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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  January 31, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST

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>> is it too late to change the vice president? i don't think it's too late to change the candidate for
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president. i really don't. i still have trouble believing the democrats are going to run joe biden against donald trump. >> our kids are online and using them as a product and keep them online longer. their business model is built on addicting children to the screen. >> just at the beginning of the ai revolution and there's going to be a lot of pull from ai. we saw that already. >> oh, by the way, iran is also starting to put lng export terms in place. who buys lng? china and south korea and japan. all three have a major trade imbalance with. ah, toby keith, i like his voice. great voice. wednesday, january 31st.
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check the markets and dow is up and nasdaq is way down, 234 points down, that's 1.5%. big tech is not looking good. put them on the screen. all of them are down. all of them. microsoft, apple, meta, amazon, alphabet. all taking it opportunistic the chin and nasdaq down 200. 10-year treasury yield coming down, 3.94% is the yield there. now this, once again iran is center stage in american politics. 40 years after the mullahs up ended jim my carter, they're doing the same thing to joe biden. the death of three american soldiers and presents our president and political and military president like a probable. carter launched a military operation inside iran to free the american diplomats and taking them hostage. the mission failed badly and iranians hold hostages and carter lost his job. he was a one term president. biden has the same dilemma and bring them to the end without
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starting a full scale war with iran. this is an election year and drama is likely to drag on just as the president campaigns for reelection. cart her to contend with iran, biden has to contend with iran. another echo from the past: gas prices. they spiked under carter because of iran. if biden takes action that moves gas prices back to $4 or $5 a gallon, voters will not be happy, especially since it was biden who ended america's energy independence in the first place. plenty of carter/biden parallels and may be one more. carter lost to ronald reagan who projected american's strength and power. if biden faces tram nap november, will history repeat? that's a fair question. third hour of varney starts now. martha maccallum with us on this
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wednesday morning. will history repeat itself? >> there's a lot of parallels here and i'd also argue that there's a parallel in the election of jimmy carter and came post-watergate and a time when people were seeking someone steady, someone that was calm, someone who w wore sweaters and cardigans and calm the chaos in the nation. it didn't work. four years later, there were more chaos in the nation and jimmy carter seen as weak and ronald reagan seen as strong and there's a lot of parallels here because you saw the election of biden in the middle of another chaotic time that covid pandemic across the country. people felt it wasn't being addressed properly, they needed someone who could calm things down. lot of division in the nation. i think there's parallels and i think it's very -- the other thing that's so impressive here is to have a president running
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again. late 1800s, grover cleveland was reelected in that situation and see what happens with trump. stuart: we shall, shortly. one more, martha. time magazine says biden owes the country a vice president and more than enough talent in the congress and outside government for him to do so. it's a little late to replace kamala harris, isn't it? >> desire is there and poll numbers are terrible. she doesn't have anything to hang her hat on in terms of policy in terms of what she's done. i mean, the vice president as this article points out there to break tie votes and fill the job. if needed. keep in mind that president biden is over 80 sot last time they switched vice presidents was fdr when he went into the fourth term and there were concerns about henry wallace and he was replaced by t truman; right? keep in mind when fdr died in his fourth term, he was 63 years
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old. 63. when lyndon johnson dropped out, he was in that age range as well. and under pressure during the vietnam war of course. there's so much pressure on this older president right now, i mean, other candidate looking to be in the lead is also in the upper age range as well, but it's competency and ability to do the job that really matters in this case. if they can pull that off and change their vice president, it'll be very interesting and a lot of pressure to do just that. i agree, i saw the will cain teaser on the way in here. i think there's shakeups to come that we don't see in the race and we'll see what they are. stuart: both you and i love politics and it's a wonderful year for politics. >> it's a big year for sure. stuart: watching you on the story here on fox news. thanks very much, martha. back to the markets, mark tepper is with me for the hour, is the big tech rally losing -- running out of steam? >> no, i don't think so. in fact, i think the better question is probably when are
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the dip investors going to step in and buy things now that they've pulled back a bit. stu, today -- or yesterday and today have been a great lesson in really managing expectations but also in risk management. on how important it is to actually sell and take profits as stocks are moving higher, especially with the three that reported yesterday. they're up 50-100% over the course of the last year. when it comes to managing expectations, with all of this ai hype, all thee of the company hads tremendously high expectations and you compare that to a starbucks, which actually lowered their forward guidance and the stock was up this morning. you know, so they have very low expectations coming in earnings, amd, alphabet, microsoft, very high expectations. i think this is just a pause and it's probably a good buying opportunity and missed out on ai trade. stuart: microsoft and going up from here you think? >> without a doubt.
