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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  January 10, 2024 11:00am-12:01pm EST

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when they discussed the mohs surgery on my face, i was not really a fan of that because the scarring can be disfiguring. if you've been affected by skin cancer, surgery is no longer your only option. we chose gentlecure. gentlecure is a surgery-free treatment that uses low energy x-rays to kill skin cancer cells with a 99% cure rate. plus, there's no cutting, no surgical scarring and no downtime. the results are absolutely fabulous. see why so many people, including doctors, are choosing gentlecure. call today or go to gentlecure.com. >> you don't have a change in the voting patterns. who these constituents are going to support. they keep voting for the same liberal policies, same liberal
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politicians and they keep getting the same results. >> if biden didn't fire after the afghanistan debacle, i don't expect to see any kind of level of accountability, but apparently he does need to take attendance at his cabinet meetings. >> they dig the earth deeply we missions, with environmental stance and farming that all out to the countries with the worst human right ands environmental standards. >> biden incredibly in the first acts as president undid he can be that basically secured the border. it's almost unimaginable. stuart: oh, hold on, i'm coming by michael bolton. sounded kind of ominous, didn't he? 11:00 eastern time, it's
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wednesday, january 10th and here we go. on the markets, green, not much but some. big cpi numbers out tomorrow and keeping the market in check. up p o on the dao -- up 70 on the dough, up 70 on the nasdaq and big tech, a mixed bag there and mostly higher. meta, amazon, microsoft, alphabet up but apple is down just a few cents at 184. 10-year treasury yield at 4%, right there. now this, confidence is a tricky thing. you can be sailing along confident that things are under control. then things start to go wrong, doubts appear and optimism gives way to pessimism and confidence is gone. that's what's happened to the biden administration. oh, yeah, they started strong and then the new president exuded confidence with the trump years and it didn't last. on day one, he ended america's
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energy independence and you have to wonder, does he know what he's doing and afghan debacle demolished any confidence our allies had in us and the border was opening up to all co comersd myor kasam and biden -- mayorkas and biden team speed it up and they claim the border is under control but millions walk in. how do you have confidence in administration that cannot face reality. how about identity politics and it has confidence in officials that got their job because of skin color, gender or sexuality. are you confident that kamala harris would make a solid president? the latest confidence eroder is a defense secretary. lloyd austin hospitalized for prostate cancer for over a week and the president was kept in the dark for three days and didn't find out he'd had cancer, austin had cancer till yesterday. that's amateur hour. in short, america can no longer be confident we have efficient and effective government. that's a problem in november.
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this election may be a vote of no confidence in joe biden. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: the gentleman on the right hand side of the skene is will cain and do you think the november election will be a vote of no confidence in biden? >> i think as far as public is concerned that's probably the calculation is made, stuart, a vote of no confidence and i will disagree with you a little bit. when i think about the word that characterized the biden administration. i think about insecurity, it was an administration that sold itself exclusively as alternative to donald trump insecure about donald trump. at the same time it played on fear, fear through covid and fear through the loss of our democracy, and it was never for lacking of self-assuredness and in fact willing to censor or
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crush anyone that stepped in way of it is agenda. never in doubt of its own righteousness. all of those words, insecurity, fear and self-assuredness to me bring up a dimple word when it comes to posture of biden administration. for me that word is narcissism and the same play they'll make here coming down the home stretch of 2024. stuart: i've always been accused of being a narcissist and that'll surprise people on television. >> never. never would have guessed. stuart: tell me more about in what way is biden a narcissist? >> well, the elements of narcissism are on the surface. some cox sured confidence, you know, the amateur i guess social observer really believes in himself and it masks underneath and it's huge insecurity about who you are in this world and the biden administration has never been someone that stands firm in the conviction of its
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own principle and entire posture is a response to donald trump. in order to convince you and me and the public that it's a legitimate response to donald trump, they really had to play on our fears and it's been an administration and joe biden's speech last week reiterated this and we should all walk through the world entirely full of terror. terror that we're going to catch a virus, terror that everyone is going to die, terror that we're going to lose or democracy, terror that there's an authoritarian in donald trump and to me, that's not real confidence. real confidence is this is what i believe. i'm going to explain to you the courage of my convictions of what i believe and why i believe it's the best for all of us. i'm going to give you this, this is noted an endorsement but an election between biden and donald trump and rhetorically, i'll tell you that who speaks with that level of confidence, true confidence to me in his principles and convictions right now when i listen to him is
