or successful people would be at all hesitant to pay more or pay their fair share if there was a comprehens if they believed there was a comprehensive set of solutions on the table, if they thought, okay, we have a problem, i need to you pitch in. and here s how we are going to from all angles spending, revenues inefficiency, reform, we are going to knock this thing together and get it. that s not what is being said in france. it s not what is being said in california or in washington, which is, you pay us more. we are not fixing anything. and i don t think the entrepreneurial class buys that. neil: clearly not. three americans were killed in the attack in algeria. some of the weapons came from where? in america tay we re running out of a vital resource we need
reporter: on occasion, it is. however people do decide, if i am going to fly budget airlines, i want to be the king on the budget airlines. they are learning that people are willing to pay up. if i can get the baseline price, a better plies than on american or united or whatever it is, they know what they are paying for. but if you go and pay above that price for united, you figure you are going to get thrown in with all the rest. this might be a good strategy for southwest airlines neil: not if it chases its elite flyers away. reporter: you know what is funning? of all the testing the airlines do, the fees that most flyers are willing to pay more for is a warm meal. neil: really? reporter: people want air warm meal. that s the thing they miss. they miss getting served on their flights. neil: i know you are a health nut and you jog a thousand miles a day. but hello, sinna bon, they near
tell your doctor about other medicines yore taking. ll your doctoright away if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired, have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of rare but serious side effects. is your cholesterol at goal? talk to youdoctor about crestor. [ femalannouncer ] if you can t afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. neil: all right. i know i am pelting you with a lot of company earnings news. i doo so for a reason, with a pattern, with ibmr. and google s numbers, potentially a trend in the internet world. but ibm saying it s optimistic, things are looking better globally, making particular interest to asia. we go back and forth to say if china s slowing doub.
2012 will be one of the coldest years of the century. so the idea that they are focusing on a heat wave in australia, wob.5% of the earth and ignoring the global and trying to bring in every storm as a joiivegdz for spending literally trillions of dollars and turning over large portions of the economy to the international bureaucrats and calderon would love to be in charge of tens of trillions of dollars to do absolutely nothing to impact the weather or the climate because governments can t control the weather and the climate. neil: all right. we will watch closely. thank you very much. you know what the prevailing media says about this, but the overwhelming science supports this. but you should know, it is not all science. you should know that that record on global governments doing anything is not perfect. so even if you were to support such an initiative, look what you are putting your faith in. just out there.
have is fossile fuel. so the idea of putting solar panels instead of real infrastructure and running water and electricity and modern sewage and modern hospitals is insane. it is completely taking reality on its head neil: isn t that aren t they trying to take a look the cold blast is the latest reminder, it is 800 degrees below zero that this is the way to stop this. what do you think of that? they think they say in there they can stop future storms. they say they can stop the devastatingesques of global warming. the lower 48 they excluded alaska because they had a record cold year, very cold year in a 10-year decline of temperatures, but they claim the continental u.s. was the hottest on record. we are finding the 1930s is hotter with the unadjusted data. but globally, we haven t had a temperature rise, we are flat lining, 15, 16 years.