tv Varney Company FBC February 6, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EST
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>> at the end of the day, he has to know that donald trump would whup him, and if he doesn't, maybe he will agree, and maybe we'll get this debate. and god bless that man, because trump will destroy him. >> there's at lot of things in there, there's a9 lot of mechanisms that are good. so real world application. if we were the apply this bill today, we wouldn't be releasing even chose to what we're releasing right now. >> what you're trying to do with deterrence is put everything back in a box, and the is longer this goes, the harder it is. what you're actually saying is we can accept this level of violence in the region. >> president biden, on day wunsch invited -- one, invited this catastrophe, this humanitarian crisis and the crime that we see and all the a rest of it. on day one. ♪ remember mama said, no, you just have to wait. ♪ he said love don't come -- she said love don't come easy -- stuart: ah, i know that is the supremes. how do i know that?
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jimmy failla's on the set, and he told maine you can't hurry love. 11:00 eastern time, it is tuesday, february the 6th. straight to the markets, please. the dow's up 60, the s&p barely changed, nasdaq down 22 points. not much price movement this morning. show me big tech, please. you always have to go to them, because they've got the money. alphabet's up, apple's up, microsoft and -- amazing. amazon and meta platforms are down. check that 10-year treasury yield, please are, 4.11% on the 10-year. that's where it is. and now this. president biden will not do the traditional super bowl interview. he says he wants america to forget politics and just enjoy the game. more likely, his handlers are scared of what he might say. trump says he would love to do the super bowl interview. he would, he says, get ratings gold. and east right. how about a presidential debate? if an election debate? trump says he's ready right now. would biden do it?
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well, he gave a vague answer. again, his handlers will move heaven and earth to avoid a head to head matchup. more and more it's trump who looks like a president in waiting. he looks and talks like a president. he jets around the country on a plane his aides call trump force one. he showed it off to brian kilmeade. looks like air force one. his aides don't refer to former president trump. oh, no, no, he is the 45 president, donald j. trump. his secret service motorcade has been turned into a presidential-looking photo op. it looks like the trappings of a sitting president. yet again the contrast is just so apparent. biden can't debate. he answer as questions with background -- where background noise if obscures his answers. he's pursuing a basement strategy even more extreme than 2020 when he add covid as an excuse. there are constant gaffes and slurred words. his mind wanders. well, biden is the president. he doesn't always look like one, and he doesn't always a act like
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one. if trump does. third hour of "varney" starts now. ♪ ♪ if. stuart: well, the aforementioned jimmy failla a is with me now. he looks and act as like a president. you going to disagree with me? >> the trump man? if he's a a lot more formidable, and we need that on the world stage, because they understand strength. it's the only one of our values that they value. they don't value life the way we do, they certainly don't value women or any type of tolerance when it comes to your sexual orientation. but here's the problem for biden and the super bowl interview, and we all know what the problem is. they can't trust him in if an untethered interview. when he does a press conference, he's got the list of reporters ahead of time, he's often got the answers on a note card. that's theater. that's not a press conference. and when you get biden in a live interview, okay, now he's subjected to tough questions like what's your name, you know?
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[laughter] what do you to for a living, they can really stump that guy with those types of gotcha journalism moments, and that's to why they've got to kind of stash him out of the way. i would love to see trump do it because i think what people will appreciate, even the people who hate trump, okay, is we're now living in a world where where we don't have the luxury of getting upset about tweets or things trump might say about the cast of "saturday night live," because the world's actually on fire. you need a guy that'll show up to put it out. trump's willingness to take on all comers, i think, is more endearing now than four years ago because the world was in better shape. stuart: he hasn'ts -- answer as any and all a questions finish. >> whether his aides want him to or not. he lives in the people's republic of trump. i know he has advisers, but at the end of the day, judge, jury and executioner is donald trump. stuart: he never left the presidency is. aye got to get to this, more than half of gen-zers say that the tax season has brought them to tears.
