tv Cavuto FOX Business October 7, 2014 11:00pm-12:01am EDT
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. neil: tonight on cavuto, you heard it here first, the u.s. government does not have ebola under control. all the proof you need is what the head of the cdc said to me or didn't say to me, because i still can't figure it out. maybe you can. i'll give you a chance. american -- how many more did we miss? you wonder how the crises end? kreskin does, and what the renown mentalist sees coming, nothing short of amazing. plus it is one thing to target your bank account, are hackers targeting your life? you got to hear this. your money, your life, your
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show, and it all starts right now. welcome, everybody, glad to have you, i'm neil cavuto. is it me or getting tired of constantly telling to you stay calm. when it coms to ebola they're on top of it. >> the chances of ebola outbreak here in the united states are extremely low. >> on the subject of ebola, i salute the president. >> the united states can prevent the widespread of ebola. >> the risk of ebola outbreak in the united states would be exceedingly low. >> the chances of outbreak, of epidemic here are extraordinarily low. neil: first off, i was calm until all these government guys started telling me i should stay calm, especially when the same folks urging restraint now were the same once scaring the you know what out of us with something called sequestration back then. do you remember this.
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>> these cuts are not smart, they're not fair. >> sequestration would be destruct testify our nation's security. >> sequestration equals unemployment. >> 750,000 american jobs lost. >> thousands of teachers and educators will be laid off. >> the republicans better be very careful what they're doing here. neil: an going to die! except we didn't. you see, that's what makes folks nervous. the folks telling them to stay calm, they make them nervous. maybe because washington never seems to consistently have so much as a clues, so they overstated sequestration then, what's to stop us from thinking they are understalth the threat of ebola right now. to forbes editor in chief steve forbes. i get nervous when they keep reassuring me not to be nervous. >> the government has no credibility, everything from veterans administration, what's happening in the middle east and other things, economy still in the sluggish state.
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labor participation rate's low. so the reassurance is people just don't believe the american people should be credited that they're not panicking over ebola yet, but don't have the confidence this government is truly in charge. for example, i'd love to get true reassurances of they're going all out of creating vaccines if this thing does break out. there are things can you do, emergency measures to ramp up productions of medications? i haven't heard about it yet. neil: they did tip their hat when they sent 3,000 troops to liberia to deal with this, right? that was a sign they were fearing something was up, and coordinated all of the various health agencies, responses and press statements, almost daily press briefings, leaders meeting with the president on almost a daily basis. so me thinks something is up even though they tell us nothing is up. what do you think is the case? >> the fact that it's spreading, even though it's confined largely to three
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countries and nigeria has taken constructive steps on this, these things get out of hand. ebola has been around for years, and when we had potential outbreaks in the past, they stamped it out pretty quickly. this time lethal genie has the gone out of bottle. in terms of the flights to the three countries in west africa, i don't know why we can't quarantine them, if somebody comes in, you quarantine them until they see you don't have the symptoms. those steps, inconvenient though they are now, can save a whole lot of trouble later. neil: it's going to induce panic and get people going nuts and start acting like they did during sequestration? >> well, i think the american people, if they know steps are being taken and the government can show that they have this thing in hand will react calmly. they will be on the lookout for symptoms and the like, but
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again, these bland reassurances and keep getting the upcroppings of things that shouldn't be happening. so why not take preemptive measures? why doesn't the president come out and say we are ramping up production of these medications, just in case, and so we do have this thing in hand. i think people would like to see that the government is acting rather than reacting. neil: well put, steve forbes, good seeing you, my friend. >> thank you. neil: forget about soothing the savage ebola, the cdc is feeding the panicked beast, especially when director dr. thomas frieden avoids details of what's up with me. have a look. >> looking at other things to further increase safety of the american people. that is the number one priority. neil: like what? >> looking at options. >> could you tell me what one of those options are? >> let me first make an important point. neil: what is the one thing you're doing now short of shutting down travel to that affected area that you're considering going to implement?
