tv The Willis Report FOX Business January 24, 2015 5:00am-6:01am EST
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you. that's it for us tonight. stay tuned for cavuto. have a great weekend, good night from new york. critical week for the markets and we hope you will join us. meanwhile "the willis report" and tracy byrnes is next. tracy: hello, everyone, i am in for gerri willis and this is "the willis report" where consumers are our business. tax season is in full swing. what do you need to note to keep your money safe? >> and it's round two at the box office for american sniper. but with so many taking aim, can it pull out another victory? and in our user's guide to retirement we asked wayne rogers why he chose not to retire. and a georgia man getting age ticket for eating a cheeseburger behind the wheel. and we have headed back to davos
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>> what is the prime minister's idea? he is coming up and "the willis report" coming up next. >> where consumers are business coming up next. single logo. ♪ all. tracy: we begin with even aggressive phone calls, calls like these that impersonate irs agents. [inaudible] >> this is the internal revenue service. tracy: calls like these surging in recent months 3000 victims getting swindled we will talk about these dirty dozen. our financial planner and author of the book your money life, peter, thank you for joining us, i have been covering taxes for a long time and i say resume that
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uncle sam is a technological idiot and the only thing he knows how to do is write a letter. >> yes, in this case changing the caller id settings so that when you get a call it appears it's coming from the irs and in so much what they are also doing is changing the caller id to be your local police department to scare you into calling them back and taking your calls and giving them your hard-earned money. >> i have to say i've heard the stories and as a producer here at fox his dad.calls and got so nervous they didn't know what to do. but people should know that the irs will contact you by letter first. >> nothing raises your blood pressure more like getting a letter from the irs. and that should be your first point of contact. i wish i could say this for three minutes over and over again and it's very simple. if you get a call listen to
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them take note and then go to the irs.gov find the phone number and call them yourself, never call somebody back from the irs because it's probably not the irs. >> this is such an important topic, we have a screen of things at the irs will never do. one of them as you know they will never contact you about calling you first and they will never demand an immediate payment. and that scares the people the most, you must pay me now or we are calling the local authorities. >> in most situations financially, the thought of the irs putting pressure on you, it freaks you out and you want to resolve it as soon as possible, you don't want any problems for the rest of your life and to what ends up happening is a lot of people are forced to get prepaid cards and make the payment at that point you have lost and the scammers have gone away an amazing part of that $40 million and last 13 months.
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>> let's be clear that there is no one like this at the irs no one is going to come banging on your door. demanding money. also if you ever get someone to ask you for a credit card number absolutely do not give it, do not given out. >> plus what they will do a lot of times and say that they know the last four digits of your social security number and they want you to repeat it to confirm i would've fallen for this from time to time, but you just can't do it. targeting the elderly taking the sort of tricks so that everyone needs to talk to a generation up in the generation down and let them know that this is really common. tracy: it is a great point because the elderly are scared the most. there were stamps back in those days as well, people stealing w-2 forms right out of mailboxes and this has been going on for a
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long time. >> to bring a close to home, in the last week i have had my identity stolen from someone in lincoln, nebraska and someone call my house and say that they were from my computer company and they wanted to verify my social security number. that is in the last 100 xt hours the technology was taking over fraud. tracy: peter mentioned getting the numbers, go to this website and we also have this on the website. report this stuff. >> yes. >> to take down the details come anything we tell you, any numbers, we can pass it along to the proper authorities and not take authorities. protect your neighbors, take down information so that it doesn't happen to anyone else. tracy: tried to pay electronically. when i was doing returns, no one should ever make the check out to the irs because it easily
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becomes mrs. burns and i go cash it. tracy: thank you for your insight on this. >> thank you. tracy: turbotax backtracking tonight, admitting that they made a mistake when forcing customers to pay 50% more for their tax preparation software, starting today they are issuing a 25-dollar refund for those customers. for those of you who are doing your own taxes on your own, we have some advice in choosing the best software. john gregory is with us with the irs. and he also founded this company. are you happy with this. is that enough? >> well, i think that it really shoots itself in the foot on that one. but they did do a good job by tracking the statement and then giving people $25 and i think that that's a lesson learned from this. tracy: in full disclosure i use
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this and part of it is everything rolls over year-to-year and it makes it very simple and so while maybe they shot themselves in the foot, people like me are two lazy to try to do do something else. so presuming that i want to go some rows what is the first thing they look for? >> that's a good question. i was looking for tax software and the way we have this return it's very much misled. the person we want to look for is can use it for the free. a lot of times you can get to the point never get to this return. until we actually fill it out correctly. that's frustrating because we don't know who you miss something. so that is why we have this return to make sure you can actually view this tax return. the second thing important for people to do is remember when they are looking for a tax software. what type of health do they have
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we have how-to videos on how to complete tax returns and probably the biggest thing for people is the affordable healthcare act and that is a new situation in the tax operation business. and you want to look for video showing you how to do that. tracy: i think it's more than a wrinkle. you make great points. make sure the numbers land where they are supposed to. even if you have never filled it out before coming or that it should be on the line a line that says capital gains and you should be able to see it. it is a great point and it can be all the ways it can be over the phone, live chat, whatever works for you. you just need to find a system that does. >> yes, that is correct. >> if you get stuck and you need to contact somebody, guess support is important. most people can talk about this