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stuart: really, without a doubt? >> microsoft is one of the biggest cloud players out there and they continue to shift towards utilizing more and more ai, you'll need more cloud. outside of microsoft, that's one of the reasons why i think data center are good potential investors as well. stuart: they've got to be gigantic and find one investing in data centers and that's a winner. >> publicly traded options and private investments as well. stuart: i have one in mind that you traded in allowed to tell me? >> i don't own it so can't talk about it. stuart: stay there and more for you later. lauren is looking at movers and fascinated by novonordisk. lauren: bigger than lvmh.
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luxury goods. second european company with a $500 billion european market cap. second one. that's it. their obesity category has high sales and ceo said only a couple million people we're treating. imagine the hundreds of millions of people obese and there's a lot of room for growth for them. stuart: i noticed you said novo nordisk worth $500 billion. stuart: rock well automation manufacturing slow down. lauren: down 15% and getting pmis over a career and under 50 and that's contraction and a lot of inventory and they get new words and have trouble meeting the types to deliver because of disruptions in the red sea and their first quarter profit missed estimates. stuart: phillips 66 and based obstructing cerumen iran. lauren: they're up and shares at
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new high and hitting high earlier and solid earnings report sustained demand for fuel and they're still around. stuart: i first game to america and california, saw phillips 66 everywhere and the circle with 66 on it. lauren: you're right. stuart: seen it for years and years and years. thank you, lauren, coming up, 21 states now considered proposals to crack down on dei on college campuses. sounds like people are getting tired of woke policies in the school. mike rowe will take that on for us. >> it's gone like full communist and out of his mind and approach to law enforcement is so insane, it's so insane. stuart: full bore coming and i like that one. we'll be talking to a sheriff from vast increase in chinese nationals crossing the border. we'll be back. even democrats in eagle pass sounding the alarm on the border cry suspended ands.
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stuart: all right, to biden's border crisis. democrat leaders in eagle pass, texas, say their city is being overrun by illegals. matt finn is there speaking to the leaders. matt, what are they telling you? reporter: well, stu, they're asking for the biden administration, in particular president biden to come visit this showdown that we've been reporting on now for weeks.
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i caught up with the democratic mayor of eagle pass and also democratic council woman. they say their town has been overrun by illegal immigration for years. they both have joined a course of leaders all around this country who say they feel abandoned by the biden administration and are urging both sides to come together to find a solution. >> we need to stop it from happening the way it's happening and it's not right and they're in their right to defend and stop it and 6, 8 million people crossing in the last three years is just getting out of hand. we're having our check points close. i don't know.
