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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  September 25, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am EDT

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hp big data and cloud solutions make sure you always know what's coming - and are ready for it. make it matter. . neil: welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. and when it rains it pours. wouldn't you know in washington, d.c., new york city, it's been raining hard, as the latest terror threat to the two very big subway dependent cities started pouring in and sinking in. tonight a look at what authorities are doing here to make sure commuters stay safe, amid a potential isis threat that is targeting subway cities. here and in france. and is chris christie bad for business? i want you to meet the republican who says this image is proof governor christie will
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never be president christie. all that and forget about an iphone that bends. what new york city mayor de blasio is planning, what he wants to do with iphones? it's bent. eric holder stepping down as attorney general of the united states. many on the right welcome it, many on the left chagrinned about it, and time awasting for president to find a replacement for him. keep in mind, the white house is extremely concerned if it doesn't move fast, it could be dealing with trying to get a replacement confirmed in a potentially republican senate. more on that later to. charlie gasparino on wall street's rocky relationship with the ag. charles payne on the relationship worse because of the ag. and fox biz all-stars, jonas max blixt and veronica dagher. guests for you first, handicap,
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all of the above? >> interesting first, jamie dimon once referred to dealing with the holder d.o.j. is like dealing with the mafia. they are relentless. wall street would want anybody in except for him. i think kamala harris, the ag from california has a hot. i think preet bharahan. he did a damn good job, if you look at that. a lot of this is up to the president who's going to carry out his agenda, hatchet man to do things he doesn't want to get his fingerprints on? is preet the best? is kamala harris? he picked jack lew as treasury secretary because he would carry his water better than anybody else. this isn't necessarily about paper. but i do know this, preet has been competing for this for years. one negative with him is that
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he and holder don't get along, i don't know how much say holder is going to have with his replacement. they actually hate each other. neil: as it's effect on race relations, whoever comes after him, you can't be nearly as fiery, nearly as controversial, nearly as divisive. what do you say? >> i don't know if it will be in position to him. if it is kamala harris or someone else who is a black person. to charlie's point, not only is he confrontational with the big banks but the ideology that driving him has operation chokepoint where they went after small gun shops or the gibson guitar thing. we remember the speech, we're a nation of cowards, the way we deal with race relations in this country. the idea that we've gotten to where we want to get as a nation in terms of race, everyone grease we've got a ways to go but should have been
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in a celebratory mood, we have the first black president and first black attorney general. it was never good enough for -- i thought he brought it up more often than president obama, and i think he made it worse. whether that was his intentions or not know that it had to be. neil: especially when he added that the president's problems come at the expense of those who are racist. >> sure. neil: he didn't say exactly, that the gist of that. veronica, i'm curious what the financial fallout of this is? much of the banking community and the investment community to charlie gasparino's point, this is the guy who oversaw the shakedown, to the tune of billions of dollars, tens of billions of dollars, and they might be feeling or saying ding dong the witch is dead. >> they might be, he was not a friend to wall street, went after a lot of insider trading folks. lot of enemies on wall street. jamie dimon might be happy he's gone as well. i think the big question is who's going to replace him, and
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will they be friendlier to wall street or not? this is going to be a big change for the president. the president has had him as a key member of his team for many years. neil: what is he third longest serveing? >> indeed. and i think this is going to be a big adjustment for obama. he knew this was coming, the timing is interesting as well. neil: what do you make of the timing, jonas? >> he's depressed, i think he wants out of the job. i don't think he thinks he was successful. a lot of cash settlements, he wanted people behind bars for the whole financial crisis. that was a bomb. he alludes to he wishes there should be a bigger whistle-blower following, i need more tips. i think he wanted executives in jail. he didn't get that. and wall street didn't get -- >> a lot of people on the insider trading behind jail. that was preet's doing. neil: nevertheless, that in motion, what could be the next
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wave in this before they drag him to the big house. mercedes to veronica's point, i'm stepping back and getting a bigger picture about normally in the last two years, of many administration, they tend to be just get ready to slowly turn out the lights. so the conventional wisdom is it's not going to make a big difference regardless. do you agree with that? >> it could, because it depends what's happening in the united states, outside of the united states. remember, that the president wants to choose an attorney general that is one of his closest confidants. we saw that with president kennedy who chose his brother. it's an incredibly important position for the president to pick someone he feels absolutely comfortable with. i think massachusetts governor duval patrick is very much a good candidate. he's a close friend of the president's. he handled the boston bombing very well. you know, he's up to play there. so again, it does matter because although we can say
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what we want to say, we can look back at president bush when we did have the financial crisis in the last two years and you want to make sure have you someone you can rely on. neil: no, no, you're right. look at rudy giuliani and even in and the last couple of months in office. duval patrick, i had a feeling he was a big deal at the 2012 democratic convention, when i seized this exclusive moment. take a look. >> governor, you have a minute to talk to us? >> i've got to fly, you can talk to us. neil: you are getting good reaction to the speech. >> thank you. neil: did you expect the reception that you got? >> expected a lot from this president and his agenda. >> he really liked you. [ laughter ] >> charles payne, i understand the enormity of how big a deal this guy is.
