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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  December 5, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EST

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>> the bottom line is we can see the end of the finish line
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for the federal reserve. if they have to cut rates in march or say february, that means they've made a bilge mistake and the economy is in free fall. >> we want to free gaza from hamas and minimizing civilian casualties and we're doing this for you in america and for the entire west. >> there's no reason to end fossil fuels and makes no sense whatsoever. if you want to tack on nuclear development, i am all for the nuclear side. >> the boondoggles and we'll be dead in ten years and so for all the spending, there'd be significant reductions in co2 and temperature. stuart: the more you play tom petty, the happier i am. >> agree. he'd be canceled for not saying
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american them. lookout for the state here, stu. look out for the estate. we love petty. stuart: jimmy failla joining us in a few minutes. it's 11:00 eastern time and tuesday, december 5. nas dock is up 92 -- nasdaq up 92 points. show me big tech. it was something of a mixed picture. no, now they're all in the green. apple up 194, beat that. alphabet 132, amazon 147 and microsoft up $2, 371 and meta 320. where's the 10-year treasury yield in is it down? it's down. maybe that's helping the nasdaq. 417 on the ten year. and bitcoin a standout this wee. 42,200 per coin. wow. now this. this week, republican candidates for the presidency will be on full display. president biden will not. this week is a window on how the 2024 campaign is going to look.
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for the republicans, it's hey, look at me. i've got something to say. i'm out there looking for your vote. biden is the opposite. don't look at me. i'm in the basement, and please don't listen to what i say, especially if i mumble or go off prompter. start with trump. tonight at 9:00 eastern he does a town hall with sean hannity on fox. friendly encounter? yes, it is. sean did very well in the desantis newsom debate keeping them both in line. trump won't miss this opportunity to present his candidacy forcefully. on wednesday, four other candidates take the debate stage in alabama. desantis, haley, ramaswamy and christie. it's their chance to break out, they'll not be bashful. biden will spend the week raising money and largely out of sight. today he has three campaign receptions otherwise known as fundraisers in boston. tomorrow, a campaign reception in dc. friday more fundraising in los s angeles and make remarks to tribal leaders at the white house and handing out money,
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friday helldiver remarks in las vegas, don't know if the remarks will be public. that is a very thin public schedule, and he could be sure his handlers will be on high alert to avoid any impromptu remarks, gaffes, stumbles, any example of come peak spltive decline. one bad slip would be a disaster. what a contrast for the republican. president under wraps and gop out front. this is the way it's going to b. quite simply, the president is incapable of active campaigning. does anyone believe joe biden can be president for another five years? third hour of varney starts now. stuart: aforementioned jimmy failla making hides mark on tom petty is with us now. was i too harsh?
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>> no, you're speaking to the obvious truth. joe biden is the president with the public appearance schedule of a ground hog. we should be predicting seasons based on his appearances. the democrats are -- this is very telling what you just said. okay, we are in the midst of an election, okay. prior incumbents, trump and obama spent about 12 times as much money as biden, did 50 times as many appearances. the democrats in an election year are treating an incumbent president the way gavin newsom treated all the homeless when xi jinping came to san francisco. they're sweeping him out of the way because they don't want people to see the problem, okay. they're playing a pretty thin defense with the president. this is a conversation we have and i don't want to make the segment about me or national syndicated talk show fox across america listening to weekdays noon to 3:00. this is a k we've seen never a president in such scarce supply. if you tell people you saw biden at an event, they treat you like you met big foot.
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he saw joe biden. what was he doing, swimming with the loch ness monster. was elvis there? stuart: can he be president another five years? >> no, not even another five minutes. gavin newsom wouldn't be on our air and hannity gets credit and people watching olekowski home need to know and this came up at my standups over the weekend. i can't believe you give gavin newsom a platform on fox. we want democrats on fox and we want this election to be about ideas and we'll win. the election about name calling and super official culture war garbage they're good autoand if it's about helping the country in the election, we're winning. bring them down. stuart: the story the audience wants to hear about from you. oxford university, the people that public the oxford dictionary, they announced the word of the year is rizz, r-i z z. as a noun, style, charm, attract
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triness. as a verb, seduce or chat someone up. use rizz in a necessary not including me. >> no, slipping the $20 under my office door today said it would help if i mentioned you. it's clear the viewers at home are being treated to three gentlemen with a lot of rizz. the rizz meter is off the charts between the un and mike. for different reasons. you're brilliant, cute and charming. i appeal to the chubby chaser crowd. okay, mike is the next level thing. he belongs in some type of sitcom. shouldn't be onset with you and me. i mean it. there should be a curve. he's being shown in hi-def and i'm being shown in standard deaf. honestly, i've complained to my agents about the booking -- kidding, i love you. i said, me, you and mike. mike, stuart and mai mai have at of rizz. we're off to see the rizzard, the wonderful rizzard -- you
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brought up the oxford dictionary because you think i need to read the dictionary more. stuart: it's a way to get to your book. >> damn right it is. it's called the cancel culture dictionary. if one of you buys this, it would believe double my sales i kid. you'd like it. weaponnized censorship and we police comedians harder than we police the streets and cancel a lot of super official things like american communities and the problem in the native american community is not the half-time show. there's a lot of problems and that's not one of them. i'm trying to show people a way back to a time when fun was legal where we didn't police sources of joy for grievance. that's the point. a war on fun. producing comedy in the movies. stuart: the cancel culture dictionary out today.
