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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  June 20, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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call or go online now to request your free quote with one of generac's nationwide dealers. special financing and low monthly payment options are available, and if you call now, you will also receive a free 5 year warranty valued at over $500. the call is free, the quote is free, and there's no obligation to buy. call or go online now, so the next time there's a power outage, your home powers up. power your life with generac. call or go online to request your free quote today. >> when someone like dan ives is saying trillions of market
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cap can go, that's the kind of thing that marks the moment. we're going to look back and go, boy, what we were thinking? >> you're right to think that if donald trump is someone that's going to be easily reelected and then i think you really are going by the graveyard. >> the real element going further and further away. he promised to fix our still broke and getting more broken. >> the democrats are act ago bit like the boy who cried wolf. every time he says something, every time he does something, they claim that this is the end. stuart: everybody plays the fool. which story that relates to today.
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11:00 eastern time and it's jun. the longest day of the year and more sunshine available than any other day. on the market, some green. dow's up 75, nasdaq up about 40. big tech presented a mixed picture this morning. some up, some down, we do have amazon, alphabet, meta up. microsoft, apple down. the 10 year treasury yield has been going up. it's above 4.25%. yet it's up some more, 4.28% right now. and now this, this is stonehenge in southern england and engineering marvel and nobody knows how they moved those 13-ton blocks of stone in place. on the summer solstice, it rices between two keystones throwing its light into the center of the circumstance and will mathematical brilliant piece and
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britain's iconic monument. this week, stonehenge was vandalized by the climate group just stop oil. they sprayed orange paint on the stones. they demand a rapid faze out of all fossil fuels by 2030. two arrests, a 21-year-old and 73-year-old. when i saw this, i was angry. i want these people thrown in prison. more importantly i want their cause exposed for the nonsense that it is. faze out all fossil fuels by 2030, that's ridiculous. this vandalism got support for the whole climate agenda and across europe, climate war wars if you want to call them that, thrown paint and suit on the mona lisa and sunflowers and dumped char coil into the -- chair coal on the roam town doyne and works of art in museums glueing themselves to it. it's the most extreme climate circles and it's affecting the vote. in this month's election for the
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european parliament, green parties were the biggest losers and in germany, the greens lost half their seats and all across, environmental rules are being rolled back. here in america, climate change comes in ninth on the list of extremely important issues to voters. if these climate vandals think they're going to raise our consciousness, they better think again. voters are not intimidated, they're angry and expressing opinion at ballot box. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: i hope steve hilton agrees with me. do you think the far left greenists are vandalizing art and national monuments are going to win people over. i know you agree with me on this. >> i totally agree and i want to share the emotional outrage and i felt the same way. many, many years ago i had an ex-girlfriend who's parents lived in will shire where
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stonehenge is and we'd drive down from london and often right past stonehenge and look and marvel every single time. the thing that i want to say about this, these ignorant morons that do this and other kinds of vandalism, they're actually not the worst of this movement because in one sense you can say at least they're just hurting inan hasn't combined effects and slogan just stop oil is the official policy of democratic policy here in america and certainly here in california. their id seizure disorders hurts not just inan hasn't objects but people and businesses every single day and when you look at what is happening in the name of this cause, small businesses are being crushed and people's livelihoods are being ruined and absolute lunacy here in california and now they're saying they're going to force trains to try and be electric even as they do that they admit they haven't even been invented yet on the scale that can carry the cargo. they're just -- they are the
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ignorant morons in pushing through this agenda. this completely wildly impossible to deliver without massive destruction right across the board. stuart: i knew you'd agree with me. this is extraordinary stuff. luxury high-rise homeless shelter open in downtown la and each unit cost estimated $600,000 funded by taxpayer. i know we'll agree on this one. tell me what you really think, steve. >> look, you've got -- this will be 280 ant >>s or something like that -- 280 units or something like that and 200,000 plus people living on the streets and highest in the nation by far and direct result of democrat policies, far left democrat policies. ironically the policy is called housing first. what does is mean? it means that if you are operating a shelter like that or other homeless service in
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california, it's against state law to require people to be sober, to get into alcohol or drug treatment. given the fact that majority of people with the streets even if they weren't addicted to drugs or alcohol when they get flat configuration and trauma of being on the streets and gangs that prey on them, they do become addicted to drugs and state law make it is illegal to get them off drugs as a condition of accepting shelter like that . it's total insanity. stuart: yes, it is. another one and i think actually we'll agree on this one too, a school, la schools will now ban the students from using cell phones during school day. i know you're in favor of this and we spoke about it before. i'm sure you're pleased to see this go through. it's not quite through yet but pleased to see it. >> very, very pleased and it's already started in other jurisdictions around the country. florida i believe was the first to do this. very rapidly they report real transformations in behavior in
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school. bullying is down and cooperation between students is up and attention span, which is the most important thing in class and they've all gone in the right direction and this is about saying kids can't have phones at all or shouldn't have any way of keeping in touch with their parents, it's about saying don't have the smart phones and they're so addictive and meaning they're staring at screens all day and not talking to friends and recess and so on. this is very healthy and it's a very welcomed development. stuart: you still don't have a smart phone, do you? >> i don't. i have an old fashioned flip phone and i'm on the road a lot for campaigning change for california and i have to be reachable and i stepped into the modern world and got a flip phone, not a smart phone. stuart: okay. i give in. steve hilton, you're all right and see you again soon. on the road with his flip phone. check those markets.
