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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  August 7, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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jot unemployment numbers on friday is not what the markets want, but it's a historic low still. >> she's the most left wing for a party nomination and could have balanced by picking josh shapiro. >> catering to the most radford dallas cowboys elements of the democrat party that are anti-american, anti-ziti railly, anti--- anti-israeli and anti-semitic. >> the doj, all they did was raise rates be aquarter point and we almost had a global meltdown. >> it's a very, very bad time for the country and sort of old bill clinton moderate democrat and economic policy has been taken over. >> rotors mostly in america hate trump more than they like america. they hate trump. why would we do that now with the euphoric stage wonderful
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place the wildest expectations. ♪ ♪ stuart: it's the who. who are you. lauren: who is kamala? who is tim? stuart: excellent. you picked up faster than i did. wednesday, august 7. look at that market. that's a rebound. solid now. up 430 points on the dow. almost 300 on the nasdaq. okay, now have a look at big tech. almost all on the upside now. amazon, apple, alphabet, microsoft, meta all making gains better than 1%. the 10 year treasury though, that yield is going up and might have hurt the nasdaq and tech stocks but apparently not and five basis points and getting close to being back at 4% on 10
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year treasury. 394 right now. now this, who is tim alzheimer and what does he stand for? he's a classic liberal and in line with kamala harris. 90% of the people in the country admit to knowing very little about harris' running mate. there's a rundown of the track record. he loves taxes. as governor of minnesota, imposed a surtax, a new surtax on investment income and in congress, he voted against donald trump's tax cuts and in a harris administration, he'll have no trouble raising the tax on businesses and on estates. there's no gap between harris and walz on taxes. they are glued together. walz is a climate guy expects 50% of all cars to be electric by 2030 and even has a 20 year mining ban to not get the rare earth metals in the state that are vital to ev production. you get the message here. it's tax and spend all the way
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to chronic debt. but wait, there's more. walz gives migrants free lunch and breakfast in schools, free community college, free healthcare. 80,000 got driver's licenses. he kept minnesota schools closed during covid for longer than most states and during the lockdown opened a hot line so people could inform on their neighbors. it's called snitching, for breaking the covid rules and encouraged this. what a guy. no wonder he said one person's socialist is the next person's neighborlessness. whatever that means. he'll take orders from kamala harris and fit right no. the left, of course, loves him. bernie sanders is ecstatic. teacher's union chief randi wiengarten thinks he walks on water and aoc said he's the perfect pick. i can't find out what this
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radical ticket has planned for the future and it'll be like pulling teeth to find out. last thing they want to do is talk policy, past or present. they'll bash trump. that's all they've got. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: liz peek with us this morning. what do you make of the harris walz pick? >> oh, i think you laid it out very well. he's extremely to the left. the fact that the mainstream media pounced on this pick and started talking about him being a moderate democrat. that's what the los angeles times had to say, the washington post sort of followed the same line talking up his small town roots, which are true. and his military service, that's a very continue verse y'all topic, that we don't have time to get into but everyone should look it up. this guy is a horror show in my view and a real problem.
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stuart: that bad? a horror show? >> well, look, stuart, there's nothing sensible about the guy and from the point of view of the kamala harris campaign, what he did, the way he got elected in his state is basically getting elected in the areas that joe biden did and he did not do at all well in the parts of the state that donald trump won. in other words his margin of victory is only the same as joe biden, which tells you he is not going to help kamala harris spread out and enlarge their tent. he's not going after the moderate mainstream even traditional democrat. i would also say that picking him was as bad for who she picked as who she didn't pick. the fact she passed over josh shapiro that would have delivered the 19 electoral votes in pennsylvania. why did she not? for the same reason she chose somebody that aoc really loves and bernie sanders loves.