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vivek ramaswamy. stuart: that's an interesting idea. original thinking from will cain. okay, think originally about this one. another story for you. a private christian school in iowa announced some of its staff will be armed while on campus. the announcement came after a mass shooting in iowa that killed a sixth grader and injured five others. what do you think of arming teachers, will? >> i think it's, stuart, it's a sad statement on where we are as a culture, but a necessity. we need to arm our schools, we need to have credible threat to those that would do harm. whether or not that's teachers or that's undercover officers or that's officers at the door, there needs to be fear, legitimate righteous fear in the minds and hearts of someone that would walk into the school and shoot children. now, i will say this ultimately leads us towards a conversation debate about guns and increasingly armed society and i
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think we'll just be scratching the surface of the real problem in the culture. there's something in the psyche of young men that has evolved over the past 30, 40 years, stuart, it's perhaps and i don't know, i'm an open mind always in search of this. i worry about the increasing medication of our children, i worry about the loss and sense of purpose. i worry about the loss with touch of reality and comes to living your live through a screen and worry about social distancing and i think this cultural issue is not about the tools but about what's going on, and we can be real, it's mostly, mostly young men. what's going on with young men in america? stuart: yeah, you really did your homework to prepare for this today. we really appreciate that. as i said before, original thinking works wonders for me. will cain, you're all right. >> you're not a narcissist. you're perfectly capable of laughing at yourself and confident human being. you are true confidence, stuart
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varney. stuart: flash reigns leading is the mother's milk of television. see you soon, will. thanks a lot. get to the markets. modest gains across the board for stocks and mark tepper is with us. i'm reading the prompt terrific. mark tepper is worried about a recession. >> i am a little bit but a coin flip chance, 50/50. when you look at especially last friday's jobs report, one of the thing when is you look under the surface is you begin to realize that we are continuing to lose full-time jobs while adding part-time jobs so we're adding enough part-time jobs to make it look like we continue to add new jobs but, stu, as painful recessions may be, they're a necessary part of the economic psychoand will they have to happen. you have to clear out excesses and nobody wants to go through the pain of that excess clearing out but if you go back to summertime opportunistic last year, you remember that trucking
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company that went bankrupt? it was called yellow. yellow. they went bankrupt and i remember hearing kevin o'leary and he was on your program and he said, good. let memorabilia go bankrupt. there's a terrible management team and inefficiently run and all of those employees will be absorbed by competitors. all of those truck deliveries will be absorbed by competitors and better long term economic growth because that happened. that's why i say recessions are necessary. >> probably good for the market once you've gotten through it and expand on the upper side. >> absolutely. gives you a great chance to buy lower on pullbacks. stuart: you're here for the full hour and looking at movers and lauren deals with home depot. lauren: leading the dow jones industrial average and along with salesforce for home depot and web bush upgrading them to 380 price target and slow down with consumer spending and housing last year, it's done. it's starting to reverse. that's good news.
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stuart: marathon digital, is that a crypto company? lauren: yep and the stocks are down across the board. very volatile and down 7% and now down 1%. this is all about what the sec did, the big oops yesterday; right. it said falsely that the bitcoin etfs were approved and that approval is imminent and could happen today, but we saw the market move after this event. do you guys think that the sec cannot approve any of these 14etf applications that they're looking at after what happened yesterday? saw the market move so much. stuart: i don't think they can sort of step away and probably not going to do it. lauren: that's what it looks like yet these stocks are down a bit. stuart: they're taking their time and going to get there eventually. pretty sure on that. crypto up $44,000 per coin and holding firm. lauren: went to almost 50. stuart: amazon is laying off people? lauren: yes, several hundred in their prime video and division
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and targeted job cuts and they cut workers in their music division and earlier this year workers applied for jobs in the ai division and own twitch and laying off 35% of their staff and amazon up. >> i wonder if that's dealing with after strike on prime video. stuart: a 93-year-old grandma proving you're never too old to date, getting into the dating scene. watch this. >> five first dates and met one at a funeral and bingo and tell you about her and the dating history and getting teppers reaction too.
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alzheimers helping with treatment. stuart: pushing for a two state solution and a live report from tel aviv next. t (christina) with verizon business unlimited, i get 5g, truly unlimited data, and unlimited hotspot data. so, no matter what, i'm running this kitchen. (vo) make the switch. it's your business. it's your verizon.
