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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  February 22, 2013 11:00pm-12:00am EST

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mechanism, and the hell with the membership. >> win an election, develop the message, and tell people why they need to vote for the republican party. lou: what should be the response? what should the republicans do in response to the class warfare? >> we are one nation, work together, achieve together. we are not a divided society. we are not a divided country. we sink or swim together, stop it, mr. president. >> put blinders on. talking about the rich again, forg talking about 47%. middle class, middle class, middle class, middle class because middle class are the people who are screwed in the country by both parties. >> they have to talk about your situation, where you are, losing your home and job -- >> better nots say the better class earns $250,000 because they lose everybody. >> that's true. lou: the head of the chamber of commerce, said, basically, he and richard can work things out,
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and -- are you kidding me? >> out of touch. lou: more elitism. it's suffocating in the country while we got 23 million people. >> that's why there was a tea party. lou: it is, and what -- that is now, apparently, i'm going to get a lot of letters for this, but right now, it looks like most of the tea party is either retired from the field of combat or, in many cases, just the turf pelosi said they were. folks -- >> i think they'll be back in droves. lou: i hope so. they brought energy to the republican party and made it an interesting country with the loyal opposition. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> thank you. lou: results of the poll tonight, will the president and congress reach a deal to avoid sequestering? 10% said yes. 90% said . good night from new york. >> to serve men, it's a cook book.
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♪ >> no, n! >> no. neil: yes. a cookbook. it is too late. or is it? forget about the health care menuar, we're on the menu.ican go welcome, everybody. i am neil cavuto.ve with all the governorsto what oe marching like zombies into the federal health care of reason this for essentially doing the same thing because the cost of fighting the will pa medicare thing is over the et top.ma i they think it is better choose which may i hearken quote
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back to the famous "twilightean zone" episode theres about toexa be road kill on the plate. one republican governor lines up after another riding the of a rocket ship to help. trust me, once they see the cost of caving they will see stars because as the medicare rises it turns out those who were in seizing up i the humans as the main course on thei dish andayi adding insult the governors serving the dish aside from saving money, the cost of the budget bustingely een banquet has been pushed onto them.es trust me but by then they
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are million miles away in anot a rocket ship and we are stuck in deep ship. watching this unfold "in living color" david macarthur and david drucker as well. so doctor, what do they do that they are not sayingth? >> thank you for having meshteng back.patien obamacare shortens the liveses f of patients but lengthening medicare and medicaid. it is a disaster, the implementation with the march to single payer andmediai? who would want anybody to be isu on medicaid in their state?ave it has shown that they have the worst health carethe
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outcome than any other insurance program in the developed world. they sellout, they are intimidated, the patients verses' politicians motivated by money and power. neil: to that poiunt*, davidfe point*, david, they feel that's better we have some coste input, a better skyrocketing mic costs with the fed's save usta money but itli sounds tantalizing with some of too s good to be true, are theytwilig injuring theirz own "twilight zone"? >> they could.it tbeca
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they are under budgetarypressure pressure, they don't have a federal reserve to print money and buy bonds. they try to weigh the cost and benefit. should they take many, if they don't will they have budgetary pressures later and in the palm the hook? the republican governors arend t not lining up to do this. even the conservativeo, idalwarts like rick scotthaveec and basic have decided to gore along with this. repl it is a lot of the land and esp they be responsible for the ot constituents health care soonto. they try to have moreway from e control but ultimately theyis?