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with an e-mail and they can also do chats but nothing when you look at with special online software. and if you go through the forms, see if they have these buttons on the side if you get stuck on a particular area you can answer before you have to reach out to tech support. tracy: that's a great point. if you know enough come he don't need handholding, i've done this before and i still like the handholding. so i choose the programs that ask me lots of questions but then i'm okay with that because you get everything in, they are pretty much up to date at this point. and i don't have to worry about going out there with the software that is not going to have updated itself throughout the tax season. >> yes, i'm not a big fan of desktop tax software. you load it onto your pc and you
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know all of the forms are not there to begin with. so then you start your tax return and unless you have a good high-speed internet connection, it could take a long while for them to update all of the information on the desktop. on the other hand if you go to online filing come you don't have to worry about operating systems because all you have to do is have a current browser all the time. so you have to think that it the beauty of doing it on the web is you can pick it up from anywhere and electronically file it because all of the things are cleared. thank you for your insight on this. >> i want to make a valiant statement. we would like a valiant viewing
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audience. by using this return. tracy: thank you so much the viewers thank you as well. all right, a lot more to come including a new application that offers to give you a new boyfriend. and the president taking on college savings plans and 401k plans. we will break down these ideas and separate fact from fiction coming up next the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta.
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tracy: the president renewing his push to put a cap on retirement savings, critics warned that proposal is and what hit the richest of the bridge rich as the white house is spinning. with one that's we have jack from the employee research institute. let's tell everyone what he is thinking because this sounds so crazy to so many people.
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>> the proposal is trying to put a cap on all savings. if you have your defined contributions, the iras, basically there is going to be an overall cap, which is why we have been talking about it as a $3.4 million path and if you exceed that, you will no longer be able to make any additional contributions to the defined and if it plans. tracy: this is an aggregate of everything you have area and he is basically saying that that is because the white house thinks that your annual distribution at that amount would he about $210,000 in matching you more than enough to live on. >> that has always been the case for defined benefit plans by themselves, this is the first time that we are adding in the
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defined contributions to it. but you really have to keep in mind that the 3.4 million can be very misleading. interest rates are at an all-time low. those olives are going to be much smaller for younger individuals. if rates come back up to something like 8% a 25-year-old is going to have not 3.4 million but all the way down to $132000. tracy: that's the part that isn't being told. but we are talking about hurting the future workers here. >> that's right, if you look at the overall limit, very few realize how destructive that might be in terms of impacting individuals we have a database of over 25 million people from 60,000 plans actually running afoul, and we found that even at today's low interest rates, one in 10 people are likely to be
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impacted by this going forward by the time they hit 65. tracy: we all know that the younger generation is not lying on insecurity. and so that just puts more of a burden on the government if you don't allow people to save money for the future. >> in addition to that keep in mind that those people that are saving for retirement now to supplement social security are primarily doing it through employer sponsored plans especially for the smaller plans if you have an individual who maybe has 10 employees and suddenly he or she finds that they are no longer able to make contributions on their own behalf or only the incentives to continue that plan for themselves and their employees diminished substantially. as many as 75% of plans less
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than 100 employees are likely to find themselves in that situation and it's fair to assume that a certain percentage are going to take very seriously about terminating their 401k plans as a result. tracy: that is the huge point. even talking about doing away with the 401k or hurting the policies of it is this going to continue to discourage people from saving while it still exists? we will have to keep talking more about it. >> it's my pleasure to be on the show, thank you for having me. tracy: coming up next changing the tax system and making it fair for the middle class and college savings plans and changing 401k plans. today one of the richest men in the world, bill gates sat down with maria bartiromo and the best his take on the current tax system. >> it's not far off from being a good tax system, the deficit isn't that much greater than our
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economic growth rate. so it's a percentage of the economy, the debt is only growing modestly. the big challenge is what we do about medical costs, are we smart enough to drive the cost saving innovation. tracy: republicans have said that this could be an area of compromise with the president. and later in the show we wrap up the users guide on stretching your retirement dollars. coming up next valentine's day fast approaching and many single ladies are looking for a boyfriend. there is an app for that. we are not talking about dating websites, taking a look at the invisible boyfriend after the break single loco. ♪ single
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tracy: so you want a perfect significant other, they are is a catch. it's all fake. that is the premise for a new application letting you create an invisible boyfriend or girlfriend. here to weigh in is pete cashel. okay, there are so many things wrong with this on so many levels, but maybe i'm not seeing it right. what i didn't realize is that the invisible girlfriend came first and was successful. >> that's right, successful enough to greet us. that happened. [laughter] tracy: let's talk about what this is. the invisible boyfriend for a monthly fee.
