tv After the Bell FOX Business June 4, 2015 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT
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think intraday, it was down about 195. melissa: still a sea of red here as we head into the close. there, that is the closing bell on wall street right now. [closing bell ringing] a steep stock selloff. david: what is happening overseas affecting the market a lot but what is happening here tomorrow is going to after effect stocks in a very big way when we get those jobs numbers. melissa: there you go. wall street is closed. here is everything you need to know now. markets spending the day in the red. let's head straight to the floor of the new york stock exchange. lori rothman is standing by. lori, what were the big movers today? >> hi, melissa. a lot of movers to the downside. all 10 s&p sectors were in the red today. interesting, more economically sensitive sectors, things like materials were the biggest decliners in the session today. so broad selloff across a variety of sectors. actually gave us one of the most volatile days we've seen in about a month. in fact the index that tracks that, the vix, hit a one-month
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high today. so you heard traders clapping. they were actually dizzy today. a lot of action on the floor of the new york stock exchange. so part of the reason for the volatility today had more drama out of greece. it broke late this afternoon might look like greece may need a third extension from the current bailout plans beyond june. there was decent economic news. initial jobless claims were pretty good this morning. it means the fed is more likely to have to raise rates. the imf did call for the u.s. to push off rates, lift off, if you will into next year. slashing its u.s. economic growth outlook. with that i send it back to you, david and melissa. melissa: lori, thank you so much. david: with the great track record of imf -- i'm joking. this is no joke. fears are spreading as number of labs receiving live anthrax is getting a lot bigger. the pentagon mistakenly shipped the deadly pathogen to 51 labs in 18 states and washington,
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d.c. shipments made their way to three other countries. numbers continue to grow. joining me is the former deputy assistant to secretary rumsfeld and national security director for the heritage foundation. how could this go under the radar? i don't understand? >> this was a major, major blown call here. this is the, the equivalent of the army labs. it is their, putting the real nuclear weapons own the airplanes that the air force did a few years ago. big problem. big mistake. totally unacceptable. and it needs to be fixed. david: i remember very well, right after 9/11 a couple of envelopes with anthrax. just the smallest trace of anthrax was deadly. everybody was scared to death. we actually had an attack in the building where fox business and fox news is located because the "new york post" is also here. are we going to have to have major evacuations and quarantines of all those 50
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labs? >> no, we're not. the amount of the anthrax virus that was in samples is very low. they had been irradiated. that's why they thought they were dead. turns out their quality control is off. they're taking right precautions. they're giving people medicine. we'll not see the places go down. it didn't get out and spread all over the buildings. a big mistake, but fortunately i think repercussions healthwise will be fairly small. david: steve, we had a lot of big mistakes by our big government in the past couple months n particular i'm thinking most recently the tsa. that guy left his job at the tsa because of those mistakes. because they had a 95% failure rate. he is still working for the government, homeland security. somebody needs to be fired. but this is the government. that probably won't happen, will
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it? >> my concern who they will fire is some low-level person who just moved boxes around. david: right. >> that is not right. people need to take responsibility. if you're in leadership, you have big responsibilities. there are consequences when even the people under you are the ones who mess up. david: yeah. they will find a fall guy, no doubt. steve, i agree with you. thanks for coming on. appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. melissa: a critical defense bill hitting the senate floor despite democrat threat to filibuster. our own maria bartiromo has that story for us. >> thanks so much. president obama announcing that he will veto the national defense authorization act. the announcement coming despite the fact that the defense spending bill meets funding requirements called for by the president himself. we spoke with armed services committee chairman john mccain who also warned that the president's rosy view of the world is not set in reality and this is to time to play politics with our national defense. >> the world is on fire, maria. i just came from asia where the