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will saddle taxpayers with it's billions and that is not a bargain. but now we have to see how this plays out. with their own voters get upset? neil: it comes down to guys like you on the front line trying to run businesses of the rhone.tis you will get medicaid byas wel this also. >> yes.r se go back tod, the cookbook it is called for speed. [laughter] it's aut feeling the governor's crawl in bet with e nextvil is another tool for the federal government too come back and say we givet g you many but now we won't pay for this or any replacements.e to
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neil: see you think theylo promise short-term savings? >> especially the boat we'reke in the government says we're saving money but feel the way we save money is we have to increase deductibles and decrease one insurance pays. typical government logic. neil: and you are on the front linesn , we may get whatie we pay for medicated self is a proposition but also questi blanket it out across with the coverage this could get tricky.ca >> medicaid while it has aoctrs. dismal care as access toflies. doctors. they drop off like flies. it comes up with the exorb enormous price tag.ses
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the hire people on privateetitit insurance it as a double-edged sword. we don't need the increased safety net so more people having good, private insurance. neil: the premiums are going through the roof. t flip but the governors theyrtainly o figure this is the lot ofundersn the land so i can understandingh that but it sounds like a of the bargain.his b >> that is one of the ying reasons they agreed to do this three years from the state legislature because in mei the coming years thecare and
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government will play less and less. the government willrm or determine how this goes that as the doctors said more and more will drop out of medicare and medicaid. then premiums go up and will people ask questions with those who cooperated with the affordable care act. but there is nothingth morevernr other they and a catharsisf hey because of they don't acceptxchg the expansion are runninge the exchange's the federal government will do it anyway it. >> so they may say get usedde to this?weet ca >> here is your love and how sweet kid may not make it? remo
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ith our policy coming up we and had to manipulate deductibles and even had to remove ourselves from a local hospital chain because they charge more than willing lot -- the insurance is willing to pay. obamacare is a book of rules nobody knows how to live within them.edub it will not be free. al, neil: the spaceship has lostosc -- lfeft the planet the oscar o? goes to look at that. washington they act like the economy is fine thetomatic uts automatic cuts around the but th corner but the guy at the receiving end, the democrats are being as called --
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neil: look up. over much of the country, it's the same story. a massive snowstorm slamming a good chunk of the country, but one week before the automatic cuts are set to kick in, the new york new york say -- the "new york times" says the president and democrats are calm in the budget storm and kicking their feet up. the headline says it all. for obama and team, calm, not crisis, similar mewlated fiscal battle. the times has not had to listen to them. >> our country's less safe and communities' less safe as a result of sequester. >> federal probation prosecutoro close cases and let criminals go. >> furloughs of air traffic controllers, border patrol. >> air traffic controllers and airport security will see cutbacks. >> thousands of teachers and educators will be laid off.
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neil: comedian says the union guys who hit him are calmer. you know, it it does defie the impression that the times and others leave that, hey, everyone is calm, but the words speaking about, hell to come, i don't know, i mean, i hear about hundreds of thousands of mentally ill patients who won't get their meds so they are lose on the streets and coming to my front door. there's talks that meat inspectors go so i'll eat mr. it. it doesn't look like a calm environment to me. something's not jiving. >> i appreciate you show me being punched in the face every time i come on the show. neil: a subliminal message. i have no idea. >> like having nam flashbacks when i come on. all right, here's the thing, this administration, are they scared? yes, i certainly agree with you there, things are not easy, but
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i don't think they are as scared as they should be, barack obama knows the media carries the heavy water for the administration. they are in the back pocket and come police -- come police sit. he knows that. i'm not saying they ant to be in the cocktail parties or ladies of "the view," and 'm not saying brian williams wants to be his girlfriend, but what i'm saying is that he's so considerateble here with the media he's allowed to rest his head more easily than he should, breathe easier because the relationship with the media is so cozy. he's more comfortable than he should be. is he scared? yeah. the media should put the fear of god in him. neil: i think they should check the fear of god rhetoric coming out of him. if you look at what's comical here, and, of course, i bow to you on all things funny because you are funny and smart, but, i mean, if you think about it, what's comical is the $85 billion we talk about, i take
