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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  September 22, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am EDT

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it's no wonder more people choose delta than any other airline. ♪ neil: holy moly, is isis a crisis because we're godless? i raised it again on my weekend show. let's just say i must have hit a nerve with a lot of you. claire in boston writes, there is no denying when we went secular bad guys went nuclear. you're damn right, cavuto. jim, take god out of the classrooms. no mystery to me why we start seeing terrorists in the streets. ti, no god, no hope, no america. simple as that. james e-mails, cavuto you normally get stuff wrong but the proof is right. the proof is politically correct dealing with these murderous
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bastards dealing what they are, evil. scott in florida, you can't extrapolate with fewer americans going to he church with trouble coming our way, that is idiotic connection. call me an idiot. i am juxtaposing the two events. they're uncanny. tanya. secular isn't evil than calling you ignorant journalist. just because you are a dumb ass, don't mean those who are not god are nuts or well, dumb asses too. i have no idea what you're talking about. truly noted the same. thanks for watching. better suited to that network that killed off god years ago and starting with m and ending with c. anyway, hundreds of e-mails pro and con just like that. we have terrorist analyst who says america's lost faith is indeed helping isis win this war. they're kind of filling a vacuum as you reminded me in the past. right, eric? >> neil, i think so. what do we stand for here in the west anymore? the west, united states, europe,
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we were founded on judeo-christian, western civilization, heritage values. that seems to be slipping away right now. look, i was in germany a few years ago, neil and investigating us lame mick terrorism and i interviewed some freedom fighters in germany fighting back against jihad in that country. i was amazed, to a man all of them were atheists. i said, guys at end of the day, what are you fighting for? are you fighting for freedom, in my opinion, freedom is a god-given thing? what are we fighting for today? are we fighting for the right to play on our ipad and watch the kardashians on tv any think many peep, especially in our elites, in the leadership here in the west, have lost their morings and lost what this is all about. neil, i can tell you these muslim radicals have a religious zeal. they have a clear ideology, clear goals, they know exactly what they're fighting for but what are we fighting for anymore? neil: we generally respond, eric, not what they're fighting
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for. we see them as having a twisted view of a deity or what is religious cause. >> sure. neil: we think that alone will cover it. you say not nearly enough, right? >> here is the deal, neil. we have a problem with moral relativism. we a problem with the elite class identifying evil. i look at president obama, for instance. he is a guy when israel and hamas are at war, basically saying both sides have legitimate grievances and he is castigating israel. no, hamas is pure evil. evil exists. we're talking about moral relativism. they don't see evil. they can't call evil for what it is. if someone is chopping off an innocent journalist as head, neil i don't care why they're doing it. i don't care they're doing it because they disagree with american foreign policy the bottom line they're chopping off an innocent person's head, and that is evil. we have inability among our leaders to call evil for what it is and to confront it. i interviewed islamic
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terrorists, neil. i have been face-to-face with islamic radicals. they tell me we're at war with you. we have want to defeat you and kill you. this is a war. if you can't acknowledge evil and ideology of the enemy you're up against, you can't beat them. neil: that is very good point. eric, do you mind sticking around here i want to advance this with my august panel. we're here on same day administration officials are warning that estimated 100 americans who traveled to the middle east and joined terrorist organizations like isis have now returned to the united states. they're right here in our midst doing god knows what. lizzie macdonald, katy past live. what worries you? >> i think that we've been warning for months about isis coming back to the united states, not through the southern border like people have been warning about but on their u.s. passports because the state department can't confirm whether the passports were revoked. legislation in the senate last week was voted down would make it easier to revoke passports of americans knowingly fighting for
