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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  June 21, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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stuart: in the good ole summertime. nat king cole. that takes me back. good ole summertime. big time sumner new york at the moment. going up to the 6 degrees here -- 96 degrees here. it is june 21st. to be correct, friday today. look at markets, not much price change. very little and dow is up 38 and nasdaq down 6. that's it. show me big tech, please. a mixed picture i believe. not so mixed. alphabet, apple, amazon, microsoft up. meta down. meta dropped below $50 a share and 10-year treasury yield hovering around 4.25% and gone up a bit and that's hurt the nasdaq. now this, many the first hour after new york court found donald trump guilty on 34 felony counts, just in the first hour,
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$53 million came into the trump campaign. that helped hip raise a total of $141 million in the month of may. way more than the $85 million raised by the president's campaign and the democrat national chit tee. break down -- committee. break down where the money came from, you can see the difference between the two campaigns and the difference between the two parties. putting it simply, trump's fundraising leans towards the little guy. biden leans towards hollywood and the billionaire class. and in may, trump's average donation was $27.77. that was the afternoon per donor. hardly mega donors and 25% for first time donors and a lot of individuals incensed by the guilty verdicts only too willing to open their modest olekowski ets and trump has a -- wallets and trump has a few billionaires and he's giving 50 million and wrinkle bust twins giving
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$2 million worth of bitcoin and biden relies more heavily on the rich. remember, he cut short his trip to the g7, sent kamala harris to take place at ukraine conference and flew to hollywood for george clooney's fundraising and took in 30 million that night. that was the night that obama had to lead him off the stage very gently, very embarrassing. the democrats also used something called joint fundraising. by combining the dnc, the biden campaign and 50 state democrat parties, wealthy people can donate close to $1 million to the biden victory fund. each election cycle. steven spielberg and his wife both cut checks for $929,000. lauren powell, steve job's widow, gave $929,000. george soros gave $933,000. look, when i first came to america, 50 years ago the democrats were the party of working people. republicans were the country club party. times have changed.
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these days the rich lean democrat and biden gets their money. working people lean to trump and give him their small donations. you know, do the democrats understand how much more money would flames flow to trump if ty tried to put him in prison? third hour of varney starts now. stuart: outkick founder and clay travis with me now. all right, clay, are the democrats going to back off their lawfare because it's clearly helping trump? >> i don't think s. they've made a gross political miscalculation, stuart. when you look at where we are, we're waiting on the supreme court opinions about the full expansion of oxly and whether it be used in january 6 immunity case and presidential case we're waiting for and we can't know
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the full scope of those given that varney will instill a situation down in atlanta and aileen cannon case in south florida that's continuing to play out 34 felony could bees in alvin bragg and resounded to donald trump's benefit and maybe in the end around here, democrats will be fortunate they don't have anymore cases going to trial before then. stuart: clay, what do you think would happen if the judge tries to sentence donald trump to prison? i'm sure the donations will sore. >> that's my expectation. stuart: you do? >> that's my expectation that judge merchan is because they're not going to get these other three cases. when have they shown restraint in any of these cases against donald trump? when has someone made a rational choice and said, you know what, maybe this is not in the best interest of the country. maybe we shouldn't cross the proverbial rubicon here. i think desperation is setting in and they're not having the same impact and they thought and
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remember, this is big and i haven't heard a lot of people talk about it, stu. look at the amount of money spent by joe biden, tens of millions of dollars and hasn't really moved the needle very much over the past few months and now trump is going to have at worst even dollars to spend in many of the battleground states where he's already leading and spent well, there's multiple pathways for trump to win and biden has to draw the state here and has to win wisconsin, michigan, and pennsylvania. there's almost no map out there where he can win the presidency without winning all three of the states. stuart: kevin durant agrees that caitlyn clark should have been left off the olympic's women's basketball roster. was it right to leave her off the olympic team? >> not if your goal is to have the biggest possible audience for women's sports and i think that caitlyn clark would double or triple by herself the number
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of people that would view the game and putting it into context. this is a great stat for you, 6 million more people watched caitlyn clark play in the women's college basketball championship game against south carolina than watched any nba finals game, any n ba playoff game that just took place. that's pretty staggering. also the men's game beat the nba finals so the nba is not doing well. wouldn't surprise me that a guy like kevin durant doesn't understand marketing or how to put your best foot forward. may not be one of the 12 best basketball players, all though i think you can make an argument that she certainly could be given who's on this roster because i don't think they have the 12 best women players on this roster already. she certainly is the number one draw. if you want to double or triple the audience for this game, i guarantee if nbc had their druthers, they'd have picked her to be on this team. stuart: she's straight and she's white. is she therefore a target? >> i think so. i don't think it's crazy to say
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that she's a minority in a league that doesn't necessarily love her. i think you can argue that being white, being straight has led to a large prevalence of jealousy and i polled my followers and said why do you think the wnba hasn't embraced caitlyn clark the most? number one was jealousy and making a lot of money and getting a lot of attention. no. 2 she was white and has to be considered and she certainly hasn't been welcomed with open arms like tiger woods was for instance in the pga, and that's a shame because rising tide will lift all boats and more money for everyone should be a good thing. stuart: missed opportunity if you ask me. stuart: clay travis, have a great weekend and no doubt we'll see you again real soon. thank you, clay. >> for sure, thank you, stuart. stuart: quick check of the markets, please. dow up 50 and nasdaq down 4. not much price movement is the sum of dull drops.