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it was like 58% questions like no answer. but do we need an african-american? >> no, we don't need an african-american. no. maybe mercedes's point someone the president feels comfortable with. the president is about ideology than race, people should know that by now in this administration. neil: have you long been critical of the ideology, this is this and that, and anti-success. is it? >> i think it is. that's been my thought. it's a progressive idea, you go back and you read some of the thoughts of the original progressive movement and this utopian society where people don't have too much and too little and regulated by a giant government that knows best for all of us. he's bought into it hook, line and sinker and comes before everything, it dictates all of this decision-making above all of the other things like unions and stuff like that. neil: you could set this up
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smartly if you are the president or assuming against their worst fears that the senate goes republican, that that is the president's new attorney general would position themselves to we're for the common man, looking out for you. the big bad republicans. >> and we went out after wall street. i don't think you noticed that deval patrick had a little cross up when you talked to him. neil: yes, i did. i have plenty of garlic. >> i agree with charles on this point, not that the president is progressive, but he does tend to pick technocrats that can get that position through. jack lew is the treasury secretary, i don't think he's quite an idea -- ideologue, does eric holder agree with barack obama on fundamental things like social justice and public policy? yes. but he was also an extremely
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effective --. >> i think he was, you might not like him. >> yes. neil: not saying you, in particular, but very effective what he did. >> very polarizing too. neil: i will agree readily, do you think that's going to be an issue for success or right or left going to urge whatever you do mr. president, we don't need a polarizing figure? >> it could be, you definitely know his name no matter what side you fall on the issue, you know this guy has a lot of brand recognition, so to speak. the next guy, man or woman, the president may not want such a high-profile person. >> president obama is polarizing. >> i'm not worried about that. >> what you need is, listen, dick cheney was incredibly polarizing, right? i don't care which side you agree, disagree, he got the job done, and sometimes this comes down to who's going to carry the water and do it right? neil: deval patrick we've got an in like this.
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he and i are simpatico. meanwhile, new york city in danger, chicago in danger, atlanta in danger, all these cities with elaborate rail and subway systems all in danger to a terror attack. what we're learning now out of middle east that has a lot of folks here staying up way late to the middle of the night? [ male announcer ] some come here to build something smarter. ♪ some come here to build something stronger. others come to build something faster... something safer... something greener. something the whole world can share. people come to boeing to do many different things.
