tv Cavuto FOX Business October 1, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm EDT
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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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238-point drop for the dow is bad. you ain't seen nothing yet. it all starts now. welcome, everybod glad to have you, i'm neil cavuto. it's october, do you know where the market crash is? this is the month we usually see them. remember 1929? remember 1987? remember the meltdown that picked up steam this very month in 2008. the irony, of course, is october isn't that bad for stocks on average. it's just the month that most of our big hits happen on average. and usually triggered by outside events in retrospect and as worries go were more than just average. now another october. and more than just your average worry, quite a few more. let's count them, shall we? ebola now in america, crazy isis recruits threatening america. one woman beheaded in sympathy in america. we have the leftists screwing
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up protecting the united states of america, or not. and hong kong on the brink. you've got china refusing to blink. you've got the president threatening to throw security officials under the bus and security officials taking editorial pages claiming they don't like security officials being thrown under the bus. and you have voters turning on any incumbent at all. to review, you've got rage, fear, and you've got it pretty much everywhere. the issue isn't how many crises the world is facing. the issue is how many crises you think the markets can keep ignoring? i' for a crash, i'm saying we're due for something. like i said, it is october. to fox business senior correspondent charlie gasparino. that spooks people, charlie. the black swan developments, and we have a lot of them. >> right, we don't have a major one just yet, we have a lot of worry, what the issue is for the market when you are on the precipice for this, people saying the market is
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overvalued. it takes a little push sometime. what the black swan is another beheading, god forbid. the ebola outbreak going beyond one person, maybe two or three or four, that could be one of the black swan events that takes out the market a thousand points. neil: when you say a black swan event, an event we attach more significance, use it as an excuse to sell? >> it comes out of nowhere. you hear traders talk about black swans, it's something you don't think will be the trigger and some point it is. neil: in retrospect we look back. >> why is that? the markets are on edge. people in the market can't figure out why it keeps going up. listen, jobs are okay. gdp is okay. but maybe it's not 17,000 level. neil: the same data, they twist to their perverted fears, right? good news on gdp and jobs, and
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interpret that as a sign that the fed might have to tighten the rates. they're damning the good and the bad. >> the problem with the fed is a lot of people think they're pushing against a string they almost have to carry out with raising of interest rates and the schedule that they have, only because if they don't, they could break acid bubble. neil: no indication that's going to happen soon. >> we don't know. one of the things we have right now and undercover stories. battle at the fed between the yellen doves and the fisher hawks, and there is a battle royale at the fed about monetary policy. neil: absolutely. i want to bring in, are we about to see a stock market collapse based on any or all of the reasons just stated? to our biz all-stars, lizzie mcdonald, jared levy, tracy burns, tracy, what do you think? >> i think when president reagan was in office, we had nuclear weapons point at the us
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and gdp went higher. i think the market is resilient. i think small caps, the russ sell in correction mode. the s&p 400 mid caps is not doing well. the little guys are not doing well. big multinationals are holding on, it is still unfortunately, what's the saying, prettiest girl at the prom? no place else to put your money these days, and i think people are going to be pleasantly surprised. neil: jared, you can twist it around and say markets have climbed numerous walls over a lot of worries, so we're just attaching the concern of another october and saying uh-oh, maybe needlessly so, what do you think? >> first of all, from a statistical perspective. we had three years of nonevents or a bunch of small events. usually they are followed by series of smaller events and looking back in time, we're
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getting close to a period where we should see something, and i think that's what people are looking for. as scary as it is to have ebola one mile away and have isis threats, none have materialized and anything real in the trader's eyes just yet. gasparino has a great point. tracy has a great point. for now things are okay. as soon as the realization comes that this could turn into something really, really big, it could happen in the blink of an eye. i think the market is the prettiest girl at the prom. for the next month or two. neil: it's hardly ringing endorsement, it's another analogy that charlie mentioned, the tallest midget in the room. also a bunch of midgets. >> and little ugly ducklings that could culminate in a black swan event. neil: you didn't like my midget joke. >> i think they're little people. neil: yeah, yeah. >> don't call them redskins. >> let's not go there, right?
