tv Cavuto FOX Business April 16, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm EDT
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have a good night. neil: weome, everybody. i am neil cavuto. the irs is watching every move because anyone who complains gets a little extra attention from the irs the irs explains it is patrolling websites and social media to go after the tax cheats but how would they know? i guess if you dodge the tax man you stand out but coolidge you stand for this? by anyone who even vocalizes this sentiment especially
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anti-irs sentiment is one thing to be conscientious tax objector to yourself but not to another you don't want to give people ideas. am i the only one that finds the tightening a little weird? with targeting conservatives never mind it is still investigating itself but let's just say i was not hold my breath for the inquiry results and trolling for attacks trespassers at the same time? but what else do you expect from an agency that has you sign your tax form with the not so subtle reminder you do so under the threat of perjury? they are big on us being accountable what about no accounting for freedom of speech? we have our tea party
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patriots. those groups are getting sued by the war actually suing the irs to get some answers. and he says he has the proof they were patrolling go web site. they were looking? explains. >> they decided one year ago to file the only class action against the irs for a class action and we found a bug site called sued the irs and.com immediately we were able to see irs employees from the headquarters to log on and troll. neil: how did you know? >> there is no web log you can tell the servers where they come from and it is irs servers. neil: that is not too clever
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there. what do you make of this that these are fairly broad parameters that they go through this patrolling. what you think? >> another avenue to investigate citizens we are guilty before we are proven innocent. we are suing them because they refuse to comply with the freedom of information act with the new rules say are exposing to target it to us to make it permanent and make it legal. they are refusing firmly it is as transparent process how they came to the decision to make the new rules but with this case they are complete the secretive with the e-mail showing they are secretive. neil: the url comes up but it is what it is?
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>> but judicial watch has found the emails that lois lerner was trying to get then doj to criminally investigate the party groups targeted by the irs. we deserve to know what is in the document and how they came to the decision to put the new rules behalf -- into place. neil: if the irs goes after people that are cscientious tax objectors they have to search them down and that is all they are up to? you cannot break the law. we go after lawbreakers. what do you say? >> this seemawful suspicious the all the bonds are the ones breaking the law in are those on the right. that it is the process it was alluded to this a lack of transparency and
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accountability if you are five minutes late it is very clear to send the penalty and follow-up within days but we sued the irs a 226 days ago because they didn't comply with the freedom of reformation active they put us off and put us off and put us off. you have to produce these under though labelle what is ironic that what i think is fascinating alive to of the documents that we asked for has been released publicly yet they are still stonewalling. talk about how odd it that is they will buy the firm produced legally what they are supposed to that they produce for others. neil: if that was the other way around when you bring it to do the irs attention i
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can see you are looking at my site did you get any reaction or comments? >> no. they will not even respond with skirting around the issue the irs by every federal government agency operates under the constitution that says we are not subject to unreasonable searches and seizures so there must be probable cause. researchers -- us situation revers searching the facebook key and twitter accounts, the scandals have combined their searching innocent people to look for the guilty they are not allowed to do this. it is a constitutional violation. the two scandals have coincided they are now one in the same. neil: thank you. if this worries you tweet
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@teamcavuto if you are scared even to speak out about the irs now that you know they could listen to everything you are saying, writing. at the end of the show we will get your reaction. i am all for comebacks with this seems to be a little too soon. could kathleen sebelius and be serious about running for senator? and why after the rollouts sometimes it is good to just lay low. this land is not your land for the family's life has been shaken up because their home is about to be taken.
