tv Cavuto FOX Business March 2, 2014 5:00am-6:01am EST
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♪ thank you for beinghere. neil: welcome. i'm neil. that is not what got my attention. it was what really a of said after that. noof the preside but why we keep choosing the same kind of guy for president. think about it. senators, governs, politicians by prevention to the exclusion of others. why not venture outside that political dish. go outside the apitol t look at folks who are pretty good, you know, capitol. how about billnaire and former talk show host.
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i like the latter. i think really a of, more th likes the idea. he has a point. he said we should widen the job search for who sits in the white house to folks who, well, could buy the white hous folks like bill gates, maybe even oprah. why not to his point at least think of peple outside the obvious? not as if we could do worse. take look around. we already are. tonight going long with the maverick tempora shored and patience is running thin. he wants o shake up the nation once again. it's a pleasure to have you. thank you for coming. >> thank you. neil: i love the idea. i think it's brilliant. i don't know why it should be such a surprising idea. >> i don't know why either. because so many people are turned off the two parties. half the people don't bother going to the presidential election. there's a lot of cynicism. it leaves the washington bubble
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unpretushed. weeed to injection new idea, new background, new agenda. and let's face it in, the next couple of years it's going take people of a lot f money. megabillionaires or billionaires to get on the ballot to basically though the new idea based on the experience before the american people to give them more voices annoys voices. we have the whole list of the 120, i proposed on the website deer.com. you threw ted gas in there and steve -- steve case and go on to tke a look at the others. your argument by and large, if they know something about succeeding and money then maybe they're just the folks to dea with washington and money. >> yeah. the three criteria do these multibillionaires have enlightened background, have they given money tocharity, or
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groups like doctors without borders. have they taken a stand on a controversial issue. it doesn't mean iagree with them or disagree. the main thing to use the great first amendment of free speech to blow open the tight two-parterre any is unworthy of the american people. neil: when y ran for president. a lot of people said we don't think we should be running for president. why shouldn't he run for president? he's smart guy. you might not agree with the politics. why excluding it. he's not a senator or congressman. there's a lot. when you talk about the billionaires and those who have a lot maybe taken a stab at politics or the white house. i'm reminng what you said about romney when he was running for president. you might remember this. >> he should be called myt roulette romney. >> that's another good one.
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>> so far to the right of reagan. so for a to the right of nixon. and so are the republicans in congress. we're dealing with a rogue republican party. neil: your criticism of romney wasn't that what he ws. too rich on the right. you're not you say want ony left-leaning billionaire. >> i want a opetitive democrat like a competitive economy. that's what we want. if we're serious about it. we'll y the country ha a lot of problem it is doesn't deserve. a lot of solutions on the shelf that doesn't apply in one area after another. wee at gridlock. >> indian what you're saying. but u're politically choosing who like. we show the coke brothers but you said earlier you were opening expanding the petri dish but only the billionaires you like. >> idisagree with a lot of bill
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gates. he's on the list. >> miller. i want to say selection. there are plenty others. the main thing is to break up the close-door in washington. you have everythg scripted like a coronation for hillary clinton. no competition. it's crazy. >> what do you think of hillary clinton would you back or fed up with the two-party system. we don't need another eight years with the clintons. we need fresh voices, focused on results. >> including someone open to raising can taxes. cutting taes. what would ralph want to see? >> all opinions in the arena. let them compete. nothing off the table. i put 18 areas on people'sminds that were taken off the table i 2008. d i still have them on the website.
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these are issue on people's minds. they we taken off thetable -- >> you're de right about that. both parties drop th ball on the big issue. let me ask you about what i hear from business guys on left and e right about why tey don't try politics. they said it is not worth the media scrutiny or tearingdown -- you experience that for yourself running for president. in the public spotlight. you are doing what you do. i can understand why the hell with it. >> most of them will. michael could buy the white house. it's smaller than his house. >> that's tre. they don't have to dial or dollars. they don't to be ad hoc to
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commercial interest. they run for the conscience. and mo of them are pretty narcissistic. and don't care. all you need is a few enlightened ones. i call it -- we always take from the same pool. the same people. and expect different results. really a of. a pleasure. be well this weekend. >> thank you. when did it know it? forget about the politicians suddenly now demanding answers. i want you to meet dad whose daughter is dead and wants to daughter is dead and wants to ask [ female announcer ] you get sick, you can't breathe thugh your nose...