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dow up and nasdaq up. lou basenese is with us for the hour. you're saying there's a disturbing trend developing as ai hype continues. >> yeah, not as disturbing as steve hilton not having a smart phone, but we're seeing a huge divergence of the hardware providers and soft wear providers -- software providers of ai and it threatens to impact software as a service and not sure how service has to work and it's being incorporated as a future and great example of gps garmin devices in the car and charging 2, 300 per them and going for them and how much does that cost? it's applications for ai and going for the features and not stand alone products and if you look at performance of tech software going flat this year. this is potentially dangerous for companies and you can do things more efficient efficiently with the software
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and don't need as many users to do it. it's a bubbling up trend that needs paying attention to and especially if you're investing in the high flying space in the stocks and premiums based on the number of users and could change as economic model of ai rolls out. stuart: another thing helping the market recently is the possibility of a rate cut for federal reserve. do you think there'll be a rate cut before the election? >> no, absolutely not. if there is, it'll be purely political. president trump has been on the record calling the fed local back in his tenure and make no bones about it, no reappointing powell and a political move and self-service to preserve his job and sway the election. stuart: stay there, lou. lauren is looking at movers and amd7%. lauren: they were hacked on tuesday and concern that breech might have uncovered some product details. stock surging today because management said we don't believe this breech had material impact on business and pipe herrera sandler names them a -- sandler
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names them a top pick in technology. stuart: axion. lauren: up 5.5%. ex-centure. companies are not pulling back on tech spending but booking generative ai offerings. they want to automate certain parking lots of their business to the tune of $2 billion this year for generative ai. stuart: kb home they're up. 3.5%. lauren: it's a builder and home orders up for the second straight quarter and average selling price going up to $490,000. higher prices bad for us, good for them. helps boost their revenue. stuart: some up 3%. lauren, got it. hundreds of migrants in washington state camping outside of a hotel and demanding the hotel be opened as a free shelter. we've got a report. leader of hezbollah threatening to start a war without limits if
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israel going to war with lebanon. retired four star general jack jackkeane tells us if he sees a widening war on the horizon. he's here and will walk on the set in a moment. we'll greet him and might even stand up and shake his hand. he's a retired four star general. ♪ ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ ♪ [thunder rumbles] ♪ ♪
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stuart: this just coming at us, saturday sec sayre state blinken will meet with israeli officials and that was canceled because of political differences with israeli leaders and that meeting is back on. griff jenkins at the white house. do voters approve of biden's handling of the israel hamas war? reporter: stu, they don't. in fact, only 3 in 10 do and president biden despite this
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latest continues to have an issue with the democrat party split over the and shall protesters at every turn continuing to brand him as genocide joe. let's go to latest fox numbers and we'll show you here by a 31 point margin, stu, more voters disapprove than approve of biden's handling of the war and break it down over the party and the democrats disapproving 41% voter support is declining and 8% overall decrease from november of last year. the perhaps one silver lining of the white house comes to the most ten topmost beautiful issues for voters and the israel and hamas war ranked last at 32% and far below the top issue of the future of american democracy at 68% followed by the economy and 66% and now as for the latest attentions you mentioned between israel and this administration, it flaired up after a high -- flared up after
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a high level meeting between israeli officials was canceled after netanyahu posting video of withholding arms shipments and the white house responded to fox saying we have no idea what the prime minister is talking about and as you mention, the breaking news of state department is fox is confirming and we'll meet with israeli officials today unclear though and wouldn't specify who he's meeting with and meanwhile with the white house trying to find out how to handle these new issues. stuart: griff, thank you so much. leader of hezbollah threatened to start a war without limits if there's conflict between israel and lebanon. retired four star general jack keane joining me now. is a wider war coming, general? >> it's very possible. i mean, the israeli ministers and the prime minister certainly are thinking this through. the minister of defense would like to wind down in gaza and
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turn their attention towards hezbollah and the prime minister wants to finish in gaza and then turn their attention. what is the issue here? the reality is that 80,000 israelis that live in northern israel have been displaced as a result of hezbollah moving down into the southern part of lebanon close to that border and firing across that border. israel needs to get back to their border and have their residents for them and going for the boarder and could not accept that and they had two options and one is air campaign against hezbollah and hezbollah is formidable. 150,000 rockets and missiles can range at any city and town in israel and that's a bigger fight. they could range scores of missiles on cities.
