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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  April 9, 2015 11:00am-1:01pm EDT

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we have the first-quarter reporting season. that will be the driver for markets. time for varney and company. stuart: thank you maria. the morning. did you see this? a hole in one. here it goes. don't you love it. you will see that a lot in today's show. both of me. the most important golf show in the world. tiger woods is back. needs a new start to bring in the viewers. moments from now ray norman to i do. that is not all we have for you.
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america's top banker warns and other crisis is coming. gasparino is on that one. the school's football coach supports the movie. he will take the whole team. the media goes after brand paul and then some. there is a huge recall the varney and company is about to begin. ♪ stuart: it has started. we thought we would give you the odds. top of the list, rory mcelroy. five-one. my guy nine-one.
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bubba watson 12-one. tiger used to be a much longer shot. he was about 40 or 50 a couple months ago. what happened to sergio? forty-one. he endorses under armour. that stock thing a new high today. maybe they are onto something. under armour at 83. the dow is down. this is the big reporting season. they are not that strong. we have a global oil supply at a 15 year high. oil is up that $50. the price of gasoline. my hopes of a plunge in prices diminishing rapidly. we are now at 239 for the
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national average. wall-to-wall coverage of rand paul. you loved it. then came the criticism about his handling of questions. >> you now support it, at least for the time being. >> why don't you let me explain instead of talking over me. >> most of the research indicates that these cost more over the long-term then they save. >> most of the research does not indicate that. there is a profit study looking at the holiday in 2005 and his
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conclusion was it brought the hundred million dollars new capital home. if brought in about 30 million of new tax revenue is the whole purpose of doing this is to put money home. let me finish. stuart: he joined making kelly last night. she urged him to, shall we say calm down a little. >> you are going to get pounded. it is going to get ugly. >> i am not perfect. i do lose my cool and i do lose my temper sometimes. stuart: personally, i do not have a problem with candidate that put media people in their place.
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george bush went after dan rather and won the election. what is wrong with rand paul? >> somehow attacking women. i do not believe that. as a conservative, i completely understand his frustration in dealing with the left media. any republican candidate for president scores a lot of points by attacking the press. it is a great point for any gop presidential candidate. the downside is that the general electorate is also watching you. they want to see a presidential temperament. if they field you have a short use, if they feel like your demeanor -- it may hurt you in the long run.
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do it judiciously. use it sparingly when it really counts. you cannot do it all the time. it makes you look like a hothead. stuart: i got it. remember ronald reagan? remember when someone was contesting him. he said this is my mike. i paid for it. at that moment, everyone understood that he was the man in charge. he is the is negative. >> reagan was a very affable character. you use the attacks on the press. if rand paul will do this all
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the time, it will lessen the impact. stuart: okay. i've got some breaking news. a man in wisconsin has been arrested for attempting to provide material support to isis. he is 34 years old. alleged to have intended to travel to iraq or afghanistan. now, this. halting production of the chevy volts. trying to get rid of seven months of unsold inventory. where is gm stock right now? >> the stock is not responding to much to this story.
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what gm is doing is halting production of the faults over the summer so can get ready for the new plug-in hybrid that they are coming out with. it is equal to the number of silverado's sold in one day. that could be why did. stuart: that is a complete contradiction. they build though. because they do not want gas guzzlers. they have to abandon the volt because l1 is buying them. that is an extraordinary switch, when you think about it. >> it has nothing to do with workouts price are either. it is what americans like to
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drive. >> american suvs. the mercedes pickup truck if you ask people about they like their f150. not a mercedes. they are not into it. stuart: thank you very much. hillary clinton. one of google's directors of management. danielle hopper is the author. google helps obama was election campaign. now, google will hillary clinton. i call that crony capitalism.
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how about you? >> it is. politics are good for their date business. it is mutually beneficial here it other people may lose out. that is why this is happening right now. stuart: i think that google is a leftist company. that is how i perceive the kony. i do not see that helping. >> i agree. their power has risen a lot with president obama and their coziness to the white house.
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what would be interesting to see is how they shift if a republican wins. we know crony capitalism is a bipartisan problem. it is completely straight if of the issue at large. i think that that is why it is worth us talking about. it may be beneficial to the clinton campaign. google will not have such a problem. people need to stand up if they feel really strongly about it. stuart: it surely does politicians a lot of good to have a heavyweight technology company on your side. >> most of the technology
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companies tend to be liberal. they tend to be left-wing. they have tried to make and rose. they understand that big data is very important for modern elections. republicans are behind on this. they are not able to harness it. stuart: you are breaking my heart, but i do believe you speak the truth. golf legend greg norman. i say that golf needs a new started a new rivalry. i would love to see that at the masters. it is beginning today. one shot. roll the tape.
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stuart: check that big board. look at seeing the. talking about downside moves. the ceo is stepping down. the founder is taking his place. investors do not like this switch. look at linkedin. buying the online education company. paying more than a billion dollars for it. round one of the masters has teed off. we will get a golf legends take
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on the sport. greg always danger to have you with us. tell us what it takes to be the next grade man. >> he has though called this. he is growing his stature. i think that there are a lot of guys out there right now. i do not play. i am a religious watcher of all major tournaments. if there was a new rivalry i think the tv rating would go right back up again. >> i think that there is a lot.
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the own little course. teaming up on the losing side. they seem like a have a lot. i like those too. a friendly rivalry. though one that i will keep an eye on is lori mcelroy. stuart: he is the favorite right now. do you think that the next star has to be an american or just an english speaker?
