did was, when
winter came, I had to get creative and I had to sell hotdogs when they were ice
curling in Austria. And so I knew that they were
all freezing, so I had to sell hot tea, I had to sell schnapps and I had to sell
sausages and all those kind of things in order to make them happy. (Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Schnapps.
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: And you know, the more
schnapps you served them, the more tips they gave you, so it was all very good.
(Laughter) So I liked that.
But you don't want a
safety net, you don't want the government to step in. Government has its
function -- and I think the important thing is also in Europe, as I have said, 40 years ago we had socialism
there but that has changed. The European governments all have learned to go the
other way and to come up with a good mixture where government is important but
where it's not the solution to everything. And to have a public-private
partnership is the ideal thing. This is why I think it's important that
America doesn't go back to 40 years
ago. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Is capitalism a fair
system? Does it measure merit? If you're a good businessperson, will you
succeed, if you're a bad businessperson will you fail?
WARREN
BUFFETT: It works extremely well.
We've got a great, great system. In the 20th century the average person in the
United
States improved their standard of living 7 for
1 in real terms, so we've got a great system. I always say that in investing you
want to buy stock in a company that has a business that's so good that an idiot
can run it, because sooner or later one will. (Laughter) We have a country like
that. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: You know, I love that.
Governor Schwarzenegger came to this country because he wanted to, because of
his aspirations. And I always ask this question of people: If you don't think
this country is exceptional, how come every ethnic group that ever comes to
America, no matter where they come
from, does better here?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Sure.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Why?
WARREN
BUFFETT: I can tell you why. This
country in 1790 had 4 million people. China had 290 million people then,
almost the population we have now. The people were just as smart there, they had
similar climates, they had similar natural resources. And here, a couple hundred
years later, we've got 25 percent of the GDP of the world. And China
is really starting to go now, because they've picked up on us.
We've had an imperfect
but we've had a rule of law, we've had a market system and we've had a
meritocracy. And those qualities have unleashed human potential. The human
potential was there in China
before, the human potential was there in Europe
but you did not have a system that unleashed that potential the way the American
system has.
And I would give credit
to those three factors. We have a system where Jack Welch ends up running
General Electric and Mike Tyson ends up fighting for the heavyweight
championship but it doesn't put Mike Tyson in charge of General Electric or put
Jack Welch in there fighting for the heavyweight championship. We have developed
talents like an Olympic qualifying event where the right people get the right
resources and the right jobs and then we protect that by a rule of law. And it
works very, very well.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: I think Welch could take
Tyson right now. (Laughter) Just a guess.
WARREN
BUFFETT: I tell you, I've got a
little money on that one. (Laughter)
CHRIS
MATHEWS: Let me ask you,
Governor, about these tough times, because as a governor of the largest state
you face the toughest fiscal crunch. How do we get out of this thing? Where does
it go? Are we victims of it, or are we guilty of
something?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, first of all, let
me just add to what Warren said, that I think this is really the
greatest country in the world. I think it has the most opportunities of any
nation and I've traveled all over the world. (Applause) It is staggering. Anyone
can make it here if you have the will. It's all about the will, how much fire do
you have in the belly, how much do you really want to rely on yourself or how
much do you want to go and get a handout? So that really depends.
So this is really by far
the best nation even though it has its weak points and we have our crises and we
have our downturns financially and economically and all those things and the
stock market goes up and down. But there's one thing we know for sure about
America. It always will come back and
it always will be the most powerful nation and the best nation and the most
generous nation in the world. That we know for sure. (Applause)
California, like all
other states, has gotten into financial trouble because of what's going on, on
the national level and on the international level. I think California got hit very
hard with the housing crisis. But we are very fortunate, even though there was a
terrible situation of people losing their homes and people getting unemployed
and so on.
But at the same time,
one has to look at the positive also in California, because we have so many different industries
that hold up the economy in California. So, even though the housing market
went down, we have the high-tech industry, we have the green technology
industry, the biotech, nanotech, we have the most unbelievable agriculture in
the Central Valley, all of those kinds of
things. All of this is holding up California and the entertainment and music
industries and so on.