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>> those people should be sent back immediately and it's not fair for those people thomas mancino do it the right way. >> now, you're looking live at texas' razor wire barrier along the rio grand river and it appears to be working and a major plummet in large groups and the mayor and texas national guard tells me the number of crossings dropped from a high of 4,000 a day last month down to about a few hundred a day this month. the weather warming up and giving us a clearer bibbingture how well this is work if it continues to push away the large groups and becomes a game of whack a mole. do they go to new mexico, arizona and california? stu. stuart: thanks very much, matt. more than 15,000 chinese migrant haves crossed the orion border
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since october 1. sheriff, are chinese migrants passing through your town or staying, which is it? >> well, for us in river side county and we're not 100% sure where they're going to other parts of california or whether they're staying here. certainly there's so many of them. we is seat difference and see that a lot are staying and it's certainly completely noticeable and something that we can't avoid. jowski are they pleaing persecution back home? what's the reason? >> for me, we're getting into personal opinion and we don't know. border patrol lets them in and that's the policy of our administration of our presidential administration border patrol, and we don't know. the problem is california is the
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majority of people coming into the country are coming through california, and we know without a fact that the get aways are not as many as the surrenders, but who are the get aways? we have caught some of them that makes them not a get away and they're still chinese. they're middle eastern and they are fighting we don't know why they're here and when they're giving up and border patrol is taking them daily, why are there people still trying to avoid it? we know there's bad characters and actors coming into the country in droves and the federal government is doing nothing about it. stuart: what do you do when you pick them up in river side county, what do you do? send them back to the border or just release them? which is it? >> i hope this frustrates you and infuriates you, but california is one the several
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states that are sanctuary states and they've made it against the law for e me or my deputies to ask where someone is from and if they're from another country or here legally and we cannot cooperate or communicate with federal partners in ice. for us in law enforcement, our hands are tied behind our back and we can do nothing while we watch this happen. stuart: sheriff, joe rogan moved out of california a number of years ago and slamming his former home state for its approach to law enforcement. watch this, sheriff. roll tape. >> i used to be a part of the blue bubble. i was 100% a left leaning person who lived in los angeles. i was 100%, i never voted republican. it's gone like full communist. it's out of its [bleep] mind and their approach to law enforcement is so insane. it's so insane, the no cash
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bail, letting people out for committing violent crimes, the [bleep] not stopping people for stealing up to whatever money is. stuart: all right, sheriff. full communism, so insane on crime and it's all pretty harsh. do you agree with it? >> 100%. i won't speak the words he did but i think them and agree with everything he's saying. our legislatures and governor, this has been a decades-long agenda getting us to the point where we are today. it didn't start yesterday and didn't start with newsom as the governor. it started when he was rising through the ranks of his political career and that's been his agenda forever. when you pass laws that neighboring it to where like i just explained, we can't cooperate and we're being invaded and pass the rest of these laws that say we can't arrest people and can't keep them in custody and these are not good people. this is -- we are in a position
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in california where there's no one being held responsible for bad alabamas and can't have that in a laurel civilized society in the country we all grew up in, it's destroying it. it's sad. stuart: well said, sheriff chad bianco, river side, california, sheriff. thank you for joining and yous come back again any time you like. thank you very much. >> absolutely. have a great day. stuart: former congresswoman maya flores wants to flip a blue district on the texas border. ashley, i believe her campaign is taking in a lot of money. how much? ashley: yes, she has. more than $970,000 from 16,617 unique donors in all 50 states contributing. that's pretty impressive. the conservative hispanic community leader says voters across the rio grand valley and crown triple-demic know that the southern -- country know the southern board service connected a disaster and illegal immigration is out of control and democrats are solely to
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blame. flores is challenge kemadrin det vincent gonzalez that she lost to in the 2022 midterms and faces a number of other candidates in the republican primary but election analysts mostly give democrats the advantage but no significant polling has been take and we'd see. the republicans leave it to see if it can be flipped. stuart: got t thanks, ashley. check the markets, please. the green for the dow up 50 odd points but a big downside move for nasdaq and home of big tech down 200 points right there. coming up, president biden went after donald trump's economic record. biden said he, biden, had inherited a mess when he took office. we're going to dig into that claim, believe me. mike rowe said four-year college degrees are shameful. that's a strong word. mike is here in studio and he'll explain what's so shameful about the degrees. momentarily he'll walk towards me. by the way, this is the man who has one of the greatest voices in media.