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she's scared to death of losing the progressive vote because that's a mantra in the democrat party since 2016, hillary clinton didn't win because the bernadino owe -- bernie bros didn't vote for her and they've hued left looking to win the bernie bro vote and it's a disaster for the democratic party. stuart: kamala harris is failing the crisis test in the world spiraling out of control. it's been over two weeks since harry spoke to reporters and do voters care? >> i hope they can and americans thinking about what happened on monday and it's very unnerving and widespread reporting and imminent war. reassuring comments and look at where we are now. i am outraged that seven service people were hurt, injured.
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we don't know how badly from an attack on air base in iraq. we have not heard anything from the president about it. we heard from lloyd austin today that well, they just better be careful because if there's further attacks on our people, we may have to get serious. this is like, what, the fifth attack on this air base. it was unprotected and it remains apparently unprotected. where is the president? stuart, there's nobody leading this country right now. if you talk about uncertainty in the markets, uncertainty in general, that's where it's coming from. stuart: we haven't seen the president in public for a while. >> honestly, this is an outrage in my view. lauren: kamala harris did have something to say about what's going on in israel and iran, she did not pick josh shapiro, she ticked tim walz. that's all you need to know. >> that's exactly right. she's running away from it. that's all you need to know. stuart: look at that market go. that's a rebound and a half. dow up 400 and nasdaq up 321 and mark tepper with me for the
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hour. if the fed goes heavy on interest rate cuts, and there's the talk of that. why do you think that would be recession natural rights approach? >> that's a dead give away. and god forbid they end up having a emergency rate cut where they do it before the september meeting. they would be out there waiving the recession flags as boldly as possibly doing so and right now, stu, the fed fund futures are pricing in five full cuts by the january meeting. the fed will not do that when the economy is booming. they'll only do that and starlet to cut by 50 basis points or more when they believe the economy is in trouble everyone is pointing towards us probably heading towards a recessionment i think the fed would love to thread that needle and figure out how to soft land this thing. i think that's going to be a challenge. stuart: consumer is very weak at the moment and you think that's the main point towards recession? >> yeah, one of the things we like to watch is the performance of the consumer discretionary
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sector versus consumer staples. with consumer discretionaries outperforming, it's strong. and vacations and cars and stuff like that. when staples is out performing and ratio hit a year-to-date low and staples out performing and people are taking wallets and buying tooth paste and shampoo and that's where the money is going and indicates that the consumer is weak and over 1.1 trillion in credit card debt and delinquencies on the rise and approximately $700 billion in buy now and pay later debt and not reported to the credit bureaus and that's a challenge. mcdonalds said when they were giving food away for $5 value meals, couldn't get lower consumers in the door and philly fed said one-third of people making 50 grand or more will struggle to make ends meet over the next six months. it's all consumers are beginning to weaken. not absolutely pummeled but they're weakening.
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stuart: there's a political angle to that as well, which we'll get into. back to the market and lauren ising looing at movers and a big mover is a cybersecurity net. lauren: up 24% and best day ever, all on the cybersecurity stocks are up at least 3%. fort net revenue up 11% and earnings up 50% and come out and raise their forecast on the year, safety, cybersecurity is important and customers keep spending on it. stuart: they're all up. look at that. sony. lauren: they raised full year earnings forecast and another company raising the forecast and thank you, beyonce. her new album, cowboy carter. it ain't texas. come on, help me. it's a hot song. hepped their music sales plus their sales of play station and games there did well and their imaging censor business. stocks up 3.25. stuart: i prefer to move onto a broad band provider. lauren: we spoke about them yesterday and stock up 93% and
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doubles yesterday and think fiber connections for ai and silvers and network connections and yesterday said we struck $5 billion in deals for our servers from companies like microsoft and we're in active discussions for $7 billion in additional sales. stuart: that's up 27%. lauren: on top of 93% gain. stuart: not a bad performance. thanks, lauren. voters had enough with congresswoman cori bush and she's the second squad member to lose a primary race. is this the sign the voters are rejecting the very far left? donald trump said if want to know what kamala harris will do as president, take a look at how she did in california. >> she was the original defunder of the police. she was the original no cash bail. cashless bail, which caused havoc and look at how she destroyed can fran.
