tv Varney Company FOX Business May 4, 2015 11:00am-1:01pm EDT
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5.4%. stewart criteria great show. over to you. >> thanks so much, maria. oh, a chilling start to the week. sure looks like terror has landed in america again. good morning everyone. two men shot dead in texas they tried to attack a group hosting a cartoon contest. our freedom to speak our mind now under attack on our own turf. chilling on on just who these attackers were. and then we have mcdonald's. where his the beef? the big turn arn presentation this morning full of corporate jargon, see if you can understand how they're going to dress a big sales decline. worse there were problems with pay per view and many people watched it free on social media. big money? yes. big fizzle too. and the royal highnesses princes name.
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sarney and company is about to begin. . >> well, not a bad start to a monday morning if you're a market watcher we're up 18,100 to be exact. now, mcdonald's. they need a good plan. sounds more like corporate jargon to me. unlock financial value drive operating growth, what is exactly -- what does that mean? looks like investors agree with me, doesn't mean much. the stock is down for this big day on mcdonald's. and now look at amc reporting higher profit with the shows like the walking dead and the show is up 2.5%. price of oil this monday morning still around 58, 59th a barrel. but we have the price of gasoline up again overnight and the national average is now 2.62 a gallon.
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ouch. now, there's about to be a news conference on the outside of a art exhibit we're going to bring you the latest develops of course as they come in. now, here's what we know so far. two armed men opened fire on a security guard outside the event in texas. the american freedom defense initiative was show casing cartoons. a security guard was shot in the ankle, police officers returned fire killing the two gunman. now, police closed off the area thinking there was a bomb in the suspect's car, they investigated the car blew it up no explosive device was found. now, this. fbi agents are in search of the phoenix arizona elton simpson, he's one of the suspects, he was convicted of a terror situation five years ago, he was given probation. he believes to be the man who tweeted about the attack
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before it happened. program. now -- >> thank you stewart. >> now religion is clearly an issue here. can you -- at the local level because you've got to deal with this at the local level can you profile in a way that you're comfortable profiling? >> sure. there's -- that's totally allowable in our system of justice, but it can't be used for the soul reason, but it can be used as one of many narcotics we take into account. local law enforcement is playing a huge role and will continue to play a huge role in terrorist attacks here in the united states. >> you've got to deal with it. you're the first responders in these types of attacks. did you have a set plan in place? you get the call, you spring into action, you know exactly what you're doing. >> well, first of all let's
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hope a lot of preplanning is going on, there's information sharing at all levels, state local, federal government. we're an open society. we're target rich environment for this sort of thing, i don't want to create an alarm but the fact is if we want to remain an open society we're going to have to let law enforcement do what we don't find pallable today but we have to get civil liberators and keeping this country safe, and i think we have a good balance . >> what was your first reaction in what you heard were you as alarmed as a lot of people because it really does look like terror has arrived it. >> sure. but it arrived on september 11th as you know and we've had several attacks after that new york city, for example, has had several attacks. i was grateful to see the law enforcement on the scene -- our law enforcement has been under mind here in the united states but acted quickly and a little loss of life other
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than the perpetrators here, and that's what you can hope for is that the perpetrators were put down before law-abiding citizens . >> we were told that investigations in all 50 states are taking place into people who may have an association with isis, for example. now, you're in the wisconsin milwaukee area, are you aware of investigations in your area? >> well, some of that i can't disclose. these are confidential sensitive investigations. but, you know, let's be honest. yes, those things go on every day, information sharing is key. watching individuals red flag see something say something, we encourage the public -- the public plays a huge role in this. you know, the social media thing where they tweet before they go on the attack and that's important to get that to law enforcement as soon as possible so that we can prevent, that's what we want to do first. we can disrupt if it's underway these sort of terror attacks. >> we just have to live with it don't we?
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it's arrived and it's not going away anytime soon. >> no. it's not but the reality is that it's here in the united states like i said since september 11th it's been here. we have to open our eyes to it and i'm a little afraid right now that at the federal level they still have these blinders on about the dangerousness and the nature of these individuals and they have to take those blinders off to be real about it so that we can keep america safe. >> always a pleasure. thank you for being with us on a very difficult day. >> thank you . >> free speech under attack in america. judge brings us the legal and constitutional arguments about a half hour from now. 11:30. live from detroit doctor been -- ben carson makes it official that he is running for president. five people already announcing officially this morning with a
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lot more to come presumably. now, let's go back to that story. mcdonald's released details of what they call a turn around plan. there's not much meat on this bun, investors don't really care for it either, the stock is down on this big presentation day. i looked at that in my announcement there's a lot of corporate jargon, i don't think they're talking to customers. >> they're trying to talk to wall street, they say give us sometime, they want to get out what duncan donates did the same thing, they want to get out of owning restaurants they want to get more franchise, meaning more companies run are you in their companies arnold the world. that's if you are a shareholder, anything going in this press released -- no, you've got to own the stock. >> exactly they've had sales
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decline in the fast past few years. >> yeah. >> that means they've got to turn that around with the customer. look at that graphic. i mean look at that. drive operate growth. create brand excitement. what's that left one on the left? i can't even read it. >> it's like a college intern came up with that -- that's rude but, you know, did an mda come up with that in some dorm room? maybe. they could do it. but it's possible, the brand if that's their biggest issue right now, kids cotton want to go to mcdonald's, in my younger generation mcdonald's was cool, but kids these days want the healthier tough stuff, the chipotle, but that one section of international could be good for them because they're growing in particular in asia, and those are different menus, they don't offer just a burger, i mean depending on the country you're going to get differently things for each country. that could be smart. i don't want to discount them yet, but as of today
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investors are saying okay. you show me what you're going to do and then we'll discuss . >> and they're happy with what they've seen. >> no. not yet. >> i lived in hong kong in the 1970s. >> yeah. and i was there when mcdonald's opened its first store in hong kong. >> uh-huh. >> and day one the fish sandwich sold more than any other in day one. >> but here if you say fish at mcdonald's people would say i don't want to get fish at mcdonald's. >> yeah, that's -- anyway let's move on. >> you bet. >> lauren has more headlines for you, in just case you missed it. >> hello stewart good monday morning, three republican candidates now putting their name for 2016, former ceo carly, she announcing her presidential retired neurosurgeon ben carson did so as well, the three senators
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rand paul, marco rubio and ted cruz, but what's interesting here is that the three republicans have yet to announce. as the new weeks begin in baltimore, hopes are running high that the relative come will continue, the national guard is starting to move out baltimore's mayor lifted the city's curfew yesterday and now it towners criminal charges against the six police officers involved in the death of freddie gray. and the new avengers age of ultron it opened over the weekend with nearly 1 88 million dollars. that makes it the second biggest box office debut ever. second only it's predecessor the first of the avengers. movie sales would have been likely bigger if it weren't for the fights, the derby the draft, golf games were on, such a weekend of sports . >> what about the the weather. >> and the weather in northeast was gorgeous. >> yeah. and it still did very well in the box office. i bet that is the best summer box office in three years.