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>> cancellation brand with mark tepper. >> last day of dry january and constellation brands is corona, motemodello and they've overtakd bud light because of their issues as number one selling beer in american and has positive moten mentum and market share from bud light and giving management a opportunity to focus on the wine and spirits part of the stu. stuart: next one is duke energy. >> nothing interesting about a utility and it's interest rates coming lower and bombed alternative and utility should perform better in an environment where interest rates are going
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down and duke energy big player in the southeast and seeps to be a spot they want to move to and room for considerable consideration and moving over the values. >> there's no thrill at all and pocketing a dividend and hoping for appreciation. stuart: you're recommend ago 4.2% -- recommending a 4.2% dividend? >> we have to have exposure and some utilities and that's the best one i got. stuart: that was weak today, tepper. that was weak. >> i'll get better next time. stuart: look who's onset with me right now. that's mike rowe. stuart: what a voice. is that a base or baritone? >> could be. whatever. sometimes when i get excited, it morphs into the tenor or a mar
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ten but for the most part trying to be taken seriously, i let them fold them wherever it lands. other stayed non-exciting utility sector. stuart: get on what we're here for. you said something interesting about four year college degrees and they're shameful and they've seen shameful. >> pr for utilities and that's what i'm talking about with degrees and nothing inherently shameful about getting one but from a pr standpoint, something interesting has happened. in higher ed, everything is based on the perception of value around the credential and that perception is tied very specifically to the belief that it makes you knowledgeable. you get the degree and
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reflection of intellect and wisdom and knowledge. that's over. i think that connection in honinger exists in the minds of many of millions of parents and they're starting to see the degree as thing you purchase in a transactional way in the same way i believe a lot of university haves come to see their state of the unions as consumers and so what's gotten arbitraged out of the whole conversation is the actual knowledge you'd assume comes with a degree. today it's 3-p 3.8% among the graduates. a lot of people are getting as. a lot of legacies are going through. we saw the president being defended by the harvard corporation over 50 counts of plagiarism. we saw the anti-semitic thing. put it all together and you find a lot of alumni not only holding back on donations but they're
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taking their degree off of the wall frankly because they're tired of talking about this. that's a pr problem. if higher ed doesn't take it seriously, the chickens will come home to roost. stuart: to me, the bigger breakdown came during the pandemic when the schools were closed and kids had a mask up, didn't go, they lost the university experience. i think the breakdown in higher education started then. are you with me? >> new york university raised its tuition during zoom classes. at some point look at the people paying the bills and almost like they're being dared. it's like how much further will it go? meanwhile in my little tiny world, we offer work ethic scripts for kids that want to -- scholarships for kids that want to learn a skill in monday. it's never been more robust and giving away a million for these kinds of scholarships.
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they're not superior semicircular canaly but -- not sexy but they're there, pipe heating, welder, air conditioning, heater, plumber. there's a path to six figures and shorter than you they felt stuart: sharp disappeared from heisman d didn't disappear but downgraded in high school many, many uros ago when the universities wanted a more intellectual, academic education. >> look, we need -- higher ed needed higher pr in the 70s and more engineers and more doctors and needed a lot of that. the pr that came with the push for that came at the expense of the careers we're talking about. making a case for higher and he had make it by don't go in this direction, you're screwed. if you don't go in this direction, you're going to wind up under a house welding under some crazy thing and that was dumb and unintended consequences
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of that are this, skills gap. giant skills gap. 11 million open jobs. stuart: i get the impression things are changing. some corporation no longer require university degree. normal people are realizing you can make 100,000 a year as a blumer, electrician, once you've got a couple years of experience under your belt. >> final thought on pr because it matters, big study recently released asked americans to rank the 50 most important things next to the 50 things that they think people find most important. four year degree was no. 47 on the bottom and list of things people believe and find important it was no. 3. the collective delusion surrounding the primacy of four year degree is tipping and when it falls, it's going to go splat. when that happens, you're going to see a whole nother conversation emerge around the jobs that exist today.
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stuart: in england, college courses are thee years. tepper, what do you feel about a four year degree? >> we should get them done in two years. that'd bevan better. look, i mean, to mike's point about college degrees, if it's an engineering degree or a medicine degree, those in any opinion have positive rois or value and going and doing ancient philosophy or art history, not much value this. the disdain towards college degrees really came act when biden tried to pass through his student loan forgiveness plan at the expense of the welder, the plumber, the hvac guy. that is when people really started to look at this and say this isn't cool. i didn't go to college. i got to pay for these people who did go. stuart: okay. i'm out of time. sorry, mike. love to have your voice on for a few more minutes but out of time. tepper, thank you indeed. now this, billionaire and harvard mega donor ken griffin
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is stopping his donations to harvard. is this more fallout from anti-israel protests? he asks, ashley webster, what do you say? ashley: stu, he answers yes but griffin taking it a step further. the founder of citadel that's worth valued at more than $36 billion is accusing harvard and other elite u.s. colleges of producing " "wineny snow flakes- whiny snow flakes instead of future leaders". it will resume its role educating young american men and women to be leaders and problem solvers. now, griffin donated $300 million to ha varicose veit year and closed the checkbook over the handling of anti-semitism on campus and influence of diversity initiatives and left wing bias at the university. harvard has not responded to the latest remarks from griffin.
