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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  October 25, 2014 3:00am-4:01am EDT

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the independents@fox busine neil: tonight on cavuto it's time to end this ebola crisis. and we could have the guy who could end it now. russell, stepped in to fix the chaos in katrina and calls for him to end the chaos we call ebola. in just a minute. the raging cajun is here. plus, all this might have you down, but some say that america's best days could actually be around the corner. lots of homeowners are under water seriously so. and washington's new plan could leave you more than drowning. is wall street's jewel now a dud. a shakedown after a big old mess up.
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we're shaking things up right now. welcome everybody. i'm neil cavuto. is there a real leadership crisis out there when it comes to ebola who if anyone can handle it here. there are plenty of officials that are saying they're on top of this growing mess, but they really weren't on top of any of this. craig spencer just back from west africa where he was treating ebola patients. anybody surprised that he was -- like many i'm losing my patience. i'm waiting for a no nonsense person to step up. retired russellon ray. you remember him because he was there when we needed it most during katrina. he was an unmovable and certainly an always in your face force who didn't let up. that was then.
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why lawmakers say we need the good general now. among them prominent lawmakers all coming him to be the point man. general, very good to have you. (?) >> good evening. neil: you've heard those calls. what do you think of that? >> well, i appreciate the confidence, but we're dealing with a different kind of problem, and i think we will tofght refocused. this can't be an evolving solution to this problem with this many people potentially being infected. global you look at this a person dying once every hour. and the number goes up if we don't stop this. we have to come off the betweens and go on the offense and go after this disease. >> my problem with the responses we've had.
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i'm not trying to disparage anyone in particular, i just think general that we have multiple and sometimes conflicting press conferences, and i just remember in your case, i'm not blowing you smoke, i knew who was calling the shots. i knew you seemed to be in charge. and good or bad, i knew that the battle plan was on. why can't we have something like that now? or is this just a different beast, you can't? >> well, it's different in many ways. and i don't know if you could solve it, but we could clean things up to make sure our audio and our video match. there's certain things that we've done here, neil. i think in risk communication that have confused the people. in one hand, we said, hey, you can't catch it this way. and the next hand, you see people dressed in full ppe and other people are not. how do they dispose of
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the product? i think that has to be cleaned up. they don't have to enforce federal law, that doctor shouldn't have been walking around. we wish him good health and that he recovers well. and this idea that every city can deal with an ebola patient, i think that needs to be stopped and that patient needs to be sent to a designated hospital so we don't have in the middle of 8,000,001 patient we think we can take care of. we need to send him to a a known place because i don't think we have all the facts yet. neil: he was exhibiting symptoms of his own and was getting worried himself having returned to liberia that he thought he should, you know, contact medical officials, but by that time he had eaten at a restaurant, he had gone bowling, he had traveled on the new york subway system. should we have quarantined him immediately?
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what do you think? >> we need to scratch through the word protocol and saw law. this is what you will do. you just returned from an infected area, this is what you will do. and this is where you'll stay and call in. we can't afford this idea of people following protocols. we need to go to public health law. we need to be prescrippive and we need to be supervising that program. this idea that doctors are going to follow protocol. look, 40 percent don't wash their hands. 45 percent don't even take the flu shot. we need to enforce health laws. neil: you're very direct. no nonsense. you don't care about politically critique. correct. some of them need to be scared or slapped around to wake up to the severity of this. >> well, i think the other thing it builds uncertainty in the american people's mind is who is in charge? this idea of abundance
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of caution, we need to scratch through that word. we're confusing people. on one hand, we're saying you can't catch it. then next hand we're closing a bowling ally. the next thing we're trying to vet an airplane. we need to come on this thing and get it sorted out. this word abundance of caution, it works in political language, but it doesn't work for people on the street. neil: another thing, the role you took over in katrina, everything went through you. if memory serves me right. everything seemed to channel through you for a consistent message on how the rescue operation was going how the turn around in new orleans was commencing that avoided at least confusion. we knew he was going to give us the skinny of what is happening right now. whether there are mistakes or not, you know this is the procedure and the policy. we don't have that now.
