tv Varney Company FOX Business June 3, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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up. that wasn't the case. oil prices sold off and now oil is at the $60 level which is interesting. maria: we'll see what happens at the opec meeting. great sharing this morning, we'll see you next time. over to "varney & company." over to you, stu. stuart: thanks maria. who are they looking at your stuff and what are they doing with it? we're talking nsa and apple. tim cook the apple chief says they're not going to make money from your personal information, not like those guys over on facebook and google. apple makes a pr play in the privacy war. the nsa back to collecting records phone records, but only for six months. that's the president's play. oh, no enough already, clinton trouble. bill raises money while hillary lets them sweet on iran sanctions.
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it's hurt hillary in the polls. the democrats, desperate. we know you don't like soccer, got that about you you'll love the story of sepp blatter. he's out. brought down in a california style racketeering. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ ♪ for miles and miles, i can see for miles and miles ♪ >> that's "the who". that is the who. . ashley: once went for four days to see the who. it rained every day. stuart: it's called "i can see for miles and miles". we're playing it because we're just getting started on the three-hour extravaganza called "varney & company." and look at this on the nsa
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win and bo dietl and how you go after soccer officials like mobsters. also joan lunden will join us in the hour and she's can-free for a year. we'll talk about her progress. ashley webster for three full hours can we stand it? risk and reward host deirdre boulton. a long quiet, some of the most prominent and successful companies have built their businesses by lulling their customers into placesy about personal information. we think that's wrong and it's not the kind of company that apple wants to be so we don't want your data. deirdre he's taking aim. >> at google and facebook for sure. the company says if you're not paying for anything guess
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what, you're the target and the product and apple says that's not who we want to be. this is a violation of first amendment rights and he-- part of his speech calling out directly on facebook and google, others have won edward snowden interesting to note. senator patrick leahy, basically count the services too high. stuart: he's playing to a friendly crowd. >> he was, in fact with the idea that it should be free and protected. maria: maria:-- >> so he's not going to make money off that. >> he has your credit card. that's right, he says we're not going to sell it to advertisers. stuart: did he join the edward snowden crowd. ashley: the same group, that say they will not share anything. stuart: i don't think that apple stock will have any reaction.
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>> i don't think at all, but he made a big stand. stuart: i'd like to see that stand. and fifa like the mob, down goes the chief. ashley, this time yesterdayset blatter was firmly installed. now he's not. how does the whole thing start. ashley: it's interesting, all of a sudden the fbi is looking into mr. blatter as the head of fifa. they were taken into custody or issued summons, if you like. seven from europe mr. blatter was never duringed worse of those investigations and now the fbi says he's go being vesseled. sandra: do you think they made him step down? >> they got the number two goo guy to-- >> i want to hear about the managing down the sidewalk on a
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scooter. ashley: one day he's going down his motorized scooter and someone is shout out his name and he turns around,s trois the officials from the fbi. he was the first exact about corruption from fifa itself. they were following money and he was implicated. irs was on taxes not paid the money. he was the linchpin ended up turning on everyone else. there are reports, it hasn't occurred. it began on 50th avenue on a motorized scooter. >> to the markets, look at the police of oil, please. just around $60 a barrel. the opec meeting starts on friday. there is concern that opec and america will continue to flood the market with oil for many years to come. see we're down a buck today on oil. the national archives raised
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red flags with hillary clinton's record keeping practices as secretary of state. rising those for five years. fox news found this out. they knew she was keeping her own records. they worried that she would take them with her. and she did. in fact she deleted thousands of these records. all right, deirdre dfrjts -- it's illegal and there's trustworthiness issue for the former secretary of state. for the moment, as far as the democratic candidates go she's the one win, but the polls show they're trusting her less and less, 25% less than a month ago. stuart: i've got to get to the illegality of it the criminal bit. >> back in the day-- >> look it she kept these state department records on her home certainly computer server. she's got them. those belong to america, not
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here. sandra: it's a clear violation. stuart: she destroys half of them. sandra: or exports them. stuart: right after there's a benghazi investigation, she destroys that stuff, that's illegal, illegal. >> it is illegal. and she's going to have to answer to that. she's been remarkably silent in the press. a big event june 13th she's expected to answer questions. stuart: it's june 3rd we will have to wait ten days. hillary's numbers are dropping according to the cnn polls. calling it the clinton news network. and the number was 49 in march. ashley: the number is rising her, not believing her or if
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she's trustworthy. they believe if she goes head to head who do they believe in the poll is the top g.o.p. candidate it's interesting, number one marco rubio, number two jeb bush number three mike huckabee. >> huckabee made the top three, that's interesting. stuart: time to move on ladies and gentlemen, quiet on the set, please. [laughter] sorry. ashley: i'm reprimanded. stuart: that's right, the teacher is in charge. big headlines to get to and lauren just made it into the studio. >> i was waiting outside. that was a close call thanks for stalling guys. we have some good news from amazon free shipping for anyone on any item that's small and cheap at amazon. it has to weigh a half pound and costs less than ten bucks. it will be shipped to you. i've been working to come up with items that weigh eight ounces, eye liner, string limited right? gum.
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i don't know. it has to be cheap and small. also, toys connected to the internet are coming to disney this fall. the new line is called playmation. it's not cheap starting at $120. the first toy are the iron men gloves that kids can put on to interact with their super heroes. it took three years to develop. do you need prove that the banks are so frustrated citigroup capital one and j.p. morgan chase rejected a $19 billion path after the data breach. they say it's too little to came sate for the losses. replacing and replacing card and 19 million is not enough. stuart: i lost my card because of that breach. >> anybody take money from you? >> no it cost companies a lot of moan it's not their fault.
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welcome, i don't know whose fault it is. ashley: a retailer would have to be at fault. stuart: i keep looking in the top corner of the streen. to see how the market is doing. but the market isn't open yet, the new hours. [laughter] futures pointing up though. caitlyn jenner who set the internet abuzz when she appeared on the cover of "vanity fair" not done. there will be a documentary showing her. and a cosmetic deal. >> and speaking for months now miss jenner i guess we call her, about getting in contribute. kim "i broke the internet" car kardashian. it's all genders, all races,
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all colors. stuart: what's the company? mac. >> owned by estee lauder. ashley: good for her, all i can say. stuart: the political victory for rand paul. the data collection will end in six months. a lot of people the g.o.p. are not happy about it. senator barrasso agree with who called rand paul a scoundrel. we'll ask him.
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>> he doesn't know how it works. he doesn't care how it works. rand paul is a scoundrel and a charlatan. he's not protecting the american people he is protecting terrorists to further his own craven political ambitions and he reminds me of a senator joe mccarthy with the exception that mccarthy feigned going after communists. paul is attacking
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professionals. stuart: say what you like rand paul won the fight against data bulk collection and now he faces pushback from republican rivals. several say he's out of touch with the rest of the party. senator john barrasso joins me republican senator that is. always good to see you, sir. >> thanks for having me stuart. stuart: my position is this data collection resumes, but only for six months. the phone companies will keep those records only so long as they want to keep them. they may get rid of them. i say our security has taken a hit. it's a defeat for our security you say what? >> i is a that people around the world are eager to come and attack america and americans and we need to keep our country secure. what's happened recently with the legislation has not helped our security, but detracted from our national security. let's face it stuart president obama has been doing
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this to our country for the last six years. he's released people from gitmo we know who are back in the fight. he wanted to turn to the u.n. instead of united states. stuart: i'm with you, senator, but president obama could not have done this without the support of some republicans, notably rand paul. your party, i suspect, is split. >> well, i believe that all of us want to keep america safe and secure. we want a strong military around the world. we believe in american exceptionalism and that's where i'm divided from the president. the president last week went to the coast guard academy with isis on the move taking over a city in iraq and what does he talk about? climate change. the president talentened to veto the national defense authorization act unless he gets more money for the environmental protection agency. this, stuart is absolutely absurd. stuart: can you fix the nsa
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problem. i think it's a problem, you think it's a problem. can you fix it? a bad guy comes in and commits a terror act, because we don't keep records, we can't track who he called establishing this network. can you fix that? >> well i think what happened stuart, the terrorists have moved beyond that. rather than using cell phones at all, knowing about this program that had been in place, they're going to an encrypted e-mails and encrypted internet locations so they i think, are moving beyond it. it's much less effective than before when they knew about it. stuart: and president obama says the u.s. is number one respected country on the planet. senator mccain has a different take. >> i'd love to be for everyone's friend, but for the president of the united states to say that is delusional.
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stuart: you heard it senator, delusional, a description of president obama. and you say. >> i just got back from a nato tour, been to astona romania, talking to our friends overseas. they have concerns and worry that they cannot -- as our friends they don't trust us. our enemies don't fear us. putin is becoming more belligerent and aggressive. the reset clearly failed. i think the iranians who we saw yesterday, they have now actually more enriched uranium than they had before. that was supposed to have stopped as the president continues to work toward his deal with iran which i think makes us less safe as a nation. i think on his recent statement i think he's flat wrong. stuart: senator john barraso from wyoming. thank you for joining us we appreciate it. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: now this a woman who runs a school kitchen in denver
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to the firing. sandra: you have to provide context to students with no money at that moment. if they didn't have any money or came from a family that earned less than $31,000 a year the school provides free lunch program. if the family makes $45,000 or less, reduced lunch program. what this person was doing, mother was doing, kids are forgetting their lunch or the parent didn't give them money for whatever reason and felt bad for them apnd giving them free lunch. and she bad. ashley: she has a crying first grader who doesn't have money for lunch. what do you do. stuart: reprimand her and not fire her. sandra: the school responded and said that's not correct. the policy is if a kid forgets their lunch three times, each time, they'll give them a warm lunch. fourth time a cheese sandwich and a thing of milk so they help the kids who forget their lunch, but if they do it too much then the school is on the hook and not making any money on the program.
