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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  November 7, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST

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(♪) our therapists give their all each day. and while we're in the business of taking care of others, it's important to make sure our therapists know that with benefits from principal, they're taken care of too. (♪) stuart: all right. good morning, everyone. it is 10:00 eastern. we're going to go straight to
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the money. nice gain for the nasdaq this morning, it's thousand up 60 points. -- now up 60 points. the 10-year treasury yield was at 4.63 earlier this morn, now it's 4.60. i guess that's a little progress that's helped the nasdaq. the price of oil, $78 a few minutes ago, $78.48 now. it's down. bitcoin, $34,000 and change earlier, 34,800 right now. that's the markets and now this. one year from the election this is political reality: biden's base is fracturing and shrinking, trump's base is solid and growing. let's start with that now-infamous new york times poll. 22 of black voters support -- 22% of black voters support trump. he only won 8% three years ago. if the vast majority of black voters do not support biden, biden can't win. biden's losing the hispanic vote
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as well. in arizona, michigan, nevada, pennsylvania, wisconsin, he leads trump by single digits. usually the hispanic vote is 30 poit points up for biden. people of color have given biden 70% of their vote, that was in 2020. the times' poll shows that's now down to 54%. that's for non-white voters without a college degree. young people, well, they've long soured on biden. 71% think he's just a too old. and then there's the jewish vote. usually at least 75% going to democrats. will they vote again for a party where a significant minority sides with theists, hamas? -- terrorists, hamassome a racial coalition put joe biden into the oval office. it's the falling apart. trump's picking up the pieces. despite all the court appearances and the frenzied, hysterical opposition in the media, he wins recent head to head matchups, he does. cbs news, trump leads, 51-48. the messenger, 51-49.
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this shows how solid trump's base is and that it is growing. the democrats know it. they can't win with a biden-harris ticket. that's why the most important political story is going to be how they get them out and who takes their place. second hour of "varney" just getting started. ♪ ♪ stuart: okay. will cain joining us morning. all right, will, difficult question, how do the democrats get biden out? if. >> probably by any means necessary. stuart: ooh. >> you know, stuart, everything you just laid out -- the breaking up biden coalition -- also doesn't take into account, not yet because it still lies out there lurking in the future, the role of a deep nationwide recession may play in the economy on incumbent president. on top of that, you have got the role of rfk jr. who in a lot of these polls is sucking away a
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huge part of the biden constituent city. add to that war in the middle east, and you don't even see the full impact in this polling yesterday of the world that looks like it will be coming in the next year and will lay at the doorstep of joe biden. so how do they get rid of him, to your question, or by any means necessary. what i mean by that, stuart, is i think what's defined democrats by almost eight, nine years is not so much support for any one candidate but, rather, just opposition to the donald trump. so if the threat is they will lose to the donald trump, they will imaginer every single -- martial every single possible means to undermine donald trump, court cases, media manipulation, just like 2020. but also that then weaponized against joe biden. so how do they do that? pressure him at the democratic national convention to turn over his delegates to some other candidate, pressure him at any point in the primaries to drop out. i don't know the answer, i just know it'll be by any means necessary. stuart: do you hold anything in this pure speculation that
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michelle obama will ride to the rescue, perhaps at the convention next year? do you put anything in that? >> you said anything, so i might put something in that. [laughter] because there are going to be searching for someone they they -- and, again, the definition will be who can beat donald trumping and i think the easy answer, well, the easy go to, the easy trial will be gavin newsom. i'm hugely skeptical of gavin newsom because of the record california. but, you know, i was on "the five" last week, and harold ford said to me every presidential election's essentially 48-48, so who's going the win that that final 3%? gavin newsom has a good physical look for winning that casual voter. he's really good at spinning, which means lying about his record in california. so i think they will try a guy like gavin newsom, but i'm going the guess if that fails, there's always that window into michelle obama being their next person hay think could win over that 3%. stuart: pure speculation on our part, but that's the way it is.
