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tv   Cavuto  FOX Business  February 11, 2015 8:00pm-9:01pm EST

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michael goodwin. we thank you for being with us tonight. we -- we hope you have a very pleasant evening. good night from new york. ♪ neil: welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. and something tells me president obama doesn't shop at staples. president obama: when i hear large corporations that make billions of dollars in profits trying to blame our interest in providing health insurance as an excuse for cutting back workers wages, shame on them. neil: well, it doesn't make billions of dollars in profits. but shame on them. shame on you, mr. president, for screwing up the facts. staples part-time policy is not new. nor in a response to your health care reform. no this time, mr. president, you might find it hard to believe but staples is trying to save jobs not cut jobs.
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it's telling its employees not to work more than 25 hours a week. it wants to make sure all 85,000 can work every week. cynics like you resident convinced that the affordable care act is the reason staples is messing with its hours. the company has to start providing them all costly health care. now never mind many of these workers already have such coverage and staples provides it down to same-sex benefits. i don't think it would have hurt staples one bit to say this decade-long worker policy of ours, well, your health care plan, mr. president, it is complicating it. and one of the reasons we're looking to merge to a rival to help deal with the increased costs and burdens of it. a company providing 85,000 tax paying jobs to the economy doesn't warn a thank you the least the president could do is say screw you. why staples may be the one to be getting this
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targeting. what do you think? >> well, you know, i'm a little confused by the president's reaction to all this. when congress -- in the depression, president roosevelt and congress decided they would legislate the 40-hour week as required by statute. and to do that, they didn't make working over 40 hours a week illegal they said employees who work over 40 hours have to be paid over time. neil: i want to make a note. fdr was a democrat. continue. continue. >> yeah. when president obama and the democrats moved it to 30 hours, i don't know what they thought would happen. now you have employees who work 30 or more hours are less economically than employees who work under 30 hours because you have to pay for their health insurance. they responded to it the same way as the 40-hour workweek. they took employees'
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hours down below. every business in the country has done this. neil: i'm telling you every business has done this. hundreds of them. of all shapes and sizes. here's what makes staples stands out. it could be just me. i believe this was one bane capital success story. (?) and a company run by one named mitt romney comes to mind. that guy used to run that company. the cofounder said governor romney generated far more jobs than barack obama had. i'm beginning to suspect that maybe politics came into play here. >> well, look, politics probably came into play. but this, the obamacare thing is a mess. i mean, we have -- neil: but he didn't site obamacare. it could have been well-within its rights, but it did not. >> nobody will cite it. people won't say they're reducing hours for that reason. but we had 4,000 --
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5,453 employees that we offered obamacare coverage to as of january, first, thesefirst new employees we didn't offer coverage before. 90% of them declined. >> why did they decline? why did they decline? >> i tell you what i only know this anecdotally. i talked to the employees in the restaurants. one, they're young. they don't think they need health care coverage. two, to the extent they need it, they believe they can get it for free at the emergency room. and lastly, if they get really sick they think they can wait for the next enrollment date. sign up for obamacare and have insurance. the only ones who signed up -- i don't have any way to prove this -- but employees at high risk because everyone else felt they didn't need the insurance. it didn't turn out to be a big expense for us. the problem is, you're talking about hundreds of thousands, if not millions of employees across the united states who are now working under 30 hours and wish they had more hours.
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the people that interviewed president obama had an article where they interviewed some employees. even the employees said we would really like the standard to go from 30 to 40 hours. there's a bill in congress. the house passed it. bipartisan. introduced on a bipartisan-basis in the senate. fifty-six votes for sure. i hope we can get to 60 and put it on the president's desk. he already said he would veto it. it would solve all these problems. give people back their hours. we have to get president obama to make a change to obamacare. that seems to be a difficult thing to do. neil: forty hours. are you a monster? andy, thank you very much. imagine that, 40 hours holy cow. what are we running sweatshops? are there no prisons. the president wants to shame businesses into doing things their way. businesses would be better off if the president just got out of the way susan says. why so? >> this shouldn't be any surprise to him.
