tv Cavuto FOX Business April 5, 2015 5:00am-6:01am EDT
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s a war on christians. it's worth thinking about this good friday. have a great easter weekend. that's my "2 cents more." and that's it for tonight's willis report. "making money" with charles payne is ne thank you for being here. happy easter. ♪ >> you say you're happy to serve gays in your restaurant as is your dad. but you draw the line at catering a gay wedding. >> it's not a sin that we bring gays into our establishment and to serve them. it is a sin though if we condone -- if we cater their wedding. we feel we're anticipating. we're putting a stamp of approval on their wedding. >> now did she sound crazy to you? to hear these indiana protesters tell it, crystal o'connor is a bigoted bedbug. they wanted to shut her pizza shop down. crystal draws the line at catering a wedding for gays.
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on religious grounds. a lot of you have been phoning by the thousands saying crystal should stand her ground. keep those emails coming. we still want to hear from you. email at cavuto at foxbusiness.com. join the conversation at facebook.com/teamcavuto. (?) i'll read the responses at the end of the show. some of you have not been putting nice words in those texts. here's what i can tell you right now. crystal o'connor, a lot of you not only supporting her but lending your support. more than 600000 dollars' worth of support pouring from average americans help the small business get back to business. cary, what do you make of the financial response? >> well it speaks to the fact that a lot of americans are really upset about how she's been treated. you know i support gay marriage. in that sense she's a
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public establishment. she should have to serve the public. if that's what she says. there's violence. people calling for all sorts of horrible things against her. it's un-american. violates the spirit of martin luther king. this is a civil rights issue. i think they're going against his entire spirit of nonviolence. of cooperation. bringing the community together. this divides the community. >> she wanted to make it clear to me, look, gays come into my pizza shop. my dad and i will happily serve them. and we have. we do the line. and we'll draw the line at catering a gay marriage. my point is straight or gay if you're going to a pizza place to cater your wedding, there are bigger issues there. my concern is, is there something wrong with that? >> where do you draw the line? so it's against their religious belief that they won't serve a gay wedding. but a gay couple comes
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in married, are you going to refuse serving them. >> she said no. >> it's not for her to draw the line. it's for the government to protect people from discrimination. and that's what the state of indiana have done. that -- for example what if somebody wants their bridal shower, a lesbian wants her bridal shower to be catered by this place. it's a moving line. it's not up to the private business owner to draw it. now in indiana anybody can get pizza any time anywhere. neil: they had to do it in a way that gays were clearly given an exemption here. that's essentially how it was done in arkansas. i don't know how it's done in the 18 or 17 states that have similar laws on the books. is that the way to correct it? >> i think in this case yeah, because you want to have the expression separation of church and state. you don't want to be
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discriminating against gays and anything else. that creates fears. i don't think indiana wants to be seen this way. i'm assuming, governor pence wasn't aiming for that. >> did she strike you as a bigot? >> she struck me as someone who wants to discriminate against gays in a public establishment. which is wrong. >> no no. if they come in here, i'll serve them. if i have to go to a gay wedding, i won't do it. >> but that is a public -- >> what she's saying, she could have just as easily said i'll opt out. not that this ever came up. i'll opt out of it. i'm busy that night or i'm busy that day. instead, is she in danger when she says, no it's a gay wedding i don't want to do it. >> it gets to a question of civil rights. we have considerable -- it's a patchwork of states right now. i think this will become a federal issue. i think we'll get clarity from the supreme
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court at some point. >> the supreme court rules in favor of gay marriage, this becomes a moot point? >> i think so. that's where we're headed. >> in terms of using these religious freedom laws as a defense against discrimination claims, in these other states where these laws exist, i couldn't find any major cases where someone could use the religious freedom and cite it in a defense when they were accused of discrimination. and in other cases people had tried to use freedom of speech as a defense against a similar discrimination claim. like in the issue of a florist not wanting to do business with a gay -- in a gay wedding. >> we've had incidents like that. >> right. religious freedom does not work largely as a defense. >> what if you say i'm busy that day? >> they wouldn't have grounds -- >> if you keep doing it against gay couples there's going to be a track record. >> but that's an informal way that discrimination is kind of implemented now.