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jonathan hurley is with me. we have a pullback in ai-related is to be this is morning. do you think this is the start of something big? >> you real will have to zig when others zag to make the mark and these stocks have come too far way too fast and nvidia alone is responsible for about a third of the entire markets gained this year and in may and june it was those ten stocks that account for 70% of the stock markets gained and to beat nvidia and the pot st stocks and cisco systems and some microsystems and the company survived with the evaluations surveillance pressed. stuart: think there'll be a serious selloff in big tech?
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>> look at microsoft and this stock traded at $60 a share back in early 2,000s and ten years to re-eclipse after that bull market had ended and i say opportunity in other areas of the market. you know, there's 490 other stocks in the s&p 500 and the magnificent 10 and small cap value international and especially commoditities, stuart. we've spent billions and billions on this country subsidizing green energy and commodities and fossil fuel and going forward and that's why i'm looking this week on the radar screen and going off the radar screen. stuart: that's why you're on the show. jonathan hoenig. thank you for joining us on a friday. lauren is looking at palantir, down nearly 5%. lauren: yeah, cut to sell and analysts call their evaluation gluttonous, that's a quote.
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market capitalization and going $54 billion and the share from ai and volatile geopolitics providing intelligence via data to the military and the valuation he says is just way too extreme. stuart: okay, gilead sciences. late stage hiv drug trial had tremendous success in preventing hiv in women that they ended the trial early, stock's up just about 3%. stuart: big gain. mcdonalds. lauren: $5 value meal launches next week. june 25th, stock's up 2%. ubs sees sales at mcdonalds rebounding in the second half of this year and continuing into next. stuart: used to call that a loss leader. make a loss on the $5 meal. lauren: hope that is true. beverage companies hoped to monetize this and subsidize it. stuart: climate activists vandalized a plane and they thought it belonged to taylor swift and made a big mistake and full story for you coming up. the office is dropping the
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charges against some of the people that took over columbia's hamilton hall during the prohamas protests and they say there's no evidence of a crime. what? we'll take that on. vladamir putin going across asia and straightening ties with leaders in the area and forming a new world order. are we taking it seriously? rebekah koffler tells us 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 to a more confident future. voya, well planned,
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stuart: israeli forces pushing deeper into rafah and appear to capture the city. alex hogan joining us. the latest, please. >> hi, stuart. we're starting to see back and
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forth between jes jerusalem and washington showing this rift as the war drags into the ninth month and white house said it's perplexed by the recent comments of israeli minister benjamin netanyahu and he'll willing to take personal attacks as long as u.s. continues to send more military support after he had earlier this week claimed he spoke with u.s. secretary of state anthony blinken angler -- antony blinken about washington withholding weapons and the white house said that's simply not true. >> those comments are deeply disappointing and certainly vexing to us given the amount of support that we have and will continue to provide prime minister netanyahu. >> in gaza, new close quarter combat between the idf and hamas and taking place in ha fade pattern and israel today -- rafah and israel today and two of the soldiers in central gaza were killed in combat.