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before obamacare was passed. businesses of all sizes small and big companies said, you know what, you do this, there will be a loss of jobs. we'll be sending people to the healthcare.gov so they can get their subsidies and health insurance. i saw small businesses actually not growing because they got up to that 50 employee threshold, and they said we won't grow. at a time when we needed to create jobs and small businesses are the economic engine that creates jobs in this economy. but what staples is doing, is they're trying to save jobs. but they have had price pressures. they've had declining revenues ever since the recession hit. neil: they'll be closing 200 unprofitable stores by the end of the year. and merging with office depot. what i look at is this tendency to only vilify certain companies. you might as well vilify them all. you have apple, which is the darling everyone -- i should disclose, i'm a shareholder. they make these hot new
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gadgets. iphone six and 6 plus. all made in asia. (?) those are jobs shifted overseas. benefits shifted overseas. it benefits it all. they get a pass. why is that? >> ty di't ce obacar he jumped in -- he obviously wanted to talk about stapleake the look bad. obvisl the govnmen ays voris wit the kis ofeal th alws he and wi. ne: on sples h sola nels >>ight it dsn'tlwaywork t the way you want to. businesses have the freedom to respond to offset costs or transfer costs in whatever way that they see fit. and they have to do that because you can't just pass a lawto be able: i agree with you. i think that's a factor. staples came out with a statement about the percentage of part-time workers was the way it was long before the law.
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that might be the case. but i think this is the impetus. when i went to staples and did research. they offer part-time workers all these benefits. maybe not as generous as the president wants. same-sex benefits after 60 days of work. it's very, as far as company policies go, pretty generous policy. >> and actually they offered to their part-time employees health care coverage too, but it didn't meet the minimum. neil: right. >> what is better to have some coverage versus nothing? it makes no sense. neil: you almost think, if the president is making that remark, that they don't do squat for their work when they do. >> the president was really interjecting his own business philosophy with obamacare. he's reached into our businesses and said, this is the way you are going to do it. and, you know what, this is a free country. we have free enterprise and capitalism. and it's fine for a business owner to sit back and say no, mr. president -- neil: you're making a big profit
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and i think you should be spending your profit here. it's preachy. >> except you mentioned staples isn't doing that well right now. closing these stores. the internet, people can buy tons of paper clips without having to get up for a lot less money and free shipping. all kinds of options that the market will invent. neil: he doesn't know about market forces. he doesn't care about business physical therapy. >> clearly. same with the community college fortunately. if hething. free tuition. always something you can do to get around it, whether he likes it or not. neil: ladies, that was not easy. [laughter] anyway, fox biz alert, president obama asking congress to approve the fight against isis. 3400 from western nations. 20,000 from around the world. retired general bill
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says the key to stopping isis is stopping extremists from joining isis. i wonder if we're too late. >> we're way too late for an awful lot of them. but we're certainly not too late to close the fighters to get into isis and syria and really turkey is at fault for not doing the kind of job they ought to be doing to make sure thousands of those people aren't flying into turkey and crossing the border and joining isis. neil: what i'm wondering colonel, we're talking about a full ground assault. lindsey graham said we need 10,000 troops there helping to weed out these isis guys yesterday. and seeing how they spread, beyond syria, throughout the middle east, they have cells in paris. cells obviously here. is it too late? >> it's too late neil. they have cells in afghanistan too. it's too late, neil. it's too late for us to have the you were upper hand.
