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tv   Lou Dobbs Tonight  FOX Business  October 1, 2014 7:00pm-8:01pm EDT

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parameters for the market, it's been fantastic. and speaking of phenomenal, you will see me on stuart varney tomorrow. by now, handing off to the man himself, lou dobbs. keep it here on fox business. lou: good evening, everybody. raking these tonight. the president fired julia pierson today, director of the secret service. officially her resignation was accepted after her disaster in front of the house oversight committee yesterday. at the failures of the agency charged with guarding the life of the president and his family. the house oversight committee, democrats and republicans, lasseter for her agency's inability to stop an armed white house fence jumper to getting within feet of the president's personal residence within the
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white house. and determining that seven shots have been fired from a car at the white house until after that incident and a multiple felon was allowed into an elevator with while armed at the cbc with president obama during his visit there two weeks ago. and josh earnest confirmed that pearson kept the cbc incident from the president until shortly before he met with the washington examiner. >> this latest incident, he was armed in the presence of the president in violation of secret
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service calls. what happened with director julia pierson on that incident? >> i can tell you we first learned about that incident shortly before was reported lou: we will be talking with louie gohmert on whether the embattled agency is going to go forward from here. also today, benjamin netanyahu urging the president to show leadership and to end the iranian pursuits of weapons. president obama showing more support at the u.n. general assembly. >> the violence engulfing the region has made too many israelis ready to a been in the hard work of peace and that is something where the of reflection within israel. and let's be clear, the status
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quo in west bank and gossett is not sustainable. >> we also recognize that we have to find ways to change the status quo so that both israeli citizens are safe and school children are safe in their schools from the possibility of rocket fire. lou: an important difference of emphasis. a former israeli ambassador to the united states joins us now on what it feels to face radical islamic terrorists. and new concerns about the dallas ebola patient and those who may have come into contact with it. the man leading the research at the national institutes of health developing an immediately needed vaccine, doctor anthony fauci. the dow jones plummeted more than 200 points and investors losing more than $300 billion.
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we will take of the vulnerabilities of these markets in the process of economic growth with art laffer tonight. and we begin with a resignation of the secret service director. first guy says that it's about time. joining us now is congressman louie gohmert of texas. conversely, it is good to have you with us. at long last, it appears to many that it takes a lot to be fired by this president. >> apparently putting the presidents like that rest is just enough to give fired finally. and she is a symptom of a problem but keep in mind, i go there and i talk to these secret service agents and most of them are the same secret service agents who have performed
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admirably and loyally for all of these years. they have done a stellar job. but when you put political correctness above all else, just like with the military, someone comes across and says, if i let the dog go and it hurts the sky, nevermind if he has a mental issue, maybe he's the kind of person that would kill the president, you go after him and you start them at all cost. and it's getting military members killed, this is the heart of the problem and also, by the way, the same kind of idea putting the military into where they could get ebola. they are not trained to catch it. they are trained to kill the
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people that want to kill us. the president's priorities are all mixed up. all you have to do is shut down traffic where there are high risk of ebola, but political correctness will get us killed in many of these areas. lou: the reality, all the same he looked very well be true -- it is very well true. but this is -- i don't think it is sufficient, what are they doing about the agency? >> we need to get to the bottom of who has instilled this atmosphere political correctness . remember when a couple barged into the christmas party and they were not supposed to be there, the house had hearings, we got to the bottom of that.
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and it was the fact that the social director was supposed to be there, telling people that she didn't want to tell anyone know, so she didn't show up. but the problem was not the secret service then and the problem here are the political appointees that want to get involved in political correctness and we need to get back to an austere agency that protects the president and says forget political correctness because we don't care about that, we want to save the presidents life. lou: we also have the border patrol agency and we have customs enforcement agents that are not permitted to do their jobs until congress sits there and complains and there's precious little that you can do.
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>> you know, you have to have courageous leadership that will stand up and say that we are not funding agencies that are doing the job correctly. and we are not using the power that we have, we are going along and that's really got to stop. lou: you are not suggesting another disastrous shutdown on the government on the part of republicans in the house, are you? >> harry reid wanted to shut down, but he wouldn't even agree to negotiate this and he got what he wanted. >> you don't want that, do you? >> i don't want a shutdown. i didn't want one last time. >> you would not seek a shutdown after the disaster that occurred last time? >> no. and we did not last time.