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stu. stuart: thanks, ash. coming up, report of israeli military says the war with hamas will last through this entire year. what happens to american support if it lasts that long? i'll put it to mike waltz. member of the squad, cori bush, under investigation by the justice department. she's accused of using federal funds to pay for private security. she says it's a political hit job. a full report af after this. ♪ they're waiting for you. hey, do you have a second? they're all expecting more. more efficiency.
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stuart: squad member cori bush under a justice department investigation accused of misusing campaign funds. chief washington correspondent mike emmanuel with us. mike, what does the con woman have to say about this? >> congresswoman cori bush said
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she's not used federal tax dollars for personal security but insists she needs protection. >> i have endured relentless threats to my physical safety and life. as a rank and file member of congress, i'm not entitled to personal protection by the house and instead have used campaign funds as permissible to retain security services. >> she's paid $170,000 for security services and $105,000 to her husband according to fec reports even though he does not have a private security license. republican lawmaker told us she should talk to her party leader, hakeem jeffries. >> ensure that jeffries or somebody could look into it and get with local law enforcement agency and i bet she doesn't want to talk to the police, does she? she doesn't even support the police. the idea to pay her thug money
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to try and help protect her. for what? maybe if she wasn't so loud all the time she wouldn't be getting threats. reporter: bush was vocal about defund the police and hypocritical for spending lavishly on private security and some democrats are not quick to defend her. >> obviously if she's broken the law, democrats have been real consist on this. if you're cori bush or donald trump, we apply the law equally. hopefully it is a misunderstanding and if not, she'll have to deal with the consequences. reporter: for a little context, $720,000 in security services is more than four times her salary as a member of congress. stu. stuart: thanks, mike. president biden shifting his strategy in florida. ashley, is biden now mocking trump in florida? ashley: y, he s. examples and biden called trump un-american for wanting the economy to crash claiming the former president
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wants that because it will help him politically and biden predicting i'm going to win florida and make tram app loser again even though biden lost the state to trump by more than 3 percentage points in 2020 and polling shows him trailing by double digits and nevertheless he also again, biden, called trump donald herbert hoover trump and said he was like hoover because he had fewer job when is he left than came into office. all sorts of bashes and the trump campaign calling biden "delusional for thinking he could win florida". going on the offense for sure, stu. stuart: thanks issue ashley. mark, i have to ask you, how many voters, how many people in america know who merri bowl better hoover was? >> in biden's defense, he thinks he lost to herbert hoover in 1928. stuart: you're terrible. >> when it comes to florida, there's like zero percent chance
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biden wins that state. it's a red state and look how many people fled blue states trying to go there and biden economy, despite what he tries telling everyone, he's not grown the economy from the bottom up and middle out like he claims. the only people in a better place today are the richest of the rich. that's it. stuart: that's the truth. mark, show me the dow 30 please. have we got a sense of the market on a day like this when the nasdaq is way down and dow up a fraction. there's a predominance of sellers on the dow 30 when it's down 30 points, 38,435. president biden said he decided on how he's going to respond to iran-backed attacks in the middle east. are we going after their oil fields and take their money? i'll also congressman mike waltz what he thinks we should do. the congressman is next. get help reaching your goals with j.p. morgan wealth plan,
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stuart: inflation could complicate our efforts to strengthen our military. hill i have vaughn has the story. she's at the white house. why are defense contractors turning down deals with the pentagon? reporter: well, stuart, inflation is eating into not only the pentagon's buying power and the cost of defense projects
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making them unaffordable for if i weres that would normally bid on them. the way the contracts are drawn up, contractor is on the hook for any extra costs that exceed the original quote and with inflation, that difference in what they thought the project would cost can be way less than the reality so now major defense contracts are stepping back and turning down contracts, a trend if it continues that could be detrimental to the military readiness and warning that "inflation is partly -- particularly disruptive to the national defense because the long budget and acquisition processes dod uses prevents timely adjustment for inflation and absent relief to undermine the readiness of forces and timely deployment of modern deployments to the war fighters". that's a problem as president biden is ramping up attacks against proxy forces and more than three american troops that were killed and dozens more injured in a drone strike.