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away no pain from this, but in the scheme of the 3.8 trillion dollar budgets, a $16 trillion debt, i mean, when we are likening that to, you know, arm -- armageddon, what do woe do when this has to get serious? >> right. it's like sean hannity finding a 20 in an old jacket. who cares. what's $20 to him? it's important -- neil: steve, as cheap as they come, cheap, cheap, cheap. >> really? make sure we circulate that so everybody knows. i think to get back to the first point that it's important, you talk about how the administration tryings to act. they try to act like theyare not afraid. all is come, all is well. listen, barack obama is a celebrity president, okay? how a guy in this position abandoning the post and playing 18 holes, th's what he does, goes to what he knows best. neil: i mention this on the show, and you know it well, but
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if you knew mr. president, all this hell was to come, the threat of eating mr. ed stuff, mental patients on the streets like zombies. surely, surely you would not have gone golfing at all, that would be the last thing on the schedule. >> that's the thing. look at woods and obama playing, effect sply both professional golfers if you look at it that way. barack obama is -- i mean, there's so many things to do, but bottom line is his biggest supporters are celebrities and actors, a celebrity president. the black eyed peas would have sung about him. he texted scarlett johansson. neil: like you haven't. >> i wish i had her on speed dial. their professional fakers, fake, play pretend, read lines they di't write that they likely don't understand or convince an audience otherwise. neil: what about people who read
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lines and get it right? >> exactly. neil: finish your thought. >> well, barack obama, at the end of the day, as his actor pals, professional liars. barack obama is a great actor, a horrible president. neil: you know, steven, i had fun just professionally getting to know you, watch you, it's been fun. let's get together soon. i don't know if comedian is the right description, but provocateur is a good one. remember when we told you with americans taxes facebook not paying, but it's worse than what mitt romney thought. >> these are the people who pay no income tax, 47% of americans the capital one cash rewards card gives you 1% cash back on all purchases, plus a 50% annual bonus. and everyone but her likes 50% more cash, but i have an idea. do you want a princess dress? yes. cupcakes? yes. do you want an etch-a-sketch? yes!
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neil: there are 47% of the people who will vote for the president no matter what. there's 47% who are with him who are dependent upon government. neil: ou'll never guess who is ecstatic that tape was released, jimmy carter, yeah, he claims that president obama profusely thanked his grandson, jimmy carter's grandson in releasing the video putting him over the tom, and it did. here's what's over the top. it's kind of true. the culture mitt romney was talking about is now coming back to remind all americans that mitt was right. she's thankful that mitt romney exposed it. i don't think mitt romney was exposed the way it was exposed, but, anyway, joins me with jonas and wayne rogers. explain. you have a good point. >> the makers and takers point rt hard on the ears talking about that, but i get thatment you know, we want to take care
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of the poor, but what happened we had an honest conversation about who pays taxes in the country, what it takes to fund the u.s. government,the fact that the rich really do pay a lot in the way of taxes more than their fair share -- neil: apparently not enough. >> apparently not enough. listen to this important, really interesting information that's coming out from economists. they say it's really hard once you get government benefits to get off because you lose food stamps once you get a job, lose housing assistance, and so there is basically call cue louse that people who did on the government bill, they say, look, we're going to lose money. we'll stay with the government rather than getting a job. those important debates happen right now in a time, of course, when we're in fiscal duress. neil: wane rogers,a lot of big companies pay no taxes at all. last year, ge finding out it didn't pay any taxes, but now we found it with names like linked in and a host of others, including facebook, but whatever
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their enterprise is and gazillion dollar enterprises and rates like they don't pay a dime. this situation is worse than we thought; right? >> not just that, neil, but as you said, a lot of the tax incentives were begin for the purpose of incentivizing something. they don't work, and they -- neil: insent vise not to pay taxes. >> yeah, and ge was really ide yachtic. when you think that jeffrey was the president's appointee to head the commission of job creation, and he's not -- the whole thing is out of control, totally out of control. there's no dealing with it. >> you know, i thought -- i told people, the left or right, this was the week we had the reverberations of howard dean remarks if you want the government you have, and a lot of people like big government, get a lot more money for it, and it's going beyond the rich that liz eluded to, to the middle