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and i lost 172 pounds on golo. when i was a teenager i had some severe trauma in my life and i turned to food for comfort. i had a doctor tell me that if i didn't change my life, i wasn't gonna live much longer. once i saw golo was working, i felt this rush, i just had to keep going. a lot of people think no pain no gain, but with golo it is so easy. my life is so much different now that i've lost all this weight. when i look in the mirror i don't even recognize myself.
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stuart: secretary of state antony blinken urged israeli leaders to avoid harming israeli leaders in gaza after seeking a path towards a two-state solution. trey yingst live in tel aviv for us. how did the israeli leadership respond? reporter: hey, stuart, good morning. antony blinken is still in the region and he met with
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palestinian president and that meeting came after yesterday's gathering here in tel aviv and across the country meeting with top israeli officials including benjamin netanyahu and the country's prime minister and war cabinet here and families of those being held hostage inside gaza. blinken reportedly told netanyahu to work hard tore protect gazan civilians and discussed border work to free the more than 100 hostages being held and secretary visit comes after being attacked and launched by iran-backed houthi rebels in the red sea and fox news we're following today confirmation from the u.s. treasury that iran has accessed some of the $10 billion unfrozen by waiverred permitted by the biden administration.
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>> none of the money to the iranian regime or mullahs. it would go to approved vendors and approved for food, water and medicine and agricultural products. reporter: argument from some top officials and in the region and easing of economic pressure on the iranen regime makes it easier to fund and support proxies that are currently attacking american and israeli forces. stuart. stuart: i want to bring in florida congressman cory mills and biden is getting criticism because he's quietly working to get israel out of gaza. in your opinion, should israel get out of gaza. >> to be honest, varney. we are out of gaza and they
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launched this barbaric attack that killed thousands and hamas is a terrorist organization and just like the houthi rebels and the iranian-backed proxy militias attacking u.s. soldiers and troops in iraq. allowing them to reoccupy gaza in a more popular manner lawn and have attacks in response to bar pair ick attacks till this occurred and not as a preemptive strike and a way to try and go ahead and push out palestinians from their homes and so we need to be really cognizant of the fact that some of the media reports where they're saying gaza is being absolutely eliminate second-degree absolutely untrue. over 297,000 plus structures of which only 3% of the structures have been impacted and many of which are weapons, cachet and part of the terrorist tunnels and in regards to the terrorist response, it couldn't be more laughable.
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these are the same people who were saying that the money going to the un they're being poured into the terror tunnels and biden administration doesn't know where the american hostages are or where their money is transferring to and they don't have a plan and strategy to ensure that israel has a right to defend its. that's until the case and the entire time that biden continues to cower down from the mob. stuart: the governor of florida, ron desantis issued a state of emergency out of these major storms hitting florida. that's your state. how bad did the storms hit your
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district, may we ask? >> i was very fortunate that seminole and volusia county didn't get near the damage that panama city and des desitin hasd a great amount of kudos to the governor as well for jimmy, the florida disaster emergency management teams and they've all done a great job to react and this is nothing unusual for florideans but certainly we want to make sure we get stuart: thank you, cory mills. did desantis go after biden? ashley: he certainly did and saying cities throughout the land decay under democrat control and his blueprint for florida is now a beacon for people wanting to escape blue
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states. take a listen. >> we witness and continue to witness a great migration of americans away from cities and states pursuing the failed policies and florida serving as refuge of freedom and sanity and these fair y failures are not te result of chance but choices made by elected officials to put ideology over sound policy. in this time for choosing, the state of florida has chosen well. ashley: a refuge of freedom and sanity. desantis touting the state's education policies including the parent's bill of rights and elimination of that so-called dei. stu. stuart: got it. thanks, ash. check the markets, please. deeing green, dow up 50, nasdaq up 50, s&p up 10. small gains. texas just crossed a milestone and number of migrants together
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and the state and governor abbott says he's got no plans to show down. hospital for elective surgery and surgery and prostate cancer and is that elective? i'll ask doc siegle, that's coming up. ♪ mara, are you sure you don't want -to go bowling with us tonight? -yeah. no. there's my little marzipan! [ laughs ] oh, my daughter gives the best hugs! we're just passing through on our way to the jazz jamboree. [ imitates trumpet playing ]
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and we wanted to thank america's number-one motorcycle insurer -for saving us money. -thank you. [ laughs ] mara, your parents are -- exactly like me? i know, right? well, cherish your friends and loved ones. let's roll, daddio! let's boogie-woogie!