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chinese, as you know, are drastically expanding their islands and placements in the south china sea. today we see a flare-up in ukraine again as vladmir putin will continue his aggression and of course in syria, if you read the front page of "the new york times" this morning, isis continues to expand and to succeed. >> the senator maintaining that both houses of congress will continue to work on passing that defense spending bill despite those veto problem is from the president. david, melissa. back to you. david: thank you very much. the white house has confirmed president obama is going to be speaking with the prime minister of iraq in a bilateral meeting. that is going to happen this weekend. the white house says this is an opportunity for the president, quote, to check in on the situation on the ground in that battle against isis. melissa: oil today, breaking
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below $589 a barrel ahead of tomorrow's opec meeting in vienna -- $59. ministers deciding whether they can afford to cut back output in an effort to boost oil's price. phil flynn is in the pits of cme for us. he is fox business contributor. alley naimi always acting like he is cool and calm and in control. do you think he is laid-back as it looks with prices where they are? >> i think he is. i think he envisioned this. i think he envisioned the price crash. i think he envisioned the rebound. i think he really envisioned the fact if opec was going to survive they needed to do something dramatic. i think he is feeling pretty good about himself now. melissa: phil, moving on to fracking. environmental protection agency says fracking does not have a impact on drinking water. we heard this before. but coming out of the epa again. are people going to take notice of this. >> i think it is a major win for
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the u.s. fracking industry. people will take notice. this is huge. one of the biggest arguments against fracking from the state of new york and other people that want to ban this practice was the risk to drinking water. what they found of course is what the energy industry has been saying for some time. there is no measurable risk to drinking water. now there is risk, tough make sure these wells are in good shape. that they're not broken. you have to deal with ways to deal with wastewater but it is another reason why the ban against fracking has been misguided. melissa: yeah. so what do you think that means for prices going forward then? >> well, i actually think it is long term bearish for prices because it opens up the door for more production in the future but to get that production we got to get prices back up. we know at these price levels frackers are having a very difficult time. we've seen a record amount of rig count cuts. we've seen billions of dollars of capital spending cuts overall. it is good for the long-term future. in the short term this market
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still has some struggles with increasing production. melissa: it is ironic. prices have to come up in order to for this to come online so prices go back down. that is the way of energy markets, phil. thank you so much. david: that is kind of crazy. biggest auto recall in american history gets bigger. mazda is the latest automaker to expand list of cars with potentially dangerous takata airbags. mazda is adding more than 100,000 cars to the list. automakers recalled at least 34 million vehicles thanks to potentially deadly airbags. dish, nation's second largest satellite operator and t-mobile, fourth largest carrier surging today on talk of a possible merger between the two. jo ling kent with the story. >> melissa, dave, dish-t-mobile deal is in the formative stages. this could affect 53 million americans. dish and t-mobile are to combine. ceo of a newly formed company would be john legere with
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charliering begin of dish being co-chairman. he said that is rumor that deserves no content. the size could be massive with t-mobile's market cap of $34 billion and dish at 33 billion. the merger could help boost expand capacity of its fast growing network. the wireless alternative could provide all term tough slowing tv base. this follows a time warner cable, brighthouse networks and at&t's $49 billion deal with directv unlike the firm deal with comcast and time warner cable, analysts say because this is cross industry tie-up it may have a better chance going through. back to you guys. david: thank you, jo. melissa: hot-button issues on the campaign trail, national security, the economy, immigration and now the metric system? david: huh? melissa: what? we'll tell you why one candidate believes how you measure matters. david: forget about kale. some restaurants are still
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serving up calories big we're going to tell you the worst, most calorie-filled places to eat. that is coming up. melissa: i love that. lebron tries to take the shine from the golden state warriors tonight in game one of the nba finals. either way it is a big win for sponsors. ♪ the pursuit of healthier.ut) it begins from the second we're born. after all, healthier doesn't happen all by itself.
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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. >> we have the power to make things new again. to project america's strength again and get our economy going again. [applause] and that is exactly why today i am running for the presidency of the united states of america. [cheers and applause] melissa: it is a big day for former texas governor rick perry. formerly -- formally announcing his run for president in 2016. he is the latest candidate to join the already crowded gop field of contenders, making this perry's second white house bid.