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to your point, that's creating more anxiety. is it not? >> i thinkit creating anxiety. with all due respect this is a bigger event. involves a lot more places. our government and the united states is designed to work from senior elected official at county and city and come to the federal government. cdc was not designed to go out and jump on grenades. we need to enforce and have our public health people deal with this. we need to have a plan to evacuate people. once you're identified you have ebola, you need to go one of the designated hospital. we don't have time for the hospital in new york city to figure this out. neil: would you ban travel to the infected countries? >> we would have restricted travel and we would have rules. before you come out of the country, you would have top go through a regiment of 21 days of checks before you leave and you would go to a designated port of call inside the united
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states. when you get to that port of call, you would be handled differently. >> ron klain the ebola czar, sort of overseeing this, he doesn't have a medical background. does that matter to you? >> not really. i do think that we've got a department of health and human service. this problem maybe a little bit too complex to try to run out of a back room in the white house. this is why we have cabinet agency. my recommendation would have been the health human service, under a homeland security framework, this thing could have been handled, can be handled and eventually that's where it will end up. someone will have to make the tough calls on quarantine as well as restricted movement. neil: you think that's the stuff we should be talking about then? >> i think we'll eventually get there, and along the way, our government has done the right thing, but we're
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swinging late. we're doing it four, five days behind. we need to get the plan out, get the health and human services on the lead of this and have the cdc do what they're supposed to do and use the extensive capacity of our military planning and continuous planning to try and pull this together so we can have a more active, proactive and clear message going to the american people. neil: general, i want to talk about the 4,000 troops we've committed to go to liberia and to deal with ebola directly there. i think 800 of those troops are already there. they're not providing immediate medical assistance, but providing the support network that we think is important. a republican congressman was saying that's very, very dangerous. they're sitting ducks for a lot of problems. the administration, washington in general is going to regret that. that we shouldn't have sent them there.
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>> hey, that's what we do. if this could be contracted out, it would. if it was easier, someone else would do. i think our troops, both our sons are the in the military. one is in. one is about to go in. this is what we do. when the military protocol is before you leave country, going to be monitored and you going to be isolated. if the military is going to do that, why do we doctor flg from west africa walking around on his own. self-reporting, self-regulating. it's not going to work. we need to establish that as a rule not a protocol. it needs to be the law. neil: all right. but the soldiers you alluded to that they're over there doing their job, there is every bit of argument some of their return they can be infected sitting ducks. >> it could happen. with all assurances coming from the chain of
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command, it's not going to happen. the probability will be there. anything can happen. and i think there's some unknowns about this disease. we got to watch people who speak emphatically about how this disease operates. there are things we don't know. the cdc was saying two weeks ago that's totally different. neil: that was going to be my next point. the disease itself has mutated a number of times not to the point where it's going to be airborne. a lot of people say it's not entirely out of the possibility. if you were to be placed in charge right now, not that you're looking for that or shopping around for that, what would be the first thing you would do? >> clean up the message with activity health and human service. and that's what my office would be with health and human service and help the secretary pull the government
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federal response. we would get something operating out of the un with some standard international protocol in dealing with and allowing people to move, but under restricted categories. so we could protect the people that are affected the potential population that's not affected, as well as get the support and supplies we need in, and we need to call out people like paul allen who stepped up to make a difference and other people that might be able to to step up and help these people. >> you're referring microsoft the cofounder who committed $100 million to this effort. how bad does this get general? your gut. >> i don't think we've seen the worst of it yet. we have not turned the corner. we've seen some success in nigeria. today we got another country that's been exposed. when this gets into poor developing countries, it will have a mp multipling
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affect. we saw it hit in dallas. one person dead. two of our nurses in the hospital. that's not a good ratio. (?) neil: general, thank you very much. really enjoyed it. and
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neil: all right. we always thought there was going to be an october surprise. not this many surprises such a scary week for investors. not only is ebola hitting new york city. two canadian soldiers killed that past week. this man extremist shot dead in queens after attacking police with an axe. billionaire investor mark on all the chaos hitting investors all the same time approximate. we'll be bringing in our fox biz all-stars and,
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of course, jonas, but more on this week and the relevant resilience on stocks throughout. are we getting used to to it or moving past it. >> i don't think we're getting used to it. i don't think it has a lot of impact on the financial market. it's much more important factor affecting the financial markets are lower interest rates and the absolute inundation of the economy with as much money as anyone can need. low interest rates helps push up -- neil: i came into work early like you given this ebola revelation in manhattan, certainly the futures would be down. i'm concerned this was out of control. didn't happen. why? >> i think from the perspective of a lot of people it turned out to be less of a challenge or less of a threat than what we originally thought with what the news reported it.