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>> stay tuned. neil: interested to see what the protocols will be. to sabrina, tracy byrnes, that's what concerns me, you are told to be calm and not offered reassurances how to stay caught. i get nervous. >> i would have felt better if he said wash your hands when you get off the plane. something! i think steve forbes is dead on, i think everyone would feel better if they stop flights. nip this in the bud and fix this. neil: you're not of the canvas that makes the situation worse? >> no, makes everyone feel better. the two families that who have flights to west africa right now, can reschedule to a later day. neil: might be four. >> okay. maybe. neil: sabrina? >> this is an administration more concerned with being politically correct and adequately protecting the american people at home. that's going to insight panic.
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that's the attitude of the cdc, they talked about the right of return even for noncitizens with communicable diseases? this is concerning, the way the dallas mayor has been talking about the poor man duncan in dallas. look, these people, many of them were trying to help people when they contracted the disease, now we have to watch out and see how it can spread to america, and the fact that the president won't stop the flights is telling. neil: what do you think, jonas? >> the cdc is not the military. they can tell us what their plans are to stop something, even though it's unlikely. neil: washing your hands like tracy said. >> what disturbs me other than the website, i don't see what they could have done that couldn't have been done 30 years ago. how are they tracking it? filling out reports that you came in. can they track people on planes? put devices on them? smart watch. they can record your heart rate. can't they have nurses go to their houses and see if they
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have symptoms. neil: wait a could. >> there is a vaccine on the shelf. neil: jonas, that's a fine point. the argument is that why spend and do crazy stuff ahead of something that might not pan out to the degree of fear. you say what? >> we spend money on crazy stuff for turtles and bridges. neil: the turtles never had ebola. >> do we need a bridge? we need to focus on the american people and the health as opposed to the nonsensical things that the congressman lobby. neil: we mentioned, there is a disconnect between obviously the measures, we can criticize some of them, obviously, the troops over to liberia, maybe taking more stringent positions, monitoring those who come out from this region. we think something is up, when they keep saying be calm, nothing is up, they keep doing
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things that seem to imply something is worrying them. what do you think? >> i agree. im the first to say the culture of alarmism that we generally live in is a bad thing and we don't want hysteria over something that is a threat. >> the sequestration proved that. that's why their believability is in question now. >> you're absolutely right. they've lost credibility, and i think people realize that we live in a global world that has become very, very small. i have a brother in another part of africa. the reality is people travel to and from all of the time and have to think reasonably how can we limit and stem the tide of this disease. neil: we're going to take a quick break. thank you for that. in the meantime, do you think housing is off the map? meet the guy who says when these guys meet, the whole market is going to be down for the count.
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. neil: president obama meeting with regulators to push for more rules for the financial industry. former acting housing and urban development secretary brian montgomery says that's the last thing the industry or borrowers need. the rules are killing banks and maybe killing lending, could you explain? >> well, our company put out a survey called the mortgage industry outlook, the first one we just released today, and had some pretty telling statistics, largely that lenders are by and large fed up with the degree of regulation coming out of washington. in fact as many as 80% said it's negatively impacting businesses. neil: how so? which rules have changed over the past years or months have
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come about the equation. >> rules of dodd-frank of the snail's pace it took to implement all of them. and bringing up more compliance staff, legal and assistants all within the span of 18 months has been a lot more many lenders, in particular, smaller lenders. neil: i talked to people critical of the pitch, not that it's a pitch, the study, by saying bankers will find any reason to hide behind not just lending, either they're just eager not to take the risk, or they're doing quite fine the way they are and don't want to mess things up and hiding behind this, it's indeed the cheap s.o.b.'s they are. you say what? >> we know back in the heyday of the housing boom, there were too many crazy loan product. we know the laundry list of no
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doc loans, you name it. neil: did they go too part other way, and that's the rap the industry gets? >> absolutely. somewhere between laissez-faire and anything goes in the market, in between having to have a 65 score and look at the former fed chair, ben bernanke recently said he couldn't get approved for a refinance. something is a little odd. neil: i wouldn't give that much. >> someone of a man who makes 100,000 a speech couldn't qualify for a loan. neil: when he was earning a little under 200,000. you are quite right. ben bernanke's name, let this one go through, obviously they didn't, right? >> obviously they didn't. they are now. neil: brian, very good having you, thank you, very enlightening. the last stand for eric holder is hard to say. the justice department is reading another round of charges against banks.