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stuart: -- san francisco. stuart: looks lake law and order is a main tophus of the trump campaign. byron donalds on that next. ♪ daughter: hey, dad. dad: hey, sweetheart. daughter: what are you doing? dad: i'm gonna clean the fence. daughter: it's a lot of fence. dad: you wanna help me? dad: aim at the wall, but get closer. daughter: (gasps) what the?! daughter: alright. dad: side to side. when you work with someone who knows a lot and cares even more... you can do this. ...you're unstoppable. (♪) wow... are you kidding me? you can do this. at truist, we believe the same is true for banking.
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♪ stuart: missouri congresswoman cori bush is now the second squad member to lose a primary. chad pergram on capitol hill. is this is sign that voters are growing really tired of the far left? reporter: stuart, good morning. the far left ranks will dwindle slightly in the new congress but there could be more. st. louis prosecutor wesley bell
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vanquished cori bush in the primary and he gave bell a boost and braced positive campaigning. >> i was so happy that not one, not one word out of my mouth was negative, defaming in any way. not one single word. i believe in leading from the front and setting an example for the work ethic. i don't want anybody working with me think they're outworking me because you're not going to do that. reporter: bush alienated some democrats with her criticism of israel and views on the war in the middle east and bush faces a federal investigation into her campaign spending. >> we will keep supporting a free palestine and keep opposing genocide and human rights abuses worldwide and we will always stand up for the safety, for the dignity and self-determination of all people.
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just behind latimer bowman contest and squad member ill ha omar faces a -- ilhan omar faces a primary challenge next week and tim walz supported omar and walz says progressives must push for their values. stuart: chad pergram, thank you very much indeed. have you heard of hackers for harris? a group of former white house cyber officials who are fundraising for kamala harris. ashley, who are these people? ashley: hackers. form of cybersecurity and jake brawn and and another hosting this in las vegas this week and calmed hackers for harris. tickets reportedly start at $250 for students and run as high as
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$10,000 for cosponsors. the fundraiser will be held by the sidelines of the deaf con and black hat cybersecurity conferences held every year. hillary clinton's campaign also hosted a similar event, a fundraiser of black hat in 2016 with the event happening, embarrassingly, days of dnc suffered a cyber attack. it is unclear which industry players will attend harris' event. we understand it's being held at a bar so can't be that many; right? stu. stuart: we'll check the ev makers. why not? get them on the list. let's have a look at rivian, which is down just 36-cents but almost 2.5%. they reported a wider than expected loss. rivian by the way is still losing more than 32,000 on every ev sold.
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would you touch any ev makers? >> i like rivian. you know, given the fact he did get back and they're not going to have any cash flow issues. i think the long term potential is pretty good and tesla will be the only one that i could ever possibly imagine touching and always too expensive and for me, no, evs are a no touch. stuart: they're not going anywhere. >> dead money. you're at 39,003 on the dow jones industrial average and quite a few winners on the dow 30 and we'll put the top winners on there, amazon, apple, honeywell and intel broken above $20 a share. they were way down for the last couple of months and s&p 500 winners and xon, vp, and global
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payment and nasdaq winners are fort net, illumina, margo db, global foundries and z scaler. big names there. check the 10 year treasury going up and looking at getting closer and closer at 4% and 395 on the 10-year and price of gold, it's up this morning $8 but shy of $2,500 on ounce. 2440 right now. bitcoin down, $26,000. oil, $73, $74 -- $p 5 a barrel de--- $75 a barrel despite the mideast issues. nat gas down to $4.45 and average gallon of diesel down $3.78. coming up, white house trying to brush off worries about the economy and down play volatility in the market. we're going to tell you exactly how the administration is trying to spin this. one market analyst said its christmas in august and we'll ask the always bullish brian
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energy fuels, a leading american uranium producer, is ramping up production to supply expanding nuclear markets and diversifying into rare earth elements, key
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ingredients in many clean energy and defense technologies. energy fuels. stuart: mark tepper with me. his stock pick of the day is, i never heard of it, xlk. >> yeah this, is the tech etf. so, look, we bought this thing on monday after its steep pullback and got about 20% or so from the peak and holdings with microsoft and nvidia and 40% of the waiting of etf and greatway to diversify and selloff over done and heading towards a recession, rotation out of tech and that rotation will reverse and in the event of recession, people would rather be in tech. stuart: basically for a basket of big tech stocks. >> exactly. stuart: that's what it is.