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>> 25 dollars per month. you get evidence of a significant other, 10 phone calls, they will even send you a real handwritten postcard from somewhere. tracy: no one sends postcards anywhere you can get one from rio. [laughter] tracy: who is sending these texts? >> real humans. it's employing people to actually send the text back to the people who subscribe to the service. so it's going to be a little bit more natural than this robot responds, more convincing for your family member or your high school class, whoever you're trying to fool.
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>> there is clearly a clearly a demand. everyone has lied about having a significant other at some point in most people probably aren't too proud of it. but at this point won't be that sad lie where you have nothing to back it up. you can pay $25 per month and maybe do some convincing. tracy: who are you sending a text message to? and i was reading about this time you can't send nude pictures of yourself but does that mean someone tried? >> they don't exactly want you to do that, but you can send combative messages, we have a reporter that tried out the service and she constantly was calling the person claiming he was clingy. but others think that it is the model of a perfect boyfriend. tracy: there are some that might say i'm out, we're done.
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tracy: do we know how many people are using these? >> no, i haven't seen any stats, but it's clearly enough to sustain a business and hopefully it's not that much because i don't know how much that would say about our society. but i expect that this will be a flash in the pan. but i don't think it's going to explode. tracy: thank goodness for that. kudos to the entrepreneurs that came up with this. >> digitizing every element seems to be an inevitability. clearly they follow demand that could get organized with a digital solution. tracy: it was men that were first like we need an invisible portal friend. that is how it all started. tracy: thank you so much pete. oh, man. coming up will "american
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sniper" rule box office for second week? and stretching your retirement dollars continue to with a look at why americans are asking our favorite weight watchers you get sick you can't breathe through your nose suddenly, you're a mouth breather. a mouth breather! well, put on a breathe right strip and shut your mouth. cold medicines open your nose over time, but add a breathe right strip and pow, it opens your nose up to 38% more. so you can breathe and do the one thing you want to do sleep. add breathe right to your cold medicine shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. and look for the calming scent of new breathe right lavender in the sleep aisle.
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♪ tracy: welcome back to "the willis report." in a moment wayne rogers is going to tell us why he is not going to retire. and now it's time to look at some of the other stories in the news, the obama administration changing private policy on healthcare.gov after consumer outcry, the administration is scaling back the release of personal information to private companies who analyze this, it was reported that healthcare.gov talked about this as well.
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and the nfl say it is investigating how the new england patriots used underinflated balls in the afc championship. tom brady said yesterday he has yet to be contacted by the nfl. and the highest-ranking u.s. official to visit cuba in 35 years since two days of talks have left more questions than answers, roberta jacobson says the u.s. is working to empower the cuban people, but at the verdict on whether that will succeed is yet to remain seen. and the sky mall the quirky shopping catalog has filed for bankruptcy. "sky mall" has been a mainstay for more than three decades, in recent years entertainment has distracted travelers from the magazine. those are some of the stories in the news tonight.
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i always read that magazine when i take trips. the controversy continues to swirl around the movie "american sniper" about chris kyle. after the movie made killing at the box office, bringing in $107 million, what is going to happen again this weekend. adam shapiro joins us now. >> it's going to be $45 million come in a variety at the box office. 45 million is more than some movies and seth rogan has the interview. and so here is the deal this movie has resonated with millions of americans. and it will have a box office riot this weekend. the jennifer lopez has a huge film coming out "the boy next
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door." it is coming out as well. then a johnny depp film that is making headlines as well. so it could make 10 to 12 million. but american sniper, $45 million, not only that but friday reported that the ticket sales for this weekend on fandango were the largest ever in january for a second weekend in a row. there's a lot of criticism about the film. we talked about seth rogan and what he tweeted. and then pretty well-respected, he has ranked very seriously with someone who called him an insulting name. and he said i just want to read the whole thing. and this is what he said.