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>> still nice healthy day not quite triple digits, but 18 01 is where we are for the dow and it's got a stock, and that stock is moving higher. charlie from fbn reported late friday that they may make a bid for the paper for the tune of 5 billion dollars. up she goes. three other stories we're covering for you real fast. here we go.
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the newest addition to the royal family, fourth in line for the thrown. i celebrate with my fellow english accent guy, that will be 11:25 this morning and tying willie maze to the fourth all time home run list is due a bonus, but the yankees won't pay him and a rod is staying quiet about that. what's with that story? 11:53 you'll find out. check this -- you're not going to like this. take a selfie, upload it to a website, and the website guesses your age. how old do you think you look? i did it. i was profoundly unhappy with the answer. [laughter] profoundly unhappy. >> it's not how you look. it's how you feel. >> thank you very much, sherrill. i know you're not going to do it. >> heck no. >> talk about the fight, it was a letdown for a lot of people. not that much action, not much
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bang for your pay per few bucks really, the fight was even delayed because the cable companies had a hard time to meet the demand. but you know who came out a big winner? las vegas. that's where the fight was. tons of money poured in, and bob was held up in las vegas he was there for the fight you've got to give me the scene here because i hear that vegetation made a ton of money in this fight. >> good day for us in vegetation. >> yeah. >> it was a great weekend. people were spending money like it was unbelievable. but, you know, it's always been a fight town, stewart and this of course was supposed to be one of the greatest fights of all time, it probably damaged the fight business from that perspective, but the level of narcissism of selfies was everywhere in the room, trust me . >> all right. how know how many people the arena or the theater accommodated
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for this fight. >> right. >> but it was tens of thousands of people went to las vegas just to have a look -- to be there on fight night. i think that's correct, isn't it. >> yeah. probably 15 to 18,000 people in the garden, that's what they call it, the mgm. the thing that's amazing to watch, stewart, if we had cameras from los angeles san diego, coming north on interstate 15 into vegetation, starting literally on wednesday afternoon bumper to bumper, it took hours what would normally be a three hour drive from their ten hours 11 hours because the amount of people who drove in. but the time was hopping and vegas has changed, about 75% of our revenue in las vegas is coming from the restaurants the clubs the booze it's not coming from gaming. gaming is not what it used to be with thely the millennials
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they don't spend money on that, so the whole thing is changed in las vegas but there were a lot of things changing with everything going on the nhl, -- >> i remember las vegas from when you could walk up and down the strip, it was a nice thing to do. you walk the strip. but we just showed the video. not quite the same these days, is it? walking up and down the strip is not what it used to be. >> a lot of pedestrians in las vegas now. i hate to laugh about it, but so many people get whacked on the street, i'm telling you you can't imagine how many people get hit on the strip they need to billboard the walkovers because there's too many people and so much traffic. you know, for years stewart, there's two things that people really wanted that top in las vegas. one was build a train from las vegas to los angeles. second thing is make the strip one way where it would go --
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downtown las vegas and then empty out, but the casinos didn't want either one of those because they don't want like that people driving past the casinos and from a convention perspective, they just announced another casino that's supposed to go up south of the strip that we were surprised, we're talking about a 3- 4 billion project here, so it feels good from that perspective . >> okay. 75% of the money coming in las vegas is from booze, entertainment room rates, only 25% is gaming. that's a real reversal from my day for sure. last 20 seconds. go. >> well, i know what, it just shows the change. the baby boomers our generation, first of all our kids, we don't want to talk about how much money they spend at these tables, but
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that's where everybody is spending the money right now and when you talk what's going on in the town, have made building a new arena behind new york new york, everything has changed and i think in lot of ways, stewart it's better, and a lot of the things going on -- the money over there. >> exactly. >> it's gambling in mccow drinking and parting in las vegas. >> yeah. >> and selfies -- listen i'm here whenever you want, but thank you for having me. we'll keep those selfies to ourself. >> we'll see you begin soon. >> all right. >> will and kate's new baby. charlotte elizabeth i explain the fascination with the -- well i try to. not sure i remember the fascination actually. [laughter] i've been here for 40 years. >> i love it. >> we'll be back. don't go away.
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we've got charles william and george, so she's number fourth. >> i used to share a department with a guy who was 30 2 in guy. >> that's kind of cool. >> now, wait a second. you have to explain to our viewers if i can't. >> yeah. >> what is the fascination of a foreign birth to americans. >> you know, it's really interesting ever since i've been in this country, which is nearly 30 years now. anything royal seems to capture the imagination. i think it has to do with the whole disney prince and princes story and when you look at a lot of the people being interviewed back in the palace and all those places right now. a lot of them have american accents, it's fascinating. [laughter] >> let's see if sherrill can explain the fascinations. >> no offense to either of you, but you're men and women love the fairy tail, if you look at all the coverage, it's geared to us. entertainment shows and any of the cable shows. >> it's true. >> what does her hair look
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like why did she look ten hours after giving birth, i think the women in this country love this kind of stuff . >> now, i heard all kind of speculation on the internet -- some of which i read. >> some of them is true on the internet. how does she look so good. a few hours after giving birth, she looks terrific. how did that happen? >> look. she's amazing. >> the speculation is that she had actually given birth two days earlier and it took her two days to look good and present the royal child to the public. >> or it's analien baby. >> some of my friends say it wasn't fair she had to go out so quickly, couldn't she have taken a nap and others said who is her hairdresser. >> of course you get out in front of the public. get out of here. are you happy with the name? >> i am actually i like charlotte, and of course you
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have the great great grandmother elizabeth and then the late grandmother diana, so it covers a lot of bases. it's great. >> i wanted victoria. >> you should call them and express your -- >> i shall call them immediately. >> thank you very much. >> yes, sir. >> take a look at it is the biggest winner on the s&p 500 right now and it's made a lot of money and set a new high. in fact, it's up 10%. now, there's a nice rally best stock in the s&p 500. not bad. up next. free speech clearly under fire. literally. two gunman r men killed in texas after an exhibit of cartoons. judge is next. >> the reality is that it is here in the united states like i said since september 11th, it's been here. we have to open our eyes to it okay? and i'm a little afraid right now at the federal level
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police car. the police officer in that car began returning fire and struck both mensch taking them -- men taking them down. stuart: police in texas updating the shooting at an event showcasing cartoons of the prophet mohamed. the organizer was on "fox & friends" earlier this morning. she called the shooting an assault on free speech. roll tape. >> the idea that there's a violent war there's a violent assault on freedom of speech clearly was brought home last night. i believe that freedom of speech that our unalienable right was targeted. this is the war. this is the war, and it's here in america now. stuart: all rise please. judge andrew napolitano is here on the issue of free speech. judge, welcome to the program. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: some would say that pamela geller -- >> the woman that we just saw. stuart: just on tape right there, was deliberately provocative by showcasing