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we have to take advantage of what we're able to do and work with that while we try to minimize their ability to get recruits. as you and i have spoken before and you've had other guests, isis is the master's at social media. they know how to draw people in. everyone joining isis isn't a muslim. they have other faiths joining them because they see this sense of excitement this empowered radical element, for whatever distorted reason want to be part of. our work is cut out for us. just fighting isis inside syria and iraq. neil: it's gotten much bigger to your point. colonel, thank you very much. >> thank you neil. neil: to what the colonel was saying, isis in america. they're investigating isis graffiti popping up all over the country. from brooklyn to minneapolis. tim on what he calls a very troubling trend. the issue is, how do we deal with it? what do you think? >> the first thing is we
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have to dump this oppressive politically correctness going on. the nypd surveillance that's been pillaried. islamic terror removed from a lot of training manuals in the federal government. (?) if we won't take this threat seriously, i assure you they're taking us infiltrating us soil very seriously. so it's very a a symmetric right now. >> if you want to go into muslim neighborhoods it's one thing, a lot of these are american kids. a lot of them are impressionable youngsters who were drawn in for one reason or another. it seems way beyond the muslim community. >> good point. but, remember, the tsarnaev brothers were impressionable kids as well. (?) the older brother was a mixed martial arts fighter.
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neil, i grew up in the streets. i remember graffiti well in the '80s in new york. we were impressionable kids. these are the kind of things that start this snowball effect and may -- i don't want anybody to panic, i don't want to be dramatic about it, but may result in a couple of these kids turning into homegrown jihadis. and that's all you need neil. you had two kids in boston shut down an entire city for almost a week. neil: you're right about that. you're right about that. say nothing about what happened in canada and paris. but it keeps happening. thank you. >> you're welcome, neil. neil: we're breaking the bank. medicare going bankrupt. not until 2030. everyone says no big deal. calm down. this is years away. really?
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neil: every time i see that i feel like starting. time for neil's spiel. bankruptcy becoming too real. how to fix social security disability program. by the way, it goes bankrupt in late 2016. that's like next year. but if we can't save this program now, good luck with everything else going bankrupt later. to hadley. who is we're in big trouble when we keep ignoring all of this stuff. it is scary hadley. when we talk about breathing a sigh of relief. that's not until 2030. or 2033. and i'm thinking, well, this one disability thing is next week. is that scary? no. nothing. >> that's right, neil. one reason the disability program is struggling financially
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is because we saw a surge in enrollment since 2014. enrollment increased to 2013 when it leveled off. one reason is that we have an aging population. as baby boomers get older, this will affect our social security program and medicare. >> the argument for it was don't worry. don't worry. what do you think? >> well, you know, simple math says it all neil. in 2013, social security took in about 752 billion in revenue. they've paid out 822 million. the left primarily argues well no social security isn't bankrupt. look bankrupt, neil as you well know is when you can't pay your debts. you can get around it by paying people less than they're due by raising the retirement age. (?) it's like renegotiating with a bank when you can't repay your mortgage. the bottom line is, once they've exhausted the
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trust fund then all they have as hadley said is an aging population not supported by the number of workers out there. you know the bankrupt social security and medicare. neil: it's the same argument i used to hear when we were worried about government shutdown leading to default. the argument it would never happen here and we should maintain our aaa rating. we can always print money. as if. my action was, whoa, if that's your solace, we're in a deep pile of trouble. >> well, our national debt is one thing approaching $18 trillion. beyond that in social security programs and medicare we're facing a 49 trillion-dollar unfunded liability. ironically they celebrated anniversaries in 2014. during that same year unfunded obligations in the trillions of dollars. neil: gary, what happens?
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>> two things will happen. it will be inevitable. a drumbeat will be to raise taxes on everyone to maintain the level -- neil: remember, that's what we did with medicare. we made the salary cap limitless. they will do the same for this other stuff. >> exactly. then for people like you and i you'll see the government will come back, they'll say, listen, you get 100 percent of these social security benefits, now you'll get 85%. for our children, 75%. you'll see the same old thing. you'll see benefits go down. taxes will go up. and as i think you even said we might even start printing more money. which would be inflationary. neil: guys, thank you. i think. the solution. just win the powerball. win the powerball. even if you do, rip up the ticket. it's no good. you can keep half the money if you're lucky. i don't think it will even be half. really, what will you do
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with half a gazillion dollars? you don't need it. give it to the government.
