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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  July 2, 2015 12:00pm-2:01pm EDT

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deeper concerns than this. dagen mcdowell standing in for neil cavuto. dagen: be afraid, be very afraid. i and dagen mcdowell in for neil cavuto. much to cover today as we go coast to test. job growth struggling, wages not growing, what is next for this country. one new rule for the white house could make it that much worse. is this why air fares are so high? the justice department wondering if there colluding to raise fares lose someone says these charges are not fair. the nation on age. terror front in center as we head into the july 4th weekend. we are all over it. you got to watch because you never know. i might trip on my television and that would be really hilarious. it would be a yard sale as they say. the june jobs report was wildly disappointing.
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if you look at the overall number it came in below expectation. there was no wage growth. you had the unemployment rate falling 0.2%, more than 400,000 people stopped looking for work. the labour participation rate the lowest in 38 years. gerri willis says this is just the beginning of a war on jobs and will get worse. gerri: all work on jobs particularly if you are running a small business. the news we had over the last couple weeks, has been astonishing. more jobs, considers this, minimum-wage, the president pushing higher minimum-wage, this will hurt small business, overtime pay, he wants to double the threshold where companies have to pay overtime, $50,000. that will hurt small business
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and just this week, getting rid of small business efforts to help their employees pay for health care insurance. these are accounts that on their own with no requirement for anyone else, small business operators put money in these accounts so people could afford to get health care. now the irs saying no, we won't have that happen. we might find you $30,000 if you do. is it any surprise today we had to go back two months and revised jobs numbers lower? that more people aren't working and are so discouraged they are not working at all, the lowest number for labour participation in 37 years, not a big surprise. dagen: thank you for that. president obama set to pump up his overtime plan today in wisconsin but republican congressman mark mendez says the president cannot unilaterally force these rules on business. he joins me now. great to see you.
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what can you do to reverse this? why can't the president do this? >> what we have obviously is trying to affect wages through rules which is very troubling. it should be a legislative act, something the president brings before congress but just as you were talking about, this dismal jobs report, this is going to have the opposite effect, it is going to make people lose their jobs or go part-time and we will find all kinds of side effects so relieve this is up to congress to have a healthy debate to make sure we protect the middle class and we see once again the executive branch getting out there can and is troubling. dagen: what can you do? can you force a review by congress? it will take months for the labor department to approve these rules. there is a 60 day comment period but is there anything legally in place you can do to stop that and change it? >> certainly there is. there are a couple different options. one is the review process you
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talked about with regards to oversight and one of those committees i am chairman of has oversight over the department of labour but the other part of that is as we have seen with so many other epa rules, we can attach that to the funding that is coming down, put limitations on fat, to implement those types of laws, we are in the appropriations process. i believe it is time for congress to act. on behalf of the american people, the executive branch versus capitol hill, it comes down to hard-working people wanting to go to work and yet we are seeing someone who has never signed the front of a paycheck making bureaucratic decisions. dagen: how is your job going? you lost the chairmanship of the subcommittee, you got it back, it was like house of cards. you getting the cold shoulder and a cold wind blowing on you when you walk by your fellow republicans on capitol hill?
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>> certainly there is some of that but when you stand up for the american people that is what it is all about. people want something different out of their elected officials in washington d.c.. to me it was about voting my conscience and voting with the constituency in western north carolina, i am not getting a cold shoulder in north carolina. that is all that matters to me. i king we want a different kind of politics in washington d.c.. dagen: will you run for reelection? people now look in and say that is despicable. can you get anybody to eat lunch with you in d.c.? >> in d.c. my colleagues, number of people that perhaps had lunch with me before, it is a shorter list i have great friends. great americans, there is what is best about their constituent. it is that to me to bring forth that case to make sure ibm persuasive and plan to go back
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to work with a 10% effort, not only north carolina but across the country their voices heard. dagen: thank you for being here. i commend us both for not going full hillbilly talking to one another. congressman mark meadows. not the only one and never stops talking, president obama talking up the economy. a state many say is doing well because of governor scott walker. lauren simonetti, charlie gasparino, that is right. is that the best you got? >> that is the best i got. that is the -- my friend john tatum. you can't cover in new york. i am telling you.