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a quarter of them say they need a therapist to deal with the stress of taxes. [laughter] what are you laughing at there, lauren? lauren: nothing. stuart: i think expansion business in america is therapy. >> it really is. everybody's just, like, i can't already. listen, some of us have therapy, some of us have what i do, but with let's not get into it on family program such as this. i understand the stress of tax season. i have been is audited as a cab driver two times. lauren: seriously? >> yeah. so whenever you hear the irs expansion is only going to go after the rich, okay, they went after a cab driver. lauren: what'd you do? >> i had high gas, pences, and i wound -- expenses, and i wound up getting money back, but they didn't think i could support jenny and lincoln on such a minuscule income. and they thought i must have stashing. i clearly wasn't investing in clothes orness in, but the point is, it's strassel. -- stressful. here's the problem. the rich have attorneys, okay? we're a piñata. if you want at the middle class,
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money comes out. if you hit the rich piñata, a lawyer or accountant comes out. you can talk about taxing the rich, but jimmy failla's getting the bill. and it ain't right, city! stuart: what do you think about gen-zers -- >> i laugh. one of the reasons they're stressed about not having money is because they blow it on all these ridiculous things. is it too complicated? yes. but buy a bottle of wine and get over it. you'll be fine. lauren: gen-z is a more thoughtful and sensitive generation so is, yes, well-being is very bug in their vocabulary. stuart: we're going to move along -- >> are we not going to address the middle class jimmy failla? [laughter] >> when are they going to let the little guy -- she clearly owns stock in a therapist's office. stuart: okay. you've got a new potential, it's called cancel culture
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dictionary. i've got a preview. roll that tape, please. [no audio] >> -- sort of like this moment of what happened to us. >> yeah. >> how did we go from crosby, stills,man and young in the '60s to neil young on spotify yelling like an old man at joe rogan? >> that's what's so ironic to maine i grew up in the bay -- me, i grew up in the bay area being exposed to so many of those freedom fighters and hippies. and the thought that what is supposed to be the biggests place of freedom, actually the most -- >> cancel culture's in decline. >> yes, it is. they're losing their power because we finally figured out who these people were. what i mean is cancel culture happened in the social media age, but it existed before social media. we have people who'd get mad at comedians, but we didn't call them cancel culture, we called them losers. now that we understand who the losers are, i'm showing up to the movies to get mad, the comedy show, the concert, these
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are places we went to put our political differences a aside. when i say my book is trying to win a war on fun, it's not a call to arms, it's a call to chill out and have fun. and i worked one fox business host into the trail for you, city stu. delay said mr. varney will not even human this. you're welcome, brian brenberg. stuart: we will make sure we watch you on "fox news saturday night," every saturday, 10 p.m. eastern on fox news. >> what a country. stuart: jimmy, you're all right. murphy is with us, he's with us for the hour. i really want to talk nvidia. early this morning it broke above $700 a share. do you think it's going to go higher than this? >> i think the momentum here, stuart, has stopped for a minute. so it got above $700, and then it sold off a little bit from there. it's really hard to value artificial intelligence. it's really hard to value how big this actual market is. i own it. i'm letting it run right now. but, you know, can it keep
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going? i'm going to say, yes, it can keep going. how much more? if it's hard to say, but there's a a lot more i think the company can do. i think they can start talking about not just hitting the targets they've put out, but getting into other areas which will give them more levers to pull. right now the stock's working and it's arguably the best performing tock out there. stuart: it is the, indeed. i'm scared to get in at this price even though i think there's great potential here. i just don't have the -- [laughter] laugh not going to use a nasty ebb i appearance, but i don't have the cajones to buy -- [laughter] >> here's the thing, right in if we're talking about a trillion and a half or $1.7 trillion, are you thinking it doubles from here in are you thinking it goes to $3 trillion or becomes the largest market cap in the world? stuart: i just don't know. [inaudible conversations] >> here's the thing, at your age if you want to say that, you don't need it then. you can own baskets that own some nvidia. you don't have to go out and buy nvidia because we're talking about it. you're going to miss a lot r. but as an investors watching the