So we are very
diversified here and we have very hardworking people and very intelligent and
innovative people in California. So we have various different
industries that are doing well, better than last year. For instance, the
biotechnology, high technology, all of those things are doing better than last
year and also green technology, even though, like I said, the housing market is
down.
So the key thing now is,
as Warren said,
to do everything that we can to support the housing market. And this is why we
have urged the federal government to come in and to support the housing market
and to put money into the housing market. And I think this is the direction that
the second economic stimulus package should go, in that direction, to use that
money and to go in and to maybe buy up some of the loans but with the adjusted,
with the variable -- with the adjusted rate, with the new value of homes. And
even though Warren said it's very difficult to do -- I
totally agree it is very hard to do those things, where do you begin and all
this.
But I think that's the
key, to make people stay in their homes and not to lose their homes, because the
financial market is not interested, the lenders are not interested and the
families are not interested. No one is interested in losing their home, because
when banks take over those homes -- we have seen in California -- they have
to do the upkeep. They now have to sell those homes again, they have to clean
the swimming pools so they don't have the mosquitoes gather there and then
create and spread sicknesses and so on. So all of this stuff. They don't want to
get stuck with the homes. So I think there is something in there for everyone if
government helps with those homeowners and keeps people in their homes.
(Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Warren, if you
have to explain to a very untrained mind what happened to the American economy
in the year 2008, how would you explain it?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, what happened was,
it began two years back when 300 million Americans, virtually unanimously,
believed that every house was going to go up in value every year. And you
believed it, I believed it, our friends believed it, the media believed it,
Congress believed it, the lenders believed it, Wall Street believed it. So you
had this feeling -- and, of course, everybody aspires to own a home and if it's
going to cost more next year you might as well buy it this year.
And the lenders didn't
worry about whether you could meet the payments very much in terms of your
income, because they figured the house was going to be worth more next year and
if you couldn't pay they'd sell the house at a profit anyway.
So there was this
universal belief and so you had a housing bubble and you had a huge asset class
-- at the peak it was about $22 trillion -- it hit almost 68 percent of the
households in the United
States, it hit all the lenders and everything
else. And the world leveraged up, based on this. People were willing to lend
money to almost anyone to buy almost any kind of house. Forget about the down
payment.
Now, a couple of years
ago it became apparent that that was a fallacy. If houses have dropped 20
percent roughly nationwide, that's $4-and-a-fraction trillion. If you take a
$4.5 trillion hit to an asset class that's owned by a very large number of
people, in which people have bought securities on all over the world, all of a
sudden people's attitude changed and they started not trusting anybody.
And then they wanted to
deleverage. People that had leveraged up, both individuals and institutions,
wanted to deleverage. Everybody wanted to take out on the asset side of their
balance sheet. And when the whole world starts wanting to deleverage and there's
nobody on the other side, the system freezes up.
That's why you needed
the federal government. The federal government is the only party that can
leverage up in a period like this. I can't leverage up, the state of California can't leverage
up.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: What does 'leverage up'
mean?
WARREN
BUFFETT: It means borrowing more
money and in a sense buying assets with borrowed money. The whole world was
buying assets with borrowed money a few years ago. Now those people are trying
to get those loans down. You need somebody else to leverage up and that has to
be the federal government.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: So when the Governor
says 'stimulus package' we go beyond what they did a couple of weeks ago, we
keep going beyond, keep taking steps to stimulate
--
WARREN
BUFFETT: One way or another, you
let the rest of the system deleverage to some extent because they need to.
Homeowners need to deleverage. They over-borrowed. And a stimulus package is one
part of it but actually some form of either buying assets or pumping money into
the system to buy assets is absolutely required and that's why we're doing it.
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Warren, I think it will
be very important, because we always talk about how government should come in
and help out in this situation, which I think is the right thing to do but I
think it would be good if you address just a little bit about how much
government was involved in getting us into this situation in the first place,
because I think government sometimes creates the mess. (Applause) And then all
of a sudden you try to get out of it and the question then is, can the same mind
-- like Nietzsche said, the same mind that has created the problem cannot really
solve the problem. Is this also the case here? And how do we move forward on
that?