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stuart: difficult. making money. they're not recouping their cost. sandra: i used to forget nigh lunch money. and you want to make sure the kids feel good at school. i had a school nurse help me. stuart: the heart goes out to that child, always always got it. thank you very much. yes, the opening bell is coming up. it's next in fact. but there are other big headlines and we have them just for you. obama administration and epa going after the airlines saying plane exhaust endangers human health. does that mean you'll pay more for your ticket? yes. tim cook on the use of your personal information, he says he's not going to sell your personal data. we'll be back.
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you are looking at two airplane fuel gauges. can you spot the difference? no? you can't see that? alright, let's take a look. the one on the right just used 1% less fuel than the one on the left. now, to an airline a 1% difference could save enough fuel to power hundreds of flights around the world. hey, look at that. pyramids. so you see, two things that are exactly the same have never been more different. ge software. get connected. get insights. get optimized. right now, the unthinkable is happening. faithful christians are being kidnapped, tourtured, beheaded and crucified simply because they are christians. this is genocide and it won't stop unless we do something about it. at the aclj, we are the frontlines in washington at the un, and in the region advocating for those who cannot defend themselves.
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stuart: less than two minutes to the start of trading on wall street. we are joined by sandra smith ashley webster shaw gillani joining us in new york. apple says they don't want your data. we are going to make money out of your data. sandra. >> whatever. that is what i say to this spirit they don't want to sell your data doesn't mean they are
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not collecting and using it for their own purposes. stuart: if they use it for their own purposes they are making money. >> they say they are not selling the data. two different things. i get his point. all these companies collecting data and monetizing and selling it. apple says that not doing that. stuart: facebook and google are doing it. >> this is a shotgun approach for the gathering techniques to monetize what they are doing. i stand by him. i think he is correct. he was recipient of the freedom award. and rand paul another's beard he received this award yesterday in his comments were based on not. stuart: tim cook, friend of edward snowden. if i like a stock i will buy it.
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i do let politics get in the way. approximately 18 seconds to go before the bell on wall street starts to rain. i am looking at a game for the market of roughly 50 or 60 points. they've got to ring the bell before the trading begins. a second and then the trading starts. i am watching it. i want to see if it goes out. on the upside, 30 points so far. >> you are looking at stock index futures. stuart: i was ready. time now. everybody look at apple's stock. we were mentioning this a couple minutes ago. $130 a share. >> and buying it, will buy it and will continue to buy it. it takes time but it will continue to get there. 150, 185. it's going there.
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the whole ecosystem is magical. everything we have this we have this at the top of the line. everything works everything integrates. stuart: i stand corrected. by the way i was right. we are up 60 points. applause later. mcdonald's. franchisees are not happy. all kinds of expensive changes forced on not to mention 15 bucks an hour minimum wage coming down the pipe. shaw, which he by mcdonald's at 96? >> no. it is close to its all-time highs. too many internal problems. too many management issues. they're fighting with management and dictating the wages that most of the stores earned by the franchisee. they are forced to ante up on what is the right thing to do. >> they are asking them to toast the buns longer.
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it's not even fast food anymore. you stand in line so long because they make all these changes that take the staff so long. stuart: it's not necessarily making in the slow food is supposed to fast food. >> the menu has gotten more expensive than it is slowing down. >> it is not a buy right now. stuart: the dow jones industrial average of 31. let the world see it. i was right. when these is a winner today. what is buying back some of its own stock in the 2% market. more original programming for netflix. it just ordered for animated children's shows including tarzan and jane. 624 and netflix right now. there are bradley losing money, cutting its forecasts. don't do that. how far down is that?
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>> that is terrible for vera bradley. it is down 12%. a new low fare. they are not senior customers. traffic is a challenge in the stores. sales are a challenge. featuring the other hand back makers including over the weekend kate spade which has dropped 25% last month. michael kors, the results were so bad the stock lost nearly a quarter of its value. was that the handbag industry. the sox are hurting. stuart: the bottom is falling out of the bag industry. >> we politely laughed. stuart: nicole, thank you indeed be moving onto the price of oil. it is down 57 cents. opec meeting coming up on friday. i want to see really cheap oil.
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i want to see it. i want to come down below 60. 50 maybe even 40. am i going to see it come down? >> yes, you are. production is at all-time highs number one. i said this before we've seen a lot of easy money in our industry here. a ton of new money double ramp production up even more. the big guys will come online if you say oil get to 65. a lot of headwinds, a lot of pressure. we see a trackback to the low 50s are high for days. after that it's anybody's game. tree into a very good thing for america's economy. that is tough on the russians. the allies love cheap oil. they are not too happy about the fed setting new limits on airplane emissions. ashley we have imposed a later
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but we will pay for it. ashley: indeed. a new report says the emissions from planes are a danger to human health. that triggers the 1970 clean air act that anything that endangers human health has to be regulated. these emissions account for 3% of all greenhouse gases produced in the course through everything operating in this world. as far as transportation airlines are the last to be regulated on the issue. stuart: but they are using that language threat to human health so that it triggers the 1970s lot which allows them to go after. >> that is the way it works. stuart: do you remember concorde? do you know one of the reasons why they killed it? the principal ozone polluted or
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do supply 58,000 feet and there was spewing out whatever it is that it out up in the high atmosphere and a scent that is an absolute no-no. one of the big reasons they killed it. fantastic experience. he looked out the window. it was so high you could see the curvature. >> i remember being on a regular flight and they set on the write-in side you can see concorde and it's gone. stuart: the pilots say we are about to go supersonic. you will feel a kick in the pants. those were the days. i do miss them. >> i miss the no spam in down on laguardia, jfk, beautiful sight. stuart: wall street's top cop of the fec chair mary jo white under pressure to dance rules that could force companies to claw back some of their top officials extra pay. now senator elizabeth moore and
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sharply criticizing white's role in a 13 page letter. sharp, sandra ashley, what is your take on the government saying you burn too much we want it back. >> enough already. they base miss whether there was mistakes in the financial statements whether they had to go back and change them and therefore performance based on the financials payments. what they earn no-space-on performance. >> it's not about compensation for good guys. it's compensation for bad guys and fraud. i think they should go after that. facing an amiss in miss in my book because we have laws the sarbanes-oxley laws. nobody enforces those laws. we wouldn't need the rules that the laws were enforced. a swing and miss. if they would only prosecute the crimes they find we wouldn't have these problems.
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stuart: it is an excuse. go after corporate executives. sandra: when it comes to raising money and there's no problems. stuart: the hypocrisy. check out the big ward. i was right for five minutes. the dow was up 60 to 70 points. now it's up 26. president obama bragging about his legacy. if what he's leaving behind is so great, why is hillary running away from that legacy? that is next. >> you know, when i came into office the united states and the world was going through terrible economic crisis. the worst really since the 1930s. it was hard but we ended up avoiding a terrible depression. and within a year the economy
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was growing again. in the united states now we are back to the pre-crisis employment levels. our auto industry was saved. 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: wednesday morning coming day three at our new time 9:00 through 12:00 noon. the dow up 32 points. the number one stock is -- how sweet it is. microsoft number one stock. why did we drum roll this? because i do own some of that stuff. why is it up? are please raised the target to 53. i would be delighted to see microsoft. to light all around.