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program at home, get used to it, because you're going to miss plenty. if you have a plan and stick to it, missing certain companies is okay. stuart: it is okay. [laughter] whatever you say, mike. lauren -- lauren: yes. stuart: she made her presence known just a moment ago. you're looking at paypal -- lauren: they own venmo, very popular peer-to-peer payment services, and they have buy now, pay later. i wanted to bring to your attention a report that just came out of the new york fed. credit card delinquencies surged more than 50% last year, $17.5 trillion total consumer debt. delinquency transition rates are up for all types of borrowing except for student loans. stuart: that's a huge increase in delinquency rates. that's not a good story. lauren: we are swiping in, buying now and paying later just to get by. stuart: that's appalling. new york city community bank. lauren: the slide continues, down another 13, 14%. we reported the surprise loss. they cut their dividend. worries about their exposure to commercial real estate. so are these troubles specific to this bank, or are they
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representative of the regional banking sector, is the question. right now it seems it's specific to new york community bank. stuart: hopefully it is and doesn't bleed out. don't want to see that. sunworks. solar power system. lauren: filed for bankruptcy. stock's catering. another green company having trouble. stuart: sayonara. thanks, lauren. british media reports that prince harry has aa arrived at king charles' residence in london. he's with his father as his father battles cancer. we'll have a full report from london with the latest on that that coming up here. an a.i. chat bot helping people get referrals to mental health services. do people really need -- really trust a diagnosis from a robot? we'll dig into its effectiveness. the odds of a border bill getting passed through congress increasingly unlikely, but border patrol has endorsed the bill. what's the big issue here? i'll ask senator roger marshall, who doesn't like this bill. he's next. ♪
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♪ stuart: the senate is expected to take up a vote on the new border deal tomorrow. there's growing dissent within both parties about it though. ashley, where do things stand now? ashley: well, it appears to be going nowhere, stu. are republican leaders in the house saying it should be scrapped. even progressive democrats are angry because the measure doesn't provide a pathway to citizenship for the millions of undocumented migrants who have lived in the u.s. for a number of years. finish the bill that is due for a procedural vote tomorrow calls for $118 billion in new spending including $600 billion to you know, $14 -- $60 billion to ukraine and about $20 billion
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for new enforcement efforts along the u.s.-mexico border. brandon judd, president of the national border patrol council, says, look, the legislation -- sure, it doesn't go far enough, but at least it's a start. listen. >> i'm looking at this from real world application. right now, as with e speak, there are no caps to illegal immigration. as many people that cross the border illegally, we have to take them into custody. under this bill there would be a cap at 5,000. this bill transcends administrations. this will go beyond biden. it will go beyond trump. it will go beyond the next president. so i'm looking at this from the standpoint of we need something that is going to continue to go past not just executive order. ashley: well, house republicans call the bill in its current form a complete waste of time and say it will be dead the on arrival in the lower chamber. president biden says he's hopeful it will pass in the senate. and to your point, stu, setting the republicans up as the party
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has blocking reform at the southern border. we're expecting to hear from the president in the next 30 minutes on this issue. stuart: yeah. i think he will blame republicans and claim victory on that one. ashley: yep. stuart: look at the headline. this is from the washington post, republicans will never get another border security deal this good. and then there's "the wall street journal," a border security bill worth passing. the nat bill has reforms trump never if came close to getting. senator roger marshall is, republican from kansas, joins me now. mr. mr. senator, why do you say no to the border deal? >> well, look, stu, this bill does not secure the border: all i along americans need to realize that joe biden's priority was funding ukraine in this bill. this bill gives joe biden and ukraine $60 billion. only $20 billion to secure the border. and really this does not accomplish much. it does not accomplish securing the border. it does very little to impact parole or asylum, and probably
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80% of the people that have crossed the border illegally, they didn't go far enough on asylum or parole. joe biden was never serious about this bill. this was a charade. stuart: if this bill goes with down to defeat, then the president is very likely to say is, see? those republicans, they're the ones who are standing in the way to true immigration reform and control of the border. my question is, do you think the public will buy that from the president? if. >> well, that's exactly my point, stu. americans are smarter than that. come november they will make the final decision on this. and they're going to vote joe biden out of office exactly on this issue. i've been saying for six months that this open border's the number one issue of this presidential election. joe biden could shut the border down yesterday if he wanted to. he has the legal authority. but, again, he doesn't really care about border security. his priority is funding ukraine. we need a new president who's going to secure the border. stuart: and, mr. senator, the heads of big pharma companies are going to testify on capitol hill thursday. now, you're a doctor.