Well, they won't do it
perfectly but nobody would do it perfectly. You know, you could put in Alexander
Hamilton or somebody as secretary of the Treasury, whomever. It is a big, big
problem and it's going to be sloppy by its nature. You have 55 million mortgages
in the United
States. Now, only 4 million of them are in
trouble at the present time. You have 20 million homes that are owned free and
clear. But if you try to implement something on a national scale through a
bureaucracy and so on, it's going to be messy. But it's the only real vehicle
we've got to do it on the scale that's required. There's no way that the big
banks by themselves, there's no way that investors by themselves can stop the
tide of assets that are being thrown at them as the world tries to deleverage.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Let's talk about
government policy. Governor, you mentioned that when you took office five years
ago you did have strong commitments to initiatives like After School; I
interviewed you on those many times. And you've very much been pushing the
priority of education in California. Let's talk about all the people
here, 14,000 people here and if they're interested in being an entrepreneur, or
they already are an entrepreneur, or they're simply trying to make it as
consumers, employees, perhaps corporate officers. What can the government do to
be positive? What is the role, the positive role government
plays?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, I think that it is
very important that government reacts very quickly to the changes. And I think
we have seen with the federal government because of the vote of the $700 billion
package that was the first economic stimulus package. Because that failed and
they waited a week, that had a terrible impact and people lost confidence in
government and therefore it had no impact then afterwards at all. As a matter of
fact, the stock market went down when they approved finally the $700 billion
dollars.
So I think for
government it is very important to react quickly, even though it's very
challenging, because we deal with 120 legislators in Sacramento and in
Washington, of course, you have many more that you have to deal with. Then you
deal with both of the parties, the Democrats and Republicans and all of those
things. So I think it's challenging but we've got to be very
quick.
Like in California, we
were way ahead of what was going on because we saw last year already in November
the problem with the housing crisis, so therefore we got together with the
lenders and with the banks and financial institutions and started working out
agreements to help the homeowners and not to go into foreclosure but to make the
adjustments with the interest rates and to work together with the homeowners.
We put also money behind
it with a campaign to make the homeowners aware, to go and start communicating
with the lenders, because that's the most important thing. Rather than throwing
the mail away when they get mail, or someone making a phone call, not to answer
the phone, go and communicate. Because they were all scared, homeowners are
scared, we wanted to inspire them -- here is what you do -- so we did that.
We also passed laws that
the lenders have to get in touch with the homeowners if there's an adjustment of
interest rates and they maybe cannot afford that interest rate bump.
All of those things we
did very early on and I think that was important. And then the federal
government actually followed us and did the same thing in some of those areas.
So now again we are
going to have a special session very soon, after the elections, to get together
again with the legislative leaders and with the legislators to see -- because
times change so quickly and things are changing, events are changing so quickly,
we have to reevaluate is there more that we can do about the mortgage crisis and
in order to keep people in their homes and so on.
But we in California, we have done
great things. We are very fortunate that the people of California have approved
$42 billion plus an additional $8 billion of infrastructure bonds. So we have
this money. Part of it has been appropriated and the other part not. Let's push
billions of dollars as quickly as possible out there to start building the
schools, refurbishing the classrooms, building the highways, the onramps, the
off ramps, to create jobs, because we've got to create jobs. (Applause) That is
the most important thing.
And I think that, when
it comes to women -- because this is a women's conference -- women are so much
in charge of financial matters in homes. It's great, the majority of women are
running the financial situation at home. And I think that they have the
challenges, women have the additional challenges of having to take care of the
elderly -- more than 70 percent of the women have to take care of the elderly in
the family.
But at the same time,
you know, it's great when you see women owning so many businesses. Like in
California, we have almost a million women owning businesses -- small
businesses, medium, large businesses and so on -- so that's, I think, very
encouraging. And the key thing now is I think for women, that we do everything
that we can together, that we create more executives, business executives and
more leaders within corporations, because there are still only 10, a little bit
more than 10 percent of women leading corporations, the biggest corporations in
the United States. (Applause)
And also, my goal is to
do everything that we can to create also more women in the Legislature, because
we still have maybe 25 percent, or 24 percent of legislators that are women in
California.
(Applause) I think if we get that up to a level of 50/50, I think that you would
see decisions are being made differently because women have different priorities
and I think we need that mix in Sacramento and in
Washington in
order to make great decisions. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: You know, we're
outnumbered here, three guys, okay?
