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tv   Cavuto Live  FOX News  June 8, 2024 7:00am-8:00am PDT

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pete: well, thank you for joining us all a morning long, it's gone fast. rachel: it has. tony and shelley in roma, virginia is. finish. pete: thank you very much. to do two things today. enjoy the beautiful day and then the order the warren on warrior- rachel: in time for father's day. pete: we love our viewers. thank you so much, or we'll see you tomorrow. will: see you tomorrow. measure -- neil: fox on top of an election less than five months away now,
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two candidates half a world away from each other. president biden in france and former president trump out west as americans weigh the top issues at home from a border still overflowing to jobs still the surging, court battles still growing and more protesters rallying yet again like the pro-palestinian demonstration head in our nation's capital today, organizers calling it surround the white house for gaza, or even if the president isn't at the white house 40 matter what's happening in gaza. we'll hear from if key players on all of it. dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas, republican house speaker mike johnson, democratic congressman james clyburn and prosecutor hopeful robert f. kennedy jr. all here, all now. get ready. welcome, everybody, i'm neil cavuto. ♪ ♪ treasure. neil: all right. welcome, i'm neil cavuto. peter doocy in paris. peter. >> reporter: and, neil, we just i saw a few clip of president biden and president macron
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having a coffee meeting. president biden was speaking so softly while they were sitting at a table that that it was tough to make out exactly what a he was saying, but we boosted the audio, and it sounds like at least part of their conversation had to do with with the chinese leader, xi. >> my last discussion with, and i -- xi, he said -- [inaudible] if -- >> reporter: there's a lot of pomp and circumstance is here in paris. the french shut down, in the middle of saturday afternoon a, one of the biggest parisian tourist aa tractions to greet the president and first lady. a much different scene than back at the white house where a pro-palestine protest could draw as many as 9,000 people today. they're hoping to form a perimeter around the entire complex with everybody wearing matching red color to make a point that they think president biden's red line in gaza has
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been crossed byes reel. the secret service -- by israel. the secret service is telling us in preparation for the events in washington, d.c. there is potential for large crowds to gather, including anti-scale fencing have been put in place near the white house complex. that protest is moving forward despite israel's daring rescue of four israeli hostages in central gaza a cover night, something biden and macron were already planning to talk about before the breaking news. >> i absolutely expect that the president will spend some time with president macron talking about the way we have been pushing hard for this new proposal to get the hostages out and to get a ceasefire started. >> reporter: we're about a 15 is minutes now past when we were told to expect to see president biden and president ma if krone at the palace -- macron at the palace nearby to make press
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statements. and even though they've got good news to talk about with these hostages being released -- rather, being saved by the israeli forces in central gaza, we have been told explicitly that the two men will not under any circumstances be taking any if questions from the if press. neil. neil: why? >> reporter: that's a great question. there are for european elections here, european union elections here in many countries tomorrow, so maybe ma pa -- macron, the host, just doesn't want to say anything that could further jeopardize his party's chances because his party is expected to lose some ground to more conservative lawmakers in france, and maybe the biden people said, look, we have a lot of stuff going on back home that we don't want to talk about either. with but this is being billed just as a possess statement unlike -- press statement unlike when the u.s. hosts world leaders. usually you get at least two questions -- neil right. >> they are sanitized and
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prescreened and all of that, but better than nothing. neil: yeah, that is weird. peter, thank you very much. peter doocy in paris. that's an enviable assignment regardless whether leaders talk on, i guess with. meanwhile, to donald trump and what host doing out west, raising a whole lot of money and getting backing from people who have done a lot of holding off. that has change ad. madeleine rivera with more. >> reporter: hey, neil. former president trump's fund raisers on his west coast swing will help him narrow the money gap with president biden. he's in newport beach, california, today for a fundraiser hosted by the cofounder of a health insurance company. tickets range from around a $3,000 to $100 to,000 per if -- 10100,000 per person. over the last two days trump has held fundraisers in beverly hills and san francisco. he hauled in $12 million at that fundraiser in san francisco and landed the endorsement of a major tech investor, david sacks, cofounder of path ventures who blasted biden's border policies. listen here.