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neil: a robot revolution revving up. yesterday we told you about how this woman, i know i sound -- how her hair was sucked up by this roomba vacuum. did google release its robotic dog. calm down. the woman ended up okay. her hair got messed up. she's okay. tonight, powerball earnings up for grabs. who do you think the real winner is? not you. i'm talking uncle sam. uncle sam gets half the cash. more if you want the insta pay. it's really far less. the government gets it
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all. to katrina on the government's powerball power grab. people don't realize. they say well i'm still far away. you are. but you should be eye-popping ticked off that the government is getting so much. right? >> not only that. but $500 million making every rational mind drift into la-la land. the odds of winning once in a lifetime perhaps. neil: yeah, you have to be in it to win it. >> you do have to be in it to win it. but are you going to win? who says poor people don't get taxed. this is a system arranged around the hopes and dreams of people to spend money they don't have on a ticket they most likely will not win. that's really sad. neil: it's like the rich orthodontist who wins. my god, i have a thriving practice. makes millions of dollars a year. and i won!
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your point is certainly it's a regressive sort of tax, so to speak. everyone wants in. they want in on the chance to make money. where is this money going? presumably, it was going to fund our schools and make the classes better. the money coming in would have a gold-plated apple laptop. didn't happen. i'm wondering where is it going? >> it never happens because politicians are always involved. they put these lottery projects together and they say it will help the kids. it ends up encouraging people to make bad decisions with their money. in the next session they did he designate the money to go to pet projects. they steal from the kids and make a profit in the end. neil: you're a cynical young woman, but that's okay. katrina, thank you very much. good seeing you again. did you not get your
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ticket? tilltilt stating, yes but the magazine is flying off the shelves. and the push to get it off the shelves. [music throughout] ♪because i love you♪ [announcer] this is my business. i believe in it. i live it and breathe it. i put my heart and soul...
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. neil: no pain, no gain, the host of "making money" here to talk about things that make him angry. first, charles, now that you're back from the money show in orlando, you were a rock star. >> it was phenomenal. neil: i want to talk about that, but i also want to get ur rctioto ts jatha ntrythe ptor who w a ov the eie abscef al arpt in e reir and builng wk th's gng on, d th h staed talkin out e gger tndsu don'shooeven at the grmys. ke a lisn. >>hat' what bothers me about the artists, you want to use
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the propaganda for foolishness and you gotlack community if you don't need to. you will give a thousand dlos a stripper but roll up the window when you see a homeless man. neil: what do you say? >> the hypocrisy knows no bounds. pharrell had gotten pressure from the left when he talked about people examining michael brown's behavior before the deadly incident occurred, and i don't know if this is his mea culpa, if you will. neil: by the way, that happy song, wasn't that like five years ago, and he's still collecting awards for it? >> i tell you what chubby checker collected money for the twist for 30 years. neil: you said it before, within the african-american community, you have to conform to certain point of view? >> you really do there is another rapper kendrick lamar
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has the hottest song in the country, the blacker the berry, he is coming under a fair amount of pressure. the energy and resources fighting battles that i feel we've won doesn't mean there won't be skirmishes and flare-ups. neil: when you are with african-american investors in orlando, all types, sizes, wealth, how were they to you? >> they were good. they were mostly people worried about how they're going to pay the mortgage how they're going to retire safely. neil: they're color blind green is the col senator. >> they're talking about how to take care of their grandkids. i don't think enough black people focus on the next 20 years. our population is going to wane hispanics will double us with respect, if you think politicians are taking us for granted now, wait until 20 years from now. there's a lot of things we should be focused on.
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if you this thing is wrong and you want to protest. that's what america is all about. i'd like to see our community better, smarter and more focused on the future. neil: on a different subject, "sports illustrated" leaves little to the imagination, critics are calling it pornographic and should not be on shelves. what do you think, charles? >> what's your point? [ laughter ]. neil: i have no idea. last year at this time you were interviewing supermodels. >> my goodness. three of them right here. that was the highest rated "cavuto," remember that. neil: how did that go? >> fantastic. neil: they didn't have the controversy this year. >> you had three of them, they had to spice it up they are pushing the envelope as far as can you push the envelope and i'm not complaining. neil: you are not complaining? >> no. >> people say this shouldn't be allowed, this was okay this you're not okay. >> listen you know what?