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second, they have close to 100,000 people under arms. in 2006 when they went in there after several weeks trying to do the same thing, push lebanon away, the hezbollah in lebanon away, they left and retreated out in failure. three service chiefs were relieved. they know full well this would be a tough fight, but they believe they have to do it to maintain the sovereignty of israel and do not let hezbollah redefine a border for them. stuart: extraordinary. growing concerns about iran's nuclear capabilities and new report says iran has a computer modeling program that can help develop nuclear weapons. as far as -- what i'm told is the u.s. has -- says iran has a nuke in 18 months and israeli says they could have a nuke in 12 months and that's time frame acceptable for you? >> not acceptable and going for that and the capability and
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going with them closer in the enriching uranium fusion and we don't want them getting to the nuclear weapon and they have to deliver one and that would take some time to have a delivery means to be able to do that and miniaturize it and get on top of the miss and will watching this like a hawk. obviously and going for the unit making wrong decisions and going with iran over this and going for them trying to appease them anding for the latest three weeks ago and negotiating with iran and clandestinely going back to the nuclear deal after everything that happened in the middle east and does that make sense to anybody? stuart: no. i think it's called the -- nuclear facility in iran and deep, deep underground. do we have one? >> we have deep penetration
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bombs that the israelis do not have, and i would assume if we were going to do this, if the israelis were going to do it, we'd certainly give them the bombs. there's been a lot of thought on how nowon duct an operation against iran's nuclear inter-surprise and we could not destroy the entire enterprise and spread out at deep various sites, but we could delay significantly. israel has conducted espionage against nuclear inter-surprise, and they did it at -- enterprise and at one of their classified sites as well and delayed it 6-9 months. wouldn't surprise me if they don't conduct more espionage and did it enough with iranian dissidence working with them side by side in an espionage operation. stuart: they know what's going on. last one for you, general. putin and kim jong-un signed a partnership deal pledging to help each other in the attacks. can our defense spending keep up
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with the new world threat? >> defense spending has not -- it's been flat through this entire administration. the chinese are outpacing us militarily. we're the number one super power in the world militarily and getting within 1,000 miles of chinese coast, they're swinging decisively to china. offensive missiles take down them in the region and we move our fleet in close to be able to use self-fighters in the crus missiles and -- cruise missiles and swung them with capital access and personnel on a scale that actually exceeds something in world war ii and very dramatic and outpacing us and we've been talking about this for some time and got to wake up and we've got to fix the budget and get resources in there. stuart: enormous amount of money
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and we prepare to do it. >> as of right now, this administration was not prepared to do it and reason is it would change other political social objectives to take the money and put it on defense. and that is where we have been and we are flat for the last four years on defense. stuart: you know, you're presenting a very dismayed picture. >> our adversaries look at it and how serious is the united states in talk talk talk. go look at money they're willing to spend. that's what they look at. stuart: then there's the president who doesn't look like a commander in chief and doesn't carry himself like a commander in chief. doesn't talk like one or think like one. i mean, i don't mean to be peak spl jordyty of the commander in chief because you're a four star general but it's obvious, isn't it? >> there's issues there and trying to be devoid of politics but there's leadership issues associated with the president of the united states, mostly in his policies is the thing i focus
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on. and they're not for the threat today. stuart: general jack keane, great to have you with us. coming up, self-proclaimed linked in rival that rewards its users with crypto said it just raised $10 million. i'm not sure i understand this. tell you how the system works and what the new wave of funding means. we'll give you clarity and that's a props at some point. the -- promise at some point and ecuador indian migrants -- ecuadoren migrant and he's allowed to walk around freely in the country and hands of law enforcement officers tied when dealing with migrants? sheriff mark dannels discusses that next. ♪