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cartoons of the prophet muhammad. how does that stand as you weigh the debate on free speech in the face of obvious provocation? >> the supreme court has ruled unambiguously that deliberate provocation is protected speech, and it is the duty of the government to be aware of the deliberate provocation, the likely danger as a result of the provocation and to protect the speaker, not to punish the speaker. these cases come about where government seeks to punish the speaker for provoking a crowd that trashes the place, famous chicago case in 1949. that was the case. and the speaker's conviction was overturned by the supreme court which basically said the first amendment anticipates some violence. that's why we have a government to protect us from the violence that would try and silence us. stuart: okay. now, the -- it is alleged thattalton simpson who is identified as one of the
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suspects that is now dead, that he tweeted in advance of this attack using hashtag texas attack. he made known that he was going to do this attack before it happened. how do we stand on the issue, and i know this is complex, how do we stand on the issue of mass surveil is lance, that is the -- surveillance, that is the government looking at keywords on twitter? >> it depends to whom he made this known. if he made it to someone who reported it, the police can look at the report. if he made it known to the public, the police are entitled, without a search warrant, to look at anything that's in the public domain. but if you're talking about the police capturing his speech at the time he uttered it, guess what? the nsa already does that, and it obviously didn't work in this case. stuart: yes. you say that should not happen. they should not be doing it -- >> i say that the fourth amendment says -- remember that thing, the constitution? the thing that the brits don't have? will[laughter] the fourth amendment says the
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police should not be doing it. it is not i, it is the framers who ordained this. stuart: does the constitution allow the mass surveillance mass checking of keywords okay? like, for example, can the government look down from on high all the tweets, all the e-mails that go out there billions of 'em, and look for keywords which might indicate a future attack? can the government do that? >> absolutely not. ask me if the government does do it it does. ask me if it keeps us safe. it does not. stuart: you're assuming that the nsa did pick up on this hashtag -- >> oh, this is not an assumption. this is the nsa's refusal to deny to my face and to face of the public allegations that it captures every word, every tweet, every message, every e-mail every text of everybody in the unite. stuart: so that capture, in your opinion, is unconstitutional. >> yes. stuart: okay. >> i think that's the way the court will rule. because if the fourth amendment
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was written for any reason, it was written in order to require specific evidence as a trigger for a search warrant. when the government gets a warrant to listen wherever it wants and sees whatever it hears, that's called a general warrant which is what the british did to us before we had our constitution and which is why we wrote the fourth amendment, to prevent the new government from ever doing the same. why do i keep talking about the british today? did something of significance happen over there like giving baby a name? is that really significant? stuart: sarcasm -- [laughter] low form of wit. i'm shocked. okay, here's a test. charlotte, the young lady, the young princess, her royal highness, print access charlotte -- >> god, a two-day-old baby, we're going to bow to her? >> she's fourth in line to the throne. name the other three. >> her grandfather, charles, her father, william, her brother also a baby -- i think his name is george. do i have that right? stuart: you know you've got it right because i told you during
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the commercial break before we went on -- >> all right wise guy, can you name the five people in line to succeed the president of the united states? a far more significant position than a welfare state called the monarchy. [laughter] stuart: let's see -- >> my visa to london has just been taken away from me. stuart: it certainly has. i've got your pass port too. it is the vice president, then the leader of the senate -- >> president pro tem, very good. stuart: then it is the secretary of state, then it is the speaker of the house of representatives. >>. no no, no, it is the vice president, the speaker, the president pro tem and then it is the secretary of state. not bad. stuart: not bad. >> not bad, mr. varney. we did not go over this ahead of time. you were going from your knowledge of american law which is vast. stuart: are you done? [laughter] >> shouting in my ear, you're done. stuart: yes, you are. [laughter] judge, thanks very much. great start to a monday good
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stuff. check out the big board, please. it's a rally, 61 points. we'll take it, how about that? the price of oil, down a little. 589.91. it's getting -- 58.91. getting close to 60 ah, but gasoline keeps going up. $2.62 is your national average. the price of regular has gone i p for 20 straight days. here's the bit i like, cheapest gas in the land. where is it? that would be at the sonoco station in jarrett, virginia, and the price is $1.89. >> you going to drive all the way down there to full up your car with cheap gas, mr. cheapskate? stuart: absolutely. >> i'm not surprised. [laughter] stuart: now this everyone. we have some sad news, and it's from silicon valley. david goldberg ceo of survey monkey and wife of facebook's cheryl sand berg, died suddenly friday night. he was 47. the cause of death has not been reported. cheryl -- mr. goldberg, he was a popular guy in silicon valley.
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very, very sportive of his wife and women in high-tech generally. >> yeah. you know, she wrote about the support of her husband in her book "lean in." and really, you know if you look at all the mentions of what a nice guy he was her words from the book i think, are the most fascinating. she says he was the first person to show me the internet a friend who helped me, he always made me feel at home. and she talks about his being a good father with the kids and being a coparent, supporting her telling her we know you've got a six month baby but i think you should take this leadership role at facebook. all the things he supported her in her life, he was a big part of that book, and that's what's so sad. she's the one that said, you know, you can be a strong woman, and maybe you can have it all but you need a strong man. and she writes about him that he was her best friend and her partner, so it's very sad. stuart: devastating. >> we don't know what happened, but he's 47 years old.
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we're sort of waiting. stuart: the washington post raises a very good question, can the public trust hillary clinton as president? it's their headline, "is she honest enough to be president?" well, we're going to discuss this in a minute. >> families are strong, america is strong. >> i did not have sexual relations with that woman. >> what difference, at this point, does it make? when a moment spontaneously turns romantic why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use, is the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess.
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>> i'm nicole petallides with your fox business brief. dow up 62 points, tacking on to friday's winning day on wall street. in fact, preponderate month of may all the major averages to the upside, the s&p's up 1.5%. right now the dow is up 60 points. winners, merck, jpmorgan, leading the way on the dow green mountain coffee roasters coming under heavy volume and under pressure so keep an eye on that one. intraday let's take a look at las vegas sands right now. las vegas sands making a move to the upside. traders brought this one to my attention, some heavy volume. so keep an eye on that and the casinos overall have been in the news particularly because of mgm resorts, first quarter revenue fell 11%. so we've seen mgm coming under some pressure. big picture, oil pulling back, gold gaining. more "varney & company" coming up.
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stuart: can hillary clinton be trusted? trusted enough to be president? "the washington post" raised the question. just look at this headline from "the washington post" that apoored over the weekend. quote: for hillary clinton a trust deficit to surmount. joining us now is daniel harper author of the book "clinton inc.." dan yell, that headline went on to say there are doubts about whether she is honest enough to be president. coming from "the washington post," i think that's pretty
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strong stuff. >> yeah, absolutely. but it's not based on nothing. there's a recent poll that finds four in ten americans don't find the word "honest" to be the best word to describe hillary clinton, and that's coming from democrats, i should add. six in ten independents don't think "honest" helps describe hillary clinton. so it's definitely a hurdle that she'll have to overcome and my guess is she's going to make sure this election is not about trustworthiness and honesty and instead make it about something else completely different to try to win the election. because if it is a trust election, she can't win it, of. stuart: now, former president bill clinton is defending the clinton foundation and the money that rolled in from foreign governments. here's the quote from what he had to say: stuart: now, hillary and bill are -- you can't separate that link.