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stuart: still seeing the same amount of green on the stock market. mark tepper is with me. he's gloat his stock picks with him. first pick is paypal, which i thought had been beaten down something rotten. >> super beaten down and it was $120 pre-pandemic and all the way up to well over $300 at the peak of the summer of 2021 down to $50 and back top 60. this is a turn around story. what happened to paypal is they kind of lost focus of core business and they started to focus on shiny new objects and all these ancillary businesses
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and that hurt their business and have new management in place and getting refocused on what matters and trading 11 times earnings and trading 16 times earnings of them and that's the management demonstrating their heads are on 20 suspended ands and it should have a bear minimum going from 11 up to 15-16 level and our opinion means there's 40% upside and more. stuart: vestis corporation, v-e-s-t-i-s corporation. >> yeah, this is work provider outside of cintas. they were part of aramark and does sporting events and concessions and concerts and they got no love and attention. they were ancillary businesses and aramard didn't pay attention to them and spun off last year and now at the point of having a management team that once they
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demonstrate their commitment to profitability, their commitment to execution, this is something that should re-rate higher. it's trading at half the multiple of cintas right now and 37 times and these guys trade it 18 times and i'm not saying they're going to double and there's a good solid 30, 40% upside here as well as management demonstrating confidence as well. stuart: good research operation going there, son. >> yeah, a bunch of guys dumpster diving. stuart: mark, stay there, more for you later. we now know that defense secretary lloyd austin was hospitalized for infection after what he called elective surgery for prostate cancer. dr. marc siegle with us this morning. is prostate cancer surgery elective, doctor? >> well, obviously, stuart, it shouldn't be called elective because it's not like you can wait a year and it's urgent and you have to have as soon as possible if you make a decision to get prostate out of there and
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it's canser and not all prostate cancer needs surgery by the way. if that's where you're going, the sooner the better. elective is a very misleading term and the term minimally invasive and that signifies robot and they use the robot and get the robot to get in there through two small incisions. when you're getting all the way in there to take the prostate out, i don't consider that minor surgery and nobody considers that minor surgery and a further observation of the truth and trying to down play something that clearly was not handled right. stuart: left with the question of why it was kept secret from the president and scientists have identified five types of alzheimers. so what, will this narrow down the treatment or tell us more about how to fix this thing? >> when asking the question, you answer it had as usual.
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400 different patients studied and dutch researchers looked at this and found one type of alzheimers are more tout protein and another with a different blood flow and involved with a blood flow and dealing with the blood brain barrier and crosses from the barrier and brain and brains trying to protect from inflammation and doesn't always succeed and another type with a beta amyloid and the point is the more types there are, the more you target different type of differents. what works for one doesn't work for the other. that's management and that's the wave of the future. this is very important, but it just shows you one pill like what can be and can be used for everyone. stuart: another new study and there we go, there's at least 15 factors linked to early onset dementia and things like education, alcohol consumption, economic conditions. but, c really, isn't this all
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about your genes? stuart: no, why are we doing dementia on the show and sharpest person over 70 on the show and we should talk about it and seriously, genetics plays a role and if you have something called li p, o protein e and genetics play as role and so does how much you weigh and do you have dabbities, hype tension, heart disease and socioeconomic area and where are you from and impacts it too. also here's fascinating, stuart, hearing, if you don't hear that well, you don't interact that well and your brain tends to atrophy more quickly and how engage redirect examination you in the world in other people in playing games and in hearing what's going on around you. inflammatory diseases and chronic diseases, weight and genetics. stuart: doctor, i've forgotten we've been talking a lot about
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dementia recently. that was a joke, okay. doctor, we're done. wait a minute, this is for you. maybe. scientists have found 90% of all burgers and chick and plant based foods containing plastic pieces linked to cancer and another scare, doctor? >> well, it's a scare and also somewhat true and it's called conservancy working with the university of toronto and buying for the stores and it's across the board and it's meat and chicken nuggets and fish and tofu and microscopics and each person and ending up in inflammation and the complications in risk of cancer and it's something to know more
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about and i'm not afraid of this and i think though take home here is the more farm to table we do, the better and i'm coming over for dinner and farm to table is the answer here. stuart: doctor, it's a tree farm. we don't produce food. just trees, better investment. dr. siegle, you're well cam at my farm any day you want. stuart: 93-year-old great grandmother using tiktok to describe her dating life. ashley, there's millions of followers, is that accurate? ashley: 12.6 million to be exact and growing and 93-year-old liliana leeanne, aka grandma is from connecticut and likes to share the highlights of dating experiences. watch this. >> i went on five first dates and met one at a tune corral he
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was cute. one was from instagram and met one at a bar and two at bingo. you might be wondering how many i kissed. i kissed all of them. this is what happened to them. one wasn't honest, one died, i ghosted two and one became my boyfriend. this is how many ghosted me because he turned into a ghost. may he slay in peace. ashley: i kissed all of them and one died and i ghosted two. that's crazy stuff and has a lot of following and she started posting videos with her grandson in 2012 and last year her fist post in 25 years and husband passed in 2005 and went viral and registered 75 million.