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2-10 lines, 10 gigs of truly shareable data, unlimited talk and text, starting at $130 a month. . neil: you need this at this time. the threat at home, via message from iraq's prime minister saying that his country has uncovered a plot for imminent attack on subway centers in the united states and in paris. former 9/11 commission member lee hamilton says we've been here before, warned we could be here again. sir, very good to have you. what do you make of this latest perceived threat? how real it is or likely it is? >> i don't think we can really judge it. this is not the first threat it. certainly not the last one. obviously the source of information we have is a credible source, we have to take it seriously and have to do everything we can to prevent any attack on american soil or
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elsewhere against our friends or our friends in the region. it's very hard to make a judgment of how serious, how credible these threats are. those of us on the outside, not in government, probably cannot make that assessment at all. those inside government have a very difficult job. they don't just get one such threat, they're dealing with many such threats that they hear about over the course of a few days, and they have to try to check them all out as best they can. i'm sure that's exactly what's happening right now. >> i wonder what's the pecking order, as i talked to co share tom caden, look for something cyber, don't forget the planes are still a fixation of terrorists. are they all equally worrisome? could this potentially be a head fake. what do you think? >> well, in my range the threats, i would put the
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cyberattack at top because of the vulnerability of this country because we're so dependent upon the internet, and those attacks can come from hackers, teenagers from countries, from anywhere, and do great disruption to this country very quickly. i don't think we're nearly enough up to speed in defending against such attacks. having said, that i don't mean to minimize the possible attacks from isis or myriad of groups in the middle east. those attacks or threats of those attacks have to be taken seriously. they want to do us harm. we know isis wants to do us harm. we know groups who want to do us harm. we can't dismiss those threats. we have to take them seriously. neil: do you think we stirred up the hornet's nest with the airstrike campaign. fact that france is included in
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this and the fact that france joined in the sortie attacks, what do you think? >> there is action and reaction, we have a bombing campaign going against bad people who did very bad things. from our point of view, from my point of view, the attacks are fully justified. but you don't have a retaliation, if you call it that, by the united states to attack isis and expect the world to end there. it doesn't end there. there's a reaction to it. so they're sitting over there, isis and the others saying we don't have the power of the united states, we can't fly jet airplanes around the world. how do we get at these guys that we don't like? and think of asymmetrical type of an attack, an attack on our subways or whatever. it's perfectly logical tong they'll do that. we have to be prepared as best we can. neil: not as if they haven't tried it before. congressman, thank you very much, good to see you again. >> thank you, sir, nice to be
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with you. neil: we're at war with isis, but now at a twitter war, tweeting pictures of dead jihadists, sending a message of anyone thinking of joining the terror group, this could happen to you. jonas, fight fire with fire? >> yeah, it's a little propaganda for my liking of a government. it is what they do. we got to discourage, they're attempting people to join, people are prone to join who don't have jobs, they're giving them a cult to join. we have to fight fire with fire. neil: what do you think? >> i see what they're doing, i don't know if it will work, though. they're jihadist, they're out there beheading people. they're not going to be worried about photos from the government. they are determined to carry it out here or over there, and i think they're a real threat. sending pictures on twitter, maybe that would detract the 18-year-old american from
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joining perhaps, and maybe that's the state department's goal. neil: whether it reaches them. >> that's true. maybe it's a baiting strategy to see who clicks on it and who's interested. neil: exactly, trying to weed them out. mercedes, what do you think? >> i think they're trying to have the social media war right now. i've seen the video put out by the state department. if you haven't seen, it it's incredibly gruesome with the crucifixions and the beheading. i agree with veronica, i don't think it necessarily deters those who are committed and want to become part of isis or khorasan or any of the groups in syria or iraq. again i keep thinking there's a psychological reason behind what the state department is doing. i don't know if it's effective. neil: with the subway threat and everything else that's appeared, mercedes, the priority is on a high body count. we can talk about the cyberthreat. that's very, very real, i'm not diminishing it by any means. if you go as a subway, you hope
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to do a lot of damage, a lot of killing. it's pretty, pretty clear to me at least that, that is a clear and present danger and threat with isis, isil, whomever. >> right, exactly. and when you think about it. think about 9/11. who would have ever thought that these terrorists would have hijacked a plane and just struck through two buildings. it was just so, you could never imagine it, and i think that once we see the barbaric acts, the beheadings, the crucifixions, et cetera, it's such a wake-up call, this is a real threat, we need to stay vigilant that 9/11 and the war on terrorism is far from over and it's a long-term campaign that the united states is going to have to stick it out. >> yeah, but war is never going away either, this is a permanent thing. neil: my fear is we would not be having the airstrikes if it weren't for the beheadings. >> we don't want to be in a constant state of panic, it could happen.