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dagen: talked about wisconsin. >> i think scott walker if you look at the top tier candidates he is in there. i will say this. i hate to keep talking about donald trump but something odd is going on. and poll numbers rise. and negative publicity would help them but it is helping in the republican primary and he has taken a lot of air out of the campaigns of scott walker, ted cruz and a l of these sort of secondary top tier candidates. dagen: scott walker in a wisconsin has a lot of mojo in the budget deficit they are dealing with now but he took on the unions and collective bargaining and turned it into a right to work state, the recall election. >> people like to seat of fighter. you couldn't have a more stark
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contrast in wisconsin today where you have scott walker who is a superman of state budget reform. amazing what he was able to do. he took on entrenched interests. the democrat labor industrial complex, he took some head on. contrast that to the santa claus of progress of socialism coming in to the state today, his answer is to give away, he is part of the entrenched interests, he embraces the entrenched interests, he hasn't challenged convention where scott walker took a lot of risk. >> is the articulating, the one problem i have a lot of these candidates, they're technically good, a lot of good records, governor bobby jindal is a good governor, walker was an excellent governor. dagen: could be the jab walker ticket, you never know. >> what is interesting about this, the one person articulating the basic values
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the values of the base right now. i didn't give him a lot, i thought was a publicity stunt but i am still around that camp right now, it is donald trump. dagen: he is a fight. >> donald trump says what you might be thinking the don't have the courage to say and stands by what he says. potential fight between scott walker and president obama is exactly what scott walker needs right now. to be a little more combative. dagen: to take a month and to that point these candidates are not coming out with hard-core detailed plans yet because they don't have to. whatever is they say is going to get them in trouble like donald trump. >> from up business standpoint if you look at his poll numbers his poll numbers among the base in iowa and even new hampshire, i can't believe they are this
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good. it reminds me of ross perot, i'm old enough to remember him running in '91-'92, he imploded because he lost his mind a little bit. donald is such a good showman and part of this is a show. most of it is that he won't lose his mind. >> we are a month from the debate, only one month from the debate, that is where it will have definition around policies and positions take place. dagen: i will wrap it before charlie does his ross perot imitation, thank you, see you later i hope. new york heightening its terror alert. why officials are more alert now than they have been in years, after this.
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dagen: breaking news on ford, ford is recalling 443,000 vehicles because of software problems. this includes a 2015 ford focus and ford escape. the company says no injuries or accidents have been associated but better check to see if your vehicle is in this recall. take it in, get it fixed up, shares are down 1/2%. we are getting news on a heightened terror alert this weekend in new york city. and fbi source telling fox business that the bureau has received credible threats and is tightening security more this year than in years past. all this while more people are supporting isis right here in america. for more on this we go to lt. jason beardsley joining me from columbus, ohio.