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>> well diversified. this thing is down about 52% year-to-date and fan favorite and clam moraying over it and they have -- clambering over it and they have a self-inflicted issue last quarter. for the last year plus, we've all been talking about the thesis for apparel makers given ozempic and glmp1s and those people wearing shmediums have to buy smalls and replace their closet. however, the issue with lieu lieu lemon, they didn't have enough smalls. they did it to themselves and self-inflicted pain. i believe they've fix that had problem. i think right now is an excellent problem to get into one heck of a company dirt cheap. stuart: buying the dip on lululemon. very interesting. stuart: haven't been able to say that often. stuart: no, you haven't, that's true. gone straight up actually. thanks, mark. white house is down playing recent mycterolens and worries
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about a -- economic turbulence and hillary, what is the white house saying? reporter: the word of the day is resilient. they say americans and the economy are tough and brushing off concerns about a possible recession using the word resilient to describe the economy and consumers over ten times in yesterday's press briefing. >> we're going to continue to keep an eye on what's happening. that's what the economic team will continue to do. again, we believe the economy remains resilient and when wave seen recently is consumers remain resilient. reporter: republicans say americans shouldn't have to be resilient and vice presidential candidate jd vance saying today that the biden harris economic policy has created this problem. >> if you work hard and lay by the rules, this very simple principle should apply. work hard and play by the rules, you should be able to live a good life in this country and unfortunately a lot of people are working hard and playing by the rules but can't afford
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groceries and rent because of bad policy. reporter: we're going to hear a lot about the economy on the campaign trail and vice president kamala harris defending her actions on the economy while former president trump and jd vance are going to be attacking them on the economy and that's because the economy is the top issue in key battleground states. tocks news ranking shows voters in michigan, wisconsin, pennsylvania and michigan say the economy is their biggest concern over abortion rights and the border. stuart. stuart: thanks, hillary. i want to get back to the markets because we have someone that's returned to it. he's not been on the show for a long time. he is the always bullish brian belski. welcome back. you say it's christmas in august, and we should be buying this dip. which stocks are you buying this christmas in august?
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>> well, stuart, it's amazing to be back. thank you for having us. my theme in 2024 was own a bit of everything, maintain tech positions, overweight the consumer staples tech, meaning your netflix, googles, amazons, apples, nvidias, microsofts. but also drifting a bit lower in tech to names like oracle and amd and broadcom and qualcomm, but i think what people are missing is in five years we're kicking ourselves that we weren't buying this dramatic pullback and it's own a bit of everything and good old fashion stock picking with the overall theme quite frankly of normalization and loudly on monday, this was a normal pullback in august very volatile and negative friday, a lot of fear over the weekend and a
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monday selloff that made the bottom. the bottom is in place and not going straight up but you have to be very did i have gent in stock picking for the -- diligent for the stock picking for the year. stuart: s&p 500 around 5,300, somewhere around that area and you think it's going to 5,600 by the end of the year. make your case on that, please. >> original target was 5100 and put that piece out in november of last year and the average target by wall street was 4300 and upped in early june to 5600 and then the average -- now the average price target is around 5800 and wall street is too bullish and chasing the market and now we think we've gotten the correction and it's about recalibrating and earnings-driven market and level of earnings, stuart, remains very, very strong.