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we were passing bills right and left trying to work out the negotiation. lou: the idea of shutting down the government, how can you exert the will to overcome the problems that you have articulated here? >> you have a good feel and you are a good representation of what the majority of americans feel. and what would be wrong with saying that harry reid was funding everything you asked for it that this is an issue that 75% of the population in america was not going to fund this area, we are going to this area and we need to fix this and then it gives him everything he wants and i think that we just don't exert enough influence that the founders.
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lou: carson, we are running out of time, so i will leave you with this proposition here. win some elections come and take over the senate, and then you have, if you will, a little bit more intensely organized expression with control of both. and only one counterproposal to your proposal. it's great to have you with us, congressman. and the head of the intelligence community trying to clean up the damage after president obama blamed it for underestimating the islamic state over this past weekend. fox news has obtained a memo from director national intelligence james clapper. it says i'm proud of the intelligence community's efforts over the past two years to
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monitor and assess and call attention to the expansion of the islamic state. and i know the president has found that work to be critical to developing his strategy. but according to the associated press, it may be hurting the efficacy of the airstrike campaign against the islamic state, current and former officials saying that the defense department is lacking networks in ground-based technologies and that is reportedly making it difficult to strike significant targets. we are coming right back, so stay with us. president obama and prime minister benjamin netanyahu met today. and it seems that he was persuasive. danny ayalon joins us from tel aviv coming up next.
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lou: the mother of entertainment receipt asking for help as she recounted e-mails from her son. >> april 5, mom, i'm not going to make it through the night. whatever you do, do not come down here to investigate. and do not come down here to ask questions. april 14. mom, i tried to kill myself because the guards and the inmates were going to rape and torture and execute me for personal information. i needed to protect you. lou: andrew tamooressi has been detained for 185 days without a
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single mention. and joining us tonight from tel aviv, danny ayalon thank you for saying staying up all night to talk with us. it seemed like the president was taking into account israeli interests in the conflict with hamas to a greater extent than he has previously expressed. what are your views? >> yes, and thank you. it's always good to be with you notwithstanding the late hour here. and that was in the weight of the presidents speech at the u.n. recognizing the first time the obstacle to stability is not
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part of the conflict but rather the pathology and the built-in problems in the arab world. and so also the fact that under the leadership of the united states, it is going to resume their geneva talks also allowing the prime minister to raise concerns about iran. and always, meetings between them in the case of israel and the united states and they are very much intertwined an almost identical despite some technical differences in the strategy and the overall view is the same and
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we're not sure whether the results and the infrastructure is very telling. because suspension is not enough. lou: today josh earnest blasted israel for the fact that they are moving ahead with the construction of more than 2500 homes in east jerusalem. at this point, is there any way for this government to come to some understanding on settlements and ways to bridge what differences do exist and focus on the fact that both nations are threatened by radical islamists terrorists,
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that nuclear weapons would be a catastrophe for both nations and indeed the world. >> well, this is very important in the fact that there is too much world attention focused on the buildings in jerusalem and the building is for the welfare in the interest of all citizens. both arabs and jews. so any intentions on the attention of a ran or isis or others is quite important. but to be fair, this is not the first difference that israel has in the united states and jerusalem is separate, which this is what i think there is a misunderstanding about. and so also what is most
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important, and i thought the president was understanding more about this, was the crux of this between israel and the palestinians, we have dismantled the settlement in gaza, all of them come and we have offered so many other concessions. and this is not the issue. the issue is the palestinians refusal to recognize israel's right to exist. lou: ambassador, thank you so much to talk with us and it's always so good to talk with you. ambassador daniel ayalon. time to look at our online poll results. is the president's failure to attend more than have his intelligence briefings makes him unable to respond to the
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situation? 98% said yes. the question is, are you surprised that president obama is concerned about the safety of israeli women and children and civilians from hamas rockets. castor road at loudobbs.com. coming up next, my commentary on how the obama administration has replaced october surprises. that coming up next. yoshi, we're back. yes, sir! ♪ more shipping! more shipping! ♪ [ beeping ] ♪ that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80%
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lou: coming up tonight, troubling revelations of who the dallas ebola patient had contact with. doctor anthony fauci is with us. the president finally fired someone today, we have katie pavlich and joe trippi among our guest tonight. but first, your comments on the rising expectations of an october surprise before this year's midterm. an election with just voters are tilting towards republicans. so will there be an obama democratic or october surprise? definitely needing one, judging by previous election years, don't bet a lot of money on a major news event rocking the midterms. if i were a betting man i would
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go with october filled with stonewalling and energetic blaming of others and of course more deflection and distraction. back in 2010 the administration and democrats faced those deeply distressed by economic hardship and pain. white house officials asked the failing solar energy company they had funded, solyndra, to delay the announcement of impending layoffs until after the election. the president's 2012 reelection campaign bogged down by a disastrous economic performance was built on his declaration that he had al qaeda on the run. so the benghazi terrorist attacks and murders were met with an adamant assertion that denied al qaeda's involvement. a month or so to go, president obama vigorously waved a youtube video for those attacks.