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we got to be realistic and honest where we are as a society. if you don't think little joey little and league friends haven't seen worse than that you are not paying attention. neil: really? [ laughter ]. neil: kids? we're going to have a little chat when daddy gets home. thank you very much. >> thanks a lot, neil. neil: he is our rock star talk about revolting, i don't know what's going on in the payne household, not in my household. revolt against washington is just beginning, wait until you see who's leading the revolution? after this. you just got a big bump in miles. so this is a great opportunity for an upgrade. sound good? great. because you're not you you're a whole airline... and it's not a ticket you're upgrading it's your entire operations, from domestic to international... which means you need help from a whole team of advisors. from workforce strategies to tech solutions and a thousand other things.
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♪ ♪ ♪ tigers, both of you. tigers? don't be modest. i see how you've been investing. setting long term goals. diversifying. dip! you got our attention. we did? of course. you're type e* well, i have been researching retirement strategies. well that's what type e*s do. welcome home. taking control of your retirement? e*trade gives you the tools and resources to get it right. are you type e*? . neil: we're in a fox biz alert, will the days of cheap gas last? not recently national gas prices jumping three cents overnight, making it the eighth straight day of increase don't sell the suv just yet. gas is about a buck cheaper
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than it was a year ago at this time. . from gas to just a gas, there's a revolt against washington, not from the tea party, from states who have had it with both parties. state governments are fighting back with over 200 various bills to stop federal government overreach. former new mexico governor and presidential candidate gary johnson says they have every right to be and should be a start of state surge across the country. they more or less said enough is enough, governor, do you agree? >> i totally agree. you look at president obama's health care plan. my premiums quadrupled too for what that's worth, and education, you name it, the federal government oversteps its bounds and i saw that when i was governor constantly. neil: has it kicked off -- what's changed now? i heard this has always been going on with federal leads, it's just it's picked up the
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pace? >> i think it has picked up the pace. really that is the difference between republican and democrat administrations. democrats are worse than republicans, but i don't want to let republicans off the hook either. george bush was supposed to be such a states rights guy and all of a sudden we have no child left behind and all sorts of -- all sorts of federal funding tides to complying with federal legislation. neil: you know it's always done in the name governor of consistency and having the same rules for all folks across the country. where do you think that should alie and shouldn't apply? lately the administration said when it comes to vaccines measles, it should apply countrywide and dangerous when states start arbitrarily making rules in that area. where do you draw the line between what the federal government should do and states should do? >> well the notion of commerce that you can't have a requirement driving into texas
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that your car wheels can't be bigger than 23". there's a real legitimate argument out there that there needs to be consistency for one state into another, lest you break the laws with the notion that states are 50 laboratories of best practice? let them have at it. let them have at it when it comes to health care let them have at it when it comes to edgation. immigration is an overblown issue, the border states can be innovating when it comes to that, and work visas, for example. neil: are you going to run for president again? are you going to run for president again? >> i hope so, neil. i hope to be able to do that. i hope to provide a voice -- >> as a third-party candidate again, not as a republican? >> yeah, as a libertarian as a
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third party. the ideal the ideal label right now is independents that's a tough nut to crack, you got to get on the ballot in enough states to get on the ballot. we're suing the president if you're on enough ballots mathematically to become president, shouldn't you in the polls that determines who's in the debates? neil: you know what is weird about the debates, they would base it on polls that were all over the map. one state would allow you in if you were polling 10% or better of the vote, so you're relying on the reliability of the poll which can be specious. other states 20% others 25%. doesn't that beg for standard rules which gets back to a federal standard that can't be gerrymandered for various states and municipalities? >> in this case, it is a federal election you would be on the ballot in enough states
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to mathematically be elected president. look, the issue is not -- not that there be a requirement of 20% in the polls but how can you be at 20% of the polls when you're not in the poll? that's the issue more than anything. neil: you're right. >> yeah well just being in the poll i think has a self-fulfilling prophecy. gee, during the last election jill stein with the green party, myself with the libertarian party, obama and romney were the four pix. if you would have heard you had four selections for president of the united states, you would have done a little more diligence than none. neil: italy where they have 12 guys running for office at once? they had 80% turnout. italy, and we can't even drive. governor, thank you very much. good seeing. >> you always great being on thank you, neil. neil: after nearly half a cent reef cholesterol warnings did the government say what the hell? be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?"