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>> preorder foxnewsbooks.com. >> i'm buying that for sure. >> i was strictly told on the way out here, stu gets a cut. whatever. all right, i agreed to the terms. stuart: come back soon. you're the best. >> thanks. stuart: getting to the markets, dow is down only 60 and nasdaq is nicely higher about 100 points. mike murphy with me this morning. is this rally going to pick back up for the end of the year? >> amazon selling jimmy's book, that stock will really move. stuart, no, the rally really took a pause but this is real. this is moving -- i think there's a lot more to this rally than people are giving credit for. you hear the overused expressio- stuart: why? why does it deserve more credit? >> because, you know, we're so used to finding the negative. we're so used to saying, well, interest rates and what's going to stop this rally? the rally isn't real. the rally is only seven companies. how many times have you heard that on the air?
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the rally is real, the market is moving higher, the indexes are moving higher and i think if you look at the underlying economy, we're in a position to really push into a very strong q1 of next year, which means even higher prices still. so i would say people need to -- yes, you want to look for potential negatives, but right now there's a lot of potential positives out there as interest rates come down. stuart: we should always be fully invested in stocks? almost always? >> almost fully invested. you should always be in the market. tries to time one when to get in or get out or when the fed will hike or when the fed will cut or whether this company has good earnings this quarter or bad this quarter, you'll pay a lot of tax but you'll get it wrong ultimately. aside from hanging out with you and jimmy, i love being here so that the viewers will get a sense of rather than trying to pick the ins and outs, if you invest your money and look back over the last 150 years, your money has a very funny way of doubling every seven years. that's a good return. stuart: you got it right.
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you're with me for the hour. stay with there, please. turn to ashley, who i want to look at coin base, which is surging. what's going on, ash? ashley: it is, up nearly 4%. talking about bitcoin earlier and bitcoin rallying and because of that, the tide rising all stocks and also it doesn't hurt that needum lifting coin base to a buy from $160 $120 and now at $146 and that firm viewing coin base as "attractive way to play the growing crypto asset universe". stock up 3.6%. next up is tesla. car insurance registrations in china continue to pick up. it's putting the company by the way on pace to reach the best ever quarterly deliveries and saw more than 17,000 tesla insurance registrations in china just last week alone. that stock up more than 4%. and then we are going to take a look at cvs. they're on every corner in
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america and revamping the way that they price their prescription drugs and the company will bring more transparency and simplicity to its drug pricing system. the new approach, it's called cvs costvantage and using a form thanksgiving la including cod -- formula including the cost of the drug and markup and reimbursement with the pharmacy benefit managers expected to launch in 2025 and the stock itself up nearly 3.5%. stu. stuart: ash, got it, thanks very much. coming up, san diego county considering spending $3 million more to help migrants and we'll ask the mayor of vista, california, if this is a popular plan and who's getting stuck footing the bill. many of attendees of cop28 reporting to faze out fossil fuels and have no answer as to how they're going to do it. former energy secretary rick perry takes that on. electric vehicles are the latest struggling with low demand and a new report shows they don't get as many miles as advertised.
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jeff flock testify driving some of the cars -- test driving some of the cars and will take us through some of the issues, next. ♪ ameritrade is now part of schwab. bringing you an elevated experience, tailor-made for trader minds. go deeper with thinkorswim: our award-wining trading platforms. unlock support from the schwab trade desk, our team of passionate traders who live and breathe trading. and sharpen your skills with an immersive online education crafted just for traders. all so you can trade brilliantly. we're travelling all across america, talking to people about their hearts. ooh, take this exit. how's the heart? i feel like it's good. you feel like it's good? how do you know when it's time to check in on your heart? how do you know?