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>> this is where your tv audience is. this is where three of major championships are. yes. there is no question about it. you can go down the list. at the end of the day i do not think it really matters. you have come to a great golf america. you know, you have this plethora it is fascinating to watch, to tell you the truth. sometimes expect the unexpected. stuart: 22nd. is it true that you now only play a half dozen rounds every
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year? >> i played six funds last year. stuart: half of the world's greatest players do not play anymore. >> if i can play one hole the way you play, i would. that's the truth. thank you very much for being on the show. do you remember the ncaa bracket champ? they ruled that he was to begin to collect the prize. the rules say you have to be 18. listen to this. >> i did not say anything bad said in order to claim the prize you have to be 18 years or
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older. >> how did you get around it? the mac i just use my dads e-mail. i never expect it to come in first place. stuart: used his dad e-mail. that young man tied for first. tainted with a deadly pack theory up. the very popular brand. this is not good. we have the full story for you coming up. most think that the government is the problem not the solution. >> government is not the solution to our problem but government is the problem. ♪
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stuart: gotta tell you about a recall. 30,000 cases of humus, a possible listeria contamination. that a nasty bug. the brand that pretty much everybody buys. food inspectors in michigan learned of the possible contamination after inspections at a kroger grocery store. remember, please pepsi owns about half of the sabra company. the stock however not affected at all, pepsi dead flat. that's a stupid pun, isn't it?
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pepsi, unchanged. fox news poll just out, 67% say they think the government is usually the problem. 18% think the government is the solution. monica, president reagan -- [laughter] he would approve of that poll wouldn't he? >> yes. and he would probably say my work here is done. you have that kind of number saying the government most of the time is the issue. stuart: but this is an all government, all the time administration and that's what we've had for six years, and it remains popular. >> well, i'm not -- no, i'm not sure about that. i've got to disagree with you, stuart, because i think barack obama as the first black president, a transcendent figure, he remains relatively popular. high 40s, lower 50s in terms of job approval. that doesn't mean his policies are popular, in fact that's not true. stuart: how about this one? 63% say they think taxes are too high. i don't people realize
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actually -- i don't think people realize actually how high taxes are. >> i agree with you. it's, what, about 50% who do and 50% who don't. i don't think they understand what they're paying. stuart: i've got breaking news. i hate to interrupt you in full flow. justin did you just tell me that rory holed the first hole? oh, he parred the -- >> oh, man. stuart: i'm sorry, everybody. i interrupted you -- >> you interrupted our brilliance for that? stuart: i swore our producer said he holed in one, but he did not. let's get this right. he parred the first role. continue. >> now i've lost my train of thought. taxes and we're coming up on tax day. look, this is, according to the government, this is the beauty of withholding, right? because you don't realize how much you're actually paying because you never see the total money that you're earning because about half of it's going to the government in some form. the if you had to write a check
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every month or every quarter i think there'd be a tax revolt in this country akip to the original tea party. stuart: i'm sorry i interrupted you -- >> no problem, stuart. stuart: thank you very much. boston bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev guilty on 30 counts. the jury's next job is to decide if he lives or dies. judge napolitano makes his judgment in a moment. >> i don't know what justice is. i'm grateful to have him off the street. i'm grateful to show everyone, the world that it's not tolerated. this is not how we behave.
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stuart: boston bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev guilty on all 30 counts, and 17 of those counts carry the death penalty. jurors meet this month to decide does he live or does he die? here's what one of the victims had to say about the verdict. >> i think it was a relief to hear for the first time instead of the "alleged boston bomber," he was the boston bomber. and he needs to be held accountable for his actions, and i feel like that's going to happen. stuart: all rise judge andrew napolitano is here. judge, we always ask you for
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legal opinion or a constitutional opinion. would you forgive me if this morning i asked you for a personal opinion? should this guy live or die? >> oh, my. he is clearly a candidate for execution under the law and this is clearly the tube of crime for which the -- the type of crime for which the congress has prescribed the death penalty, and the state has proven its case beyond a reasonable doubt ask to a moral -- and to the moral certainty. the question is, which is the more appropriate punishment living 450 feet below the surface of the earth in obviously, a window canless 6x8 shell or a painless and quick dispatch to the next world? my own view is that the life sentence would be the more appropriate sentence here. but this is not a case where the jury's going to sutt around in a room and say -- sit around in a room and say how much do we hate
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him how horrible a person was he. the court is going to give them guidelines, questions that the congress has put in the statute that they will be required to answer; questions about the severity of his behavior the aggravating factors, questions about the mitigating factors. what was going on between his ears? was he really under duress? was someone really more culpable than he? and then they have to weigh all those factors and make a decision. my own view, to get to your question -- stuart: sure. >> -- is that once a person has been restrained, captured he's no longer a danger and the government loses its ability to kill him. the government tried to kill him 100 times. at that time he was armed and dangerous, it would have been lawful appropriate constitutional and moral to have killed him. once they took him into custody, they gave away that opportunity. stuart: quick legal point, if i may. tsarnaev's lawyer is a very famous lawyer who has
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represented other very well known criminals in the past. i think she represented the unibomber, eric rudolph, the abortion doctor murderer, and susan smith -- who drove her minivan into a lake to kill her two young children. that lawyer has represented all of those three people and got them off the death penalty. do you think the same -- i mean she's a very effective lawyer. >> yes. stuart: will she plead her case in court in the sentencing phase? >> she's probably the most effective, certainly the best known capital punishment defense lawyer in the country, and, you know lawyers specialize in everything these days stuart. her specialty is getting the admittedly guilty off people as to whom the evidence of guilt is cleary overwhelming. -- clearly overwhelming. she has a population base from which the jury came profoundly against the death penalty. even after he was convicted yesterday, the eastern part of
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massachusetts, a poll showed only 25% of the people living there wanted to see him executed. she also has a person on the jury who said at the time of to have the jury interrogation that she, the juror, was against the death penalty. the government did not object to putting her on the jury. so that woman sits on the jury. she will argue that somebody else was more culpable. that's a rational argument that the brother was more culpable. stuart: yep. >> she'll argue duress. she's going to have to put expert testimony on there to show that. she'll argue mental incapacity, and then she'll get an instruction from the judge that will tell the jurors if you find somebody else was more culpable, if you find that he never fully, actually agreed to the horrific ends that he brought about, you should take into account that those mitigating factors might outweigh the aggravating. stuart: quickly, judge i think the next argument is going to be
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about whether it is cruel and unusual to put a very young man underground in a supermax prison in a windowless cell for the rest of his life. i think -- >> i don't think, i don't think -- stuart: is that cruel and unusual punishment? is it justified? i think that's the next argument. >> well, that will not be an argument in this case. stuart: right. >> that argument would have to have been made before the trial started because the government needs to know before it puts its first witness on the stand -- the trial started in january we're now in april -- whether or not the death penalty is available. that is not an argument that can be made now. she may have made that argument, i don't know. the supreme court has drawn the line at about 18. i say "about" because some people are over 18 and have the mental capacity of a child, and some people are younger than 18 and have the mental capacity of an adult. so the rule of thumb is 18. i have -- it would be far too late for his lawyer to make that argument at this stage.