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maybe some of those who are part of the survey. this time over currency manipulation. tracy, i don't want to say this sounds like a money grab but this sounds like a money grab. >> total money grab. bank of america in the hole for $17 billion in fees and they have no choice but to pay. the government using the banks as piggy banks to get money back frankly, and the banks have no choice but to settle and move on. they have to hand in their capital statements to make sure they have enough cash on hand. they need to know their liability. neil: talking about rigging the currency markets, it gets to be arcane, jonas, suffice to say, this is like a trojan horse to maybe getting execs in prison. >> maybe, there's a one -- neil: not me. >> they couldn't get anybody on the mortgage stuff, it's legal. you can't put somebody in jail for making stupid loans for
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somebody who couldn't qualify. most of this is actually in -- neil: why would they be that blatant. >> libor was fixed. there are jail sentences, currency, sure, that market is a joke, other countries can gamble in it. almost every price is manipulated on wall street. neil: you welcome this because you are inside? >> i will say from a learning point of view, if you're a small investor and trading currencies and commodities you are trading against people who are crooked. neil: don't want to sound like apologist, but the pile-on goes on and on, to tracy's point, what's up here? what's the endgame? banks if we're angry at them for not lending, probably a good many of them trying to keep the powder dry just in case something else drops on them. >> easy to get resentful towards the wall street banks,
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they provide capital to people who need it, and that's what creates jobs. neil: clearly jonas doesn't appreciate that. >> and we had to make sure in a situation like this we don't get another dodd-frank or going to highly regulate and cripthel industry. and i think tracy is right. look not only bank of america but jpmorgan. feds manipulated that merger with bear stearns and they're slapped with a massive fine. neil: quickly with you, jonas is right, either there's a record in the past or a history of rigging different markets and easy to do with currencies, as you whispered there it is an unregulated field. if they were doing this, shouldn't they be punished. >> yes, get on with it already. this is like the slow drip. they are slowly torturing the four bankses, and the banks for the business to lend money. interest rates are so darn low, i wouldn't lend to you for 30 years. why do i want 1% when i can get it. neil: you wouldn't lend to me?
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>> or ben bernanke. >> people think we didn't get much out of banks. >> they got a lot of money but didn't get the pound of flesh. >> little bonus on the interest rates of loans they got a tarp. neil: we got a deal on the euro for you. we know hackers threaten your bank, are they now threatening your life? coming up, the cyberthreat that's worse than anything you heard before. this one is life and death stuff. so i can reach ally bank 24/7, but there are no branches? 24/7 it's just i'm a little reluctant to try new things. what's wrong with trying new things? feel that in your muscles? yeah... i do... try a new way to bank, where no branches equals great rates.
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. >> we have to tax the bill so you can find out what's in it away from the fog of the controversy. neil: that fog would be the media. it turns out that people still don't know what is in obamacare, after all this time, or any health care plan for that matter. get a lot of this. a new aflac survey shows 41% of americans are spending less than 15 minutes picking such a plan but hours on researching things like cars and vacations.
