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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  July 29, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am EDT

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♪ nine. ♪ neil: washington is trying to come up with a humanitarian solution for illegals. i don't know, how about a humanitarian solution for us? outside the white house said pretty much all. these demonstrators shouting and hollering. they are all the legal immigrants there is you find that a little odd? here is what i find more odd, no one from emigrations and customs enforcement they were not even there to contemplate. brought into a hearing so that
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lawmakers could better understand how it is they got here. i could have saved them the trouble. they broke the law believe that is how they got here. whether they did it themselves or someone pushed them, they are here illegally is, but they are front and center. second up and put a. thousands of these kids being a fan out across the country for processing including registering for glasses that there will be attending. never mind that the money is not there billion straw towns and communities but to get those kids enrolled. school is just around the corner. is it me or does this sound a bit ridiculous to back forget about whether i sound heartless to be does any of what is going on strike you as to list? chicago mayor law volunteering, actually asking the house the legal kids to gain violence out of control. the mayor says it is time to show compassion. angry residents are rightly
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asking, compassion for home? >> have the same love for these and people like you have the ones across the border. >> mr. president, we are asking for even read your spending billions of dollars above the we have a problem here in chicago. >> you will probably go down as the worst president ever elected neil: they seem upset, but different cities all across the country, putting much the same subject, even those from the border that they say borders on just insane. take a look. >> send them back. everyone. secure the. neil: we are a nation of immigrants, but that does not mean we have suddenly become a nation of illegal immigrants. it is one thing procedures to go to hell, but when the laws and lawmakers of really protest
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outside the white house, these are lawbreakers without any fear of being picked up. actually, there ought to be a law against illegals protesting outside the white house and demanding rights that they are not entitled to. is it me, or do you find all of this twisted? the law is on the side of the alleles demanding rights company is coming, and they are not even americans. well your added, open up your wallet. you are playing. tell me your thoughts. making money host who is partly canada all of this. >> it is all politics. unfortunately it is politics overwrites of americans, the economy of america and it does no one any good. here is the thing, would like to say, you know, 11 years old some , killed in kill in 19.
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2119. all of these kids were killed, murdered in chicago. all lot more just like them. neil: what is he talking about? you want to invite more kids to more poor people to your city? you can't even keep one's sure there safe. there being murder to manslaughter. it is all politics. maybe they will run for national office. it is despicable stuff. it has to stop. neil: you are noticing and a lot of these communities, the people in the communities are saying, and f. >> of course they are. it is absolutely out there. there are some places that wake up overnight. you know, these people, clandestine and dividend then
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the people, regular people, not the rich folks, but people on the main street u.s.a. we cannot afford this. and it is not a humane or mean-spirited. we want to clean up and fix our nation first. neil: when they say is unrealistic to talk about it, you say -- >> you know what, it is a can of worms. neil: a bigger one than staying here. >> a beer can of worms is the overwhelming majority stay here we invited kids in our family in the neighborhood. she is here illegally her mother paid five grand. these are breaking stories. we need to resolve the issue so that it does not get to this point where we are talking about sending its own. this should not even be an issue .
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by the late, it's very expensive neil: i want to extend this out. joining as. you are in chicago. you know what the mayor wants to do. what do you think? >> it is a tough call. things are bad debate no arguing that. charles pointed out a lot of stuff there is to take it further complex schools are closing. some kids that actually get to schools did shot dead on the way to score some to believe they get a thing called safe passage bury their closing after-school programs down because they don't have the funding of heated is a terrible situation project that he is going out there and saying , move over and unburied we will bring new kids in and take care of them, it's a terrible notion. here is the issue. its political. he is in their race of his life for mayor. next february it will get voted on. he is not winning a lot of
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people and parties tried to do what every can be attributed maybe win the election. neil: i can't see how that would open an election. just the sheer expense of all of this. there might remind up the federal money coming available. the communities are stuck right now and on the truck for educating in doing everything else that comes with processing them. >> absolutely. residents have reason to be angry it is a very sad situation, and i and compassionate toward the children who are coming into our country illegally the journey with the coyotes and the alleged abuse and physical, emotional abuse. it is terrible. neil: you all went through that same thing. >> that's true, but as a mother my children come first. we need to address the problems that are happening in chicago, as was mentioned. we have violence rampant, gun
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crime. for foundation earlier this week about curbing gun violence, trying to get our youth into more educational programs, into the arts, trying to get them out of bad elements deep 20 to fix the problems we have here. neil: and metaphor. protests. no one picks them up. i don't know what they are even protesting for. there are allowed to protest for rights they do not have been made and i think when the media covers to lament their story to we are forgetting that they don't have anywhere else. that is what -- >> and, it is true that these kids can't from countries that are worse off to in the port in the worst slums of chicago defeated is not that bad in our cities, but that said these people have a right to be angry. the presence bigger shortfall, he is taking his strongest
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constituency for granted if you go down the line of policy from this president but 2009 stimulus act. neil: biting the hand that feeds them. >> not have the -- heavily weighted. that is not money -- [inaudible conversations] neil: has not done enough for them. >> the hasn't. very illegals, they don't have a right. >> he needs to do more. neil: he doesn't need to do anything for them. they are here illegally.