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stuart: judge, thank you very much for joining us. you're on "special report" tonight, i believe? is that correct? >> yes, absolutely. stuart: i'll watch. >> very generous, stuart. [laughter] stuart: judge, thank you. check out the big board. a little concern about the level of corporate profitses. there's not that much, investors turning a thumbs down in a modest fashion, down 28 points, that's it. but, you know, we are swimming in oil. yesterday's report we've got a 15-year high in terms of supply, nevertheless, the price of oil has gone up. $51 a barrel right now. price of gas $2.39 is your national average. that is $1.20 cheaper than where we were this time last year. i'll take $1.20 a gallon off. where is the cheapest in the land? all in south carolina. $1.85 per gallon at sprint in aiken, hot spot in new ellenton and scott match in marion. south carolina, cheap gas. staying on energy, shell is
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buying a smaller rival the bg group, they're paying about $70 billion for it. we talk about oil and gatt gas all the time on this program. time we had the former president of shell on the show he said i made a bet a $100 bet with him. just roll the tape. if i had a bet with you if i said the price of a gallon of regular gas national average according to aaa will not hit $4 a gallon this year, i'll put $100 on it says i'm right. will you match me? >> i'm on. i'm on for it. stuart: okay. you know, i honestly think that's easy money. i hate to take money off a guy like john hofmeister, but here he is. do you want to back out of the pet? pause there is no way on -- out of the bet? because there is no way we are going to hit $4 a gallon in 2015, is there? >> says who? no you may say it. i'm a price hawk i'm going to stay a price hawk because two things, stuart. the level of demand over the next six months or so is really
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not known, and i'm an optimist. i think the world needs more oil. and secondly, i think that people woefully underestimate the insidious problem of decline in existing reservoirs. and so with the cutbacks, the dramatic cutbacks especially in the u.s. i think we're going to see decline rates sometime during the summer take over the production rates, and we're going to see oil actually drop in terms of its availability. i'm staying as a hawk. stuart: okay. i've got some contradictory information here i hope you can straighten things out. i am told there has been a sharp drop in what's called the rig count, that would be the number of drilling wells, wells that are actually functioning and that are being drilled right now there's a sharp decline. but i'm also told that production of oil in america keeps on going up. which is it? >> it's both at the same time. but the production going up is what i'm suggesting will come to
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an an abrupt halt sometime during the summer and from then on the rest of the year it will recede. because what we have is the overlap of last year's drilling and the productivity of last year's wells, and those wells aren't being replaced in this year. and as a consequence we'll see that the demand will overtake the supply sometime during the summer months and that's when he'll see the price of oil start to to move back up. stuart: all all right john. i'm afraid we're out of time but i can wait until december 31st for the $100 bill, and i do expect to collect. thanks very much. coming up next rick harrison. do you know the name? star of history channel's "porn stars." i think fox business' "strange inheritance" is right up his alley. we're going to see if he's watching. but, first, video of a tornado touching down in kansas. forecasters warning people in the midwest more could be on the way. watch this.
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green's terrible cold season this winter. that helps the company. express scripts up as well. constellation brands at a new high, molson coors a new high earlier. sprint those shares are doubling their number of co-owned store ises, company-owned stores by opening more than 1400 within radioshacks. that move will create 3500 jobs, and that is the latest from the floor of the new york stock exchange. more verymy and co. right after this.