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gop hopeful jeb bush is one step behind perry on officially making his announcement but word is out he almost ready. nearly six months after saying he was actively exploring the idea of running for president, the former florida governor tweeting out this morning that he will officially launch his campaign on june 15th in miami. bush has been under a lot of pressure to make his campaign decision official. david? david: just happened to say that on a day perry came out. coincidence? i don't know. meanwhile our economy is sluggish, isis terrorists in boston. violent crime is way up. what does the latest democrat candidate announce as a vital part of his agenda, the metric system. i kid you not. former rhode island governor lincoln chafee. what do you make of that? >> look, the metric system? i said with all the things we've got going on right now, david, you really want to make this your platform? he said, absolutely. we can be more international
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this way. it was, surprising. you know, i think we might have an -- david: i think we do segment. >> the united states has to be, yes, less unilateral and more international. and this is one symbolic step into that international arena. i have a quick question. do you know how many other questions are not metric? >> i understand that there are two others. >> two. two. liberia, in west africa, and myanmar in southeast asia. only two other countries. the rest of the world is metric. it will be good for our economy. david: by the way, you got that right. he quizzed you, you got it right. i'm wondering if he would get it right if you were to ask him how many liters are in a gallon, sir? i bet he couldn't answer that question. >> that is one of the challenges. look, we have had it this way for hundreds of years. there is a reason. it actually goes back historically to the french revolution. the thinking was, it just wasn't the right thing to do. it didn't represent democracy to
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go with their system. david: yes. >> so we've been this way forever. and to change it now, even if there are only three countries in the world that do it this way, look, we do it this way. how will you suddenly change it? they tried in the 1970s. join a voluntary program. nobody wanted to join. david: but his overall notion that we in the united states need to be more international, we have been through that. we did that with president obama. when president obama was campaigning he said that then he implemented policies like european socialism, that haven't worked well here. i think american people are getting fed up with the european notion in the united states. >> hey, we don't want to be france, right? david: yeah. >> we don't want china to be the next u.s. and wind up like france. david: right. >> and you know that is one of the concerns that we're just becoming to, quote, unquote international. but the other thing i brought up with him, david, what would you do right now about isis? would you have, for example, as president obama did, pulled
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troops out of iraq? and what he said to me was, we'll go back to 2002 and i voted against the war. yeah, okay. i kept pushing him. going back. and there was a reluctance there to talk about what he would do now. he finally said, yes, i agree with what the president did. i would have taken troops out. i made the point that, you know, isn't this what left us to the challenges we now see in that region, the fact that it was lawlessness after we got out of there? and he said, you know, he wanted an international coalition to try and fight all this. so, i guess that will be a thing but here's the one thing i would say, david, you have to give him credit, he is out there saying it is not right what hillary clinton did with her server. she has a credibility issue with the foundation and checks she and her husband are receiving. david: slight dig at hillary. trish, good interview. catch trish's "the intelligence report" every
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day on fox business, 2:00 p.m. eastern time. melissa? melissa: self-driving right into a crash report. more accidents for google's futuristic cars but its cofounders are blaming other driverses. warning to run for cover. former white house insider david stockman says the markets are due for a catastrophic collapse. he. he will be here to explain why. ♪ ♪ every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. ♪ those who have served our nation have earned the very best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life.
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david: looks out another accident for google's self-driving car. cofounder sergey brin defending the technology. he says he is proud of google's cars records and insists the goal is to beat human drivers. so far the autonomous cars have been in 11 accidents in the six years they have been tested but
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that is a pretty good track record when you think of 11 years. imagine when somebody starts suing? it will happen. we know it will happen. melissa: happens in every situation. this is america. we love to sue people. david: the most litigious country on face of the planet. melissa: this is no doubt where we're going. david: i hope so. for google sake and my sake, i love to drink at a party instead being sober with the one going home. melissa: that is you? i'm glad that i know that now. basketball fans gear up game one of the nba finals when cleveland's lebron james faces off with golden state's stefen curry. it's a matchup for sponsors. connell mcshane from the nba store in manhattan. >> this matchup beginning tonight in the nba finals is about a lot more than basketball. for our purposes here at the fox business network it is always about the money. you're talking about two of the most marketable stars in all of sports going one-on-one with
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each other. lebron james from cleveland and nike, against steph curry from golden state representing under armour. they hope to make curry a one billion dollar brand. look at the two companies. nike is the behemoth whether market cap or sales, nike certainly has under armour beat. if you look at the stock price over the last year, under armour has been on a roll and outperforming nike. still there is work to do for under armour, the up-and-comer in this market especially basketball. basketball shoes and sales are so important in this business. believe it or not nike still controls 95% of the u.s. market when it comes to selling basketball shoes. it is an extraordinary number. more numbers for you now. the matchup of the mvps, curry the current mvp, lebron has won the award four times. jersey sales, lebron is number one in the league. stef number two. all-star votes, curry coming on,
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he beat lebron. facebook and twitter, all lebron james and brand he built over the years. watch the feet of these two stars tonight where it is all at when it comes to money. the nba finals out in oakland. back to you. melissa: thanks, connell. i do not follow basketball but i follow money. that is important. david: another game we'll talk about. president obama welcomed another sport, this year's world series champions. the giants no stranger to the fanfare. this is the third time they claimed final in past five seasons. some day the yankees will come back. some day, maybe this year. melissa: there you go. the crash is coming. that is the chilling warning from former white house budget director david stockman. he will join us live to explain. david: you better punch another hole in your belt. with thousands of calories and four days worth of salt see if you guess which chain is serving up the fattest, unhealthiest meal in america?