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you oppose government drug price controls, i know that. but are you okay with the government negotiating with big pharma to lower prices? if. >> well, look, senator sanders has called this big hearing, and he and i both agree that prescription drug prices are too high, but he's going after the wrong entity. we need to think about the innovative cures that big pharma if has given us and the cost savings they've given as well. not only do they keep people healthy, they keep people out of the hospital. think about a hepatitis drug that now treats hepatitis. 12 pistol over 12 weeks. maybe it's $3 or 4,000. the real problem pharmacy benefit managers which grab about 50-75 cents of each dollar. and that's why we're working together. again, compliment senator sanders, senator cassidy on leading the way to go after pharmacy benefit managers. they're the real culprit that's manipulating the problem. stuart: why are drugs created
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and manufactured by american companies cheaper overseas and more expensive here? >> right. so i think that's a great question. i think it's a valid point. but many of the drugs that would go overseas are nebraska actually given to the prick if -- never if actually given to the public. a fraction a of these miracle drugs that treat cancer, the new drug that's going to treat alzheimer's, they'll never even make it to market there. foreign nations say, look, if you don't give us a special deal on this, we're just going to steal your intellectual property and make generics. and, by the way, the seventh bill joe biden signed was legislation that promoted biosims and generics getting to market sooner, and that's why we're seeing prices start to fall when it comes to diabetes. bernie sanders wants this medicare for all that's going to drive down innovation and make people stand in line for treatments. stuart: got it. senator marshall, thanks for joining us this morning. see you again soon. >> thank you. stuart: mental health therapy getting a boost if from, yeah,
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you saw it, artificial intelligence. ashley, how does that work? ashley: it's interesting. a new study in the u.k. looked at the value of using a chat bot to help people assess their need for mental health services. demand, by the way, for services of that type in england have been on the rise particularly since the covid pandemic. the chat bot was created by an a.i. company called limbic, and it evaluates whether a.i. can lore the barrier to care by helping patients access help more quickly and efficiently. the data shows that the number of referrals from services using that chat bot rose by 15% during the study's 3-month time period as compared with a 6% rise in referrals from services that didn't use it. researchers say the benefit here is that the detailed information that the chat bot collected reduces the amount of time human clinicians needed to assess patients while freeing up other resources. i think it's just the tip of the
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iceberg, stu. we're going to see this more and more. stuart: all right. thanks very much is, ash. mike murphy with me this morning. would you take mental health recommendations from an a.i. chat bot? >> well, have you ever dealt with a chat bot and felt good after doing it? that's where you type in things and you get an automatedded response? i don't see how this really works. and i think there's some people out there who just overrely on therapy. but there's some people who need real help. and i don't see how lots of uses for artificial intelligence, lots of ways it's going to change our society for the better, i think treating people for mental health isn't one of them. stuart: i've got it. all right or, mike. you've got your opinion. stick it to it, right? [laughter] >> yes. stuart: coming up, a man in florida gone viral for posting simple life hacks like how to clean out your dryer or replace a window. he's gone viral, this guy. made a ton of money. why he has such mass appeal. the carhartt or company, one of my favorites, began over a
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hundred years ago in detroit making clothing for blue collar workers: now they're an international brand. we'll ask the chief brand officer about their new spring women's fashion line. that's next. ♪ ♪ 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 ] and we wanted to thank america's number-one motorcycle insurer -for saving us money. -thank you. [ laughs ] mara, your parents are --