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>> let's get closer to it. boom. check this out, bruin. ooh my god! stuart: yes. yes, omg indeed, young man. that was the dramatic video. plenty of storms to tell you about today several in kansas brought reports of tornadoes. spotters said they'd seen one less than 15 miles from wichita. other reports from southwestern kansas, all pretty dramatic. look at that. in ohio, reports of severe thunderstorms and hail across the southwestern part of the state. some residents reporting extensive wind damage. the weather making news again today. all right, stocks, some of them bigtime big names are in the news. look at that one, that's taser. the london police department is buying 178 of taser's body
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cameras. the stock is up 6.5 percent on that one. look at disney continuing with the trend of remaking their animated classics into live action movies. do you remember cinderella? ma live sent? no release date for pinocchio, but close to all-time highs. look who is with us rick harrison star of the hit tv show "pawn stars." we know your name and we like your show appreciate it. thanks paul, for being there -- rick. what did i just say? did i say -- oh, i can't believe i said that. >> you just said paul. i look a little bit like paul mccartney. i was thinking of george harrison. i'm very very sorry rick. millennials that don't want their parents' stuff anymore, that's the kind of stuff you deal with op your show, isn't
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it? -- on your show? >> oh, yeah, we deal with it a lot. you have to realize, like, back this the 1940s 1950s there wasn't as many, you know, there wasn't flat screen tvs and jet skis to buy. one thing people bought a lot of was sterling silver flat ware no one wants that stuff anymore. you take the jewelry from the '70s and '80s it's big giant gaudy stuff, so they're not going to wear it. a lot of times they're selling it. stuart: my kids don't want my bell bottoms but that's not story entirely. you're on the show because you told us you are working very hard to reduce your high triglis rides. now, what's the big deal about this, and how are you trying to get the triglis ride level down? >> well, you know, i went to the doctor a couple years ago, and she told me that's what i had. i'm taking a drug that lowers
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them, and it's a really good company. i like 'em. i turn down multimillion dollar enforcements, i've done it multiple times because if i really don't like the company, if they don't give back, i don't want work with them. with this particular company you can go to lower my trigs.com and if you're a qualifying patient, you can get prescription co-pay cards for $9 a month. so people can afford this. stuart: rick, they did pay you millions of dollars for this? i'm not being facetious -- >> no, they did not. i'll admit, you know, fair and -- you know they do pay me to do it, but i've turned down much larger contracts because i don't like the company. i will only endorse something i like. it's the those damn morals that get in my way all the time. stuart: thanks very much for coming on the show. i'm sorry we're so pressed for time. you can come back anytime you like, okay? good to see you. >> all right, thanks a lot. stuart: "american sniper," first
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university of michigan says, oh, no you can't watch that. that's bad for you. they've reversed themselves, fortunately. details on the reversal, next. no chest-beating monologues about engine size, horsepower, or performance. no anthemic soundtracks to stir the soul. just a ram heavy duty that can carry more weight than any other heavy-duty truck. get more facts at ramtrucks.com
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the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. after all, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned... every day... using wellness to keep away illness... and believing that a single life can be made better by millions of others. healthier takes somebody who can power modern health care... by connecting every single part of it. for as the world keeps on searching for healthier... we're here to make healthier happen. optum. healthier is here.
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stuart: university of michigan
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says it will now show the movie "american sniper" despite protests there are a handful of students who called the film "racist." university of michigan football coach jim harbaugh applauds the decision. here's his tweet: stuart: concerned veterans for america ceo pete hegseth is here. two points i'd like to make, pete. number one, since when have colleges told kids what they can watch and what they can't watch? and number two, since when has the left run all of america's colleges and run decent patriotic people out of town? what's going on here? [laughter] >> since when? since a number of decades, over last couple -- this doesn't surprise me at all, stuart. this is incredibly indicative of the american left in academia today. it happened in a big spotlight and i'm now a michigan football fan because of what jim harbaugh and so many others did to expose this ridiculousness. this happens in quiet, subtle
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ways across american campuses today all over the country where freedom of speech and diversity of thought is discouraged toward a group think, an american left group think toward what is they consider to be tolerant what they consider to be socially acceptable. in this case a few students deemed "american sniper" racist and it threatened muslim students as a result they tried to shut it down. rather than debate it, shut it down. stuart: yeah, but the yoofort accepted that dub the university accepted that argument and banned that movie. in my today if my college authorities banned gig can, we would have gone to see it. we would have had a riot right then and there. [laughter] >> i think that most students want to engage with the film they wanted to show, stuart, paddington instead, a movie about a bear in london that gets hunted down by a taxi determinist. we don't understand how much
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touchy feely -- stuart: yes, hold on please. i've got monica with me. she's itching to get into this one. >> hi, pete, are you hearing from veterans? how do veterans feel when they see things like this going down on our college campuses? what does it do to their morale? >> it reminds them of what a bubble world so many of their fellow students live in. these guys or gals show up u mid 20s, you know they've seen a lifetime worth of experience on the the battlefield in iraq and afghanistan, and then they encount canner students who have been coddled complaining about injustice committed to them by a film that portrays an american hero fighting for the very freedoms that allow them to complain on their cozy little campus about being offended by a film that they don't even have to go see because oh, by the way, americans love it and support our veterans. stuart: you got it precisely right. pete hegseth everyone. good stuff. president obama's foreign
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policy in chaos, the mullahs in iran making fresh demands on us. dan henninger at the obama -- on the obama agenda at the top of the hour. plus, charlie gasparino. fresh hour of "varney & company" is two minutes away.