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revisions actually have been pretty positive into the 25 and 26 years so we don't see any kind of earnings recession and u.s. stocks will continue to lead for the next three to five years and you got your christmas gift on monday. stuart: you don't care about slide towards what may be a recession? don't care about the kamala harris and tim walz campaign being successful in november? >> absolutely nothing to do with the performance of the stock market and trajectory of the economy and the stock market and best economies in the -- best companies in the world and the effects of the harris and biden agenda happened in 2022 with a massive amount of inflation that hit and massive amounts of fiscal stimulus and we worked a lot of that off. going forward in terms of recession, all the economists have been looking for recession for three ye ye years and hasn't happened.
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it'll happen when we least expect it and normal two quarter recession in next 18-24 months but not right now. stuart: are you living down in florida, naples? >> i am. stuart: thanks for joining us, brian. see you soon. the nba made a very big deal with amazon. my question, ashley, why did they choose amazon? ashley: yes. well, because amazon has a big advantage over warner tnt who currently holds. nba in negotiations. for one. amazon agreed to promote the nba in its nfl telecast. tnt doesn't carry the nfl and can't compete there and the league considered amazon's thursday nfl targets as an advantage because they've built a sports streaming audience that
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the nba can benefit from. warner tnt carried nba for three yeyears and contractual right to carry games and warner is suing the nba claiming appson's deal was structured in a way that made it impossible for them to indeed match. now, the nba announced media deal withs amazon, disney and nbc worth an -- i can't even believe this. combined $77 billion over an 11 years. the league said that warners claims are without merit. there's a lot of money to be made in that arena. stuart: wow, 77 billion over 11 years. that's a massive amount of money for basketball. good lord. thanks a lot, ashley. mark tepper, amazon gets to stream the nba games. that is a huge deal for amazon. regardless of the price, big deal for amazon. >> without a doubt. one of the main things that came out of this whole cord cutting we've seen happen over the
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course of the last several years is advertisers are real really only advertising during live news programs like this or live sporting events and the fact that amazon is able to pluck that away from tnt, that's a huge deal for amazon. now, the consumer and sports viewers, things are becoming more challenging. you have to go to hulu for this and netflix for that and amazon for that. if i want to watch cleveland guardians play, i had to get fubo. i never even heard of that . i had a sign up for a subscription for that. things are getting muddy for how consumers watch the sporting events. stuart: i see your point there. governor tim walz with a lot of criticism going his way saying one person's socialism is another person's neighborliness. neighborliness. lauren: correct. stuart: got it.
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a federal judge from harvard must face an anti-semitism lawsuit and the school is accused of failing the jewish students and why the judge refused to throw out the case. that's next. ♪ i have type 2 diabetes, but i manage it well. ♪ ♪ jardiance! -it's a little pill with a ♪ ♪ big story to tell. ♪ ♪ i take once-daily jardiance ♪ ♪ at each day's staaart. ♪ ♪ as time went on it was easy to seeee, ♪ ♪ i'm lowering my a1c! ♪ jardiance works twenty-four seven in your body to flush out some sugar. and for adults with type 2 diabetes and known heart disease,
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jakesome of the healthcare companies and mostly higher today with the exception of anagen, the bio-tech one and down. mark tepper is here with us and likes investing in medical devices and he brought an idea, ihi, that's an etf and buying into a basket of medical device makers? >> absolutely. the rational is going back to monday, if there was one really good thing coming out of monday, other than the fact you were able to buy some of your favorite stocks on sale, it's a clear signal to investors that we can't just be all in on
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growth. we need to have some defensive exposure as well. so defensive options, consumer staples, utilities and healthcare. i would prefer healthcare and within healthcare, i do medical devices and intuitive, striker, all the big guys that are set to grow earnings in the low double digits. which is -- you're defensive but getting got growth and i like that as a play given what happens in the last week. stuart: interesting stuff, thanks very much, mark. a federal judge said harvard must face a lawsuit with a stronghold of anti-semitism. alexis mcadams joining us. harvard tried to get this case thrown out. why didn't it work? >> the judge said there was too much evidence that harvard didn't do enough to protect their jewish students and we've talked about this ask covering it from matter the campus ask now it's car hard and one of the