WARREN
BUFFETT: I like it. For a guy
that couldn't get a date in high school, I'm enjoying this.
(Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: You know, if you look at
what the law has done -- and it's a very free enterprise group here and very
self-reliant, it seems. But if you look at some good things the government has
done over the years -- I'll be the liberal for a minute -- I look at Title 9. I
love Title 9. (Applause) Because my wife went to Stanford, she was on the
national championship tennis team and she had to pay for all the away-game
travel as a player on the team. They were really unfair to women athletes.
And then I watched and
this is for obvious reasons -- well, all genders watched this. The women's
volleyball team at the Olympics this year was probably the national obsession
for two weeks. (Applause) And obviously none of that would have happened without
-- well, without California, obviously and the beach and then
the lifestyle.
But the fact that women
have been given a chance in athletics -- I want to try something by you, because
you've come out of that world to some extent, I mean you represented it -- women
in athletics, leadership roles in athletics, I really believe lead to, as it has
in so many cases with men, led to leadership roles in business. There's
something about command and leadership and personal physical challenge that is
going to make the future of women, the athletes of today, the leaders of
tomorrow. That's my hunch. What do you think?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, I think that I
have said many times that I learned my lessons, very important lessons, in
sports. There are so many great things that you learn about camaraderie, about
working together with others, being a team player. You have to analyze your
performance, you have to recognize the shortcomings, as everyone has with their
performance. What do I need to work on? How do I work on those shortcomings? How
do I listen to other people's input so that I can make improvements? So all of
this and follow through. The most important, one of the most important lessons
that you learn in sports is follow through. If you play tennis they talk about
follow through with the swing. When you play golf they talk about follow through
with the swing. When you go skiing they talk about finishing your turn and all
of those things. The same is in life, as I always say.
Like for instance, when
you come to green energy technology and about fighting global warming, there are
a lot of people that pass laws in order to go and fight global warming. But then
to actually execute the laws and to follow through and to implement the laws and
to make it actually happen, is a whole other thing. That's the difficult part
and that's why we in California have been so successful, that we create the laws
and then there is follow through, that we actually do go and cut down and fight
global warming, cut down on greenhouse gas emissions and so on. So I think those
are all lessons you learn from sports and you can apply those lessons to running
a business or showing leadership when you are the governor, or if you are a
senator or if you run for office or anything, or run a business, whatever it is.
I think all of things do have a great asset, that you bring this knowledge with
you and this experience.
WARREN
BUFFETT: I talked about how our
system has unleashed human potential but for two centuries this country really
ignored half of its human potential. (Applause) If you go back to 1776, Thomas
Jefferson in that famous second paragraph of the Declaration of Independence
inspired people throughout the country when he said "We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal." Those words were totally hollow
when they came around to drafting the Constitution. A black was three-fifths of
a person. All men are created equal -- three-fifths of a person. Women got the
right to vote in 1920 with the 19th Amendment. And even after that, it was 1981
before Sandra Day O'Conner was put on the Supreme Court. We went 200 years after
the Declaration of Independence. (Applause)
So we, in effect,
ignored half the talent in the country. It's what gives me a lot of hope for the
future in terms of unleashing even more potential in this country. If you read
the Constitution of the United States, Article 2, Section 1
talks about the qualifications of the president. I imagine Arnold has read that
section. (Laughter)
The second sentence
says, "He shall serve a term of four years." I think it's the only personal
pronoun in the Constitution. "He shall . . ." I mean, imagine the message that
has been delivering, both literally and subliminally and every other way, to
half the population. And like I said, it took 131 years before we even said they
could vote or serve on juries. We have wasted potential like you can't believe
in this country but now we're going to start unleashing it. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: The devilish part of me
is leading me in this direction now. Ready?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Okay, we've been warned.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: We've got two guys here.
Could it be that women have been victimized by their own superiority in terms of
competence? I suggest this. I grew up in an old-school family. My father was the
boss and all that but he really wasn't the boss -- it was complicated -- but he
thought he was the boss. (Laughter) He thought he was the boss. And, you know,
my mom was the genius, the reason we went to good colleges, the reason we had
our teeth straightened, the reason we had piano lessons, the reason we had a
house at the shore, the reason we became sort of moderately above, slightly
above middle-middle, was because my mom had that vision. And she worked my
father to get it done and then she worked very hard to get it done.