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>> i mean, we've basically had a de facto open border under president biden. he first gaslit us by saying for three years there was no problem in spite of video showing masses of people, now he's finally signing an executive order to do something about it, but it's too little, too late. >> trump has had a massive fund raising boost, raking in about $291 million since his conviction. he's heading to nevada this weekend as well where polls show he's leading president biden by a small margin. the president is behind former president trump there 45-50. notably, the president is up by just 1 point among union households, traditionally a key democratic voting bloc. but folks from the state's democratic party are are defiant saying they use the polls to motivate them to work harder. >> i don't let those polls dictate how we act. and i don't listen to those polls, because november is months away, and we have a serious ground game. and whatever the polls say, we're going to change that.
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>> reporter: trump will hold a rally in nevada tomorrow as well. neil. neil: madeleine, thank you for that. well, robert f. kennedy jr. says don't forget about me, i'm still in this race, and some polls show he could be a very influential player in this race, and that's what he was insisting on with me a little earlier. take a look. >> i'm polling now pretty consistently in the real polls where they ask the polling question the way it's going to end up on the ballot, i'm polling at 15% or above. my favorability rating is better than the either president biden or president trump. i'm beating them consistently in young people in this country, and i'm beating them among independent voters who are today the biggest voting cohort. neil: all right. here is the problem with rfk jr. though, he is on 7 ballots across the country. last time we checked, there are 50 states in this country. he was telling me he's optimistic he will get on those 50 state ballots. it looks unlikely, but you never
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know. to carly cooperman, democratic strategist. to you on this rfk jr. factor, what do you think? >> look, i think rfk jr. really poses a real threat to both parties, and i think that's high you see donald trump and joe biden, republicans and democrats, continue to ramp up their rhetoric against him. it's interesting, there was a poll out of florida that showed, you know, among black voters, for example, in that state the with a race between rfk, jill stein, cornel west, we saw biden's actually polling lower with those voters in florida. now, that might just seem like, you know, one data point in a state that ultimately isn't a swing state, but talking to various strategists they say, look, if rfk is having this sort of an impact in ore states, this could very well translate to the swing states like michigan, like pennsylvania if he's able to get on the ballot there. it's also indicative of maybe a
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lack of enthusiasm for east biden or trump. for either biden or trump. neil: you know, carly, i had a chance to catch up with jim clyburn, the house democrat key to getting joe biden elected president if you to think about it, and he was responding to this report that tim scott is leading this $14 million gop if initiative to try to win over black voters. i want you to respond to this, jim clyburn on that. >> -- [inaudible] tim scott. hay out your platform for the american people, let the african-american community know exactly what you plan if to do about health care, not run are on getting rid of the affordable health care plan as you did the last time. neil: think of what you're saying here. obviously, you feel that senator tim scott could do a lot america you know, to improve the conditions for african-americans. but your guy, joe biden is the president. things have gotten a lot more expensive under him, because he's leading the country right now. why are you pinning on all of this to tim scott to do so? >> i'm not pinning anything on
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tim scott. i'm saying the platform if of the party. neil: all right. what did you think of that, carly? he doesn't seem worried about what's happening or what could happen with black voters who might not show nearly as much support. are you worried? >> yeah. yes, i'm definitely worried. i mean, polling has shown some modest improvement for biden over the past few months, but he still is overall trailing trump in the national polls by a little bit. i'm also watching for rfk and the impact that he's going to have in the race. there were some polls that came out that were conducted last week in key swing states like pennsylvania and wisconsin that showed trump with a slight lead over biden. and yet when rfk was put in as a highs, suddenly biden had a -- as a choice, suddenly biden had a slight lead. and then once rfk was a choice, that put biden into a slight lead. but the dynamics, first of all, with how rfk could impact the
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race are very fluid, and while it seems like he's pulling some more support from trump than biden, also his constituents tend to younger which historically have viewed -- skewed democratic. and also an independent voting bloc, biden is very unpopular with these voters and so is trump. so biden is still trying to claw his way back in the polls at a time where the dynamics are really changing a day the -- day-to-day. neil telethe benefit of joe bite biden as -- joe biden is president is that he is president and he does get attention on these big trips. emmanuel macron and he are ab making statements, they're not going to be taking questions, but, guys, if we could taken a peek at what a heir saying, basically that they support each other and the world must be united against a potential terror and what vladimir putin is doing in ukraine. but back home, julia, that does seem to be falling on