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neil: midget redskins. >> oh, >> oh, [ laughter ] >> sorry. neil: awful. [ laughter ] >> ebola, slowdown in china, another cyberattack, another terrorist attack, they're all coming, and in october this is when wall street does window dressing, it dumps the stinkers and buys highfliers. we know the fed is exiting out of stimulus in october, it could be a slippery ride. >> don't you think hong kong could be the bigger catalyst, the hang seng falls one morning, good-bye, close the door. >> interesting from a lot of perspectives, if the chinese government doesn't crack, doesn't pull a tiananmen square, does the rational responses, embrace them, talk to them and don't kill them, you start looking at chinese internet stocks and all the stuff that i've said about alibaba that was negative, the chinese government controls this company. take the other side of the
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argument. that's good for those stocks. so that could be a positive development. if the chinese government does not crack down, you could see a lot of people thinking that economy is much more stable. put our money to work there. alibaba is a big time buy. neil: the flipside is if the government doesn't crack down, have you obviously lightened up on hong kong, lighten up on us and could create another stew, right? >> and this is why the markets really haven't budged. there is both sides that are valid. if you have the uprising spread into the chinese middle class, which by the way, china is doing a great job at censoring all of this in the mainland. i've been talking to friends over there. that could lead to problems with the chinese stock market and chinese businesses, but again, i would take charlie's side, i think the likelihood is hopefully china does treat hong kong unlike tiananmen square and they do enough. >> set aside hong kong, whenever china released
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negative market statistics, the market had a hiccup. china has exhibited slowdown -- >> i don't believe any number that comes out of china. >> what could be sfwhors. neil: we're going to see in november big sell-off, 87, 89. what do you think? >> i don't think so. neil: really? >> i will say this, russia, when we had neutrally assured destruction in the 80s when the markets went up. we have terrorists that don't care. >> none of the events are black swan, they've all been around. it can't be a black swan if you don't know about it. >> you don't know about three more. >> 3% is the maximum for october. that's the max we'll see here. looking at the options, talking to friends and i'm thinking they're going to have. >> the dow is down 2 1/2, 3%. neil: we'll watch closely. thank you very much. well, we went out on the street to see if people are worried about ebola. >> i know you can't shut the
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borders down, but i think there's going to be more exposure. >> i think sometimes these things are a bit exaggerated. >> when it comes to all about general health population of the people, you have to worry. neil: a lot of people are worrying. once they hear what airlines are doing to stop ebola, they're going to be more worried. if you own an airline stock you're going to be more worried than that. after this. meanwhile, as if letting an intruder break into the white house isn't bad enough, letting a convicted felon with a gun in the elevator with the president of the united states? who are these guys?
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. neil: after the resignation of secret service director julia pierson, is president obama that safe? to rich edson on what led to her quitting and the white house's answer right now, rich? >> reporter: remarkable breaches of presidential security and bipartisan criticism following a brutal day of congressional testimony, secret service director julia pierson is out. the administration said the obamas had confidence in pearson. by this afternoon, the white house says pierson and the president determined it was time for new leadership. >> director pierson believed it was in the best interest of the agency to which she dedicated her career.
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the secretary agreed with that assessment, the president did as well. over the last several days, we've seen recent and accumulating reports raising questions about the performance of the agency, and the president concluded that new leadership of that agency was required. >> reporter: johnson is initiating a review to determine what happened when intruder jumped white house fence, ran around the residence before agents apprehended him in the east room. investigators should submit report by november 1st. pierson's tenure includes incident where man with an arrest record armed with a gun walked onto elevator with the president in atlanta. officials are pointing joseph clancy as interim director in charge of the protective division of the secret service. he had retired in 2011. now he's back, neil? neil: what's weird about this, rich, she came into replace someone after the colombian prostitute brouhaha and she's gone.
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they keep changing chiefs but the problems keep coming up. the white house is always the one surprised? >> right, and the news had come out so belated consider wearing they were earlier in this whole incident where the guy was running around the white house. the secret service wasn't forthcoming with that information, and now you've had the president in focus here. the earlier incident where she cleaned up drunkenness, prostitutes, this is someone running around the white house and a guy standing next to the president with a gun. neil: incredible, incredible. and kept happening. rich edson, thank you very much. the problems with the white house are not easing, they're getting worse. to former secret service agent dan on what this means and whether anyone is safe. is anyone up to this task, dan? >> yes, neil. someone could be up to it. they need an outside director. the secret service unlike the
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fbi or the dea or other federal agencies has this -- i don't know if it's a habit or just unintended legacy here, of promoting people from within to director. that's great. there's a lot of experience there, neil. the downside to that is some of the problems you've become immune to because you are surrounded yourself, you see the same sign, you stop paying attention, tend to get ignored. they need an outside director with a d.c. gravitas, i hate that word. neil: you are running for congress, you're out. i got to ask you this, it's going to seem impossible, but given the frequency of the incidents, i'm beginning to wonder whether it's a lot of guys in the secret service don't like this president or don't care about his well-being. what do you think? >> no, i've never seen, that neil. i am as die-hard a conservetarian as you are going to find. i know guys that think like i
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do politically. i've never heard a hint of anything like that. matter of fact, if anything was the opposite to prove to the staff that may have had differing political opinions, that they would do -- i would argue even a better job than before. neil: i'm glad you said that, but here's what makes me not glad you said, that the only other possible excuses, they're just not up to the task. >> well, neil, there's a near mutiny going on in the secret service. this is the story that -- that's why i'm glad you have me on. nobody is reporting on right now. i'm amazed how big this story has become and no one picked up on it. why do you think all of the stories are leaking out and the whistle-blowers are magically appearing? there's a reason. the rank and file agents that get the work done, not the upper level management decimating this agency are absolutely fed up. i'm getting the calls and e-mails every day. neil: fed up with what? >> management.