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neil: the news -- >> some of it expanded or run with this story. it always calms down when we go on television. 's the mood -- neil: right. but it didn't permeate the way it normally does. because the markets tend to have a history of sell first, calm down later. >> there's a skepticism about these stories until theyse they are the kind of threats that we saw at the beginning. we are now i think in a position where you get story after story after story, then you will really get thishi and we're living in a different time. i think that may be the real threat from all this. >> i want to bring all our palestinians. lizzie, you heard that we've got a sense of perspective on it. how long do you think? >> i think this blows over -- we've had everything, but the
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kitchen sink. we had the arab spring, now the ebola scare. and every time we've been in the midterm election year, the market is up five, 10 percent on average. we still have a lot of bubble plays. airbnb is now valued more than high at and gopro is valued more than us steel. that's what's happening in the market. neil: this is real estate. bring it down to him. jonas what do you think? >> i think there are so many investors looking for a 10 percent correction. cash has been sitting at these low interest rates. we only got 7 percent from the peak then it turned right around even with this bad news. neil: couple of years without a correction. >> as you say there has been a minimal downward correction and it came back quickly that's because i think we have an unprecedented monetary policy pushing
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up the stock market. it's never happened in my lifetime. >> investors are buying bonds whenever there is a panic. neil: they know the fed will have their back. >> they just panic. you saw rates spike below 10 percent. i don't think that was the fed -- neil: every time i've seen everything hit the fan, people say, well, you know, maybe that's a good thing because janet yellen will be there to prop this up. >> when i look at the market i see volatility. dow jones industrial average almost had its best day in 2014. there was a 10 percent pull back a week prior. i saw i see a lot of volatility and it's a little worry some, but by and large you're correct. >> the underlying canopy my opinion is quite weak. we're growing the last five years -- morgan stanley says folks it will be 1.5 percent over
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the next five years. you can call us now the 1 percent economy. >> if that ever happens you'll see a complete repricing it seems to me. neil: that can stall off the typical seven year itch in the economy in a recovery. so you could have a mixed bucket. >> here's the thing, we've had five years of zero down rates. we've had a lot of zombie companies still wandering around the landscape that need to be reinstructed. when the rates go up, you will see that really. when the tide goes out, you see them swimming naked. >> the growth in tech earnings, i think they'll run out of room to grow. internet advertising revenue that will slow. you'll see companies get hit hard when they're not meeting the expectations that's already high for these stocks. >> the underlying thing
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whenly the economy start growing at a rate that justifies something in the earning -- we're talking if the jpmorgan is right. you're talking about a one and one growth rate in the next five years. neil: you can make money there. maybe if you listen to us, you can make money. >> location location location. i've heard. neil: all right. thank you. by the way, you can use hashtag cavuto. let me know if you're worried about your investments. in the meantime you're tired of hearing bad news. the congressman who has great news for all you. everyone just has to
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neil: you know, it's all how you feel. people generally go to the polls if they don't feel how hot it's going they take it out on the incumbent party. if they think things are going okay, they'll vote for the incumbent party. and that would be democrats -- so new polls showing 61 percent of respondents think the next generation will be
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worse off than they are now. not so bad. but that means congressman, that you and that is fellow republicans have to give them something to look forward to. what would that be? >> well, first of all, neil we have to get a conservative majority not only in the house, but also in senate and hopefully in the next two years in the presidency. if the american people want more personal freedom, less spending, a republican congress, senate with the president could do that. and i happen to believe since i'm a six generation native texan. you give me personal freedom, i'll work harder, i'll save for my children. i'll make sure they get a good education, make wise investments and their future will be brighter than mine. neil: you might be right, but you've seen cynicism to both parties and republicans are benefiting because people are
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mad at democrats. and they remember -- they didn't do hot a job when they were in office, the republicans. how do you say we're different this time. we'll act different this time. >> we had real welfare reform. we had o we balanced the budget three or four years in a row. we cut spending. we did grow the economy. and, again, you know, i work hard, but i need to be a part of a conservative majority. if you look at what we've done in texas in energy, not too long ago people were saying we were running out of oil. texas will produce $3 million today. united states 10 million barrels. world's largest producer. oil prices are coming down it happen p. this morning when i left texas, self-serve was 2.68 a gallon. that's a lot lower than a year and a half ago. kawvment mentioned some
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bright spots people are forgetting. joe barton of the fine state of texas. what do you think of what he was saying. use #cavuto. if the next generation is doomed or not. in the meantime waiting for that housing boom, don't hold your breath.@?