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stuart: demand for electric vehicles are low and new road tests show many of the vehicles are not living up to their billing. jeff flock in connecticut. jeff, you're driving a tesla model s. tell us about that one. and one reporter: driving this one and reports for the last several month haves been testing the evs to see if they can measure up to what the government and epa says
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they do. and the headline, alex s what? >> we put about 22 of the most recent electric vehicles through a 70 miles per hour highway range test to really figure out just how far they could go, and found about half of them fell short of their epa range rating and others were way beyond it. reporter: interesting, put up a numbers and they've got them, stuart, of the ones that fell short and including the f150 and electric lightning from ford. the epa rating and the tesla model s was in short of its epa ratings. reporter: mbws and mercedes. >> yeah, bmw ix and i4 were 40
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more and eq mercedes sedan about 70 miles over rating. reporter: amazing they can be so far off and without even putting them through the real heavy paces and like this for example. can you go ahead and give this a punch and maybe stuart sees what it looks like? >> evs have insane acceleration and we hit 50 miles an hour in just a second or two. reporter: what about doughnuts? is it possible in an e. >> the torque of the motor is strong. reporter: mr. varney is such a big electric car fan he'd like to have a model s. stuart, it's amazing if they can be so far off in terms of that's without using the heater or the air conditioner. >> yeah, those systems all will have an impact and traffic speed
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and make an impact on them. reporter: exclusively on the fox business network, mr. varney, we're putting them through their paces. stuart: he makes the point of what sold everybody on electric cars in the first place was incredible acceleration. zero to 60 in three seconds and they could do in electric just like that. follow through that one in there and good story about that acceleration there. thanks, jeff. former energy secretary rick perry with us now. sir, i want to talk cop28 and they can't agree on when or how to phase out or should they phase out fossil fuels entirely? >> it's been a bit of a fairy tale if you will. rich people get together and sip chardonnay and talk about fairy tale stories of this perfect world and getting rid of fossil
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fuels and war and bad people, and nobody has a plan. i think in all seriousness that's the challenge and the reason you heard the head of cop, mr. aljabar saying in you want to force people back to living in caves, go to net zero by 2050 and he has a point there and the point is fossil fuels with us for a long, long time and it was this mentality that caused europe to move away from fossil fuels and nuclear i might add and nuclear will play an important role in the future of any transition away from fossil fuel. when you saw europe doing away with their natural gas facilities and coal burning plants and nuclear plants and replacing them with solar and wind, and then the lights go
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out. you know, urorendition of anthony kansas city chiefs. solar and wind cannot keep the lights on, and that's the story and all of us know that and they're a nice alternative to have and nice edition and i'm not anti-wind or antisolar but what i am is i'm pro keeping the lights on. you must have base load that will come from fossil fuels, hydro-carbons and nuclear power and if you don't have that, stand up and say when you can't guarantee the lights will stay on and very importantly to the people of africa, continent of africa, some of the most racist policies i've ever seen in my life are by these radical environmentalists and they want to tell the people you want to live in ranked poverty for the rest of your life and we're going to do away with fossil
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fuels by 2050. stuart: what a terrible thing. i want to look to 2024 for a second, mr. secretary. do you have a candidate? >> i don't. i'm just sitting here watching and it's pretty apparent to me that former president trump is leading the pack and i think it's going to be up to everybody to explain to the rest of the world why he's not going to be the -- here's what i do know, the policies we had in place while president trump was there argue those with me. i'd be happy to sit down and argue those every day. you know, did he make everybody comfortable and happy? maybe not but my point is this president that we have today, we are on the precipice of really tragic events in the world, and you have a president as you rightfully said, he's not ready for another four years and as a matter of fact is he reed i did for the next four weeks. that should be scary to the people of not just the united
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states but of the world and by if larges president is inept and have cognitive challenges and i'd say so and are we ready for another four years of this individual with his lack of understanding and lack of a grasp of the issues out there and they're really important to the american people and the citizens of the world. stuart: i want to go back to cop28 and the un wants to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions by having people eat less meat. you're home from texas, beef, cattle and cowboys. you can't be on board with that. >> well, this goes back to the earlier comments i made. these are people that get together who are not in touch with reality and the idea that if you're saying to the people of africa, not only are we not going to let you have power, we're not going to let you have protein to eat either. how dark hearted do you have to
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be. how out of touch with reality to be sitting there flying your big fossil fuel burning jet in from around the world preaching to the rest of us that you're not going to have this. it's okay for us because we're smart and cute and bright and, you know, we're pretty cool too. so the citizens of the world paying attention realize this is just a group of dilettantes who really are not in touch with reality. stuart: got it. mr. secretary, thanks very much for being on the show. don't be a stranger and come back and see us soon. please, rick, perry. >> thanks, stu. stuart: deal. coming up, a number of republican senators worried about trump's chances to win in the general election so which candidate do they think has the best chance to beat biden? details on that coming up. border patrol sources tell fox they've been, wait for it, over 10,000 migrant encounters at the southern border in the last 24