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management has used the secret service, the small cabal is a job recruitment spot. neil: pierson among them? >> i would argue yes, unfortunately. they developed relationship with the white house staff, with people in the business sector. look at what some of the former directors and former upper management. look what they've done. it's almost, neil, a quasi form of regulatory capture in the secret service. neil: who leaked that it was actually an off-duty agent who tackled this guy who entered the white house to the grounds? not an active on-duty agent. who would say that unless to embarrass active duty agents? >> they're willing to take the embarrassment at this point to get rid of this management team. they're fed up, neil. i get the calls every day. they're upset about this. neil: dan, thank you very much. curious about that. good seeing you again. now there is pressure to cap spending. the push to cut spending on
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. neil: so the fight against isis and how it could cost billions to defeat isis? lawmakers are pressured to cap military spending. is now the time to slow down defense spending? highest-ranking military member to have ever been elected congress. admiral, good to have you. what do you make of this move to rein in defense spending? both sides have strong views at the top. what are you saying? >> without question, the capability against isis is fully fund. but neil, the defense strategy that came out this year based
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on a 25-year-old model, that general powell came up with. it says in the new defense strategy we will fight two we'res simultaneously in asia on land and that's what we're going to build our force structure for. you know as well as i do, throwing more money into education isn't going to give us a better education system unless you have the right strategy. in the halls of the pentagon we didn't think about a china then. they're trying to dominate the south china sea. we weren't trying to have a force structure based on the strategy. neil: admiral, if we're not really living in the modern times, do the modern times require more money? less money? i look at the military budget and say that's a lot of money we throw at military. i'm not saying i'm against protecting us, but maybe we just reconstruct the funding we have. >> we do. look at the high end is going to be china. that's not land, that's in air and a sea battle, if we ever have to do that, heaven forbid.
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neil: by the way, on that notion, i keep interrupting you, if china were to act up in hong kong, would that justify a response on our part? >> wouldn't justify a stop of going into hong kong. you know that is china territory, we may not like it or dislike it, it is china territory. neil: natural fear is it extends to taiwan, you don't share that? >> absolutely. here's the concern, the term it uses for taiwan means we own it. that's the term they used last year for the south china sea and put out fishing rights. look at this. an aircraft carrier today can strike in one day 10 times the targets it could do 15 years ago. that means we have 150 carriers' capabilities worth. do we need a better sensor system to lay quietly in the ocean so we know where the chinese submarines are? neil, we're building the wrong warfare force rather than what
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the new air war burdens for us. neil: isis and how to prepare for that. worst-case scenario is it costs 22 billion dollars if you add troops on the ground. something the administration says isn't bandied about yet. where does the money come from? do we reallocate sources? more money, what? >> 25,000 troops on the ground, which we shouldn't do. it's three to five billion dollars if there's no troops on the ground, no more than we have today, advising, that is going -- i believe that we should come up with that and pay for this war as we go forward. put it off-line, i believe they have to remove the sequester where it's insanely congress said every program has a hair cut equally. what they have is set priorities and i think also they have to get its own budget. the year i left, the cost overruns for the fiscal year 2008 was $300 billion. i think they have to get that
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better, too. would i ramp up defense strategy if we get the cost overruns fixed? absolutely. they don't have either of those yet. neil: admiral, thank you very much. i think you are right on a lot of stuff. >> thank you. neil: three star admiral. when we come back, redskins, redskins, redskins, i'm staying now while apparently i can and those in washington still can. if the fcc has its way, you won't hear the word on tv ever again. she's still the one for you.