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great to see you. i look at the economy today. this is a business show, business network, people are struggling, you have wages that are not growing, people who are working in temporary jobs, part-time jobs, is this the right environment for terror recruiting? >> that is a great question. thanks for having me on. yes. bernard: get the cause of america, ever joy of freedom, prosperity, the commerce you're talking about is a huge part of what the cause of america is and we are sitting back watching, we have given up ground to save these, this is the greatness of america, this is what we ought to celebrate, going into independence day weekend. instead of celebrating a we had too many leaders and people are hand-wringing and apologizing for that greatness. we need to get back into the leadership role and encourage a posterity that comes from commerce and express the ideals of americanism, american exceptionalism. dagen: the thinking terms of leading do you feel comfortable
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based on what you know with the kind of law enforcement that we have seen and the kind of intelligence work we have seen in locating these people are trying to join isis and the multiple arrests we have seen in recent months even. >> i have the utmost confidence in our military, our law enforcement, our intelligence community but make no mistake it is difficult to get in front of behavior. we cannot predict ahead of time the way people will act, social science, behavioral science has been doing that for hundreds of years, we work best when law-enforcement and military, we do swift justice with a moral clarity. once we have that swift justice it sets up a tone. we set up conditions for success by the american military, american law enforcement. dagen: privacy is a balancing act, change the surveillance that the nsa was doing, a lot of discussion about privacy rights on social media from the investigative work that is
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turning up these people trying to recruit for isis. where do you fall on that? would you freely give up some of your privacy to assure safe for u.s.? >> it is always dangerous when we train our privacy and liberty for security. the government, in order, the law enforcement community, to have swift justice with more clarity does not necessarily mean we ought to be piercing the veil, penetrating the veil of privacy and security. our citizens have rights encoded in our documents, the bill of rights, what we should be doing instead of penetrating that veil of secrecy, that privacy we offer our citizens we ought to be using swift justice with moral clarity every time we meet the enemy, we have to make a decision do we want to defeat the enemy would give the more reason to grow? dagen: thank you for being here. former navy lt. jason beardsley. happy fourth. >> thank you, you have a great independence day this weekend.
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dagen: coming up wholefoods, the miss pricing was accused of. we will tell you why and bernie sanders bringing in big crowds. cit hillary clinton be included? lanny davis is next. ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands
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of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet?
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>> i disagree the all prices are high but there is no question what the d.c. a is trying to do is coerce us into paying more money and they don't have that chance to support. >> we made some mistakes. dagen: yes you did. after whole foods' chief litigator told neil the company had not overcharged customers, they admitted it. lauren simonetti on hold foods, paying up. >> in a couple days, that is quite a reversal. if you are following this story,
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the department of consumer affairs looking into whole foods and mislabeled and overcharged customers 4 items, something like $0.80, he did this for years. the company's attorney came on the show and spoke to mcneill. >> you argue trying to do that. >> i would take 0 hours. >> if someone wants to blackmail you they're basing it on something that would be frightening and embarrassing to you, this is nothing of those sort. >> we don't think it is frightening because we don't think we have done anything wrong. >> why just days later is the ceo admitting in some instances undercharging customers, the youtube videos, in front of the fruit aisle, very sincere, three things to -- we will make the situation right and retrain our
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workers. >> if there is a mistake that is not in your favor we promise to give you that i am for free. >> get something for 40, in to police them. to see something wrong and seems pricey. can you check it. dagen: this will create a personal nightmare because being the total time what my husband will hang out with whole foods going through every dish of chopped fruit, every tree cut sandwich. >> did i tell you when i returned -- i had to bring them back. i felt like at cheapskate. bernie sanders, 10,000 people at a rally in madison, wisconsin. supporters going for his ideas,
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lanny davis has more on this, former counsel to president clinton, calling for a political revolution, sounds like what got greece into trouble. >> the whole foods, let's talk about bernie sanders. your reporter got it all wrong by the way. bernie sanders is a very interesting man that i respect greatly, he calls himself a socialist democrat from vermont, that in itself is interesting and i respect him. the crowds are extremely moved, he is hitting on the populist message and disparity message that hillary clinton is mentioning as well. they make is she going further left because of that? because it is resonating? >> hasn't changed a single position in her entire career, she has been a progressive democrat.