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to saving for college. our commitment to current and former military members and their families is without equal. ♪ see what's new at projectluna.com serious ignition switch problems in some cars in the better part of the decade and said nothing for the did nothing. this much is not. 13 people are dead and more than a million vehicles have been recalled thus far as a result of a malfunction that effective shut down vehic safety systems including air bags. to man who knows too well.
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ken. his daughter, brooke, was killed in a crash linked to the ignition switch defect back in 2010. he and his lawyer lance cooper are suing gm nd hope to get answers now. both gentlemen join me from atlanta. my condolence, ken, to your loss. i cannot imagine as it goes against he grind of life. our children are supposed to bury us. not the other way around. but was this defect the reason your daughte died? undotedly. it was found even before the 2005 model that my daughter boht. for some reason they decided not to disclose the matter, and she bought a -- a new model in 2005, and in 2010
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the ignition cutoff on her. she had an accident, which killed her. neil: i don't want to reliveethe horrible history. if you'llic dulling me. the ignition cuts off. it means the engine effectively cuts off. it means also the air bag cannot be released because the safety system goes down. it went she went head on in to someone and that's what happened; right? >> unfortunately, went acoss two lane of traffic, t-boned by another car, she lost braking, all steeringand went down to a ditch full of water after that. i understand from the doctor at the hospital that her neck was bren in the side crash.
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in the 13 people gm disclosed she wasn't included because it was no a head-on collision. that's what i was going to raise with your attorney. they are distinguished btween those involved and the head-on crash and those not. as in en's daughters. but '02 saying that if you include off such events the are i count of those killed goes up presip usely >> absolutey. >> explain, lance, what your track will be. >> well, gm is actually settled the claim. we continue to pursue our investigation to make sure that nitsa pursue their investigation to get what gm knew and when. ifhey didn't rely it and tha was the initial argument at the time that even government didn't know because the company sharing
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this. where does it put the investigation. they had a duty to disclose it within five days. they should have disclosed it in 2005 when the chiefprogramming engineer who had a similar incident -- they knew about the defect. they determined the ignition switch was defective in for of 2005. they never should have put the car on the road and should have informed th of the problem and fixed it. we wouldn't be here today. as ken said there ar likely more nmerous fatalities. they have been had incuded brooke's accent. >> i talked to one analyst yesterday who said it is easy to make it look obvious after the fact there are reports or sporadic the study show problem in the thiscase the ignition situatn and others.
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do you believe they knew that? >> no, i don't believe it. i believe they already ad indications if there were problems with the switch before that. and didn't indicate that. we'll watch where it goes. lance, as well. thank you, both, for coming. thank you. >> thank you, neil. >> all right. to former transportation sector how a company could literally keep it under the hood for so long. secretary, it isn't automatic lividded to government; right? the company coul keep this to itself or is there procedure? what is the procedure? %-ways that nitsa the safetyo organization at d.o.t. that looks in to these matters with
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the safety organization when i was there where we called toyota and made sure their cars wre safe. we did it with gm when it came to the volt and the batteries were catching fire. we required them to fix it. so pple can complain to nits they can file a complaint online. or the car company has to disclose it. those are the only two ways. neil: do we know, secretary, whether gm had relayed it or people were working through to get the wor back to gm to get the word back. was it -- >> well, everything i read didn't look like they knew about it. which means they didn't disclose it. nobody complained about it. sometimes theyread about them and opens an investigation. neil: how does it start, secretary. let say there are a series of incidents or accidents short of the people involved or their loved ones getting in touch of
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them or their lawyer. that's about the only way they're going find out if the company isn't saying anything; right? >> that's right. somebody has to file a complaint. somebody has to go online. somebody has to called line and say my car is not working righ my ignition is not working properly. how does the toyota stuff get to you? >> it really came as a result of the accident in san diego where ree people were killed. and that's when we opened the investigation. neil: and that we had tape and that made it more powerful. >> that's right. we did a second investigation where they didn't disclose information. we fined them again. it came through a complaint that was filed by individual citizens. >> do you think it's a cynical question, forgive me. given what gm was dealing with some years back with the buyout and the rescue, that maybe if we
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would have gotten the rescue. >> i think when i look back on t four and a half years i was secretary. we took these things very seriously. people criticized us for, you know, trying to take on tow you that or trying to, you know, impinge toyota's reputation. but -- >> going to toyota and maybe going soft. i know, the vote. i remember that very well. maybe there was a sort of standoffish deal with gm because there was a heap of problems already. >> not at all. we went after chrysler when they had the gas tank on the jeep improperly u installed with went after gm when the volt's batteries were catching fire.
