tv Cavuto FOX Business March 24, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm EDT
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♪ neil: here is why putin smirks. he knows he has is over a barrel, quite literally. that is why the man with the oil can be so slippery. the world needs what he has which is why fox of the awful stuff he does. i ameil welcome but some energy alternatives, they might be looking at more punishing putting alternatives, but they are not, are they? and we are not, come to think of it, are we? the guy we hate is the guy whos energy we need, and even though we don't need it nearly as much as the europeans because
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vladimir putin controls so much sway over the market, we don't have the energy to fight him too much because we realize it will only end up hurting us much more. that is why these sanctions are so tame even russian oligarchs are saying so what. when you can't stand on your own two energy feet, it is it any wonder we keep enduring getting kicked in the butt? that is what vladimir putin is doing. afraid to take them on because he knows he has the stuff that keeps their lights on and he knows as well we in the u.s. aren't much better. still on the keystone pipeline that could make us more energy self-sufficient and still sitting on natural gas supplies that could make up for any gas supplies put in cuts off to europe. but we are really not having that oil, are we? largely sitting on the natural gas, aren't we? he knows it, he sees it, and vladimir putin is laughing at us
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because of it. that is why they are fearing it is still possible because it is so easy. it is slippery slope being so energy dependent, isn't it? it makes slippery leaders even more slippery. doesn't the guide had a keystone pipeline see it for himself? transcanada ceo says energy independence is staring us in the face but so far we have been turning a blind eye. if the u.s. doesn't want that energy, a lot of other folks do. he joins us exclusively. think you for joining us. >> thank you. neil: are you ever amazed? we got access to this gold underground. >> i have said repeatedly one of the primary reasons for a keystone pipeline was to be able to have a secure source from the world's second-largest supply
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source the world's largest refining market in the gulf coast. that continues to be the major driver behind the project as production continues to grow in north america. we want to continue to feed the market. neil: the idea would we would straighten out all the governmental concerns. it has been years and it could be years more. what do you think? >> we got through the first issues which were associated with safety. whole host of reasons we needed to address those issues in a much more aggressive way. now 59 conditions on the pipeline that will make it the safest pipeline ever built. issues in nebraska now completed with the route we have now in nebraska and so the last item on the table was the g hg issue.
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report indicates the pipeline won't have any impact on emissions. the criteria laid out by the president the pipeline would only be beamed to make games to be in the public's interest if it didn't significantly increase emissions both in north america. neil: compromise our market. looking at the meditative hassles you have had to encounter, do you regret getting involved in this? >> no. i am a fundamental believer in the market. frustrated at five and half years of process, but what we have seen his production grow in north america by two, two and half million barrels per day. the oil has to find its way to market, fin finance white the mt now in other roads of transportation. the need for it is greater than it was we started this process. as i have said, the marketplace
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will dictate a pipeline gets built and the logical day it gets built to refining locations, that is what the british pipeline does. neil: your customers would be happy to take it. how do you stand on that? >> as canadians, we realize have a single outlet for production is a risky proposition and so subsequent to the delays in this project you have seen canada move in the direction of finding alternatives to alternative markets. we have the energy project moving a million barrels per day from alberta to the eastern refineries of canada and as well export points both in quebec and st. john. a couple of proposals to move crude off the west coast of china to access asian market. we see global demand increasing, canada having a large supply
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rest of the globe had a strong desire to attach at least proportion of the spply contracts for canadian supply. neil: i know you don't weigh in on international political matters, but one of the understandings we have of vladimir putin tough stance on these issues and especially dealing with the europeans and us in the face of sanctions is there is only so far we will push it. because europeans in particular need energy and they are not going to cut off their nose to spite their face. and for that matter, neither will we. what do you make of that? >> the genesis of this project was back in 2007 we saw the naturalization of oil production in venezuela, a number of american multinationals basically having their facility appropriated and haven' having k elsewhere for sources of supply for the gulf coast refineries.