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it's fun covering politics like this. will cain, thank you very much. see you again real soon, you got it. thanks. >> thanks, stuart. stuart: top political strategists are sounding the alarm about biden's bad polling numbers. what do they say? is. lauren: there's so many, and the latest high profile strategist is dick morris who was an adviser to bill clinton. he told "the new york post," quote, biden has no path forward. to win. if you rook at the math and his polling numbers, he cannot do it. let's look at, again, the thy times poll. he's getting killed in the swing states. he's losing the youth vote and the minority vote. and then if you look at the states, michigan, a lot of arab-americans. one of their congresswomen, rashida tlaib, is telling americans that biden is supporting genocide. trump's already up by 5 points there, so or her saying that doesn't help biden. so this is what will cain was city saying, the belief used to be at least if we keep biden in the race, he can beat donald
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trump. but, obviously, that consensus view is fraying. stuart: yeah. we always come back to that question, how do they get him out and who do they replace him with, and we can't answer that question. it's pure speculation all the time, but has leading political story -- lauren: yeah. and the chorus is growing louder from those insiders or that it might be time for somebody else. stuart: thanks, lauren. back to the markets, please. green across the board. nasdaq up nearly 60, the dow has turned positive. st the up 6 points. scott shellady with me now. uber reported this morning. the stock turned around. it was down a fraction, then it moved up, thousand it's dead flat. now it's do dead flat. what's your ideas on uber this morning? >> well, i got a message from 'em about, i don't know, a month ago saying i'm a 10- year uber rider whichst the gone by quickly, and i use it a lot it's a good company. they obviously broke the mold. it's a game-changer. and i'm always skeptical of analyst expectations, stuart. and i think sometimes you are
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too about expectations period because they came out, and they grew with. they made money. they missed expectations on top and bottom line by just a little bit percentage terms wise, and they get punished for that? that's why analysts don't run companies, because they couldn't. [laughter] they'd also by saying on the other hand or the other hand. i think that uber's results were just fine and away we go. and i think that maybe the market is coming to that realization here now. stuart: we had an analyst on show, we rarely have pure analysts on the show. we put him on just before out 3r goes doing go to -- going to go to $66 a share, and at that point it did bump up a little wit. let me turn toward housing. you say housing is starting to see some cracks. is that -- give me, prices are beginning to come down in some places? >> well, there's only two things that can happen to help housing, right? interest rates come down or prices come down, right?
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and it doesn't rook like interest rates are going to come down anytime soon even though everybody got out a little bit over their skis with those implosion in rates which i thought was going to be a memory thing. but redfin say, you know, it looks like these 2021 expectations of house prices where people are putting them on for those old prices, that's starting to hoe signs. one of the two things that happens in price, sellers come down or interest rates come down. it looks as though sellers are beating them to the punch and starting to lower prices if they want to sell. if they don't lower their prices, stuart, bottom line is these interest rates aren't going anywhere, and even if it comes down to 6.5 or 7%, that's not going to change anybody's mind. those things are going to be on the market for a long time and get really steal. -- stale. stuart: the brutal reality of the housing market, and you brought it right to us. >> i'm sorry. stuart: tell the truth, you do, you do. thank you very much, indeed.