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isis overseas. we've been warning about. it is here. you're saying only 40 people. 40 isis fighters can do a lot of damage especially with americans suspecting of it. neil: to your point, minimum 40. latest count is more than that. we have to start searching from these guys. many are of somali dissent, knoll. we get racial profiling thing, something that eric mentioned. >> we have been so politically correct and so concerned about being politically correct it is to our detriment. look at examples. many there are thousands of student visas that have been lost. not to mention -- neil: we can't trace them. we don't know where the heck they are. >> not at all. we're so concerned on, you know, profiling people at the airport and, you know, while we have many so one that looks like alibaba and 40 thieves we let go on through, we're stopping
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grandma with gray hair and six kids behind her to be fair and politically correct. it has reached an insane level. neil: you know, gets back, i think, lizzie to the whole multiculturalism. be tolerant with all cultures but it is fine goal but detriment of everything else we have. >> you know what really bothers me, people who come to the united states and hate america for, or attack america and their incredibility integrity so undermined, why do they come here in the first place, right? we are standing up for what america stand for. america is for freedom, for economic liberty, for justice, for holding governments accountable. it is no surprise the 22 members of the arab league, none of them, none of them are full-fledged democracies, neil. i would say -- neil: excellent point. >> we stand for middle class values. that you work hard and you strife and you do right by your family. i don't like think countries go to war with each other, each had a starbucks or burger king in
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there. that is the issue too. my point though, coming back to it, i don't see isis going after north korea, russia. they are godless too. it is about what america stand for. this is about resentment. that is feeding this. neil: you know i got to wonder, eric, back to what you were saying how you treat this, how we respond to this we're very, very even in the midst of something terrifying, we're very much reminded not to go too far, not to profile, not to appear to be as godless as the very folks we are trying to take on. is there a risk to that behavior? look almost too goodie, as responding to bad guys? >> sure, neil, you know what our problem is at end of the day? we're tolerant of the intolerant. that is our problem today. we're speaking about somali threat and isis recruiting among somalis. i was in minneapolis, the twin cities, last week, has largest somali population in the united
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states. 100,000 somalis live in minneapolis. neil: i'll not saying willy-nilly go after groups, but if you know there is predisposition or heresy or talk out of concerted group, why not? >> at the end of the day, neil, it is a sad fact. although al qaeda, isis are trying to recruit causecations, women, it's a sad fact that the vast majority of terrorists today are young, middle earn and south asian males. i wish it wasn't sot is. to not pay closer attention to that demographic is madness. neil: thank you very much. we'll have some of you back a little later. meantime, coming up, more on the terror threat these fine folks were alluding to, and why isis could be the least of our problems, the least of our problems. first, climate protesters push marching on wall street, pushing off the wall spending but are they willing to pick up the tab? their costly pitch is a son of a -- >> we've gone through a
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neil: boy, they are nothing if not relentless, right? climate protesters marching on wall street ahead of tore's big u.n. climate summit. leaders looking to spend billions of dollars in the name of climate change, but should we spend the money without knowing what we're doing with the money or whether that is the problem they say it is. remember this was called global warming and they switched to at least more nebulous climate change. never nebulous chris warner on what to make this. they have got the numbers, chris. what are they doing with those numbers. >> they're demanding all sorts of policies and programs if you go back in time they have demanded in the name of all sorts of greatest threats facing manned kindkind. the roll down the autobahn that everyone embraces like grim death would not have any impact on climate, according to everything they tout to promote agenda, computer models.
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it is not about climate. it is worse than not being sure their prescription and all this spending might not be in the name of something really facing us. in fact we know whatever is going through their minds, this can not be about climate so it is about something else. if it wouldn't impact issue anomaly in support of. this is climate agenda that nobody claims will impact climate. neil: chris, go so far to say, i will give them their due, this is among the things we might want to look at. i think, you and i can respectfully disagree. i don't agree. i'm saying we have more pressing matters, like isis killing people around the world and beheading them right now. state governments out of money and deep, deep, deep in the red. we have got this whole, you know, unfunded pension obligation that cuts across the all the major western powers. we've got vladmir putin, doing some crazy stuff. just saying that in a world of all these other big developments, maybe we could prioritize a little bit.