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stuart: the obama doctrine on foreign policy, it is on full display. item one we empower iran with nuke talks, and their president says no deal unless economic sanctions are lifted on day one, all of 'em, got that go, day one. item two, iran's military, parking two warships off yemen. third yemen, pure chaos. now the u.s. and iran partners in negotiation are helping soldiers on opposite sides in the yemeni conflict. meanwhile we keep poking at our
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only true ally in the middle east that would be israel. the white house mocking benjamin netanyahu's image, warning about an iran nuke a few years back. the obama doctrine, chaos and immaturity. dan henninger responds in just a minute. ♪ ♪ stuart: check the big board. i've got to say this is pretty much a go nowhere thursday morning, thus far only down 22 points. the supply of oil, though, has reached a 15-year high. you could say we're swimming in the stuff but price of oil is actually going up today despite that massive supply. $51 per barrel. here's the price of gas. uh-oh, went up again overnight. $2.39 is your average. i guess my prediction of a plunge is really going nowhere. remember that we are still down $1.20 from where we were this
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time last year. that is money in your pocket. we'll take that. other big stories this hour, jamie dimon considered the best bank exec out there, warning of another crisis. gasparino on that in a few minutes. we also have an apple watch on set and a review of it. is it a gadget? is it a fashion accessory? we'll show one right here on the set. but first back to president obama. "wall street journal"'s dan henninger is with us. let's talk about what you are calling the obama doctrine. you say it's the incredible -- >> incredible obama doctrine. stuart: what is it, first of all? what is it? >> the doctrine is he was asked by tom friedman of the new york times and he said the doctrine is that we will engage, but we preserve our capabilities. we will engage with countries like iran or russia, but if things get dangerous, then we have what he calls superior military force to preserve stability and peace. stuart: yeah, but --
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>> but. stuart: if you say i 5eu7b9 gonna use my big stick, it's not much use is it? >> yeah. teddy roosevelt, speak softly and carry a big sick. their version is speak softly and claim you're carrying a big stick which you have no intention of ever using. today, yesterday john kerry said we will not allow the middle east to spin out of control, we will become involved. this is literally incredible -- because when assad was using gas against the syrians a year or two ago remember that barack obama drew a redline in the sand, and john kerry at that point gave the most extraordinary churchillian speech about how this will not stand, we will not allow assad to use chemical weapons against his people. now we're back to the same thing with john kerry saying they will not allow the destabilization of the middle east. stuart: but is that doctrine
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popular? because the president sort of phrases it as it's my way or it's war. i think that's a false choice, but that's the way he's positioning it to gain public acceptance. >> i don't think it's working, stuart. i think most people understand that a there are steps between his way, just simple negotiation, making these concessions to the iranians, or war. it's an irony since the middle east is now getting to the point where it is end gulfed in war. and he is -- engulfed in war and he is still standing there claiming war is already happening stuart. stuart: the middle east is in absolute chaos. i can't think of that many middle eastern cities which are not just marijuana rubble. >> to his point about it's either his plan with iran or war and destabilization in an extraordinary op-ed for the or "wall street journal" yesterday, henry kissinger and george schultz made the point that the nuclear deal will lead to the destabilization of the region, because you'll have one nuclear
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power and the others trying to gain nuclear capability. and now john kerry is saying that if the place is stabilized -- destabilized they will intervene when, in fact destabilization is occurring right now in yemen, iraq syria and jordan. stuart: what do you make of this tweaking of weng min netanyahu? -- benjamin netanyahu? side by side with the same diagram netanyahu showed in 2012. that's a tweet. that's really poking the israelis all over again. there's no attempt there to redo the relationship or to mend any kind of fences. he's making it or worse. >> it's unpresidential. the white house doesn't need to descend to a college humor mag end zien. recall that just last week the president himself said that scott walker -- maybe when he learns a little bit about foreign policy, then he can make comments about what we're doing with iran. i mean these cheap shots that they're taking about serious individuals in politics is
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demeaning the system. stuart: you are exasperated aren't you? i've known you for a long time and i see you week after week, you are whats rated. >> well, you know, one sits here stuart, week after week and watches a situation hike the middle east deglade piece by piece. -- degrade piece by piece. first it was the islamic state taking over mosul in iraq then they swept into syria, then you have the saudis saying they have to do something about this, and you have them invading literally yemen because they think an iran-supported group the houthis are taking over yemen. so every week it falls apart by another big chunk. stuart: by the way, the iranian leadership today said the saudis shouldn't be doing that, we should have negotiations. >> and the ships that the iranians just sent into the gulf of aden, they say it's an antipiracy mission. they sound like putin! [laughter] stuart: that's right. if iran has done so well with
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negotiating with barack obama, of course they're going to say we'll negotiate with the saudis. >> that's why the doctrine's incredible. countries like iran think they have a free run, and they're taking it. stuart: dan henninger, the exasperated one. thank you, dan. all right, he is one of the top bankers in the world, certainly the top banker in america, jpmorgan's chief jamie dimon, and he's warned here comes another financial crisis in part because of bank regulation. you know i don't like charts, but look at this one. he says the treasury crash last october was a warning shot. there it is, that's the one that we've circled there. that's the warning shot. charlie gasparino is here. first of all, this is pretty strong stuff from america's top banker. or am i overplaying this? >> i don't think jamie dimon thinks we're going to have another financial crisis. suiter suiter so why is he issuing this warning? >> well, i read the letter, too and that wasn't front and center. that's the part you liked, i guess the best concern.
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[laughter] it wasn't up top. stuart: look, i highlighted it because jamie dimon has been the victim of bank regulation, dodd-frank. they have just murdered jpmorgan and all the other -- >> well, and -- stuart: and he hasn't pushed back. >> well, i think the real story is here if you read the letter, he talked about how we got our regulatory issues behind us we see some daylight, we're not going to be fined and attacked every day by the president anymore. he sees the environment in washington changing, right? republicans have taken the house and the senate and who knows what's going to happen in 2016. hillary's going to be -- if hillary clinton gets elected even as a democrat, it's going to be a much more bank-friendly president. so he's coming out of his shell now and he's making several points. number one is regulation is holding back the banking industry. he believes by putting -- when you bailed out citigroup and forced jpmorgan to take t.a.r.p.