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palestinian officials say israeli air strikes today killed five people. there's also new urgency as rise in temperatures are creating the move for thousands of palestinians quite placed and u.s. military pier in gaza is back up and republicanning once again and -- running once again and taken down last friday due to poor sea conditions and the united nations is not resuming to carry out and bring that aid across the gaza strip to warehouses and distribute it again throughout gaza because it's continuing to evaluate how to do so safely. it was just yesterday, stuart, that the pentagon says it dropped about $1.4 million of aid, but it's not yet clear how much of that has been distributed. stuart. stuart: alex, got it. thank you very much. now this, chair of house intelligence committee is warning of a possible missile crisis in space. watch this. >> well, this is clearly a result of administration's weakness that we're seeing this provocativeness from vladamir
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putin and he's developing a antisatellite weapon and detonated all satellites in lower orbit and would likely render the entire orbit unusable up to an entire year and this from pentagon experts that said this is a real threat to the economic security and national security but also just even our basic communications systems. stuart: serious stuff, we need intelligence analyst with someone of access to intelligence and that's rebekah koffler who joins us now. that was frightening stuff. have we got space weapons? >> we don't, but we don't need to overreact to this. nuclear detonation in space is not a new concept and it's an old concept; right? but guess what, if putin decides to detonate in open space and our satellites will fry out
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russia's satellites and that's going to be reserved as hail mary contraindication for cerumen removal right? this is a last ditch for wartime very high on the escalation ladder and russia doesn't need that capability to actually unbalance washington and there's a whole rage of antisatellite weapons and missiles and the like and if russia jams gps, our entire way of life can be disrupted. is putin going to do that right now? no. people simply need to do their job and develop the counter measures and no need to declassify this and people that deal with this have security clearances, and all you need to do is give our guys proper weapons and give them instead of feeding them synthetic meat, this wolf stuff, they need to do their job. stuart: okay. putin is making deals across
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asia especially with north korea and straightening ties with china and iran and there's a world order. are we taking it seriously? >> i don't think they are taking it seriously and putin is basically standing up and getting there and she's putting together agreements in which she can use third party to hold u.s. homeland at risk and such as north korea, china, iran and she's doing it in retaliation to what we are doing. biden just gavrikov authorization to strike and such weapons to strike deep into russia. >> it is absolutely absurd. putin is not going to sit and wait till moscow is in petersburg and struck and they have a nuclear document and
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everything he needs to hold u.s. homeland at risk. he just sent warships into -- off the coast of florida and what biden administration needs to do is completely turn around its strategy. there's no strategy and ukraine, war is unwinnable for ukraine. the whole year or two and biden needs to resign a new set of people need to come in and they need to negotiate. stuart: that's not going to happen. he's not gonna resign over the ukraine war, is he? >> hopefully we're going to vote him out in november; right. but we need to negotiate with putin right now and the longer goals and his defense spending
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is 70% from 2023-2022. right. he has put russia on the wartime footing and this war is just we're investing right now in the destruction of ukraine and depletion of our own weapons. stuart: come back to the debate. this is a long debate. it's a good one. thanks for joining us, rebeka. >> any time. stuart: administration is redirecting air defense missiles sending to ukraine first. what does that mean for our allies? lauren: some are going to face delays and industrial base is struggling to keep up with global demand for weapons with so many wars at hand and redistricting missiles as soon as they come off the assembly line to kyiv. russia ramps up its attacks and ukrainian president met with the g7 leaders last week and may toe renewed plea for more aid and national security council coordinator john kirby said this tells putin we're not backing down and also said speaking of
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allies that israel and taiwan will not be affected by the delays. stuart: rebeka is here and disagrees entirely i'm sure. we'll have you back for more debate. you named them the big three and here they are. nvidia, which is down today 2% lower, apple reached 210, microsoft at 447. any except? lauren: i believe microsoft is no. 1 in terms of valuation. stuart: crossing back and neck and neck. neck. teacher union pushing for more sustainable schools to be built and they deliver poor test results and the story coming up. president biden preparing to face off with donald trump next week, but it seems like the media hassett the bar for a biden success as low as possible. tomi lahren sounds off on that, next. ♪
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♪ stuart: check the markets,nasd airlines is moving, isn't it? down 2%. lauren: they flew an air bus and know boeing and air bus 320 from airport in connecticut and had to return to that airport because engine cover knew off the plane. lauren: it was a record travel weekend and i was hopeful we were doing an airplane problem that didn't involve boeing. stuart: i see the point. all right, the gene therapy. lauren: yeah, explanned them their parents are desperate and fda expanded over the age and this basically guarantees a multibillion market for the problem.