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[inaudible conversations] let me ask your own thoughts how it can take a ten years to fess up. >> unprofessionalism. something is not right. very deep, very deep. find out what happened. and then make people pay monetaly and otherwise. follow the law. follow the information. this will be investigated for thoroughly. >> the woman who run gm ran the division that oversaw this car and series of cas. if there is a link she bought something. should she go? >> we'll that leave up see what the investigation says and look there's a board of directors that runs gm. one priority for all car
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keep it to a minimum. some ge a little too personal. the camera adds 50 pounds. [laughter] meanwhile, new chair janet yellen a breath of fresh air. >> federal reserve simply doesn't have authority to supervisor or regulate bitcoin. neilthat's rigt. but unusual will someone in washington saying not our job that the fed doesn't have the authority which is making you a lot of you have the authority to step in and regulate everything else. 90% of what they regulate. another from ben who write it was a hint, hint to obamato sign an executive order to give them the authority to regulate bitcoin. we don't know for sure. but we know a lot of you are green. we call it --
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[audible] there's a limit to what i can do. look what thefed does. they are supposed to regulate banks and regulatethe amount of money and circulation. they did a lousy job with the banks in 2008. in term of regulating the amount of -- it's great for wall street. artificially low interest rates. main streeters havn't done so well particularly in the job situation and folks like me saving their money aren't willing to gamble as much. you look very god. >> 88 years old. >> 84. 84. >> marvelous. >> you know what i'm saying. what they do regulate.
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they seem to regulate poorly. why give bitcoin? >> right. you don't want o add to the responsibility. more government rules gone wrong. the federal hoding calling the lunch program for schools disassous. find out a 150 schools are saying kids are going hungry because the small portions. that's one way to fight obesity. make them not eat so they starve. it's geting you a lot of you mad. from roland who writes my children can't stnd the cafeteria food. the way it tastes anymore. we pack our own launches now. another from adam who writes maybe the lids could tax kids for not buying something they don't want. finally, this from beth 73. this is what happened in a tweet that's what they do. they just put a code. anyway for one the lunches are more expensive. two the food is gross. longo longer have to deal with it.
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hash tash thankful. >> they were meant to be controlled by the local mmunities. control by the mothers and fathers. when the feds came in saying first the tachers got unionized then feds came in with department of education. it sounds great. what it means is the rules start coming from washington not the local community. concerning school aids. i used to ab teacher. i hated deal with the school boards. they were slave of the federal government international airported to get the money coming from the fed. they had to do with the feds told them. even if it didn't work. whether involved in teaching aidsr now the -- i don't want to -- i don't know but something is happening. they are -- >> look. okay indian obesity. i don't want them saying you're against it. i understand it's a problem. being too thin is also a problem. >> tell me about it. [laughte >> if yoo don't like what you're
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mandated to eat what you have to eat according to the federal rules. >> because ty're not eating it. [inaudible conversations] some schools have actually mandated they bring in chips so they get a -- [inaudible] >> that's my place. >> it's ridiculous. >> ring ding junior high. >> local communities control the situation better than the feds. >> well, said, my friend. a thin, fit, 88-year-old david. >> 88. [laughter] forget whether cutting so -- preworld war ii level is good for the next. what if i told you we're sitting up for a far more ominous one. the next war. a cyber war. a war fo which we're outmanned outspent, and get a load of this. out of time. [ male announcer ] did you know , you're almost twice as likely to lose your supporting teeth?
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>> attacks growing. attacks agnst wall street and around theorld hit disruptive attacks. @e should protect the networks than we have them protected today. we have to be prepared for that as a nation. neil: ary stuff. that is the head of.s. cyber command saying it is not if an attack is coming it is when and when it comes we won't be ready. this during the time our defense budget is being cut to eworld war ii levels. at least the top commitment. homeland security expert thinks the terrorism is no longer our biggest immediate threat. that cyber warfare is. they are joined at the same dangerous hip? >> yes, they are. connection between the cyberattack and fiscal attack. you shut out the lights and bring the attack to the streets of america. neil: but what could, help me here. what is csidered cyber? what is cyber area?