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(♪) (♪) (♪) (♪) stuart: the dow industrials up 16 and nasdaq had a very small gain up ten points and going for the stock picks ready to go and more. >> it's a $6 billion bio-tech and been around for a long time
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and rna and based on the pfizer and moderna vaccines and that's four different types of rna and at a different space and going for 40 drugs in partnership with a lot of big pharma and talking about it coming back in here and big pharma looking for companies like earnest and going for them and doing their own research and take over target as the share. stuart: 50, $60 a share? >> yeah, tomorrow it would be close to 80-90. i wouldn't be made if that happened. stuart: nor should you. c3ai. >> not star war c3po and ai-based enterprise development and earlier this is the disconnect between software and hardware and helping them integrate ai into their business and not create ai products and think about companies like dow chemicals and con ed here and they're using ai as a tool and optimize business and revenue up
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20% and quarter over quarter and it's a compelling growth business and playing out ai that's not nvidia. stuart: down 3% today. >> down with the market and what's nvidia doing and no particular reason. it's a megamultibillion market cap stuart: a 3% decline doesn't worry you at this stage? >> it does not. stuart: next case, got to hear this story, hundreds of migrants are camped out next to a vacant hotel in washington state. they're demanding the hotel tell be opened up as a free shelter. dan springer is there for us. why do they feel entitled to a hotel? reporter: they're still in that old real estate ax yum, location, location, location and i'll step out of the way and close to the migrant cam and vacant hotel and it's about the groups saying they should be used for them and immigration crisis and 9 million entering the country illegally the last
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three years and most seeking asylum and unable to work and waiting years for a permit. now here in kent, washington, south of seattle, 270 asylum seekers from angola and venezuela and set up a tent with no running water and squaller and they're demanding to be let into that old hotel. >> the governments of washington and ken county. >> to have the heart to help and yous house us in that abandoned hotel. reporter: complicated and hotel owned by king county and used during covid as a quarantine shelter. it's so dilapidated and would cost millions to bring it up to code. the county says doesn't have the money. city of kent meantime doesn't p the hotel ever used as a shelter and desperately wants the
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encampment removed and it's a 48 hour trespass violation two weeks ago and king county, a sanctuary jurisdiction, refused to cooperate with the sweep. >> my responsibility is taking care of the 140,000 people that call kent home. i don't have the capacity nor do most cities to take on thousands of additional people that have no way of providing housing for any of those. >> more than 2,000 asylum seekers come through a church in willow washington and some given housing and others gone to shelters and various encampments and king county has spent $5 million on migrants and state of washington and legislature has allotted 30 million and going around the state and it's not nearly enough.
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stuart: illegal immigrant arrested for vehicular manslaughter in colorado. he previously been deported multiple times and in new york, ecuadoren migrant with a criminal history allegedly rape ago 13-year-old girl. sheriff, why are the criminals allowed to walk freely in our country? are you hands tied when dealing with illegals. >> federal immigration is a federal mandate by u.s. congress and the white house and going delivery on international borders and it's not a local or state jurisdiction and reason we're so embraced and engaged with it and recognizing it is the fact it's affecting communities throughout the united states like we just noted and i'll say this setting the stage, this administration for president biden he owns it. he owns this and he said in the
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state and country for the last three years and more and more tragedies getting worse and worse and victimized our citizens. stuart: what are you allowed to do when you see whom you think would be illegals walking through your county? are you allowed to question them? can you stop them? can you arrest them? what can you do? >> a bill by michael and lawmakers in arizona came up with that and that was vetted for the court side of arizona and long story short we have the authority for reasonable detention and think they're in the country illegally up to the point the federal government is not coming or letting go. our hands are tied and our border community has a little more depth and immigration folks working alistening side and yous interior united states, it's a free for all. stuart: ice is restrictive in what they can do when they know there's illegal immigrant over there. ice is restricted; right?