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neil: so uncle sam to save the day? maybe not at least when it comes to your home. new home sales barely budging. the government is trying to change that by making it easier for more people to buy a home, but therein might lie some problems. >> ben couldn't refinance his mortgage. the housing continues its tepid recovery. new home sales were up
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2 percent -- new home sales make up less than 10 percent of housing buys to support the recovery amid concerns lending standards are too tight the obama administration recently scrapped a proposal that would require a 20 percent down payment -- fannie mae and freddie mac those government companies say they'll take loans with smaller down payments as little as 3 percent. regulators are offering banks more clarity on when they'll have to buy back loans from the government. still banks could get their standards as high as they see fit. there remain a host of new government regulations keeping credit tight. neil: this is part of the problem here, folks. a lot of homeowners are still under water on their mortgage. maybe you too. i mean, really underwater. i'm talking 20 leagues under the sea. eight properties have a market value less than the mortgages attached to them. the former fannie mae
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executive says right now he wouldn't be surprised to see a lot of these homeowners ultimately defaulting on their own. he's joining me. tim, what surprises me about that, you can't be shopping for a home or looking for a home if you're underwater on your own. at the lower end where this is particularly acute, that means first time home buyers have nothing to buy into because these folks can't get out of the homes they're in. right? >> you're absolutely right. you can't buy what's not for sell. the problem is really exponentially worth on the lower end the. the properties that are 50,000 and below, the percentage that are underwater is substantial higher than the hundred or million dollar properties. it's making it harder to find those properties. the administration is trying to create demand then maybe we can drive the demand up.
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neil: what fann fannie and frede are contemplating right now, i don't think rates of zero would change that basic underwater equation. >> it takes two to tango. they will say guys don't sweat it. go out and make those loans 3 percent down. lenders learned the hard way when they thought they were turning the risk to fannie mae, they were renting the credit risk. the loans came back to the lenders. they're saying thanks, but no thanks right now. neil: you got to wonder whether we're cooking more problems. >> i agree. because i don't believe the problem is needed needing to intervene in the market. i believe when there -- when you alternative have a quota to hand out loans to individuals who can't afford them, the affirmative quota that was in place in the 90s
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that was in place by clinton and barney frank. not a barney frank fan. the affirmative rate is the problem. neil: rates down at zero. and i know that's unlikely. we're going at it in real terms. that it's not going to get those people out from under water in their homes. even those who take advantage of take advantage of a mortgage aren't going to have a home to buy with it. >> what will save them is inflation which we don't have. these homes -- a lot of these markets -- new york is hot. a lot of the country that has got hot will never be that hot again. a lot of places are down from the bubble that hit a few years ago. a lot will be underwater because of inflation. as far as the reckless lending, if we didn't have these low rates -- these guys got six, 7 percent loan.
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if we had six, 7 percent loans these homes would be underwater. neil: you can refinance and stretch it out, but you're still in deep. >> what we're really talking about the government trying to stage the housing market. that's not what we need. the reason san francisco and new york is doing great because blue chip companies operate there. you cannot talk about subprime loans right now. by the way, they were invented for rich people who didn't need to show their income on the statements. when you have this kind of talk going on, it's because they've lost perspective in washington, dc. we're in a recession that usually lasts 17 years. so housing market will need some time to recovery and heal. i wore my nancy red. >> you can get a very low down payment loan for a million dollar loan. it's the low end that's tougher. the lowering interest rates of the fanny
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macloans -- neil: tim, you know this better than i do. i think with the best of intentions the government could be screwing this up all over again and resinning old sins. >> think about it this way, i think too often we confuse bad economic policy with bad credit policy. you can get economic policy right and the other policy doesn't matter as long as people are getting jobs, starting households. you can take a lot of risk on the credit policy side. we have bad economic policies. no matter how you move the dials on the credit policies, you still have a lot of people at risk. lastly even though this 3 percent down payment will have an 8x default of someone who puts 20 percent down. you'll break a few eggs to make an omelet. but evictions hurt too. home ownership being a lot less than renting, there will be a great
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opportunity to drive people more into home ownership. the homeowner is greater that night renter it's imperfect, but it's the right direction. neil: nothing is moving right now. maybe we'll see what changes that. many say is crossing the line. this ebola doc putting hundreds at risk. how to make sure you're not. go ahead and put your bag right here. have a nice flight! traveling can feel like one big mystery. you're never quite sure what is coming your way. but when you've got an entire company who knows that the most on-time flights are nothing if we can't get your things there too. it's no wonder more people choose delta than any other airline.