(Laughter)
But she was the mental
brain of the family. The checkbook would never have been even looked at if it
hadn't been for her. She knew all that.
And this is so true
today and I just wonder whether women are working so hard that they're losing
their leverage, because they do all the mental stuff. They know what shots the
kids have had. If you ask a guy what shots the kids have had he looks at you
like you're from Pluto. Like, why would I know that, you know? (Laughter) The
teachers' names, they don't know their classmates' names. The wife, the mother,
knows them all or feels guilty if she doesn't, the shots, the kids, everything
about them. Child enrichment, they have to go to the museum today, they've got
to go to get piano lessons today. The husband is thinking, I've got to get out
of here, kind of thing. (Laughter)
And yet mentally he's
carrying the notion of pater familia still. So my question is, are women the
secret CEOs, or the secret CFOs, the secret C of the family? And why aren't they
running the place officially, is what I'm asking. (Applause) That's my troubling
thought.
WARREN
BUFFETT: Okay. Let me get
devilish too. Going back to this household of your youth -- (Laughter). If you
could have made the change, would you have changed yourself, in terms of
exploring your talents and everything else in the future -- would you have
changed your sex into a woman and made that choice and said that's the better
side of the fence to be on? (Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Back then -- you are
playing to this crowd. (Laughter) I would think that -- being my daughter is a
good deal, I'll put it that way, all right? Today, in the 21st century, being a
young woman of college age and having ambitions -- like she just popped me with
lawyer the other day, or she popped my wife with it -- complete aptitude and
complete confidence that she can do just about anything. And as I said, she's
out there exploring the costs of big government debt 20, 30 years from now. I
don't think she has any barrier that she can see.
WARREN
BUFFETT: And I'm all for that.
It's changed dramatically but I was born in 1930 and I had two sisters,
absolutely as smart as I was. Subliminally they were given the message in
school, at home, in their church -- they saw men ruling the churches, the saw
men ruling everything. They were given the message that they did not have the
same destiny that I had and that was a terrible message. (Applause)
Now, I think it's gotten
way, way better. But the idea that if you had ambitions in anything -- I talked
to the woman one time that was the first woman doctor to go to Cornell Medical School. They had her stand behind a screen
during the anatomy class. The messages you got as a woman 50 years ago were that
your place was over here. And maybe you outsmarted your husband in some way or
another but very few males I knew then said gee, I wish I'd been born a woman so
I could explore my talents fully, you know, in whatever field.
(Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: So what changed? What
was the catalyst?
WARREN
BUFFETT: Well, I think it started
changing, actually, in 1920 with the 19th Amendment. But it changed very slowly.
And then, I think women have had different models. I think that the emergence of
a Sandra Day O'Connor, whatever it may be, you had to see it to believe it. And
they didn't see it 50 or 75 years ago. Now they see women running businesses and
they see women doing things, this year running for president in a very serious
way. So it has changed. Hillary Clinton has done a lot for women. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: What do you think about
that, Governor? Here in California -- let's talk politics for a
minute, because it's the time to do it. Hillary Clinton won roughly half the
votes in the Democratic Party when she ran for president and it was very close
right to then end. We've got a vice-presidential running mate on the Republican
side now, with a very good clothing allowance. (Laughter) See? Listen to this.
WARREN
BUFFETT: Remember your mother,
Chris.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: It has begun, it has
begun. Governor, what do you think about politics and women right now?
California has two U.S.
Senators who are women, very prominent. (Applause) Have we reached equality yet
in politics, or something close to it, or not? Are we still 20 years off from
something like equality in politics?
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, first of all, let
me just say it was interesting that he didn't answer the question that you asked
originally, if you ever wanted to be a woman. That was really the question but
anyway, he didn't answer that question. (Laughter) Very good. But anyway, the
bottom line -- Warren, you put the pressure on him, I'm
telling you. You've got to tone it down, Warren. You've got to tone it down.