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mainly the issue -- dagen: i heard her make comments about wall street and the financial institution and worked much harsher than the rhetoric in the past. the e-mails that were released, she had a lovely relationship with people in the financial industry with steve swartzman, apologize to terry duffy for failing to commit to any event right away, tried to help steve swartzman from blackstone. what she is saying about wall street is opposed to the relationship she has with many on wall street particularly as contributors. >> a chance to take your general rhetoric and get the facts and we will compare the two. let's do facts. you, said she has been nicer, harsher relationship, she favors
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taxing carried interest with schwartzman, which wall street opposes. she favors increasing taxes on the wealthy which wall street opposes. she favors improving the minimum-wage substantially which many people in the business community oppose. when i give you specific facts and say those positions that are contrary to the notion of being cozy with wall street are facts, they're not generalizations. data going back to 1999 her biggest contributors -- have been citigroup. they are in the top, citigroup is number one but then goldman sachs, morgan stanley. is it going to hurt her. is it going to hurt her in fund-raising? i have $45 million contribution, $100 or raising money from wall street? >> you mentioned all but donations and i gave you all the positions contrary to the donors that interest and you ignored
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that. let me repeat. dagen: let me repeat. >> taxing carried interest which everybody who donated in those companies benefit by so if you take money from donors who think -- you take positions contrary to their interests that is pretty -- dagen: do you think it will eventually hurt her in this presidential run in terms of fund-raising from them? has in the past i will give you that, but could it? >> no because they respect her leadership qualities. they also agreed that they need to contribute more because many of these wall street people are progressive democrats who are very wealthy. they don't like being paid higher taxes. bill clinton had best line of all. i am now very substantial in my income, increase my taxes. lot of people on wall street agree with that. dagen: i want to ask about more e-mails, 25 e-mails released so far were deemed classified despite secretary clinton saying
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she never sent a classified e-mail on her personal e-mail. what do you make of that? >> you characterize that inaccurately. dagen: that was as straight as i could be. >> i am not saying you personally are responsible but it is inaccurate to say that she send any e-mails that were classified. since the e-mails were sent those e-mails may have been posed factow regarded as i don't know what level of classification so i need to figure this out too but nothing king knowingly did and all she ever said. of something was done after the e-mails were sent where they looked at the e-mail instead >> reporter: the status of this e-mail that is not something she knowingly did the dagen: who should she give her first tv interview to really quickly? >> i would love it to be with you. dagen: that is a punch in the bat. i interviewed her with stuart varney and she called him rude on the air. may be need to give her some
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media training before she does her next. >> stuart varney can be tough and he can be fair, maybe he was rude. i don't think he would be rude but as to who should -- ultimately the presidential candidate, she will be interviewed by everyone including -- she did an interview with bill o'reilly when she ran in 2008, really well done and i think she will be interviewed by i hope you get a chance. dagen: it was good to see you. we had a productive conversation. >> whole foods please. dagen: lanny davis, happy fourth. have fun. greece remains in limbo as the bank has a few days before they complete the run out of cash. a live report from ashley webster next.
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>> is facebook considering bid for twitter? charlie gasparino has this story for us. >> give credit where credit is due. it is recode in a com today about mark zuckerberg a reporter who wrote today that zuckerberg would once thought about make it a bid for twitter which is as you know, in the dumps it was a private company u now a public company facing major issues. he's now once again, with thinking of buying twitter. we should point out that fox business first to report that twitter following mr. castillo departure announced departure that investment banks that cover twitter say prm is once again
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open to a potential bid and that is why on slow news day like today you have social media buzz. a lot of buzz on wall street, this deal that twitter could be in play right now. takes two to tango mr. dorsey zach dorsey as of today is ceo of twitter. he's going to have to sell it. price will have to be right. trading small pop out of the recode today. recode if you don't know is a popular and influential blog. >> all things -- went on there. >> full disclosure which was a good friend of mine. old colleague of mine. so at "the wall street journal," a lot of admiration they know that space so saying that zuckerberg is interested in twitter again i take it to the bank. takes two to tango. i can tell you from my investment banks sources that they say twitter is open, open to a potential deal.