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>> anything that that uses computerize system. refer to scata, supervisory control and data access. we control all the big things from power plants to dams, spillways, through the use of a computer. we send out a rio signal and tell them what to do. the concern of course you get into these operating systems and you manipulate them in a way thaw either mask what's going on, so in other words, a take fills up supposed to let out bad material before it get as certain level. you have a gauge the gauge gets taken off-line. neil: don't we, starting to -- you always talk about malware type of devices some wear. don't we have the equivalent of that to ward off this. >> believe it or not the, what we say, benjamin netanyahu, the former israeli prime minister, and davos, switzerland, at economic conference called
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cybersecurity the arms race without end. that is because cybersecurity is not a destination. it is a journey. it is evolution. neil: what do the bad guys want to do, michael? >> what they have been doing, they steal, exfiltration of data. they take money. they take, intellectual capal. not only from terrorists this is nation states. ese are criminals. so they're stealing things. they're implanting capabilities so they come back in, what they call back doors, trojan hses. things lie in wait until a computerized system until they receive an instruction, now move forward, execute this order. they're also taking informati as you type. something known as key logging. you put a malware program on the system downloads keystrokes, information you're putting out, e-mails. the things that you send to differenteople. they're snooping, they're stealing and potentially they're manipulating. and it is that last piece that
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is always the intersection between cybersecurity and physical security. neil: i always worries what happened i the san jose, utility. shutting down our grid, is that the ultimate form of cyber terror? >> i think there is a lot of ways, if we shut down wall street, and if we took out the financial markets -- neil: even disruptg for a few days, couple thousand points. >> big thing also, how much of our economy is predicated upon online transactions? neil: that's right. >> target. apple revealed there was vulnerability in their operating systems. neil: you think these are setting up worse things? >> i think they are setting up and erode people's confidence how they work in the cyber economy. that could have major impacts for the united states. neil: impacts we're not ready for? >> no. working with a guy from the chief counsel of homeland security committee in the house, we talk about how we need a safe harbor for information-sharing how we're being attacked in addition to. who we could never get a bill donen the u.s. congres
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they could never move it forward. that is lack of leadership. lack of vision. neil: or lack of knowledge. >> or lack of knowledge. neil: michael, thank you very, very much. >> my pleasure. neil: meantime have you seen stocks lately? well the s&p hitting all-time highs. so why are shoppers hidin away their wallets? stks are running up. consumers are running scared. that can't go on. here's a word you should keep in mind "unbiased".
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neil: well for some of you it is going to be a great weekend after all thanks to us. earlier this week judge napolitano was on this very show saying that new york city ban on bottomless brunches and unlimited drink deals is against the law. and now, and now, officials are saying boozing brunches are exempt, exempt from the ban. so, pop the champagne, have a mimosa. not on us, for us. give you address and details.
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you'reme wrica. anyway, brut winter, even more brutal sales. a new report showing retail sales posted their first profit drop as a group since the recession. model sporting goods ceo mitch mode dell is getting frozen out because it is frozen where a lot of his stores are. mitch, in the northeast, another storm that is supposedly goin to hit. people all they have to do is hear about that and they don't go out, right? >> absolutely. all we need is another blizzard on sunday, monday. you know what? neil: the mayor will dig us all out. what happened to th snowplows? did hide them. >> i think he is hidinghem somewhere. neil: but it does impact you? >> no question. every retailer is sold out of boots and outerwear. the good news is sold out the winter goods. neil: what about sweatshirts. >> the goo news we're out of sweats but everyone sitting on
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spring goods when it is 10 degrees. neil: you were telling me when weather warmed up a little bit and they were out there. >> last weekend in the 50s, it was the first sign of life probably in about 30 days. people were shoppg, all areas of the store. neil: do you think it's a all weather, mitch? reason why i ask, there is disconnect going on, i'm tying together housing, all these bank laying off people in their mortgage businesses. housing is slowing a little bit. surge in home prices is slowing a little bit. not a lot. not crisis levels. i'm connecting all of those dots and sayings well, maybe we're in for a little hit? >> until the weather turns warm, hopefully in the next two weeks you will see, when railers do well, everyone does well. >> is that so? >> yeah. usuay like one retailer does well, everyone does poorly. when it comes to businesses really contingent on with, people buy for need. i don't think it is just the weather situation. i don't know if it is oil
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prices, i don't know if it is food prices. i don't know if it is the sentiment of the people that, they feel like their job might be at stake, what is going on in washington. possibly raising taxes in the city. neil: health care. >> health care. it is like, there es an uncertainty amon consumers that @e'll know sooner than later if it is that or if it is weather. neil: sells sports paraphernalia, when the baseball season cops, even when snowing outside, when i hear that spring training is going on and first game of the baseball season it could be five feet of snow out there, but i'm already convinced spring is here. >> no question about it. when the yankees signed tanaka, it was unbelievable. when derek jeter announced retirement they came woodwork. neil: is that? derek jeter stuff in demand because it is final year? >> unbelievable. last year we didn't have a good
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team in new york. this year on paper the team looks great but the fact they want to be part of you know, history and we saw what happened -- neil: they will have another sasterous year. >> absolutely. i know you're aosto fan. neil: no, i'm not. boston on paper looked good and didn't look good. every time they say on paper someone looks great you know. >> listen, like any other team, if the tm stays healthy they have a good chance of battling it out. it will be definitely exciting. neil: this is the limit of my sports discussion because you know so far much more. i know the standings. that is it. >> y'r not bringing up jeremy lynn. neil: i won't go there youre you were stuck with a lot of that. >> ion't even want to say. neil: mitch, knows the business very well. have you ever sfed the net, stumbled upon, i don't know, stuff like this? oh, i don't know, maybe this? let's say this? yeah, ladi. turns out you're the not only ones looking.