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neil: well, why wasn't this doctor in isolation? searcher asking that about dr. craig spencer going bowling, eating out, before testing positive for ebola when he knew he was developing a fever and knew at least he was experiencing symptoms that seemed very much ebola like. in fact they were ebola like. they were ebola. the screening process for doctors obviously has got to be fine-tuned here. emergency room nurse says that is the problem with this screening process, it takes days until symptoms kick in.
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so maybe a mandatory quarantine should be in place. what do you mean by that? >> you can be exposed to ebola body fluids, but it takes eight to ten days to get sick. you see what happened to this doctor in that he left west africa flew on a plane to the united states. felt fine wednesday. started to feel achy. then edges down with ebola. neil: shouldn't he have policed himself better? >> yes. he had these mild symptoms on wednesday, but he still went out for a night on the town. if we can't expect a doctor to self-monitor effectively how are we going to see all these people come into our country do it correctly? neil: this doctor coming back, when would you have started that quarantine. >> ideally immediately. neil: even before he was
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exhibiting those symptoms? >> yeah, health care workers in africa are in such close contact with people who have had ebola. i think the volunteer experience in west af doesn't end when you leave that last patient's bedside. it needs to end three weeks later and it's been shown you don't have the virus. the potential of spreading it here is still there. she's exposing health care workers here in the united states. you can see a situation where this can happen again. we need to be more careful of those who are volunteering to help over there. we need them, but they need to be more careful when they come back here. neil: would you stop travel to and from western nations. >> i think that's what we need do. neil: there's the alarmist thought that that scares the, you know what, out of people. >> i think people have a serious lack of faith in the cdc and government to deal with the ebola crisis. i think taking a drastic action will really
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restore public confidence. neil: what do you see when you work with others? what are they telling you? what are they doing? do they feel they're up to speed? what? >> right. you know, my hospital does a very good job -- neil: you're in nashville. >> yes. nashville. i work in the emergency department. my patients have beenn concerned about ebola at this point. neil: normally when you go to the emergency roomou're concerned about other things. >> exactly. nurses say we're still not prepared. 44 percent of hospitals don't have the protective equipment they need at this point. 80 percent of nurses said they haven't got the proper training. neil: all this talk that the hospitals have been briefed on how to deal with this, you're not the first person to say that's not the case. >> some hospitals are up to speed. others are not. there's not been a coordinated effort on
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this. if you look at the cdc -- there's 15 steps on how to put on how to put it on. you need to practice it. you need to have those materials right there. you're supposed to have a decontamination area that's sealed off where you can take this off. neil: the way they were dealing with stuff with this doctor's department -- >> throwing their trash. you have to be specific when it comes to this. people don't have experience with it. don't throw your gloves in the trash. if you don't do that, people will make mistakes. neil: these guys might have. good stuff. thank you very much. she keeps us calm. all right. well, amazon burned by fire. why jeff bezos might have bought that washington post thing too soon. after this. our veterans need you.
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neil: in tonight's biz blitz, amazon not looking good. look at this drop. you know, the company never has any problem selling stuff. they just don't make money on it. the latest quarter, the biggest loss we've seen in 14 years. john as that's not good generally. >> amazon is -- someday there will be a huge windfall of profits. they're always using the profits to reinvest and grow. this phone thing, they should have bought something like motorola versus trying to make this thing from scratch. they're very late. neil: maybe he shouldn't have bought the washington post because he could use that money now. >> why not use the fire
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phone? -- anyway here's the with things amazon, they haven't had a true bottom line on a net income basis for about a decade. it's the most overvalued non-profit for profit company as one analyst put it. is this an indication of where we're headed in the holiday season? no. amazon's business model is squeeze the suppliers. blowing money on devices that aren't working. you have to look at ups and fedex. what they're doing there, it looks like it will be a solid holiday. neil: they're building an empire and that costs. >> i think the problem is this multi facetted investment strategy. they were investing in a video website -- it's still there. they should zero in on that. i live among graduate -- when i walk into the mail room, it's stocked bottom to top with amazon boxes. among millennials it's
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like the vogue to say i'm on prime. they should zero in on that. neil: your friends sound very shallow. >> we'll ship you two pens in two days for free. they're slowly rubbing out everybody else. >> and annoying their suppliers. neil: people on the amazon experience when they talk about getting such -- they do like it. believe it or not, i'm just saying i have no axe to grind here. on that they get that right. the online commerce. >> they get that right. if they have real serious -- neil: you're a hater. >> i actually like prime. >> once you go prime, you'll never go back. that is the life. neil: tragic. kaley, i can see. she's young impressionable. you're slightly older. >> a lifetime buy, i would buy it.
