look, if you re a parent you may be more likely to keep your kids home from school. you may be more likely to cancel play dates. but also for hospitals, they could be anticipating more patients coming in. so leading more surge capacity more beds available, having more medications, flu vaccine, things like that on standby. by this is sort of where we re headed with regard to predicting when it s going to get really bad. all right. sanjay thank you for that. back with me dr. fauci. so we haven t even hit the peak of flu season yet. if i m a parent of a young child, because children have been especially prone to this this season, i m saying how bad can it get? well you don t know poppy. you really can t predict. it certainly is going to be a significant season. it s not going to be it s certainly worse when you look at the tracking than it was last year. it tracks a little bit more on the 2012/2013 season. but one of the things that you can do is that even if you don t know when it
here s what s happening. gm is recalling more than 90,000 vehicles due to a problem with ignition locks. the republican $2 million due to ignition switches. flu is at epidemic levels. house politicians up 35 percent compared to the 2012/2013 season. mario cuomo has died at the age of 82. he passed away after his son. the inauguration. back to lock up. in charleston, south carolina, 27,000 men and women a year are booked into the sheriff al cannon detention center.
your individual taxes and in fact, in the last three years, it has been very good for states. last year states collected more than $309 billion on individual income taxes, and that is 10% more than the states received the year before, and in this cash, it is crucial, because the income taxes make up more than one-third of total state revenues. i am joined by the washington post reed wilson who analyzed all of the census data, and reed, why are we seeing the increase recently? well, two reasons. first of all, coming out of the economic recession, and the recovery has been good for income incomes as the incomes have gotten stronger, so have the tax revenues, and the second has to do with the fiscal cliff from back in 2012/2013, and a lot of the wealthier individuals took their income out of the market, and took it out of the market before the fiscal cliff hit, because they thought they would have to pay more taxes after the cliff hit, so that the money taken out of the market ended up
all eyes on washington this week as president obama s set to deliver his state of the union address tuesday night. so what can we expect him to say? joining us as the host of fox news sunday, chris wallace received a copy of the full state of the union address. chris, can you read it for us now? i feel like i have received a brief copy because i read last year s address the other day and it sounds from what everyone is saying to be the same. a lot of talk about ladders of opportunity to the middle class. that s the key to growing the economic engine, not to say that s not an important message, but it is basically the message the president delivered in 2012/2013 and it appears in 2014. what will he say about the affordable care act? i m curious to see what he says that, will it be a success or a down play? what s your sense of that? it s a very good yes and i m
the divers in the water taking pictures when the whales came to the surface and chase something food. the diver said he thought he was going to get hit by the massive tail. i worked my way over to the boat. got up on the back of it as soon as i could. the other guys said they had never seen me swim that fast before and i can see now why as i watched the video. i can imagine that. he said the whales were so close, he could have touched them. college students may be going deeper into debt. mom and dad are cutting back at the same time. jackie is with us moving your money. details of a new survey here, jackie, that finds cash-strapped parents can t contribute as much. that s absolutely right. it s a time when tuition costs are rising and kids look to their parents for help but the bank of mom and dad seems to be closed. on average, parents contributing just under 6,000 for each kid in the 2012/2013 academic year and down from the 30% that the nearly 9,000 they were shelling