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stuart: all right. stuart: tepper is a money guy. you can make money on that, can't you? >> i'll buy her accounts and i'll have 12 million followers. stuart: you can't do that, can you? >> yeah, buy the account and change the profile picture and name and all that stuff. wouldn't be granny smith anymore but, yeah. stuart: any comment on the 93-year-old great grandmother? >> it's cool she's picking up guys at funerals. that's straight out of wedding crashers and will farrell said he's not going to pick them up at weddings but going to funerals now. it's really cool she goes to bars and picks up guys. maybe i'll go with her for a drink and hang out. i'll learn from her about how to build the social media. stuart: got me in trouble here, granny or tepper. whatever your name is. look at this wild video of gunmen who took hostages live on air at tv station in ecuador. what's that all about. we'll try to tell you.
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that school is housing thousands of migrants and locals are furious. full story after this. people are excited about what ai will do for them. we're excited about what ai will do for business. meet the watsonx assistants, ai designed to multiply output by automating tasks. when you watsonx your business, you can use ai assistants to help coders code faster, customer service respond quicker, and employees handle repetitive tasks in less time. let's create ai assistants that transform business with watsonx. ibm. let's create. mike had a heart attack a year ago.
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stuart: ashley, what new milestone did texas just reach in the biden border crisis? ashley: more than 100,000 migrants bussed out of texas and seeps as though there's a new milestone every day. does it not, when it comes to crisis at the border but this time it's the number of migrants bussed out of texas. greg abbott posting this on x and says texas has transported over 100,000 migrants to sanctuary cities to relieve overwhelmed border towns till biden learfield img verses
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course on open boarder and they'll transport to the cities and not back down to efforts to secure the boarder and this will carry on till the biden administration secured the boarder and we're still pating for that. stuart: yeah, thanks, ash. entire high school in brooklyn forced students to go remote so 2,000 migrants can be used in their that school a housed in that school. madison alworth and the founders cannot be happy, they must be steamed accident right? , madison? reporter: stuart, they're incredibly upset this happened. for many reasons and for one, they didn't find out till yesterday afternoon till around 1:00 p.m. their students learning remotely and not because of snowstorm or rainstorm shutting down the road but because the school bind me being turned into a sheller and
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2,000 migrants being turned into a sheller and 4,000 students learning remotely for the day. i talked to some parents and this is a population that's heavily immigrant, legal immigrants and they're very upset this is happening and their students are losing out on learning opportunities and they're frustrate it had could happen again. take a listen. >> no matter how hard teachers try, it does not work. students need to be sitting in schools facing teachers and talking to teachers. sitting a a computer with the camera off and face timing your friends does not work. it does not institute as learning. >> i came here legally and had to wait for the u.s. government to actually approve me before i stepped foot into this country and i paid taxes and i love america. i didn't come here to take advantage of it for the free education, for the free medication, for free everything. reporter: parents are really frustrated in the injustice of it all. this is a population that a lot
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of recent legal immigrants believe in the immigration system but the legal immigration system. they're very frustrated their state of the unions are having the issue of needing to work remotely which we learned from the pandemic and really doesn't work and then another injustice they were pointing at is the difference in security. so for students that come into this school, they had to go through metal detectors and none of the migrants last night had to go through any of the metal detectors and we're hearing they say they're going to clean the school, but the parents are concern that had might not happen. there you go, stuart. back to you. stuart: math madison alworth, thank you for that. the reaction of parents and going remote and migrants in the classroom. >> we're now at the point where we're prioritizing migrants over the education of school children and to the parent's point you go back and look at test score and look at math and reading and proficiency scores that happen
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post-pandemic because of virtual learning and they were terrible. they weren't even a passing grade. so, you know, the biggest concern i had was eric adams said a month or two ago and he's going to roll back the budget for education and sanitation and safety because of this migrant storm. storm. stuart: that's extraordinary situation. people aren't standing for it. mark, thank you. take a look at this. it's a wild scene. gunmen stormed a tv station and they took hostages live on air and this is in ecuador and ashley what hatched here. ashley: remarkable. the government taking hostages live on air during a news broadcast in local ebbing dorn television -- ecuadoren station and a man pleading with the gunmen taking over the set and appeared to hold a gun to his neck and forces him to kneel, not seeing that now and the gunmen ordered people on that set that were there to lie on
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the floor and shouted that they had bombs at one point and some in the background pleading please, don't shoot. the hooded gunmen wearing masks as well and broadcast for at least 15 minutes till it abruptly cut off. later footage showed police arresting all of the gunmen that stormed the tv studios so they were taken into custody. by the way this, happened one day after a notorious gang leader escaped from prison triggering a 60 day state of emergency in ecuador. thankfully no one hurt. stuart: got t ash, thanks very much. the dow 30 and sense of the market. okay, we've got about 10 up, 20 down and there's been some modest buying and the dow is up 50, 37,570. congress is giving harvard a deadline to answer questions about anti-semitism on campus.