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>> i love physical therapy you get free two day shipping on anything. you can't go back. >> three days, you're like. forget it. neil: if i don't have drones delivering that day. i want that cheese sandwich. all right, guys. thank you very, very much. here's what i love about doing a segment on how nasty republicans and democrats are getting with each other these days. they start getting nasty with me and start saying nasty things to me. they actually confirm what i said about themselves that they're awful, tacky, small humandon? reading pictures, pictures there's a boy riding on his bicycle you can read too grandpa!
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>> "what's the deal, neil?." >> and really, what is the deal with the nastiness? republicans calling the president to ebola czar ron klain an act. and inserting fat jokes in what was supposed to be a real news story on chris christie hiking the minimum wage.
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out of control. i say, and all for all sides to stay real and stay civil. the personal attacks are just wrong, many people said i was preaching. mitch e-mails, preaching hardly, the intolerance of tolerance cuts both political and conservative lines. keep preaching right from wrong, neil, we need more people like you in the media. kip writes get off your high horse, ass! double play on words, calling a horse's -- anyway. jim in florida, cavuto if you haven't learned anything about the administration, too late to educate you. thanks for the condescending lectures. bravo neil, henry via gmail, very impressed by what you said mr. cavuto. very good. heather via verizon, very good, neil. your remarks made me a
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little verklempt. i'm not one to watch much cnn or fox news. i love you so i flipped your show on. preach, brother, everyone needs to stop taking cheap shots. mary via comcast. you were 100% about the personal attacks. thank you for those getting slammed. alan in brooksville, neil, you talk like john wayne but hedge everything you say. what bs. you sound like pee wee herman. and mark via yahoo! we stop calling people fat and come up with nicer names. overweight people are not calorically challenged, they are gravitationally challenged. i'll take that. stay classy, kylie, you sound that. how can you get chris christie past the way, he speaks to
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people. i suggest you look back at town hall meetings to see how kind he can be. i see, return insult with insult. noah via icloud, thank you for taking the test to the media and the american public pr meanness. when did our country become so mean? yeah, when we became so tolerant. you had a good point there. steve in washington, you disregard klain critics when they say why he's disqualified for the job and lumped them together with those who attacked chris christie for being fat. i won't say you're a buffoon but you seem to think like one. if you didn't call me a buffoon, i seem to be a buffoon, i can take that. carol in mexico, it is clear you don't like people that criticize, you're right, your rights stop where my rights begin. i'm not clear what you said. i said repeatedly i like people who criticize, i don't like people who call names when they do.
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pastor wayne in new mexico, closing comments were so reaganesques. most journalists are so tabloid driven, they never see gentlemen like you debate the substance rather than the subject. that's all i'm saying. pastor, exactly right. before he spends his first day on the job is ridiculous, i feel his appointment is a clear political move it is so wrong to discredit him so quickly. we are a mixed marriage, hubby's a democrat, i'm a republican, we were floored by your comments and for the first time in a long time we agreed with the guy is more than a anchor, he's a good soul who gets it. what do you mean odd head. well, that odd head gets captain tom annoyed. don't try to come off acting like you're the pope. for one thing you work at fox, and for another he wears white
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which ain't exactly thinning meatball head, cappishe? i know, i know these are coming from my staff.. >> that evening, everyone. breaking news from newark international airport in new jersey. and the state department of health and the unidentified health care worker was not showing any symptoms of ebola, but quarantined nonetheless with the governors of new york and new jersey. and today they announced that the states have the right to protect their residents from the deadly disease and will no longer wait for president obama and the centers for disease control to devilish a travel ban or a mandatory

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