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jewish students suing saying these legal battle shine as light on a bigger problem. >> it is a damming thing on the state of higher education and receiving equity, equality and justice and go to a court of law to address the client and harvard for ten months was unwilling to do the due diligence and unwilling to protect its own students. >> this legal battle started back in january and six jewish state of the unions at harvard filed this lawsuit -- studenting filed a lawsuit saying they didn't feel safe on campus because the school didn't do enough to stop anti-semitism. they didn't punish students or teachers with the anti-semitic protests and set up things around campus. harvard worked to get the lawsuit dropped and didn't happen and tried to explain to the judge that they could not break up the come pus protests because it would have "violated student's first amendment rights". they continue that legal battle, harvard university telling fox news this in in part on your screen, mar v harvard is confids
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the fact in this case are made clear and it'll be evident that harvard acted fairly and with deep concern for supporting the jewish and ziti ragaini ellie students and harvard students tell us that's not good enough. >> harvard didn't lift a finger to combat the pervasive and anti-semitic nature on its campus is simply not true and they know that . >> other schools hit with similar lawsuits. last month nyu and columbia settled and this case hat not been settled yet and will go back to court and be there throughout the summer and we'll have to see what happens if nor students speak up or more lawsuits filed. stuart: alexis, thank you very much indeed. a chinese academic convicted of acting as a foreign agent in the united states. lauren: he was found guilty on four counts including acting a z a foreign agent and lying to authorities about it. he collected information about people who trusted him. pro democracy activists here representing hong kong and
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taiwanese independents and then he shared that with the chinese communist party. this is the a quote. the indictment from the prosecutor, indictment could have been a plot of the spy novel and evidence is shockingly real. wang was willing to betray those that respected and trusted him and sentencing in january and could face 25 years behind bars. stuart: thank you, lauren. china is finally putting new restrictions on the chemicals used to make fentanyl. that's news. ashley, administration was asking this for years. why a sudden crackdown? ashley: they want concessions for the chinese and china is one of the biggest sources of the chemicals which he used to produce fentanyl which then sold to cartels in mexico and then go onto make the highly potent narcotic into the united states and nearly 75,000 people in the u.s. estimated to have died last
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year from the synthetic opioid such as fentanyl but beginning september s belski beijing said we're going to clamp down on production of chemicals used to making fentanyl finally including requiring exporters to obtain a license. but authorities in the u.s. say the effectiveness in disrupting the fentanyl supply line limited to best and claim that china again will use the issue of fentanyl to win concessions from the united states such as things like lower tariffs so there's reasoning behind this and its effectiveness is being questioned anyway. stu. stuart: see if it works and it's that time on the dow 30. there's going to be plenty of green there and only three losers and rest are winners and dow is up 300 points, 39,298. some would call this stunning and a new poll showing donald trump leading kamala harris with jewish voters in new york. we'll see a shift like that in
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stuart: the zoom fundraiser, white dudes for harris, that's what it's called, tim walz made a strange comparison saying one person's socialism is another person's neighborliness. is that right in neighborliness? >> yeah. stuart: jon levine is with us this morning 6789 he knows how to pronounce that word. >> neighborliness. stuart: neighborliness. thank you. is harris any hope to be a moderate when styed up with a socialists? >> she had a number of moderate options and senator mark kelly in arizona and josh shapiro in pennsylvania. both were moderates and both would have given swing states into her column. i'll tell you, republicans were biting their nails about both of them. they would have been very, very hard to run against. instead she picked the most progressive, most far left of all the possible canned indicates and there's a lot more than what yuppies just mentioned. he was in charge of minnesota during the black ration of independences matter riots, george floyd. and putting menstrual producting