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at ny.gov/business melissa: check out the selloff on wall street the dow down more than one pun points. according to our next guest you ain't seen nothing yet. david stockman, former white house budget director under president ronald reagan. you think there is big collapse coming. why do you think that? >> yes i do. the combined central banks in
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the world have created most fantastic financial bubble in recorded history. when you look at 80 months of zero interest rates, that is where we'll be assuming they raise the interest rate in september and even that is uncertain. generated most massive subsidy to speculation in the carry trades imaginable. that is what is so bad about zerp. that is what is so destructive and counter productive what they're doing. melissa: you're not only one saying this. steven king from hsbc, their chief economist also out with a note talking about the titanic global economy collapse that could be coming. he was talking to neil about it earlier. listen. i will get your reaction on the other side. >> one obvious danger is that stock markets have risen too far, as far as the economy. they could correct quite a long way. that could be a trigger for recession. federal reserve finally decides
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to raise interest rates we discover the u.s. economy isn't really strong enough to cope wit. what goes up comes back down again. federal reserve ends up with some egg on its face. melissa: not only they cause this by leaving rates too low too long but they won't have any ammunition on the other side to go into recession to battle bat because rates are completely slack. do you agree with that? >> i agree with that. they have defined inflation incorrectly. yes, there is a low amount of goods and services inflation and for good reason. there has been so matchessive overinvestment in the world economy for the, because of central bank low interest rates and cost of capital we have huge excess capacity in the world. so of course there is isn't consumer inflation. instead what we have had is massive unrelenting, financial asset inflation .
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with subprime mortgages there was only 1.4 trillion outstanding the time the crisis began in march 2007. in the last three years by contrast, we issued in the u.s. alone, 3 trillion of new junk bonds of leveraged loans and clos. melissa: meanwhile, hang on, christine lagarde says she is not done yet. listen to this. >> what we are seeing in the data, particularly on inflation, is that the pickup is very slow. and we believe that there is a good argument to actually defer until early 2016 any rate hike. melissa: there you go, david. she is going to double down on
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everything. >> she has no idea what she is talking about. everywhere in the world there is clear evidence that there are financial bubbles in the junk bond market, the real estate market. melissa: equity. >> in the stock market. in biotech. in social media. look at even the broad market is trading at 20 times trailing reported net income. the highest, level that we've seen, except for 2000. we know where that went. melissa: yeah. >> so how can they be so blind to what's going on in the financial market? the answer is, they're all keynesian -- melissa: you're right about that we have to run. david, thanks so much. i hope you come back soon. thank you. >> very good. melissa: over to you, david. david: david bill be watching this. tomorrow is jobs day in america. our panel is here to break down what to expect. kirsten powers, author of a new book, the silencing, a fox news
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contributor. john bussey from the "wall street journal" tom kimble from the lasalle network. tom, this is your specialty. what will we see tomorrow? >> what economists predicting. low 200s, high 100s. employment will be flat. job shift from the wage gap. david: did we get preview from the adp numbers? >> it is still flat. we're not seeing what everybody else wants to be seeing. david: kirsten, even if the jobs report is at what tom said or better people still feel bad about the economy. look at the most recent poll, the most important issues facing country, economy, jobs, 34%. more than terrorism. >> that is shifting back and forth. not that long ago it was terrorism. i think terrorism is a top issue. those are end up being two top issues for the election. david: most people feel we're still in recession. people feel the economy is bad. >> people want to see a more row one of the recoverly, right? even the president himself would like to see a more robust
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recovery. so, the economy absolutely will be a huge issue in the campaign, there is no question. the fact that it is not as robust as people would like it to be would harm hillary clinton because, you know, even though she is going to try to distance herself from barack obama, and democrat democratic party's policies. david: that would hurt hillary. i think imf gives lousy advice very often. they have done it in the third world time and again. tell people to raise taxes when it hurts economy. should we take any advice from the imf about our economy. >> yes. what she advised, christine lagarde said put off rate increase next year. economy is slower than you think. it will be around 2.5%. the long -- david: they kept revising it. they were dead wrong on their forecast in the past year-and-a-half. >> they will be revised again no doubt just like our economic numbers are revised. look if you 2.5% and look what the jobs numbers likely