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brown-forman strong sales getting a boost from jack daniels. 95 i'm not.. president obama boasted about his legacy. why would hillary be running away from the legacy if it's such a good legacy? at aquinas the author of several books about the clintons and he joins us right now. why should running away? >> when i published a book about obama in 2012 called the amateur, one of the mainstream press that you've exaggerated. now everybody on the last to charles krauthammer fox news contributor follows an amateur. scarborough refers to amateur hour in the white house. hillary realizes this legacy is albatross around her neck. she have to distance yourself. stuart: which direction do she
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ran in for the primaries facing possible leftist opposition? even to the left of barack obama. how could you possibly run to the right? >> my sources in the clinton camp tell made no clinton, perhaps the greatest political figure of our time and expense of getting things done has told her, feed the base red meat. go to the left and always come back to the center if you win and when you win. she has gone to the left to make sure elizabeth warren isn't the campaign and she's not vulnerable. stuart: however, if you look at her polls 57% of the people polled believe she is not honest. she is not trustworthy. 57% is up considerably for march
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when it was 40% of the people felt that way. was she going to do about it? >> when she left the state department she was at 59% favorability. inside her campaign there's a sense of already panic in the campaign that all the trend lines are going in the wrong direction and most of all the independence in the general election are starting to erode. stuart: y a c. in such trouble? i have a theory about this. i have a feeling the voters are finally fed up with what they consider to be self-serving in washington, corruption and the leadership last of america. when elizabeth coward on thank
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you, mr. chairman. ) a toxin that the game is rigged. hillary clinton foundation is the personification of how that is rigged. i think that has come through loud and clear. stuart: and she's a democrat. elizabeth warren is a democrat. it has always been the republicans who were deeply admired in the mess in washington. a worker brats. they represent business. they represent the banks. they represent wall street. now you are saying that washes over to the clintons in particular seem as part of the corrupt class? >> correct. sidney blumenthal foundation, it all stinks to high heaven. it is finally starting to get through to people that the clintons have been changed. they are the same people they were in the 90s. they are still out to feather
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their own nests their own nests. they don't have principles. they don't stand for anything other than getting and holding power. stuart: is there any doubt in your mind that hillary clinton is not going to be the candidate? >> a slight doubt. the doubt revolves around her health. but people don't realize is hillary is not as healthy as she claims to be. she has had a series of fainting problems as we all know. stuart: it is her head. >> she has frequent headaches. she's having trouble sleeping at night. she has insomnia. bill has told her to take it easy to pace herself. if anything would make it possible for her not to run it would be her health. stuart: next one. president obama says he helped the u.s. regain his status as the number one most respected
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country in the world. senator mccain differs from that. >> i would love to be everyone's friend but for the president of the united states to say that is absolutely delusional. stuart: you heard the word delusional from the united states senator describing the president of the united states. delusional. a serious word to use. >> all you have to do is talk to europe in the middle east, asia. they all agree with senator mccain. they agree the president has been a failed president does not know how to focus on foreign policy trajectory american power that he has retrenched to the point where they've now considered to be worse than it was under george w. bush. stuart: you have good sources in the paddock is sources the white house in washington d.c. for many years.
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how do you describe the personality of barack obama? >> detached, aloof, feeling he knows best all the time no matter what the facts are even if his feelings and beliefs don't mesh with the facts. stuart: does he have a lot of close friendships? >> triumvirate in the white house. barack obama gallery garrett michelle obama in that oval office together. michele as well as salary. most of the time is that the people who talk to each other all the time. they are not connected. you talk to democrats in congress. they never hear from the president. they feel the president has been off in his own world all these years he's been in the white house. stuart: you wrote the book
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called blood field about the obama's in the clintons. that is still active? >> i would say it is worse than ever. this is not my opinion. this is based on my interviews. the clintons both bill and hillary feel that the scandal she has been hit with recently including cindy blumenthal the e-mail foundation have been fomented vanvleet by the obama white house. stuart: albright. we have to leave it at that. that is food for thought. thank you so much for joining us. the california state senate offers an on court 24 hour car service for lawmakers to drunk to drive. there is a change of story for you. wait until you hear this one.
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custody. a big-name stocks. you know it is moving. facebook is one of the biggest movers in the s&p 500. up nearly 2% this morning. facebook approaching 82. look at apple. tim kirkuk says they don't want your personal information like other big companies, facebook and google. apple is holding all 30. opec's meeting on friday looking not a sea of oil for many years to come. nonetheless down 50 cents at 60 bucks a barrel. it is never a good idea to drink and drive. don't do it especially if you run a peer company. a glass of anheuser-busch fired immediately after he was caught driving down a german highway under the heavy influence of alcohol. on a related note california state senate officials have hired designated driving employees to drive home tipsy
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lawmakers because they were too many high-profile drunk drivers from the assembly. that is a nice perk for lawmakers in the last five years. now they've hired to designated drivers who were paid $2500 a month. 60 grand a year taxpayers so lawmakers drink enough to not have to worry about drunk driving. stuart: if you are a lawmaker, legislator the voters all stand for it. ashley: they don't have any restraints apparently. california amazes me. we are picking up a lot of california viewers because of the earlier time. $60,000 a year. $60,000 a year protecting legislators from drunk driving charges. that's extraordinary. stuart: i drink too much.
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let me get my card out. ashley: he picks you up and drives you home courtesy of the taxpayer. stuart: soccer officials being treated like the mob. bo dietl knows a thing about that. he was in goodfellas. that is him. he is going to join us at the top of the hour. plus wait for this one. a wasp stings cockroaches and turns the cockroaches into zombies. you may well ask what. it is apparently for real. we have got the guy who calls himself the bug man. he will explain. the second hour of "varney & co.." i bet you can't wait for the bug man.
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the foundation getting millions as swedish companies were fighting sanctions just when hillary was secretary of state. can you say quid pro quo? the top guy in soccer steps down and the feds are treating the whole thing like a mop case. bo dietl is coming up it looks likes a scene straight out of goodfellas, isn't it? a fox news exclusive, the government slackers that cannot be fired and now the unions want to give them access to potentially dangerous web mail. that's or your tax dollars. what you haven't seen before it's a special wasp that turns bugs into zombies. the bug man is on the show later. this isn't your average business show, but of course you already knew that. ♪ now there is a number just crossed, it's called the ism,
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it's the non-manufacturing index. the reading was 55.7. the actual reading is not terribly important. it's down from the previous month from april, but it's having some modest effect on the market. we were up 65 70 points and now we're up 54. i'm not going to call that an enormous impact. it's down what 10 points on the index, that's not much reaction. do look at mcdonald's, their franchisees are not happy. a lot of expensive changes being forced on them like the $15 minimum wage if it comes down the pike and new development and new menu items. franchisees don't like it. mcdonald's at 96. look at apple, the chief, tim cook says they don't want your personal information like facebook and google. the price of oil, a meeting with opec the world is swimming in supply the price
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is only down 40 cents. a developing story out of boston. the man shot and killed by police when he came at them with a knife reportedly was plotting with another suspect to behead boston officers. that's according to fox news. police have a second suspect under arrest set to appear in court this afternoon. there are said to be terrorist connections. check the automakers a four year labor agreement expires in september between the big three automakers and the uaw. will we see a strike in detroit? jeff flock will have more on that story coming up later. now this south carolina governor nicky haley is gearing up for a fight against the unions and uaw. clig to move in on a volvo plant in charleston. governor haley made it clear the unions are not welcome. liz macdonald, this is sprung
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on me ms. haley, she's a republican and i think she brought them in liz: this would be the first time volvo would have a plant here. what's mitting in the media parts of the story. volvo has a workers council and already has its own union. in the fire fight with volkswagen and senator bob corker in tennessee. they have a union and they need the uaw to step up in between that and some of the workers in tennessee say we don't need the usw and they could say we have our guys we don't you stepping in, that's uaw stepping in. stuart: the soccer scandal, the feds are treating it like a case against the mob. sepp blatter gone is somebody going to rat him out.
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who knows soccer like the mob, bo dietl. he was actually in goodfellas busting henry hill wasn't it? >> henry hill yeah and then i eventually lock up jimmy bergen. >> two murders. >> we've got the information. stuart: now, wait a second. i want you to describe how our authorities here in the states i think they use racketeering laws to go after the soccer bureaucracy. didn't they get a hold of somebody and turn him? how did this happen? >> this goes back to 2011 with the heavy set guy with the beard. stuart: blazer. >> blazer what happened they grabbed him on oodles and oodles of nonreporting taxes, irs. he was looking at life imprisonment. when you get a guy like that
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you flipatate him. and when you flipatate him, one of the things going back and forth in my ear, the country of qatar. and i remembering two years ago they were paying out oodles of money built like 12 soccer soldiers around qatar and they wanted it so bad and supposedly hundreds of millions of dollars that was passed to these guys in the soccer commission there. and this is going to get uglier and dirtier. and something tells me that he was wearing wire for a long time. when he was having steak with them, remember the last 25 millions, get another 25 million from the qatar guys. south africa we've got those guys. and was the old setup like against john gotti. he was a rat, he killed 19 people, but they used him, stuart. they used him to turn on else and this is a
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classic turn around and that's it. stuart: our point is that most people in america really don't care about soccer and they really don't care about fifa and they don't care about sepp blatter, but what is interesting, fascinating is how they brought him down and you just described it. >> the case originated in america for failure to pay his irs monies earned. you could make one, stuart your money all over the world, and vaeflts, if you don't report it that's tax evasions. >> think, you can try to use the rudy guiliani mob busting, they're saying because of the bank accounts and the wiring of the money to the u.s. bank accounts. ashley brought us the story of blazer, the flipatatar guy. the beard guy. ashley: he was in his motorized scooter going down the avenue.
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and they're shouting at him, mr. blazer mr. blazer gotcha. >> he looks a little like santa claus, with the beard and-- they grabbed him for non-reporting back then. and have him on the felony counts. when they start to pile up. you're looking at life. so this guy was facing life for flipatating. >> it seems like this time sepp blatter was firmly established as the king of soccer. a couple of hours later he's resigned and gone. it must be that his second in command. >> the underboss. stuart: they got him and flipatated the underboss? >> it obviously goes right up to him and you can't tell me if i'm the boss and getting the moynihan when you're doing a deal and give the boss his end of it and they're going to lead
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right up to it. stuart: the interpoll, international police ocean, they issued two red cards, to use soccer. and-- >> i think what's going to happen to qatar, qatar, whatever you want to call that joint. i think they're going to be taken away from that award because theres' so much corruption-- >> they've spent 200 billion of dollars. >> i was involved in a little bit of security and next thing, built a massive stadium and they're going to pay for it. stuart: who are they going to sue? >> well probably award fifa. you gave it on good faith. >> corrected. stuart: it doesn't matter it's a corrupted case. >> and russia will lose and.