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in the boy's bathrooms and one thing after another with him. he's a caricature of every far left position and he's not even from a swing state. they're going to win minnesota. i don't know what he gets but he does excite the craziest most hard line members of the base and hoping for just extraordinary turnout that he can jazz that up in a way perhaps shapiro and kelly could not. stuart: the media loves him. going around and protect him. >> the media is going to protect any democrat they pick. they want harris to win. stuart: would have that surrounded him and supported shapiro? >> yeah, the media wants harris to win. she could pick a baked potato as vice president and they'd support that . they want trump out. stuart: it's a stunning poll, a sienna poll showing a majority of jewish voters in new york state support donald trump. listen to what trump said about this. roll it. >> they are so bad to jewish people. what they've done and the way they talk and their policy and
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everything else. probably earned just what happened because everyone thought it was going to be shapiro and it wasn't and i had very little doubt it was not for the reason we're talking about and it was because of the fact that he's jewish. this is the worst team ever assembled for a jewish person or for israel, either one. stuart: we'll get into the shapiro rejection in a moment, but, jon, do you believe this poll, 50% of jewish voters in new york says they bac back tru? >> that would be a major, major eaearthquake. stuart: you don't believe it? >> no, i don't. when we get into the campaign in september and october and ads go and nonstop charlottesville and jews will fall in line like a movement and 70/30 but i don't
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believe it. there'll be some movement though. i was having dinner with someone that was jewish and he told me he was solidly for biden and now he's not sure and not voting for trump but maybe stays home and votes third party. there's some movement there. stuart: i'm shifting gears. you're a new yorker. what's this about rfk jr. and a dead bear in central park? give me the story. story. stuart: if you can. >> story is from rfk. telling in to roseanne barr and he was driving down the highway and the car in front of him hit and bear and kill it had. and he pulled over and picked up the bear and was going to skin it and eat it, that's the first thought you see when you see road kill and put it in the trunk of his car and was like i have to go to a dinner and flying somewhere and don't want the bear to rot up my car and dumped it in central park with a bicycle and trying to make it look like a bicycle accident. you want to talk weird. that's weird. lauren: a bear is heavy.
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>> it was a bear cub. a little bear. he's pretty built. stuart: did he present this as a positive for him or what? >> i don't know what this is. it's completely, completely psychotic. it's a kennedy and thankfully it wasn't a girlfriend. it's just the most bizarre story in the world, and it really is just major character issues and judgment like if this is your first thought seeing a piece of road kill, what are you going to do seeing major international incident and in charge of nuclear codes and kennedy has never been great. stuart: we're done with this one. it's a fine appearance today and maybe stick around for the trivia question. why don't you? here it is, on average, how many slices of pizza during america, that's the entire country, eat per second? 200, 250, 300, 350? the answer when we come back. jon, you can play. ♪
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stuart: well you know this was one of those rather strange questions wasn't it? on average how many slices of pizza does america, that's the whole country, how much do we eat per-second? ashley it's yours. your first. ashley: whatever it is, it's embarrassing i'll go with number 3, 300. stuart: john levine? >> this is america so i have to
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say 350. stuart: lauren simonetti. lauren: go big or go home. number four, 350. stuart: you think that 350 slices of pizza eaten every second? lauren: yes it's not much different than 300. stuart: is this pre-ozempic? i'm going big or going home, i'm going 350. stuart: i'm going 350. there are 330 million americans, and we're right, yes, ladies and gentlemen. 350. that's roughly 2 1,000s slices per-minute and it would cover 100 acres of land. now you know. lauren: i wonder how many pies we individually eat per-year. stuart: maybe that will be a trivia question very soon. who knows? john thanks for being on the show, mark thanks very much for being on the show. we have about five seconds left before we introduce neil and "coast to coast." 3-2-1. neil: you know, i like

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