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precisely portioned for your dog's needs. it's an idea whose time has come. stuart: well, the markets are not really moving that much. dow's up 70, nasdaq's down 7, but murphy is here with his stock picks, and he has a picked palantir which happens to be way up this morning. >> palantir -- [laughter] had great earnings. we've talked about a it now for some time -- stuart: wait a minute. did you see is it go up and, right, i'm going to recommend that thing? >> i did. that's exactly what i did. can we go back to the tapes a few months ago in. [laughter] for people who own palling tier -- palantir, the move into artificial intelligence, this is one company that is getting it and getting it right. i'm not saying they'll be the next nvidia or microsoft, but when you look attar official intelligence and look at palantir and what they're doing, i think this is one area people
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should be looking at. we've owned it for some time, i think there's a lot more upside. from here, probably 50%. stuart: 50% up from here? i just told you i've got some money to invest, and i suggested putting it into with nvidia are. your telling me, don't do it, stu, put it intoing palantir. >> well, more potential reward but more risk. so you have to balance the two. stuart: i'll tray. next one is qe health care. ge health care. it's up 12%. what the hell's going on? >> i'm here to point it out, not say run out and buy it today. this is a company that spun out of general electric. they sold off a lot a few months ago, and now it's coming back. old high is $88 a share. strong numbers out of the company today. i think if it pushes above that $88 number, there's a lot more upside. if you own it, i wouldn't be selling it here. stuart: palantir, ge health care, thank you very much, mike. now this, carhartt launched as a work wear brand in 1889. it was something you'd wear the
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your blue collar job especially if you worked outdoors. more recently we're told it has become a luxury fashion brand. joining me now is susan heineke, the chief brand officer at carhartt. i have to tell you, i'm an enormous carhartt supporter and have been for many years. i wear that stuff myself. i've got a farm, and and that's what i wear on the farm. how come can carhartt is now a pop culture phenomenon? if how did that happen? [laughter] >> well, thank you so much for having me today. i really appreciate it. i don't know if we say pop culture phenomenon, but the brand has been around for 135 years. it is built fully on, you know, supplying the right product for the core working consumer, and i think that authenticities has just really resonated. you know, just with other generations and with many other consumers. but it is built, you know, for the trades, for work, and we're really proud of where we've come. stuart: i am told that there are
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youngsters, young women actually, wearing car harts in brooklyn. now, that's a revelation to meant but i think you've got a new spring line for women, is that correct? >> yeah. we've actually done a lot of research really leaning in to the female worker and and kind of -- and understanding what she's looking for in her work wear. so when we're visiting the trades or we're out in the field at the ran are. and the farm, we're listening to what the female wants. and the things that she's looking for are different than what are necessarily want they -- what they want in men. they want to make shower they're getting the right product that fits them properly and stand the up to their long day. so we're really excited to launch into our new line for spring '24. stuart: but for women your clothing, is it for functional or is fashionable? or can you have both? >> well,s it is function first for carhartt always. we really, really want to make sure that our product leans in to the durability standards that
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we've had for the last 135 years. but she does want to have fashion colors, she wants to make sure that it's fitting her properly. but really it leans into work wear before anything else. stuart: okay. congratulations on the new line. i hope it's a great success for you. i will continue to war my carhartt bibs, but you'll never see a picture of me in them. susan, thank you very much for being with us. we appreciate it. >> thank you so much for having me. take care. stuart: i'm not fashionable, i'm just functional. thank you, susan. now this, a man in florida, he brought millions -- he's got millions of fans for sharing his unconventional a home repair tips online. ash, what kind of things is he fixing? ashley: yeah? well, things like how to unclog a dishwasher, fix your garbage disposal a, perhaps repair a water heater. the tiktok user from tallahassee to, who goes by the name of gator, a childhood nickname, has posted hundreds of videos on just useful repair hacks around