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people just kind of opt out. and i think it's good that they had made this clear statement so that we as a country can have this conversation. >> do any of you find offense, that they label them a nut job. >> i agree. the fact that people were violent. wanted to shut down this business. i find that repulsive. >> the level of hate directed at these business owners was completely unwarranted. and i think it's ineffective. if you want everybody to get along and you want to fight discrimination, that's not the way to do it. neil: right. >> i think it's driven out of fear. it's easy to sit here as someone not afflicted that way. oh, you shouldn't react so harshly. you're extremely concerned this could be the tipping point of a lot of other states and a lot of other issues that could come down on you. gays aren't protected fully under the law. that's where this
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concern is. neil: many of you have been weighing on this issue. pro con, in between. there are a few in between. say your thoughts. foxbusiness.com. facebook.com/team cavuto. i'll read some of those. don't get really nasty here. fair is fair. i mean, this is holy week. the mainstream media is far more focused on how we're treating gays than the growing threat of islamic terrorists who prefer killing gays. all in the same week we're learning the muslim population is growing very fast to the point by 2050, experts predict there will be as many muslims as christians in this world. not that all those muslims will be bad. my guest is betting the sheer numbers will be scary. again, whether you're straight or gay. to jesse lee peterson. reverend, what are your concerns? we're not saying all muslims are awful awful people. or that they're all killing homosexuals.
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or anyone for that matter. but your concern is what? >> my concern is that radical islam have been taught that christians and jews are infidels and that they're worthy of death. so if we don't conform to islam then they are going to take us out. and just imagine if they outnumber christians by 2050, we don't have a chance. i think, neil, that's so amazing, that rather than focusing on this issue because radical islam not only do they hate christians and jews, they also hate homosexuals. and they will cut off a homosexual's head as quickly as they had a christian. but the left deliberately focuses on taking away religious freedom from christians and not paying any attention what's going to happen, i believe once it moves on population takeover. >> i talk to many reverends, those that
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are religious the pizza shop owner they feel they're being made out to be backward, racist, prestigious even stupid. how do you answer that? >> you know i've come to realize that this attack upon christianity from the left is not about civil rights. it's about power. they want to take the power away from the majority and give it to a minority. and that's what it's all about. i also have noticed that christianity is under attack around the world. and it's hated more than any other religion in this world. and the reason that it is so hated is because christianity requires us to examine ourselves and change from being the way that we are. overcome evil and become good. we have to admit that we are wrong before we can enter into a state of
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goodness and liberals -- >> but follow up on that. i wish i had more time. you mentioned key points. as a reverend man of god, you heard what this young woman said, pizza shop owner, morally she can serve gays in her pizza shop but cannot take the extra effort to serve a gay wedding. if it becomes the law of the land and the supreme court recognizes gay marriage, technical she would havelyshe would have to, how would she reconcile that with her religion? >> you know, it's interesting. i write for warrendaily.com. i wrote an article to the christians asking how to deal with this. let's say the laws you have to do this as a christian, and so they come into my shop for a cake, i would explain to them, you know, i am not in support of same-sex marriage. but the law says i have to do it. so what i'll do, i'll
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bake you a cake for x amount of dollars. and i'll take your money and do not that money to an organization or law firm who will -- that is fighting against same-sex marriage. >> whoa whoa. >> well, you know, you certainly have a new debate going there reverend. >> always -- >> as a writer, we have to stand on principles. >> okay. reverend, thank you very much. you might offend a whole new -- meanwhile, forget about 2015. you hear about these female isis sympathizers caught in this country. ray kelly says the bad guys and gals are already here. good thing he is here too. ♪ people ship all kinds of things. but what if that thing is a few hundred thousand doses of flu vaccine.
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that need to be kept at 41 degrees. while being shipped to a country where it's 90 degrees. in the shade. sound hard? yeah. does that mean people in laos shouldn't get their vaccine? we didn't think so. from figuring it out to getting it done, we're here to help. you can call me shallow... but, i have a wandering eye. i mean, come on.