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scott shellady, see you again soon. lauren's got the movers, and i'm intrigued at data dog up 27- lauren: can we make it 28? this is amazing. so many security breaches. so businesses are turning to the cybersecurity solutions, and data dogs provides that. just to give you some metrics, their earnings grew by 95% on the year. they almost doubled their earning, and revenue grew by a quarter. stuart: i've never engaged one of these cybersecurity companies, but it you co, do they offer some kind of guarantee? lauren: that's a question. stuart: take my program, and you ain't going to be the hacked. they can't say that. lauren: no, because more often than not we are seeing companies that invest a lot of money in cybersecurity, mgm, get hacked. stuart: exxonmobil -- lauren: yeah, oil lower. down around 2%. oil prices are down 2% at
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two-and-a-half month lows. some hixed economic data out of -- mixed economic out of china. stuart: dr horton. lauren: good quarter. they're benefiting because they sell new homes, and new homes are expensive and there are, like, no existing homes on the market. no invenn story, e high rates, a lot of people are buying new homes. the one thing dr horton's doing is they're actually starting to make smaller new homes to keep the price more affordable for those that are struggling. stuart: what's this about a potential maybe relaunching of ftx? lauren: 2.0, can it be? yeah. there are tree bidders, reportedly -- three bidders. paragraph that the silicon valley investment firm is said to have approached other investors to join their bid for ftx. also reportededly a fin-tech company and a vc firm. can ftx bet a send act? i'm going to go with yes, because you have millions of customers that ftx did business
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with, and a lot of them are still bullish on cryptocurrency. stuart: crypto's done well. etherium in particular. i got my money back out of etherium. lauren: look at that. stuart: coming up, it's election day in 37 statements today including virginia -- states. if governor youngkin can hold the house and flip the senate, maybe he'll run for president maybe in 2028, who knows? we've got a report on that. and bret baer will go through all the big races to watch today. bret joins me next. ♪ trading at schwab is now powered by ameritrade, unlocking the power of thinkorswim, the award-winning trading platforms. bring your trades into focus on thinkorswim desktop with robust charting and analysis tools, including over 400 technical studies. tailor the platforms to your unique needs with nearly endless customization.
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stuart: has it all turned green yet? almost. nasdaq up 50, dow still down 9 points. show me big tech, please. earlier they were all up. they're still all up. amazon, 141. met a, 318. look at alphabet, 130. bottom of that list. it's election day in virginia, and republicans hope to flip the senate in their favor while holding on to the their majority in the house. alexandria hoff in virginia for us. could the election serb as a 2024 consider -- serve as a 2024 bellwether? >> reporter: stu, it could also serve as a referendum for governor glenn youngkin. he's not on the ballot today, but his legislative priorities certainly are. all 140 seats of virginia's general assembly, they are up for grabs. republicans have control of the house of delegates, as you mentioned, the democrats have a slim criminal of the senate. if they were to obtain control, it would insure the passage of youngkin's agenda on education,
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taxes, public safety and i abortion. the governor's been heavy on the campaign trail. >> listen, let me just ask you a question, do you feel it? [cheers and applause] you can feel the spirit of virginia washing over the commonwealth. you can feel it in loudon county. folks, it's real. >> reporter: losen concern loudoun county, that's one of those hotly connest thed districts, areas where this race will really come down. democrats are forcing on abortion. virginia is the only southern state without significant restrictions right now. governor young kin is seeking a 15-week limit with exceptions. >> abortion is absolutely on the lewin, you know? access to books -- on the line. insuring that we've got some common sense gun reform, issues that, you know, are affecting our lives are indeed decided. >> reporter: you know, this election is also a test for republicans and their willingness to vote early. governor youngkin's pac invested heavily in a campaign the
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destigmatize it. >> so we went work to get republicans off the sidelines. i can tell you that it has worked. we have seen really strong early voting turnout particularly in our battle ground districts. >> reporter: this weekend you had maryland's democratic governor wes moore, he came to advocate and campaign for democrat candidates here in the commonwealth. you also have the and vice president, they have endorsed nearly two dozen democratic candidates. stuart? stuart: alex, thanks very much, indeed. look who's with me now, bret baier joins us. all right, bret -- [laughter] you're with on. >> caught me reading. stuart: that happened to me just the other day, i was on my phone. [laughter] when that kind of hinge happens, you smile. and you've got a great smile. >> exactly. stuart: yeah. if hay flip if senate and hold the house in virginia, does glenn youngkin, governor