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deaf'res -- ears. i'm just wondering what you they make of that. >> yeah, look, i guess from talking to democrats they say, look, this is an opportunity for joe id booen to use -- joe biden to use his statesman platform, to go overseas and essentially create a contrast with donald trump, to be with these big playerses like emmanuel macron, to go to the place yesterday in france where ronald reagan with 40 years ago talked about freedom and such after world war ii and the importance of that. i think they're seeing that as an opportunity. that a being said though, republicans push back on that saying, look, biden's appearance, you know, his, i guess the way he's carrying himself and such, they're going to very much try to pounce on that as, you know, someone who is older and sort of try to pull those clips for ads. you're already seeing them all over, and. but democrats saying it's a great way to make a contrast while donald trump just last week was convicted in that
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criminal hush money trial. definitely a contrast. but in terms of impact, we're still so far out from the election. neil: you're right about that. carly, the whole trump conviction thing, are you surprised that it hasn't damaged him that much? now, polls are still early, few and far between, to be honest, but so far so good for him. it's certainly not hurting his money raising or winning over silicon valley investors and the like. i know that's not the general electorate, but what do you make of that, that he seems to be absorbing this pretty nicely? >> he does. i mean, the polling has shown so far that maybe the slightest bit of decline for trump as a result, but we really have not seen any dramatic shift in the race right now. i think that people are so baked in right now as it relates to their opinions about trump, and there was a lot of data including my own firm's that showed that leading up and during the trials people were really largely tuned out to it at point, and there was this
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perception even though there was this thought that trump has done something wrong and should be prosecuted, this was also this belief that this trial in particular if was very if politicized. and it seems like people were largely tuning it out. neil: yeah. >> now, he does have, he will, you know, we'll see what the actual sentencing is next month. but it's not really clear that this is changing things dramatically for him. neil: not yet with. ladies, we'll see how it sorts out. as you said, still five months away. stillen monitoring these developments in paris, the president of the united states, president emmanuel macron of france, they won't be taking questions. they are saying the nations remain as close and committed to freedom as they were 80 years ago this very week. in the meantime, some good news to share with you, the israeli military free ifed four hostages long thought dead held by hamas in gaza. that was earlier this morning. it was quite a daring rescue. it succeeded. israel responding to the good news.
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neil: all right, it is now officially a state visit for the united states president, giving an address or a joint press statement -- they're not taking any questions here -- with emmanuel macron, there's going to be a state dinner tonight. but the two countries are not on the same page when it concerns right now israel and israel's posture in this war even with the good news of israel managing to get freed these four hostages. sharp divisions between the two countries how they handle that and the stuff of protest in this country. want to take you to washington, d.c. right now outside the white house where they're planning for what could be a pretty big sized pro-a palestinian protest scheduled for hater today. they're expecting thousands there. they're expecting everyone to keep cool heads there, but we're
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watching it. that's some of the political. now to the very real heat gripping much of the nation, particularly down south and the southwest. it seems to be everywhere. kendall smith on how hot it gets. >> reporter: yeah, neil, millions of americans from the west coast all the way down to the southeast are sweating it out this weekend with. in fact, we have 114 million of us that are experiencing above average heat for today. the good news though is that number does drop down to 65 million for sunday, and then on monday it's down to just 58 million. now, what's going on out west is that we are still in the midst of a heat wave. this large upper ridge of high pressure is dominating our weather pattern, and that has been leading to multiple days of widespread temperatures in the 90s and triple digits, and that's where we're headed this afternoon and tomorrow as a well. 10 is 7 in las vegas today, 104 tomorrow. 103 in yuma and so -- 106 degrees in places like phoenix. but it's not just the west coast that's baking in the heat, it's
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also the sunshine state. take a look at this, we could be breaking records once again today out of florida. gainesville headed up to a high of 97 this afternoon. that could potentially break a record. sanford, 97 as well. vero beach, a high of 92 degrees. these are actual air temperatures. we're not even factoring in incredibly high dewpoints, dewpoint dew points in the 70s and 80s and that's about as humid as it gets. the feels-like temperature is a whole lot hotter. tampa, 103 is what it feels like, 100 many melbourne, 1032 this afternoon in naples. so do anything you can to beat the heat because tomorrow, same song. almost a carbon copy day for us tomorrow as well. now, the good news though is we do have some relief on the way, and that's going to come in the form of multiple days of tropical downpours. take a look. fort myers, over the next week we will be dealing with the
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chance for thunderstorms each and every day. we will watch as our temperatures drop down from the 90s into the 80s, so a brief reprieve from all of the record-breaking temperatures. but here's what we know right now. deep tropical moisture, that's forecasted to be pulled from the caribbean sea all the way up to the gulf of mexico. and although we're not looking at tropical development likely, there is a row-end chance and -- low-end chance and if it is hurricane season, and our average a date of our first norm named storm storm is june 20th, so make sure to keep it all season long. neil: thank you for that. kendall smith following those developments. for more on this story and there's always a lot more, the weather just grips you, stream fox weather anytime, your favorite connected device. find us on fox weather.tv today. three guys are -- these guys are are fantastic. they know this stuff inside and out, they can sort out into the future whether that barbecue you're planning two years from