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that is when they came to canada. they invested heavily in canada to connect those supplies for the energy securities, extremely important geopolitical matter and certainly keystone was a cornerstone of trying to build that in north america and continues to be. neil: i talked too many canadians and they say what is the deal with you in the united states? this can benefit you, really put a stake in this relationship here. and it hurt our ties. has it? >> the question looms, canada and the u.s. the greatest trading relationships in the world if not the greatest trading relationship in the world, it is a large part of that in the 30 years i have spent in this business that has not been a border in place moving gas and oil back and forth.
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the question obviously as it comes to our mind is does this change that perspective, no longer a supplier of energy to the united states. neil: this idea this administration, this procedure we're getting energy would be all energy, if you want oil, get oil come if you want natural gas, gets natural gas, wind, solar. that sounded very good because the more we tap any of these area initiatives, the less we are reliant on vladimir putin of the world. it seemed like that wasn't what it claimed to be. this was alternatives to your kind of stuff, is that right? >> we understand that transition less carbon initiative. we spent about $5 billion in the last three or four years on a
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mission is energy. we are big windfarm developer. we understand all of that, but this isn't a question of alternative energy versus fossil fuels. fossil fuels are needed for liquid hydrocarbons if a transportation fuels primarily alternative energy doesn't supply that need. this isn't a trade-off between alternative energies. we need all these energy sources, develop the technologies, get down the cost making it energy dependent. this is just a question not of alternative energy versus oil, the question of where he wants to get the energy from? consuming more than it produces on its own and will for decades to come. my question is where do you want to get it from. we should move down that path as quickly as we can. reddy wants to get it from and how do you want to get it there?
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a pipeline from canada makes the most sense. neil: it defeats some of these other issues. thank you very much. >> thank you very much. neil: when we come back, john sena has just met his match. we're launching the social media page to take the champ on. here to admit cavuto is about to crush him because he has a big announcement the same day we have a big announcement. he looks pretty scared to me. tell us if you think i could take him. later in the show we will find out because he just said we will go ahead and try. trying to see peace of mind is important when you're running a business. century link provides reliable it services like multi-layered security solution to keep your information safe & secure. century link. your link with what's next.
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but she's still gonna give me a heart attack. innovations that work for you. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. ido more with less with buss energy.hp is help. soon, the world's most intelligent servers, designed by hp, will give ups over twice the performance, using forty percent less energy. multiply that across over a thousand locations,
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and they'll provide the same benefit to the environment as over 60,000 trees. that's a trend we can all get behind. neil: everyone is focusing on this 7 million number. the goal the administration set for sign-ups the end of this month. how about the 6 million that have lost their plan outright or millions more who gostuck with more expen we went on the street to see what you guys are saying about the health care law today. >> i think it gets too expensive for people.
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>> there's no incentive. the penalty is low and they figure they don't need the insurance. speedily outreach certainly has to change. >> i have no health insurance because the health connector, obamacare, is so messed up. when it comes to obama's health care, that needs to be fixed. neil: all right, health expert and founder. what do you make of this? >> the deadline is about a week. predicated on young people signing up for the law, but when they designed this a lot of thought they could create a younger generation in a mob totality similar to how they got young people to vote for obama in 2008 and 2012. they promised young people stuff in 2008 and 2012 and said you can spend other people's money to prove it to yourself, but obamacare is predicated on young
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people spending their own money to sign-up. young people are making an informed consumer decision. i can't afford this. not all of them, but how many of them are paying for it? how many are paying for the plans? i don't see the millennial surge needed to balance out these plans axelrod and obama has said in the past couple of months. neil: whether they are lucky polici celled or c at the very leaor does it fractif the overall us a >>s righon ells us se gs. firs all, estimate suggests on the litover a quaf for insue on t exchsp many of had insur. was no crmingith the lan
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ingmalchanges in thei p neil: the bottom line is the appended entire sysr th for not. even that 10% are not too keen. >> the young people i talk to a lot of them say i am being forced to pay for something i will not benefit from. young people might visit a doctor once or twice. if i get sick i will go to the pharmacy. they don't need these health policies. neil: there is some of the argument young people think they are indestructible and should have coverage. >> that progression is to be done on individual type basis. when you try to conduct millions of people to pay for something they don't need and they don't have jobs and already in debt or student loans, something is not
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adding up. will they pay and overinflated health care policy? this is something that we will see how the numbers fall. neil: the trend is their friend, things are getting better. the rollouts are coming along. you hav had a mainstream media saying they are coming along and the worst is behind us, what do you say? >> they have a long ways to go before it is even break even. they signed up 5 million people. only a quarter of those are newly insured folks. on a quarter of those have actually paid the premium. we're getting down to less than a million people have signed up, and the other hand 500,000 people have lost their plan and have not been able to find insurance. 500 to a million, that is not a lot.