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neil: could this be the new face of terror? think about that. forget about osama bin laden. this cover now says, well, pretty much it all. there is a new and very much alive evil in town. and it is not a he. it's a she. isis doesn't seem to care. a philadelphia woman picked up by authorities for trying to provide support for isis. females were arrested in a bomb threat on new york. former new york police commissioner ray kelly says all he cares about is that they're here and they're growing here. it's quite a number now. right? >> yeah. we've had obviously several plots against new york city and other places in the country. now, women seem to be surfacing but it's not a totally new phenomenon. we knew there were suicide bombers in
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moscow a few years ago. it's something reinforced by this most recent case. >> what does it mean by homegrown? these women, in the case of some women and men, they're not -- they've gone over to syria and trained and come back. a lot of them have never left the country, but a lot are being wooed in the country. >> a lot of inspiration going on by isis, al-qaeda, several plots here in the city of people who never left the united states. you know, we say the internet now is the new afghanistan, that's where training is going on. even in this case, you'll see that they have a lot of information from videos. they looked at the "inspire" magazine, which was put together by anwar awlaki in 2010. it's still a very viable vehicle to get information on how to carry out a terrorist attack. neil: so as somebody who dealt with 9/11. front and center in the
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mess of all this, do you get a sense that we are not appreciating the magnitude of social media. we have to get on the -- certainly isis, boko haram, they've mastered it. >> absolutely. they have real skills as far as social media is concerned. you look at this case that happened yesterday it got relatively speaking very little attention. i think it was on page 16 of the new york times. so, you know, if it fails, it may be a one-day story and that's it. and people won't realize that so many plots that happen here in the us and particularly here in new york. under the bloomberg administration, there were 16 plots against the city. this case about a month ago they arrested two individuals in brooklyn for material support. that sort of thing. so they keep on happening, and as you've said many times the government has to be
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right every time they only have to be right once. and, of course we all suffer the effects of that. generally speaking, there's not much focus on the -- on the issue. particularly one that's a failed attempt. >> well you know what i worry about. and i had a security expert here not too long ago. these recruits. whatever you want to call them. they're all here. now, they might be planning boston-type terrorist attacks like the tsarnaev brothers but they're here. if you set that as a given, ask in new and in new york, we catch some of them before they succeed. what do we do? how do we weed them out if that many are here and everywhere? >> jim said they're in all 50 states the fbi director. we have to continue to do what we're doing. we have to continue to devote resources to it. >> like what do you think they're planning, something like mall attacks?
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>> you know, it's pretty spontaneous. it's sort of where the thousand followers bloom. after we started bombing bombing isis. the director of isis said go out and do what you can. run people down. stab them. hit them with rocks. it's that sort of, do whatever you can to attack the infidels. >> these women wanted allegedly to go after the police. and i'm wondering in this environment, where at least in the eyes of the mainstream media, the police remain the bad guys. >> yeah. neil: it's kind of perverted. >> yeah, i think they talked about the funeral, the amassing of police officers at the funeral. neil: kill them there. >> they didn't have a specific target. clearly they were talking about conducting mayhem and had four propane tanks. >> rage against the law. >> yeah law enforcement is the most visible target. the hatred director on a daily basis.