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youngkin, he has a vehicle to present his campaign for 2028. am i reading it right? >> no, you're reading it right. it definitely is a possibility. and he's got a lot of backers out there this morning that want him in the race. however, it is the getting pretty late. there are already some state ballots that he's missed deadline on, and there are others that he would have to really gin up an operation to get on those ballots. and that's just a logistical thing. as far as and money and support, he could do it. and, yes, if he wins the state senate and holds on to the house virginia, that is the vehicle by which to do it. stuart: what are the other big races that you're following of real importance? >> well, i think that that one is the ohio race about the constitutional add to their state constitution protecting abortion rights. listen, i think there are a couple of races here where abortion -- and and virginia's one of them -- it'll tell us
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whether it's still as prevalent as it was in 2022 just after roe v. wade was overturned. there's a couple governors' races that are interesting in kentucky and mississippi. they should go republican, the incumbent democrat governor in kentucky could have trouble with a republican challenger, and the republican in mississippi should hold on. but there you see david cameron, he is at least the latest polls going in, he was right there, my and tuck. we'll see how that race in kentucky comes out. stuart: looking ahead to 2024, seems to me the democrats are fractured. they want biden and harris out because they don't think they can win with that ticket. but i've asked everybody who appear ifs on the show how do they get them out, and who do they replace biden-harris ticket with. do you have any answers for this, bret? [laughter] >> i have no answer as to that, or stuart, and i don't think democrats coeast. they're in, like, a five-alarm
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fire. of that new york times/sienna poll over the weekend showing former president donald trump beating president biden in five of six swing states sent chills down the democratic circles here in washington. and i agree that there is this hope is and prayer that somehow heir going to get a different ticket,s but the mechanics, the logistics of how that happens, no one has explained to me either. one way is to, percent president to eventually step -- for the president to eventually step out and that democrats find their candidate at the convention. that is a possibility. it's a long shot, but it is a possibility because democrats have the mechanics, supersell gates -- superdelegates, etc., where they could do that. stuart: that's where the speculation about michelle obama comes in, doesn't it? convention next year. i don't want you to speak to that, bret. i'm going to leave you out of that particular speculation. [laughter] tomorrow the third republican debate with, five candidates qualified. seems to me lakest it's a race
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for -- like it's a race for second place. what say you. >>some. >> i think you're right. clearly, the former president has a big lead. nikki haley in the center seat now has had a couple of good debates and a couple of good times campaigning and seems very comfortable in this moment, obviously, with the focus on foreign policy and what's happening in israel. and with hamas. i think this'll be interesting for her if she has another good night what that means, you know, if it jump-starts that campaign in the swing states. ron desantis with a big endorsement of iowa governor kim reynolds. logistically, he's essentially living in iowa now because that's his path to getting to the that second alternative 130. but right now the former president, stuart, is in the driver's seat. stuart: this is one of the host enjoyable times in my life to be a part of the political process. i find it absolutely fascinating. 2024 is going to be an extraordinary year and we will, of course, be polling this on
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"special report," weekdays on fox news channel at 6 p.m. eastern. bret, thanks for joining us, sir. appreciate it. >> thank you. stuart: democrat senator john fetterman taking a dig at a california governor began newsome. -- gavin newsom. ashley, morning to you. what's this all about? ashley: it's interesting, fetterman accusing newsom of basically running a presidential campaign against president biden without actually making it official, without announcing it. we talk about the it a lot. he was speaking at an event in iowa, and he said, look, there are two democrats running for president right now in addition to joe biden, noting congressman dean phillips of minnesota announced to challenge last month but said newsom doesn't have the guts, he says, to actually make it official. newsome, as we know, has repeatedly said i'm not going to run for the white house in 2024. even if mr. biden does not pursue a re-election bid. but that said, the california governor has taken steps to boost his public profile, just