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money, the psalm bailout must be, you -- the same ballout money you put two players on the same plane that didn't deserve to be there. the scarlet letter, citigroup deserved it not jpmorgan. that sort of mindset does create the next financial crisis because banks think they're going to get bailed out in the future. and one other thing that's important is the notion that regulation is bad. and, you know, before he went into his shell when he had to deal with gazillions of dollars in fines, jamie was on the warpath saying dodd-frank was destroying the banking industry preventing us from are doing what's right, increasing our costs and costs to consumers. i would say what we're going to see now out of jamie dimon is a guy who's going to resume his mantle as the spokesman for responsible banking. which he always had been before that. stuart: it'll be nice to see that. >> i'm curious what his
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relationship is with the president now. you know, they were so close in the first term, and then -- stuart: were they? were they so close? >> oh, yeah, he was -- he went several times. >> well, they all go. let me just say this, his people told me they weren't as close as the popular wisdom was. >> oh, okay. >> now, when jamie -- jamie's recovering from cancer he's obviously in total remission, he's doing very well, the president -- they had a nice chat apparently, when it was first disclosed. listen, jamie dimon right now is no fan of president obama's policies. and president obama is no fan of him opening his mouth. stuart: that's very true. charlie, thank you very much. another story that wall street's talking about, the masters. here are the latest odds from our guy in vegas justin spieth, is he now the -- >> jordan spieth. stuart: he's now the favorite? >> who's jordan -- stuart: no, he's not. >> you don't know who jordan
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spieth is? stuart: rory mcilroy is the favorite. wait a second did you all see this? jack nicklaus you've got to see this. 75 years old. he hits a hole in one in the par-3 event yesterday at augusta. golf needs a shot in the arm -- let's wait. i must have seen that a dozen times. [laughter] i love it. just love it. >> amazing. stuart: for all of us getting on in year, it's nice to see a 75-year-old do that. >> golf isn't a sport, right? stuart: be careful charlie. [laughter] get me out of this. lauren simonetti, i want to know, are they buzzing about the masters down there? >> you're going to get me in trouble stuart because the answer is, yes. the other answer is the tournament's actually on some of the tv screens down here, and i'm not allowed to say to the traders or the firms or that are watching it. stuart: but what was that about,
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was it under armour? their stock hit a high today? >> oh, yes. stuart: don't they -- is jordan spieth be wearing their sufficient or somethingsome. >> i'm not sure who's wearing under armour, but there are -- if you created a golf index which our own charlie brady did our senior markets editor, you can see stocks like under armour all-time high. there's other golf-related stocks that you wouldn't expect. toll brothers, they own a lot of golf communities. so does jack nicklaus are by the way he has a realty company. golf carts, there are so many stocks affiliated with golf that you wouldn't automatically think about. i should tell some of the guys on the floor as their watching. [laughter] it was 10:40, you had the teeoff between phil mickelson, rory mcilroy and ryan moore. that was exciting. stuart: you couldn't remember those? oh lauren. >> i'm sorry stuart! stuart: we'll be back to you --
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>> ask me about shop ising, and i can remember all the brands. [laughter] stuart: all right. coming up at this hour, in this hour, i should say, a doctor says he's ready to perform the first head transplant. i'll say that again, the first head transplant. says he has magical glue -- [laughter] he can use it to attach one man's head to another body. okay okay. we're going to deal with it. dr. see getting is coming. -- dr. siegel is coming. the irs says they're too busy to answer your calls. does that mean they're too busy to audit you? and next, apple's watch goes on sale tomorrow. we've got one on the set. i want to know, will women want to buy one? ♪ ♪
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stuart: the apple watch officially available for preorder tomorrow. we have one with us here on the set. mashable's chief correspondent lance lara joins me now with the watch on his wrist. >> yes. stuart: you like it -- wait a second. most of the reviews have been kind of lukewarm at best but you like it, don't you? >> i do like it. i think it's the best wear able to date. it's best designed, best interface. it serves the purpose of being a watch very well, but it also does a lot more but without being too much in your face. i do think where they've succeeded is both fashion and for keeping your phone in your pocket more often. stuart: so you like the look. >> i do. stuart: make it do something which turns me on as a potential buyer. >> all right. well these are all the aps here. i'll show you what the digital crown can do. i'm going to zoom in basically, to the map. i'm scrolling the digital crown, moving this around and you can see what's happening, this is
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right where we are right now. so it's using the gps on the upon the it also has, it also has, obviously, a lot of workout and fitness stuff in here. i can, of course also talk to friends and family -- stuart: oh, you can? >> well, i can -- >> let's call christine. stuart: no, let's not. what are you doing right now? >> right now i'm contacting a friend named trudy, and i'm going to do the digital touch and i'm going to draw a picture -- oh, she's actually sent me a message, but i'm going to draw a picture, and this -- what i draw here will appear, will float away and appear on her apple watch. i can also send her so after that goes i'll put my two fingers here. i have to do it like this, and now i'm going to sender if if i can just -- yeah, i know, that's a exactly what i wanted. stuart: is it working? >> yeah, it is. what i'm doing, i'm doing it sort of twisted like this, but basically two fingers on here, and you can do a heartbeat.
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and i'm not going to have that work right now, of course. [laughter] that has been working. i want to show you also -- >> that's the face of it right? with all the little icons? >> well actually the face of it is going to be your watch. so nine times out of ten what you're going to be seeing is this. but not just this one. if you don't like this one, you've got this one. and this is kind of cool because this way you'll see the flower bloom -- [laughter] he doesn't -- >> i think he likes it. stuart: i'm not turned on by this thing. >> first of all let me ask you are yo i a watch -- are you a watch person? i am a watch person. i've been collecting watches, both mechanical and digital. so that's one of the reasons it excites me it does have the real look and feel of a watch. stuart: hold on a second, lance. i know you're a big deal but this is deirdre bolton. now, deirdre, you've seen it. >> i have seen it. stuart: keep it on camera. is that a fashion statement to
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you? am i being sexist by asking you a female, if that is a fashion statement? >> you are not being sexist. actually, i'm flattered stuart that you want my style opinion and i am here to give it. honestly, i think that looks a little clunky but lance says he is a watch expert so with all due respect, what i'm more entered in -- stuart: wait a minuter. >> this is not the only size and not the only design. >> you didn't splash out the 17k for the gold-plaited one? >> no, this is stainless steegal low, so this is a more expensive one, but there's also the sport model which is 38 millimeters smaller, aluminum alloy, it has a leather band, it has -- >> which makes me think of chicken which makes me realize i need to go to the gym and i need these apps from the watch. i'm more concerned about functionality. our colleague at the "wall street journal" said it was good, but it didn't pester me enough. she dud a spin class at s cycle and she said, you know it tracked my heartbeat, but it
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didn't pester me after it realized i hadn't -- stuart tart do you want to be pestered by a watch? >> maybe for that. stuart: do you want to be pestered by a watch? >> what i like is being notified when it matters. you can set all the notifications hide hinges you don't -- hide things you don't like. what apple was trying to do was break the so-called tyranny of their own product, the iphone. so up stead of getting sucked in, you get a vibration, and the next thing you know you're sucked into it -- >> to me, it feels like this is the rudest thing in the world when you have your iphone and you're ignoring basically, who's across from you. is it better if you're looking at your wrist? [laughter] >> well the idea is you're glancing at it. you don't have to look at it very long. you look down and look away. >> tell 'em your story, and i'll be like, what? >> but do i need it? >> no, of course not. >> do i need this? i don't. and it's expensive.
