Keyword: neilcavuto
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<p>You'd think listening to all the news reports out of Iraq, that things are out of control in Iraq.</p>
<p>Joe Klein in Time magazine going so far as to ask, "Who is losing Iraq?"</p>
<p>I don't know, Joe. But I know this much: We aren't.</p>
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Please tell me if this has ever happened to you. I'm at the doctor's office, and after a full check-up, the guy in the white coat lays it on me. "Well, Mr. Cavuto, you could afford to lose a few pounds."Point taken. But this doctor made me look like Brad Pitt! I mean the guy had to be at least 300 pounds! I kid you not. And he was as serious as a heart attack (apparently mine or his). Believe me, he wasn't telling me something I didn't know, but couldn't he have brought in his much thinner and much...
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<p>It's horrible enough what happened in Jerusalem on Tuesday. Yet sadly, innocents getting blown up there is an almost familiar, tragic sight on almost any day.</p>
<p>I want to focus on the other tragedy today.</p>
<p>I hope the rest of the world took a look at what happened in Baghdad (search) on Tuesday, because some of their own died today. Good people, trying to do good things in a bad place.</p>
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<p>It's horrible enough what happened in Jerusalem on Tuesday. Yet sadly, innocents getting blown up there is an almost familiar, tragic sight on almost any day.</p>
<p>I want to focus on the other tragedy today.</p>
<p>I hope the rest of the world took a look at what happened in Baghdad on Tuesday, because some of their own died today. Good people, trying to do good things in a bad place.</p>
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<p>There's more than a food fight going on in this country. It gets to the heart of something very wrong going on with this country. We are turning into a nation of babies. Not all of us, but enough of us, to make me worry about the whole lot of us.</p>
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Jewish World Review August 4, 2003 / 6 Menachem-Av, 5763 Neil Cavuto PHONY BALONEY! http://www.jewishworldreview.com | My father used to say, judge people not by the big things they say, but the little things they do. I wish he were around to see something startling I witnessed just the other night, while I was attending a financial event in New York City. Among the big chief executives and high-powered money managers in attendance was a prominent television anchor. I won't tell you his name, but I will tell you he talks often about small investors, about how he feels their...
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As a FOX News anchor, I get a good deal of e-mail -- some of it good, some of it bad. Some of it gets into substantive issues, a lot of it into anything but. It's the latter category that most intrigues and often amuses me. The comments can be nasty ("Your ego is as big as your head") and funny ("Of all the FOX anchors, you seem to be the least obnoxious, but you're still obnoxious").But occasionally I get particularly hurtful e-mail that even I must admit hits a chord. One concerned my wearing a flag pin each night...
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So the other day, I'm hearing former President Clinton bashing this big tax cut. He says it's a total waste, that it means an extra $80,000 for him, and he doesn't need it. He's rich enough as it is. Nowhere did I hear him say, "So, I'm going to give it back." Look, there are a lot of similarly rich guys, just like Mr. Clinton, who don't much fancy this tax cut. Warren Buffett thinks it's a travesty, and some Hollywood types are saying it will bust the deficit. So I'm thinking to myself, if you're so worried about the...
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<p>They say dead men tell no tales. It's a pity, because that means they can't respond to some pretty tall tales either.</p>
<p>Take John F. Kennedy, Jr. (search). He's dead, but he's alive and well in the press again thanks to Edward Klein's much talked about book, The Kennedy Curse: Why Tragedy Has Haunted America's First Family for 150 Years.</p>
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<p>Neil Cavuto was joined by Gregg Hymowitz, founder of Entrust Capital; Jim Rogers, president of JimRogers.com; Michelle Girard, vice president and Treasury specialist at Prudential Financial; Tom Dorsey, president of Dorsey Wright & Associates; and Lt. Col. Bill Cowan, FOX News military analyst.</p>
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<p>Have any of you been following the latest on JFK? It seems he had his way with a 19-year-old intern named "Mimi," and now "Mimi" has spoken out.</p>
<p>Marion Fahnestock (search), now 60 years old, tells the New York Daily News it's all true. That while she couldn't type, she could indeed do other things to catch the commander-in-chief's attention.</p>
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"This is a partial transcript from YOUR WORLD with Neil Cavuto that was edited for clarity"
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In a blistering commentary, Fox News star Neil Cavuto castigated New York Times liberal columnist Paul Krugman, after the radical liberal and Bush hater accused him of blatant partisanship. Said the gentlemanly and usually mild-mannered Cavuto "Since no good deed goes unpunished, leave it to The New York Times to take a shot at me. Not The Times itself, but columnist Paul Krugman, who blasts me for my apparent blatant partisanship." In his Times column Krugman wrote that "Neil Cavuto of Fox News is an anchor, not a commentator. Yet after Baghdad's fall he told ‘those who opposed the liberation...
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<p>Since no good deed goes unpunished, leave it to The New York Times to take a shot at me. Not The Times itself, but columnist Paul Krugman, who blasts me for my apparent blatant partisanship.</p>
<p>"Neil Cavuto of FOX News is an anchor, not a commentator. Yet after Baghdad's fall he told ‘those who opposed the liberation of Iraq’ -- a large minority -- that ‘you were sickening then; you are sickening now.’</p>
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<p>I have a question for those opposed to tax cuts: Why are they bad, but spending increases are okay?</p>
<p>You say tax cuts are like spending money we don't have. But you have no problem increasing spending on programs we don't want.</p>
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<p>Have you ever heard something that just so ticks you off, you have to respond?</p>
<p>Well, I have.</p>
<p>Some senator -- I don't even remember who – said this whole tax cut was irresponsible.</p>
<p>Irresponsible? To whom? To you? Because you can't spend the money? Or to us, because we can? Why is it reckless to give people their money back, but okay for you to keep it?</p>
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Paying the Ultimate Price Monday, April 28, 2003 By Neil Cavuto Sometimes it's easy to sit in an anchor chair and talk about a war. It's a lot more difficult being in that war, fighting in that war and for some, dying in that war. But there are many who protested this war. That was their right then. But I think it's wrong now. Yet it continues. And given the transition difficulties in Iraq, it is even picking up steam now. I think it borders on insulting now. Not only because the war clearly was a success. But because of...
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<p>I guess if you live long enough, you'll see everything. Some Hollywood types are complaining that they are being blacklisted. Yes, the "Land of the Left" feels left out, and all because of the war in Iraq.</p>
<p>Now, most of them opposed it. Even as most Americans supported it. And now some of these actors and actresses say they're suffering because of it.</p>
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<p>I remember reading this story years ago about a guy who was fired at work yet no one immediately around him knew it at the time. So he kept coming into work.</p>
<p>Every day at 9 a.m. sharp, he would take off his coat, neatly place it beside his desk, sit down and do his job -- making purchase orders, even attending meetings!</p>
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