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neil: i wonder if we divided that and split the cost. thank you both very much. something about john sena last visit stood out to us. take a look. >> i truly. maybe i can come. i will take the cup of coffee and try to eat as many cinnabon as i can in an hour. neil: this is my gravy train, stay off it. neil: it is getting very, very close. find out why we're teaming up in directly and how it impacts you and the entire internet as we know it. [ intercom ] drivers, to your marks.
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neil: hip-hop? charles payne says more like hip slop. launching a hip-hop caucus to get the young community involved with climate change. prove their out of touch of what is going on in the black community, in fact all communities. charles: it is really dangerous and stupid. we talk a lot about people not voting in their own interest. these compass meant to say we will rally young black people and help them push the climate change agenda, there are a lot of things we would do first. how about the family agenda. let's get our act together on the family side. and the education agenda and encouraging capitalism and summer further down on the list, climate change. that is where the list should look right now. don't use these kids as ponds in a left-wing agenda and left-wing ideology. climate change, and you read what they are saying, instances
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of asthma among black people and black kids. there are because a lot of them live in crowded neighborhoods with more wrapped and roaches. nothing to do with climate change, everything to do with let's figure out a way to enhance ourselves, to make ourselves better to get out of this squalor instead of fighting against global climate change. neil: do you think they share notes? the concerted effort, i think, to deflect on so of these other issues and make it seem like these are the issues that really matter because when you pull people, young people in particular talk about this as a worry. maybe they are tapping that. neil: it is easier to talk about this as a worry when you don't have a mortgage. when you are not trying to get college for your own kids. maybe something a young people might be able to think about when they go out in the world on
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their own. the fact i have not had a job in six months and cannot feed my kids. i think you are right the first time with respect to deflate in. president obama and the black bk caucus have let you down. the president talks all the time i am nothe president of black america. you fix the weakest link in the chain. this is one of the weakest links a chain. no caps recalls her name was some way begrudge us you for paying special attention at least periodically to black people and set of using them to be a pawn in a wider agenda that has nothing to do with their well-being, certain not at the top of the letter. neil: when you talk to kids, do they worry about the job market or do they say this global warming thing is freaking out? >> one thing that is happening with black kids, bill o'reilly talked about being role models.
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one thalamus with the talk about with luxury wrapped. for a kid to grow up in an underprivileged community to dream about the private jet and being the boss. now the only thing is to expand that. you can do all those things but 99.9% of people are not rappers or in the nba. take the idea you can have anything come you deserve it, but widen your avenues. let's widen how we get there. lot of kids talk about this. years ago telling kids you be the next mark zuckerberg. you can be. that should be the hip-hop message with respect to politicians. what you can be in america, not that you are the victim of time a change. neil: well put, charles payne. here is the thing about negotiating with this particular guy. he is not a normal guy.
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okay, that can be a very big bravado way right there. >> yes, we see this from a number of wall street ceos, many of which you talk about like larry ellison and carl i come. neil: he said that said i'm going to bully my way in. >> the qualities that i want to see, i don't mind if they are vladimir putin like qualities. but that's not the kind of person you want to see heading up a democratic country. some of these ceos do. neil: with vladimir putin he has and he is and no one can contain him. >> the people that changed the world overstepped their
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boundaries. and the state hasn't economic model. if you have a company a flat on its back, who would you want to be the ceo? lattimer putin or barack obama? putin took over a company called rush almost 15 years ago and he returned it to the semblance of major market competitors. the guy is -- calling him crazy doesn't help heard he has a touch of megalomania. but i'm not a doctor. but i am a strategic analyst or it to play with the long-term strategic vision, rootlessness and pursuit of that vision. a brilliant judge of his adversaries and a really good marketer which we don't always understand what he is to his own people and he's really incisive and he sticks to it.