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>> what court are you going to sue the world court. stuart: they were flipatated and-- >> bring it to america and let us have some soccer. stuart: your colorful language got you two minutes. >> called dietlese. >> we're hearing about self-driving cars. they may have one particular big problem. lauren has the details in case you missed them. >> oh stuart self-driving cars will make you car sick all the time. the conclusion of the study by university of michigan transportation research institute. it says that self-driving cars are different than trains have smaller windows, more of long longitudal and lateral.
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when you're in there, you're reading or watching movies it makes the motion sickness worse. i've always been car sick. stuart: liz, ashley what do you think about this? we're doing that yeah the driverless cars. what have you got liz: well. stuart: i think i threw it at you. quickly for this. caitlyn jenner's reality series will be called "i am kate", it will air on e! and it's going to be in july. ashley: it will have huge ratings. stuart: i think a huge moneymaker. and she has the cosmetics liz: it's a documentary on transitioning. stuart: i'm not saying that it's going to happen because
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it's a moneymaker, but it's a huge ratings-- for what was it? >> "i am kate". an enormous amount forest stay lauder. stuart: a lot of money, thanks everyone. >> sure. stuart: a pledge from apple, tim cook says he's not going to sell your information unlike facebook and google. in fact he doesn't want any of your data. some are not convinced. hillary clinton losing support by the minute and today's report will not do her any favors. we'll talk to the person-- >> what difference at this point does it make? .
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economy the reading on it was down. for some reason that is good news for stocks because we're now up 120 points. maybe the theory is that if the economy is not doing well interest rates will stay low for virtually forever. the market loves that up it goes, 127 points. maybe that's the theory. >> the dollar is up 128. let's celebrate, shall we? look boys and girls, microsoft, yes i own some of it. barclays says it's going to 53. i'll be cheering it on. 74 cents at 47.65, the leading dow stock. look at this amazon another winner, piper jaffray says it's going to $520 a share. up five bucks. more clinton cash. the clinton foundation set for fund raising arm in sweden that brought in 26 million dollars just from sweden. here is the author of clinton
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cash. peter welcome to the program. >> thanks stuart. >> it's my understanding, peter okay they brought in 26 million to the swedish foundation, at precisely the same time as hillary was secretary of state and not black listing swedish companies for breaking sanctions against iran. does that add up to a quid pro quo? >> well i think it does especially in light of the other evidence. i mean one of the things i point out in the book directly related to this at the same time that the swedish government is sending $26 million to the clinton foundation, bill clinton is given his single biggest speech pay day ever $750,000 for a single speech. who pays him, ericsson at ground zero over this debate of economic ties with iran. before and after, he's never paid bill clinton for a speech before. so this fits the pattern of behavior and you know it's just another example of this
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kind of pay to play system that the clintons are offering. stuart: i don't want to get bogged down in detail, but get to the heart of the principle of this. ericsson, a swedish company, electronics and appliances they're big on doing business with iran. never given bill clinton a dime and suddenly $750,000 for a speech while his wife is secretary of state and not imposing sanctions against ericsson for doing business with iran. is that it? >> that's it stuart. and literally nine days after bill clinton gets paid that big pay day, nine days the state department comes out with a statement with hillary clinton saying that we're not going to impose sanctions, expand sanctions to include companies like ericsson. we're going to rely on ericsson and other companies to quote, unquote police themselves which is exactly what ericsson wanted. so i mean it's hard to beat that timing. stuart: i'm going to connect
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the dots. i don't know about you, but i'm connecting the dots and saying that that's a pretty good indication of a quid pro quo, will you join me? will you connect the dots? >> yes, especially you see this pattern over and over and over again. you and i both stuart if this were the only case maybe it's just a bizarre coincidence, but the fact is you see the same thing over and over and over again. signing up bill clinton to do speeches. while hillary is reviewing that in the state department. never paid him for a speech before. the examples go on and on and on. stuart: when will hillary answer direct questions, or bill, answer direct questions about the foundation and sweden and the sanctions and all the rest of it. when are we going to get them to speak? >> obviously, i don't know when they're going to decide to do that. if you look at the recent poll numbers from cnn and "the washington post," just over the last four weeks or so since the
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book's come out and there's been this flurry of reporting, the fox news special. her poll numbers are abysmal, the worst since 2001 and the number of people who regard her as dishonest or untrustworthy has undergonna 30-point swing. so it indicates to me very heartening that people do still care about these issues they care about corruption they care about politicians enriching themselves. i think they're going to have to address these issues sooner rather than later. stuart: peter schweitzer clinton cash author. see you soon. >> thanks stuart. stuart: let's get to apple. the chief, tim cook says that apple doesn't-- apple will not sell your data like facebook and google. and jo ling kent is here to discuss this one. okay. apple collects a ton of data. >> it does especially in the cloud. all of us uploading stuff on our iphones, but apple ceo tim cook in washington yesterday
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saying they want to collect a minimum amount of data, but the real point of this speech was to slam the other competition. facebook and google there is concern that those two companies, as others are creeping on apple's massive success. >> you know what really annoys me when i google something, up comes the ads and takes me forever to get rid of them and where i want to go. that's using google's information to advertise to me. i don't like it. is that what tim cook is saying, i'm not going to do that to you? >> tim cook is saying that he doesn't necessarily want to use that information for ads, but believes there should be no sacrifice between privacy and security and that's his argument, but the skeptics say that he's collecting a lot of data and making money off of products that consumers at home are buying including all of the very popular apple products. so he's using this as a platform. stuart: apple knows if i'm
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using apple pay or one of these things, they know my credit card history and what i'm spending on. >> tim cook is saying that apple pay does not want your data. stuart: so he's kind of mixed up in the nsa controversy to some degree? >> he's all about privacy and pro encryption. some people in government wants a master key to unlock your personal device and he says no. that's interesting. stuart: all right. iconic american brand being shot down. how the gun maker colt seems to be headed for bankruptcy. charlie gasparino breaking it down for us in the next hour. and government slackers you cannot fire them and unions will protect them, but get this, now they want access to websites that could put your security, national security on the line. liz macdonald on her exclusive follow-up is next. >> arguing that they could go
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call 1-888-438-9061 to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $423. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at 1-888-438-9061 see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. stuart: elizabeth mcdonald is back with her soccer's report appeared at report appeared in an attempt to block employees gmail's accounts at work. i'm a government worker on my computer at work. i want to use my gmail like everybody else in private enterprise. the government says no you can't do that because that is a
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security breach and we've been breach because of what you're doing on your private e-mail. the students come along and say you can't stop our members from using gmail at work. liz: this is homeland security. while ice, immigration custom informant on shed enforcement say you should enter into collective bargaining and negotiating policy updates and expect workers in the workplace stuart: this is homeland security immigration. liz: there is a 2002 federal law that says social security has the right to make moves like this. workers can use their smartphones to go on gmail or hotmail on their own personal devices. the ashley: they can open the back door through gmail.