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tomorrow, expectation is 225,000. more of the same. it's a slow gradual improvement in the economy. it will get to tom's point about what's happening to wages and are those beginning to catch up so that people don't feel as negative about the economy as you say that they do? there is always this recession -- david: i'm not saying it. polls are saying it. >> there is always this recessionary sense after a recession is over. people coming out of a difficult time. companies are slow to -- david: tom, we've been out of recession for years now and people are still feeling we're in one. >> two things. number one, people feel safe in america. terrorism will drop down on the list. david: i don't know, isis in boston. >> if there is attack -- david: we had an attack, at least one foiled right before it happened. >> if it something happens it rises up similar to what kirsten said. it goes up and down. what we're looking with the jobs, companies are not spending foolishly. the stock market is up. corporate profits are up for the most part. not spending foolishly and not
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seeing huge layoffs in mass. david: i want to ask the democrat, which republican makes strongest salient point on the economy from a political point of view. >> none of them from my perspective -- david: zero? >> i don't really hear them saying anything other than lot of platitudes. david: we heard rick perry -- >> always platitudes about cutting taxes, blah, blah. haven't heard anything really specific that will actually do something for the economy. david: hillary in just a moment. got to move on. you will have a chance to opine more about politics but we got to leave it at that. be sure to tune in tomorrow morning. fox business will have special reports on the jobs number tomorrow. watch "mornings with maria," starts 6:00 a.m. eastern with the may jobs number coming 8:30 eastern. kirsten you will have time to talk about hillary in the next segment coming up in a moment. melissa? melissa: forget bottomless jars of mayonnaise by the truckload.
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costco is cornering the automobile market. cosco moved 400,000 vehicles last year. that is twice as many in 2008. only 100,000 cars less than autonation, america's number one car retailer. wow. no more tippy toes for bar by. getting a makeover first time in 56 years. she is kick off her high heels in flavor of flats. that looks a lot more comfortable to me. happy hour arrived at taco bell. a thank you restaurant in chicago will serve beer, wine, mixed alcohol freeze this is summer. that sounds food. drink something restricted inside the restaurant. a new cup will be distinguished between regular and alcoholic beverages. sound perfect. david, let's to. david: we will. out of the question. hillary clinton's latest standoff with the media. we'll tell you what is out of the question. the cinematic event of the year,
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cloudy with a chance of "sharknado"? a third film about to take a bite out of our nation's capitol.rsui you want to hear about this. 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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david: no questions please. questions about hillary clinton's emails and clinton foundation keep piling up but she has been avoiding full interviews for quite a while now and her campaign is doubling down on that policy announcing before a speech in texas, and i'm quoting here, there will be no opportunities to interview hillary clinton. her speech will being her interview. how much longer before silence turns into stonewalling? kirsten and john are back. along with forbes contributor carey sheffield. first ten there a lot of stuff piling up. journalists, i was skeptical mainstream media would follow up and questions are piling up and she is not answering. >> speech is interview is
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literally kind of thing you see in china. david: as a democrat that must bother you a lot? >> it should bother everybody. i understand from political perspective why she would put off reporters for as long as she can because she has so many things to answer for but getting to the point where she is causing herself more damage by not talking than the damage would be done by actually answering some questions. david: well, john, even without the emails, infamous emails we may or may not ever see, there is a lot of stuff, journalists have been reporting most recent study on foundation, swedish branch of the clinton foundation we never knew about that received $26 million from the swedish lottery fund at the sim time clinton's team in d.c. declined to blacklist any swedish firm that despite embassy officials in stockholm that they were working with iran. that looks lousy.