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>> yes. i do hold responsible in supplying the weapons to the people of the military. reporter: the pentagon knows they can't be expected to absorb the increases of contracts that have widely rising inflation and head of army futures command kaying "we need ways to account for unexpected economic conditions. we're not just asking the industry to completely eat all that increase". stuart, hopefully change is on the way to adjust the contracts at least until inflation calms down. stuart. stuart: good idea. hillary, thank you indeed. iran warning it'll respond "decisively to any u.s. threats". congressman mike waltz joining me. you're on the armed services committee, congressman. do we attack iran's oil
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facilities and take away their money? is that what you want to see happen? >> well, i definitely want to take their money, stu. until we dry up the cash in teheran, they're going to continue to pump into their proxies and not only their terrorist proxies but remember, they're pumping drones, short range missiles and other things to russia. that would also, you know, supporting ukraine to fight against them and the root of all this evil in the middle east is in teheran. there's a number of options, we don't have to bomb these oil fields. we could actually enforce the sanctions. we could hit the terminals through cyber means. and what i'd also like to see is the actual iranian operatives running iraq and syria and yemen that are aiding and abetting and resupplying these various terrorist groups, we could take them off the battlefield like trump did with soleimani and his successor is also running around the middle east attacking americans and israelis and causing mayhem.
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stuart: if we attack oil facilities or in some way restrict their oil out. gas prices many america. that's not good for biden in an election year. >> well, it wouldn't except that biden just shut down the exports of american gas, which by the way for example i was just with the speaker of the parliament of lithuania on the front lines of russia, they buy 85% of their energy from the united states and they don't know what they're going to do. this is affecting our allies, affecting europe. we could replace what we shut down from iran with cleaner american oil and gas if we chose to, but the climate agenda in this administration is mucking up our foreign policy, not just in the middle east but china and europe as well. stuart: got it. congressman, the israeli military says the hamas war will last through all of 2024 and
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possibly into 2025. will the u.s. continue to support israel for another year? >> as long as republicans in the house have a say, absolutely. i'll tell you what, stu, in talking to number one democrat colleagues, they're under a ton of pressure and have protests out in front of their offices and getting thousands of calls a week from the progressive left demanding they withdraw their support from israel and push israel into a ceasefire. that's unfortunate but it's a political reality and i expect to see the administration getting weaker and weaker in terms of it is support for israel as the election year progresses. stuart: i'm afraid we're out of time, congressman. i want to take 30 seconds and you know what's coming to wish you a very happy 50th birthday. now, when i turn 50 -- when i turned 50, it made no difference. i didn't have a real problem with birthdays till i'm 75.
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you doing okay with 50? >> as a combat veteran, i'm bless that had i made it this far. we have too many colleagues that never d. i don't take any years for granted. never hear me complain. stuart: great having you on the show. here it is, wednesday trivia question, another good one: which year was the first wristwatch invented? 1742, 1780, 1810 or 1845? the anxious when we return. answer when we return. you got this. let's go. gobble gobble. i've seen bigger legs on a turkey! .. sports tech like this smart fitness mirror. i'm also mr. leg day...1989! anyone can become an agent of innovation with invesco qqq,
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stuart: i like this question. we asked which year was the first wristwatch invented. ashley, you go right ahead. ashley: i don't have enough time to figure this out. i will go with number 2, 1780. stuart: what about you? >> number 4, eighteen forty five. we when you stole that from me. i'm going to choose 1848 or 45. used all that off of me. there is why i say 1845, don't show us the answer yet. wait a minute.
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you didn't give me a chance to explain myself. i thought 1742-1780 were before technology and it would be a huge clunky thing on your wrist so that couldn't be it. by 1845 the industrial revolution, get a wristwatch around you. here's the blurb, the name of the watch was commissioned by the queen of naples for fr.5000, $25,000 today. i would like to see it. it was french, not swiss. >> neither confirm nor deny. stuart: we are out of time. thanks for all the help you have given me yesterday. thanks for being with us. coast-to-coast starts now.

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