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about the characters playing on tv. [laughter] the you are pretty convincing in good fellas. use started off you did not love the health care law but who then you became disenchanted. what happened to? >> when sebelius comes out with the knowledge the information that she knew all along it was way too earlto put the head god only knows but when you do something that large you have to have your ducks in a row. i have an image of this getting bigger and bigger and bigger and people watch it in and everybody is confused and nobody knows what to do. i just had to get insurance for my daughter and granddaughter she is 17
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going on a tripping and needs insurance writer way. i f try to do the obama thing because i thought it would take too much time smudges cobbing got it for them through the insurance company. but the point is why shouldn't i be able to call up to get the obamacare thing? why not? may be other people were doing that i just wish it would do what it set out to do but it does not look like it is doing that. it is disturbing. neil: timing is everything but i hate kid you about so many mob movies. >> what makes you say that? [laughter] neil: but this does not make sense. but only two weeks ago she said i will plan to stay
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through the election. the president is happy with what i do. but now she is out. something happened. >> she said it was way off. >> you don't do that. >> the boss is not always right but the boss is always up boss if you say he was robbed, of bye-bye. neil: didn't she claimed they kind of threw her under the bus? >> that is what i surmise. i don't know that but it looks that way that they needed the fall guy ian she is the fall guy. >> if she is going to read now that is the excuse? >> i have to say why i went out to rapid. neil: i did not think of that. i quit because the really
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want to run for office the myth that is a possibility and something i would do so i put myself in other people's minds said strict all politicians are actors. i know that i work for you and as a matter of fact my family is behind everything i am doing now. i could never be a politician because i have too many of my own opinions. mario cuomo was is a good friend he said he should think about it. i said i cannot cut its. i cannot do that. they would call me the reagan democrat because some things i am very a conservative. neil: you are a conundrum. >> i am a riddle. neil: new play so many great characters but you also played henry kissinger.
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>> you have to know what he does not want you to you to but he speaks innominate of. [laughter] neil: i had no way be a. >> you play all sides and all characters do you have a bias either way? to make you take the bias of the character. that is your job. neil: do you get that way? >> i know they have to go through the party line so once they're in a category that wipes out the deep thinking. you can have thoughts be you must not deny them because you have to go through the party line. you have to support the leaders. it is too much for a person like me.
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i am not liberal. i am very different how. neil: would every our position is i am afraid of you. chris christie might be flailing fast even jeb bush because he was to reach out on illegal immigration are the extremists taking over with both parties? >> that is unfortunate absolutely because there is no way to maintain a firm extreme position. if you say that is all i will do then you are already completely left. >> there is no way to do that. i could not do that and i don't think thinking people can really do that. that is why people are inpendent. i cannot be part of the
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program or a set way of thinking. that is not my life. and all actors are ready to take any position in life. so i have my own creed or way of behavior demanded is no moral or ethical position and that i take. neil: i take great pride to know that an actor will play shakespeare. >> it is not that day gravitate but although it was just bad with brooklyn but what i was described as was one writer said we are tired. >> i heard that a review
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were passed away. [laughter] >> if we want to match i kiwi will step up 51 stibium best selling author like i am. monday 21st i am directing and starring in doing things it is all done as britisher imitation of british. i think the brits will like it actually if you have a good strong powerful acting with the beautiful head accent. neil: city to get the credit subset? >> they turned me down for that role. [laughter] >> i would have chosen a
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team it has been that way since the day they met by your erectile dysfunction could be a question of blood flow. neil: they talk about john baker it is pretty means of man behind and add add now he is running again. now while we are on the subject of the blood flow the heart of -- the security breach compromising from bank account numbers to passwords could have been stopped a and guests to? the nsa. that is what they're supposed to do. former apple ceo how he offers with his new company a way to strengthen signals to address this nonsense. the one thing we trust to an essay to do is the one thing they did not.