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liz: the stories up on the web. china, russia can come in and play computer viruses. you and the homeland security, no more gmail on office computer. but you can use gmail on mobile device at work. the unions say we want collect the bargaining because the members. liz: what is the policy of using personal devices. a lot of bargaining. it seems even daily the government is under attack. stuart: i can see both sides of this actually. a victory for rand paul. the nsa now lives in a key part of his surveillance program. judge napolitano. will he take a victory lap? he is coming up next beard
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amanda ran a website who sold illegal drug sentenced to life in prison. we will talk to the director. >> the first thing he told me was there were multiple. >> there was more than one person. >> at least two if not three. why should over two hundred years of citi history matter to you? well, because it tells us something powerful about progress: that whether times are good or bad, people and their ideas will continue to move the world forward. as long as they have someone to believe in them. citi financed the transatlantic cable that connected continents. and the panama canal, that made our world a smaller place. we backed the marshall plan that helped europe regain its strength. and pioneered the atm, for cash, anytime. for over two centuries we've supported dreams like these,
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trends to look at their spirit up 150 points. there was a weak reading on the service that there appeared a b. investors feel they are for interest rates will stay down forever. anyway you slice it the dow was up 150. the price of oil with a draw down. less oil in storage of 2 million barrels. that is producing -- the oil was down it but now it is down 36 cents. less supply for the price goes up a little. this is just coming in from apple. they recall about 220000 of its speakers. they received any reports of batteries overheating. one user was burned. this stock is still at $130 per share. i will call it a political victory. the nsa data collection will end
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in six months. separately, listen to what lieutenant colonel ralph peters had to say about ray and paul. >> he doesn't know how it works. rand paul is a scoundrel and scarlet tint. he is protecting terrorists to further his own political ambitions and he reminds me of senator joseph mccarthy that the exception the mccarthy go in after congress whereas rand paul is attacking the patriotic intelligence professionals. i'm going to ask restraint on the part of judge napolitano. >> which you did not get for my friend colonel peters who honestly sees it differently. there's two ways to look at this. the argument is succeeded as a political argument. his poll numbers are up and you will see at the end of the week that its cash and political
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offers is way up. right now the most recent fox news poll shows him number one amongst republicans. three weeks ago he was number five. these are close and compact within a few tenths of a point of governor bush. in terms of what happened legally, this is not a victory. he knows it. he voted against the u.s.a. freedom act. it actually gives the nsa more access to our data in the patriot act. this is an astounding victory for those who don't care about privacy and am i able to say this, the nsa supported the u.s.a. freedom act. but they are supported if he was going to clip their wings? of course not. stuart: the phone data will end in six months. >> absolutely not. >> the nsa has computers in
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every phone switching office of every carrier in the united states of america. they are manned by nsa agents. under the new law, the asian sleeve go to fort meade, maryland and operate computers remotely. they have the same access to the same information. they are just not physically there. stuart: the book collection and in six months. >> i don't know what you mean by that. if the nsa is collecting this data, a year down the road they are acting illegally against the law. >> absolutely not. you have brought the papa grande has supported this nonsense. by me tell you why. when the nsa wants information from a telephone company it
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goes to the fisa court and says give us an order. i will use verizon as an example. directed violence to give us on the telephone that the data in the area code or zip code. or better yet from all verizon's customers. stuart: i know what you are saying, judge. they are under no obligation. >> under an obligation to keep the records for 18 months. if the nsa wants then they have to get them in 18 months. once it gets them, it keeps them. they can keep them forever. >> it doesn't matter because they will party had those records. they can still go to five. stuart: the phone companies can't get the records. >> a look at them before they are destroyed because they are in real time. when you call me this afternoon, the nsa can get that as we speak. when you call in your cell phone
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a months from now the nsa can get that as you speak. >> really information they can get us the phone number. >> absolutely. as much as i love you, incorrect. they have access to all the content they want. stuart: wait a second, eight months from now on the early part of next year, you tell me the nsa will still have access to every phone conversation taking place in the united states and all around the world. is that true? stuart: they are going to do it in a differenthod. >> the charade they paraded in front of the congress to make them think they were clipping the nsa wings. stuart: this is precisely what i want.
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>> i like how you said i was out of order. >> i started by saying i love you and i do appear to stuart: stay there. i've got something else for you in a moment. judge say they are. watch this. >> there is a huge dispute. >> not that i am reading about. >> people don't know who clinton bosses. stuart: a convicted creator and operator of the online illegal drug market known as the silk road. he was sentenced to life in prison on friday. joining us now is director of deep web alex winter. welcome to the program. first of all what was silk roa i thought it was a free-market communication device.
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did this guy hijacked and turned it into into a drug delivery system? >> the silk road was a market that was in an anonymous area called the dark net. a small corner of the internet originally created by government agents in order to have private and anonymous communication. it is also used by all kinds of people. it appeared in 2011 primarily used for drug transaction. primarily drug transaction and mostly marijuana sales. that was the lion share of drugs transact it. in the shut down in 2013. it was a very big sting operation. a global operation involving six or 73 letter agencies. he was found through the silk rose server being hosted in iceland. there is still dispute about how
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the server was down by law enforcement because it was hidden within the hidden services of the dark net. that has been a matter of controversy and a question of whether it was these legally or illegally. ross albrecht who was convicted of creating and running and did it to creating the silk road. stuart: sorry to interrupt you. this dark night you are talking about, doesn't still exist? >> of course. one of the ways into the dark net is a service called poorer which stands for the onion router. it was founded by the u.s. navy for government purposes. it is still popularly used. it is easier to use now than a few years ago. fairly easy to get into the dark net. the markets not going away either. there have been many more markets it. when he was seized and they go
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all the time. stuart: the next grading of deep web to borrow 9:45 a.m. eastern time. thanks for being with us. fascinating story. we will get on it. thanks very much, alex. >> banks. and the judge is right, by the way. stuart: what do you think of the deep net? do you want to shoot that down too? >> absolutely not. this is free communication people voluntarily be involved in. government doesn't want us to put into our bodies what we want to do. but that is gradually changing. stuart: i'm glad you were on the show. they can be too happy about the new epa regulations to help save the planet. cheryl casone election airline stocks. reporter: airline stocks is one side of the story. what are the biggest companies
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we follow that as fedex and ups. a little bit higher. as you mentioned, the epa with new roles on friday in what this will do is a greenhouse gas emissions because the airlines whether as fedex or ups are one of the big names is contributing to global warming. that is the thinking by the epa. a little more than $100 right now. when the rules come out watch out for these names. stuart: here is something with a real stake in detail. the dementia wasp accused of turning other bugs into zombies. believe me we will take a closer look at this. ♪
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microsoft leading the way. that is up 1.5%. jpmorgan home depot and american express all of which have more than 1%. look at jpmorgan link didn't and go pro. adding its u.s. opening six may reach the target. they liked this one because they are bullish on the launch including a new camera drove and planned end coupon. the downside the cfo is stepping down at the end of the month. 1.6%.
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the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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stuart: billionaire hedge fund manager john paulson giving $400 million to harvard is the largest gift ever in university history. the money will go to the school of engineering and applied sciences. graduated from harvard business school in 1980 he is worth $11 billion. look at nasdaq on track for record close. 5106.59 is the number to be. looking good for a record close on nasdaq. repeating the news on apple recalling 220000 speakers.
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batteries overheat, one person burned, no effect whatsoever on the stock. wait for it. looks like any other wasp but the dementia is doing something unheard of. the wasps go after cockroaches injecting them with a venom that turns the roaches into the passive zombies. look who is here. the bug expert ride the bug man bridge. you are on this program because when we heard zombie cockroaches that is a must. tommy what does the wasp adieu to the cockroach and what uses that knowledge to me? >> anytime there is about beating up on cockroaches, that's a good thing for all. secondly, talking about an awareness thing way beyond the dementia are lost. we are finally putting bugs in a positive spotlight and that is what i do. stuart: the wasp injects the
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cockroach with some fandom. what happens to it? >> the venom in the wasp enables the nurse and the cop roach and basically limits their functionality. not so much is obvious that limits the ability for the cockroach to get away and fight back. export is a battle for the wasp to overtake the cockroach. stuart: to mentor wasp does it ever attack humans? >> not unless you pop one in your mouth i don't suppose it would. stuart: is there any practical application for the venom they go at the cockroach with? >> the whole point of the venom is to enable and disable the cockroach in a way that the wasp can lay an egg on it fea catches
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and within eight to 10 days the larva is already developed into a cocoon inside the cockroach. by not allowing the cockroach to fight back it makes things really easy for the wasp to take over the cockroach. stuart: bug man, that really is fascinating. even though there's no critical application. you will be back. listen it donald you are itching to get into this. liz: there is an application. it reduces aggressive behavior. maybe we can use it down on wall street. it can reduce aggressive behavior in the medical field as a medical application. stuart: thank you, lav.
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>> i think it will be a little bit like the luge ride of my new keep playing six. a little bumpy going down but it may eventually make it to the bottom of the hill. like it with the uaw in kansas city said in terms of whether or not there will be a strike. whether we should be mentally prepared. it is a last resort in the collective bargaining process. detroit has made $73 billion in profits over the past four years. the guys that make the cars on some of this down. this is a different. a uaw president. this is a picture you would have never seen in the past. too bad timing. he is a guy who had worse unions to deal with in italy. he thinks in the u.s. the workers are friendly.
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>> they especially like the fact we are buying their cars. thank you, jeff flock. >> a full two hours of "varney & co." now on the books. stay with us. stuart: california, you amazing. how will you spend $60,000 a year? protecting your legislators for drunk driving charges. that's extraordinary. >> that's incredible. you get a plastic card. i drink too much. let me give my card out. along comes the employee who picks you up and drives you home. >> the information they get is your phone number, not your name and address. >> as much as i love you incorrect.