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easiest target when you think about it. neil: what if they were more like you? recruit you again commissioner. ray kelly the former new york city police commissioner. like i said, at the top of the show, we're worried about whether this woman is antigay. think about that. keep telling us what you think about that and whether the mainstream media is going too far obsessing about that and not issues well like this. we want to hear from you. go to facebook.com/teamcavuto. email cavuto@foxbusiness.com. we'll share those comments. we're getting doozies. that recovery. what recovery? have you seen the latest ♪ at mfs, we believe in the power of active management. every day, our teams collaborate around the world
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half of what economists expected. and the tiniest growth we've seen in six months. good thing the markets are closed today. don't know what they would have done with a number this lousy. maybe they would celebrate that the federal reserve would not be able to hike interest rates in this environment. i do know someone who has a pretty good idea what this could mean what it could portend. michael. columnist. what do you think of this? >> well you know, i think the numbers aren't going to be good for the first quarter. people are bullish. that's not a good combination. >> i heard numbers, they would have to revise gdp numbers sharply down. they're already anemic. >> jpmorgan decreased their numbers to .5% growth down from 1.6 for the first quarter. i think this will come
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in, in earnings season. i'm telling readers to be careful in the market right now. people are too bullish right now. people don't seem to be thinking about the weakness. neil: what's interesting too you've read about this. people are interested of climbing this wall. every time i've been doubtful, i've been hurt for being out of this. so eventually, there's going to come that moment. >> right. neil: but you've been richly rewarded for ignoring it. right? >> yeah. i look at a couple of sentiment measures. right now they're in the red flag zone. that's the key. >> like what? >> the investors intelligence close to four. above four is really dangerous. neil: in other words, that's almost too giddy. >> yeah, it's the old reverse think. so people are so positive -- of thing it this way. if everyone is bullish who is left to buy your stock and drive it up higher. when people are bullish, they tend to be complacent. bad news comes along
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and, quote, unquote surprises them. the last people in have the least conviction. they're more likely to sell on any kind of bad news. >> what do you think would have happened if the markets were open today? you and i were chatting one side would say hey the federal reserve can't raise interest rates. the other side says yeah there's a reason they can't. things are bad. >> it's tough to know. what's generally been happening the market sells off in the morning. probably that would have been the scenario. but, you know we haven't any earnings warnings that were huge. we're due for that. companies held off probably because of the holiday. we might see something on monday and tuesday. when the earnings numbers start to roll out. you'll see a lot of this negativity from the first quarter. people will look to guidance. like i said they'll blame it on the weather. investors are skeptical of that excuse. >> heard that one before. might explain why these companies are merging. batten down the hatches before. right?
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>> there's that. and also it's easy to buy growth. right? neil: yeah. >> you know, when -- neil: but when they come together, it doesn't do much for job growth. right? >> no. well it depends. but usually not. >> all right. thank you very much. michael. machetemarketwatch. the indiana pizza shop is closed up. which has my inbox lighting up. if you could only see what people are saying about crystal. others calling her a bigot. some a saint. you can continue to send emails. some of you are saying nasty things. you're cursing. i'm not the only one watching you. i'm just saying. meanwhile all of these stories i've been reporting on that got you outraged, do they make you want to pull a peter finch and run to the nearest window and scream at the top your lungs? >> i'm as mad as hell. i'm not going to take this anymore. >> that movie, i want
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neil: i am owrmingd. outraged. and i'm outraged more people aren't outraged. if i could only figure out what it is today that has me outraged. comedian jim says pick a subject any time, someone somewhere is flying off the handle about something someone else said and they have to get it off their chest preferably as they're pounding their chest. they're serious. just because you're a comic. don't think you'll be spared. you hear that? comedy central might think you're fit to fill jon stewart's shoes. watch where those shoes are stepping. you've stepped in it now. oddly enough over stuff you've tweeted. i need not share it. jim says be done with it. we're addicted to the rush of being royally teed off.
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one of the funniest guys i know said it's time -- it's so good to have you. i read your piece in time magazine. i cheered out loud. left and right, i think you hit this over the top. this rage thing. what is driving it? >> it has nothing to do with left and right. the people doing it are the same person. the arch liberals, the arch conservatives. the same self-serving ass that wants everyone have the same line of appropriateness as i have. if i don't like something, i don't want you to say it either. when you start targeting comedians and saying, you said something inappropriate. what do you think comedians do? we say things kind of inappropriate. that's part of the job description. >> let's talk about conservatives first. they took a lot of remarks and tweets and comments he's made about jews. whatever group you want to make. and saying, well if
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someone on the right did that, it would be over. it would be finished. it's a double standard. they like the fact that comedy central was standing by them. they wish some of the shows would be as open-minded and pragmatic when it came to those in the public domain who said something similar. >> well the conservatives are right about that. but then there's also -- if you do certain gay jokes, the conservatives will give you a pass and the liberals will come after you. there's one group that will defend you because you haven't offended them. if i agree with the subtext of what you're saying, it's okay. it's this irritating trend we're in. we grab to things they're saying we try to make it about us so we can feel victimized and get attention. >> you're one of the few i know that doesn't seem to give a damn. you go out there. you might be offending someone as we speak. you obviously weigh the career risk with that. right?