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stuart: joe biden, donald trump they're preparing to face off next week. peter doocy at white house. peter, walk me through how they're preparing. going for this. >> that's a thumb's up. that's it. this is a president who according to all accounts privately likes to get bogged down in details about policies but his allies are urging him to simplify his approach. >> i would encourage our president not to talk of abstract about percentages and economic terms and we have the strongest economy, but instead to focus on new manufacturing plants, high skill, high wage jobs. >> as for trump, he's reportedly
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doing a more traditional debate prep than in 2016 or 2020. >> allotrope p has to do is be calm. maybe ask biden some questions like did you really know vladamir putin when he was a lieutenant colonel in the kgb in east jerkins germany, which biden claimed he d. do you really believe your uncle was eaten by cannibals? biden is so open to -- if my advice to trump would be deal with biden with humor not with anger. because biden is pathetic. >> word is next thursday goes to trump because they'd rather pick their stage positions and trump will get the final closing argument. stu. stuart: peter, got it. thanks indeed. tomi lahren with us this morning. here in new york city, you know, they set a very low bar for biden and all he's got to do is stand up for them.
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>> ahead of state of the union and sean hannity called jacked up joe and we'll expect to see next thursday and some version of joe and not where he's gaffing or mumbling or yelling and combination of something like that. stuart: think he was jacked up on something like the state of the union? >> 1,000%. i don't know and can't speculate but it was something. there's a different joe that comes out when he needs to perform, but this is going to be a little different because this isn't a speech to read off a tell prompter, which he already struggles with and he'll have to interact and answer questions on the fly and more difficult for joe but i'll say this, set the bar higher for him, make him rise to the expect taces. he's the president of the united states for goodness sake. but also what i find really disturbing is he has to take an entire week, an entire week off from being the president to prepare for a 90 minute debate?
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stuart: he's resting. >> this is the leader of the free world. he has to take a week off to prepare for the debate. stuart: the media will say he won if he stands there and gets through it. >> i think if donald trump acts more presidential than he ever has in his spite of life, i think he'll win it because people are expecting him to be angry and to talk about a rigged system. speak about how america was greater under you, mr. president, and you'll win. stuart: do you believe your uncle was eaten by cannibals? that would be a priceless comment. >> i can't wait to hear the response if it happens. even better than the debates against hillary clinton and that was a very high bar because that was comedy and that was drama and it's everything we wanted and more. i'm hoping for something similar on thursday. stuart: changes the subject for a second, i'm sure you remember
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the protesters at columbia university and barricaded themselves inside a campus building. well, manhattan da alvin bragg dropped all their charges. where are the consequences for what they did and how are jewish students going to feel going back to columbia now? >> i think this also sets the stage for dnc convention because there are going to be the same folks that show up there and show up to every democrat rally from here until election day but this just proves they continually have no one above the law and no one is below donald trump and setting new york city and 34 counts and people are intimidating and vandalizing their own campus and they just can't go there because they're not exactly sure who they were. not enough security footage and a lot are wearing masks and sets the precedent you can go buck wild and do whatever you want. stuart: alvin bragg said there's not enough evidence to convict the students. why didn't you look for it for heaven's sake. dig under every rock to get a
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trump and won't even go to these students who were threatening jews. >> right. and it's going to continue. they were camped out for weeks, you don't know who they were at this point? and a lot are proud of what they've done. some of them wear the mask but others are quite proud of their position and even more elmore boldened and proud of their position. but it's the democrats that will suffer because like i said, they'll show up in chicago and that'll be unavoidable. stuart: august 19th, democrat convention begins in chicago. will it be a repeat of 1968? you don't remember that, but i certainly do. tomi lahren, you're all right. thanks for joining us. >> thank you, stu. stuart: staying on the issue of pro hamas protest and more. lauren: 72% say punish and 18% of 72% say expel them and 16% put them on probation, 13% suspend them. 13% force them to do community service, and 12% just a written republican reprimand and this is