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to newly named aflac u.s. president and first african-american to hold that position toeresa light. thank you for coming on, and congratulations. >> thank you so much, i appreciate it. neil: none of this surprises me, it falls in line with other studies that have proven we're far more interested in researching where we're going to go on vacation than on what plan we have to look after us while we are on vacation, but this is even wider and bigger numbers than i thought. how do you then get people interested in paying attention? >> well, one of the things they think we have to do is make sure that employers are going to educate their workers. 73% of employers say -- employees say that they don't understand the complexities of the affordable care act, and that's an astounding number. so with that, with all of the
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changes that have been made with the affordable care act and with health insurance premiums period, employees have to be educated on what to look for, and you know, as you said, they're taking 15 minutes to do these enrollments. 15 minutes. i spent more time picking my shoes out this weekend at the mall than most people spend on, you know, on picking health insurance. this is a very, very important matter. neil: you know, what's interesting, not using it as excuse, i'm probably guilty of it as well, teresa, the people we pick as experts can't agree. when i talk about what are the surcharges i'm facing? they more or less say hell if i know. doctors unsure, radiologists are unsure, nurses are unsure, what the heck, right? >> there are so many changes happening at one time. from employer standpoint, the
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goal is cost containment. so 56% of employers have really adjusted their plans, they basically have gone from a traditional plan to some of the health savings accounts and high deductible health plans. with the change happening from employer perspective and changes in health care in general in all of the regulations associated with it, then there's no question that everybody, if confused about what needs to happen. the one thing that is constant is employers are attempting to work hard in educating their employees for this upcoming enrollment season. that's a good thing. neil: all right, by the way, my bosses are saying neil, we know what we're doing, you're the clueless idiot. teresa, thank you very much. congratulations again, quite an honor. speaking of high-powered female executives, our very own jo ling kent will be chatting
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with gm ceo mary barra tomorrow 12:30 p.m. eastern time on fbn coming as we're getting word that the number of deaths pegged to the ignition switch problem has essentially doubled since the first estimates that came out. this 19-year-old caught in chicago before flying off to fight for isis. good thing the fbi got him because they flat-out missed this one. >> my name here is zagra, i'm from ohio in the united states of america. most people in america are against dash of course, islamic (trader vo) i search. i research. i dig. and dig some more. because, for me, the challenge of the search... is almost as exciting as the thrill of the find. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we rebuilt scottrade elite from the ground up -
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. neil: welcome back, more details on the teen arrested in chicago traveling to join isis, we're now hearing unnamed turkish contact found him online, purchased airline tickets. to the fox biz all-star, jonas, what do you think? >> i like the high-tech sparring going on, that's where the defense budget needs to go and out of the submarine budget. neil: how did they find this guy? >> snitches, i don't know, it's working. you don't want it to be like minority report, busting people before they commit crimes. neil: i like the reference to hollywood. >> they're going to call me, neil, someday. because there are people that want to knock off banks and talk about buddies and don't do it, and decide it's a student idea. if we arrest everybody for chitchatting with crime,
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they're going to fill prisons with people that aren't criminals. >> they were talking about it on blogs. neil: were they really? >> yeah. neil: this is mine. >> this individual c., whoever this person is he met online, he's landing overseas hoping someone will take him to -- >> what is the case of this kid, who's 19, that some guy bought the ticket for him in advance, that is among the way they traced it back. >> and that's the big thing is that among these american jihadis that we have, a lot of them are not only getting training but resources from abroad. we've been seeing it and this is exactly the case of the fort hood shooting in 2009. that this guy was tied to the yemenis, we have to walk a fine line between preserving civil liberties and protecting
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securities. i think we have to make sure we're investigating all possible options. neil: you know what's interesting, the kid had a record of being disgruntled. they found papers at his place. that is the common theme, unhappy, angry, they're not all poor, but they are angry. >> he asked parents to come along with him, he denied. he said they won't let me back into the united states, see you. neil: oh, he knew. >> he knew he would be arrested. >> the video of the guys already over there. that's scary, jonas. >> it's working but i don't know if the crimes are discussed doing this, but i don't want to catch -- you want to catch real criminals or while they're doing a crime, not throwing everyone in prison. a lot of teenagers are disgruntled grow out of it. neil: $250,000 fine if found guilty for essentially not committing an act here but on his way to commit an act. >> maybe he would have got
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chicken at the airport, not done. neil: but they have to succeed once, no matter how hard they try. the markets are watching the world with uncertainty. if only we had the answers. who better to ask about the future than the amazing kreskin. i predict this much, he'll only i predict this much, he'll only be here.