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>> well, that's the advantage to having only achieved mediocrity. there's not much they can take. neil: come on. i build a career on mediocrity, young man. do you ever say, you know, i have a feeling that this won't go well in this city, in this town or with this group? >> not in this city or this town. i don't localize it or with this -- or gay people or black people or white people. i kind of think, you do a risk analysis with certain jokes. i mean, i'm not an idiot. i won't go on twitter and say truly vile and racist things about somebody. you can't do that in a club either. i mean, just saying you're uncensored and speak your mind doesn't mean you have no social grace or you're a total moron running through a comedy show with a bomb belt on. you kind of know what you should and shouldn't do. if you cross the line, i don't think you should be executed for it. i think people should realize that their line is not everybody else's line. i've heard things that
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have offended me. i just don't want people to be penalized for it. i don't want you to lose your job. >> that's what's happened. if someone says something, either off the cuff or there might be a planned script it's played back. things are played on the internet again and again. people call for their head. they call for advertiser boycotts. a lot of companies will fold like cheap suits and say goodbye. >> yeah. because they're not used to being criticized or being called racist or a homophobe or whatever it is. you look at the comedy central roasts. ludicrous got mad at paul walker jokes because he knew him. pete davis -- >> that's an excellent point. >> he wouldn't -- pete davidson's father was killed on 9/11. he made fun of it. i love pete for doing
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that. he said basically by doing that, there's nothing sacred when it comes to humor. anything can be addressed and made fun of. when people began to get self-righteous they become selectively self-righteous, that's annoying. (?) the guys from south park said either it's all okay or none of it's okay. that's how i look at it. >> except when it applies to a justin bieber roast. >> i don't care for the beebs being mocked. >> i just wanted to get that on record just so you you knew. >> he's terrific. >> he's his own man. that's great. i'm still outraged. not at jim but at jerry. jerry brown. governor moonbeam, a brought on all of us. those damn californians leaving us all high and dry. i'm outraged. well, not really, but coming up.
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neil: i've been telling you. that pizza co-owner speaking up. it's blowing up. she struck a nerve. a lot of you are saying that the mainstream media has a lot of nerve. go to facebook.com/teamcavuto. join the conversation. i'll be reading some of your comments. again, nice comments. not -- the cursing and some of the stuff, some of you, for example throw in fat jokes in there. really? really? all right. but first don't think california's drought will impact you. ryan says water prices across the country are going to skyrocket because of it. explain that. because we tend to think right now, ryan, oh this is the governor's problem. not ours. >> first, as americans we view water as a right. which is a blessing. what a wonderful country we live in where we have
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access to clean water. but, you know take what happened with gas prices, neil, it's not a proportional decline. gas prices go up 75%. we don't see a 75% decrease in demand. >> yeah. >> whatever the price increase is on water, you won't see a proportional decrease in the amount of consumption -- >> but what's going on in california, how would that get to us. >> well, first you have to remember that the price of crops cattle all of that will increase how much we're paying for food. and, again, that's not something -- >> but it hasn't yet. >> it hasn't yet. until these restrictions are put in, you say that changes. now they're forced restrictions. >> absolutely. you have to remember too, with draughts in situations like this, it's not an immediate impact. (?) take today for example if california received all the water they needed to completely wipe out the drought
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you wouldn't see a change in pricing overnight. take cattle. the gestational period for cattle happens annually. it will take a long time for those prices to self-correct if they had all the water they need -- >> would that be localize to cattle in california. and fruit in california. i know it's a lot. but it's not north dakota. >> you have to remember how much of an impact that california brings to the table affecting prices across the united states. even with what they export out to the markets in oklahoma that we eat we'll have to pay a little extra for what's coming from them out there. neil: do you think governor brown, i think he has the best intentions voluntary effort. help me out here. let's voluntarily see what we can do. and they didn't do it. >> that goes back to my original point. they won't do this on their own.