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>> emails and number of the other things that reporters would like to sit down to quiz hillary clinton on. why not? because she doesn't want to answer tough questions. maybe doesn't want to be seen as contradicting something that obama has just done. those are all good reasons. but as we get closer to the election, mind you it is way off still, as we get closer to the election, it will be essential for her to sit down with all the networks, with all of the major media organizations and do these interviews. you already are seeing is in the polls, erosion of support for hillary clinton. that is partly tied to some of this negative news which there has not been sufficient -- david: carrie, why aren't republicans not exploiting this? why are republicans so silent about her silence? >> i think republicans are pretty busy declaring. david: hold on a second. is it because they're afraid of her? isn't it because they're afraid of being charged with being anti-woman? >> that is the thing carly fiorina is one republican not afraid to go after hillary. but the thing is, they're all
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trying to find their niche. they're trying to find their lane how they differentiate themselves. that is why you see rand paul going off on his tangent. everybody is trying to get their little branding in. that's why they're not really talking about hillary right now. they want to distinguish themselves from amongst each other. david: you're right, with the exception of carly. she is shadowing hillary every place. >> she is doing great. david: carrie, if you like what you see of carrie, seer every saturday 11:00 a.m. on "forbes on fox." this weekend it will be late because of something else. thank you, guys. kirsten powers, by the way has a new book called, the silencing." how the left is killing free speech. kirsten, i tell you, i said in the break you are a brave person because you are, you don't see many conservatives going after conservatives or liberals after liberals but in this book that is exactly what you do? >> i refer to them in the book as liberal left. i don't think they're representative of all liberals. they're not representatives of average democrat.
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this group of people decided debate is over on certain topics. if anybody speaks out against them they will delegitimatize them through all sorts of noxious tactics. it is not just conservatives. you see with liberals coming out, there was something in vox yesterday about liberal professor saying i'm afraid of my liberal students. it was written under a pseudonym. he is so afraid of how they're behaving on the campuses. so this is something that is not just affecting conservatives and christians, which it is. it is affecting everybody. if you step out of line on one issue they come after you and try to destroy your life. david: this is the minority. i'm wonder having you had any encounters with this? are they reacting to this book or things you said? you're an open christian which is dangerous thing these days in certain parts of the world. what kind of feedback have you had? >> a lot of stuff i talk about in the book frankly. not that surprising, claiming that i was, helping homophobes,
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right-wing homophobes even though i'm absolutely for gay rights. i have different view than brendan on same-sex marriage. you shouldn't lose your job over private donation. things that seem obvious but make you homophobe enabler. this is tactics. david: brave woman. this is called the silencing, how the left is killing free speech. thank you very much for being here. appreciate it. >> thank you: deirdre. deirdre bolton joins us with a look what is coming up next hour. that is you. there you are. >> coming up on "risk & reward," the company behind the life-changing technology, one that is helping disabled people around the world walk again. how is this as well for alternative investment. water, we're all going to be fighting for it in about 20 years time. we'll talk about investing in it. college dropouts, david, are thriving in the tech world. we'll give you some stats. david: deirdre, we'll be
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watching thank you very much. melissa, over to you. melissa: whether on wall street here is what is making money. the comedy "veep" may move production to the sunshine state after filming three seasons in maryland. the show applied for and received tax credits from the state for relocating. billy joel is ready to prove set toppy an know man. ready to surpass elton john of record number of shows played in madison square garden. elton john currently holds the record with 64 shows. joel will surpass him on july 1st. good for him. getting ready to cash in, "sharknado 3", oh hell no. that is really the title. i'm not just saying that. mark cuban stars as president. there are a few other cameos from nascar drivers. even a wwe star. it will debut on the sci-fi channel in july. that should be pretty interesting. as more restaurants turn to
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healthier menu options, there are still places here in the u.s. where you can get a whopping 3600 calories with just one plate of food. it's a dream come true. coming up, list of worst chains for your health. for those that don't like deleting all the email, one major companies is not giving its employees an option. we'll be right back (vo) rush hour around here starts at 6:30 a.m. - on the nose. but for me, it starts with the opening bell. and the rush i get, lasts way more than an hour. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we've built powerful technology to alert you to your next opportunity. because at scottrade, our passion is to power yours. multiple medications, does your mouth often feel dry?