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now can still happen. that's a little extreme, but you get my point. they're very good at what they do. by the way, to the heat at the border that is building up, we can really play on this, can't we if if you heard about the biden administration's plan to crack down, well, not everyone is saying it's enough cracking down. we'll be talking to alejandro mayorkas, of course, what he makes of that, speaker mike johnson in the house of representatives, what he doesn't make of that the after this. we're talking about practicing-- practicing good financial strategy. ...by cashbackin. what'd you think i was talking about? -not a game. -not a game. -talking about cashbackin. -cashbackin. cashback like a pro with chase freedom unlimited. how do you cash back? lowe's knows new projects come with questions. so, we have answers. like how to keep your yard looking lush. which paint color matches your bold style. and with the mylowe's rewards credit card, you can save 5% every day. you got this. and we got you. these days everyone is staring at screens,
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neil: all right, some call it too little too late, but nonetheless, the president of the united states has a plan to crack down on the border, and his homeland security secretary, alejandro mayorkas, trying to sell it to me. take a look.
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>> bipartisan bashing is part and parcel of immigration. but where we need bipartisan unity is where we had it in the proposed legislation that senators and this administration worked is hard to i achieve. that bipartisan legislation would have provided the toughest statutory, the toughest new laws to further secure our southern border in more than three decades. it would have allowed us to hire 1500 more u.s. customs and border protection personnel, more than 4,000 asylum officers, more than 100 immigration judges. neil: but it didn't happen. i understand your frustration, but it didn't happen. but nevertheless, you had said and the president said a number of times, sir, that the border already was secure. so, obviously, it's not. >> oh, neil, we've been talking
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about strengthening the security of the border since day one. the challenge of regular migration is very, very dynamic. our personnel, our border patrol agents are doing extraordinary, heroic work every day, 24/7. we need more tools, we need our broken immigration system fixed, with we need more resources, and the american people deserve it. if. neil: all right. but nonetheless are, you're doing the one thing you criticized president trump for doing when he was in office. i want to take you back to october 2020, sir, or when joe biden was saying this about the president's move at the time, president trump's move at the time, to deal with these asylum -- assay human cases. >> this is the first president in fact history of the united states -- in the history of the united states of america that anybody if seeking asylum has to do it in another one. that's never happened before in
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america. you come to the quites and you make your case -- to the united states and you make your case based on the patrolling premise r -- following premise, why i think serve it under american law. neil: now he's doing what donald trump did. >> not true, neil. and president biden spoke accurately in the clip you just showed. president trump shut down asylum altogether. what we are doing is cutting out the smugglers and deterring irregular migration in between our ports of entry where it's so very dangerous and the crossings are illegal. we are allowing asylum claimants to come to the ports of entry using our cbp1 app in a lawful, safe and orderly way. if we also have built other lawful pathways for individuals to seek asylum in this country. so we haven't shut down asigh hum are. what we've done is -- asylum. what we've cone is -- done is
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further strengthen the border through executive action which and will be challenged in the courts which is why we need congress to act. that is the enduring solution. neil: one thing i didn't understand, secretary, there are a number of exemptions for this including, you know, unaccompanied children. isn't that a green light for drug cartels to take advantage of that and, you know, the whole purpose of this sort of blows up in your face? >> oh, absolutely not. neil: but where -- who's going to watch those unaccompanied children if you are allowed in? you don't ship them back, so where do they go? >> neil, we deal with unaccompanied children in a humanitarian way, adhering to our values. we deter irregular migration, we build lawful pathways -- neil: but this encourages structure cartels to take advantage of those kids, does it
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not, sir? >> neil, we're taking it to the drug cartels with unprecedented strength through our transmartial -- neil: no, no, this is actually a green light for those cartels. isn't that the fear? oh, god, we can use these kids as pawns to get what we want. >> neil, let's be clear, the cartels are smuggling organizations that are unscrupulous. they exploit individuals of all different types of vulnerabilities. we are taking it to the cartels. we accepted unaccompanied children from this asylum bar because of the compelling humanitarian picture they present. neil: all right. accept what you will, fair and balanced, we went to speak speaker mike johnson to get his take on that. >> this is exactly why we had to impeach secretary mayorkas. he has a serious problem with the truth. what he's saying is comical.