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class. now, he had the guts to say after the election, i have to point out, there was not anyone at the white house or powers to be in the united states senate saying it's right, isn't it? >> yes, because 47% of the can't not pay taxes and get benefits. more than 47% of the country gets benefits, and almost 100% get something between social security, medicare, public schools, ect.. neil: howard is right? >> he's right, if you're not going to cut programs, widen the tax base. the recent tax increases are not enough. 47% of the country is not poor. that's an important statement. if it's the case to help the poor, half of the country is not poor, quite frankly. mitt romney was not the person to deliver the message. he's in a country club and not the guy to say that, it is an
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important message. we need somebody who is not super rich to say it so we believe it. neil: extend it, wait a min, what happened to the country with the breaks and allowances? older americans, soldiers and the like who are -- technically part of the group. i just wonder how it got to the point where when e were in the school, it was in the 20s and now it's 50%. something's out o of sync there. to add insult to injury here, and could be putting republicans on the defensive, how many corporations dodge the tax man. doesn't that beg for a simpler, more incluesive tax code, period? >> it does. the reason they don't pay taxes, corporations, because the tax code is a 2 # -- 21st sear ri pork barrel nobody says it is. they will drill in the loopholes because thaw have political constituents paying e money. back to the other thing about who we are as a country and
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whether or not our identity as a country is turning into, y know, a mature european country, just 73 million baby boomers retiring, and the real falsehood there in the media is that the democrats have a monopoly on compassion. only the democrats care about the poor. no, the g.o.p. cares about the poor. they want to rescue and protect and preserve these programs to help the poor and elderly. something, the guy who really helped create the earned income tax credit, governor reagan in 1972 #, he said, yes, help the poor with credits and testimony fore congress. that's what we're saying, honesty in the debates. neil: you mentioned reagan, and wayne, quickly, before the producers go nuts, and i understand, he wanted to close loopholes and special breaks allowing companies and individuals to dodge the tax man because just paraphrasing here, at the time, you said everyone should have essentially skin in the game. very few in the country do. th's the problem.
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>> not just that, neil. something else is going on. they assume there's a pie, and the pie doesn't get bigger, and once the pie is cooked, you can't cut it. they belly ache and it grows without a budget, and you can't cut that or that. the word "need" is always used, and -- so just don't let the pie grow. pal, you cut it. i think the sequestering is a good idea. cut it across the board. if you can't find a way to cut it, we cut it for you. neil: small cut in the sche of things, but your thoughts? >> we have a small government tax code for 90% of the country. it doesn't take a lot. republicans are the reason why there's been a growth at the bottom end. the, pangs of the chide credits led to those not paying federal income tax, and, yet, we have the benefits program of norway and sweden, but they have, you
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know, there's higher taxes and a high -- essentially one who doesn't pay income tax that collects revenue to support the government programs. neil: worry with that is an added tax doesn't mean another tax goes away. >> people don't pay income tax, there has to be another tax. neil: something, something, something. guys don't wander far. we'll get back to you later in the show. they are selling is the time to start worrying. tech legend on why there is, indeed, a lot to worry about indeed, a lot to worry about after this oh this is lame, investors could lose tens of thousands of dollars on their 401(k) to hidden fees. is that what you're looking for, like a hidden fee in your giant mom bag? maybe i have them... oh that's right i don't because i rolled my account over to e-trade where... woah. okay... they don't have hidden fees... hey fern. the junkrawer? why would they... is that my gerbil? you said he moved to ainy farm. that's it, i'm running away. no, no you can't come! [ male announcer ] e-trade. less for us. more for you.
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neil: stocks on a roll, but billionaires are bailing. warren buffet cut the stake in sciewrm -- consumer products, and george sorros selling a million shares in bank stocks. the man who founded java, scott, what the heck is going on here? scott, glad to have you. you saw it coming saying those with money would be voting with their money whatted to do,and in an environment like this, they are doing more than hedging their bets. what's going on? >> well, first of all, thanks for the compliment, but i'm not a billionaire or close. neil: i say that because many and i who listen -- no, kidding, well, you're successful. leave it at that. go ahead.