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responsibility, yes, yes it has one, recently removing caramel color from the cold cuts like rose beef and ham. you thought you were eating fresh stuff. it was coloring before, melissa. melissa: wow. from that to very unhealthy eats. food watchdogs at center for science in the public interest just announced its extreme eating awards for the worst fast-food meals for your health. the winner is, drum roll, red lobster. with more on this, is my panel, fox business's liz macdonald. thestreet.com personal finance contributor lore rellyons cole. the author of the small change diet. i guess what you think about this, i start with emac. red lobster, huh? >> i thought it would be a beef item but look at this, melissa. melissa: this is the winner. it looks delicious. >> it's a gut bomb. cardiac arrest on a place. nutritional shipwreck.
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let's go through it. jumbo shrimp. two types of jumbo shrimp. and add caesar salad and french fries. lobsterita. with a drink. that's right. and equal to four days doses of salt. melissa: now, carrie, people out there look at this, i'm eating fish. it is good for me. how could it possibly be this bad? >> well, because this fish is fried. that is not necessarily the type of fish we would recommending. recommending more grilled or broiled. everything else they're adding to the dish is really upping those calories. melissa: is lot of problem portion-size? because people feel like when they go out to eat they want to get most for their money. they're in business. after all why we're talking about. cheesecake factory. that one, louisiana chicken pasta, when you think ordering it is not that bad but enormous. >> it is enormous and what people are choosing. there rather items on the menus that are healthier.
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melissa: you don't look like you eat any of this. i don't think you have ever tried any of these products at all? >> the only time i go into red lobster with my grandfather who loves it. he is actually in pretty good shape. possible to go into the places not pick unhealthy things. what i take issue, calorie count is based on only one cheddar business cut. that is impossible. melissa: can't have just one. emac, surprised to see names on this list. outback is in there one i like to get. roasted prime rib. i love that. ihop, the fiesta omelette. >> with the prime rib, food scientists called it crime rib. take a really long walk home after you eat it. getting back to red lobster. this sun fair. you can eat a broccoli stalk with your meal to bring the calorie count down. they say food scientists purposely loaded up calories in the meal. the problem is, red lobster's
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office this is combo meal. you can choose the items and eat it. melissa: carrie, what is the truth? is this how people are eating? this is calories for the whole plate. i don't know know who could eat whole dishes. >> you would be surprised. some people don't. and there is a lot of people that don't. these menus in all these places are huge. there are options will be really ridiculous when it comes to calories and fat and those items a little bit better. melissa: lauren, let me ask you a financial question, a lot has to do with people don't have as much disposable income. they want to go out and get their money's worth and have a huge portion. that is how they're choosing to spend money. the restaurants give them what they want. >> i can relate to that you pay money for the food. you want to he eat as much as possible. melissa: get it all in there. >> one of the items on the list is milk shake from sonic. i calculated that out. you get 400 calories per dollar on pineapple upside down. if you take it into
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consideration with how many nutrients and vitamins you're getting -- >> i'm not even mentioning that. melissa: i want the dell like factor. back over to you. david: seriously tonight i'm having lobster at a lobster fry. swear to goodness. i will go anyway. melissa: take a jog in the morning. david: meanwhile viacom taking measures to prevent leak of sensitive emails like what happened at sony. coming up why your emails may be about to be deleted by your boss. you have to listen to this.
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>> so viacom has a new policy, automatically deleting employee emails on system after 30 days, just 30 days. comes in the wake of the sony picture hack where thousands of sensitive emails were leaked online. workers have 90 days to clean out their boxes. david, would that work for you. david: not at all you see picture of my office. this is crowded and cluttered.
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this is example of my email. if they delete my email account, i don't know how i would survive. that is after i cleaned it up for the picture. >> my goodness. it was tidier. bolt bowl in the next deirdre bolton. deirdre: so glad to see the picture, makes me feel so much better about my desk. melissa, david, thanks so much. thank you for joining us on "risk & reward." a bionic suit helping the disabled to walk again. a lot of tech founders quitting college. it is not the right move for everyone. we'll talk to a company taking the rage out of parking. ♪ deirdre: we have the top tech stories of the day for you. mark spoon now joining me no
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