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so he is, essentially, out there talking about the foundation on behalf of hillary, isn't he? >> absolutely. frankly, it's the first interview of the clinton campaign from a clinton. it's very shocking that the spouse of the candidate would be the first to give the interview. so that part is weird by itself. but pay attention to the words for a second, "knowingly inappropriate," they didn't do anything knowingly inappropriate. it's like it's written by some lawyer. we know bill clinton is a lawyer, but it's like he sent it to his lawyer before he read it on air, you know? it's a very strange comment that leaves open a lot of interpretation that i think should be parsed pretty carefully. stuart: i'm surprised coming from the washington post and then this is statement from bill clinton, i'm surprised that hasn't pushed senator elizabeth warren more to the forefront and added backing from a candidacy for her. but i've heard no movement of any kind on her front thus far
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have you? >> no, i've detected no movement, and there is a wide opening for an ambitious democrat to come after her and attack her and say these revelations, these allegations of quid pro quo are disqualifying. we don't need the president of the united states to have these allegations about them. and no democrat has said anything like that, and i think there's a real opening. even if somebody like martin o'malley or somebody who's sort of in the race took a stronger stand, you'd think they'd get a lot of attention and really set the terms of the debate, and so far they're just putting on their kid gloves to talk about hillary clinton. stuart: now earlier this morning mitt romney was on fox news' "fox & friends," the program early this morning. listen to what he had to say about hillary clinton and baltimore. >> are we not going to lock people up who commit crimes? is that what she's suggesting? i thaw thought it was a very inappropriate thing for her to do and political in nature, and i think it was a big mistake on her part and simply wrong. stuart: now, this is another
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line of attack against hillary clinton. not just at the foundation and the e-mails, but this is the politicization of baltimore and what she would do about baltimore. it's another line of attack. >> well she essentially repudiated a big part of her husband's policy, domestic policing policy, in a speech she gave last week. and i think that's what governor romney's talking about there. that's very strange and it's very odd, and it signals something else in the campaign. keep in mind if bill clinton were to run today, i don't think his constituency exists. i don't think the coalition that elected bill clinton twice exists anymore and so hillary clinton needs to try to get barack obama's coalition to vote for her so she -- this is not bill clinton's democratic party this is barack obama's democratic party x -- and that's clearly who she's pandering to. there's a long record of her speaking publicly in favor of those policing practices, but now it's too important for her to think so. stuart: two last questions. number one is there any doubt in your mind that hillary clinton will be the democrat
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nominee for the presidency? >> you know, i don't know. maybe two and three chance she will be, three and four chance she will be. she definitely is likely to be it but there is this wide open room for somebody to attack her. it's a matter of somebody actually taking it. stuart: okay last question. assuming she is the democrat nominee, do you think she wins the presidency? >> i think she has a good chance. you know, she's going to come into the -- the republican who wins the primaries is going to come into the general election dead broke, and hillary clinton will have a billion dollar war chest, and that money means something, and that organizing power that she's going to have going into that means something, and she will have an advantage over her republican, for sure. but she has her weaknesseses and she can be beat. stuart: okay. we shall see. daniel thanks so much for joining us. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: alex rodriguez due a bonus from the yankees because he hit his 660th home run, but the yankees are not paying that
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bonus and, guess what? a-rod has said nothing about it, staying quiet. now, there's a story there. we're going to dig into it in just a moment. 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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place on the all-time home run list with willie mays. rodriguez' contract states he gets a $6 million bonus. number 660 is the first milestone the yankees aren't going to pay him because they can't make any money off the home run since a-rod was suspended forster is oid use. -- for steroid use. what's that all about the? they can't market this milestone, so they don't pay. explain it. >> well, stuart, the context of when alex rodriguez signed his latest contract extension back in 2007 is very important. when a-rod signed that deal back in 2007 there had been no public acknowledgment of the fact that he used steroids back in the early 2000s and then again, of course, he used it again since then. so this is now two ped revelations ago, and the yankees' argument is, listen, we can't market this achievement because it is materially
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tainted. now, brian cash match the yankees' gm, said over weekend basically acknowledging officially for the first time the yankees do not plan to pay that bonus or presumably any subsequent bonuses. but a-rod stuart, we have not heard from him at all yet about what exactly he plans to do about it. there is a process laid out through the players' association if he desires to do so. stuart: i guess it will go to arbitration at some point because that's the way these contractual disputes go. but there's an icy relationship between a-rod and the yankees. he really hasn't come through for them in the way that he was supposed to. [laughter] i don't know why you're laughing. >> very complicated. of course, it goes back -- right. it goes back a very, very long time. now, of course, he's actually the long-tenured yankee now with the retirement of derek jeter, sort of an irony there. and, actually this season he's played pretty well. he's been one of their bigger
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power threats. the yankees, of course are in first place, and brian cashman did acknowledge over the weekend this year he's been something of a model clubhouse citizen. he has stayed out of the headlines, produced quite well. so from that standpoint this year in and of itself the yankees do appear to be satisfied with what a-rod has done for them. but there's, of course, a long history, threatened legal action in years past from a-rod to the yankees, even a time when he actually had sued briefly the major league baseball players' association the very union that defended him in his previous defenses of the suspension he received for performance-enhancing drugs. this is a very complicated history, but the reality is right now, stuart, he has been one of their better hitters. and, actually, when you talk about a marketing standpoint, he does make this team a little bit more interesting to watch. [laughter] stuart: i guess you could say that. i'm just interested in how baseball deals with the steroid e rah. if we're -- era. if we're moving beyond it how do we deal with bonuses paid to
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players who were involved in the steroid era? i think that's still an open question at this point. last word to you. >> well it's a great point stuart. one reason i think we should be continuing to talk about this is the major league baseball players' association is one of the strongest unions in the united states of america, sports or otherwise. so i think their position would be on this hey listen, this is an addendum to a uniform player contract. it says when the milestone comes about, he gets the bonus. so i think regardless of whatever a-rod's individual opinion on this may be or whether or not he actually needs that extra $6 million on a $275 million contract he already has, the union will, i think, vigorously defend this point because it is part of a contract clause that they wish to defend. stuart our colleague at fox, ken rosenthal, has said perhaps they should get together and donate this money to charity. stuart: ah that's a possibility. >> turn this into a positive. that's certainly my hope as well. stuart: thanks very much.
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we'll see you soon. much more from garland, texas, at top of this coming hour. i'll give you my take on that and take you live to the scene. plus, is another bailout coming for baltimore and other cities? that city already received nearly $2 billion in the stimulus plan. back in a moment with hour two.