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>> yeah. i had a lot billionaire buddies. there's five categoryings of areas that are scaring folks who would normally invest in u.s. equities. number one, everybody talks about the debt, quantitative easi which is turning, you know, qe2 turnedded into our titanic fiscally. neil: the fed is backing away from that, scott, so maybe they are concerned about that as well or no? >> well, that means they know inflation's coming like a freight train, and anything nominated in u.s. dollars, assets or income streams are devalued. it's a tax on every asset on income stream in the u.s. dollars, and, by the way, i call that trickle up poverty, and it's a big deal, and investing in u.s. equities, destroying the buying power and, unfortunately, it's very regressive because it doesn't destroy my lifestyle, but it destroys the bottom half, the middle class, their lifestyle is destroyed. my parents' lifestyle and nest
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eggs are getting destroyeded by this qe, quantitative easing. it's a disaster, and i think smart investors are saying, hey, the race to the bottom, the currency race to the bottom is not a place to be. that's one thing, the second thing is ha -- neil: i know you look at what's going on in the market aggregates and racing to a new high on the dow soon. you know that's back to where we were five or six years ago, so technically a new high, but back to five years. >> it's a shallow bubble. neil: taking money off the sidelines, billionaires, successful guys, millionaires, what have you, saying i'm not trapped in this thing. are they right? >> it's a bubble. nobodiments in -- nobody wants in a bubble when it pops. who gets nailed is main street, not wall street. neil: what do you see happening? what's going on in our country? >> well, well, i think there's an enormous amount of bad policy. you know, they argue about
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raising minimum wage, if i'm an investor in the u.s., that's the wrong thing to do, driving up trickle up poverty, more unemployment, and the economic war of the u.s. versus other countries when people are out of work is just a disaster. obama care is driving an enormous amount of under employment, outsourcing, that sort of thing, the con cement of are we redistribution society or are we going to just take care of the safety net? what percentage subpoena on -- is on the safety net? 1% or 50 million food stamp people in the battle here on capitalism versus socialism. people don't like to talk about it, but i think big time investors would rather invest in societies moving towards capitalism. we're on a freight train hurdling towards 50% of the gdp in the public sector, and that's not what i would call a strong capitalist society. you know, that drives this third
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issue that's got to scare anybody looking at it in that huge chunks of the economy, i call it health care education, housing, and insurance are all being taken over and dominated and moved out of the private sector into what i call the government secor, and the government sector, everybody knows they operate effectively and corruptly leading me to another issue. the u.s. economy and government used to be the model of lack of corruption. when you look at what we have with government sector unions, that is inherently corrupt. you look at pork barrel spending, and it is the definition of "corruptness," and they call it crony capitasm. i call it cronny governmentalism, and if you look at things like slyndra those are the poster child for that. finally, i think the leadership in this country and no disrespect -- i love my country, i'm, you know, i'm very patriotic and invested american,
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but the leadership here is just not something that i respect. the deviciveness, the rhetoric, the noise, all the rest of it. i guess i'm just a raging capitalist who believes in small government, less regulation, personal responsibility, and lack of victimization, and we don't need more than half of the country being handled by the safety net which is basically not a safety net. it's a -- it's a velcro. it's fly people. we need a trampoline for the bottom one, two, or three personality, n a velcro dependency net for more than half of the country. i -- i look at all of that, and i'm no different than any other investing. u.s. equities, when you're moving the direction that we're moving as a country is just not a place to be. there are better currencies and better geographies to go invest in. neil: we might be seeing that going on behind the scenes as we speak.
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scott, very good seeing you, my friend. thank you very much. >> thank you. neil: all right, scott. we might call this is cavuto quiz moment, what's happening? pigs flying? top obama official praising grover norquist. this is america.