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that's not a great mentality for an ongoing period of indefinite length. >> the alternative is you forget them. >> get a little too lacks, and we can't afford to be lax at this point. neil: what we're doing in in country to deal with it. coming up, next time your car breaks down, don't check the engine, you might want to check to see
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. neil: imagine getting into your car and it won't start, not because you are having car trouble, there is something called an engine underneath the hood. enough about my mechanical expertise. it's not starting because you have loan trouble. auto subprime loan lenders are disabling cars driven by
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delinquent borrowers. back with mercedes, jonas, veronica. veronica, it sounds weird, but i guess the lender can deactivate the car remotely if someone is late on a payment. what do you think? >> i can see it from both ways. the lender wants money back, they lend out the money. neil: doesn't it seem like a little tony soprano next. what's next? >> who knows? at the same time, there's another question to this. if you can't car payment, buy a cheaper car or get -- maybe you shouldn't be owning the car to begin with. i think there's maybe some mistake on the part of the lenders making the loans and on the part of the consumer. know what you're buying, know what you're agreeing to. if you can't afford the monthly payments, maybe there is other transportation alternatives. cheaper car, mass transit. there are other ways. neil: mercedes? >> anyone raise their hand if they have had a late payment on the car. it happens all the time.
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this poor woman was trying get her kid to an emergency room and that lender shut down her car remotely and she was three days late to pay. neil: to be fair, that was an extenuating and unusual circumstance. she had a history of late payments in the past. i'm not condoning what's going on. in all the clippings i read, these are the stories that come back, feel sorry for the person who was essentially a deadbeat. >> might not have gotten loans to begin with. neil: she should count her lucky stars. what do you make of it? >> the poor get hosed a lot by the financial services with the credit rate, but this is not one of the cases for a variety of reasons, the higher the collection rate is on defaulted auto loans, the lower the rate that future subprime people will get that. is how the loans are priced. so if they can get a higher return, used to be people could default for years, and send a
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repo man out to get the cars. if they can get the car back quickly, other people can get the loan. neil: how do they deactivate it? >> because they know where it is. neil: they can't deactivated it on the highway. >> i hope not. >> it literally is like nsa, the nsa of lenders. >> two days late on a car payment and can turn their car off. government doesn't know anyone is floating around. >> the nsa would kill them. they have the right to kill them. i guess what i'm saying here is it's -- it's being late on payment is one thing, is this going too far, this method, because others could seize on this and say well, we can apply it to subprime home loans, automatically lock the doors if they're trying to get in. it's a logical next step. >> this is definitely tough love, but know what you're buying, know what you can and can't afford, i think there's
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got to be logic on the part of the consumer before they make decisions and sign on the dotted line. >> veronica is tough. neil: you seem to be a little late on the payment. >> it's an embarrassing beeping that it does when you are late. you explain to your girlfriend, the seat belt is not locked. neil: how is that? [ laughter ]. neil: this is an interesting national political story. chris christie getting a little too comfy with a guy named cuomo. >> i would like to thank the governor for being a partnererer sfx: opening chimes sfx: ambient park noise, crane engine, music begins. we asked people a question, how much money do you have in your pocket right now? i have $40, $53, $21,
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. neil: what is that they say about a picture being worth a thousand words? take a look at this very familiar one. some say that it all but sealed the president's re-election, and doomed chris christie with conservatives in his own party. is the same thing going to happen again because of this linkup with andrew cuomo, teaming up to sign a security bill. cuomo's republican challenger rob astorino says governor christie is getting a little too close for comfort yet again. he joins me on the phone. fair and balanced, we invite out phone, and governor cuomo we invited, we have yet to get
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a response. you get the idea both governors are doing gubernatorial duties and staying in mutual contact about a joint security post-9/11 pact, you don't buy that, why not? >> everything is through the prism of politics. you are 40 days away. they have both said that there is no threat that they know of, but they're just taking precautions, which is what we're all doing. i'd like to hear governor cuomo come to the support of the nypd, who he has not uttered any words of swhpt they've been under attack by their own mayor. mayor de blasio. neil: has governor christie ever reached out to you. i know as head of the new jersey national governor's association, he skipped out on offering financial support to you, all but branding you a lost cause. after that, you smarted from that a lot of other prominent national republican candidates, offered support, but not chris christie. has any of that changed?