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what is it going to take to change the culture of elite universities in america. we'll take that on, next. ♪
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stuart: the house giving harvard a two week deadline to produce
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documents in anti-semitism investigation and hid ya hu is with d lydia hu is with me. reporter: yeah, faculties circulating around the university and october 7 terrorist attacks and they want proof of any disciplinary charges of harassment to jewish students and donations to the university of excess of $50,000 and donations from qatar reignsy source and the house committee on education and work force and investigates the university's response to anti-semitism and protection of jewish students and congresswoman virginia foxx writing in a letter to harvard corporations senior fellow penny pritzker and interim president dr. allen gasher we have grave concerns regarding in inadequacf harvard's campus and troubling
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incidents and developments at the university and also states this "harvard's dismal record on free speech exposes the intellectual and moral bankruptcy of rationalizations inaction towards anti-semitism on campus and the subject of investigation would have fallen under claudine gay's brief tenure as president on harvard and committee accuses harvard of pervasive anti-semitism for years extending well beyond gay's time in office. harvard university spokesperson tells fox business the university is reviewing the letter and will be in touch with the committee but, stuart, this adds to a growing list of information they'll have to produce and committee had previous documents alleged to claudine gay's tenure and that's under review. stuart: cornell university law professor william jacobson. william, how long will it take to change the dominant liberal culture in our universities? >> it's going to take decades
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and cook decades to get to where we are now. 30 years ago, it was not that skewed and they've been purged from academia and firing and not hiring and there's been almost no hiring of open conservatives in academia certainly elite academia in 20 to 30 years and it's going to take a long time. stuart: do you believe it brings down the quality of education at elite universities? >> i think there's no question about it because students only get exposed to one view points in the paint and world outlook and it's got an lots worst in the last three, four years with extreme emphasis on dicersty, ex-wety and inclusion with the race their and i what's a bad situation is now a lot worse. it's doing a disservice to students and they don't hear opposing viewpoints on campus. stuart: does anybody talk to you in the faculty lounge?
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>> i don't go to the faculty lounge very much. i would say that there's a cold piece for me trying not to bother people in the building and hopefully they're not trying to bother me and i'm not fully integrated into the faculty mostly because of my political viewpoint does not align with most people. stuart: you're a free speech guy guy and welcome on this program and we want you to come back soon because this is an ongoing situation and we want to hear from you. profession sore william jay con son, thank you -- jacobson. thank you, professor. >> thank you. stuart: how many rooms in buckingham ball las, 492, 559, 728 or 775? it's a big number but didn't know it was that big. we'll be back. .. e was founded in 1844
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we're passing on a cultural heritage, the culture of the west when the federal government started giving money to colleges, we didn't take it. that independence has allowed us to stay with our mission that we established 175 years ago. because we don't accept federal money, we are free to concentrate on the mission of the college we care about freedom and that affiliates us with the free institutions of america.
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stuart: this is one of those intriguing questions. how many rooms are in buckingham palace? europe first. >> buckingham palace. i will go with number 2, 550. neil: mark tepper.
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>> 192 is a trick question. so let's go with number three, 628. stuart: i'm going for 550, number 2. the answer is 775 rooms, construction began, king george iv, work was not completed until 94 years later, 1914 under king george v, 770 yard rooms. how many bathrooms? at least 100 bathrooms. here i am speculating on royalty. that is it for today's programming. thank you very much, see you again tomorrow. coast-to-coast starts in 4, 3, two, and starts now.

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