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recently meeting with chinese president xi. as they say, stu,if it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck do, governs like a duck then it's probably a duck. [laughter] stuart: i love that line, that was a good one. thank you, ashley. ashley: sure. stuart: i'm changing the subject here. difficult subject to turn to. a jewish man has died after a confrontation with pro-pal seven january protesters. we have the latest on the investigation. the police are calling it homicide. american troops in iraq and syria have attacked 38 times in just three weeks. why is nobody talking about this? texas senator ted cruz deals with that next. ♪ ♪
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golo gave me back my life, and that's why i'm here. (announcer) change your life at golo.com. that's golo.com. stuart: still the same pattern of trading this morning although the rally has improved a little. the nasdaq's now up close to the 100, the dow's up 36. i want to know what's happening with tesla, it's down? lauren: down nearly 1%. so i have good news for for you. if you look at insurance registrations in china, they rose by 30% last week -- stuart: for tesla. lauren: yep. and now there's indications on various channels that tesla's going to the increase prices on
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the model y that it sells in china. that would imply their margins have bottomed, and that's good news if people are buying a lot of teslas and the prices are getting more expensive. good news for investors, yet the stock is lower. stuart: they're not taking that news like they should. what is vivid seats? lauren: it's a marketplace where you can buy concert tickets and football tickets and any sort of tickets. more orders were placed on the platform, stock is up 7%, so they boostedded their outlook for this year and for next year. entertainment. we're buying in to entertainmen. stuart: can you get taylor swift tickets on -- lauren: i believe you can. stuart: not sure: producers? all right. we've got sonos. lauren: down 7%. the speaker people. bank of america downgraded hem to neutral. price target of 12 which was down from 20. they do channel checks, and they just found that we're looking to save money, we're not spending as much on electronics.
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stuart: thank you, lauren. the administration plans a $320 the million weapons transfer to israel. edward lawrence at the white house. is this in response to the increased attacks on u.s. troops in the middle east? >> reporter: not this specifically. this is aid that was going to help the israelis in their to financive. fox news has confirmed that number, 320 million, of precision-guided bombs going to the israelis that could be used, dropped out of airplanes. israel defense forces will use these to go after the hamas tunnels which, you know, to limit the casualties around. these bombs can play a big role. this as iranian proxies continue to hit u.s. a targets in the middle east. all the attacks have not been officially linked to iran yet. still, since october 17th, 38 american sites have been struck with 46 u.s. service members hurt in those attacks. if. >> as for who's responsible, i think while we can't pinpoint a certain group on a certain day
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at this point, obviously these attackses are all coming from these militia groups that are backed by the irgc, the revolutionary guard corpses, in tehran. we know that for a fact and, again, we'll do what we have to do to to defend our troops and facilities. >> reporter: the u.s. has responded to the attacks by hitting two proxy sites in syria and iraq. some house republicans say the administration needs to paul more forcefully against iranian proxies. >> how do how you negotiate a ceasefire with a group of terrorists that literally cut the throats of babies? and that rape women and take defenseless civilians and americans as well hostage? this whole thing is just convoluted. the only way we're going to negotiate this is with the israelis at the end of the barrel of a gun. >> reporter: the secretary of state, antony blinken, running around the middle east talking to partners there, listening to their concerns about hows israel is carrying out the ground
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operation. stu? stuart: edward, hanks very much, indeed. joining us now, senator ted cruz, republican from the great state of texas. mr. senator, always good to see you. >> stuart, good morning. stuart: we've seen 38 attacks on u.s. forces in three weeks. our response is to move more troops in the area. is that a strong enough response, in your opinion? >> of course it's not. and we are seeing the consequences of a weak and ineffective commander in chief. joe biden came into office three years ago, and he inherited peace and prosperity. and you look at what has happened across the globe, we right now have the largest land war this europe since world war ii, israel has faced the most significant attack, the worst attack in 50 years, we have a major war in the middle east. every enemy of america is stronger. and you look at these 38 attacks, these 38 attacks came from iran. you know who paid for the drones that are being used to attack u.s. soldiers?