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the house. incredibly, he's e acued nearly 50 million -- accrued nearly 50 million likes and 3 million tiktok followers. he's even been offered a sponsorship deal by wd-40. gray to have calls his tiktok -- gator calls his tiktok stardom just a complete accident. he just did it for fun and now believes his videos have become so popular because many young people aren't taught basic with skills. he learned the building trade starting at the age of 18, before the internet existed, he says, and now he just focuses on making videos that are accessible to all a audiences. good for him, and it shows you the massive demand for that. stu. stuart: you can make a lot of money with millions of people following you hike this. all right, ash, thanks. look who's still with me. mike murphy. would you take advice from that guy? >> i would. stuart: you would? >> and we talk a lot about the younger generation wasting time on hair phone, but i'm not on tiktok, but i'm on instagram. i'll see a guy like this, i
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follow a guy very similar to that, dad advice is, things on how to fix things around the house. you can get recipes, workouts. there's so many things that you can just pull out your phone and get access to that if you think about it, it's a whole cottage industry that's really in the early innings. there's a lot more upside for people like that. if you can post contact and bring value to consumers, it drives people to your page. you can make a lot of money. stuart: but with you wouldn't actually watch gator fix something and take out a hammer, saw and screwdriver and fix it yourself in your house, would you? >> if i had to. i'm not really the guy who can take out a hammer and fix something in my house. i'm more likely to break something. but i would pull a recipe out, and i'd try to cook it, which i've done a lot recently from the internet. i get a recipe and use it. so if gator's giving advice on how to fix something and you have it broken, i'd listen to gator. stuart: i'm not allowed to hold a ham aer in my house, ever. [laughter] coming up, e nearly 70% of
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voters in chicago say mayor johnson is handling the migrant crisis. pastor corey brooks on the state of play in chicago. new video shows king charles and queen consort camilla returning to the royal palace after a it was announced the king was undergoing treatment for cancer. prince harry reportedly there. his wife is not. we'll ask royal are watcher, neil sean, what more he's heard from the palace. he's next. ♪ ♪
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every time. ( ♪ ) constant contact. helping the small stand tall. stuart: any moment now president biden will deliver remarks on the senate's border deal. we will monitor and bring you any headlines that come our way. we're going to look at new video, here we go. put it on the -- there you go. that's king charles and queen consort camilla returning to the
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royal palace after it was announced the king was undergoing treatment for cancer. greg palkot, what more do we know? >> the front page of "the sun" says it all a, typical of most newspapers here. quoting the king, i have cancer. king charles iii is now entering his second day of a new royal reality, the u.k. head of state diagnosed with some form of cancer. u.k. prime minister sue knack confirmed today the encouraging news, that the cancer was caught early, and friends of the king saying he and his doctors are very, very positive. finish remember that cancer, stu, was found when he was being treated for another condition, an enlarged prostate. yesterday he had his first outpatient treatment and is said to be on his usual good form p. he will keep up his private duties, his royal paperwork, but he will back off his public role for the duration of the treatment. the royal family backing him up. prince harry flew in from california overnight. he reportedly met with his father a short time ago a, about