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your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge might not seem so big after all. ♪ . neil: all right, they say we live in uncertain times with, a war and isis, and ebola and sluggish economy. we have a guy who's actually got it all down. the amazing kreskin is here. so cool to have you, thank you very much for coming. >> i got to shake hands. neil: hell of a handshake. >> regis says my handshake is the dream of every chiropractor. neil: you almost broke my hand. >> you know something neil, it's ironic, think about this sitting in the green room. congratulations on your being
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voted and picked as the popular personality. neil: people want to have a beer with me. >> no, that's something, i had a hero, i'm not going into it now, you youngsters studying about broadcasting, he says you have to write a life story. the most powerful communicator was arthur godfrey, it was quietly decided godfrey would take over the nation and "time" magazine thought i was out of my mind. he had a way of making people feel he was only talking to them. i got to tell you something, you deal with the economy. this is such an action to say. this do you realize, neil, every show they do, talk about we protect our money, we protect our savings, and every concert i do, and my shows are for corporate and public shows, at a certain point i turn my
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check, my fee for the program over to a committee of strangers from the audience. the one condition is i must never have met them. it's usually six people. i'm escorted from the building, unless two weeks ago at the toronto state fair, the shows are outdoors, di39 shows in 18 days. they put me in a trailer. my check is hidden in the theater. >> the actual check? >> my check. >> when i return, the committee is on stage. it's not a gimmick, the committee thinks what they've done. if i don't find my fee, i don't get paid. the money goes back to the people who book me, and i have failed nine times. neil: out many? >> out of 6,000. >> the most famous is new zealand, broadcast all over the world. i lost in one night at a coliseum, $51,000. neil: what happens?
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you give it to them. >> and they hide it anywhere. neil: if you can't find it. >> they come back if they don't think about it, neil. neil: you're a mentalist. >> i'm perceiving their thoughts. neil: what do you have the power to do? >> it's anability, at riveriera in vegas, i said someone is thinking of these two names. a man stood up, very distinguished. i said, they're our pets. we are from another part of the country. didn't you say your wife iwonder if you can tell me military number. that was another hotel. does anybody know it. no one in the service forgets it, but whoever talks about it? i gave him exact serial number, he was in world war ii. let me tell you where my check is hidden. university in illinois. gymnasium, 8,000 people. this man, he was a teacher.
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i said would you stand. would you open your mouth. like a fool, no check. i walked away from him, amongst the people sitting on everything else and something brought me back to him, i said sir, if this embarrasses you, sit down, i apologize, would you open your mouth does, this have anything to do with the roof of your mouth? neil, he took out upper plates and handed me my check. neil: oh, my god. i've seen it on and off. >> and he's known me for years, since mike douglas days. neil: a lot of people call this magic. >> it is not magic. neil: it's weird, you have a power, let me pursue this power part. you see what's gone on in the world and see a lot of nervous people. >> you know, neil, i apologize. neil: do you see anything that worries you now that is unlike
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other times? >> i'm going to tell you something and no one has brought up this in the news, and i'm interviewed all the time. and they said we never forgot about. this let me tell you something you haven't thought of. we have a tremendous wave of interest for the past 12 1/2 years, out of almost out of control, in the occult, in seances, spirit of communication, you don't believe me? look at internet. so many shows where people are going to haunted houses. neil, in the history of this modern society, before the civil war, before world war i, before world war ii, before every great calamity in modern history there is interest in the here after and communication, and spiritism in this phenomena. tremendous interest. there was a monumental interest in the first world war, you heard about houdini exposing, someone did a true story, true story has never been told. none of that compares with today. this reflects -- and this
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affects how we invest, how we handle our money and so forth, there's an uncertainty because the public is not feeling confident on what's being told them, they don't feel the trust and the conviction that let's say other times in history, i don't care if it's roosevelt or what other president, truman or other people, they don't feel what's going on, not only with the disease, but the war, and we are at war. neil: all those other instances you referred to, led to pretty bad things. >> they were tremendously -- neil: what are you saying here? >> we are at war, and as far as, listen, we never learn from history. my hero and i consider myself a great authority on nothing, and i know very little about everything else. neil: i built a career on it, so -- >> i spend my time tuning in on thoughts of other people. if we only study history, my greatest hero is churchill. if these people paid attention to him, they would have been