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he said it is the wrong thing, that "american sniper" under normal circumstances it would be beneath criticism of an consuming the walnut sized mind of the president who got us into the war in question. this is about all the americans were watching this film and loving it. it is the fact of the movie is popular and actually make sense to somebody people. that is the problem. he's not a dumb man, but he's not listening to his fellow countrymen. he sacrificed for us to integrate odds to follow our policy in iraq and they did not make the policy and he's not only criticizing the people who
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are supporting those men and women, but is insulting them soon i hope everyone goes to see this movie. >> you're probably like if "love actually" type moviegoers. tracy: no, not necessarily. i'm paying for it and i hope everyone else does too. okay turning 65? no beer bearing tees, you'll be ready or even willing to retire, it seems more and more americans are continuing to work yonder 65th birthday and in fact 1991 only 11% of workers anticipated this. that number has been jumping since 2013. so chairman of wayne rogers and
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company. here you are, wayne rogers, what is the secret? >> life expectancy when the social security was passed was only it is a staggering statistic they are finding out what to do with that. first of all many people had to work when they were, you know younger. so they found that they don't have to work you get social security and all sorts of income and things like that so they can now make a choice of doing what they wanted to do when they were younger.
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and they had an opportunity to do something they really wanted to understand. people are exploring that. tracy: you said in your notes that you would be psychologically destitute. i love that because what you are saying is you have to keep your mind going. >> oh, i think so. the guy asked me the other day and you continue to work, whitey were? i mean, what makes it so important to you. why don't you retire. and i said to define retirement for me. and he said that retirement is doing what you want to do and i said that it i am retired and i do what i want to do, and it's wonderful and i think that's very meaningful. when you don't have to do something and you're just doing something that you want to do, you wake up in the morning and you want to go to work and when you come home at the end of the day, you are satisfied with what you have done and you come home a happy person and you go to work a happy person and it makes
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your life much better off. so i don't understand people who don't want to do something else. i was raised differently and that has a lot to do with it you know, how you were raised and how i was raised, if i'm a good provider, i was raised in a time when work wise the thing that you did everybody went to work. >> so much to share, i would think you are more valuable then the young people coming up the ranks who show with nose rings and things like that. >> it's certainly not going to get you an interview at ibm anymore. and in any case i think that the desire to work and do something and do that that should make you
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a happier person and you say if you weren't raised in a certain way, you are liable to go out and join ace regaining and do all of those things, but i was raised to work and that this ought to be a good provider, you should be a citizen, you should go to school, you can learn all those things you're supposed to learn. and make a contribution to society in which you live. tracy: i've been working my whole life i want to stay home and collect it. >> i think that that is a small mind, it might be, but i don't understand people that do that. and i think people that are not
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driven, there's something wrong with them. tracy: you should watch him on saturday morning. jonathan hoenig, he will be there as well. >> we have a good time together. we are lucky to have you wayne rogers, we are lucky to have you. >> it's good if you. tracy: heading out to davos where liz claman is joined by an interesting guest. and how many of you have gone through the drive-through and eight this on the way home? well, it's not legal in georgia. the panel will weigh in. at first, here is your consumer gauge coming up next. ♪ ♪ you park your car. as you walk away crunch! a garbage truck backs into it. so,you call your insurance company, looking for a little support. what you get is a game of a thousand questions. was it raining? were
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offer you a drink and alcohol at your age can lead to so many things none of them good. so can i go to the sleepover? lucy i want you to promise me something - i finished my homework (laugh) bigger promise if there's any drinking i want you to say no thanks, not my thing. mom i promise you your real friends won't care deal? sure - really? i promise mom they really do hear you did you pack your toothbrush? for tips on how to start the talk visit underagedrinking.samhsa.gov a public service message from the substance abuse and mental health services administration tracy: imagine you are pulled
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over and given a ticket for distracted driving. it wasn't because we were on the phone were putting mascara on it was because of that. he was eating a quarter pounder a double quarter pounder with cheese. so does the driver had a case? joining me for a debate, lis wiehl. okay, so what are pounder aside. >> going through drive-through are they going to make illegal drive-through is? because the whole idea is to get a meal and eat it while you're driving. >> he said he was driving for a long period of time, had he bolted down he would've gotten away with it. >> i guess he didn't get a break today like mcdonald's advertises. [laughter] to police officers have a lot of discretion when people are driving distracted.
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it's a big difference from eating a small white castle burger or a burger that could take two hands. there is no specific. and when people do things such as peeling a banana how do you do that with one hand? tracy: wait a second, we are being based on the size and the sloppiness of the burger here, let's say they professionally unwrapped it. >> he said the important word which is discretion, the cops have discretion when they pull somebody over i mean that is really what it is. discretion. let the guy go, because he could face up to a year in prison for this. he won his court date is on february 3. he's fighting it.