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no, you even hear the u.n. say, this has to be front and center issue. john kerry, saying this is the main issue. i have an issue with that. >> well, the minute anyone opens by saying this is the greatest threat facing mankind and everyone from the president down to his secretary of state, through, u.n., secretary-general, said that, stop listening to them. second, isn't it time we began thinking about or time investing in these things? jimmy carter, guy from the history books increased their subsidies and there are new technologies and so on. divorce ourself from cronyism to move to the solyndra economy et cetera? the irony has no end. we have many greater threats. all the parade of horribles, wealthier is healthier, wealthier is more resilient to all of this, including something always happening which is climate change, which is not changing outside of historical variability. you need to move this down, irrationally, and why they promote it emotionally with
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scare campaigns with big red flag, we must act now. that is generally a tip it doesn't stand scrutiny. neil: if you have champion a cause you have to live it and provide no arsenal to your enemy or, ammunition to your enemy. when i see a lot of these guys leave tons of garbage, messes all of that stuff, styrofoam cans and containers all the like, you're defeating very message. like al gore flying in a private jet, you know to makes his cause for another, you know, save the environment pitch. i mean it just falls on deaf ears, doesn't it? >> it does. that is alinsky rule number four. make them live their own truths. the fact is, this is a wealthy, white, western movement. this is go to haiti, ask them, i'm deeply concerned. will you come on board to coyote toe two. i have first order needs, food, fuel, medicine shelter. people that are concerned about food, fuel, shelter, can not
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administer to the withwer energy taxes this is rich man's folly. they don't point to places where it has worked because it never has. doesn't seem to impact them. most are wealthy enough to be right. it will harm a awful lot of people who are obsessing about real needs confronting them. neil: yeah. you have got to be able to walk the walk while you're walking and protesting. don't leave garbage behind. you want a clean earth. >> wealthier is healthier, neil. and cleaner. neil: i might run with that, but not credit you. chris horner, thank you very much. protesters might be the least of wall street's problems. why a top regulator now says a cyber apocalypse could be about to rock the entire financial system after this. ♪ we've never sold a house before.
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neil: "fox business alert" for you. new york's top regulator fearing armageddon type cyberattack could be hitting wall street that would be essentially you because the department of financial services is gearing up for it and what effect one morning you wake up see your account zeroed out. american bankers association, ceo, former oklahoma governor frank keating on the threat to banks and to you. what is the big fear, governor? >> precisely what you said. i think it is, good to have laws say we should be very concerned. it is important that all the regulators and all the banks and the federal government recognize that a nation-state attack on the financial services industry of the united states or utilities or whatever it may be is serious business. the thugocacy groups and criminal elements that is totally different deal. banks pay anyone who losing
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money, in cyberattack banks pay. the target breach, retailers, apparently they gave access in effect keys to the kingdom to the heating and air-conditioning people which is just crazy. i think any of us who served uncle sam the recognize the big fear is nation-state and we have bill in congress -- neil: they have more money, weapons behind them to make -- >> latest technology. they can develop themselves. can steal it or borrow it. neil: starts with paying kids really good at this stuff and -- >> yeah. i'm just saying, for us as a country, we need to pass a cyber bill which permits sharing of information between the public and private sector. it he is in the congress now. no blowback because of privacy concerns. and it is important there be no silos. neil: there is blow back on privacy concerns. people say, keep us safe is one thing but using that as an excuse to snoop on me is another. you say what? >> to the extent new technologies are coming against us or there is a strike date, we
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need to know about it in the private sector. the federal government is very good now of partnering with us in financial services industry. we need to do a lot more because fundamentally, you don't need ships at sea, and you don't need flags flying. behind armies you need just a computer. neil: let me ask you with your expertise on this, governor? what is your fear? that bad guys will get into our financial accounts, steal the money, make it look like all the money has been taken. really whack us out, what? >> well, who knows. i mean, look at israelis. they're fighting off iranians probably daily. i think that example is a good good one, to sit down with them, tell us what you know. but the united states government knows what's coming or what isn't coming. they know that groups out there, the thug groups that are after us, they are the law enforcement agencies. they also know the technology. so for the private sector to say to uncle sam tell us everything you know to have state like in
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the losky case, we're spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year, the financial services sector to protect borrowers and customers of banks but we need to know if somebody is coming through the front door but are they coming through the back door. we need to share. neil: what about stuff we're up loading. iphones and new device, up load it to the cloud and vice versa, bring it back down. a lot of people can get their hand on that or there is potential for that? >> during the cold war the customs union was created before currency union. it was only good as weakest link. in the payments process, neil, we need to mcsure that the system is equally regulated, and the expectations of everybody in the system are equal. tough, no-nonsense, the best technologies. so, with all of these new players getting into the payment space i'm concerned because i want to make sure everybody has the same rock solid intent to protect the process. neil: you're pretty good at this stuff. dow up load stuff to a cloud or online material or financial
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data of your own or your family, to the internet? >> answer is no. neil: really? >> yeah. neil: you're putting it all on the hard disk. >> for me, and i'm, i'm the vietnam generation and before. for me i want to make sure i have a written record of everything i have, so in the event everything disappears into the ether, i can say, hey, listen this is my stuff. neil: i have this 4account right here. governor, thank you very, very much. very wise words. so the nfl catches a lot of hell over domestic abuse but the media voices similar reports about a female soccer star named hope solo, the domestic abuse double-standard coming up. but first, big bucks going to fight ebola. a former fema director saying bigger paycheck, often times the bigger problems. bigger problems. ♪ you know what my business philosophy is, reynolds?