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he just said that the republicans didn't act? we passed h.r. 2, the most secure border measure in the history of congress, 14 months ago. it is still sitting on chuck schumer's desk in the senate right now. that would is have actually fixed the problem. moye your cat -- neil: but there were no democratic votes for that, right, sir? >> there were not, and that's the point. if they wanted to secure the border, they could have. but, neil, that's the very issue here. the president and mayorkas engineered the open border. they did it intentionallingly. they ban -- began on the first day of his administration. we documented 60 executive actions that biden and mayorkas took to invite everyone to come in. and you know who's come in, many dangerous people. we have known terrorists on the watch list, we have criminals from prisons that have been emptied out in central america, we have gang members and car tell members and everybody else. and -- cartel members. and now the secretary -- or the director of the fbi, has testified for the fourth time to
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congress that that all the red lights are flashing meaning we're in serious danger in the homeland because they have allowed all these dangerous elements to come into our country. it's maddening. they should have closed it on day one, but they kept it open this long because they wanted to, and everybody knows that. neil: both the president and the secretary, as you know, speaker, said if republicans weren't kowtowing to donald trump or sucking up to him or doing his bidding, we wouldn't be where we are right now. that measure or some version of it were to pass and this hullabaloo over what the president's doing with these executive action would be a moot point. what to you say? >> they never sent a bill over from the senate. it couldn't pass in the senate because if it was a half measure. it wouldn't have solved the problem. neil, january 3rd of this year i took 64 house republicans down to the border, the largest contingency of members of congress that has ever been to the border. we went to eagle pass, the epicenter of all the problems, and the border patrol agents told us, a 33-year veteran,
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deputy of the agency told us that the problem the remain in mexico. if you reinstated remain in mexico policy that president trump did, you would stop the illegal flow by 70 percent. that was the clear admission of the people there on the ground, and that was the advice that i delivered to president biden myself. he refused to do it. if he really wanted to solve the border, neil, he could close the border entirely. but this half plaintiff measure -- half-measure executive order exacerbates the problem. he's allowing thousands of people over the border every day before they just begin to enforce existing federal immigration law. it makes no sense, and everyone wants to know around the country why would they do that? because they want to turn these people poo voters. that's the -- into voters. that's the only rational explanation for what they've done. neil: all right. and since then, of course, border penetration remains what it was. when we come back, game stopped, roaring kitty crumbled.
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neil: i bet you don't know the name keith gill, but i have an idea you know, well, the title roaring kitty. i'll explain, but first kelly o'grady to find out why he's creating such a commotion. >> reporter: hey there, neil. that's right, roaring kitty, right, the person that got meme mania three years ago, all week the gamestop stock was soaring
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in anticipation of his first live stream in three years, and after the fact p neil, i've been reviewing the response on social media, and a lot of folks were really let down. you can see that in how the stock performed yesterday. it finished 39 down after his live stream -- 39% -- to more than 600,000 followers he spoke to. they were really hoping for the secret sauce behind keith gill's wild bet on gamestop, and if i'm being honest, it just wasn't there. we did glean three key things from that stream. the first that roaring kitty's position in gamestop makes up the entirety of his portfolio, okay? that's the only thing he owns. and he shared the value following the market's close on thursday, you can see it right there, $586 million -- of course, he lost a couple hundred million yesterday alone in how it performed. the second takeaway is that roaring kitty really believes in gamestop's future. he reiterated that confidence that the company can revamp its legacy business and said it all comes down to the ceo, ryan
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cohen, and i think that's part of where his messaging fell flat. three years later, there was nothing new in his whoo why k and that was coupled with a dismal earnings report yesterday morning. the biggest surprise though, neil, was the change in his messaging. he chose his words really carefully and preetedly warned -- repeatedly warped listeners to trust no one blindly. >> you could lose everything. you kind of factor that into your analysis. and so it's the same thing here. it becomes kind of a bet on the team. and if what i've seen so far, i think i, i -- [laughter] i reserve the right to change my mind as you should too. i'm a believer right now. >> reporter: now, we do know the regulators are investigating the meme stock leader's investing activity, but it may also mean that meme mania, neil, it doesn't have as much staying power as it did last time around. we didn't get the zeal from that