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hours. incredible. bill melugin in the middle of it all in arizona. bill has the latest after this. ♪ (sfx: stone wheel crafting) ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪
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stuart: nasdaq rolls on nicely and dow down 100, 36,00 36,100 e level. murphy is with me and brought hiss stock picks starting with wal-mart. >> we've talked about this name a few times, stuart. wal-mart has great earnings and a lot of momentum, and i think they're not getting priced like the amazons of the world so i think if people have a little patience with wal-mart getting more into the online business, you'll see the stock really move there providing low cost and moving up the chain. as consumers are spending, they're going to spend in wal-mart. they have strong earnings and i expect that to go up. stuart: where's it going? >> 180, 190. stuart: snap, you like it? >> it's one of the social media companies and upgrade from jeffries but momentum wise, the stock is moving.
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for myself, my teenagers if they had to just keep one social media company, it would be snap. i hear that from a lot. i think snap will figure out how to monetize their user base a bit better and could be a lot more upside with them. stuart: is that the message disappears after a few seconds? >> yes, thanksgiving the one. stuart: nike. >> look at moten now and then, another momentum story and nike beaten up a lot and a lot given up on the stock and had a nice move higher, but people are still buying nike sneakers and gear. there's really no -- maybe in europe adidas but hear in the united states there's no no. 2 to nike. they're going to have that strong foothold in the younger generation. their sales will continue and they had a concern over the inventory and they've straightened out and you happen side for them. stuart: i'll invest in my grandchildren's acts today. wal-mart, snap, nike, where should it go? >> nike if you have to pick one. stuart: i probably do.
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i don't though. that's true. thanks, mike. this s is incredible. border patrol said more than 10,000 migrants crossed the southern border in the last 24 hours. bill melugin is in lukeville, arizona, right now. i see hundreds of migrants behind you right now, what's the story? reporter: here in lukeville, it's essentially the middle of nowhere in southern arizona, but it's become the epicenter of the border crisis and every single digits day it's unsustainable and give you a look and it's a massive hundred people and waiting for border patrol waiting for chp and it's all single adult men from all over the from africa and middle east and others from asia and one man from processer koenen and one from new guinea planning to head to new york city and cuts and
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breaches all over the footage we shot yesterday and a huge where you shall of myograns rushing through that hole in the wall and crossing illegally and and border patrol watching as it happened and you'll notice, there's a guy dressed in black on the other side of the wall, that's a human smuggler and once all the illegal immigrants comes through, looks at the camera and gives us a shrug and absolutes us and walks away. that's how simple it is out here in border patrol, frustrated and overhemmed. look at what the union had to say. >> it's caused by open invitation and come one come all and it's getting released and the men and women out there putting lives on the line every day. reporter: take a look at this video out of border patrol san diego sector.
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it's a large number of of chinese nationals that crossed illegally. that happening near the hot springs area and 168 chinese nationals crossed illegally into the border patrol san diego sector alone and that's the scene out here. it's taking border patrol a long time to process the folks and two hours to the closest major city to us. this is the middle of nowhere. people keep arriving and cbp sources telling me tucson had nearly 3,000 illegal crossings yesterday alone. back to you. stuart: bill melugin right in the middle as usual. that's extraordinary. great reporting. well done, bill. next case san diego county considering giving an additional $3 million to migrants. john franklin is the mayor of vista, california, within san diego county. before we get going, sir. did you see what we reported? 10,000 migrants crossed the border in one day? did you see that? >> yeah, it's out of control. stuart: okay, san diego county is going to try to give an extra
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$3 million to migrants. how's that going down with locals? >> not very well. >> the second inget of county soup visiers that want to fund a center and legal assistance and thousands of people living and we need resources to get the americans living on the streets out of the streets and conservative ship powers for drugs and funding for extra 26 staff members and this would pay to help get people off the streets of the county and we're using to vir which you signal. it's wrong. stuart: what's the resistance to that? is there any? >> robi robust debate and the bd of supervisors and people are speaking up. it's very con ten shoes --
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contentious? stuart: any help from governor newsom? >> no, he's done very little to put words into action and hayed a lot of great great son servetive things running shadow campaign for president but when it comes to putting words into action and helping us awes. he wailed the care court proposal and only 40 people spread into now and we need real tools to get people with the state law being debated and had would allow narcotic drug addicts to be brought into the numbers and we need resources for the rooms to hold the people and they're screaming at the moon because they're in a drug-induced psychosis.