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neil: we have to draw lines in the sand. it is all about who can win the hispanic vote, who can capture the most the chief of the fastest-growing and voting block in america. that patronized and insulted? >> all of the other devices stories that come up periodically. these people don't like you put it we want to embrace. neil: is in that the same as the war on women, wouldn't women feel insulted by that? >> absolutely. i completely agree. i think that, as you were saying, this is a vote grab putting the best constituents, you know, in that area. chicago residents feel like they have been forgotten in his career started there. he lived there will be they
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should have his support. neil: a lot more as we continue. someone plans to make sure your plan does not go down. is it really worth the price?
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♪ warm. neil: all right. new york democratic congressman steve israel wants commercial airlines to be equipped with anti-missile technology. could that cause you? one of our followers tweeting one incident does not justify billions of dollars in spending. we have an $18 trillion debt. another defending the government's plan. the government should cover it. it is a good use of money. why don't we just choose to fly not to -- on a we just use not to fly over hostile areas. more than 39 hostile areas around the planet, not such a simple solution. kendis price tag and abitibi. what do you think? >> i think it is critically important. here is the problem.
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we have learned from recent incidents that terrorists are going to use all the tools and their toolbox to bring planes down. when it comes to a shoulder-fired missiles there were 250,700,000 around the world cannot thousand hands of terrorist groups. the airforce one is equipped. we need to get find a way to equip our planes to keep people safe from terrorist. neil: a right to be concerned, but seeing as how we have one problem incident like this, is it justified? >> there have been 23 over the past several years. we are fortunate that there have not been some in the united states xbox 5623 involving passenger jets? >> forty-three shoulder fired missiles have been fired now here is --
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neil: congressman, i'm sorry. those -- i forget he was doing the firing, but there were all fired a passenger jets? >> no. different jets. neil: understood. even that in the scheme of thousands. i am with you on being concerned. in the scheme of things does it justify what could be a poor but cost for fires? >> there was a study done several years ago the concluded that a successful firing of a shoulder fired missiles would devastate the economy. an initial cost of a billion escalating to 4 billion escalating to 15 billion. common sense. a shoulder fired missile does not even have to hit. if one is fired on a plane without hitting, what what our response be? when a rocket landed within a mile of the airport our faa said we could no longer go to that
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airport. what would happen if a shoulder fired missile is fired on a plane near any american airport? unfortunately it is easy to do it. neil: doesn't a pilot also, congressman, have to go through evasive maneuvers? you might have the technology, but you, as the pilot to have to be up to speed on what to do in that event. they're is a whole retraining process just on how to use this technology. >> it depends on the technology. some do not require pilots to do much at all. others to require additional training. what i am proposing is that we get everyone around the table, the pilots, the airline industry, let's figure out a way to get this done in the most cost-effective way possible. i refuse to accept that if israel can do with we, as americans to buy can't find a way to do it on our aircraft. neil: do you think this will happen again? >> i am concerned that it will
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happen again because it has happened. one thing we know about terrorist, the copycat tactics. if the terrorists seized is successful firing in one area of the world to my concern they will try in another. in the nature of is that their portable, easy to operate. basically looks like a camera tripod. and so i would rather be cautious then have to catch up to the disaster after it occurs. neil: very good having you. thank you very much. all right. jesse jackson making some noise, but you will not believe who he is making noise at. that guy on the right, the billionaire. what now? ♪ dentures are very different to real teeth.