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ringleader that we did last anytime. -- time. neil: obvious obviously, some oe regulators were monitoring that. it doesn't appear that he stepped over the line, but we'll watch it. kelly, thank you so much. this woman pork toes -- works nonstop. i want to go to another, well, i guess i would call him a roaring k, as in gary kaltbaum, because he doesn't like characters like this who pop unusual ily at the end of bull markets, but not all the time. gary, what do you make of this? he's obviously choosing his words carefully, but you do see individuals maybe indicative of the froth in the market, he did put out a lot of caveats and warnings, but what do you think? >> well, nothing personal, but i really hope the entity of the roaring kitty goes by the way of the dodo bird, and that's because of two words, and that's wealth destruction. the last go-around the stock dropped 90%, and amazingly they've been squeezing up amc
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which dropped 99% and and still has not stopped people from delving into these crazes. my message, just be very, very careful. stocks, ultimately, will go back to where they should be regardless of short squeezes, and you have a company now that just put 75 million shares out onto the market diluting by 25%, thus the big drop yesterday, and that's after 45 million shares before that. and now they're lowering their numbers and reporting gargantuan losses. so when this music stops, i expect this thing to be back in single digits, and a lot of people are going to be losing a lot of money that have a lot of hope. if you go on that live stream from yesterday, you should have seen some of the commentary. people worried because their take -- they're taking out loans and begging in this man, roaring kitty, to do better and get the stock back up. neil: yeah, it doesn't work yesterday but, again, we'll see. you know, gary, it was interesting because the same day he was streaming after three
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years of not doing is so, we got an employment if report that offered something for the bulls and the bears. you know, better than expected 272,000 jobs added, but a a separate household survey that showed mysteriously 400,000 miss americans leaving the labor market -- plus americans leaving the labor market. it's kind of in the weeds here, but what do you think? >> there's some weird numbers coming out, neil. look, i've been saying two words for a long while to to you, in shape. the job market's been in shape, but i have a big but going on right now and that's 8.4 million people with two jobs and almost 300 to,000 part-time jobs added in this last month. and that's usually something that telegraph withs a good slowdown finish telegraphs a good slowdown in the jobs market. and with so much debt in the system right now, that really worries me. these are people that do not believe they're meeting ends and, thus, they've got to work
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two jobs. very worrisome sign especially, again, the word debt is a good thing when things are going well. it is the big enemy when things start heading down. so that's something to keep front and and center. i am in the camp right now we're in slowdown mode. to what extent, i don't know just yet. neil: roaring kaltbauming thanks very much -- [laughter] >> have a good weekend, neil. neil: in the meantime, this is a sad note. william anders, one of the first three human beings to orbit the moon, he died in a plane crash on friday. he was 90 years old. anders was best known for his iconic earth rise photo that he took while in lunar orbit. remember this? on christmas eve, 1968, which completely changed the way people view the planet. reports are that he was piloting a vintage air force plane when it went down off the coast of washington state yesterday morning. no to one else was onboard. his son, greg anders, says the
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family was devastated. he was a great pilot, and we will miss him terribly. as will many others. kid at -- dead at 90. you can't get a home loan because of your credit? here's great news. at newday we've been granted automatic authority by the va to make our own loan approval decisions. in fact, if you've had credit challenges and missed a payment along the way, you're more than five times more likely to get approved for the newday 100 va cash out loan. no one knows veterans like newday usa. ♪operatic music♪ ♪ ♪ ♪♪
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woman who moved home in 2020 20 to live with her family during covid. four years later, she's still there because of the cost of living and housing. now she wants to hear from biden and trump about what they are going to do about this affordability crisis. >> i've experienced high cost of living these past four years for absolutely everything with biden being in presidency. i'm so curious, honestly, to see what they all have to say in terms of cost of living. >> reporter: and she's not alone. a redfin poll shows 99 out of 10 young people say housing will influence how they will vote in november. neil, back to you. neil: lydia, thank you very much is. a carry pattern to sort of go over with you, the danish prime minister, an attack on her. she's okay. is slovakian prime minister three weeks ago, he was still recovering, and robert f. kennedy jr. who keeps looking for secret service protection and is told no five times. we connect, you might want to
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>> the secret service itself which we've worked with and which has been very, very cooperative with us and supportive of me getting protection did its own threat assessment and determined i was at elevated risk. i've had three home break-ins since i announced my candidacy. i'm the first presidential candidate in history since my father's death, 56 years, who's requested secret service protection and then it, it's been denied. neil: that was robert f. kennedy jr.. oddly enough, i had the chance to speak with him on june 5th. that was the 56th anniversary of the assassination of his father, senator robert f. kennedy jr.,