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stuart: we did. >> that would be jo biden and the biden administration -- joe biden and the administration that that has flowed nearly $100 billion to iran. i would start with a very simple proposition, don't give money to terrorists who want to kill you. this is the something the white house does not seem to the understand. stuart we're not talking about this because it seems like we're worried of provoking iran. if we do something, all hell breaks loose, the war will be expanded. that's why we're not talking about it, right? >> look, this president and this administration has approached our enemies from weakness. there is a reason that nobody goes and studies foreign policy at the nell chamberlain -- neville chamberlain school of porn affairs. [laughter] appeasement doesn't work, and this president, this democrat party doesn't understand that. and they're approach -- what was their approach? right after hamas death squads murder 1400 israelis, rape women and little girls, decapitate and
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burn alive infants, what was the biden administration's response? we're going to send $100 million to gaza that'll go straight to that -- hamas. that is insanity. sop the sending money to people who are killing not only our allies, but killing americans. look, october 7th, 31 americans were murdered. that was not only the worst attack on israel and the worst mass murder in a single day of j is ews in day since the holocaust, it is also one of the worst terror attacks in history on the united states. 31 americans were murdered that day, a z dozen americans are still hostages from these animals. and this, these are vicious monsters. i'm sorry. anyone that puts a baby this an oven, has literally what these death squads did. those are mat city tactics, and they're the -- nazi tactics, and they were doing that simply because they're jew sr.. -- jews. and yet the administration has
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funded it, has enabled it. and since this war started, they've undermined the government of israel significantly including going to israel and saying you need a, quote, humanitarian pause which is asking israel do not try to kill the terrorists, do not try to take out hamas. that makes no sense. stuart: got it. you've got a new the book out that comes out this week, i believe. it's called "unwoke: how to defeat cultural marxism in america." tell us more about this, but the words cultural marxism, that seems to me to be a little strong. tell me where i'm gong wrong on this. going wrong on this. >> the book with comes out actually today, so it is available in every book sore in america today. you can get it on amazon right now. and it explaining or you know, stuart, many people -- we look around the country and wonder what the hell's going on. stuart: yeah, we do. >> because it seems like the country has gone mad, that in particular our major institutions one after the other
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has been captured be by the radical left. and this book explains how and why that happened, and it lays out a battle plan. it starts in the university, the first if chapter in the book is the university which i call the wuhan lab of the woke virus. st it's where the virus was created, it's where it mutated, it's where it spread. and i describe the history of marxists going to the faculties of the elite universities starting in the '60s and '70s. and from there it spread. each chapter of the book takes on a different institution. so i go from universities to k-1 the education, to journalism, to big business, to big tech, to entertainment, to movies and television and sports and music, to science. and let's take, for example, big business. look, you focus on business a lot. stuart: yep. >> the chapter on big business, i number one discuss, you know, ten years ago if i would have suggested to you that fortune
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100 companies would become the economic enforcers of a left-wing agenda, you would have said that's crazy. stuart: i would. >> that doesn't headache any sense at all. and yet now we're seeing company after company after company engaging in politics. and so i describe, for example, when bank of america and citi the group both -- citigroup both put out announcements saying they would refuse to provide banking services to retailers unless they complied with their own preferred gun control policies -- mind you, not policies adopted by congress. and i describe in the book in the chapter on big business, i describe the leadership for bank of america that came to my if office -- stuart: okay. >> and they put in place a policy -- stuart: i'm sorry -- >> yeah. stuart: i'm terribly sorry, mr. senator. i've got a hard break coming up, and i would never cut senator the ted cruz off, but i've got to say good-bye. i'm going to buy the book. thank you, sir. more "varney" after this.