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>> yes, they are and i'll tell you why they're restricted and not because of the rule of law and going to look at them and criminals that are here and they need to be here and going with the executive order and two weeks ago and going to be secure and that's not happening. people think it is and we're replacing people with false security in every community and they're roaming the street, i say people, violent people from across the boarder and look at all the got aways. stuart: sheriff mark dannels, thank you for being on the show and thanks a lot. see you again soon. a california man admitted to trying to smuggle migrants over the border. what's the story, ashley? ashley: yeah, the man of california facing federal conspiracy charges after his suv
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was stopped by border patrol agents driving from the border in new mexico with six migrants found crouching inside and agents had watched the individuals come over the border wall from mexico and then run towards his waiting dodge durango and migrants from the border wall to a safe house in new mexico and court records by the way showed the suspects two previous arrests for migrants smuggling in california. ruiz now faces a criminal complaint accusing him of conspiring to transport illegal aliens for profit. in other words, just another day at the border. stuart: you're right there, thanks issue ash. the world's largest private wine collection up for option and costing a lot for the peopleup vintages and former president trump trying to appear to the community and wants their support and their donations and we have the full report on what
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role cryptos are playing in the election. that's next. ♪
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stuart: donald trump wants to convince the crypto community to back his campaign. kelly o grady is poll ing this and what is trump doing to appeal to the crypto guys? >> he's going as a friend to crypto and he's working directly with crypto advocates in the industry to shape his potential policy. he's also the first major presidential candidate to go with currency and it's a bit of 180 when he joined your show a few years ago and he vowed to
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keep regulators away. >> joe biden's war on crypto. we'll ensure that the future of crypto and the future of bitcoin made in america. >> crypto could really play a key role come november and 52 million americans that own crypto and may matter in swing states and there's a pact, stand with crypto and signing up advocates in swing states and georgia and arizona signed up more advocates in those states than double the gap in votes in those states between trump and biden in 2020. it's no surprise that crypto is a talking point on the campaign trail. looking at president biden, he'll join a round table next month and going to be more crypto friendly and actions speak louder than words and he recently angered the community by verne toed a bipartisan -- vetoed a bipartisan revolution with the sev oversight. >> 49% of eligible voters and going with millennials and
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crypto is the majority party and many are very motivated after being attacked and attacked and attacked by the biden administration for the past four years. >> stuart, neither candidate laid out a specific plan but we've been speaking with large players like coin base in the space and industry is spend ago lot of money and it really has the potential to pick one of the candidates this fall. stuart: yeah, it does. very interesting. thanks, kelly. lou basenese what, do you make of trump trying to court the crypto community? maybe crypto more mainstream? >> it is and it's classic politics and promise something and specifics on policies are lacking whether it's the republican or democrats. it's a big voting block for anything else and think about the reservation coming from sam bankman-fried and he made $100 million in illegal donations or other people's donations and that's got a bad reputation because of that, but there's a lot of people like kelly said, there's 52 million americans that are using this and this is something that is becoming more mainstream and the irony is more mainstream it
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becomes and more regulated it'll be. stuart: yeah. lauren: young people are more into crypto than older people and trump can read the room and those that he needs on his side. stuart: thanks, everyone. this fair shake, a crypto super pact raising money to support lawmakers and endorse crypto and block chain. how much have they raised, ashley? ashley: $169 million and counting. the super pact has received milmillions in contributions for coin base and crypto and outcome of final key races in u.s. elections and back in march, california rep katie porter lost a primary race for u.s. senate after the pack claim that had porter took campaign contributions from "big pharma, big oil, and big executives". at the time, porter responded saying "californians aren't fooled, shadowy crypto billionaires don't want a strong voice for consumers in the senate and fear people that call out corporate greed and spending
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millions on dishonest doc money ads against me". money from super packs cannot -- can be used to support specific candidates of political parties, but the group is not permitted to coordinate with the actual campaigns. stu. stuart: understood, thanks, ashley. now this, linked in rival, bonex raising money to expand their platform and how much have they raised? lauren: $10 million. this is a fintech company and build ago gambler ified version of linked in. it's gameified and users getting $10,000 in bounties successfully recruiting and rule would be great for that company and i refer him and get $10,000 for that token. what can i do with that token? haven't a clue. this is the worst case scenario. stuart: that's your prize. lauren: it's gimmicky, i guess.