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>> no, not yet. and that's when you don't open your mouth that early in the race, and you don't open your mouth when you don't know what you're talking about. new york is a very different state. when he uttered that, the polls had us at 35 points down, now the new poll that just came out has us down by 17, and cuomo under 50. you know? and that was the "new york times" came out last week with a similar poll where cuomo was at 46. rasmussen has him at 48, 49. neil: you could agree that governor cuomo is sort of piggy backing with the popularity, not as much as governor christie before, a lot of new yorkers think highly of that new jersey governor, and that cuomo is leveraging that for all it's worth? >> politically speaking if i'm governor christie, i don't know why i want to stand next to andrew cuomo, under investigation by federal prosecutors. neil: what if it's about
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politics. christie's people are saying this is about two governors, two terror tempted states doing what they have to do keep residents safe? >> everything is about politics now. 40 days before an election. governor christie has been traveling around, he was in connecticut yesterday. he's the national association chairman. neil: he goes everywhere but to you. >> everywhere but new york so far. neil: what is it about you? >> i bathed. i don't know what it is. i have noed -- no idea. i'm proud to have had a meeting with carly fiorina. >> you had bobby jindel, everyone but governor christie. we'll watch closely. rob, thank you very much. >> thank you very much, neil. neil: to my panel, what do you think? >> unrealistic the two
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governors aren't going to meet given the threat of terror right now. there's a lot we don't know about. neil: is it kind of weird? >> might be, but you can't control the terror threats are going to happen either. neil: you think christie is being vindictive? >> playing a long game to win, it's a comeback train, people are tired of republicans hate every democrat and democrats hate every republican. he will be the crossover candidate. and the opposite of the whole bridge thing where he was being all nasty. he's showing the friendlier chris christie. neil: he was exonerated on the bridge thing. what do you think? >> first friendly act hugging president obama after hurricane sandy. that hit the republicans really hard. it was one of those, what would you say that pictures are or that video that said hey, wait a second. he does try to be a very bipartisan work on both sides
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of the aisle. neil: you think it's hurting him in the party now. and whether it hurts astorino or not, it hurts the base of the party. >> i think when you talk about the base of the party, people look at governor christie believe and he's truly a moderate. in new jersey, to be governor, you got to be a moderate in order to win those votes. he won a strong number of the independent votes, the hispanic votes. >> you think he's damaged goods trying to get the republican nomination? >> yeah, it's going to be incredibly difficult for him, he's got to win the primary voters who are conservative. neil: looking at the before-and-afters. he's lost a lot of weight. there is that. may not be working at espn for much longer. his issue is a freedom of speech issue. and set your dvr's tomorrow 8:00 p.m. on fox business, google executive chairman eric schmidt on the world piling on google and a host of other technology names. lot of you asking, i'm betwixt
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and between, i want to watch o'reilly and watch you. it counts on the dvr. dvr bill because his show runs about 78 times. that's your call. because you don't do as i say, it could be killing o'reilly viewers. that's the next one. thatatatatat
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(announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we rebuilt scottrade elite from the ground up - including a proprietary momentum indicator that makes researching sectors and industries even easier. because at scottrade, our passion is to power yours. . neil: sports commentator bill simmons suspended after attacking the nfl. is that an attack on the first amendment. he was suspended after saying this on his podcast. >> goodell, if he didn't know what was on that tape, he's a liar. i'm saying it. he's lying. i think that dude is lying, if you put him up on a lie detector test, that guy would fail.