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according to to a poll for individual rights and found 63% of people said these protests don't make them more sympathetic to the cause. stuart: glad to hear it. lauren: it disrupts every day life. stuart: it's pro hamas. lauren: that too but thinking of climate protesters also. they disrupt thing instead of drawing attention to what you want them to know. stuart: the chicago teacher's union making more de-demands for their next contract and what are they demanding? lauren: more sustainable community schools. it's -- there's only 20 in chicago. they focus on teaching restorative justice and social and emotional learning. they reduce punishments, fewer suspensions, fewer detentions. problem is as you noted when you came to me, they're failing to provide a real education at the best performing community schools, 28% reading proficiency rate and highest was 13% and these schools are failing and yet the teacher's union want to
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go to 2200 of them. at the expense of specialized schools where the students actually learn. stuart: turning out activists. it's all over. lauren: definitely bottom line at that. stuart: activists for heaven's sake. sake hold me back, please. amazon making changes to the way they pack their products. what they're changing and why. heat across the country affecting 135 million people. we'll bring you all the latest from the fox weather center. after this. ♪ trading at schwab is now powered by ameritrade,
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the worry every single month to make that payment was gone. our customers' homes are taking care of them. maybe, your home could do the same for you. call aag, the country's #1 reverse mortgage lender, and get your free info kit. call this number stuart: there's a heat wave affecting 135 million people. janice dean joins us from the fox weather center. do we have any idea when we'll get relief, janice? >> well, how about the month of
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september? or october? we're off to a summery start. first official day of summer was yesterday and we have the full day of summer today and, man, is it feeling like it for parts of the northeast all up and down the i-95 corridor or boston and north of boston. you've got a cold front last night that's alleviated some humidity and brought temperatures down and not much more places like philadelphia. 98 is your daytime high and saturday and sunday is the last time we had a 98 degree day was over ten years ago for the month of june. but that just tells you how rare this is for the heat wave early on in the season and going for heat advisories and heat watches going to object for millions up and down the i-95 and again, we got some relief for northern new england and they're concerned about them and parts have air conditioning and doing well today and parts of ohio valley and great lakes and northeast
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and knee jerk reaction to heat resident and can susceptible to heat illness, you cannot be outside for great length of time and there's the forecast of heat index and 99 in philadelphia and 98 in new york and 94 in new haven and it gets worse tomorrow for places along the mid-atlantic and this is dew point and what this tells you is how much moisture it has and how humid it feels like it's energy for storms that could fire up later on today. it could bring a quick release and welcome to the soupy mess for places like baltimore and philadelphia and new york. it'll feel like 104 and 106 in baltimore. when do we really see the relief? i think over the weekend as a cold front moves in on sunday and things will come down a little bit and then they'll go right back up again. we head into wednesday and this is dc and the forecast and 104 for you on saturday and 103 on sunday and then a little respite
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and then we're back into 100 e draconian temperatures -- 100 degree temperatures and watching the pleasures here and we're watching two disturbances and one in the gulf of mexico and had alberto the other day make landfall in mexico and bring incredible amounts in going 96 miles per hour and second named storm moving close to the coast here and we're going to have to monitor this and bottom line is whether it gets named or not, it could mean heavy rain and gusty conditions for the coastal regions and beaches of the southeast. we'll keep you up to date of course and fox weather.com for all of the latest details and i'm glad to be in the air-conditioned studios of the weather center. stuart: it is summer after all. come on. >> you're right. absolutely right. stuart: janice, you're all right. see you again soon. thank you. >> nice to see you. stuart: climate activists vandalized a private jet thinking it belonged to taylor swift but made a mistake.