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♪ neil: well, on the attack never the less. jesse jackson wondering how is that the lack of diversity in silicon valley is getting to be so pronounced. in fact, he has made it is next work. tech companies don't catch on. the government should jump in. how liberals make it harder for blacks to succeed. wall street journal editorial board member. all stars joining us as well. right now, you think he is up to what? >> what he has always been up to for the past 30-35 years. this is just as next industry. now it is silicon valley's turn. the numbers are clear here. what you have is a pool problem, problem and the number of black graduates in these fields to fill these positions. companies a looking for the brightest kids from the most selective schools just the quick
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numbers, black college graduates make up about 5 percent of kids you received degrees in engineering and computer science 1 percent a ph.d. in those fields. jesse jackson should focus on expanding the pool of candid it's about trying to shake down silicon valley. it is not racial animus. neil: facebook came back and said, well, we do have more representation in our ranks, a lot of asians. did they hurt themselves with that comment or were they tried to tell him, look, minorities to us are not just african-americans. >> i think the latter, and they are right, how is it that indians, japanese, chinese, filipinos don't qualify as a diverse pool jesse jackson is about lining his own pockets. this is lucrative for him. this is about access for jesse jackson. if jesse jackson wanted to do some good he should go back to
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chicago and devote himself full-time to real problems. stop the black kids are shooting each other. tell them to get an education, plus penstemon take care of their kids believe he would make progress on that front. these numbers would take care of themselves. neil: actor robert when he would go after we will pay you cannot do something you know, and that settled things up very nicely. what happens now? >> well, that used to work. may not anymore because like you was pointing out, the facts just don't back it up. he looked at the industry right now, close to 50 percent of workers versus non tech areas which are about 37%. so the tech sector is helping minorities. it is the dearth of people that are available, not really the tech sector excluding people.
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the tech sector has been one of the big benefactors to minority groups as they have grown. >> i'll give you another figure. in 2001 some 14,000 kids score 700 better on the math section of the s.a.t. 14,000 horses 700 blacks. you know, blacks outnumber asians by some multiple. that is why those groups are represented in blacks are not. it is simple math. a simple issue of how many kids from certain groups are qualified. jesse jackson is not only not helping in terms of pushing this. he is not helping silicon valley they want to innovate. they want that best kids. it will not force them to lower their standards. neil: i always look at this by howard looks. this company's rates, this company still to to the right.
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do you -- african-american community or hispanic community, do you want to buy from this company? in other words, that is what they fear. it will never be good. >> right, but if those companies were concerned that would mean there would be doing hiring. neil: now they have been discovered. >> right. whatever happens to hiring the brightest of the best for your organization. >> absolutely. jesse jackson can focus on things that need to be focused on like getting black kids to value education. if he does that the rest will take care of itself, but he does not want to keep the focus there. what white america can do for black america. it is a lucrative industry. >> the problem with this analysis is you are ignoring the white women who went to the same
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schools. >> no, not. >> the tech industry gets men. women don't have an interest. very early. neil: what he is talking about -- [inaudible conversations] >> is too late. >> they are still growing. [inaudible conversations] >> you hire people what's really blind. sick workers in other countries. i don't even know. [inaudible conversations] >> the idea that black kids, -- [inaudible conversations] studies have shown that black children enter college as a freshman more likely to go weight to the major. >> reporter: [inaudible conversations] [inaudible conversations]
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>> you are seeing an outcome. women are not represented in this field. automatically. >> that they went down that path that a young age, they are not using it. [inaudible conversations] neil: all right. i wanted thank you. in the meantime, it's all fun and games. what if i told you now that the latest excuse for violence in the movies with these characters we are going nuts. really? unlimited cash back. let that phrase sit with you for a second. unlimited. as in, no limits on your hard-earned cash back. as in no more dealing with those rotating categories.
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♪ neil: have you ever been to any of these conventions? they're is a big one going on right now.
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it seems a little surreal. it has become a multi-billion dollar industry. to me it just seems so little of friendly. that is just me. i am not saying that those in my generation's were unusual. let's just say that made me look cool. anyway, the new york times saying that comecon and some of these other entertainment venues promote the very the violence we have seen across the country what do you think? >> first of all, those people, not violence. >> you know, there are cases, but there are many other times where violence is decreased. people used to fight in bars. and i think how much time your kids bins with video games and tv might come -- and of the kid makes a lot of difference.
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neil: if you look at the shootings when those things, they played. maybe those -- >> they always say that whenever there is a shooting spree they look to see if there was a video game or violent movie that was a favorite. people who are troubled it troubling things. neil: some of these games with some of these kids pull that trigger. >> honestly, i don't think so. neil: u.s. and bob are you leery ? >> as a mom i am very careful to breed of monitor it and monitor their reactions all right. some of these other incidents, we later discovered to love playing star kraft, a lot of, you know, pretty violent games. that is so fact of thing. this is what happens.