But anyway, let me just
--
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Well, actually I had
four brothers and no sisters, so I don't know. But point taken.
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: You don't have to
explain, because there are some men in California that would like to change to be a
woman. (Laughter) But don't worry, you don't have to make that commitment.
But anyway, I think I
mentioned that --
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Are we going back to
girly boys again? (Laughter)
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: I didn't say it.
WARREN
BUFFETT: I don't say taxes, he
doesn't say girly men. (Laughter)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: I get it.
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: I think I mentioned that
earlier, that I think that women have made tremendous strides forward. And it is
very, very challenging to be a woman, obviously, because of the tradition where
you come from and then to break through this glass ceiling and to go and really
make those advances and moves forward. And I think that this year it was really
a terrific year, even though you see all the bickering, the partisan bickering
out there and the fights and they're pointing fingers at each other. But the
fact is that woman have really made a major move. And like you said, Hillary
Clinton -- I mean, this is extraordinary. On the Democratic side, of course, I
think there are two breakthroughs. It didn't matter who was chosen in the end,
because he's a great breakthrough on the African-American side and an
extraordinary breakthrough it would have been also for woman. (Applause) So I
think that was fantastic, to see that.
And I think also on the
Republican side I think it's great that McCain picked Palin, Governor Palin,
because that is again -- (Applause) And you know, I'm not talking about now the
argument, less experienced, more experienced, clothes $150,000 or $20,000 and
all those things. That has nothing to do with it. It's just that a woman is
there in there in that position. I think that is extraordinary. I'm very proud
of the Republican Party because of it, because I felt they would never get
there, to really break through those kind of areas and they did, so that was
terrific.
And I think that now we
have to continue on. I think America is ready to elect a woman as president
and America is ready to elect an
African-American to be president. I think Americans are ready for change.
(Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Well, I guess we sit
here as three men and I want to say something to defend what seems to be my
trolldom here. (Laughter) I am amazed at the person I live with, her ability to
multitask -- and that's not even explaining her fully -- the ability to think
about things in the widest variety of concern in our lives, the broadest,
deepest concern. And she has these things on her mind and she deals with them
and I'll put things off. And she'll deal with bureaucrats. I hate dealing with
bureaucrats. I hate dealing with companies when you call them up to fix
something. And she's so gutsy at calling up the bureaucrat, calling up the
agency, fixing -- and she'll say, "I fixed that thing we were worried about
today," when I come home and have dinner with her. She's made the dinner and
she's dealt with the most complicated issues of our time every single day of my
life. With the kids, she knows all this stuff about our family. She is like a
giant computer of knowledge about our family and I'm like this insect that comes
in and knows nothing except where's the food, I'll make the coffee. And I am so
proud.
And what I think we're
talking about here is the lag. Men have appreciated, these three guys here and
society has appreciated the enormous intellectual and conscientious role that
women have played for so many centuries in this country. It's not new, the
capability. It's new, the recognition and I think that's what's happened.
(Applause)
And I salute Maria --
and I didn't get a chance to talk about how you divide responsibilities and
authority in the Schwarzenegger household. Do you want to ask for extra time for
that? (Laughter)
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: I can tell you, in our
household it's very easy. I just say yes to everything Maria asks for.
(Laughter) To keep peace.
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: I don't think so. I
think it's more complicated.
GOVERNOR
SCHWARZENEGGER: But I tell you, you have
a really good point there, because if you really watch women and how they
function at home and the kind of multi-tasking that they do -- I'm absolutely
blown away, for instance, by Maria. I mean, she has been, when the kids grew up
and they were little babies, they were crawling around under the desk at home
and she would be working on the computer and she would be on the phone on one
side and she was taking notes on the other and I will come in and ask her a
question and she will continue doing all of those things. When I just read a
script I couldn't have a kid in the room. She is so unbelievable with the
multitasking. And I think women have that capability more so, much more so than
men have. So they are maybe superior, who knows? (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: Maybe superior, who
knows? But definitely, finally politics and society is catching up with reality.
Thank you all. Thank you, Warren Buffet, sir.
WARREN
BUFFETT: Thank you. (Applause)
CHRIS
MATTHEWS: And thank you, Governor.
(Applause)