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. neil: has no one learned from gary hart, do you not tempt people? you do not say go ahead, because espn quickly suspended simmons for three weeks, barred him from twitter during that time. we can't say and can't do anything, the question comes back is that overkill or is this in keeping with a very politically correct thing going no, no, no, keep in mind, the nfl and espn have a lot of advantages. espn has had a number of critical commentators on on goodell. you could argue this guy went overboard. >> he went overboard and did the right thing. i'm not a big sports fan. neil: let me tell you, this football thing is huge. [ laughter ] >> espn is not a news network.
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it is -- it doesn't say anything for news. they are an entertainment company. they have multibillion-dollar deals to air these games and -- . >> you are the broadcaster or one of those with the broadcast rights. >> if you work for the "wall street journal" and say tim gross needs to get fired, he's lying, one thing after another, and they fired you, because they have ads from pimco. that is offensive. that is meadia. that is a newspaper. it's a bubble. nfl they have cheerleaders and you couldn't hire them. neil: oh, yes, you could. >> there's got to be a standard, though. >> not a reporter. >> saying all the expletives on the podcast. neil: was that an espn owned podcast. others have been fired for saying things way out of line. >> right, yeah, i'm not sure who has the rights on that.
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still, i think it's okay to have an opinion but there's got to be standards and respect when you are giving your opinion too. neil: he and i are like this with the nfl, he reminded me that is on the website, you can access it from the website. maybe it is espn owned. is it going too far in the only thing that made a difference is the guy acted asinine, leave the cursing out of it. almost tempting his bosses to fire him and the bosses would be idiotic because he was acting crazy. >> espn is his employer. they can decide what to do with their employee. the nfl have a $15.2 billion contract. neil: oh, that little thing. >> yes! >> they have a financially strong relationship. if this guy is out of line, they can get him out.
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neil: that would be like me saying, don't even think of putting gold in your portfolio -- [ laughter ]. neil: i do gold commercials. just saying. >> this is a news network! if you worked for apple and you get fired, of course he got fired. that's what it is. it's not news, it is entertainment and they're in deep with the nfl and the nfl is a fantasy anyway. neil: well said. and -- you need gold. more after this. more after this. >> and you need [ male announcer ] automotive innovation starts... right here. with a control pad that can read your handwriting, a wide-screen multimedia center, and a head-up display for enhanced driver focus. all inside a newly redesigned cabin of unrivaled style and comfort. ♪ the all-new c-class. at the very touch point of performance and innovation.
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. neil: well, in our biz blitz tonight, maybe this is why marriage rates are at all-time lows. a lot of people aren't into
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each other. one big thing women want is a guy with a job. the fact so many men don't have jobs, or apparently not the job women find desirable. that would seem to indicate marriages go nowhere fast. >> seem like, and we saw in the great recession, a lot of young men lost their jobs at a faster rate than young women. young men, it put them in a difficult spot. from a dating perspective, there's a lot of women who want to be independent and equal partners, in our society, still, there's a view that you want to guy to pay, you don't want to go on dates and be the woman paying. that's what i'm gathering from this. neil: the guys have the same mind-set today? >> hard look, we get heat for that. when my stock portfolio crashed in the dot com crash, your woman options dry up. it's not the same.