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biggest military buildup in a generation. a moscow group says putin's secret budget has doubled. russia has moved to a more quote permanent war condition. is that the because they're that respects america? also this morning fox news report that isis is developing sophisticated weapons special suicide bomb trucks and a computer guided sniper rifle? they don't respect us, they think we're a push over. and don't forget the claim that obama is the most jewish president to sit in the office. josh is very much aligned with what people want. let's ask the israelis about how they feel about iran getting a nuclear program. now, we are a financial program and we follow current affairs to see what impact they'll have on your money. i don't think america's repented. i reget to say that our enemies and rivals hold us in contempt. and sooner or later, that is going to hit every one of us
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in the wallet. ♪ . stuart: i am pleased to announce that your wallet is not taking a hit at this particular moment. the dow is up nearly 150 points. negative into his you on the service sector may that means that interest rates will stay down. so the stock market goes up. at least that's the theory that's doing the rounds out there at this moment. got it. check the price of oil. nearly 2 million-barrel draw down that means less oil in inventory, so it's pushing within the pulling in the oil market. bottom line? down about a buck a barrel. $60 as we speak. and then we have apple with 200,000 peek speakers. and mcdonald's, higher wages
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better drive-throughs, but their franchises ease are not happy. mcdonald's still at 96. we're following a developing story out of boston. a man shot and killed by police when he came at him with a knife. police believe he could have had tied to isis. reportedly he was plotting with another suspect to behead police officers. you're now seeing new video. this is a second suspect david right arriving at court where he too faces federal charges. now, my take, you just heardt on the policy, fox news editor joins us now. was i a little extreme there chris? >> well, extremely in your viewer's pocketbooks is no . stuart: what did she very good indeed. >> you're allowed to fire it up. go ahead i'm sorry . stuart: look, my point is that our enemies are now rivals of
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building up military, whether it's russia china isis. they're all doing this. and sooner or later it comes home to roost here in our wallets. now, that was the premise of what had to say. do you disagree with it? >> look, here's the thing. you can see an international arms race occur when people respect the transitional model for a arms race that fear and respect for a rival cause and whether this is the building of the bismarck or the nuc unitehe soviets, we see that that's what happens international tension can stem from respect and fear. in this case, however what we see are people doing things that they're not supposed to be doing. that we have said whatever you do don't do this, china and china says, yeah, we'll get back to you. and we say whatever you do, russia don't go in there, and they go in there and we say hey, syria no check weapons and they get it, so this not
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the escalation that take place inside the construct of a arms race but instead are people testing the limits of a world that doesn't seem to have an order to it? . stuart: there's another development today. it's about the clinton foundation. it has a sweetish fundraising arm. that arm. [laughter] brought in $26 million worth of donations there you have it. all the time while sweetish companies were lobbying the state department not to be blacklisted for breaking sanctions on iran. now, we had peter schweitzer on earlier today. he's connecting the dots here,. >> uh-huh. stuart: and he says, you know, this is pretty close to a quid pro quo. you give you us the money and we'll do this for you. >> again totally point where they say there's no smoking gun. there's no evidence that this was pay for play. but obviously the sweden thought it was when we see these numbers from all the
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tens of millions of dollars coming from the swedish lottery. so why dodd care so much? what's the deal? and now the assistance clear. they must have thought that the way you gained favor with hillary clinton state department was by shoveling money into her family foundation and a 750,000 speech by former president william jefferson clinton. now, i've heard some good talks in my life, but i never heard one worth three-quarters of a million dollars . stuart: and, by the way, that was the first time that erickson paid the $750,000 and never paid before. and that's when they said, no, they won't be blacklisted. convince? >> hillary clinton says there's no smoke and gun. polls now tell us -- we have a new fox poll coming out. voters don't care whether there's a smoking gun. they think it's a miss. .
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stuart: more on hillary the national archives i should say. sounded the alarm about hillary's private e-mail keeping practices. they sounded the alarm for five years. they were worried that she would take the records with her when she left, and she did. >> she did . stuart: and she deleted half of them. now, there's a criminality animal to this. >> well, as you can see as you read the back and forth what the problem was. and the problem was hillary clinton was not accountable inside the organization where she worked, anybody else who was already at that point the democratic nominee in 2016 would be able to get away with this conduct of magnitude. but instead you have these federal officials who are charged and duty-bound by the constitution to say i hope someone will please raise this issue but you're not allowed to have a home borrow e-mail server for goodness sanction. and you say no wonder she got away with murder because she created a situation where she
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can do whatever as he wants a home brew server? did you just invent had a inspect. >> no. that's not hillbilly talk. that's a real thing . stuart: hillbilly? that's a tour deforce of what we have today. >> thank you . stuart: thick and fast today by the way. this is from the nfl. they have chosen yahoo as the venue to live stream a regular season game on the internet for the first time. law why can't you have to gets the stream between the bills and the jaguars. >> did you snore? >> it wasn't me, it was ashley. >> not exactly, you know, the . stuart: can i get to the punch line? it will be streamed nationally by yahoo for free. you wouldn't pay for it. [laughter] >> everything's for free on yahoo . stuart: all right. so it's new. here's your story charlie. let me introduce there. the iconic gun maker colt close to bankruptcy.
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recently received its lowest debt generating possible. charlie, what's going on and why colt? i know colt. >> this company is shot . stuart: oh, stop it. go ahead. why on earth. >> oh, god. >> i didn't even get a smile out of these guys. >> that was pathetic. >> let's just get to the lines, they're expected to file chapter 11 bankruptcy next week . stuart: okay. >> it means a reorganization of assets, some sort of way to reduce the payments on their massive debt loads, so that's what's going on here. this company is in real deep trouble. now, why is it -- why? >> the obama effect had to basically help all the other gun manufacturers, smith and we knew, you name it, they on behalf of the sales, and it was just clear miss management. it was a crummy company . stuart: oh,. >> at least the management was crummy . stuart: these -- they're doing
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incredible well. >> this is a private company. so we don't have stock prices on it. but, you know, they think the creditors think with some organization, they have ties to the defense department. they do a lot of definition department work. they're going to focus on that. they're probably going to scale back on their gun manufacturing, you know, the handgun stuff. they can make it go -- but we should point that out that two things can happen when they want to i will for bankruptcy. they can stay in bankruptcy, they can sell the company. if they sell the company, they have a big manufacturing flatten hart . stuart: yeah. >> that's going to affect the workers. and there's a good chance that those workers get mission placed. but they're close to filing bankruptcy, and i hear it's a 98% chance that we're talking about . stuart: when i first came to america 40 years ago i fired a gun for the first time in my life. and it air force colt .45 and when i picked that thing up and fired it. >> yeah. stuart: for the first time ever i understood the awesome power of a gun.
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>> yeah. >> uh-huh. stuart: you know, my dad was a in my opinioner it in the marines. we never shot a gun. >> i was eight the first time i shot a gun. [laughter] >> eight years old? >> yeah. texas. you shoot -- stuart: eight is kind of late for texas. [laughter] >> yeah, right. . stuart: thank you charlie. good story. >> thank you . stuart: i'm really shocked at it actually. there's a lot of news happening today. we need an update on some of the big stories. and here's right here. >> and i don't have to my gun with me today. talk to me tomorrow. we opted relevant reported this earlier, cailtyn jenner starring in a new documentary series they just released the trailer. this is brand-new. now we know what the show's title is going to be titled. it's going to be called call me caitlyn and i know charlie is going to watch every episode. [laughter]
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city group capital one and citibank and chase were responsible for derailing the card over last month, over the massive data breach. but according to wall street journal the banks buckled over a $19 million between mastercard and target saying their losses are way more than $19 million. that breach back in 2013 target systems were hacked that exposed 40 million credit cards to they've seen. again, the journal saying the banks killing that deal pap and finally from the rent is too dam high, the median cost in san francisco get this. it's a staggering $4,225 a month. that's according to zillo in san francisco. and that is 16% higher, guys, than a year ago. stuart, that's any size, a one, two it be three bedroom. whatever. . stuart: that's just the average. >> if you're a teacher, a cop, a fireman in san francisco working in san francisco . stuart: you're not living in san francisco.
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>> you know, if you're cailtyn jenner, you could afford a house or an apartment . stuart: by the way, i have a correction. ladies and gentlemen the name of the reality show. >> uh-huh. stuart: is i am kate. that is the proper name. >> okay. stuart: got it. >> wow i'm so wrong . stuart: thank you, everybody. it's hard to get a word right on your own show. if you're tired of lugging your suitcase around the airport, this app is for you. they pack your bags, clean your clothes send them to your hotel. this in a moment
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the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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in texas and another cyber attack on the military. ashley has details please. >> yeah. stuart, the chair says that the individual in question, they believe there's a link between him, they believe he is based in syria or maybe iraq. he is actually a 21-year-old brit. originally from england who is now fighting with isis. they found a link between him the united states special operations command and twitter just prior to the shootings in garland texas, if you remember there were a couple of individuals who interrupted. there's a link now and now we have somebody coordinating attacks on u.s. soil from somewhere out there that's actually this has coordination that's important. . stuart: very important. >> yes. he goes by the cyber name trick, of this particular
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individual, which they believe who is originally from england. stuart: from england. . stuart: thanks ashley. >> yeah. stuart: repeating the news from the nfl we brought you earlier. yahoo will be the first site where the games can be streamed. it will be free nationally and, by the way, the game will be played in london. no impact on yahoo stock up just a couple of cents there. frequent travelers. listen, please, you may never have to pack a suitcase again. did you feel is a new app, and it does it all for you. for a price of course. it will ship your suitcase to your hotel, pick up, followed, and wash your clothes and store it all until your next trip. here is the founder and the guy who runs it. his name is bill rinehart, and he joins us now. right from the get-go practitioner i want to know help you how much are you going to charge me to pick up my suitcase, put it in the hotel, watch clean dry and do it all over again.