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what i'm really looking for is -- i got two words for you -- re-wards. ♪ there's got to be better cards than this. [ male announcer ] there's a better way with creditcards.com. compare hundreds of cards from all the major banks to find the one that's right for you. it's simple. search, compare, and apply at creditcards.com. first round's on me. >> unfortunately, the state department doesn't have our own grove norquist pushing a pledge to protect it. neil: i think that's a compliment. it was not pigs flying or hell freezing over, but it was john kerry. john kerry giving a shoutout to frequent white house contribute ire grover norquist in the first speech as secretary of state. the watchdog here to respond. grover, wha he esntially saying ino one is kind of policing us, but what did you think of the back handed
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compliment? >> senator kerry, originally from massachusetts prior to immigrating to the united states -- [laughter] i talked to kerry, and he understands the protection pledge. he was trying to get taxes raised in 2011 with president obama, and he found he couldn't because republican said they made the commitment in writing not to raise taxes. they confuse the commitment by elected officials never to raise taxes with me. i share the pledge with people, but the power of the pledge and tax issue is independent of me personally, but sometimes people, grover, tax issue, i understand what he met. the tax issue is powerful. the state department needs to focus on what america does well, profit rights, rule of law. we should be exporting property rights, not money. neil: yeah, well, we are
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exporting money. the a lot of millionaires and billionaires ship it out of here to there. i want you to weigh in on, if you don't mind, the sequester thing. my view on the subject, and i don't know what yours is, but $85 billion in the scheme of things is chump change and scarying th bejesus that we'll bring us back to the dark ages if they go through. first of all, both parties agreed, in fact, it waa the president's original concoction, 85 trillion in a 3 trillion budget, if that's the beginning of the end of the world, i don't know what happens when we have to get serious. >> well, i think it's very helpful because this is budget cutting on training wheels. this is not serious budget cutting. it's bget cutting on training wheels. it's the beginning of reducing the overspending of the last decade, plus. neil: not great on the training wheels leading me to believe ultimately taking them off is tough, if not impossible. >> i think we have to go through a year or two where we have
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minor -- this is a 2% cut in spending over the decade. we're going to save one trillion on -- from a federal budget which over the next ten years -- spend 45 billion -- trillion, trillion, trillion, trillion, t's, t's. 25 trillion. neil: more than we do now? shaving that, but we're not cutting the overall debt, but go ahead. >> right. it's a small cut. what we are learning that we can get -- we can do this. we have to figure out how to do more. what we're also learning is that obama acts like a small child who's been hurt, you know, when you try to fix it, he screams bloody murder while you're trying to fix the problem. his reaction to a small budget cut is to faint and sceam and have a hissy-fit. what we've to do is learn to ignore his screams of anguish reforming the government she's so badly damaged over the last four years.
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neil: worried about whether it's too late, though? we've shown little resolve to rain it in. the president more or less gave up on that, evidence in the state of the union speech, he's really, i think, gone over the top on the scare tactics with this cut. by the way, the other side has not wowed me with taking vacation with this, as i understand, that, you know, this is better than getting tax hikes in there, but neither side gives me much, you know, encouragement here. >> well, i think the american people understand that spending has gone too far. we need to bringit back. it was, again, it was the president's idea to do the sequester. it's not the most elegant way t cut spending -- neil: but it's a way. >> one way. it's better to cut it this way than to not begin the prosises of reducing spending. wherev the president went to grade school, he learnedded addition, but in the subtraction, and he finds is
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easy to add to the budget, and heust gets confused when you talk to him about spending less. it just gsh he's never heard the concept. neil: yeah. i think he knows the concept well. i just think he doesn't want to hear about it. >> yeah, that's it. neil: grover, always a pleasure, good seeing you. >> good to be with you. neil: a homeless guy suing his parents because they didn't show him enough love. >> i'm sorry, just behave. >> i love you, mo
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♪ neil: well, love stinks, and so does getting sued. 32-year-old bernard bay is suing