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45 minutes. long time since they've been together. queen camilla seen at charles' side as you just showed as he left the residence for a chopper ride e to his country house. prince william will resume public duties tomorrow. he's been caring for his wife, princess kate, who's recovering from ab comal scheduler. -- ab a.comal surgery. messages if from leaders of france, india, canada, australia and the united states. president biden posting in part, navigating a cancer diagnosis takes hope and absolute courage. former president trump sending his wishes for a fast and full recovery. again, as we got that a brief glimpse of the king today, stuart, it was encouraging. he was smiling, he was waving. let's hope for that recovery. back to you. stuart: that is very positive. greg, thanks very much, indeed. let's bring in royal watch or neil sean. what's the speculation are around the severity of king charles' cancer? >> good afternoon, stuart, from london. well, you know, i would surm
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mise that i think it's a little bit more serious than we're led to believe. and i don't mean that in a frightening way, but anybody who's undergoing this sort of treatment, they know the background to this. now, what i would suggest is that what his majesty, the king, has done is been very clever to alienate any fears that we may have had. we saw him only two days ago on sunday attending or church. and, of course, he would have known about this diagnosis well into last week. what i would say is commendable work from queen camilla because she knew about this and carried on work on his behalf. but there's a lot of speculation over here as there was with the princess of wales, and that's rather cruel, to speculate on that. what i would think is that this is going to put his majesty, the king, out of action even longer than he possibly believes at this point. stuart: neil, prince harry is at his father's residence in london now. meghan is not there. what is the significance of
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harry rushing over there in haste? >> well, let me tell you this, stu, nobody wants meghan markle here. she is, many people suggest, the source of a lot of the problems that have is ensue ised over the last four years. and that, of course, is speculative. what we do find over here in the united kingdom is this: that harry, amazingly, could rush over, security problems, you know, a attached to that as well, get picked up from heathrow with royal security, no problem there. but, of course, he couldn't be bothered to stay too long for his father's coronation. one would surmise this, that if he goes back to america and spoke like he did about meeting her majesty, the queen, and the right people around a her, this could be the end of his reconnection, dare i say. stuart: do you think he's got his tail between his legs? if. >> not at all, no. i, you know, sad to say i'm sure he's very upset about a his father who -- who wouldn't be? it would be unnatural. but you have to view harry and
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meghan with a lot of suspicion because of what they've done previously. and i think over here, stuart, you know the mood in the united kingdom, it's just, we're just very cautious of him. why would he suddenly drop everything? or is there a bigger story that we don't actually know about, the reason to turn the up like that? stuart: neil, thanks for being with us this morning. ongoing story. you'll be back soon, i'm sure. >> pressure. stuart: ashley, what is president biden saying about king charles' cancer dying know sis? ashley: the president, whose son beau died of brain cancer at 46, says he is concerned and hopes to speak to the king soon. take a listen. >> reporter: do you have a message for king charles? a message for king charles? >> i'm concerned about him. just heard his diagnosis. i'll be talking to him, god willing. ashley: he was in las vegas at a union event. later, in a post on x, biden said, quote: navigating a cancer
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diagnosis, treatment and sur shrivership takes hope and absolute courage. illinois and i join the people of the quited i didn't think come in praying that his e majesty -- united kingdom in praying that his majesty enjoys a quick and full recovery. stuart: thanks, ash. some buying, i see some green, maybe two-thirds up, one-third down. the dow is up 600 points at 38,440. with now, yesterday i shared a personal anecdote of giving money to a migrant woman. i wanted to know if you, the viewers, thought i did the right thing. you were not shy about telling how you felt. we'll read some of your responses and ask pastor corey brooks what he thinks about a it. all of that is next. ♪ ♪ j.p. morgan wealth management knows it's easy to get lost in investment research.