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we view water as a right. and we're going to go use it the way we want and assume the other guy is going to -- is going to be -- >> whatwater is a right to drink. water is a right it irrigate for food. it's not a right to keep the hollywood moguls lawn green. >> they're always watering the grass and there's not a lot of grass out there to water. >> they're not just smoking it. they're -- >> absolutely. and i don't think you'll see any changes in that. i hope that -- neil: well -- >> and i hope we can push more innovations and regulation, neil. that's a big concern for me. i know you have to have a certain amount of regulation especially in like where governor brown is, where we have to step in or people's lives could be at risk. i hope we can see more innovation and government not really having to strong arm us too much. >> share and share alike. thank you so much. millennials whine, it's
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♪ neil: well put down the fiber con and stop clipping those coupons. the bitter millennials are back and on the attack. president obama is going on the offensive after republican bush to euthanize our debt tax. are the bitter boomers being taxed some money they've already been taxed on. they're minutes away from dying anyway. they don't need it. lizzie mcdonald. charlie brady. joining me now.
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>> the real injustice is the people who work their entire lives building a business and have government taxation their heirs to sell it or liquidate the business in order to the pay the taxes. >> i so much agree. the journalization generalization of that -- >> how about the millennials. they're complete morons. they're idiots. >> they're getting screwed here -- >> but the top 1% of this country does drive a lot of jobs. now small businesses, neil contribute about two-thirds of new jobs over the pass 15 years. here's another statistic from a survey. university of chicago survey 50% -- 50% of small business owners just want to reach a certain size and stop
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growing. now, i -- neil: to avoid the taxes. right? >> that would be my presumption. at least some of them. so why don't we just cut it off cut the country off by its legs? >> lizzie, can you pipe down. >> what does it raise? only about $20 billion a year. that's enough to pave -- >> is that really? >> enough to pay for the new marine helicopter that the president wants. it's nothing. two-thirds of the evil rich that the president is always sulking with the higher taxes. they're the guys that create jobs in this country. that's a fact. neil: it's a small percentage -- >> when you look at the unemployment report today, you know, you see how a lot of people are dropping out of the work force. it was a lousy report. but millennials are getting crushed. neil: why are they getting crushed? >> here's the question i had -- neil: because you're hogging all the goods. charlie: it gets back to the obamanomics. they keep voting for this guy.
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they helped put him in office. >> that's absolutely true. charlie: he keeps screwing them. what does that mean about them? most millennials are morons. >> i wouldn't say most but a large number. >> i mean -- the millennials are the end. that's what's going on here. >> no. there are a lot of very smart millennials. there really are. but the point is, they won't have a chance to express themself unless we give them a chance. now, if obama really wants to do something and separate the wheat from the chaff, this is what he can do, he can -- he can eliminate a lot of these regulations, which are making -- (?) >> but the president -- all right but the president. wait a minute. neil: she's taking the glasses off. >> those are the people that should be taxed. >> don't goes wheat. >> teacher faculty lounge from the
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president what we're talking about is he consistently ignores small businesses and farmers. we will lose our business with the state tax hike that you have on us. that's a fact. you're hurting middle class jobs. he will not acknowledge that. neil: the rich aren't paying enough, that's what he's saying. >> we're seeing the effects in today's employment report. 126,000 jobs, a little more than half of what was expected. all these things -- neil: it's the cold weather charlie. it's snowing. >> but who is getting screwed the most? the millennials. yet they keep voting for him. it's crazy. >> that part of it is crazy. charlie: i think some of the millennials are amazing. some that fought in the gulf wars. they're amazing. really good kids. so many of them are pampered. loser morons. >> the age -- our demo age is going up. >> 10% of the millennials do have their own businesses they should care about
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the estate tax. >> they don't care about it. neil: do you have a recommendation for all the young kids today? >> gitmo. i know. learn a manual pass. mothers don't let your kids to grow up to be investment bankers or lawyers. neil: or you. >> let them grow up and learn a skill they can learn. >> believe in the free markets they work. neil: all right. kids. that's it. that's all we'll tell you. when we come back the reactions to that indiana pizza shop owner, young and old let's bring us your baffling. bring us your audacious. we want your sticky notes, sketchbooks, and scribbles. let's pin 'em to the wall. kick 'em around. kick 'em around, see what happens. because we're in the how-do-i-get-this-startup- off-the-ground business. the taking-your-business- global-business. we're in the problem-solving business. 400,000 people - ready to help you solve problems while they're still called opportunities.