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neil: if you're going to go that way, what do you make of the idea that you have an in-your-face leader doesn't dillydally. there's something to be admired, but it involves upsetting the global world order and where do you draw that line? >> i think the camera was on me when i reacted like that. i didn't know that he was going to say jeff bezos. he's done a good job taking rest in venturing into territory where no one ago. but these companies -- they cannot change. the ceos cannot change. and they are moving in because
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they have a vision that they can stick to. regardless of what people think they are doing. neil: is a weness on the part of those in his market. that is the bottom line. >> he certainly does. he is also willing to take losses for a long time to achieve his goals. which is why lukewarm sanctions don't do a doggone thing. and about ceos, the difference between a very successful ceo and jeff bezos or vladimir putin, is that people -- like donald trump him and they the they have done a possible very well. vladimir putin is the impossible. although he is a more attractive figure in a lot of ways. it works for the audience.
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not for us but domestic consumption and even as an author i'm terrified of the guy. nonetheless, this guy did the impossible. and he keeps doing it and the naysayers as with the naysayers of lattimer putin amax sorry to cut you off, but i just want to say that he did an amazing job working with the resources that he had using them to his advantage. something the united states could learn from. considering all this natural gas and oil, what an opportunity. >> at the weird thing. neil: wwe on the midwest networks. we are updating facebook page. here on the two biggest media announcements you will ever
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neil: neil cavuto taking on fema? more or less, this is about to get ugly. it may be the most followed athlete story on facebook or it but i am the most followed news anchor on facebook or it is true. give or take, you know, maybe 50 individuals. but close to it. the wwe may have launched the first 24 sevenths streaming network with digital distribution. we just want the first 147 caputo page with digital distribution told that this thing is big. we have a long way to go and he has been doing this for years. we have been doing at or about one hour.
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so he is also going to give us tips on how to keep those followers and you have been very good about that. frankly i can't be bothered so my colleagues are here to take notes. >> here's what you have to do. the most followed people on twitter and facebook are socialized musicians. something catchy, take this down. it is caputo. we will put it on the youtube in the my space and the kids will love it. neil: i have to when kids over. >> you have to make it so the kids are won over and you make a song. and we will have you go crazy and shave your legs. and finally the home run is obviously a tape area.
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>> is a thinking out of the box. taking all of that down. >> than 10,000 to the most talked about athlete in the world. and you blow them all the way together. >> here's the thing with social networking. it's the voice of the individual when you gain interest and all athletes know that all celebrities have access to social media.
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so it's my voice out there. and yes, i use print conglomerates and incorporate sponsors so i tweak my success. i tweak my meals and i tweak certain comments. >> it's one day a week. >> one is all? neil: how do you know when you attach yourself to this the rise the this is going to be big. other stars realize that target words, for example, they are halfhearted into it i want to
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give the magic and the program and this is the way that people communicate them. neil: how do you know that they are not just doing everything on those devices? >> if you do not have a digital presence, you're missing out on so much interaction with a globe of people whether they are fans or not. putting it in my own words and people like to reach we quotes. so what's a lot of people will reach we get and then they
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>> i like it, actually. and an italian stud muffin, i thought that was kind of appropriate? >> and there were all the other ethnic groups as well. just me thinking outside the box >> the menu traveled to bakeries across as well. and could you imagine what that would be like? so in the meantime and i have been working at this for years
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now. >> you always make me laugh or you. >> it beats the alternative. >> can and we tell them where o'reilly's offices? >> maybe i could get a wwe >> maybe i could get a wwe thit's not the "limit yoursh hard earned cash back" card . it's not the "confused by rotating categories" card. it's the no-category-gaming, no-look-passing, clear-the-lane-i'm- going-up-strong, backboard-breaking, cash back card. this is the quicksilver cash back card from capital one. unlimited 1.5% cash back on every purchase, every single day. i'll ask again... what's in your wallet? how much money do you think you'll need when you retire?