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>> tomorrow on opening bell, hd reportedly has had talks about a merger four years. the mayo clinic doctor on the ebola crisis. all coming up tomorrow opening bell 9:00 a.m. eastern. ♪ neil: think about this, already sending millions of dollars to stop the ebola outbreak. we are very skeptical it will fix the problem. why? when it comes to money, look at 75th. new york city is still looking to repair funds set by stan lee, particularly in the s.i. area, and billions of dollars are still left over in that accounted for, in many cases just sitting at the tablecloth. a former fema director michael brown says sending cash could lead to bigger problems. i guess what you are saying is that other forces come in and try to take that money
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for other nefarious uses. >> that's right. not even sure if there are nefarious forces are not, but what happens in most disasters, americans are incredibly giving to a reader responds to their call to give aid to bella citizens or even those were suffering overseas. for example, sandy, hundreds of millions of dollars donated to the red cross and other organizations. the new york attorney general investigating whether those moneys were used for the purposes they were raised for. on top of that the ebola crisis says. we will spend 178 million for that. and i think what is important about the government money is the white house website talks about, we are going to repurchase existing programs from existing money which only takes care a part of it we now have to go to the general fund to get the rest of it. as you know, we borrow 30,
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$0.45 of every dollar we spend. we continue to act like the money in washington d.c. is monopoly money. we forget that it comes from hard working americans that go out there every day to keep the economy going. neil: we all have big hearts and what to do something. we have liz macdonald to follow this money. sixty plus billion dollars. you know, by all means, a big heart. have the brain to go with it . >> we do not do that part. again, it is emotional response. we get caught up in the initial headlines. when you keep reading a story in following the money you find that it is just not showing up forgoes some are else. here is the problem. we talk about the number of homes that have been really damaged. right now we only have less than 600 homes out of 19,000 a cap money so far today. and maybe less than 600 are
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still waiting for checks. 19,000 homes. this is an issue for the united states. talking about bigger hurricanes. you talk about developing atlantic city into a seaside resort, you have to wonder what they're going to do in terms of bolstering atlantic city. seaside resorts to bring a lot of economic activity. they need to really push quickly to do that support of a future hurricane. neil: when it comes to future hurricane gusts, smart guys like you, you can never make an area hurricane proof but you can make them more retain resistance. and to that and a lot of folks in jersey, s.i., they are requiring house be built a liar. a lot of people between a rock in our place doing that they won't get insurance if they cannot. what do you do? it sits in the meantime waiting for something. what do you do? >> the legislatures need tax privileges which is need to
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do things. they need to knew what jeff perris did in full -- jeff bush did in florida. he worked hard to convince the legislature to opposed stricter building codes in those areas that were most vulnerable because if we mitigate now it reduces the cost later. the second thing that state legislators need to do is to give exemption so that people can give some waivers from some of the restrictions on how much incurrence you have to of insurance you have to have set. we need to learn to be flexible and these positions unfortunately bureaucrats like to make sure that everything we do is inside that box which is why you have to have the legislature give them some wiggle room outside of those boxes. so to the point about all the money that comes in here it can be used for its best purpose. neil: here is where i wonder what the best purposes. after sandy, and correct me if i am wrong, although i will not like it if you do. the is -- smithsonian museum
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in washington well a field got money to fix its roof. >> that's right. neil: how do you prevent that kind of stuff? and i love the smithsonian. how do you prevent that? >> are you asking me? >> i am. i have the speech was. >> first and foremost you put restrictions on what you can use the disaster relief fund money for. as has been true since september 11th. size 36 storm related. >> exactly. but the problem is the members of congress, republicans and democrats alike do not want to turn anybody down because if you turn somebody down for completely logical and accountable reasons they get on television and the next thing you know people begin to give into it. we have to learn to be practical answer to the american people it has to be storm related, directly related to the cause and
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effect. we do that in the core of all the time. neil: you're right. he is making way too much sense. >> this saves ebola money to. that can't go to lining dictators bank accounts. neil: that little detail. isis was scary? what if i chose a much scarier group is looking to come up after us? so, this group makes them so, this group makes them look
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but when you've got an entire company who knows that the fewest cancellations and the most on-time flights are nothing if we can't get your things there, too. it's no wonder more people choose delta than any other airline. ♪ neil: it feels like i am worrying like crazy. there is any other group behind isis that has a lot of terrorist watchers worrying and panicking. warning that two other groups led by former leaders could be even bigger threats to the united states. retired linen to colonel