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>> if i was at the nsa and would be embarrassed it took two years to find this out. now a fair amount of damage has been done. neil: we have a case where they were warned about this. we do know the nsa has collected with the phone records, or 70 percent of all internet i don't know but maybe they are busy doing other things. >> a the heartbeat problem is software flaw implemented by a programmer of the security software to allow your computer and my
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computer to talk to one another. neil: explain what happens. what is the lapse? >> this law is a the perpetrator someone who uses it to get access to all of the memory on your computer. then they can steal your passwords addresses bank accounts whenever you want and the worst part is it leaves no trail no evidence it ever happened so there is no way to know whether or not you a victim. neil: i guess if your bank account was triggered me a good clue what happens if they say we patched it up? how do we know that? >> there has been new piece
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of software release that solves the problem but with all the internet service providers need to let the customers know if they have implemented this. >> win tim cook was saying investing in green technologies that if you don't like that you are not into that bindle by the stock for the shareholder. what you make of that? >> i don't know what to make of that. he must speak to what he thinks is his audience sample ought to stick to what it knows how to do best wishes to make great products. i am not sure he should get into any of this. >> ibm and apple shareholder
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myself that is fine but don't tell me i should not be a shareholder because you do? >> via agree with fact. >> always good to see you. continued success. neil: a standoff that could be just the start. a government seizure is not an isolated case a colorado couple to stop the government from taking care w and. -- land [ chilen yelling ] [ telephone rings ] [ shirley ] edwa jones. this is shirley eaking. how may i help you? oh hey, neill, how areou? how was the trip? [ male announcer ] with nearly 7 million investors...
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but with so much health care noise, i didn't always watch out for myself. with unitedhealthcare, i get personalized information and rewards for addressing my health risks. but she's still gonna give me a heart attack. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. neil: well, imagine this, you own a little slice of he ven. it is your heaven. you think it is. the government tries to take it from you all in the name of saving your land which turns out
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apparently to be everyone's land, the bought's land. they are fighting such a battle in colorado. the government is going after their little heaven. andy, explain what is going on here. >> thanks for having us. we bought the property in late 2011. we bought a vehicle to access the upper par which is a ten-acre patented gold mine from the 1808's. we would have no other way gettings up there in the winter if we didn't have the vehicle. the force etf service, u.s. forest service didn't like us using that vehicle up there, saying that it would, might harm the property or the path up there. so they tried to stop us. and they didn't like it that we didn't comply. and, we kept going up there. and we, received a notice from summit county they wanted to meet with us. they threatened to eminent domain unless we weapon through
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a long process and expensive process. we said no. by the 1866 mining law, we have every right to use this road. and we continued to do so. tried to work an access deal back with the forest service and, basically summit county eminent domained. neil: so, it was an existing road, wast not? >> yes, it was. the road was there with we bought the house. it was an old jeep road. neil: okay. so obviously other vehicles had been on that road. was it the problem it was your vehicle to get where you were going? >> well the problem was, they outlawed all vehicular access. it wasn't well-publicized. no one knew, there were still people cutting across our property and using their vehicles to get up there. and when we bought the place, it was, represented to us that we did have vehicular access. neil: without the vehicular access, just to be clear, you don't have any access to your
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home effectively, then you don't have a home? >> no. we could hike or snowshoe. neil: how far is it from the main road to get up to that home? >> it is about, it is about a 50-minute hike. neil: 50-minute hike. >> it is pretty steep, yes. neil: where stuff stand now? the way i'm reading this, looking at a lot of the particulars, is, right now, if this isn't address you lose the home, you lose everything. what do you do? >> they, well, they have basically spent us to death. the, we just couldn't continue the expenditure on the attorney, on the attorney fees to fight the government. neil: so, andy, what are you going to do? >> we went to a mediation two weeks ago and, that mediation has setted now. so we settled for almost four times what the initially offered. so, it's a done deal. the land is gone.
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we have, lower land where we do have a cabin. so we can still access the upper cabin, or access the upper land. the cabin is going to be torn down. neil: incredible. how long have you had this cabin. >> since late 2011. the cabin though existed since the 1808s. neil: do you think if you -- 1880s, if you think you didn't fight them as aggressively as you did, you would not be in this position, if you were not friendly to them and now they're making you pay? >> i think they're making us pay trying to fight for the vehicular access. it was annoying to them. i think to solve that problem, they decided we'll eminent domain and take it that's what we can do. but i think the whole problem in the cases that they really, there is not a good reason for them taking that property that sat there since the 1800s. our land patent was signed by president garfield. it has been undisturbed. people hike up there. when you look for a reason why
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they're doing, the only one i can find, we annoyed them by trying to gain access. the fact that, that they never came to us and said, okay, you can keep it with no access, or you know, they're saying that the cabin is non-conforming. that it hasn't plumbing and electricity issues which is hilarious because it is a hunting cabin without any of that. but the fact that they didn't say you can, tear down the cabin, you can keep the property. don't use your vehicle. you can keep the property that was never an issue. okay, you know what? we're taking it. >> we have been offer, we offered to donate the upper eight acres to the forest service directly, taking the summit county out of it. and we got a refusal for that. it would have been, at no cost to them. basically that took the money out of it for summit. summit is going to swap this land for 10 areas closer to breckenridge which they can make millions of dollars of off of.