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his parents for not loving him enough blaming them for being lousy parents. i read this and think ofmy own kids. if any of you pull this -- anyway, that's why he's homeless. the attorney says they had no case, but another disagrees. it's zero case on this in >> no basis to sue your parents at 32 years old for any abuse or any lack of love. if he were underage and there was abuse, of course, there's remedial measures, measures where -- neil: what's he claiming on part of the abuse? going out on his own? >> claiming he's homeless and can't work because he was abused and because of the abuse, he's dysfunctional and can't get a job saying step dad, sell a piece of rayless -- real estate so we can buy dominoes franchises so i can work. get a regular job or put yourself through -- if he has psychological problems, we're
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not demeaning them, but he needs to get help for them, not sue his parents for what really doesn't make much sense. neil: by the way, it was well and good with the arrangement, the alleged abuse notwittanding, until they said the gig's up, but having said that, do you think he does have a bit of a case? explain? >> parents provide food, clothing, housing for the children. neil: doesn't that stop at 18? >> well, ande's actually alleging these abuses and this neglect was far reaching and has lasted throughout his life so from the time that he was a child up through the current day, now he's 32, and maybe at this point at 32 #, that could be a little bit far flung, but it's if a parent doesn't meet bayic needs, i think there's
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grounds for recovery, and he says that he has -- neil: you're kidding me, these are those who hook up with any my daughters. >> i hope not. neil: and live in your place. what do you do -- you're the judge, hearing this case, it's gone to that point, what kind of stuff are you looking to see? >> as a judge in this case, i think a brooklyn supreme court judge, and i practice in brooklyn, i know a lot of the judges. i think, honestly, they take -- they'll be sad for him, but they'll ask him to go through a psychological evaluation, and i think they try to push him towards getting some sort of help with his problems. neil: thatmight confirm well enough, and that might reenforce the argument that he might have a case because the parents -- >> let me address that then. >> i think so. >> if they made the case, their only obligated until he's 18. the statute of limitations op personal injury action in new york state is maximum three
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years, contract action six years. he doesn't meet the statute of limitations no matter what. from 32 years ol, if they were obligated, not saying they were, but until 18, he has a very large difference in time. he would have -- the statute's past. this clause -- it's past for m. it's past for him. neil: i go back, lord rest my parents, wonderful parents, but my father, i had all a's on my card, but one b. he focused on the b. everybodcan say whatever ails them is as a result of something done to them by a horrible mother and father who -- who somehow put them in this bind. it is stupid. >> but -- but there are very many instances where a child suffers, abuse, neglected -- neil: but then why at 32?
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at 32, obviously, he has enough wherewithall to say, hey, the gravy train is ending. >> the facts of this particular case may not be as great as some other particular facts, maybe for somebody who is 18 years old, but there is a legal basis for some action or inaction that parents may have done to a child. neil: kids, if you are watching at home, don't think about it. all right. now either one of my favorite places is facing a hit. the olive garden warning tax the olive garden warning tax hikes is the hit all stations come over to mission a for a final go. this is for real this time. step seven point two one two. rify and lock. command is locked. five seconds. three, two, one.
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>> that is a double whammy in the gas prices going up on consumer spending reynaud neil: wayne rogers i know
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with full medicare holiday relief, the argument against it with its the policy is keeps this shored up and find and cozy. she was against other tax cuts but now all the satin with the tax breaks even after two years is hard to just back. with more to come. >> the of the side of the equation, they've got to cut spending. neil: they are not. they are not. >> and people are on washington mall with guns in their hands i am just waving>> o a red flag. lookout. m,
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neil: here is my fear. is no one should be surprised when the brake is take it away they don't spend as much but they have reverberations. >> something.is a tax increase, they forget the old level that is damaging.i neil: we should be like this a 32 year-old and assume. ho [laughter] >> it shows for the first hundred grand to the point*ke to the problems with social securityne nd awkward. we were on the same team on that puppy. >> this one instantaneous, up like the stimulus of the debate and the car thing, this or that -- po but the fact that companies

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