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says winnie to focus on these other threats. a group how that got them worrying. and now you're saying there are groups and others are confirming there are other groups. >> well, first off, probably most everyone in the united states knows too that is because that is all we're talking about on the news. these other groups warn us. you have the director of national intelligence saying that this particular gruber is a bigger threat than anything else. that is an attention getter. >> let me say first, he is saying that because he knows something we don't know. bin but by all accounts this group is small, very secretive. we do not know how big they are well funded. what we do know is what matters. there are in serious but not there because they want to
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take us on out. they wanted to a form of caliphate. that is the place where they can find and recruit people, get experience, qualified people to do what their primary objective is to attack the united states, the west as soon as possible by the most devious means possible. they're working on the caliphate and on controlling and taking more land in the san that. these guys are focused on the west, the united states and want to get your sooner than later. neil: i wonder hamas. they might actually be more and goose with one another than fighting one another to divide and conquer, divide our attention ace's be to say nothing of our attack line. >> if you consider, go back one year from right now, whatever elements we had in the u.s. government were working are on the intelligence programs and
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operations, what have you, primary focus on other small groups and other groups in north africa and the middle east. suddenly along comes this giant. so all of those resources, some great numbers and the after run over and start looking to answer the questions coming out of the white house and pentagon. that means their is a void and we do not have the kind of people we have before focusing on the real threats. obviously some are focused on a. clearly this other group are the big guys that we need to be looking at. it looks like it would years sooner than later. until we put the kind of resources on and that we can which means new people and new programs, we will not really know. neil: we are not doing that. we're not doing that. >> i think there are no indications we are. again, the intelligence community has to go for carson say that we need more people. our recess to approve it. there has to be more money
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put together for intelligence operations which is not a simple thing. it is complex. no short-term solutions, but we must. neil: ahead of all of this long before anyone i know. thank you. says meanwhile, nfl stars accused of domestic abuse and the media just runs with it. accused of domestic abuse. we are so all over it. ♪ it's monday,
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♪ neil: is a weird double standard board the domestic violence story that no one is talking about. still playing ccused of domestic abuse against
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her 17-year-old nephew and a half sister. why all the media of rage over the nfl? not of people. back with our xbox business of stars. double standard? the. >> for short. she is getting a pat on the back. visible injuries. a visible injuries. the two counts of domestic assault and violence. listen, and she was a marginal player she would be benched. she is the face of the women's league right now. neil: not a marginal ballplayer. >> you have the nfl players bins as they await legal procedures. neil: by the way to buy one to pick up on this point, the official response. we are wearing that their handling a personal situation. the same time she as an opportunity to set a significant record this big star hard work and dedication. we believe we should
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recognize that in the proper way. the focus is on what she's done professionally and not part tiara -- purposely. known. the media should say no. is it the flip side? >> when you have people put into these public positions were a lot of people know about them when they're representing an organization and get into a bad situation in their personal life in as a reflection of what -- not only on the personal life and the organization but the gain. people look at what they're doing in a different way. did. neil: think about what your saying. whatever we are doing in our private lives should somehow intrude on the we're doing in our public lives here in. is there a case to be made? >> you know, wrong. i think that if you commit any act of violence, man or woman, any kind of sports representation team were not
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you need to me -- yes. and you know what, nike dropped the sponsorship of peterson, but nike continues to sponsor the solo. why? you should cut across-the-board. if you are accused of violence nike should cut everyone's sponsorship that is accused. neil: i don't know which way it just has to be consistent this is apple, the new iphone six and six plus smart phones sold in its opening weekend. celebrities and had been having naked pictures of them clearing. supposedly more are coming. it looks like customers are letting the security things slide. very diligent about this. obviously it does not matter >> road, your head is in the cloud. the timber cut is out going
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full-court press last week. we cannot even give the government information event they hit us with a wiretap request, but that is not the issue. it up in the cloud is not secure and will remain an issue for all of these other companies in. neil: it is interesting that when you get one of these new funds and what to download, that is what you're doing, download and a material and starting from scratch. i suppose that is exactly what they do. there are risks to that end we are just not appreciating. >> certainly a risk. although customers are putting that aside to buy guaranteed they say how does this work? have my pictures can get up into the cloud. they're asking more questions about how the software works which is something we do not always ask him. we think that they work the same as they did before. but, you know, that people want to avoid that says they need to accept that in the