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stuart: free speech is surely america's core value. you can't solve a problem and you don't feel free if you can't speak your mind. well, last night in garland, texas, free speech came under armed attack. two men trove up to a meeting where muhammad cartoons were being discussed. they got out of the vehicle opened fire. islamists will now decide what we we in america are allowed to say. that's appalling. we've seen free speech attacked by the politically correct, curtailed by lawsuit -- yes, we have -- now we're threatened with death if islamists don't
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approve of what we say. i say enough. president obama leads our retreat. enough. he won't recognize the religious nature of the enemy. enough. he would allow our mortal enemies to get a nuclear weapon. enough of that too. garland, texas, is the latest wake-up call, let's not ignore it. free speech is at the core of who we are. ♪ ♪ stuart: all right now here's what we know about the shooting in texas. two gunmen, armed with assault rifles, opening fire at an exhibit showcasing cartoons of the prophet muhammad in garland texas just outside that's. a security guard was shot in the leg police killed both gunmen. fbi agents searching the phoenix home of one of the suspects, authorities say alton simpson tweeted about attack before it
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was carried out using the hashtag the texas attack. police say simple so many was convict inside a terror organization five years ago. he was given probation. judge novel he joined us -- napolitano joined us last hour and says the attack is an assault on free speech. >> deliberate provocation is protected speech. and it is the tooth of the -- the duty of the government to be aware of the deliberate provocation, the likely danger as a result of the provocation and to protect the speaker, not to punish the speaker. stuart: obviously, much more on this throughout our program. terror has arrived again in the united states. all right, check that big board. stocks are moving a little bit higher. we were up a bit more than this earlier but we've reached back to 18,100. now look at this, this is green mown cane keurig, you know, the individual coffee cup makers, down $4, that's 3.7%. that stock is the biggest loser of all the 500 stocks in the s&p
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500. the price of oil moving a little bit lower, $58.70. it's been a narrow trading range recently. price of gas, though, keeps going up. $2.62, that is the current price for regular. i was looking for a plunge three, four five weeks ago. didn't happen. but i've got to tell you, i did pay $2.41 for regular in new jersey at 4:00 this morning. okay. a real eye-opening number from wall street, "the wall street journal", that is. look at this. 93% say they believe there -- 96% say they believe there will be more racial riots this summer n. baltimore things have qiepted down the curfew has been lifted. baltimore received $1.8 billion in stimulus money just a few years ago. is the president going to send more? let's bring in radio host larry elder. larry, welcome back to the program. >> good morning. stuart: it seems to me like the
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administration is shaping up a policy of pumping more money into already-failed programs. you think this is gonna happen? >> yeah, this' what i'm hearing, stuart. what i'm hearing is they're gearing up for a, quote, new marshall plan. since lyndon johnson launched the so-called war on poverty, we've spent over $22 trillion on anti-poverty programs, and poverty has won. so spending more money, in my opinion, is not going to do any good whatsoever. stuart: a new marshall plan? that's not going to happen. but it tells you their response to this problem. >> yeah. they believe that it's all about money. never mind that the baltimore public school spends per capita about $16,000 every single year per student with lousy results. again the problem is the family breakdown and the welfare state have promoted that. we've incentivized women to marry the government, men to
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abandon their financial responsibility. and obama said a kid who's raised without a father -- and that's 75% of black kids -- is 20 times more likely to end up in jail. so do the math. stuart: what about education reform? i don't think it's gonna happen. i don't see an increase in school choice, do you? >> well, in maryland they are hostile to charter schools let alone vouchers. it's republicans that want inner city parents to be able to take their kids and put them into a better school. it's democrats that oppose that. and democrats have run that place for about 50 years. 100% of the council positions are democrat, and still they're whining about racism. three of the six officers by the way, charged are black which suggests something about when people are yelling and screaming about ferguson being 100% white, this is not a white department. it's mostly, 40% black and they're still accusing the black department of engaging in police
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brutality, so maybe we ought to be talking about individual behavior and not the race of the cop and the suspect. stuart: look, agreed entirely but where's the pushback against this new marshall plan? i mean, we're talking about a huge commitment of money from the administration going into our inner cities. where's the pushback to that? where's the political power that says, hey look it's not working already, why are we doing more of this? where's that pushback? >> that's a very good question stuart. you have hillary running for essentially obama's third term. we spent a trillion dollars on stimulus which hasn't worked. look at europe, there are lots of object lessons that we're ignoring. chicago detroit, they've been run by democrats for a long time, and they ought to be shining cities on a hill according to ronald reagan, but they're not. stuart: i did take a look at europe, by the way. saw it firsthand, didn't like it came here, and now it's just awful to see the same thing happening here. larry elder, don't be such a stranger, okay? we sometimes get you out of bed
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early in the morning, you know, come on back, all right? >> stuart, can i weigh in quickly? stuart: please. >> wrote an op-ed in "the wall street journal," quote: people making good wages working at jobs they are proud of do not destroy themselves or their places where they live or work. i think that says it all. stuart: it does. the real victims of the baltimore riot, so to speak are those mom and pop businesses just put out of business. >> that's right. stuart: take a look at the share price of mcdonald's please. it's releasing details of its turn around plan. did that early this morning. not much specific stuff there. a lot of corporate jargon and investors don't care much for turn around plan. the stock is actually down a nickel 97 for mcdonald's. pepsico diet pepsi dropping as par tame citing customer concernings. no impact on the stock now because that action took place a week ago. now look at chipotle removing
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genetically-modified food items from their menu. aspartame gone gmos gone. liz macdonald here. seems to me like these companies are tying to put out -- trying to to put out good pr as opposed to good science. >> yeah that's exactly right. let's show the quote from "the wall street journal." they're essentially saying that this is good pr and announcing this week chipotle plans to stop using gmo, this is about marketing. it's about, you know, making the food safer and healthier. but the executives at chipotle, stuart, couldn't even say believe it or not gmo-free food was safer or healthier and, again it's just pr. i've been looking at this mother jones national academy of sciences 147 peer-reviewed studies said gmo food is safer, it alleviates poverty, it reduces uses of pesticides, and it increases crop yields.
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if you pull gmo to foods out of the system, you will are increase global warming, you will increase taxpayer-funded agricultural subsidies, you'll increase obesity and watch pepsico. if you do all that if you have the so-called healthy food movement you will have fattier, saltier and more sugary foods back in the system. we've been doing this since the 1950s, so there's something to be said about this push to have gmo-free foods in the system. stuart: yeah. but it's a pr push. >> it's a pr push. stuart: it's not based on science, it's not based on anything rational. it's chipotle saying our millennials, our customers they don't like gmos, so we're going to take them off the menu regardless of the safety value. >> at a time when not many people even read the calorie counts in food. stuart: so disappointing. >> it is. it feels like a pr push, and it could actually hurt the economy and people down the road. stuart: don't start up with
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these urban myths, please. >> that's right. stuart: let's be rational. look at this. take a selfie, upload it to a web site, and the web site guesses your age. that's lauren simonetti by the way. the results for some people are flattering. not flattering for others. more from this, next. >> say cheese. >> cheese. >> will okay. >> whoa! what is it? 40. >> oh, that's a good age. >> what's the truth? i'm not supposed to ask a lady her age, but today -- >> 48. [laughter]
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>> the clinton foundation in hot water after the book "clinton cash" legged that bill earned big speaking fees and foundation donations while hillary was secretary of state. now running the for president hillary has dismissed the book's allegations. well the reliance on emergency care is stronger than ever, so so says the american college of emergency physicians. in a new report they find three-quarters of emergency doctors say emergency visits have gone up in the past year. it's another consequence of obamacare which is supposed to bring down e.r. traffic. but with more people on medicaid and fewer doctors accepting their coverage, the numbers have risen, and the princess has a name charlotte elizabeth diana the official name is her royal highness, princess charlotte of cambridge. stuart, i thought of your twin granddaughters' name. cynthia eleanor, it's similar. it's regal. stuart: i like it a lot. thank you very much, indeed. age, you know, the just a
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number, but what if technology told you you look a lot younger or older than you really are? well, here's the story. there's a new program, and it's from microsoft, and it guesses a person's age and gender from a quick photo. all right, we sent kurt the cyber guy to the streets of new york to see how it actually works. roll tape. >> take your picture and -- >> oh, this is not going to be pretty. >> and it is -- say cheese. >> cheese. >> it's analyzing you right now. it's gonna guess your age based on a formula that they developed at microsoft. >> i'm 72. >> you don't look a day over -- >> but i'm close or than it told you. >> how old are you for real? before the test? >> 46. >> 46? >> yeah. >> we're the same age. smile. >> 46.