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what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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. neil: don't say i didn't warn you, america. in tonight's biz blitz. 40 years of warnings out the window. the government admitting what i've long been thinking, high-cholesterol foods aren't that bad for you after all. that has liz mcdonald and tracy byrnes wondering what else the government is getting wrong? >> apparently a lot. i'm glad your eggs are back on the table. truth is i never got rid of them. they're telling the story inaccurately. there is saturated fat in certain things you should be worried about. let's not pop them like vitamins. still be careful. >> go ahead and pop them like viminsdon' listen to her. >> b it gso t who we shoun't ein th. u td use suldtat
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th, buwecan. if t crebili isthe it'song ne. one in fou c't e es, wherelseas the gernmt beenrong wh el? neilthe vernnt srted od a badosterl. whanext ester es a yo fre fro now . rembern 92he gernmt idatix seven servings of pasta. neil: six or seven of what? >> a day. neil: a day? i missed that cookies took off. neil: i never understood that pyramid. mine had bakery products and little vegetable at the top. what did you make of it? >> i think people should be healthy and stop, and the government should, again, stay out of big gulps of the world the eggs everything. neil: and how do we stay the sexy things we are?
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moderation. now yesterday yesterday we told you about the hair-eating vacuum. it was a roomba. there's nothing funny about a vacuum eating a woman's head it. messed up her hair, she probably had to go to the beauty parlor. that's the worst of it. google's new robo dog is the big thing now. i just don't know what a robo dog will do, but i bet it's obedient. lizzie what do you think? >> the head of the defense department said we want the robots to move around in packs indoors to figure out if there's a human being there. neil: they have someone kicking it to. >> to make sure it can stand. it's really good on its feet. neil: what does it do? fetch a beer? >> probably could. they're used to carry supplies and weapons for the military.
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they're calling it cujo. these guys are checking it out. >> i want it to bring my umbrella down to the beach. they are developing it to sense there are humans indoors, that's scary. that was the intent of the project to begin with for the google dog. neil: but the vacuum sucking your hair is bigger. >> are the bigger story is why is she sleeping on the floor? it's cool if this gets to the next level. neil: how did that happen? >> she was napping on the floor. neil: there you go. have a roomba going around on the floor, don't nap on it! [ laughter ]. neil: really? do i have to think for you? >> exactly. neil: onto issue three, urban outfitters under fire for making tappestries that some say resemble concentration camps. tracy, i cannot imagine this is on purpose. >> someone -- well you know
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what, someone has to be fired. the thing is we're talking about -- not to blame the youngins, they don't know history, and this has happened before, they made mistakes the kent state sweatshirt. neil: the 70th anniversary of the auschwitz. remember the kent state story? that was beyond -- >> somebody should be fired. >> tedious that retailers have to create buzz for their clothing. neil: you think it was intentional. the kent state was blatantly stupid. >> and they sold t-shirts to preteens i drink, you're cute t-shirts. enough already. >> what they're missing is i'm insulted and since i still pay the bills we're not going in there. heck yes, not to mention that the store smells like you swam in the cologne. neil: what kind of cologne.