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>> dems basil we saw play out in the last two weeks. a crude and disgusting video that sparked outrage throughout the muslim world. and i have made it clear that the united states government had nothing to do with this video. and i believe that its message must be rejected by all the respect our common humanity. lou: instead of attacking radical islamists, he was defending the united states. listen to the president earlier last month trying to explain why he is holding off on what he calls immigration reform or amnesty until after election day. >> i want to make sure that we get it right. i want to make sure that all of the politics, not only do i want to make sure that all of our t's
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are crossed and i's dotted, but what we saw a couple of weeks ago from central america a surge of kids showing up at the border, we got a lot of attention. lou: it's not politics but perhaps part of the reason why he is just gladly giving refugee status to the children who created the border crisis, his administration did, and the children that made up that crisis from central america and companies that they have refugee status, but they can bring their parents and family into the united states as well. so it's not just about amnesty. and he will be calling congress in all likelihood to authorize the use of force in syria anytime either, but of course, past performance is no guarantee of future results. today, president obama did exactly the right thing and he
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fired secret service director julia pierson for the worsening screw ups. a firing that i called for on this podcast yesterday. today, the firing is the october surprise and it is a welcome surprise for all americans. and the quotation of the evening tonight. this one from one of our founding fathers, the second president of the united states john adams. who said that people have a right and an indisputable and unalienable divine right to the most dreaded kind of knowledge. >> the character and the conduct of this. so how much do you think the public deserves to know about all of the critical information that could affect our lives? we asked the question of doctor anthony fauci about ebola when we come back. >> growing fears of a deadly
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ebola outbreak is the first case is diagnosed in the united states. we have leading infectious disease researcher doctor anthony fauci on the chances of an outbreak coming up next. your goals, our technology. introducing synchrony financial, bringing new meaning to the word partnership. banking. loyalty. analytics. synchrony financial. enagage with us.
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leuvment pro democracy demonstrations today swelling in hong kong as mainland china celebrated the 56th anniversary of the country's communist take over. protesters want the beijing friendly leader out and they're now threatening to occupy key buildings in hong kong. all of this comes as beijing's patience is running out. it warns hong kong residents not to interfere with efforts to restore order in the city. texas health officials monitoring system as 18 people for ebola including five children after they came in contact with the first patient
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diagnosed in this country. the patient is identified as thomas eric duncan. he was sent home from a dallas hospital after two days despite telling a hospital he traveled from liberia. for more on this, i'm joined by one of the nation's top infectious disease experts. he's director of the institute of disease and he's importantly leading the quest to discover and prove an effective vax against ebola. thank you for having with us. >> thanks leuvment there's great discussion at local and state federal levels about how serious the prospects are. how likely the prospects are of an outbreak of a contagion an that would come from this first patient. >> my thoughts, lieu, it's
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extraordinarily unlikely there will be an outbreak. i'm very confident as the cdc there will not be an outbreak. the patients indeed as you mentioned was in the community for a couple of days for a few days with fever before he was finally recognized to be having ebola and was put in the proper isolation and he's being cared for right now in the hospital in texas. but the important reason why there will not be an outbreak is that we have the capability of doing what's called is contact tracing and contact tracing is to the core of preventing an outbreak. so you identify and monitor people that have come into contact with this patient during the time this patient was symptomatic. and you follow them and monitor them for a total of 21 days. and if they go beyond 21 days without any symptoms, they're home free.
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if they develop symptoms, then you isolate and make sure they do or doesn't have ebola. if they do, you obviously take care of them. leuvment the name of the patient the exact circumstances in which he came into this country. there was no disclosure. i'm not going to name names. acting the show this were a nation of children rather than a nation of citizens who deserve to know what's going on. the public's right to know and i think that should be honored in all cases at all times, don't you? >> well, actually, lou, i disagree with you on that. i understand why you're saying that, but there is something called patient confidentially that really is important. if the patient wants to reveal who is what he is and what his name is then that's fine, but there is a code of patient confidential that the patient doesn't want to disclose.