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nailed it on the nose. wow, that's an amazing app. >> say cheese. >> cheese. >> okay. >> whoa! >> what is it? >> 40. >> ah, that's a good age. >> what's the truth? i'm not suppose today ask a lady her age but today -- >> 48. [laughter] >> say cheese. >> cheese. >> no. 23. >> love it i'm 32. nice. >> all right. let's see what the magic number is on this app. >> interesting, really? >> 29. say cheese! >> cheese. >> how old are you? >> 8. >> 8? says you're 7 that's not too far off. >> 5. >> 5 it got it right. >> 32. >> so you're holding up well. >> 34. >> you're 34? pretty close, right? >> not close enough. >> you want to be under. [laughter] stuart: hold on a second, everybody. obviously, we tried it on me.
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my assistant, chrissy ambrose, took a picture of me this morning put it on the web site and tried to guess my age. you know what this stupid web site said? [laughter] >> another reaction here. because i know what's coming. stuart: i'm not 76. i mean come on really, do i look are 76? >> not a day over 90, i gotta tell you. stuart: no -- >> i'm 66. >> okay. stuart: and it said i was 76. that's disgusting. >> universally out on the street, it does have a vawr i can't range to it. you can -- variant range to it. you can take various pictures of yourself and get wildly different numbers, but when it's wright it just feels right. and when it's over -- stuart: it's just a joke isn't it? >> no, it's not. the thing is this was a tool in the background -- that's a good question. this was a tool that they're developing because they like to crowd source data. they like to source data so that they can tell in a room how many
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women they have, how many men how old are they, and they can better assess what's going on in the world through artificial face ids, you know? that's what this is about. stuart: is it programmed to be nice to women and nasty to guys? >> you know, people are asking that question. [laughter] i don't think there's any foundation to that, but i think you may have a subjective opinion. in that direction. stuart: okay of we've got -- okay. we've got a couple more of the people in the studio. we took their picture, and first of all we got you, kurt. yeah, right. now, you are 46. >> yeah, but i happened to pick the picture that said i was 46. there was one that said i was 67 -- stuart: no. >> one that said i was 62 by fountain frozen at bryant park and one that got me at 22. stuart: how about lauren simonetti? now, she -- the article said she was 32. in fact, that's almost correct, she is, in fact, 34. then we have liz macdonald who
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is with us now -- [laughter] the picture said, the web site said you're 43. now i'm not supposed to ask -- >> you know why? because you're a gentleman. >> so i can ask for you. how old are you? >> well, i ain't saying. it was way off, let's put it that way, by about ten years. >> you know what it has been universally correct though? it'll also tell the jerpd, and not one time has it been incorrect. stuart: well, that's reassuring. i feel so much better. [laughter] >> i thought it might be amusing to call the kardashian guy, i'm sorry, who's just -- stuart: bruce jenner. >> what would happen if we shot him, would it say boy/girl? >> it would say lady, why are we even going there? what's wrong with you? let's not go there. stuart: it's wildly inaccurate but it's a lot of fun. >> it's caught on. it's one of those internet crazes, it's free and it puts a smile on your face, no matter what, each when you're insulted
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by it. stuart: it didn't put a smile on my face. [laughter] thanks, kurt. they were calling it the fight of the isn'tly mayweather versus pacquiao but it turns out you didn't need to pay $100 to watch it. you could have just pirated it. kind of easy, too. we'll explain how to do that in a moment. ♪ ♪
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i feel like i've been here before. switch now and get the fastest wifi everywhere. comcast business. built for business. stuart: this is interesting, some boxing fans found a way to watch saturday's big fight without paying for it. instead of laying out $100 for pay-per-view thousands of people used video-streaming apps like twitter's periscope to watch un,000ed live -- unauthorized live streams of the fight. deer drink bolton just go through this with me. i want to know how it works. >> it's like when you back in the day sent your buddies to a movie theater with a camcorder, right? that person pays for the ticket, holds up the camcorder, then goes out copies all these dvds and sells them on the street. that's essentially what it is although in this case nobody was actually selling it. it's just that instead of paying $100 for the fight, i did this in front of my tv screen and, essentially broadcast it out.
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stuart: okay, i go to a buddy's house, my buddy has paid $100 to watch the fight. the it's coming right at him. i'm there, i hold up my iphone, and i take the video from that pay-per-view screen, and i stream it out. >> that's right. that's exactly what happened. that is exactly what happened. so your buddy maybe looks foolish, you look like the cool cat -- stuart: wait wait wait, thousands of people are following my stream. >> up to 10,000. stuart: and there are watching it for free. that's the way of the future. >> it is, but the one caveat in all this is you can put hearts on a periscope stream. so, for example, in this case you you would have said to your followers, hang on, stop liking my stream, it's going to get shut down. because twitter -- >> so twitter shuts it down. >> yeah. and they don't really want to be -- stuart: because they know what's going on. >> and they don't want to be
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seen as supporting piracy. it's a little dodgy for them. stuart: periscope or meerkat -- >> yeah, the big ones. stuart: if i was doing that, sitting on a couch with other people in towns and cities and we could do commentary? >> i think that's theaway of the future is -- wave of the future is you can hear your comments on this same boxing match or movie, whatever the production is. there's a big hit in britain where people sit on the couch and comment on the news and it's an absolute laugh riot. it is a blockbuster hit in britain. i think that's the wave of the future having your friends weigh in and hearing ore people's commentary about what you're watching. >> also what's interesting is some of the cable companies actually had a hard time streaming the fight so it gave, as you say, meerkat and perry cop -- scope an exla little boost.
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stuart: it's always quick math with me. thanks so much deirdre. we'll see you at one. up next another up intended consequence of obamacare. more and more people going to the emergency room. that wasn't supposed to happen. that's going to cost taxpayers a great deal of money. full story for you next. >> if you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor period. if you like your health care plan, you will be able to keep your health care plan, period.