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who was killed in california while campaigning for the presidency. it is true what he said, at least five times the biden administration has rejected his calls for secret service protection. that's something that falls under alejandro mayorkas who said that a group decided that reports to him was not necessary. obviously, kennedy believes it is necessary, and those who are familiar with what his family's gone through would say it is very necessary. nicole parker joins us now, former fbi special agent. it's very good to have you because all of this to occurs as we got news yesterday of a threatened attack on the danish prime minister. she's all right, but she was attacked by identified as a madman who came at her for no reason. we don't know what was gown on there. three weeks before, we had the slovakian prime minister who was shot in a public square. he is still recovering from that. i don't like to link all of these issues, but they do scare you. what do you make of it in. >> you know, in this day and age, individuals are taking out
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their frustrations with political, you know, representatives with violence. they don't agree with what you believe or, you know, someone might have if a psychological problem, that is a major threat to those that are, you know, in public office and are running for public office. and you mentioned rfk jr. i think that's extremely important to discuss, because again, he has asked for u.s. secret service protective detail five times. and with his family's history, his uncle assassinated, his father assassinated, in 1968, i mean, it was because of his father's assassination that they started enacting secret service protection. it was title 18 u.s. code 3056 -- neil: you're right. >> -- that mentions that you are entitled potentially to protective detail up to one year prior to a general election. and that is exactly what we're seeing. there are different elements that they look at in determining who will get, you know, protection. but when you go down that checklist and with the threat assessment levels and elevated
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level for rfk jr., i find it quite puzzling and concerning that he does not have secret service protection. neil: yeah. i would think that just a kennedy requesting this would be, again, a -- but that's me. but the other issue is that the times in which we live and, you know, there are a lot of people who are hearkening back to 1968 and democrats gathering in chicago, people remember the last time they did that, and now they're doing it again this summer. we've seen these incidents sporadically around the world, so these are hot and volatile times. i mean, the better course of safety would be better protection. i know if someone's intent on harming someone, they'll probably succeed. but you don't want to make it this easy, do you? >> of course, you absolutely don't want to make it this easy. and i would like to give my accolades to the united states secret service, because being a secret service agent is a very difficult job. neil: absolutely. >> it is very taxing. you have to be on point at all
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times, 24/7, around the clock, you are standing for up to 12 hours sometimes doing protect detail. you cannot -- this is no room for if error, and i think it's important to understand with the advanced technologies we have in today's society, that is making it more difficult to do protective detail around the world because individuals who want to harm others have access to informs through the internet whether it's to create weaponry, thousand -- how they're going to plan, where the location is of their potential target. having advanced technology, the protective detail teams have to keep up with that advance the technology, and it does make pit more difficult. but i do give my accolades and respect to the secret service. they are spread if thin right now. at the end of the day, if something does happen to a rfk jr., it highed on the shoulders of senator -- excuse me, secretary mayorkas. dhs secretary mayorkas has the final say in this, and if something occurs, it is on his shoulders. yes, there is an advisory committee, a bipartisan congressional advisory committee, but at the end of the day, it is on his shoulders.
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neil: real quickly, nicole, joe biden so the boss, and joe biden has a bust of his father in the oval office, and joe biden could decide, you know, secretary, stop this. you've got to protect the guy. i know he's running against me, you've got to protect the guy. can't the president intervene? >> i would think so. he seems to intervene in every other situation. at the end of the day, like i said, i would not want that burden on my shoulders. it is such a high, elevated risk, and i do believe he deserves protection. neil: thank you so much, nicole. for of the of you who want an update on the danish prime minister, she is okay. she was more startled than anything else, but this guy or sort of jumped on her out of a crowd. they are politicians, and they like to see and meet people. that is when they're in the greatest danger. we'll have more after this. rizo, everyone can get the best deals, like that iphone 15 on them. (man) switching all the time...it wasn't easy.
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