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neil: incredible. just incredible. guys, hang in there, hope it isn't over the way it makes it sound. meantime, thank you. >> thank you. neil: if you're familiar with this, john boehner, let's say he cries a lot as speaker. meet the guy who is crying even more because he is speaker. he is not a democrat. he is a republican. >> if you have a boehner lasting longer than 23 years, seek immediate medical attention. boehner shouldn't count his chickens before they hatch. neil: the man whose goal isn't just to unseat the speaker, to run him out of washington all together. together. ♪ why relocating manufacturingpany to upstate new york?
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used on a daily basis, this will help you every time the moment is right. neil: it is original. he says he is here to help you with your electile dysfunction. he is running for congress. he is not just running against anyone, speaker of house, united states, john boehner who he says putting politics before what is best for the country. what kind of reaction have you gotten from this, from this ad? >> it has been kind of a mixed reaction. obviously it has over 200,000 hits on youtube. so i think a lot of people are amused by it. neil: it hasn't helped you so far. still early in the poles. i mean, speaker, not surprisingly would be a prohibitive favorite. that is quite a quest to topple incumbent congressman anyway. but one who is speaker of the house who can claim look what i can do for our district, given my position it is even tougher,
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right? >> yeah. no, i mean it is not as cozy as he thinks. tea party leadership fund did a poll in the district. he only has 49% support. when he is put up against an unnamed primary challenger, that drops to 25%. in the district, we're starving for someone new. there are numbers there that show we're ready for it. we're just waiting for it to happen of the. neil: you know, i always think of those who challenge a speaker within the party, they're not so crazy. your ad might be a little different. it is not so crazy, argument could gogo republicans are expected to keep the house. someone is going to be speaker d that is going to be a republican and in that event it won't be boehner in this case if you were to try yum or any of one of your challengers were to triumph. that the thinking our district won't lose out here, one way or thether a republican will be speaker? >> well, thinking is we actually have a chance to make history. we have a political elite that
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really isn't working in our interests. if we can remove the speaker, and in an election like this we can actually push for conservative values and agenda that we want that we believe will happen, such as getting rid of obamacare and holding firm on the debt ceiling. neil: you say these conservative values. are any of them offended by you know an ad like this to make that conservative point? >> you know, i think they're more offended by the fact that we have a representative in congress right now who doesn't come home, who doesn't relate to us. i don't know when the last time was he ran an ad but he doesn't really seem to care about what we have to say. neil: well he doesn't think he has to. he doesn't think he has to, dismissing. >> you no, he doesn't. neil: you say he dismisses you to his own detriment, right? >> absolutely. neil: well, we'll see what happens. jdvery interesting ad, i will say that thank you for joining us. >> thank you. ne: all right, meanwhile you parents out there, take a look at your kid right now and if he or she is holding an ipad,
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knock it out of their hand right now. lock it up and don't let them touch it until they're at least 18, by which time such technology will be a chip in their brain. i'm going to tell you why you want to do this after this. up. a short word that's a tall order. up your game. up the ante. and if you stumble, you get back up. up isn't easy, and we ought to know. we're in the business of up. everyday delta flies a quarter of million people while investing billions improving everything from booking to baggage claim. we're raising the bar on flying and tomorrow we will up it yet again.
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neil: in tonight's biz blitz we know tablets are cool but are they cruel? education experts fearing kids who use them too much, well, it's going to hurt them. an association of teachers say a growing number are hooked on ipads, they're not able to do simple things like using toy building skills, remembering things. being respectful to their parents, answering their parents, if they have done their chores.