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>> updating shooting in garland, texas, two opened fire outside an exhibit showcasing cartoons prophet muhammad as security guards shot in the ankle police officers on the scene killed both gunman. fbi agent as searching phoenix arizona home for one of the suspects they say elton simpson tweeted about the attack before the attack using hashtag texas attack. convicted on charge was lying to federal agent as about traveling to somalia for the purpose of joining terror group al shabaab sentenced to three yearings probation on those charges. garland police officer johan commented on the investigation last hour. >> this is not going to be a real fast investigation. we've got our suspects, we continue to monitor social
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media, and other entail to make sure that we're not getting anymore -- any threats. >> well this is free speech under armed attack in the united states. terror has come to america again. we, of course, are on this story bringing you every detail as they emerge going nowhere day thus far in monday morning up 69 points 18 shy of 18001. we don't like to show you charts on this program but this is the s&p 500, the stock index. versus the economy s&p 500 straight up at the blue line. the economy dead flat going across the bottom. what is with that? here is steve nor with with the heritage foundation you have to explain this one to me. stock heart goes straight up with i mean, that is a pretty straightforward upline there. and the economy is dead flat. why do you explain to our viewers what is going on here. >> what is gong on is american companies have become really
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profitable and really efficient. that is a great american success story over last 7 years, six or everyone seasons this recession ended american companies really retool themselveses that fortune 500 company and medium size companies profits are the mother's milk of the stock market so when profits go up so does stock values. here's the problem, talk about this for months and months on your show. problem is these companies are making profits but guess what they're they're not doing reinvesting that money into their companies or hiring more workers at the pace that they normally do you but in a state of feel. panic because of washington. and you know why -- >> got all of this cash and there are 3 trillion overseas in corporate profits. not being used inside america. where is that going to change or what changes the equation? >> well you're right all of is overseas and should be a repeat holiday and put at use here in
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the united states to create jobs and more factories so on. but not all of it is overseas. a lot of it as you know is sitting in cash. you know these companies are buying ten or 20 year treasury bills. i think about it this way, think about what companies have lived through over last five or six years first we have the 7 trillion dollar increase in the national debt and then we add obamacare and then we have tax increases on quote the rich which are basically business men and women, and i think, you know, when i talk to these companies they're just afraid of what the next shoe is beginning to drop in washington. if you get rid of that fear, stuart, and you get, you know administration that is probusiness proprofit. i think you could have a big boom. >> real fast what do you make of the moral question here? do corporations have a moral responsibility to put some at least some of that profit back into expanding the work force and expanding wages is there a moral responsibility to do that? >> well look i'm going to turn that around an you, and you know liberals who were watching this
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say doesn't the government have a moral responsibility to create a probusiness proemployment in amnesty or so businesses want to do that. and we haven't had for five or six or seven year the stuart i think that is where the blame lands. again if you got rid of these ap regulations and fixed this tax system and did other things that would make businesses feel like it is safe and secure, they start reinvesting that money we're talking about an 80s and 90s style boom in this country. only question is when is it going to happen? >> yeah when is that going to happen we have to have tax changes in washington. you've got it. >> look for my money i don't think we're going to get that until there's -- another administration. that is why this is an important election coming up. listening to your previousingment, i feel like the biggest sucker on this planet right now. i paid $100 for that damn -- type and i could have gotten it for free. now you tell me, stuart.
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you have to watch this show on a regular basis that is how we work it right now. disappointing for fans thank you so much steve. >> thank you for the tip. we have the dow industrial average up 66 points that is all we've got at this you don't and we've been in that very, very narrow range. now this. emergency room visits up, under obamacare, despite the prediction that emergency room visits would decline as people gamed access to doctors. another obamacare promise not being kept. manny alvarez has this subject. they looked to add 2,095 emergency room doctors. right and said you seeing an increase in emergency room traffic and three quarters of them said for the second year in a row, yes. >> that before you have with the s&p going up. well medicaid but recipients going up health care flat, out comes everybody unhappy. flat as a pancake.
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>> in a bowels of hell. health care in this country is broken beyond comprehension. when you look at the survey and i don't need a survey you can go out to throw a stone talk to any doctor who goes to the emergency. ten, 10% increase in medicaid patients coming in. why? because they cannot find any doctors that will take medicaid. all right, they can't find doctors that will take medicaid? why can't they find doctors to tack medicaid because doctor cannot pay his electricity with the medicaid reimbursement why a doctor put himself into that kind of business when he can't even buy food or his kids on the table. so these patients have now waiting periods of four weeks, five weeks to see a medicaid doctor. and that happens. so look, this has been for people out there to remember. you have medicaid and a lot of people have because they can't even afford to have an obamacare private talk with the insurance because was copay and deductible. you're going to have a medicaid
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car you're going to have to go to a medicaid hospital that takes a lot of medicaid and if you need a cardiologist you need four or five weeks orthopedic surgeon you wait four or five weeks that is the norm. that is what obamacare is all about. >> with the underlying problem the cost of medical treatment. for example, recently i had some blood test done, 14 00 for ordinary blood test? >> that was well written talking about how defendant it is to figure outs a medical bill. we don't put millionth bill together. right these with coders, billers with multiple codes. you have one code walk to the corner another code. incredible charges at the end of the day doesn't matter because your insurance company is going to reimburse a doctor a prefix amount same thing for the hospital. in may that is a different problem that we have to fix. but when you look at medicaid recipients now aa days, many of
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them are sicker because these are people that couldn't get private insurance before. so you have diabetics, you know people with heart conditions, people that really need to have a one-on-one relationship with a primary care specialist that is not just going to happen. not going to happen. it ain't going to happen. now many things of government can do. they can identify doctors don't take medicaid that will open a window because doctors say i don't fear that i'm taking on the sick patient with multiple medical problems and a spend a lot of time fixing the problem because they also fear litigation. litigation in this country is out of control. so that would solve a lot of things. >> you know the lawsuit. >> any physician that works works works for the federal government identified against malpractice. now there's a happy medium in the private sector that needs to be found if you can have federal programs of reimbursement identify services to a certain degree so that they don't feel that they have this extra burden
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to worry about. >> well said dr. manny thank you so much for being here. >> bowels of hell. >> indeed. we have some breaking news for you, and it is sad news indeed. several news outlets are reporting that the nypd officer who was shot in the head over the weekend has died. officer brian moore was shot in the line of duty in queens, new york. a suspect is in custody. arrested over the weekend again, nypd officer brian moore has died from his injuries. we will be back.
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>> i'm nicole with your fox business stocks are higher today check hadding on to what we've seen for the month of may. winning month so far. dow is up 65 points at 18,088. up 22 all of these averages up about one thirds of one percent roughly. transport is up about half of a percent. take a look at mains that are leading in that group of robinson. and pacific andland star seeing the trucker or shippers doing well. airliners moving back. take a look at amc breaking bad. original programming, real high 3 and a half percent. tyson meat producer that also has scene sales on the rise a winner of 2%. cutting more rigs and that is down about 4 percent keep the eye on names including eog resource. and arco and dennies. coming up.