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wee need that for the quality of life and not millions to finance immigrants that largely are only in the county for a day or two making way on that their way. stuart: this is exasperating and we saw the report we just had from bill melugin. what you need is a wall. an impenetrable wall that stops the flood. i'm sorry, i'm out of time, but that's what you need. your honor, thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me back, stuart. stuart: thanks a lot. a 13-year-old has died in san diego after crossing from mexico into the united states. ashley, what happened in ashley: yeah, of course very sad. according to border patrol and local authorities, the 13-year-old boy arrived this past saturday at border area east of san diego and there with traumatic injuries and believed to have been inv involved in a r accident in mexico and taken to the border wall for faster treatment. paramedics arrived and tried to treat the teenager and novial signs. it was too late and young boy died in his injuries and was
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pronounced dead at the scene. now, border patrol office of professional responsibility is investigating while the san diego medical examiner office is investigating the cause and manner of the teen's death. that was over the weekend. stu. stuart: thanks, ashley. the presidents of three top universities are testifying before congress. they're facing questions about anti-semitism on campus. the latest headlines from the hearing next. ♪
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stuart: three presidents from top universities are testifying on capitol hill about anti-semitism on campuses. hillary vaughn is with us. reporter: stuart, bot too many line, jewish students don't feel safe on college campuses here in america and response of college
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campus presidents to violent protest for the wave of racist rhetoric and threat of anti-semitic violence and it's been met with deafening silence. jewish students on capitol hill sounding off as college campus presidents are here on the hill to face questions from lawm lawmakers. >> being a jew at nyu is being surrounded by students and faculty that are saying resistance is justifying while occupied. being a jew at nyu is being assaulted by a fellow student wearing a american israeli flag and having my attacker roam freely. >> i used to think this was nonsense. fear mongering, until i was made aware that penn recommended to students that not wear clothing/accessories relating to judaism. hundreds of posts -- reporter: even though in action
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college leadership tiptoed a dance not upsetting palestinian protesters in their response today, they sang a bolder tune for lawmaker when is asked if they think israel has a right to exist. >> i want to ask each one of you, president gay, do you believe that israel has a right to exist as a jewish nation? >> i agree that the state of israel has the right to exist. >> ms. mcgill, same question? >> i a agree, the state of israel has the right to exist. >> dr. cornblooth? >> absolutely, israel has the right to exist. reporter: it's not loud enough to drown out the screams of protesters on campus and the jewish people and israel to be wiped off the map. stuart: hillary, we hear you. thank you very much indeed.
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karine, you went to harvard. at what point does clamping down on anti-semitism compromise free speech? >> well, thank you for having me on, stuart. it's a great question and a tricky one. certainly students should have the right to protest and the bar for speech needs to be high, especially on universities, progressive ors docksies set that and it's important to have a high bar for what is and isn't allowed to be said on campus to preserve free speech across all topics and that being said, it shouldn't be hard to say that terrorism is wrong. shouldn't be hard to condemn anti-semitism on campus. stuart: is there a double standard here? i can't imagine if this debate were about racism or antiblack feeling, it would be condemned immediately and you'd be out of the university. is there a double standard? >> oh, absolutely. the dei regimes on campuses have
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selected certain causes and have ruled out others, and you're seeing over anti-semitism on campus. i've talked to students that don't feel safe on campus, and that is a product of selective inclusion efforts. that doesn't mean inclues for everyone, it means inclusion for the cautions of progressive orthodoxies on campus. stuart: let me change the subject for a second. donald trump with 60% of the republican vote in the primaries, 21% of independents would vote for him too. now, you're with the boston globe. i can't imagine the boston globe is terribly happy about a trump win, what do you say? >> well, i can't speak for my colleagues on the editorial board, but what i can say is that i myself as a conservative am trying to get to the bottom of the trump question, especially up in new hampshire with voters in the primaries there, and a question i have is why are voters sticking with trump throughout legal troubles? is this a question that comes
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across their mind and the answer to this question is really important because it impacts politics going forward in this country and impacts bipartisanship. i think that democratic voters, democratic leaders knead to understand that a lot of these voters don't feel heard, especially by the media. their main complaints are that they're not being represented in the media narrative, and that they see president trump who many of them voted for in the past, continuously attacked as he was in the prior administration by the media, and they feel personally attacked by that as well. there's a lack of dialogue going on, i think. a lot of them felt they had a better life under donald trump. stuart: sure. >> they felt the economy was better and felt the schools were better. yeah. stuart: all true. the news out of this interview is that the boston globe has a conservative on its editorial board. we thank you very much for you being here today. karine, come back and see us any time you like. good stuff. thank you. >> thank you. thanks for having me on. stuart: you're welcome.