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>> the fact of the matter the public's right to know has to take precedence. the potential as you suggest, highly unlikely. but without potential, there is a responsibility of all who are paid by our federal government to tell us the citizenry to tell us what is going on. we know the suspicion and the distrust compounds itself when that public right to know is violated. that's why i'm so insis tent on it. our elites have become -- and i'm not talking about medicine or science, our elites when it comes to the government class have become so arrogant. and so disappointing in their performance. americans deserve more information don't you knowing think? >> well, i think the information that the american people deserve is information (?) that will directly keep them
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safe and prevent them from getting into trouble with something like ebola. and, again, i always am comfortable when i disagree with you, lou, but i have to tell you, i don't see anything that was egregiously held back that would have an important impact. so i have to say, i don't think the cdc was wrong in this. >> okay. we have to disagree on that. and like you, i'm just as ever bit as uncomfortable when i have to disagree with you. dr. anthony fowcher leading that effort. we're coming right back jobs and the obama economy. next.
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>> lou: lots of talk about on wall street and this economy. a huge sellout on wall street
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today. stocks falling. the dow jones fell. nasdaq fell 71 points. much higher volume on the big board. the will cher 5,000 measuring today's losses at $325 billion. today's sell off a third day of losses on wall street. likely more volatility tomorrow. lots of economic reports out tomorrow. and be sure to listen to my financial reports he three times a day coast to coast from the salem network. here for this economy and for our markets in the midst of rising geopolitical uncertainty. art laffer. chairman of laffer associates. art good to have you with us. these triple digital moves are becoming a habit in the market.
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are we likely to see continued volatility. >> when things are happening unsettling in the world people react by selling off and trying to go to cash and it seems reasonable they would do that. i don't think it's a long-term problem right now. i think once the elections are over which is a month from now with your october surprise coming in, but i think that will stabilize the markets. i don't expect a calamity in the next six months. >> lou: i'm not sure one can ever expect a calamity or even forecast one. but always be on the look out for the black swan for unforeseen events, but the reality this market does look treacherous to me. it doesn't look like a very good time for individual investors to be here given the volty. as you were suggesting all of this is happening --
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>> but you're right. >> lou: there's no sense going forward with this discussion if we've concluded -- but looking to the ukraine. looking to what is happening in hong kong. looking to ebola in this country. and obviously in africa. the middle east, the islamic state, iran, all of these are unresolved and then eternally to look at the difficulty right now to restore prosperity on the part of our business community and the political leaders as well. >> well, it's the political leaders that are the problem, lou. when you don't change policies, don't expect results to be any different. we have a horrible economy. we've had a horrible economy for over six years. there has been no major upswing yet. if you look at employment as a share of adult population it's hit its low. it's about where it was back
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then in the recession. it's not improved. housing sales have not improved. they really should. look at the deviation we are from growth line of gdp we're about $4 trillion short. if we had that $4 trillion, lou, if the us were $4 trillion output than it is just go back to the years we were in the clinton years. if we were we would have none of these international problems. no one picks on strong people. the reason these are things happening is because the us is crumbling. we're the problem. >> lou: i would agree, but i would probably put one individual in the front of that we. as we look at what's coming friday, an unemployment report that's going to be studied and obviously watched, what do you expect it to look like.
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>> i don't know obviously, but i would expect it more of the same. slightly a number of jobs are growing. i would expect the unemployment rate to stay where it is. when you look at it from a long perspective, there's no real change coming. we have a huge drop in the participation rate. so we don't have a very attractive outlook, frankly. >> lou: i got to say, i'm going to give you the bill clinton test. here. the former president said he had the answers as to why wages are stagnant if we can put up this chart these are the three reasons he suggested. he said labor markets aren't tight enough. we haven't raised the minimum wage. what part of that do you agree with? >> that's ridiculous. i thought you were going to ask me, remember when bob dole did viagra ads. i wonder what would happen if
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bill clinton did cialis ads in all seriousness you can't raise the minimum wage and expect the economy to get better. >> lou: how about the labor markets not being tight enough. >> i think they are loose because we have no job creation. you can't love jobs and hate job creators, lou. you've got to love job creators and love jobs. how are these people in washington -- when i have clients, lou, when i have clients that pay me money, i love those clients. i think they're wonderful. i want to marry them. the people who pay the government, the government hates them and tries to hurt them. it's stupid. we should love the taxpayers of america not demand they pay more and go after and investigate them. they're the savior, not the enemy. i just don't get it.
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>> lou: art laffer meet bill clinton. bill clinton meet art laffer. a turbulent day in a turbulent world. ebola fears, the islamic state the liberal and conservative perspectives on our markets and economy. we are joined next by our cohost katy pavlich. strategist joe trippi. stay with us.