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from figuring it out to getting it done we're here to help. the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. after all, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned... every day... using wellness to keep away illness... and believing that a single life can be made better by millions of others. healthier takes somebody who can power modern health care... by connecting every single part of it. for as the world keeps on searching for healthier... we're here to make healthier happen. optum. healthier is here.
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you can call me shallow... but, i have a wandering eye. i mean, come on. national gives me the control to choose any car in the aisle i want. i could choose you... or i could choose her if i like her more. and i do. oh, the silent treatment. real mature. so you wanna get out of here? go national. go like a pro.
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serve gays but she just off the line at catering their weddings. and on religious grounds you just said that you could not cater a gay wedding. but i listen to that right? >> well, they are welcome, anyone is welcome in the store. but it is against our belief to cater to their wedding. neil: carolyn saying good for the pizza place owner. and you could not understand how she could not make pizza for homosexual wedding but you could serve them pizza. the answer? lord jesus ate with sinners and he never condone their sins. when jesus died for us he died for the sins of the whole world and not just levers very it he does not see arsons anymore. we are not to judge anyone, gays
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or muslims, we are supposed to love everyone as he loved us. and one individual said getting married is a sin in this way. and another says you are a bigot. [inaudible] why do our businesses -- our business citizens have to cater to gay marriage functions when they object to the marriages of gay folks? and then i wish that you would have asked the pizza company how many total wedding receptions vacated last year. who has a wedding reception at a 10 table pizza joint to and i think what she is saying is that you make the pizza and you bring it to them. anyway, islam would not cater
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gay weddings but liberals are not attacking them. and then not good enough, union protesters demanding that unions pony up the extra buck per hour that they are adding to the workers minimum wage. and nancy's that you are forgetting that the union wages are based off the minimum wage including government union wages going up. and don't any of these protesters work or not mac they seem to be having fun in carrying on. judy says my daughter makes $31,000 per year as an idaho elementary school. and the union wants to pay her for flipping hamburgers? and another says it's all part of the socialist communist national government backed by al sharpton and his clones part of obama's plan to destroy the usa. intel says for mcdonald's i could care less if they go chapter 13 tomorrow. martha says i'm sorry, but unskilled workers don't deserve higher wages and truly improve
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their skills come a which allows them to get a better job. and then e-mailing the following are these not starter jobs? they do not require much skill. how much do you need to make for that. people with skills should also get a raise and we will head towards a 5-dollar bigot mask to make everyone happy. and work hard, get an education, if you want more money than mcdonald's pays. it does not have to be college-level. many trade schools produce college graduates earn more than i did. and nancy says your guest is stating that mcdonald's is losing business because the front-line experience is unsatisfactory. if the minimum wage has increased, the front-line employees will stay the same and we will be paying more for the unsatisfactory experience. apparently he is not sure what
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university with them, but in this world that would just make a bad employee well played paid and something tells me that you welcome to another edition of the best of the eye mass morning program as we look at the beautiful kalt ranch for kids for cancer in new mexico. here at our fox business network studios in new york. over the next hour some of the interviews and musical performances as well. we'll have the very funny colin quinn here in a few minutes. he was talking about his broadway show
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