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stuart: well, i just thought i'd point this out to you, microsoft at the moment is on pace for a record close, 360 per share, up 3.91. thousand this, brandeis university in massachusetts, the first private college to ban the students for justice in palestine group on campus. lydia hu with me now. why's the university doing that? >> reporter: they say the student group is problematic because they're encouraging misconduct. their behind many of the anti-israel demonstrations on college campuses. you often hear them chanting from the river to the sea which means, of course, we understand eliminating israel. the university's president explained why he's eliminating sjp prosecute campus yesterday. quote, universities cannot stop hate peach, but they can sop paying for it. brandeis will insure that groups that receive privileges through their affiliations with the
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university including using its name will lose their affiliations and privileges while they spew hate. now, the brandeis chapter of students for justice in palestine called the banning racist and against the values of brandeis university. some context here, brandeis is a private secular university, that means not religious. it was pounded by the american jewish -- founded by the american jewish community back in 1948 to combat anti-semitism and bigotry in higher egg. jewish students across the country are preparing to sue elite universities. the lead attorney el thing fox business that what is happening on college campuses is not a test of free speech, it's discrimination. watch in this. >> this is the about protecting students from discrimination, harassment and insuring hair physical safety. -- their physical safety. you know, these schools despite their gigantic endowments get hundreds of millions of collars in taxpayer money.
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if you get federal funds, then you have to comply withal law. >> reporter: so there's the issue, free speech versus discrimination, stuart. we're going to follow it. stuart: that's the issue, isn't it? where do you draw that line? >> reporter: we might hear from a court. stuart: good stuff, lydia. rabbi, welcome back to the program. not seen you in many years. are we doing enough to sop anti-semitism on campus? >> of course not. i became the rabbi at oxford university in 1988, and i was the first to witness the tsunami of anti-israel hatred that began at the elite universities. back then it was only in europe. we brought six israeli prime ministers to respond to it, and is we gal vannized the students -- galvanized the students. but i would never have believed what's happening now. how can we possibly say we're doing enough? this is a disgrace, that the world's concern america's best university, harvard, has
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students that are openly siding with baby beheaders, openly siding with pregnant women dis'em boulders? -- 'em bowellers? i believe any student who openly supports terrorism on campus must be expelled by the universities for moral turpitude. if you can't condemn murder, what the hell are you doing at a university? stuart: okay, rabbi. what should be done with rashida tlaib who links president biden to general -- genocide? what should we do with her? she's right mt. middle of congress. >> by the way, president biden has a number of jewish grandchildren, he has a jewish daughter-in-law. it's a disgrace to call him someone who enables genocide, especially when he's really had israel's back. let's call rashida tlaib who she is, she is american taliban. let me repeat that, a rashida tlaib is american taliban.
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she is a fifth column in the united states congress whose purpose it is to destroy the united states congress. look, when we had the insurrection of january 6th, people were outraged how could we do this assault on the nation's capitol. i understand that. but what if it's done from withinsome why is that okay? -- within? why is that the okay? when you have american lawmakers who were, who sit in the seats of the founderses of this nation, who are there to stop even thety think of george iii who just wanted to the tax our tea, what would they be saying about those who want to support the -- stuart: exactly. you're right again. rabbi, i'm sorry to interrupt you. you're right again, and we appreciate you coming back on the program. hope to see you again soon. >> god bless you. stuart: cohost of "the view," ana navarro, doesn't think democrats should be concerned about biden's pool polling. -- poor polling. sounds like she's in denial. brian kilmeade will deal with that next. ♪ you better work, work.