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i digress. i'm thinking about my house. anyway it is not good for the next generation but jared levy says it is very good for tech companies apparently hooking them in. he is here with scott martin and gary kaltbaum. jared, you're saying whatever happens here the message the tech companies behind this, they're just fine? >> as much as i agree with everything you just said i think that giving a 5-year-old or 4-year-old ipad and shoving them in their room all night is probably the worst thing for them. the reality we're not going to go backwards. we'll continue to get more and more technologically savvy and hand the kid more and more electronic devices. companies like google and software creators like facebook and spotify and othe companies that attract the kid they are going to benefit. that sun fortunate but that is the real reality that we're dealing with. neil: what i admire that position you're not a fan of social trend but damn if not going to make money on it. i admire that greatly. scott what do you make of that?
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as a new dad yourself you're seeing these type of headlines and reports out of teachers concerned we're just, we're just going too far with this stuff, what do you do? >> well, jared is right, neil but the tech companies have won but guess where they won? they won at the parent level that is the problem here i think. if you go out, take a small experiment, look at like, a dinner where some parents are with their kids, the parents are just as glued to the device as the kids are. neil: you're exactly right. >> the kids imitate their parents. that is the problem, neil. cut off nowhere. that is really the thing. we all like to give a kid ipad or iphone great to have a 10 or 15-minute baby sirte. the parents are at fault. if the parents can get disconnected they can too. neil: my opinion whatever shuts them up. thats that who long term benefit but you will learn this, scott. obviously what the teachers are ying unless you wane them off this early they will be socially
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clueless forever? >> look, there is tremendous up side to technology. when i was a kid i had encyclopedia britannica and one-year-old. we loop up anything on google. scott is 100% right. it starts with the parents, and ends with the parents. they're supposed to have control. obviously they don't. guess what, their head or elevator driving a car, their eyes are looking and texting doing wrong things at all times. the kids are ending up with bug eyes sitting on games for three or four hours. i think it only gets worse from here. neil: none of you are looking at the value of this thing. this type of technology and things that you can do in ipad or any type of these device, stuff that none of us had available in our case, gary, when we were kids, these two other guys i have no idea. you know what i mean? >> there is a great value. you can go on the web right right now and find out anything about anything, whether it is medical or -- neil: oh, man, you should see the stuff i dug up on you
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kaltbaum. that's another show. >> is hh. neil: ixnay on the, i wonder if anyone at the federal reserve has been to the grocery store recently. while they're saying inflation is low and remains low, beef prices are hitting all-time highs. cost of everything from eggs to canned fruits, that's soaring. scott, don't these guys shop or don't they care or is that just the math we use? >> that is one of the problems with ben bernanke commenting on gas prices last year. he said he hadn't driven a car in six months. no, they don't know, neil. i think there is a couple of issues here. look at all the liquidity and stimulus the fed pumped into the economy. one of mandates besides maximum employment is price stability. we've got anything but that. neil, if you look at real inflation numbers you highlighted it doesn't fit what the fed is doing. if they saw real numbers what they were nway they would be stimulating as hard as they are because that is what is driving up all the prices. neil: jared. >> the cpi is flawed index and
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old and convoluted and changed to help the government. remember this, over 50% of america is on some sort of government entitlement program. a lot of those programs are basically tied to something called cola, the cost of living adjustments. neil: right. >> the cpi keeps that as minimum as possible. we at chatwood index looked a at group of 500 different items we saw a 10% in 2013. things like baby sitting and how much for a starbucks cup of coffee. we don't look at those things. we look a mathematical convoluted number that is a lie. in reality if it were real we would have bigger proems with our budget on our hands of the that is the other way to think about think, reduce the inflation on baby sitting costs give the kid an ipad and put them up in their room. that is another story. gary, i always think part of dynamic accounting states when you look at these inflation numbers you leave out the fact when people see beef prices soaring they move on to chicken. they move on to turkey, what have you. in other words, they adjust. that's why the fed said, it is not such a problem because
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people do move into cheaper alternatives. so inflation, don't worry. you say what? >> they're nuts. the inflation numbers are fake. they change the numbers years ago, to keep them lower, just like they change the gdp numbers to get them higher. look prices for everything are going up. i think the fed has got their head underneath a pillow. i think their butler is buying their food. i think their driver is buying them gas. i don't know where they're going with this. neil: i didn't know where you were going with the head around then, please say he is going to say under their pillow. anyway i was just worried. guys, thank you all, very, very much. by the way what is the deal with charging 1500 bucks for a pair of goofy glasses making it a one-day sale? apparently money, for google lots of money. for a ton of your emails and for a ton of your emails and tweets, tons of predicting the future is a pretty difficult thing to do. but, manufacturing in the united states means advanced technology.