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>> it was brought up. listen, you don't know how these games will affect people. i played a lot of games while was ordered. the problem is, a lot of these people to but reporters, hey, this guy should not have killed anybody. she could not hurt a fly, yet something sell-off this person. it is hard to tell who is going to do this and who was not. i will tell you, in society as you see more of this stuff to blasted on tv, and the newspapers, the more desensitize you get to it, whenever you receive more of something you become less appreciative of a. it is just out there more babies that is what propelled some of the material out there right now neil: they are expanding it a bit. hollywood in a way. not that i think that is justified, but where is all of this going?
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what they're saying is, we have to be much more aggressive with policing everything we watch, see, and by. >> where would it go? it is too violent. they don't ban them outright. you can't sell that. neil: mature. >> spiral. says of millions just in the u.s. domestically. yet there were hardly any three or four decades ago. the violence. it seems like it is not proportional. all of these kids play these games. whenever when does something bad, it is very common. >> look at what sells. to look at what is selling in hollywood. it is the violent stuff. a tone it down. they change the rating system. those are the sellers. if you are a businessman a
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production line in making that stuff people are going to buy. neil: some of them, today's new york times. all right. thank you. north korea threatening to nuke us. really? basketball softball cannonball which sounds most fun to you? ♪
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neil: all right. i am showing you a psa that is running in north korea, a public-service announcement launching a nuclear attack, a nuclear attack on washington. he see it in the background. lovely. lovely. think of that time this is being done and what has been going on in the world. lieutenant-colonel on why we need to take this seriously.
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why? >> well, look. i don't think we have to worry about the north koreans looking washington d.c. or the united states. we have 28,500 u.s. troops in south korea, ourself korean allies. consistently, given the behavior i think we also need to be paying attention to what they may do or may be capable of doing. neil: what has excited them are these sanctions and other efforts are leading to alienate. now when russia. what they are more less saying, they're ready to be put down. but even in north korea do they take it seriously? do they just start feeling emboldened? >> that is a great question. you know, the people are spoonfed whatever it is that they get. what they get on radio and
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television is very carefully orchestrated and coordinated by the regime. most people really do believe that the prime leader there, i can run but the exact word, but the royal leader, that he can actually play a round of golf and ace every hole. they tell the public that. neil: reelected with 100 percent of the vote. try doing that in our country. but i am saying, i worry that we always say. they're pretty good at lobbing missiles. they're not great accuracy, but i suspect in time there will be. >> well, they are working toward that. we know that they're working of intercontinental ballistic missiles. they have run a lot of tests. we know that they don't have the major reservation yet to put the bomb and missile together. we also know that they are working at it.
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they have a wonderful working relationship with russia, iran, other countries around the world who are not necessarily friends of ours. what technology they can develop taken certainly buy or acquire through some other agreement with other countries that are opposed to the united states and the west. neil: birds of a sanctioned father stick together. if you are watching and being alienated by the world to, you know, north korea, your group together and see what you can do . >> absolutely. eighty-one of those countries was to polkas and the nights a degree that they can . means that the united states of the west might get pricked a little bit or poke in the header whenever, they will want to do that. they share the same objectives, destabilize the west, regain their positions around the globe, particularly russia. we know they want to see a much more powerful russian that he is in now.
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he is working toward those ends and achieving it. neil: always a pleasure. you scare me. be well, my friend. you know, a lot depends on what china does. what if china has its own problems? even bigger. much bigger. when folks think about what they get from alaska, they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america.
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♪ neil: went over the media. even if you don't know that it is for sure real, for sure to get on top of it. if you do you are a media darling. another company and you might not be that big on climate change. bay into charter schools. you won't be treated as
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favorably. it is the latest reminder. what do you think? >> it is pretty terrible. no matter what side they're on, the media is trying to leverage their influence on the consumer. the funny thing about the article is that it says of their this leader and example. other firms in the industry should take note. those are quotes from some of the commentators. what other companies -- let other companies decide what they want to do. leave it up to them but if other companies want to make changes on there own, let them. let it shakeout in the market. don't try to influence them through biased articles. neil: nevertheless, they get good play in the media. whether they believe or not. is that why they drifted back are they generally interested? >> climate change it has always been a controversial issue. whatever happens to a company doing something just to do something that was good and not
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wear it on their sleeves? at think this is a bit of a knee-jerk reaction to my other heels of the pressuring him calling them out by name. not necessarily the greatest company. now of a sudden they're trying to make more sustainable ingredients. neil: we may disagree on this subject, but if walmart were to be unionized tomorrow all the problems would be gone. that is not happening. having said that, is there a double standard for how the press treats issues it cares about a company's that espouse them? >> i am surprised walmart has not been dumped? neil: of the green care. >> solar installation. help the belittled. in if you are making her the freedom.