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better prepared. neil: you're right about that. >> the bottom line is, we have to face the fact that this war is going to last before anyone alive. neil: you're talking about the war with isis, the war with terrorists. >> no one will be alive today when this war finally ends. look at history. the longest wars in history have been religious wars. for god's sake study history. do our politicians, listen i've been critical, i want to say something now, i'm not against all politicians, i wish most of them had been on the titanic, because i lost a lot of faith as a young boy, and it lingers in my life, when i was a kid in the second war was ending, you had roosevelt who led this country, we had great faith in him, he died in the fourth term, and out of great wisdom, they decided you can only be president for two terms. i now look at them within the years past as total hypocrites. how come a person can be in
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congress for 27 2 years. neil: very good point. what you seem to be saying is be prepared for some pretty scary stuff. >> but you know on the other side of the coin, neil, some of the greatest people in history, and it's going to come from young people, people are asking me, and i do a lot of corporate affairs. neil: what do you tell those audiences? >> they ask me who, if i look at congress and the senate, who i can pick as leaders? i perform for an awful lot of people, i can't pick anybody, neil. i'm going to tell you honestly. i swear as god is my judge, and i love this country, i don't see a strong leader. it is going to come out of a young person. neil: a young person, you mentioned that no one would have thought harry truman would have made a president. >> he was one of the greatest presidents. >> absolutely. who is to say there is someone
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underneath there now. >> there is. neil: none of the established names you hear. >> i've been around some of them. i was with one that's the governor of new jersey and he asked me to come again to an event. neil: there's a guy that could use a little magic. >> i had my hand against his head, and said he maybe you and i should be on letterman together. i said governor christie, maybe we better not. neil: if you're right. i'm not a know-it-all. the trend people are going to take away, a lot of people stop when you talk. >> don't stop and give up your life. i'm sorry, i'm sorry, neil. neil: would you -- do you see, in this environment, a market crash? do you see a depression? what do you see? >> i don't see a depression as we know it, but i see, first of all, i worked at casinos all over the world. the biggest gambling casino i
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know is wall street. and by the way, can i warn you folks and i'm sure neil in his own way has, we take advice from people, we have to search for people to believe in, if you hear people going to psychics, and i don't believe in all psychics, they're not all fakes. if they're going soothsayers, are they better off take advice at wall street who are giving advice before our last crash, the last recession. the movie "wolf of wall street," i know wall street, do you think it stopped with that movie? there is just as much corruption going on now. when you have that much money, the temptation is always there. neil: the temptation for crime is always there. >> neil, do you think it's going to change? first of all, our founding fathers and students, i've done over 1,000 university shows in this country.
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neil: wow. >> and they say, kreskin, you have to realize that our founding fathers never expected politics to be a job. you were giving something of yourself back in some way and going back to everyday life. what shocks people? how many lobbyists are there in washington, d.c. 22,000? i'm sorry. i've got to mention something. neil: rat-a-tat-tat. so if you had to take a bid on this country's future, better or worse near term? >> i believe it's going to be better. neil: stock market, buy or sell? >> i am not buying, but that's only me. neil: am i off the air? >> folks! neil, he's getting me in trouble. i got to tell you i'm excited about this because it is a tremendous departure, and i will tomorrow be -- i will tomorrow be appearing with a famous boxer, heather the heat.
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i am appearing and conditioning her mentally so she is more responsive in a boxing match. i work with three of this man's boxers, and next week is the final match. neil: you have a future in this. you should stick with. this we have a lot more. is this guy cool or what? everyone stops what they're doing when he talk. i've been working on that couple of decades now. momomomomo you owned your car for four years. you named it brad. you loved brad. and then you totaled him. you two had been through everything together. two boyfriends. three jobs. you're like "nothing can replace brad!" then liberty mutual calls. and you break into your happy dance. if you sign up for better car replacement, we'll pay for a car that's a model year newer with 15,000 fewer miles than your old one. see car insurance in a whole new light.