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we learned that technology allows us to be craft oriented. no one's losing their job. there's no beer robot that has suddenly chased them out. the technology is actually creating new jobs. siemens designed and built the right tools and resources to get the job done. why relocating manufacturingpany to upstate new york? i tell people it's for the climate.
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the conditions in new york state are great for business. new york is ranked #2 in the nation for new private sector job creation. and w it's even better because they've introduced startup new york - dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. you'll get a warm welcome in the new new york. see if your business qualifies at startupny.com if ...hey breathing's hard... know the feeling? copd includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my obstructed airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier.
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spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder does not replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctorf you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva. discuss all medicines you take, even eye drops. stop taking spiriva and seek immediate medical help if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain, or problems passing urine. other side effects include dry mouth and constipation. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. does breathing with copd weigh you down? don't wait to ask your doctor about spiriva. >> what's the deal, neil? neil: what is the deal with the
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irs trolling your >>f what is the deal with the irs to see if your dodging ton taxes under twitter page? everyone is terrified to say anything about the irs. poi they are a mafia shake down at this point.hav others say it will not help them but we have freedom of speech unless the president took that away. >> for years i have heard dram against taxes and the irs and we were alwaysill worried they would kill you or i did you but you are y still alive. watch yourself. you seem like a nice yum! brands.ant >> i am constantly audited.oes it is true.or that goes with the territory. th the think the irs has thee controversy you should see the response is officially one with the google's $1,500
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glass. >> 24 hours sale for these and class is? who buys these? in probably those the watch cnbc. >> i might consider them but $52? are you serious? 1 wheat could eat to like it came at a pond rose up for one-tenth of thate.ses >> if they could see through t womens' clothing that is one thing but i will revert toson people regardless do not vides for yourself you have little credibility pre as it is if you walk into a bar with these a they will beat the crap out of view. >> noted.rdia if i have cardiac surgery and the doctor has those on to confer then i have the wrong cardiac surgeon. you
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>> your interview with the apathetic stooge was not watchable space you forgothabl how about people who were hiding from stalkers where people in restaurants that don't want to to be faced with s someone staring at them? they could feel the wrath. >> i brought up those exact points maybe those who issues are not the problem may be assured hearing.t switched channels right now. right now. is twitter facing and not so may happy fifth of may because s insiders said the stock could start swimming righttes, now to say facebook is lee mckewon as saying in 140 characters time to take a facebook is an antique
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the way to do was twitter and others they are short point.the >> i am telling you the whole twitter and facebook thing will be big like the internet. >> why do i give the cavuto haters the time of day? the hate mail does not deserve my time it makes you want to punch them in the d nose. >> you can still do that. >> icon a few minutes of m your show it was positive. is. >> here is a shot of timesmen square.ing >> watching neil cavuto demanded just like those in times square. >> it is pretty funny that he thinks the president watches his tv show. did you not get the memo?
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that is said. only the president's very powerful people watch. see you tomorrow. >> is red meat to wednesday. ron paul is here to talk about the nevada ranch controversy in his own standoff with the irs. we have ambassador john bolton ended andy levy and a sound off on the new al qaeda video. legendary fannie mae and dave barry and angel of death nick gillespie. this is the independents. matt: the i am matt welch along with kmele foster and our special guest for the
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