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i have a phone. stuart: lance has the last word. did you think you needed an ipad? >> no. that's a good point. i do love my ipad. >> right. and that's what's happened to a lot of people. wearables is in a tough place because a lot of people don't think they need them but at least when you've got a product that looks good and works well, it gets closer to people realizing oh maybe there is something to having wearable technology, intelligence on my list that also looks good. stuart: i'm going to buy one, because i want a status symbol. >> father enough. [laughter] stuart: thank you very much indeed. mashable guy, thank you. >> my pleasure. stuart: and deirdre we'll see you. [laughter] it's not chunk key. >> all right. according to stuart varney, it's not chunk key. stuart: i'm going to have one. up next, the boston bomber guilty on 30 counts. question, how many others, how many dzhokhars are out will? do we know who they are? if we do, what are we doing about it? >> my own view is that the life
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sentence would be the more appropriate sentence here. so what about that stock? sure thing, right? actually, knowing the kind of risk that you're comfortable with i'd steer clear. really? really. straight talk. now based on your strategy i do have some other thoughts... multiplied by 13,000 financial advisors it's a big deal. and it's how edward jones makes sense of investing.
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[office phone chatter] [frogs croaking] you know what, let me call you back. what are you doing?! [scream] [frogs croaking] [yelling and screaming]
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it's back! xfinity watchathon week. the biggest week in television history. it's your all-access binge-watching pass to tv's hottest shows, free with xfinity on demand. xfinity watchathon week. now through april 12th. perfect for people who really love tv. stuart: boston bomber dzhokhar tsarnaev found guilty on all 30 counts. how many other would-be
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terrorists are living among us? blake berman has the full report. all right, blake, let me get into this. here's what i want to know and what the viewers want to know. how many other tsarnaevs are there out there? do we know who they are, and if we know who they are, what are we doing about it? well stuart the the president of justice just provided -- the department of justice just provided another reminder today. not only both abroad, but also here at home. the doj announced the arrest of a 34-year-old man from wisconsin, madison, wisconsin. his name is joshua ray van houghton. they picked him up last night at o'hare. he went abroad to turkey, tried to help isis then flew back here to the united states, and that is when they arrested him late last night. just this past weekend the head of the department of homeland security, jeh johnson said while they are able to monitor people that come from overseas leave the u.s. go overseas and come back he admitted quote,
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you can't know everything. and as you mentioned in february, the head of the fbi, james comey said there are cases relating to isis, active cases in every single state in the u.s. stuart: we're following them, we're not arresting them, we're just surveilling them, i guess, that's basically the answer here, isn't it? >> yeah. they are definitely following them. since march of 2013, so about the last 25 months or so according to our fox news research, nearly 50 people have been picked up by u.s. authorities who are from here or have lived here in the united states. of those 50, stuart, they have been charged for cases relating to terrorism. and here's what is so scary according to one counterterrorism expert we talked to this morning who said a lot of these people are younger, tech-savvy, can get inspiration online at home on the computer. of those near 50, 12 of those, stuart were just mere teenagers. stuart: ouch. blake berman look, this is your
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first time on this show. i know you've been with the network all week, but we really appreciate you being with us. thank you very much indeed for being here. >> good to be here thanks. stuart: rand paul. not even a week as a candidate, and he's already under attack. we have the woman who helped create one of the first negative ads on rand paul, and she is a republican. treasure >> what did the other growers tell you about the importance of jimmy's work continuing? >> he was blazing new trails, and they didn't want to see brand go away. and they all stepped up and offered to take his fruit that year and make wine for free if i would help the bond business.
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stuart: dead flat. it is thursday, lunchtime. look at the price of oil. the price of gasoline holding at 239 per gallon. you can get it for $1.85 that three different places in south carolina. $1.85 all three places.
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this is a great rebate. oil below $53 a barrel, is that good or bad for the economy? >> i feel awful for those working within the oil and gas patch. everyone is feeling the crunch. >> that was fooled. do you want to start again? >> absolutely. i think that it is good. it will be driven into the u.s.
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economy. stuart: i do a quick view. i think it is a very good thing for the economy. [laughter] >> i asked for it. i suppose i really did. please do not buzz me again. these are good guys. they are being shut down because of low prices. >> these jobs welcome back. just a matter of time. it is not the end of the world. stuart: we had the for president of shell say that he thinks the
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price of gasoline could go to $4 a gallon. where do you stand on that forecast? >> i think that that is a little too optimistic on his part. i think that we will probably see these prices for an extended period of time. stuart: you are welcome back anytime you'd like. rand paul. the attacks are already rolling in. it is a non-partisan group. this is a non-partisan group. >> squarely focused on foreign policy issues.