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going down. a lot of people think young folks are opting out. not interested. news that student loan debt is keeping first-time buyers out of the market. driving the market down. a lost opportunity as a result. real estate entrepreneur, corporation founder and friend of one barack obama, the chairman and ceo don peebles who says we could see another housing crisis if we're not careful. what's going on? what do you think? >> it's interesting, what's happening is the housing market is catching its breath. we are in a heavy recession, and the stagnant job growth, stagnant economy was like waiting on an air inflated ball in a pool. and once it was released, it popped up and went above the level and the water level. neil: that's happening now. >> the housing market is catching its breath, unsustainable level of rapid appreciation. neil: only in some markets. >> major markets. the major gateway markets where there's the highest concentration of population and
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the highest concentration of jobs. we have a significant job problem. neil: that's what does it, right? if you don't approve the job picture and particularly for young people, they feed the bottom and the bottom goes up, we're not going to get this under control. are we? >> no. and the challenge we have also is young people have seen what has happened in this last recession. if you're gun-shy about getting committed to owning a home. neil: they don't think it's the big draw that it was for you and many in our generation, right? >> the uncertainty in the job market. we have a much more mobile youth society now. so those at the bottom know the emerging homebuyers, they want to have mobility and owning a home is not mobile anymore. this last recession showed them homes are harder to sell and not guaranteed to hold their value. neil: what do you think is going to happen, then? the last housing meltdown and
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housing sort of freeze where nothing happens, period. >> i think we're going to have more of kind of what you hear some of these very liberal politicians saying about the tale of two cities or this wealth disparity. two housing markets. >> it's occurred under a president they love, that that gap has widened, i'm not blaming it on him. under democrats and republicans alike, it affects growth? >> we're going to have in the housing market, the top end is doing well. the levels of appreciation on the super luxury end are staggering. neil:is that right. >> in new york city. neil: this is a weird environment. this breathes bubble. >> take the worst market in the country during the recession which is miami. overbuilt for condo, you couldn't give them away, 200, $300 for square foot in downtown miami. those same units are $1200 a square foot.
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that market has recovered. but the typical american market, where you have home prices in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, that's stagnant and it's going to continue to be stagnant until there is significant long-term, sustainable job growth because people are too uncertain and don't have the resources. neil: the president interviewed on "60 minutes" last week, don, says he recognizes while the economy has improved and americans don't feel it, to your point. there are ways to rectify. that raise the minimum wage, is it that simple? >> it's not that simple. we have to figure out a way that we encourage and incentivize business. look at the affordable housing crisis that we have in the major cities in the country, all run with a liberal approach it governing. and the idea of incentivizing public housing by requiring it to be built by giving, it has not worked there. needs to be a way to incentivize businesses to spend more money, invest more capital
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and take greater risk. businesses are concerned about this economy and the tax policies and the discussions about further raising taxes right now in new york, there's a discussion about taxing, raising taxes on pied-a-terres and use it a month out of the year. we want those kind -- neil: we're not talking about those individuals, we're talking about those who have a little place. >> right. >> they come here and buy real estate and pay taxes. neil: and you're a democrat? what's the deal with you? >> pro business american. neil: no, you're also a good egg and a pragmatic guy. we need more on both sides of the equation. don peebles, great seeing you, again. >> great seeing you, neil. neil: is what's happening in hong kong about to happen here? why dr. ben carson says yes, maybe even worse if we're not careful.