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the world is filled with air. but for people with copd sometimes breathing air can be difficult. if you have copd, ask your doctor about once-daily anoro ellipta. it helps people with copd breathe better for a full 24hours. anoro ellipta is the first fda-approved product containing two long-acting bronchodilators in one inhaler. anoro is not for asthma. anoro contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, or high blood pressure. tell your doctor if you have glaucoma, prostate or bladder problems, or problems passing urine as anoro may make these problems worse. call your doctor right away if you have worsened breathing chest pain, swelling of your mouth or tongue, problems urinating or eye problems including vision changes or eye pain while taking anoro. nothing can reverse copd.
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the world is filled with air and anoro is helping people with copd breath air better. get your first prescription free at anoro.com. shopping online... ...is as easy as it gets. wouldn't it be great if hiring plumbers carpenters and even piano tuners... were just as simple? thanks to angie's list now it is. start shopping online... ...from a list of top rated providers. visit angieslist.com today. >> look at mcdonald's announcing the first steps in its turnaround plan come on q fitzgerald in portland oregon, i looked a this the turnaround plan a lot of corporate jargon involved gears towards investors not towards customers. would you buy this stock? >> no, you know stuart i think that i'm not loving this stock right now. i love my big mac but not this stock. there was nothing there that was related to anything unique but
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buzz word bingo and i don't see anything. give me quarter to numbers and it was geared towards investigation force. >> we're going to drive operating growth. we're going to unlock financial value and create brand excitement. but it didn't -- investors. >>no that sounds like charlie brown. what they need to do stuart is get back to their menu and value and back to their customers because that is the people that are ultimately paying the bills. >> do you think they can do that? >> you know, they kind of out of fashion respect they? you know, french fries, hamburgers and milk shakes, that is not what millennials are supposed to like to eat whether they do or not. >> well look at this way good burger fries never go out of style that is as american as apple pie but they've gotten away from thatting forgotten what value is and question about what is in their food. menu is bloated service is slow. those are things that have to get addressed before customers come back. >> i was in mcdonald's and for
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52 cents i got a senior's black coffee to go. i thought that was a pretty good bargain. >> yeah probably because you didn't have obamacare pay for it. [laughter] very good. very good thought i would chuck that at you and see what happens. keith fitzgerald thank you, sir, appreciate it. some players lost a lot of money. dropping in the nfl draft, look at nebraska randy drafted 60th over cowboys supposed to be a top ten pick until he tested positive for -- marijuana. another dallas cowboy greg hardy suspended first ten game was of the season for domestic abuse now underfire for making a 9/11 joke on twitter in reference to the former team drafting to tall players he said, didn't the twin towers get blown up? this guy is in trouble. contrast that, however, to boxing floyd mayweather. he got paid up with 120 million for that fight 79 despite a series of domestic violent
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incidents. rick is here, right in the middle of the professional sports business. welcome to the program. >> thank you. >> explain this to me here you have football players penalized heavily for off the field behavior and boxer not penalized rewarded with 120 million that looks like bad out of the ring behavior. >> confusing as we discussed before. one being with the college kids being amateur status, and the boxer being a professional, i think that is where the difference comes in. because -- >> individuals support. he represents himself. >> he's self-employed essentially so he's not soullying image of a can. so much -- not doing that at a all. >> not at all. by the way, did you know that two reporters one from cnn and one from espn bound from the fight because they reported on
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mayweather's domestic violence that is mayweather is his own entity i'm sure he told everybody. everybody is cool except those two. what it caused where the fight happened, an how much he gets paid. >> he can do that. he did do that. 140 million as of today. >> how did you do in the draft did your guys? issue >> doing okay. i had alley who was a division three kid. who went in second round which was -- unheard of hasn't happened in years. three other guys went in the fourth run. one signed with jets as a free agent. >> you have to tell me about the cleveland browns guy. not sure of his name -- >> very difficult name. i have -- i don't know -- alamo his last name. i couldn't get it. he was going to be a high top pick. and then there was something in
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his background and he didn't make any money. >> injury and what he's trying to do now is he's drafted, he's not playing with football he's claiming that the injury will not allow him to play football. so he says he has a $3 million policy. but now we're going to get technical with the whole thing and for viewers out there that don't understand it, he's not going to collect $3 million and the reason why, is because the school paid for the policy. so if they seem to -- if they get the insurance company to pay him, he's going to pay taxes on that. because even write the check. which i'm sure -- the agent probably didn't explain it i'm going to bad mouth anybody. but i guarantee if you would have told me when i'm coming out you can tack this, i'm going to get this oh, but you're going to pay this when you get that. i would be like -- >> because that is your business
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essentially you ensure against physical injury that is what you do. >> and there's been other guys that have claimed it is called loss of value insurance, in 25 years of me being in this business, not one claim has ever been paid out. >> great exertion for you. see what i do for you. >> all right knows what he's talking about. we appreciate it. >> thank you, thank you. >> republican, joining the 2016 race for president and it is getting crowded what does the arena have to offer? we're going to discuss that in a moment. tonight, liz claman sits down with warren buffett and bill gaits 8 p.m. eastern on the fox business network.
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>> tyson is a chicken company and today getting what we call to call the barren's bounce so roosevelt is responsible for the bounce and with us today. you featured in your weekend magazine and said you liked it on a monday morning it goes up as they usually do what you say you like it. what do you like about it? >> this is a company that made a smart that made sausages and
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ballpark franks that the jiminy dean sausage whether you like sausage or hot dog or not they have much high per profit margins than chicken and pork which is the main business. >> that is why you look them so much. >> yeah we think that is going to pay off more than people realize. >> people respect your barren's bounce you gave it to them. 41 and change now. where do you think it is going to? >> another 20% over the next year or so. trying to do the math that is $6 -- that is -- [laughter] >> but where's it going to a dollar number? >> 47 -- >> thank you. >> quite confident in this? >> we are. >> you made that clear and bounds for the weekend? >> yeah. >> we think this is the company very much on the right track in
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its industry. >> okay. well always a pleasure phil. glad you are pointing things to us because your track record with the barren bounce is on. former hp chief announcing her candidacy for the presidency today. elisabeth mcdonald is here she didn't do that well as ceo of hewlet packard what does he bring to the table here? >> taking the fight to hillary clinton who reports indicate use the gender card in her race for the presidency, so already carly is talking about are you tired of indentify the politics. are you tired of the political class, hillary clinton clearly is not trustworthy, and she's going after bill clinton right now too over his defense over the clinton foundation. >> i've heard commentary maybe she would line to be on vice presidential line or cabinet
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look 76 years old? don't answer that. deirdre bolton your time is now. deirdre: absolutely not stuart. that's what i say. thank you very much stuart. channing is coming to the fbi cell phone tracking program. we're going to tell you what it means for your privacy. the fight of the century not between two boxers, but between periscope meerkat and cable operators. another fight between disney and movie operators over the new avengers release. corporations do not need to notify customers every time there is a data breach. this is the premise for new legislating working through capital hill. john bussey is with me now from the wall street journal. companies don't have to disclose when they've been hacked. this is the possibility? >> the question is when should a company, if it has some kind of data breach be req
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