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get help with j.p morgan personal advisors. hey, david! ready to get started? work with advisors who create a plan with you, and help you find the right investments. so great getting to know you, let's take a look at your new investment plan. ok, great! this should have you moving in the right direction. thanks jen. get ongoing advice; and manage your investments in the chase mobile app. ♪ ♪ ♪ [typing] ♪ you were made to act spontaneously. we were made to help plan accordingly. ♪
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stuart: yesterday i told you a personal story of how i gave money to a migrant woman outside newark airport. i asked you to send in your thoughts and you responded in full force. the first one comes to us from mick. here we go, stu, you're a kind person to give money to the person begging at the airport,
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but given all the support being provided by our government, americans need to know how to direct the beggars to government help. after all, our tax dollars are paying for these people already. okay. next comes from ken. well done, stu. as my wife always says, err on the side of mercy. one comes to us from if jeffrey. spot on reaction, mr. varney. i would have done the same thing. however, it is wrong for joe biden to have allothis in the first place. apparently, godly americans will be facing this type of migrant issue wherever we may go. it's a vicious cycle. our president has created it. the last one comes to us from terry. to give money to illegal migrants today is misplaced charity at this date and time in america. five years ago or more i would see a homeless person or family, i would buy food and bring it to them, and if there was a dog, dog food. we are encouraging migrants to break our laws and shortchange our citizens, especially our veterans in efforts aspect. all right, mike murphy, did i do
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the right thing? >> well, i'm going to say you did. and it's what i would have done as well. but i agree with the viewers too, you know? so the migrant situation's way out of hand. i don't think anyone's debating that that. but i don't think it's really if we were in a different country and given the opportunity to just walk across and get free health care, free room and board, free food, we would do do the same thing, so i don't blame those people, you know? i blame the people who are in charge. so i think what you did -- i'm a big believer in karma, so giving that small amount of money doesn't impact you too much, that'll come back to you in great ways. stuart: thank you, mike. i want to bring in new beginnings church of chicago, the founder and senior pastor thereof, corey brooks. pastor, welcome to the show. what's your opinion on it? if you're a pastor. was it the right thing for me to do that, morally? >> absolutely. morally, without a had toe of a doubt, you know? if you're going to err, you should always err on the side of giving. i really do believe god gives
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blessings to who he can give blessings through. i believe life is like a boomerang. you throw it out, it comes back to you. i definitely believe giving is always the right thing to do. the problem that a we're faced with in the city of chicago, however, is that it's stressing our system. and even though we keep trying to give, i experience it at our church every single day, i have migrants who are showing up. and i try to help every single one. but the more i try to help, the more show up. and they're taking resources away from us transforming a block called o block in chicago. stuart: i was trying to help in a very personal sense. i wasn't9 trying to impact or affect if policy at i all. but in chicago 70% of the residents of your city do not agree with what major johnson is doing. what would you do in chicago to cope with this migrant crisis? if what should be done? >> well, first of all i think the people in chicago should have the right to decide if we want to have a sanctuary city. most people in chicago do not want a sanctuary city, and as a result we're seeing all of the migrants being, showing up here
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in chicago already are on the stressed system where we're already dealing with crime, we're already dealing with housing. resourcing that could -- resources that could go toward those issues are now going to other places, toward migrants. free housing, free food, free this. and i understand we have to help, we have to do our part. but it's the policies that are causing the major problems for us in the city of chicago. we need to close our borders. stuart: well, how do you get policy to change in chicago, and how do you get federal policy to change at the border? how do you do that? the only thing is, you've not to vote, right? >> you have to vote. and you have to stop voting the way you've been voting for all these years. as a black man in chicago, i can tell you that they've been voting democrats forever. but their starting to -- they're starting to see the reality that you can't continue that cycle and expect for things to go your way. you're going to have to looked at something different. stuart: is it okay as a christian to say no, you close that border? you may want to come in but you can't? if. >> as a christian, we have a
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right to say, listen, we want to help, but we think you ought to abide by the law. we are supposed to abide by the law. and i think there's nothing wrong with telling individuals that, listen, this is the law, this is what we expect, this is the responsibility. that's what we expect not just from migrants, but we expect that from all of the citizens of america, follow the laws. stuart: i just get the impression that the times are changing, fast. pastor corey brooks, god bless you. thanks for being on the show. >> appreciate it. stuart: thank you. here we go, it's time for the tuesday trivia question which has nothing to do with the border. what percentage of american adults have had at least one cavity? [laughter] north americans. is it 60, 70, 80 or 90%? what percentage of americans have had at least one cavity? if an intriguing question will be answered, after this. ♪
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questions? okay. i've got number 2. 70%. stuart: what have you got? >> i will go with number 3. stuart: i'm going with 90% on the ground american dentists, you get an american dentist's office and have something wrong with you. i was right. it's 90%. that's for adults 20 and older. it's 57% had a cavity and children 6 to 8, 52% had a cavity in their baby teeth. you put a feeling and a baby tooth? i learned a lot on this program. thanks for being with me for the hour. what's your name? thank you very much. let's go, time is up for me. coast-to-coast starts now.
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