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>> not high karate or whatever you wear. neil: jabbar? what is wrong with english leather. ladies, thank you very much for your renaissance outlook on life. in the meantime, a lot of you want to know how big a deal is neil cavuto? let's just say, santa, santa is a fan. fat chance the factor can never top. proof is next.
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when the moment's spontaneous, why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph,
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like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision or any symptoms of an allergic reaction stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a free 30-tablet trial. >> "what's the deal, neil?" neil: what is the deal with the media making else sharpton the go to person for any racial crises? has anyone put two and two together and realize that he is the guy starting them up? i generally seek out other
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points of view. when it comes to him supposedly speaking for the african-american community there are plenty out there and among the best is pastor jonathan gentry and he proved why again last night. >> focusing what is not a race issue, you and your posse came in there and made it a race issue. and now they cannot be trusted where they need you right now. but yet you are not going to come around and that is not what you are about. that's not what you are about. neil: al sharpton take notes that this guy is remarkable. and only an individual like this could get neil cavuto to shut up once. praise jesus. rank in california, awesome feature from los angeles. and in american woman who only wanted to do good is gone and we are contorting over how to respond. kayla mueller and the happy images did more to now than i
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than any hostage burning. ec says someone so young and so stupid, this wonderful girl, the president who had incompetent policies that sealed her doom. anton says let's call the president what he really is and not waste their time figuring it out. he will not fight this religion that is attacking the world stage and come into our doorstep. and another rights that their only a couple of times i have heard her voice cracked and your usual calm composure get rattled. maybe that is because you were speaking as a dad and realizing that someone just lost a beautiful daughter. and bernardin baltimore says you were talking to a senator that said we need 10,000 soldiers to fight isis. are you kidding me? been there and done that. and as you interview kt k.t. mcfarland you asked what do we learn from this amax really? it's always the same stupid
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question and nothing new and smart ever comes from people who think that they are smart. the truth is that being compensated with a high salary is much more important than acting with courage. tobin apparently had the same point of view. you talk about courage anniversary like the ultimate joke. what would you know about adversity or dealing with pain. keep eating and laughing, but i have to go because i have a serious disease and have to walk and take my medicine. tip is on the same page. keep reading the prompter and i will handle the pain. and it's easy to talk tough when it's pretty clear they couldn't tough out a hangnail, right anchor boy? not quite, but i don't have time to respond to you because you're not really worth the effort. and rick at hotmail says please stop using the phrase boots on the ground because it's quite offensive and hurtful to me. i am a soldier and not a boot. sorry, rick i got the phrase
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from other soldiers who kept calling for it and i apologize to you. then there is one who found my cat with rick and karen santorum annoying. when he went to shut up when a guest is talking? your interview with the santorum family is disgraceful but typical of everyone you interview. shut up. you shut up. anyway, you better talk to kimberly who writes that you let these two right wing religious freaks prattle on. at least not your head that it's okay to answer the question now and then. you are horrible. well, both of you should listen to mike in florida who thinks that i am great and he appreciates me. listen to this. i'm touched by your editorial views, maybe it is something about pressing the mid century mark or maybe i had just learned to recognize how few people in the world make a positive impact and contribution to the lives of others.
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this is not a message to flatter your conceit or your programs, i enjoy having you in my home most every day. and you did say most every day, but i'm not going to be picky. thank you very much. i'm honored that you let me visit. and gary goes by another name as well another alias. from one man to another, i love you, man. i am santa claus so i have a reason to be jolly picture attached. you are insightful and brilliant, i watch you on on fox and i watch you on fox business also. i cannot get enough of your analysis humor. signed santa. gary k. from oceanside california. my vacation home went to the north pole. top that factor. stuff it. okay, i will put in a good word for you just the same.
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thank you for watching, and all new "strange inheritance" is coming up next. forget about putting in a nice word for you. "strange inheritance" startsnhetance now. ♪ ♪ ♪ will. announcer: was he a lifelong corridor or collector? the answer lies in sizes knowledge regard told what rusty old cars. which is the truth? we are about to find out. ♪ ♪ jamie:

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