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some senate republicans concerned about trump's electability in the general. ashley, come back in, please. what are they saying? ashley: very interesting. an article on the hill claims gop senators that don't support trump acknowledge, well, yeah, he could win the presidency given president biden's very weak job approval ratings. but they view nikki haley as much more electable because she does not alienate independent and suburban women voters like trump does. they're also worried if trump is the gop nominee, it could still lead to a disastrous result for their party. the growing buzz around haley comes at a time when many gop senators are reportedly writing off florida governor ron desantis' chances of staging a comeback. senate republican whip john thune from south dakota who repeatedly stressed the importance of appealing to moderate and independent voters beyond the gop's conservative base says, hey, haley seems to be emerging as the leading
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alternative to trump. now, all of that said, we do know trump continues to enjoy a very commanding lead in gop primary polls. stuart: that's true, ashley. all right. restaurant owners in dc have begun referring to the holiday season as the robbery season. one owner said her locations have been broken into at least eight times in the past few years. how close is she to moving out? we'll ask her, she's next. ♪ so many people are overweight now and asking themselves, "why can't i lose weight?" for most, the reason is insulin resistance, and they don't even know they have it.
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an increased risk of infections, some fatal, have occurred. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to, or if ibd symptoms develop or worsen. cosentyx. still workin' for me. ♪see me♪ find relief that can last. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx. stuart: restaurant owneers in dc calling the holiday season "robbery subpoena". the owner of a pizzeria joining me now. maria, do you call it robbery season? have you been robbed in >> it's burglary to be precise and thankfully we've not had actual robberies while we're open, god forbid, however since 2021, we've been in business since 2012. for the first nine years, we had no incidents whatsoever. in 2021, every year we've had an
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incident, whether it's at our pizza shop or a few doors down we have an italian deli shop. between the two locations, every year we've gotten broken into. one year it happened twice. so right now it's becoming increasingly difficult to just sweep this incidents under the rug and move on without demanding from city government concrete action resolving this -- stuart: they break in in the middle of the night. they're not face-to-face robbery across the counter, but what are do they steal in the middle of the night? there's not much money on the property, is there? >> there's no money on the property. minimum inventory on the property and look for money and don't find it and don't ever steal any food. they go for liqueur, and then they leave. it's basically just vandalism going for the liqueur and not finding any cash and leaving. very frustrating. stuart: what's the response of the authorities? >> well, i can -- i want to actually say big thank you to our fifth district police
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officers who responded to the crime in the middle of the night. they stood guard by our broken door until the morning until we could come and secure it. the police, they're doing all they can within their power to keep the city safe, but it's difficult environment to operate in. we're looking -- stuart: i'm sure you may be close to leaving. hang in there and come back and tell us what's the latest next year, okay. good to e sue .y >> sounds good. thank you. stuart: thank you. here we go, time for the tuesday trivia question. this is a good one: which stays hat the highest rate of home ownership? west virginia, delaware, new hampshire, iowa? mike just slapped the table as if he thinks he knows. i think i know. i think i've got a good idea. the answer when we come back. stay there, please. ♪
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which state has the highest rate of homeownership. mike knows because he slapped the table. >> i will say number 3, new hampshire.
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ashley: what do you say i? ashley: based on affordability, iowa, number 4. stuart: i think it is iowa. what? west virginia, 78.6% of the state's population were home owners. i never saw that coming. >> i knew it couldn't be west virginia. how could it possibly be west virginia. thanks for being on the show for the entire hour. we will see you tomorrow. as we close out the show a quick check of the market, the dow was down one hundred 40, the nasdaq a fraction to 16 points to plenty of selling on wall street today. one standout is bitcoin, $42,000 a coin. time is up for me. coast to coast starts now.

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