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exactly what the organization's room is. it is focused on doing just that. making sure we have a secure and prosperous america. >> it is not put out by democrats. this is put out by a group which generally supports all republicans. >> the framework for the deal was announced last week. quite frankly senator rand paul had not taken a strong stance on this. stuart: i see your point. what you are doing i think you
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are a republican. you are splitting the party. if i contributed money and i find that any of it ends up in an attack ad, i want my money back the. >> it is highlighted things that senator has said. iran is not a threat to the united states. not a threat to israel. the viewpoint on iran is out of
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step with conservatives and out of step with the craft as well. you look at a liberal host like chris matthews. senator rand paul is very closely aligned with president obama's foreign-policy. huygens tensions overseas. it is pointing out a sitting senator whose policies are quite dangerous. stuart: do you have to name the donors and contributors to your organization? >> the ads are simply highlighting rand falls viewpoint. >> most of the people that contributed the money are conservative.
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>> we do not disclose donors. the fact of the matter is what these ads do is focus on things that senator rand paul has said. there is an incredibly important port history right now. >> we are debating the issues. i've not think that it is very helpful. senator rand paul's viewpoint. i will agree with you on that. it is important. stuart: this is maybe one of my favorite stories of the day.
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a doctor says he is ready to perform the first had transplant . i am not sure i understand that one. doctor siegal is next. ♪
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>> if you look at overall averages right now you are looking at a dead flat market. we'll show you some big movers. pier one. you can see some losers on the screen. take a look at these two stocks. pulleys wearing more body cameras. one police ordered body cameras from tasered.
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we will have the ceo on varney toubro. ♪ ónóv
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>> this is not a quiz. it is an interesting question. should you buy the home you live in or rent it? >> there is a change in the dynamics. we are finally seeing the big
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shift. it is better for your pocketbook there is a big switch. there is a new report that looks at affordability in markets. 76%. it is better to own land to rent in that city. that is a gigantic number. the mood has shifted. three quarters of america. >> rent has gone up and up and up. others looking at different cities. a big shift is happening.
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stuart: there is a shift. >> we saw this back into 92. it was the same dynamic that is at play right now. stuart: .there sergio has agreed to perform the world's first had transplant. working on a russian man who has an extremely rare spinal disease. doctor siegal will tell us what on earth is going on. this doctor wants to take his head off this living human being
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inputted on a cadaver. now has a good body to work with. what in the devil is all about about? >> i we transplanting my head on to sports an acre if i could. this will never work. if this was true but you would be able to cure paralysis. if i take your head put it on a different body, you will not be able to use your arms and legs. they could hook up the blood supply. the monkey head was held ill to be alive on another body.
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you cannot move your arms and legs into will last a few days and months. stuart: she is going to do this. he will do it. >> i think that it is malpractice. stuart: is he in russia? [laughter] stuart: i think you killed this one. let me move on. president obama wants to make a link between climate change and asthma. more drought more wildfires more dust in the air. he is raising this because one of his daughters has nasty asthma. >> is this the same doctor that brought us the affordable care act? we had a very cold winter.
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very cold winters equal wet springs equal a lot more appalling in the air. that is what we are seeing. probably because the pollen is up because of the cold winter, not drought. carbon dioxide can lead to paul in. i reserve judgment. it is just speculation. >> i call it fantasy. trying to blame everything on climate change. it makes asthma worse in children. >> bull warming. where did that come from? a cold winter. it was local cooling before
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that. remember that? >> actually, i do. stuart: global cooling. >> i do not see a connection. stuart: thank you. and that transplant is not going to work. the irs is too busy to answer their calls. does that mean they are too busy to give you an audit? >> it crushes innovation. imagine abolishing the irs. ♪
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call now, request your free [decision guide] and start gathering the information you need to help you keep rolling with confidence. go long™. ♪ stuart: the stature of people criticizing the policies is on the rise. members of his own party question his. seven and 11 eastern. ♪ stuart: here it calms. april 15. gerri willis is here. the irs does not answer the phone 60% of the time. this is a serious question.
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>> you think you should just not file. >> i did not say that. >> are you kidding me? you have lost your mind. the irs can look back. stuart: i am not paying anything. if they are so root for money isn't there less of a risk? >> this year, but not next year or the following years. stuart: okay and okay. this year there is a slightly smaller chance of an audience.
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>> what about next year? you are in a load of hot water life friend. stuart: they just said you are a killjoy. there are somethings -- you do not mess with the irs. >> claiming some of them you cannot help. you are more than likely to get audited. server-side chance of getting audited. stuart: thank you for giving
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their. we will let go on that one. thank you very much in need. more varney after this. ♪
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>> every now and again it comes along that there are such things as go nowhere days. actually it seems like we've had almost a few go nowhere days. look at this. the dow industrial average is up a mere 6 points 17,909. the professionals say the market is searching for direction. >> yeah 6 points to the upside. stuart: have we got the buzzer handy. i deserve the buzzer for saying that the market is searching for direction. [buzzer] >> that's what i want to hear. >> you've been buzzed twice on your own show. stuart: i'm supposed to be-- [buzzer] >> my time is up and let's hand it over to deidre bolton
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who will not be buzzed. deirdre: i was going to say, three buzzes and you're out. and announcing intentions to run for president of the united states we'll take you behind the battle scenes for voters' hearts, minds and money. speaking of money, two people who know banking, who say there are risks in the system. jamie dimon and sheila bayer, separate and equal worries. and drones how technology is used to battle a key issue facing america. while republican presidential candidate rand paul just wrapped up a rally in south carolina with senator lindsay graham, john roberts is on the ground there in charleston. first and foremost why is south carolina so important to g.o.p. contenders? >> oh it's so important to g.o.p. contenders because every year besides 2012 it has picked the person who would be th

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