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little to keep me calm. have a look. >> what is the one thing you're doing now, short of shutting down travel to that affected area that you're considering going implement like now? >> well, stay tuned. neil: driving me nuts! anyway, wow, yours is the first interview i've seen with the cdc director which someone, that would be you, demanded specifics, and clear examples of what the agency is doing to keep us safe. good for you, bad for him not answering you. victor writes, you expose this puffed-up charletain to be much the clueless dweeb i was expecting, who was the doctor, the boob answering the questions or the surgeon taking him apart with pinpointed questions. he's a good doctor, anyway, jim e-mails, i watched the interview, and he could not answer the questions, unlike most of the administration he talked around it, i fear for
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america tonight. mark, thank you, for asking the hard questions of the cdc director. keep doing what you're doing. cathy e-mails, neil, i've watched your show for years, today you continue to drill down with the cdc director on america's concerns over the ebola virus and didn't stop. congrats, neil. as i was getting puffed up on that one, along comes joe to say it ain't so. hey, marcus welby, news flash, you're not a doctor, defer to the guy who is. by the way you're not a good doctor either, defer to interns who probably do a better job! that was very hurtful. gary via aol. too aggressive and demanding on the cdc director, neil. come on. don't add to the panic factor. dave in indiana, during interview with the doctor, you kept barging in on comments, i enjoy your program, but you have a habit of intruding on guests. please stop.
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that only when they stop evading my questions, dave. thomas in florida, cannot believe the unreal and disquieting, keep pushing the bureaucratic pin heads. my sister works in an emergency room and to date not one person has come to speak about what the protocol is when someone comes in and might be showing symptoms of ebola. ed in vermont, neil, what planet is this blanking idiot on? zero common sense. there are 10,000 people a day leaving liberia by plane. it's closer to 1,000, but your point is well taken. we're not take anything interest in the people who are leaving, are we? and arnie in wisconsin, the director of the cdc sounds like nfl coach who lost a game. we will watch the film and learn from our mistakes.
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glen in new york wonders what the cdc has against closing off travel in the affected african countries. i don't believe a word this guy is saying. love his comment closing the borders will make our problems worse, for whom? i'm worried about bringing it here. these cdc guys sound like obama, they never give an answer. we're looking at options and don't get it. send christopher columbus out to sea, for indigenous americans day, and let's just say not just italian-americans like my buddy joe piscopo are ticked. don in alabama writes this is a day to honor the man for discovery of america, leave this day alone, if you want a day for other people, pick april 1st. ben e-mails the italians are hardly the building blocks that me and joe piscopo keep claiming they are. they built america?
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are you kidding? italians more times than not are associated with crime, disruption, ever heard of the italian mafia. the most productive reliable responsible group in america. ben, i'm half irish, welcome all. don't swap out one group for another. remember, we're a melting pot. you sound like a crackpot. the italian-americans are behind the times, scientists have proven that columbus was from northeastern spain and his real family is from the barcelona area. italian or spanish, he did not discover the americas, native americans discovered this land. i have no idea what you're talking about lowell, you sound very, very smart. hey, if not for italians, there would not be sopranos or little league, no cannolis and no mob
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hits, just s seattle, just saying. i see where you're going here. you're threatening them, and dragging our people down. lovely! lovely! so ally bank really has no hidden fees on savings accounts? that's right. it's just that i'm worried about you know "hidden things..." ok, why's that? no hidden fees, from the bank where no branches equals great rates. pehabits of cleaning theirld dentures with toothpaste, and dentures are very different than real teeth. they're about ten times softer and have surface pores where bacteria can grow and multiply. polident is specifically designed to clean dentures daily. it's unique micro-clean formula kills 99.99% of odor-causing bacteria and helps dissolve stains, cleaning it a better way than brushing with toothpaste. that's why dentists recommend using polident. for a cleaner, fresher, brighter denture everyday. mr. daniels. mr. daniels. look at this. what's this?
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♪keep holding on kennedy: why doesn't this whole isis engagement has a name? as one person put if you don't name it, you own it. they don't want to own it. and rock is like nana's favorite shop, if you break it you buy it. well, we broke it. and we're lobbing bombs that aren't stopping isis nor protecting the kurds. we can call it syrian delirium. but the better plan at this point is to call the whole thing off. i thought of another one. operation cut and run. bobby jindal. he wants to
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