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neil: what is going to come of this place, right? you might be looking at these protests in hong kong and think that's so far on the other side of the earth, so not on our side of the earth. not on us here. dr. ben carson says you might want to listen and you might want to pay attention, because whatever's going on, there could be an issue here. what do you mean, doctor, explain. >> you know, the people in hong kong have had 17 years now, which they've been under the control of beijing, and promises were made to them that they'd be able to keep their independence, and they were also promised that in 2017, they could have independent elections for their leaders. more recently, beijing indicated that they could have those elections but the people running for election would have to be sanctioned by beijing. so obviously, the people are starting to say wait a minute, what's happening to our freedom? that causes enormous amount of
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anxiety. they're thinking back to what happened to tiananmen square, back in 1989, and this was causing a great deal of anxiety. in this country, we also have a situation where people are starting to become less trustful of the government. we have enormous financial potential instability because of the level of our debts and the only reason we can sustain a debt of that nature is we can manipulate money, print money. what if we couldn't print money with that level of debt? not to mention the unfunded liabilities. >> the fact of the matter is we can and do and have and we probably will continue to do so, so the experts i talk to on this is a tell dr. carson to take a chill pill, he's not nothing to worry about. what do you say? >> i've got more to add. the threat of isis and other terrorist organizations that
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could impinge upon us, we have the capability of iran to develop nuclear weapons. we have instability going on in the western pacific, with expansionism of china. we have putin's threats, you know there's a number of things going on around the world when combined with what's going on here. all you have to do is think back to 2008, and six months before the financial crisis. neil: right. >> things were pretty nice. so -- >> you're saying to experience something like that again, a meltdown type of event. we started off the show talking about it is october after all. a month famous for some of the most scary stock market slides in history. are you looking at that? >> i sure hope not. i'm trusting in the stability of our system. we have an incredibly strong
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country. neil: but you're saying, a lot of folks say maybe what we're missing are strong leaders. your name keeps popping up in presidential tinder, and it's raising growing interest in you as a prospective candidate. are you? >> prospective. that's a correct word, yes. prospective. neil: when you look at numbers like that. a few years ago, doctors outside in the medical community where you are widely respected and still are, most folks didn't know you, you are up there with top presidential names. >> i think people are starting to recognize that maybe the qualifications for leadership is not many years in political office. many years in political office, if that was a qualification, i think there are a number of people we could put on the
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table, and you're saying are you kidding me? i wouldn't want them. what we need is wisdom, the ability to amalgamate a lot of information from a lot of experts and make wise decisions, and most importantly, we need to recognize that this is a country in which the government is supposed to conform to the will of the people. neil: i think you're running, i think you're running for office now. you're just laying the groundwork as we speak. >> you could be right. [ laughter ] >> all right. well, i'm watching closely, doctor. ben carson. always a pleasure, sir, appreciate it. >> thank you, neil. neil: what the bleep. why the washington redskins are about to be the washington [ bleep ] with universities across the state. for better access to talent, cutting edge research, and state of the art facilities. and you pay no taxes for ten years. from biotech in brooklyn, to next gen energy in binghamton,
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. >> the term redskins, could soon be banned for simply being too offensive. that makes me want to say something really offensive. because the fcc is thinking of censoring the name, the term, redskins from even being said on tv and radio. so are people as outraged as they think? we went to the street to find out. >> you can't be in a word that's taking control of people's freedom of speech and rights. >> inappropriate. >> used negatively in the past. >> we live in an age, you offend somebody you have to take it back. no longer freedom of speech. >> changing every name because it's politically incorrect. >> we could be thicker skinned about things. >> where do we go from here? all major on spores and look at other offensive names, anything that could offend anybody, really. neil: all right, back with the all-stars, lizzie, what do you think of that? >> outlaw the tomahawk chop at
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games too, meaning -- >> i got it. as if i'm not up on all the sports. i'm not an idiot. >> redskins is a -- we get that. name the team what they want. i think the fcc has bigger problems on its hands like russia trying to get google's algorithm. neil: yeah, sure. >> losing sleep over it. neil: absolutely. >> the fcc is offended more than anyone else. you should not come to dinner at my house on sunday, you will be completely offended. this is what people do. i think we need thicker skin. the redskins are happy to be called the redskins and let it be. >> you know, here's the funny part, right? do we even use the word? in my travels, which i've been all over the u.s., i've never heard anybody use the term redskin in a derogatory fashion, right? and you look at the logo of the
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redskins, it's a proud native american. there's a redskin theater up the street in oklahoma owned by a native american in tribal territory. it's not that offensive. it boggles my mind that we can watch "jersey shore" where they throw out expletives way worse than redskins. >> the fcc should come down on the "jersey shore," that completely offensive to people from jersey. >> don't you think the fcc has bigger things, seriously, to worry about. neil: with indians and the atlanta braves, and i don't know, it's out of control. >> it's silly and ridiculous. there are bigger problems that we have to deal with. neil: and people are childish and keep saying redskins, redskins, redskins, redskins, redskins, anyway -- back to ebola and safer to fly first class. reports are giving more attention to cleaning first class seats than they do coach.