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you want to say, we are going to get the share. it is a good move. you are still making a super sugar crisps. kids are getting heavy. does play the media at there own game. raising your green and red. neil: and shipped to the other super sugar crisp. >> dropped the name to make it just golden crisp years ago pleaded sounded a little ridiculous. neil: you're going to die. take a look of what has been going on in china. i did not want to make a big deal about this. people far smarter than i crunched numbers. they are making a big deal out of this questioning china's banks and whether they can survive. in the event of a crisis of the rest of that industry, the chinese banking industry has grown exponentially to more than half trillion dollars. what that means is that if
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everything hits the fan china's banks and institutions could get blown away. you know how this all global connecting thing goes. we get blown away or could. in other words, it is a global contagion. >> i do to some degree. the banks are more interconnected than they ever have been. ironically because of the financial crisis we had in the united states and the regulations that came out of it. billions of dollars is going overseas to be all over the globe because of other funding for investments in transfer payments. neil: that is china's business. what is to stop someone? me what to shore up their banks. >> i think in today's global economy everything is interconnected. it would and and adversely affect us. neil: are chinese banks too big to fail? >> it would go down like japan collapse where they kept the banks alive.
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that economy fell apart a couple of decades ago. neil: how real is that? >> not as likely. for no other reason than the stock market is absolutely ridiculous that said -- neil: the real estate activity. [inaudible conversations] >> the central bank created an economy pitch surprise that it has lasted this long. >> a lot of it is government related. china's government controls all business over there. we don't even know what is coming out of china right now. neil: i don't trust any piece of data. >> that's right. neil: 8% growth. i don't know. i just don't know of rights. we come back, a viewer wants to know if our graphics department could blur up my face.
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how cruel can he be and how cruel to you think i can be responding to a local you can be the?
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neil: and what is the deal with u.s. taxpayers' putting the bill for thousands of illegal kids being spread out. the federal government says they will register them for class is. are you kidding me? barely covering the legal kids who are here. this is going to make us detroit. and my kids have to make room for them when they're already kraut -- cloud -- crowded glasses predecessors stop. thwarting judge in tennessee. thus far i have yet to see what
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starving skin and bone and remember. most look well fed, some even fat. clothes are not bad either. maybe it was not bad or as rough as we were led to believe. there is no way of knowing traverse they were calling him kids. it turns out many at teenagers. then they said they were year alone. many came with adults. i could be wrong. meanwhile please start a campaign now. we have plenty of time to get the message out. and mitt romney now the polls shows the republican nominee handily beating barack obama if the election were held today. one of those with buyers' remorse.
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why was a promising? think i think you were talking about the infamous moment the president leaned over and whispered committee your alarm is justifiable then as now. what deals were made? and in new york say this. everything he said was right. everything. i am going to give him that pivot everything he warned about has come to pass. no matter. no way romney would ever win. he lost the election because he walks like a woman. if he would come to texas i would show him how to walk like a man. and i guarantee you he would run in 2016. he would win the election. i have no idea what you're talking about.
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the fix. they are quibbling over the price. many of you shocked to hear me say that republicans should just suck up the 18 billion get the damn thing syed hamid we don't have a lot of time to waste. i don't want democrats using republicans as an excuse. tim in michigan. what makes this different? en when you give up on how much the government initiative costs, i am convinced it's not a bad idea. game over. in virginia, i am happy. however, i hear no more about those who are responsible getting serious jail time. they kill veterans are not -- for money. then these random -- is getting done. including john in arizona.
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the tv screen up 20 percent of my screen. alert. words running across the bottom. if i want to read my news i would go on the internet or read a magazine. your people must have a ph.d. adjust lost track. i don't know where he was going. is there any way your graphics guys can't cover all of your page? you scare me. well, then don't watch. how hurtful. okay. i can't understand anything. it seems to me that all those small minds right to bash you are either just jealous are doing it to see if you read their e-mail on the air. pitiful. which is why i am writing to defend and salute you and see if you will read my e-mail on the air. welcome i adjusted. i hate that little -- emoticon.
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this can be a sad face, too. we are not going there. all right. see you tomorrow. ♪ kennedy: sanctions are like spankings. russia is getting a bright red bottom u.s. and eu who. will this economic punishment be enough to turn the frown upside down? i am not totally convinced. here is what i know about russia . a belligerent little bastard and many would love to contain him about how do you move past the paddle? do you invade? there is no pat answer. if we hit him below the bill we can make you bleed from his wallet .

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