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>> lou: joining me now town hall.com news editor for the hill and outnumbered katy pavlich. fox news contributor. joe trippi brilliant strategist
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if i may say. good have you here. katy, let's start with the president firing julia pierson. we now know it can be done by this administration. your reaction. >> katie: we now know that when things affect president obama personally he decides to take some action and fire someone one person in the past six years. i don't think is a success, but he's done it. it's time to move forward and it's time to reform the secret service and i think it's important to take a look at the culture the secret service has been engaged in the past couple of years where we've seen these very serious security breaches and on hopefully they will look at how agents behave and they'll reassess. i think it comes down to an attitude problem of really paying attention. >> lou: congressman opened up this morning and nancy pelosi joined him in calling for the
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firing of her. instrumental in the president's decision. >> joe: when you find out you're in the elevator with a guy who is a convict and he has a gun and you find out three minutes before the rest of us finds out, i think that tips the scales before you hear from nancy pelosi or anybody else. it's unfathomable how this happened. she was supposed to go in there and take on the scandals the agents who were, you know, taking prostitutes in south america and stuff like that. she gets in and what we've got instead of these scandals where the president and the family are just not being protected. literally the core cause of the secret service wasn't being performed. she had to go. >> lou: i called for her firing personally. and i'm delighted the president has done so. but i believe that agency with
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its performance has got to be -- they've got to clean house in those management ranks. >> katie: i think you mentioned a very good point what we've seen in other law enforcement agencies in the government. it's also about management. julia pierson is not the only problem. it's a management problem. that needs to be addressed. she can't be the only person fired or nothing will change. >> lou: the direction john clapper said he's proud of the work they've done in the past few years and how instrumental everyone has been in presenting the evidence, the information and the recommendation to the president. that was basically sort of an if you will a dismissal of the president saying clapper was one. quite a response don't you think, joe? >> he made a big deal in the
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memo about none of us could have seen the collapse of the army in the north. he went into a whole area with that. that confirmed what the president said on 60 minutes. i'm not -- i'm sure that the memo was a response to 60 minutes to try to, you know -- to get morale up within the intelligence community. i think the president shouldn't have said -- it would have been a lot better to say the royal we didn't see it. i think clapper was walking a fine line. he was confirming what the president said and backing that up, but at the same time saying, hey, we made a lot of progress and told you what was going to happen. >> lou: you think he should have used that royal we. mark had a great quote about that. only royalty and editors are permitted royal we's and those with tapeworms. and i'm not sure that he fits any of those categories. katy be your reaction.
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>> katie: my reaction is there are a couple of different things. when president obama campaigned a few years ago and talked about pulling out the troops in in iraq. he was warned that the iraqi army wouldn't be able to fight -- if we pulled the troops too early something like this would happen. on the issue of james clapper being named by the president in that interview specifically for the white house to then come back and say, we weren't trying on purpose to blame the intelligence community. president obama went out of his way to name someone in the intelligence community. and the fact is the president is missing 60 percent of his intelligence briefings, and the bottom line here is this: president obama made a political decision in iraq. he has been listening to his military leaders for years. he hasn't been listening to the intelligence community. they've been providing all the information he needs to prevent the situation we're saying in iraq and syria.
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>> lou: the president meeting with the prime minister of israel. netanyahu. at this time they've talked about what the israeli people have had to put up with the hamas situation and more -- the civilians women and children in israel rather than focusing on palestinians, quite a change. do you think netanyahu was that persuasive. >> joe: i don't think these two guys -- they clearly have a warm relationship from the beginning of the obama presidency. i think they did their best to paper over diplomatically paper over their differences. but, you know -- >> lou: well, they got a real difference over iran. >> joe: that's what i'm saying. netanyahu is focused on iran. the president is focused on
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syria and isil. those two things don't work together very well. >> lou: i got to leave it there. we're out of time. thank you so much, joe. that's it for us. stay tuned for cavuto. he's coming right up. a new investing and banking experience with personalized guidance and online tools. visit a branch, call or go online today. that's a good thing, but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans,
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keurig. neil: tonight on cavuto, ebola is here and so is the fear. if you are flying soon, you should think about upgrading to first class. why if you're flying coach, you could be more likely to get sick? the reason, that will really make you sick. secret service director julia pierson resigning, but is the president really that safe? meet the former secret service agent who has inside details you will not hear anywhere else. if you think the protests in hong kong are bad, dr. van carson says wait until you see that kind of anarchy spreading here. that's right, here. the doctor is in the house. get ready to bring down the house. but first think of

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