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delays lots of things are not private and they will do almost anything for new iphone. neil: the bottom line is that a lot of young people are not focusing on any of this. they just want to get an neat gadget and the bells and whistles that come with it. i suspect that privacy issues which might be out there but are not in the top pecking order. what do you think? >> everyone is focused on the bigger, better deal been. they want to have the bigger, better deal. as far as people's photos and information, why don't we all go back to the old. that way you have nothing to worry about. bachmann. >> notes instead of the males. bad i digress. looks like money still talks. bringing in more cash than republicans. and it could be the
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difference between republicans in the senate or not. >> i think this. the democrats have the burden of proving he. they have to defend bad policies. we are living in a world created by the democrats failed policies which is why the gop and our candid it's in the midterm are probably going to prevail. even eight silver, number one ranked pollster has said that we look for a republican run senate. but have to tell you. they may out raise us, we still need to raise money. i do not think this will affect the midterms. there are raising is because they have to defend their bad policies. >> but that is the way. >> we need to win double-digit with women. that is what i am reading. that is what i am finding out they're going to avoid
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talking about his toward the poor economic recovery, all were since world war ii which is what women care about and focus on the pay gap or things like contraception. women on both sides say, you know what, get rid of the contraception issue and make it over the counter. it is really about the poor economic recovery. neil: is the money factor going to tip a couple of those close races enough so that democrats still eke out control of the senate? >> i am not sure about that. this time around after voters have given president obama second chance and are disappointed, seen broken promises from their senators about their health care plan, people will be more focused on the money in their wallets that much money each party is spending. neil: we shall see. wanted thank you all. a question ever since recovered the scottish election. where did you get your scottish accent? when fixed income experts
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neil: and what is the deal with this nonstop nfl. barres was a billing to believe behavior on and off the field. please, that would be like my boss company because i got busted for getting drunk on a friday night. by that logic of america would be in the unemployment line. since when is much of the media going through marriages like candy? why is the nfl being scorned what crime did he commit? because as a couple of flag jobs on his payroll. welcome to america. talk about overkill. the nfl being judged on more of this to molecule being judged on what you eat. either image makes one are all, don't you think?
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i do not know where you are going, but i think he made fun of me session. of what business is domestic violence for the nfl? now, workplace violence would be understandable. there is nothing requires the attention of the nation of the nfl. the national conversation focuses on the image of the nfl. the responsibility of players and, no one, not even you is opening a national dialogue on the victims. our job is to discuss the role of the players to make victims and whether the organization that employs and should. that is it. that is all. are a prison the in after he dies down constructive results will come. hmm this is a bratton door in this not done this so patients mom copper pot. you continue to say hope springs eternal when the fact is hope springs eternal in new.
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[laughter] on to interrupting my friends show him, his coverage and what many of you perceive to be a god awful scottish accent. after all is said and done, we are getting that together. and today pallium ec that. just shut up, man. nothing, no thank you, that's fine. take it from a start. you suck. him 1i don't even have to watch your saree station. not done retiring. you leading. get out there in the mexican
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those of us that two of the opinion of thinking about you better talk to tom the north carolina bin rude hearing you and don imus reminds me of shaquille o'neal and costs. but to assume? when he calls you fact i was furious. when he shot back that he looked like beatles use of was doubled over. you guys are magic together. georgia and ohio, not a fan of mine beetle juice in. nothing but a power grab by you said that you could do more of your useless pontificating about the pros and cons of this got thing that most of us who would watch care less about. plenty of other news outlets covering the subject. get back in your ivory tower and leave the show alone. and then tyler from atlanta. you should have offered coverage on scotland, like
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the other networks did. instead, on the day of the vote nothing. just his stupid crude nervously laughing at his jokes. you missed an ideal chance to cover a legitimate news story. we did cover the scottish vote. before i was straight. this is the most stirring felt i had ever seen. you look just like someone on my high-school basketball team.
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i believe that he could survive with all of you haters. indeed, i can happily.

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