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then we gave each person a ribbon to show how many years that amount might last. i was trying to, like, pull it a little further. [ woman ] got me to 70 years old. i'm going have to rethink this thing. it's hard to imagin how much we'll need for a retirement that could last 3years or mor so maybe we need to approach things dferently, if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. ♪
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or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor about other medicines you'rtang. call your doctor rht away if you have muscle pain or weakness, fl unusually tired, have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine, or yellowing of skin eyes. these could be sig of rare but seris side effects. crestor! yes! [ female announcer ] ask your doctor about crestor. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca y be able toelp. neil: right off the bat, what is nae deal with nancy in a tizzy over this. >> is obamacare a winner or a loser politically, by the way, it is called affordable care act, affordable for a reason. neil: a lot of tweets claiming that nancy is a twit, she should
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understand they don't call it the affordable health care actce because it is not affordable fo. most. still this tweet, i love your coverage on the unaffordable care act or i mean obamacare, it is destroying the best health sn care system in the world.d i know pehls soy is owes -- tp i supporters believe she is judy n garland, but to the rest of us r she is the scare crow. dave, bravo, americans need to wake the hell up now. sandy, no one could have said it better, amen. and neil, please run for president. could i stop for a moment, how do you connection prostate withn
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running for president? i think i'll just leave it there. sand rah, now we know that crash is coming, we run out and sell our stock. what do we do with the money? do you give it to me.th seriously, i think he said do not vist as if debt does not matter is does, and ignoreing if will cost us a lot. reese tweets, good opening speech, rhino g.o.p.h circumstance tacking tea party.v and than thank you for your opeg with what i have been yelling at my tv for a while. and great speech neil, hope som folks heard it, today among log, excellent, richard, in missouri. heard your rant against republicans, obama and nancy pelosi are out there cheering, e
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go neil go. i always thought you were a smart guy, now realize you are not too bright. it does not take a sharp knifesn to figure this run out the cloca strategy is going to cut republican's own throat, if youh don't see it, you will this d november, and when it is vem politically viable to sell your soul, you have to address thatt and what is the deal with e-trade giving heave-ho to martialic baby.i'v i have always loveed this ad,ng fire guy tweets, e-trade kidk quits, why did you let the catdy out of the bag, the companyb already did.mp leave the talking baby, one of few commercials worth watching, not any more, norm, hate talking babies, stupid done, stop all progressifiificive, and geico ad gold ads.
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piper tweets, i am sick of alld mascots for corporation, the baby is only one i like.ly i l and neil, that can't get rid of the etrade baby, i will never buy anything from e-trade.o . another they must be nuts to discontinue them. and start petition keep the baby. if you are starting a petition on that stuff, i just say petitions are things that stuff matter. i like the baby too. reall and that baby can't quit,los everyone loves him, and next anchor who wears diapers go toon feeling the heat you hack?diap that depends, get it depends? i crack myself up. you can switch the channel right now, you are driving down the iq of my audience. n so i will wait. there is another guy yelling go.
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go all right, she is gone. jay, thank you, for being then real deal neil cavuto. michelle. love your show, i call you neil. real deal cavuto, you with more common sense than most in dc . o you are a sharp dresser, neil,r it matches my sharp mind. thank you all for noticing.thanu thank you for watching those whn had nice things to say, but the' rest, i don't know wha what to k i know you made this a verythisr watched and popular segment even "wall street journal" -- the "wall street journal"! is copys it."the look at this. launching its own, what's theat deal section, they didn't think we'd notice. really? okay they are kind of in our family, i'll let it go this 1, but if "new york times" pulls it, oh, i have lawyers.
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and italians who are in the, that is all i'm going to say, we'll see you tomorrow. kennedy: what is a strange day, malaysia government, with highest degree of certainty confirmed that flight 370 crashed into the sea. comes the relization for families, fineality is brutal, and people were certain we would never find it. in mystery started brideing more conspiracy than the dugger family. now that talk of black holes and vortexing comes crashing dac to ing back to earth, thank god are in russia, the latest conspiracy.
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