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they're look for a man with a gold watch future. but that future -- >> it works both ways. >> i think it's an equal partnership. i don't think one person wants to carry the weight of the relationship. and with so many men out of work, women were pulling the extra weight in the families or in the relationships, and they didn't want to do that. they didn't want to have that role. neil: mercedes, do you think men are looking at women the same way or look at other things? >> ha! neil! i think it depends on the man, but i think there is that sense of wanting to have that equal partnership like veronica mentioned. neil: jonas and i are taken -- [ laughter ]. >> i think the mere fact that men want to have the partner, the person that they can go through the ups and downs of life. what's happening for these men is quite frankly it's depressing when you are out of
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work. neil: depressing when they find out the potential loves of their life are shallow, no offense. >> confidence to approach the women during this time. >> what is the equal partnership? the women don't want the men that have the gold watch job. >> not all of the women. >> the security of their husbands, that isson old-fashioned concept. it is an old-fashioned model. >> people want to earn their own wage, but they want the men to contribute. neil: i have no idea when that means. >> the survey is i want them to have a good a job as me. the survey is i want them to have a reliable job. >> if you want someone who is ambitious and out there. that is important. neil: fair enough. issue two, are kids iphones an end. his own son violates the policy and thinks it's important that
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kids have these phones, but a lot of folks are saying, the bad thing there is it's a distraction. my kids' school forbids the phones or collect them if they bring them in. is there a case. >> i wish i had a phone to cheat back in school. i can't believe -- you wouldn't have to study for everything, you have the google phone and ask it questions! >> oh, my friend, i'm onto you. >> this is going to look sillny 15, 20 years. i didn't know all kids have ipads and doing books and textbooky things. apparently they're not, they're living at the xerox at home. neil: do you not have kids, do you? >> i do not. >> integrate it into the classroom because technology is so important. neil: they could do it for that. >> they could do it for that. neil: you all know hard examples and school shootings where we try to contact the kid, something like that would have come in handy? >> that's right, i have five
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kids, i can vouch for this. when it comes to, i think he sounds more like a libertarian than a liberal. because taking out the cell phone ban is very important. i think for children it gives them that personal responsibility. we're talking about high schoolers, this is when they're -- neil: high schoolers, anyone younger they're taking advantage of it and playing games. >> not necessarily, in middle school, my daughter's school, they collect the phones. i like the idea of parents being able to locate their children. >> whoa, whoa, first of all there's phones from 15 years ago where you can take an emergency call that have the little screen. you're talking about angry bird playing machine. you can give a communication device, a pager. neil: anything to give them an edge. >> give them phones from 1999, then. >> they need to set the rules very clearly how the phones should be used. obviously they shouldn't be used during class. they need to set parameters.
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it's a safety and personal responsibility issue for the children. >> yeah, and the rules need to be clear and consistent. if one school in new york city is banning the phones, other schools should ban it too. neil: what are you going to do when the iwatch comes snout. >> you need to adapt education to technology. the teachers have a tough job on their hands. >> you're not going to be able to know you have one. neil: i can't imagine you with kids, not with a pad of paper. we've been telling you about new york city, and a lot of other cities on super high alert right now after the plot was revealed. they don't know for sure whether it's something they have to worry about. they're not taking chances, any city with elaborate rail system, subway or otherwise, they're feeling the same angst. they're feeling the same angst. whwhwhwhwh guys! you're not gonna believe this!
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neil: unnamed sources, a lot of chatter, authorities telling him terrorists are targeting subways in paris, new york, pretty much any american city that has a subway system. or rail system that would be our biggest city, it is a big, big worry in this city, where i reside, we have rich eds on with the latest. >> well we know that iraqi officials have said they uncovered a terrorist plot again u.s. and paris. and officials here say they heard nothing about it, iraqi prime minister said he received an intelligence through an arrest that happened in baghdad. folks in u.s. government saying that iraqis h have not informed
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u.s. officials directly, they are trying to figure out what is going on, saying that fbi joint terrorism tasks force, and nypd are committed to protecting the city. cuomo and chris christie implemented a plan for transit points there are piecing ongoing, but bottom line it that the iraqi prime minister, in new york with president obama, there, makes this claim he has intelligence about a possible attack that has been disrupted. does not bother, to tell u.s. about it, but he tells reporters. reporter. neil: someone knows something or not, we'll be up on the threat, and how real it is. what cities of doing to prepare, tomorrow, eric smith on chatter that might be contributeing to
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this, google executive chairman on what they look for, try to learn, and separate chatter that means nothing, that means everything. will do it see you tomorrow. tomorrow. >> we're the party of choice. . >> we are the party of choice. >> so say the democratics. >> if you like your doctors, you will keep your doctor. john: republicans say -- >> this is the most anti-choice administration in a long time. >> we like to have choices. i want to choose to have a pink mustache on minivan and act like a taxi driver. taxi drivers don't want me to do this. >> we have to pay big money for licenses, we have to have commercial insurance, pink mustache has nothing. john: also can there be too much choice? >> frappuccino, rappa chino, al pacino. >> and in the

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