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how much? >> so, stuart, hello. the price for the had standard service is $99. and what that includes is shipping to the total shipping back to the hotel to our warehouse and cleaning and storing all of your clothes . stuart: nine dollars? >> per trip . stuart: you know, that's not bad. >> pretty good . stuart: i mean okays i have fed exed stuff to a total where i'm going to be working and then fedex it back. that's a lot more than $99 for the round trip. i've got to say. so how much business have you drummed up so far? >> so we've been in business -- we launched april 30th, so we're just getting started. we've had thousands of people express interest in the service, and they're all kind of in the process of signing up. whether that means they're already traveling for us or just sending clothes. so we've had an overwhelming response in the last few weeks. stuart: so what kind of guarantees do you offer? if i shoot it out there on
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fedex, it absolutely positively has to be there overnight. i got that. what do you offer? >> well, the same. we use fedex as our carrier so as you know they're highly reliable. in addition if there is something that goes wrong and something is always going to go wrong we'll make it right. we have a network of 1,700 couriers around the u.s. and we'll get you close within a few hours of the delivery but we haven't seen that at all yet as i say this is for frequent travelers who travel a lot. take me through it again. i give you a suitcase full of clothes that i'm going to be using on my business trip, you ship it to the hotel that i'm going to, i fly to the hotel that i'm going to. and there is the suitcase, unpacked in my room and you dry cleaned and laundered everything inside. is that true? >> it's almost true. let me take you through the process . stuart: okay. >> so what we do is we send you a very large roller bag. you physiological it with all the clothes we inventory
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that we put it in our warehouse, and then there's an app that has professional pictures of your clothes. you literally just tap the clothes that you want to take for that particular trip. when you get to your hotel your bag is there. it's professionally folded and pressed . stuart: that's not bad. >> pretty cool . stuart: wait a moment i just saw the graphic there. you operate internationally? >> that's the next step. so right now we launched in the u.s. only. we'll be adding canada and the european union in the next 90 days, and then we'll go from there . stuart: it's a great idea, bill. >> thank you . stuart: it really is a very, very good idea. what attracted me was the price. $99. i really kind of like that a lot. that's good stuff. bill rinehart from duffle, the app we'll see you again soon. >> thank you . >> you don't like anything. i'm really surprised. >> i want to know. is that $95 anywhere in the world? . stuart: they have not started overseas yet. >> but when . stuart: i do in the united states it's $99.
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stuart: look at this. facebook is one of the biggest winners in the s&p 500. it's up over 2%. $82 a share for facebook. and now this. facebook's chief mark zuckerberg has got some legal problems with his neighbors. ever what they are calling a shady real estate deal. sherrill is here to explain. >> a little bit of a coperty around his mansion in silicon valley so he could have more privacy. well, one of the couples -- they kept thinking that he was going to come and offer them money, and he never did. so enter this developer who walks in and says, hey i'll give you a, you know, few million dollars for your property. a little bit more than 4 million. they take the deal. then what? the developer goes over to zuckerberg and says, hey, i'm going to build a huge mansion with a view right into your bedroom and zuckerberg says, oh no, you're not. here's $1.7 million. go away. now the couple is crying foul in court saying wait a minute
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we've been had. we've been -- you know, what a shyster thing is. are they really going to be able to approve that with that developer? >> it's all about greed. they signed originally with the original developer. sorry you lost . stuart: i don't care about the legalism so much as it's very constructive about people who are worth $20 billion. >> always . stuart: what a story. >> don't you love the fact that zuckerberg never offered to buy their house? and then when he found out this other guy was going to build a mansion looking into his bedroom, he says here you go. go away. it was $5 million . stuart: that is a fascinating story. i do hope you keep on top of that. >> i will. send me. i'll all over it . stuart: i bet you. coming up, ladies and gentlemen. joe london. now, she is a legend at good morning, america. she survived the year long battle with breast cancer. she's going to tell us her story.
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and president obama says we're the most repented nation on the plant. don't tell that. putin is flexing his muscle -- >> with his shirt off . stuart: there he is. >> scary. . stuart: are we getting respect from the russians? i think not. but first strange inheritance tonight at 9:00. here's a preview for you. >> i meet with grandson and your and mike for a driving lesson. step one hand crank the car to start it. >> i don't know. what do you think? >> i think you're up for it. see if you can do it. >> get a good crank. oh not quite. >> wait. is this a trick? oh, come on. get me a car that works. >> all right. it is. >> all right. there you go.
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congressman mike mccall says an isis cyber attacker who hacked the u.s. special operations command was also tweeting with the attackers who tried to storm a free speech, in any event garland texas. and president obama's claim that the most respected nation on cert being put to the test. new this morning. russian is embarking on the military buildup. and fox business contributor mark is here. apart from the particular episode with the russians, i think it's fair to say that russia doesn't suspect '14 us that happen of. how does it affect us in our day-to-day lives. >> it's really about safety. it's affecting every american. let's take, for example ucriterion. it would be good politics, it would be good foreign policy, but it would also be good business for to americans sell hardware military equipment
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to the ukrainians. they're asking for it. they are our allies. can you imagine what this would do for the defense industry here if we were able to approve and say we're going to give the ukrainians everything they're asking for again, stuart? this is not only good for business but it's the right foreign policy move -- stuart: we don't sell those to ukraine because we're scared of putin. is that what you're saying. >> we're scared of putin. we're letting the europeans kind of cave on issues. we don't have have a good policy when it comes to selling natural gas to europe. that would also be a good policy . stuart: are you saying that we're constrained in selling our natural gas to europe. we're constrained by russia because russia doesn't respect us? our power is not respected? >> we're not standing up to the russians. we're not standing up to the chinese. if you look at the last two years, both russia and china
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are doing land grapes. imagine what that's doing to all of our business opportunities around the world. that's a foreign policy failure that affects us personally as americans, and our safety, and in that growing businesses. the only way to add jobs and to give americans better opportunities is to expand markets. we're being bullied by the russians throughout eastern europe for sure, and i think an argument to be made throughout europe . stuart: so what douse? the president we are now the most respected nation on effort earth. i take it you don't agree with that. >> no. i was in the un for eight years. i know these diplomats. there's a difference between seems like respecting. they may like a weaker america because it benefits them. they have their ideas are placed out in the marketplace more. they're the ones that people are turning to. they -- absolutely like a weaker america some people. . stuart: they like it.
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they like a weaker america. are you saying the president is flat out wrong in his legacy of foreign policy. >> plats out wrong. look at what happened two weeks ago when he called gcc to the saudi arabia meetings. they were saying we don't want to go. imagine that snub. you don't want to come to the table to talk to the president. two months after being elected, they say we don't want to serve on the security counsel president the world's most important body because the americans hypocrites . stuart: is there nothing out there on which the president could stake his claim to being more respected now than ever? >> i always think that there's a chance that he could put a stake in the ground and say we're going to do something about syria. i mean look what's happening over there. we've seen in the last 24 hours that they could be following. that is a game changer for the islamic radicals . stuart: sometimes in their favor --
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>> you're unpopular because you can't please all the people all the time. >> yeah. >> what the policy says is we're going to sit on the fence, let them work it out and what's that done is made us a push over, and putin has managed to from the void. correct? >> correct. and it makes us popular at the un for dinner . stuart: what's that's the best you could say inspect that's not very good. stay there because we might have something else for you in just a moment. >> okay. stuart: i do like to bring you news of a rally and we're up 125 points, 18,137 for the dow. the price of crude oil. that's in the news. it's down a buck. crude oil inventories were down. that should have put the price up, but it didn't. however it meets on friday and a lot of people think they're going to flood the market with oil. that's what's pushing it down. by the way the national forming gas is 2.75. up about a half penny for yesterday. that's the national forming
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regular. listen to this. nearly a yeargo tv host found out she had breast cancer and following six treatments of chemotherapy -- i think it was more than that, she'd cancer free and right here in our studio talk about the battle. what an honor and pleasure to have you with us. >> 16 rounds. . stuart: give me your story. it was a year ago. >> one year ago i thought life was good . stuart: and there was a diagnosis. >> and it could never happen to me because it wasn't in my family history . stuart: one year ago diagnosis, now cancer free. >> cancer free . stuart: how did you do it? >> i built my team of doctors and you fight your way through it. you kind of become a warrior and i think i went from patient to warrior to advocate, and i went public, which is also a tough decision. stuart: yeah. >> you kind of to want hide out. but by going public, i had this unbelievable response on special media from
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everywhere. alls women telling me their frustrations their problems, how they couldn't get a mammogram, how they couldn't get paid for their medicine, and then i started speaking all over the country at events and i found out there are many many organizations, 1400 of them all across the country that provide these services. and i said i have to do something to try to put these people together. so i started going to washington knocking on senators doors to try to get them to vote on legislation. but then i decided to take it up a notch and today i launched an online tv channel . stuart: hold on a second. it's an online tv channel. >> yeah. you just heard about nfl and yahoo, this is the way that people get their information sometimes. and you can never do what i'm doing on regular broadcast television. it's 24/7, it's video on demand. i'm giving women useful information if they're just diagnosed.
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the access to the best experts in the world . stuart: what's what you want, isn't it? >> yeah. this is a passion project . stuart: i can understand when the diagnosis is maybe not the first thing you want, i want information. what am i going to do? >> and you want to be able to turn to someone you can . stuart: did you say uh-huh. >> because it's a very ventricle time. and i found over the last year, you also need a lot of supporter. and there's an amazing amount of supporter within the community and we have big organizations on the board like susan g and breast cancer research fund. we have ford motor company. i mean people think of big institutions like, big car companies as not caring . stuart: yeah. >> and yet they have stepped up to the plate and gone into business with lyft, and they are picking up women and giving them free rides to chemo and mammograms. >> you are cancer free. >> yes. >> how much progress is being made tackling breast cancer and many other forms.