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neil: noyou may want to throw away your webcam because, news that british spies intercepted llions of weam images from yahoo! users. now many of them, sex alley explicit. that is alarming. yahoo!ays they didn't really know anything about this or that it was going on. keith fitz-gerald, gary b. smith, says if tech companies like yahoo! can't protect privacy of their users we got big ol' problems. gary b., what do you think of this? >> there is difference, neil, between investing company and using company. i think you said it right up front i would throw away my webcam.
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but on other hand, people are very stubborn in what they use, applications they use ad things like that. what will happen people stop using webcam, but if they're big yahoo! users they still use yahoo! i would be scared away some portions of the applicati but not so much the stock. neil: what worries, keith to ry's point, we get used to, you don't have a webcam or built into monitor you don't think about it. i'm wondering if we get upset about this and forget about this? >> actually i think it is other way around, neil. i think we forget about it and upset we forgot about it an proof is right in our face of the time to really discuss all this 40 years ago when they first developedhis technology. the genie is so far out bottle from usage standpoint it is not even funny. going forwarfrom an investment standpoint the real meat on the bone is edges. it is around secury companies. around who can mipulate the data it will not be big guys like yahoo! because they have lost contl of it. >> even if they lost control of
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it, there are very few guys do what they do, to the heft they do. gary b., might get a black eye or genuine surprise or feigning rprise but i don't see the hit being that severe that long, do you? >> totally agree. the best example is most recent one in target. people were outraged. people were going to stop shopping there. meanwhile, target i think i just looked is up 15% since the, since the end of january. so if you had bought when, you know, there is all the red flags and going out of business, they will lose all this you would have made a pretty good penny. neil: do you think, keith, you went back, nicelyut, forget the rage, whether you did forget we look at all of these high-tech companies as having the potential to make us very vulnerable but we deal, we just deal with it because we need them, what do you make of that? >> i think that's a very prescient statement, neil. we have tended to lrn to live
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th our worst nightmares because they become something much softer. they become dreams and hopes and aspirations. so at first we're terrified. we don't know what to make. human beings are wired against and resistant to change. sooner or later when you come out of the cave you figure the say per tooth tiger isn't lurking and go get your dinner. neil: ery night at my house. gary b., it doesn't make you question this entire group or for that matter technology stocks, right? some people say until the dust settles i avoid all of these guys. what do you say to th >> well, you know for those ludites i suppose that will never like technology stocks like warren buffett but for the rest of us who can't avoid using google and twitter and look,f i knew tomorrow there was some huge bug in google, i would still, well, i still got to check the news. i still got to read the tweets. i still got to use normal applications. you can pick and choose between yahoo! and google and bing and
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things like that. kind of like keith said, if you have your go-to thing you will be hungered down in the cave and think there is no sabre tooth tiger. neil: i strength it and the tiger analogy. finally time. you've all been waiting and all want to know -- >> what is the deal? (vo) you are a business pro. seeker of the sublime. you can separate runway diculousness... from fashionhat flies off the shelve and you...rent from national. because only nationalets you choose any car in the aisle... and go. and only national isanked highest in car rental customer satisfaction by j.d. power. (natalie) ooooh, i like your style. (vo) so do we, business pro. so do we. go national. go like pro. we are thinkers. the job jugglers. the up all-nhts. and the ones who turn ideas into action.