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stuart: look at state of the market. that means all 30 of the dow stocks and i see buy on there. nine down and 21 are up if i added it up correctly. the dow up almost a quarter percent and 90 points to the upside. former fundraiser for democrats because it's so fed up with the left that she has ditched the party entirely. even supporting donald trump. we asked her what caused a huge shift. she's next. ♪ ♪(voya)♪ there are some things that work better together. like your workplace benefits and retirement savings. voya provides tools that help you make the right investment and benefit choices. so you can reach today's financial goals and look forward
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i'm sensing an underlying issue. it's t-mobile. it started when we tried to get him under a new plan. but they they unexpectedly unraveled their “price lock” guarantee. which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for.
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stuart: allison nguyen helped raised millions for barack obama's 2008 presidential campaign and used identify as a left leaning democrat and now she's supporting trump. allison joins me now. allison, welcome to the show. why are you fed up with the left? >> good morning, stuart. i love the original messaging of
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barack obama. there's no white america, there's no black america, there's just one america. unfortunately since his time, america has become more divisive. i don't believe in a blue america, red america, there is just one america and we need policies that make america a better place. a policy that is centered around the next industrial revolution. ai, block chain, web 3, and i love that trump is all in. times have changed. america is not making t-shirts and basketball anymore. we're making ai and crypto and we need to keep those jobs in america. stuart: you've gone to trump because you think he is america's technological future. you think he will be good for ai and biden will not. is that summing it up in a nutshell? >> yes and we can get more into
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the specific details such as tax cuts for mining bitcoin in america; right, stopping elizabeth warren and sec from driving some of our best innovative companies offshore. entrepreneurs and invoter vatters like -- innovators like steve jobs are the rebels and making our country safe. let's keep the new products made in america have prosperity of it. stuart: since you came out like this for trump and have you been ostracized by your friends? >> was really surprised, i haven't been. people called me and said wow, you're articulating our thoughts. we were just too scared to say anything. i think that talks more about our culture and that's why i'm writing this book beyond good and evil with these big four companies that say do no evil
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and a cancel culture of click bait. stuart: that is true. allison, thanks very much for coming on the show. we appreciate it and hope to see you again real soon. allison huynh, everyone. >> thank you, stuart. largest private wine collection ever going to be there. lauren: nearly $140,000. per bottle. two events and more than 3,000 bottles of champagne and burgundy and historic french wines and the collection and assembled them over 40 years and this is expected to fetch $50 million if not more and going for the wine collection ever to come to market. stuart: the thing is, do you get to drink a little of it at first? no, you don't. >> you get to tell everyone i
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bought it. look at that bottle. i bought it. collectibles is uncorrelated as asset that's done really well to the stock market and looking for a way to have the stock market and look at collectibles like wine and antique cars and baseball and sports memorabilia and had people on that are marketing sports memorabilia. a way to invest. lauren: were you listening to the last hour, lou? stuart: we had this ridiculous story on. 94% of gen z people, youngsters, go for collectibles. i thought that was utter nonsense. >> it's like real estate. where's the liquidity when you need it. the beauty of the stock market -- >> wait a minute. do you believe this? 94% of gen z people invest in collectibles? >> do they have a very expensive pair of shoes in that's a collectible. stuart: time for the thursday trivia. the summer solstice occurs at what time today? 9:30 2, 12 noon, 4:51 p.m., 8:4e
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by the way. the answer when we return. ♪ [thunder rumbles] ♪ ♪ .. ♪ ♪ the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪ ♪ [thunder rumbles] ♪ ♪ (marci) so, how long have you lived here? and how are the restaurants around here? are they good, bad, meh? (luke) marci, we've gotta go. (marci) i'm sorry. (luke) we've got seventeen thousand more parks to visit. [marci screams] (luke) we bring you the best neighborhood info.
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solstice, and what do you say? stuart: i will dust off my druids robe. number 3. lauren: 8:4:06 pm. >> 4:51 with ashley. stuart: i will go with 4:51. >> got to go with ashley. stuart: the longest day of the year, the longest sunlight hours, the solstice occurs when the earth arrived at the point in its orbit when the north pole is at its maximum tilt. thanks for sticking around. wants to hear from you. do your anyone you know purchase expensive collectibles? send it to varneyviewers@fox.com.

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