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>> because there is a lot of women out there making a lot of noise there's more money going to breast cancer than any other form of cancer and there are new discoveries every single week, so it's a good news. it's a good time to have to go through this, at least there's wonderful modern medicine . stuart: two points. rick, you are also cancer free two years after the event. >> supporter hotchkins research, i'm better for it. . stuart: look into that camera. you've done this before. and how do women get onto this online channel? do it. >> you can log onto a live with joan.com from any device. from your iphone, ipad, your laptop, anything that connects to the internet, you can just go to live with joan.com and we're always uploading every single day and we're also going to have user generated uploads and going to have survivor stories all
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across the country. it's kind of an all access pass . stuart: i wish i had such style and class when i look into a camera. [laughter] that was very good. again one more time, please. >> alivewithjoan.com . stuart: thank you very much. >> thank you . stuart: a former irs employee pleads guilty to steeling people's identities. filing fake tax returns. under their names. full details next [ male announcer ] ours was the first modern airliner, revolutionary by every standard. and that became our passion. to always build something better airplanes that fly cleaner and farther on less fuel. that redefine comfort and connect the world like never before. after all, you can't turn dreams into airplanes unless your passion for innovation is nonstop. ♪ ♪
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the real question that needs to be asked is "what is it that we can do that is impactful?" what the cloud enables is computing to empower cancer researchers. it used to take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome; with the microsoft cloud we can analyze 100 per day. whatever i can do to help compute a cure for cancer, that's what i'd like to do.
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>> your fox business brief. the dow jones industrial up about 97 points at the moment, highs of the day but still a gain of a about half of 1%, the s&p up 6 and the nasdaq up 26. we're watching the utilities under some pressure. this is the ten-year bond yield. sitting at # .35%. in fact, this is on track to have the highest close since november 19th. of course everybody looks at utilities for yields and as a result you're seeing them react to the downside. and you can see duke energy, for example down 1.5%. wendy's up 4.3%, new 52 week high there, 1.4 billion in shares and also nelson going to get some of that. and bureau under pressure getting a new low there. that's jack daniels that's up
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1.1%. more "varney & company" coming up after the break you pay your auto insurance premium every month on the dot. you're like the poster child for paying on time. and then one day you tap the bumper of a station wagon. no big deal... until your insurance company jacks up your rates. you freak out. what good is having insurance if you get punished for using it? hey insurance companies, news flash. nobody's perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? at 62,000 brush movements per minute philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before. innovation and you. philips sonicare.
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you wouldn't order szechuan without checking the spice level. it really opens the passages. waiter. water. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck. stuart: a former irs employee pleading guilty to a massive fraud scheme. he submitted hundreds of false statement income tax returns that netted her hundreds of thousands of dollars. how did she do it?
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>> she stole social security numbers, names, date of birth possibly from the irs office she worked . stuart: she worked in an irs office? >> she worked in an irs office. i thought that was the main part of the story. networked st. louis missouri. she has just pled guilty to filing false tax returns. now, it's possible she stole this information right from the tax office that she worked in . stuart: how long did this go on? >> four years . stuart: wait. wait. wait. she worked in a irs office and for four years she's filing false income tax returns getting the refund check keeping it, and she gets $300,000 total net. >> 350,000 dollars . stuart: oh, i'm sorry. and people who have had their information stolen . stuart: wait a second. the top guy at irs, he said it was the rotten russian bandits. >> criminals from all over the plant. no it's a chick in st. louis
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missouri who has found your; right? stuart: did she use the same address. >> no. no. no. . stuart: what was that you said the other way in lithuania? 6 if it checks went the same address in lithuania. you might think someone said wait a minute. >> they don't make the changes. on and on it goes. . stuart: you've got a really good series of stories. >> yeah. >> thank you . stuart: gerri willis, thank you very much indeed. >> thank you . stuart: neil has a new show on fox business. big hit. you know what? i think i know why. roll tape. . stuart: you have to admit that neil cavuto's coast to coast is modeled directly on "varney & company," isn't it? >> you got me. [laughter] >> stuart your show is a lot like mine, pal but that's fine. stuart: well, guess what? neil is back from florida. he's here, and i'm going to ask him the following
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question. in what way are you going to copy me again today? >> well today i'm going to be british. [laughter] i love what you're doing with your shore and how you've marveled it after all my shows over the years and continue your success stew . stuart: stew. [laughter] you've got donald trump on the show today; right? >> yeah. we were chatting about ever so briefly when i was in florida yesterday and for my mine despite all the presidential candidates out there and the power brokers that i've had a chance to speak with. when i had a chance to talk to don, that was the stop everything moment for me because clearly for some reason it seemed to me that the bloom was off the democratic roads, i thought it was a given a slam-dunk that he was going to be helping
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hillary clinton. that's not the case. my take away from that that he was he's some of these prominent republicans like jeb bush, scott walker, and it's more of what he had to see about democrats persistent attack on the upper 1% that's bothering him. it could be that he's watching your show, stuart, or that he think wanted to say it on mine. i don't know . stuart: i think he wanted to say it on yours actually. >> there you go . stuart: by the way, i know you've got donald trump, i think it is about 10, 15 minutes away now. >> yeah. stuart: one significant issue that donald trump and i agree on you probably don't know this. >> brass. . stuart: no, we're both dofe tattoos. you might have to ask him about that. >> you like them or you don't like them . stuart: deaf. i have a large family. any one of my kids gets a tattoo they're out of the will. >> they might not be missing much because you're cheap.
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so i would go full throttle on the tattoos. but i will ask him . stuart: thank you. >> all right stuart, does that satisfy you? . stuart: just great. we'll see you again soon. >> no. you've got toed a tony is thing. . stuart: forget about it. >> awful. awful. [laughter] . stuart: thank you very much, neil. we'll be watching. >> all right. stuart: more varney surprising enough coming up 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... from the smallest detail to the boldest leap. healthier means using wellness to keep away illness... knowing a prescription is way more than the pills... and believing that a single life can be made better by millions of others. ♪ ♪ healthier takes somebody who can power modern health care...
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liberty mutual insurance. stua: hos th for adli? google glass wasn't ready. they put it out. but it wasn't ready. that's what the head of google research lab just said. they weren't ready. ashley. why are they putting out that information now? >> well, to be honest with you, this is the mo of google. they tend to rush products out, make a big to do about it, and then have to backtrack and s bugs out. it's at $1,500 a pair, and it went out -- let's be honest, to mostly reviewers out there to techies to see what it was like and it got horrible reviews, words like terrible, unreliable connection, little use. so now they're on a apology tour.
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you mentioned the head of tour astro tella going around the country saying, yeah, we kind of rushed this, but they're not giving up on it, which is interesting. but they did the same thing for self driving cars. they found o enough sensors and they were hitting things, so they said let's bring them back to the shop . uartthat thexa opposite of apple isn't it. >> yes. stuart: apple doesn't put anything out there unless it's brilliant. >> yeah. because google likes to say we beat apple to the punch, but they end up apologizing . stuart: i want to go back to the yahoo story because they truck a deal with the nfl. the bills versus jaguars game will be streamed nationally. the game is in london. now, we've reported this the past hour. i want to take it a little bit further. seems that susic business, the video business. >> it has . stuart: now is it going to
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take over sports? >> it may very well. we were talking about this. how much did google -- yahoo rather bay to the nfl? because the nfl doesn't give away . stuart: no, they wouldn't give it away. >> to stream an entire game like that for free on yahoo is a huge step. and i would like to know what was the agreement . stuart: yeah well-- >> for them to bank account that but it is the future . stuart: presumably we have yahoo paying nfl for the rights to stream that game. >> correct. stuart: and then yahoo somehow or rather makes some money. >> well, ads with advertising on it. . stuart: yeah. >> into the sports streaming world . stuart: is this how we're going to watch sports in the future? streamed live from wherever? >> it's not out of the question . stuart: it's not. . stuart: by the way, the dow is up 77 points, it had been up about 150. >> uh-huh. stuart: not much going on in the middle of the day on wall street these days, but we're up 80 points. a highlight from today's -- >> three hour -- stuart: tour is next. stay
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>> we are not standing up to the russians. we are not standing up to the chinese. russia and china are doing land grabs. imagine what that is doing to all of our business opportunities around the world. that is a foreign policy failure that affects us first glance american in our safety and growing businesses. stuart: fox news contributor eric grenell responding to the comments about the u.s. be the respected nation on earth. we have this from one of our. my husband wants to know how you are so chipper it 9:00 a.m. when you have three hours of this to go through. suzanne, it is called coffee. it comes in and around 3:45 in the morning. pot number to around 6:30 7:00 and i sip of coffee
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throughout the show. good answer? ashley: and it's true by the way. stuart: i have a sugar break at around 10:50. sugar and caffeine. everybody understand? neil, i believe it is yours. someone just be honest you are drunk. jeb bush scott walker you name it they were all there. the interview that stood out for me getting incredible reverberations today, my chat with don peebles. let's just say off the rose for mr. peebles when it comes to financially help being hillary clinton. >> today's democratic party is not a party of opportunity anymore. we have one candidate demon aiding the airspace and they've been in politics for 44 years. that's not an environment of
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