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tracy, that makes me think a lot of folks want to upgrade. apparently the seats in coach are not cleaned. >> i know, when you're traveling with 52 kids, you can't upgrade. what's going to happen is the post-9/11 thing. everyone is nervous, no one is going to fly. the airlines are going to hand out hand sanitizer and go on. >> it is creepy. 2 billion people fly every year and they don't clean the table in front of you. >> you could have gotten anything that the point. >> i love what the "wall street journal" looked into it and asked the government asked the fda who is to make sure the airlines are clean? go check with the fda and the fda said go check on osha. it was who's on first and second game. neil: they're working on the redskins. >> right. neil: where is it going? >> well, here's where it's going to go, i believe. there are no antibacterial protocols in major commercial
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airlines. in other words, there's no thing they go through where they wipe the seats with stuff to clean it, better get on with the handy wipe or hand sanitizer. they're going to begin charging i think a $5 surcharge perhaps, that might be the answer where, they clean the seats, they wipe them down, the hand rests and seat belt buckles, you are turning around a plane in 20 minutes. >> you're saying we are going to have to pay a stewardess to come by with a 409 bottle? >> yes. >> maybe everyone get an ebola cover-up for five bucks. >> the michelin man. neil: first class or coach, the bottom line is that a lot of people say since this ebola revelation, maybe it's not safe to fly at all. is it that bad? >> the stocks have not been in the upright position for sometime. ha-ha. neil: you are just the worse.
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>> they are hurting their brand with the fees, and now that the planes are dirty, it's going turn off passengers. >> go into one of the bathrooms, you could get african syndrome in the bathroom. >> is that a listed disease. give me an e.coli virus. neil: bottled water. >> vodka kills everything. neil: we're going to feed on this and you're going to have a lot of people who hold off because we were told that there are ways of monitoring this ebola thing and ways not to, and we're told it wasn't exactly the way they said. that's not good. >> that's not good. delta and united airlines are stepping up, cleaning their planes whether it's first class and coach remains to be seen. >> the first two seats are immaculate. coming up, the solution to the secret service screwups. i'm going to give it to you, and more to do with just firing someone. maybe redoing the entire department. after this.
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neil: what's the deal with the continued secret service screw ups? neil, this situation reminds me, when i was in the army, i started when carter was president, finished under reagan, behaviors that slid under carter were no longer accepted under reagan, it is a mind set thing. most military guys don't flip over this president, they protect of as much as the man, he is their commander, most of them put protecting him over what they think of him. bob in chicago, neil, the secret service protects our commander in chief regard less of political parties, so far, but one thing i take exception with you calls president the most powerful man in the world, right now putin seems to be that person, all right we can just
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disagree. and ashley, north carolina, i don't see what the bothi bothers about, the president was not there, when he is, he is not, we don't need a secret service. sadly ashley we do. no matter what you president or these incidents involving secret service. we need a body, an agency in charge of protects the most powerful man on the planet, stan in utah, down be a dope, secret service director did nothing different than any others, firing her will accomplish nothing more, i could not disagree more, julia person should go, if no other person than cooling dismissing a knife wielding gonzalez breaking into the white house as unacceptible, that did you not cut it. she has to any. kevin, writes, okay, what would you do? >> first, i would take the
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responsibility for the secret service, out of the president's hands. how can he say anything critical about them, these are the guys protecting him, i say give it to treasury secretary, whose office oversees the department, and take the president out. why should guy whose life is in their hands, be in compromising position of hiring and firing their boss, pete writes, if you were president, secret service would have it easy, if they lost you, they would just have to check the nearest denny's there you would be having a grand time, and picking up the tab for everyone in the rift rift, that restaurant that is the kind of guy yo you are, you who who wano harm you. >> this secret service would shoot you and try to make it look like an accident or let anyone run into the white house and finish you off, secret service protect those that like
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and respect, get it, cavuto? i get it porter, your fam famous dark play, not this kind, crack pot. i have no idea what i said, just sounded mean. anyway, pamela, you seem to come down hard on secret service give a pass to banks, talk about a twisted alleged journalist with a warped sense of values. the two have nothing to do with each other, pam lark pamela, in secret service. i am not as hard on the banks i figure that government has been hard on them already, if you watch this show, i have argueed that banks are no saints, but all of these politicians, throwing these obscene finds to cover theire own stupidty. kennedy: pay attention next
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time, we're doing porter -- sore you and porter not watch the show, i want you to g scoot down the broadcast bench. see you tomorrow. kennedy: news, caught up in ebola beat down. raise a glass to brave hodge konhong kongkong protesters, ths have a impact. so much easier to get steam ruled by news cycle drama. remember the signer at nelson mandela's -- that nut bowl was feet from president. we lose sight of goal, to keep an eye on the freaks who run things, you are hedge on the headlines, they are growing bigger, and their money -- for v.a., and
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