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from hennion & walsh. if you have at least 10,000 dollars to invest, call and talk with one of our bond specialists at 1-800-217-3217. we'll send you our exclusive bond guide, free. with details about how bonds can be an important part of your portfolio. hennion & walsh has specialized in fixed income and growth solutions for 30 years, and offers high-quality municipal bonds from across the country. they provide the potential for regular income... are federally tax-free... and have historically low risk. call today to request your free bond guide. 1-800-217-3217. that's 1-800-217-3217. stuart: it's almost 10:51 on the eastern seaboard of these here united states, and that means it's time for brian kilmeade who
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will miraculously appear. there you go. we've been talking about biden's bad polling numbers. listen to what the ladies of "the view" had to say about that. >> democrats need to the stop fretting, need to stop looking at it as a warning and look at it as a wake-up call to organize, to the mobilize, to register people, to the talk about the accomplishments of this administration. if you want to beat donald trump, stop clutching your pearls and get to work with. stuart: well, brian, what do you say to that? is she in denial, perhaps? how can you be in denial in a five-alarm fire? >> true. make it a six-alarm, if they have six alarms. ana navarro's supposed to be republican by the way. fascinating. the problem with get to work is your candidate can't. stuart: that's right. >> can't speak, has terrible policies. everything he's touched has blown up. and it's not like -- there's unfortunate things like tornadoes, natural disaster, wars that are none of your doing, if canada, for example, was attacked, we'd have to the
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defend them, and that would change everyone's agenda. but what has happened all his doing -- you make the point of israel, if we don't blow up the abraham awards, start going up to iran and say go sell some oil, we're going to stop the total pressure campaign, if we don't let them do that, they don't finance hamas. if we actually show them that ukraine will fight for themselves and and got them weapons ahead of time, they would not have been invaded. if we didn't slow walk, there wouldn't have been 550 days of ongoing struggle. there wouldn't be a collapse at the border if he wasn't determined to the reverse all of donald trump's policies. so he is responsible. and he does not have barack obama or bill clinton's ability to communicate. and i'll add something else to this. the only ab tactic they have is what barack obama used his second term. hay made mitt romney look like the worst person on the planet, and he's not. that's what they're doing to
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donald trump. maga is republicans when want to the headache america great again. they're going to hurt you with this, and what's worse is "60 minutes" is compliance, "the washington post." donald trump too will be nothing but revenge. really? where'd that come from? it came from the city yen ma poll. and they're a pannishing, and they're all -- panicking, and they're all in against it. he's there's twitter that will play it fair. stuart: check the subject and talk about your new book because i know it's out today. teddy and booker t., how two american icons blazed a path for racial equality. all right, brian, tell me briefly how booker t. and tedty improved our country. >> well, number one, it's on fox nation, an hour. i think it's the best special i was ever a part of. we've been shooting it for the last year, great produce or. but i just wanted the ache a guy that was -- take a guy that was born a slave until he was 9 and how he became one of the most important people of any generation and how he did it through education. and how a black man born a slave
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ends up winning over people like teddy roosevt and made them partners to make america a better place. and before you take a knee before a football game or take a knee before a u.s. world cup game, maybe you should think about those men and women who combined together to make america a better place in the jim crow south. i don't tell you that the poll taxes weren't real, i just tell you how people overcame it by working together. and these are two unbelievable stories that nobody forecasted they'd even be successful, let as well be such an impact player for maybe all-time great americans. i just wanted to bring that out. stuart: well, i think one thing that should be brought out is that booker t. believed in a meritocracy, not in what we have today, the equity and you automatically do this, that and the other because of the color of your skin. now, the book is out today, is that correct, brian? >> yeah. it's out today. i'm going to be in red bank, new jersey, on tuesday and talking about all the books in a
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patriotic, motivation al way. this one, people need to know. i want people to know the progress we made and the great people that pulled us that direction. and by winning people over by their actions, not by their activism, by educating and teaching the trade and teaching and combining that with education to tell everyone, america, black, white, asian, it doesn't matter. just go in and compete. and he helped level the playing field for general races. stuart: we've got a constitution, that's right. brian, good luck with the book. great to see you. we'll see you again soon, i promise. >> go yet 'em, stuart. stuart: still ahead, jimmy failla on am rack joe handing out $16 billion for railroads when the world's on fire and he's heading to defeat next year. deroy murdock on donald trump gaining support with black voters. jason rantz on students in seat -- the in seattle being checked when they go to the bathroom for ids.
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