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i have to believe that this cop pulled him over for things that are truly dangerous. >> yes, they could, the thing about it is bad when i did my research on it unfortunately there were a lot of cases where people actually got killed as a result of not drunk drivers but just driving and people trying to eat what with forks and spins. and so you never know. tracy: what about all the drivers? >> some legislators have actually thought about passing it and the problem is it's hard to legislate everything in existence. tracy: a minivan has approximately 13 cupholders. so that means that we shouldn't be drinking in the car either. >> or you have your kids in the van and they are talking to you and they are talking back. that is a little bit distracting. so you really have to pull
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someone over and give them a ticket for that? >> it depends on how you go about doing it if you are turning around and not paying attention. tracy: by the way low blood sugar if you don't eat, that would actually be worse. >> oh, yes. tracy: especially coincidently diabetic or something. >> that could've been worse. tracy: either way, i respect you for taking the side. >> i really think that the police ought to have the discretion and half of us could be thrown in jail for doing this every day. it's actually possible for you to be safer doing that, but there's a lot of action that go on every day. tracy: i don't know. how many times have i spelled her a copy and practically taken a guard rail out.
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[laughter] tracy: we want to know what you think. here's our question tonight. do you eat and drive? i guess that's better than asking if you drink and drive. go to gerriwillis.com and we will share the results at the end of tonight's show. still to come, heading back to liz claman in davos as she looks at how this country is handling a possible resist in europe and when heartburn comes creeping up on you... fight back with lief so smooth... .it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. tum, tum tum tum...♪ smoothies! only from tums. welcome back to showdown! jerry rice here with 8 year old andrew hunter debating who will win the big race between the tortoise and the hare. what do you think andrew?
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swedish prime minister. >> countries can choose to be part of the european union and then refrain from using this as their currency, that is exactly the choice that was made years ago by sweden. so how does that change with what has been announced? we are joined by sweden's prime minister. >> it's my pleasure to be here. liz: the eurozone announce the big package. how do you expect that will affect them, and how does that work? >> as the unit as a whole, we have introduced the commission -- the commission introduced this plan, which the european consul thought was a good idea to try to get more investment,
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putting this money together with private money to boost investment and this is another way of boosting the investment. how it turns out in terms of currency is and other effects we do not know yet. tracy: sweden remains. let's talk about the currency and inflation or deflation ,-com,-com ma what is your country facing right now because we didn't just announced that they had to downgrade their growth for 2015. >> jest, that is mainly because it is not doing that well. the upturn has been way too slow and that is why we need the investment because sweden is dependent on export and the largest market is europe and europe is doing bad and it affects sweden. that is why we find this guide. liz: you have been asking a lot of world leaders that question.
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a lot of leaders here in davos. >> yes, we heard about it earlier that it might happen and we were prepared. basically the central bank has also said that it given the situation they are also prepared to take the necessary steps. liz: what is the biggest threat. we are asking a lot of world leaders this year, what is the vaguest threat facing our country right now. >> is unemployment, youth unemployment is too high and that is why we introduced in our budget proposal in december what we call a guarantee because we want as a society to guarantee the individual young people jobs or apprenticeships or on the education, whatever is needed for the individual. because the young people need to
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see that there's a future for them to. tracy: liz: let's talk about leaders are talking about the growing threat of terrorism. we have a big population -- that is that you have to make sure that the budget is a constraint so much that you can provide government services. >> we have to be thorough on one thing. terrorism is not only connected to islam and muslims, we have right wing extremists, left wing extremists and yes we have extreme is also in different religions. in norway they had a terrible attack on society by christian extremists and that is the first thing. but of course we need to meet this and be very firm and that
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is why we are also looking into the possibility and we will introduce new legislation that makes it illegal to go from sweden and take part in terrorist acts and other parts of the world and to finance those things. liz: we wish you a wonderful time in davos, thank you for speaking with us. tracy: thank you so much we are going to be right back here in new york were the answer to your question of the day coming
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our question. that's it for "the willis report," don't forget to dvr the show if you can't watch us live. "making money" with charles neil: welcome everybody i'm neil cavuto, and i don't know if you plan to see a movie this weekend, but the message from some on the left is you better not make it "american sniper." better to show your guts and download "the interview," a not at all realized story about killing a foreign leader that is now made out to seam heroic. is it just me, or has hollywood officially lost its mind? stars saying it's patriotic to release "the interview" but idiotic to see "american sniper" because it offends sensibilities. it's okay to stick it to kim jong un as long as we
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