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- ♪ there's a me no one knows - ♪ waiting to be set free... - so what's the empty suitcase for? the grand prize trophy. ♪ i was born to be somebody... ♪ neil: this is quickly becoming the most popular segment of the show perhaps any show and what do we call it guys? >> what's the deal, neil? neil: you can ask me anything you want, anything at all, email, tweet, text or talk. >> neil, what is your advice for the next year? neil: welly advice for the ne year is patience. next question? >> i think that you know, that amerans should be entitled to, you know, decent health care. you know, at a decent cost. i n't think obama is going around about doing it the right way. neil: that's fine.
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you can make a statement. doesn't have to be in the form of a question. actually agree withou on both counts. don't say i didn't didn't warn you the whole health care thing would be going down for the count. tweets, everyone is getting in on the deal. notorious writes, i think you need to pull that stick out of your ass, neil. thank goodness i always won wondered why my back was killing me. maybe maria will take or neil's job. isn't neil getting old, now? kevin, are you getting a little old to write these kind of tweets right now. that is a good hashtag. they wouldn't prove those wide angle camera shots on you. thank you, uncle morphine. take some morphine and how about we be done with you! cavuto said jpmorgan layoffs are because of government regulation. he left out the company made 24 billion in revenue. whatever insanity or hashtag you
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self, i did not, not, say the layoffs from jpmorgan were because of government regulation. i said because of all the these government fines we've been seeing. so hashtag imbecile. drum guy, you just showed, clip of yourself from 1987, hashtag, bad hair day. every day since my friend. every day since of the hashtag, thanks for reminding me ruining my day. bill in washington, had it with nasty emails i've been getting. i like it fine. i really enjoy your show and you. put the whiners around crybabies do it somewhere else. like msnbc where they would probably be more at home. rita from conneicut, neil, you're o standing in your field because you connect with your viewers. you come across as sincere and no one in your business can beat that your guests seem to genuinely like you and i like your widow's peak. what widow's peak? thankthank you for saying i'm sincere. that has taken me years to perfect. meanwhile, california, who
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chooses your suit and ties for your shows? you're the best-dressed on fox. for the record i agree with you, not varney. well i will let stuart know that. he needs to be hum bed now and then. my outfits all the credit goes to the folks here at fox who know fashion, not anchors like me and certainly varney who do not. meanwhile roger at gmail addressing even more personal questions i get. boxers or briefs? and answer is? depends. that's nice. john, via yahoo! i applaud calling out your detractors that criticize your voice. kudos for not making excuses and hiding health iues. you're hardest working guy on tv. your the best sense of humor. please interrupt liars, spinners ansid i don't think so. they waste your time and answer. why can't answer the question. why indeed. you bter talk to phillies in
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las vegas. sheave had it. cavuto, control yourself and shut up! you're so busy trying to prove you're smart and you're not. you get dumber every second you interrupt your otherwise more stimulating guests. this viewer will get stimulated elsewhere. phyllis, exactly what do you mean by stimulated elsewhere? it's a family show, young lady. christie in baton rouge. fox anchors like to talk you remind me of my butcher. like him you also give me the beef. touche, chrissie, touche. al leaks, what is the deal with your hairpce. don't you make sure it is straight before you go on air. it was all out of place last night. all right. alex for the 1,000, one millionth time this is not a hairpiece but on such matters yvonne, aol, do you dye your hair? certainly looks like you do. no, yvonne, i do not. but i dye my hairpiece linda in miami, neil, are you
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into threesomes? linda, i have discussed three stocks on thiss shoo many times. sometimes as many as 10. on the same night. where are you people coming from? cal, in washington, d.c. cavuto you're not all ilian, no? you're on to me. half irish, cal. bill in lexington, kentucky, if i already had a lot of mom why the hell should i watch you? to make a lot of more money, bill. sometimes conventional wisdom is right, but more often than that, tip, tip. pete in san jose, nil why do you talk to some ex-convictions. kozlowski, bernie kerik. getting next time they throw your fat criminal ass in jail? yes. yes, for all those lies i'm saying onhe air and all that stuff you mentioned, exactly it, pete. i'm bracing forgoing to jail. people like you somehow get
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through your screeners. okay. keep emails and tweets coming. thank you very, very much. for watching again, what is the name of the segment, guy >> what's the deal, power to prosper. ♪ don: that's really unbelievable. connell: what? don: you know, the obesity rte for young children in this country plummeted 43% in the last decade. you know, we're not even number one in fat kids anymore. [laughter] connell: yeah. don: i mean, the country used to be number one in everythin. now it's almost nothing. this is unbelieve belieble.
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