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lauren: two climate activists from just stop oil, we know that group. they spray painted two private jets at uk airport with orange paint. they thought one of them was taylor's, who is actually in the uk for eras tour. she's faced criticism from fans and environmentalists for using a private jet. but the airport denied that her plane was there. the two activists were arrested and they were charged. in fact one of them actually met stay lori harmon swift backstage during nine years ago during one of her tours and obviously had a change of heart in the past decade. stuart: okay. i'm mad as hell at those people for what they did at stonehenge and detracts from their cause and want to stop all oil producers from 2030 and fossil fuels. lauren: they're punishing people because of that goal. >> amazon cutting down use of
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plastic packages and what's going to be different? lauren: the little plastic air pillows and getting something delicate and surround with plastic air packages and not doing it anymore. they're ditching them by the end of the year and replacing them with recycled paper packaging. stuart: i support that. lauren: when you dispose and i use a knife and i pop and takes forever with the paper you can just. stuart: recycle immediately. all right, lauren, thanks. time to show you the dow 30. i don't know what sense of the market we'll get and even split in the market at this moment. it's not going that far. you're down 50 on the dow and above the 39,000 level. friday feedback is next. ♪
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her uncle's unhappy. 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: my least favorite song. lauren: why? stuart: kind of nothing. it's north carolina, 82 degrees and looks kind of nice to me. time for friday feedback, just you and i. are you ready? lauren: i think so. hi, stuart, have you or will you take your grandchildren to england to show them where -- where you were born and where you grew up? lauren: you won't. you won't but you should. go ahead, answer the question. stuart: when i travel big time it's australia or new zealand or cape cod or florida to see the family. stuart: but the family wants to see where you're from. leave me alone. this is from morgan and understand spraying paint on rocks and into the air is good
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for the environment? lauren: yeah, the climate protesters just don't make sense and do things to aggravate people and use the orange paint because they say it's made of corn flower and not bad for the environment and i do not know if that's true and that's a good point-blank layups that was brought up. stuart: this is from carl. a thought from retired teacher of math. i together my students to use their phones as educational tool. it is a powerful tool. i had great success with it. let's teach students proper etiquette for using phones. problem with using phones in classrooms or schools. the bullying problem and the distraction problem. i mean, that's it, isn't it? lauren: a huge distraction. when you take particularly young girls it happens with boys and they often have problems in real life interaction with friends and then separate additional problems on phone live. then it just creates more and more problems for kids that don't know how to deal with this stuff. stuart: i'm in favor of keeping
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phones out of the class. lauren: 100%. stuart: out of the class, that's it. lauren: there's push back. stuart: from duncan, stu, we've heard you mention a few times you were a socialist when younger. what finally woke you up and made you abandon socialism? that's easy. i was indeed a socialist and at london school of economics and left wing radical places on earth and i was a social exist travel around the world and went to hong kong. that changed my mind. hong kong was, not now maybe, but it was a classic free market capitalist society. worked like clock work and so efficient and everybody worked hard. everybody got ahead. i loved it. absolutely love it had and chipped my politics completely. lauren: on a similar note, at george washington university, i went to beijing and went to -- in china i was taking university and he was in and i remember seeing with the students and i was scared. i was 19 years old because they
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were telling me that they lived in a democracy. i'm sitting there like no, this is a communist nation and i just remembered the propaganda and being scared by it. stuart: that's good. two good stories i think. lauren: look at that. stuart: good stuff. next from bethany, ai technologies. what is a technological advancement you see in your lifetime that blew your mind? easy for me, the introduction of satellites so you could be broadcasting from new york by satellite reach anywhere in the world. at the same time you can bring in stuff from anywhere in the world realtime. i remember when this first occurred back in the early 1980s, sitting on the set, looking at the gang of four on trial in beijing. this is about 1981. wife and bamboo doc all in black and there it was live in the doc and city of new york watching this thing. how about you? lauren: hdtv. you see every single pore on your face and where i think and will everything. takes more time than hair and
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makeup. stuart: for me too. this is from around, stuart, i must know, in your estimation who was the most talented member of the beatles? i'm sorry to -- i'm digressing a bit, len non-and mccar thissen. mccartney and they came together and created the most brilliant song writing machine. lauren: paul mccartney because i saw him years ago and the energy, i was envy yous, it was fantastic. stuart: name them. lauren: republic geopolitical star, paul mccartney, john len non-. stuart: we're having too much fun. thanks, everybody, for sending in your friday feedback. now time for the friday trivia question. it's estimated for the highest iq. estimated because they didn't have iqs from them.
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abraham lincoln, john quincy adams, barack obama, or calvin coolage? the answer when we return. can i have another pancake? from full house... ...to empty nest... ...to free birds. vanguard personal advisor can help you prepare for every chapter. we got this. that's the value of ownership. you didn't live this strong, this long to get put on the shelf like a porcelain doll. .. and are at high risk for fracture, you can build new bone with evenity®. ask your doctor if you can do more than just slowing down bone loss with evenity®. want stronger bones? then build new bone; evenity® can help in just 12 months.
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(♪) (♪) (♪) (♪) stuart: which president is estimated to have the highest
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iq? inc. and, john quincy adams, barack obama, calvin coolidge. >> calvin coolidge. >> a trick question. it is just estimated they didn't have iq tests. i but this is going to be barack obama. and john quincy adams. the sixth president, estimated iq of 175. graduated harvard university, served as secretary of state under president monroe and was fluent in seven language. lauren: that's great for an american. you can go around the world and speak english. europeans speak so many languages. "varney and company" is done. coast to coast starts now.

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