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but don't know the price if it is trading 5 a share right now. you would think market cap is something like between 25 and a $30 billion. you want a premium on that. has to be somebody to pay at least $40 billion you would think, right? only a couple of places that can do that and tech land apple is one, obviously, facebook is another. google is another. those are the firms, though, companies with the cash that can do it with cash. you know, facebook if it went to facebook, there would, obviously, be an antitrust issue. >> less so with apple i think. >> less so with google. but you know, maybe not -- i mean you know so much is opening up in social media right now. so who knows. so this is a story to watch you heard it first here on fox business, you would know. >> you have to stick around because next hour charlie will be back with birth boomers. >> aren't you excited about hosting? >> extremely, extremely excited. >> bringing a segment. angry old people made me look young. >> thank you.
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you're looking really young today. >> thank you charlie charlie you look good. see you in an hour of state of greece in limbo. ahead of the referendum vote but banks could run out of money before that. to ashley webster in athens with the latest. ashley. reporter: yeah, hi, yeah they could run out of the money within next couple of days long lines, people trying to get in. long line at atm senior citizens are suffering and now could be a food shortage kicking in next week, basic commodities meat, rice beanings those type of things because greece importers don't have money to pay their suppliers because banks are basically closed and they can't get any access to cash. so all of that is ramping up the tension and a the desire to get something done as we head towards that referendum on sunday. just three days away and imf had an analysis of where greece stands in its finances this was bear in mind before it missed that payment due to the imf this is in default they came up with
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this brilliant -- recap say they need debt relief no kidding. also says it needs discountinged interest rates to get out of this mess. longer repayment periods and a 56 billion dollars in new financing through 2018 in other words everything realready knew they need debt relief and long-term loans with low interest rates. the question is, who is going to give it to them? >> exactly, ashley really quickly. yesterday i thinking as of yesterday banks in greece had about $1 billion euros in cash left. when the banks run out of that, and they don't get a higher relief amount from the imf do they have to print to stay open? no, that is a very good question if they run out banks shut down and people have to make due with with what they've got until
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another solution is come up with which would have to be either dropping out of the eurozone or, you know, bowing down to those requirements that are being asked by the euro, and you know better hide your cash under the bed. desperate situation. >> thank you so much. terrific reporting you're amazing. and have a great fourth. i know you're in athens but enred, white, and blue this week the world's debt problem is front and center ashley is laying out what greece is facing but what about puerto rico, illinois, chicago, what about us? joining me from washington, d.c. former imf official. desmond how worried should we be in terms of our own finances again not greece today. but how long before we are? >> well we might not be greece today. but puerto rico certainly does look like greece. they've just come out indicating that they need to restructure something like 73 billion
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dollars of debt. this would be the largest use for bankruptcy to put that in perspective detroit when they went bust they have $7 billion on the line. so there are things that we've got to worry about. >> but we never worry about it, politicians don't worries about it. governments don't worry about it. the lenders don't worry about it until it is too late to actually address it. until the borrower is flat on its back. >> yeah, that is the case sadly. that is what we're seeing now in greece, that's the fact that they haven't dealt with it for all of these years, to reach a point where creditors have more money and run out of money and a it can be pretty catastrophic. you're not in a space near that position, that in greece, the ratio is 180%, united states we're with at about 100. paces that you have to worry about right now are places like
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italy and japan where the ratios will already very high and they've got in growth. >> yet japan is i think it is about 250% debt to gdp but japan has been running debt levels like that for yearses and years and economy struggles, but again it is not going broke. >> that's true. that they've struggled with these high levels of debt but that doesn't mean that it has sustainable. japan is now entering into a new phase with population getting very old. they're not saving so much. they're going to become a lot more dependent on foreigners to finance them, an they're still running a very big project diseflt. so japan's day of reckoning will come an probably take manifest itself with the collapse in the value of the n. >> and make greece look like a pip squeak in the grand scheme of things good to see you. >> you too. former ims official happy fourth of july is weekend. enjoy. >> same to you.
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>> coming up, are airlines working together colluding to keep ticket prices high? the justice department is on the case. more, next.
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>> airlines stock taking a hit as the justice probes airlines on cliewg, you can see the losses here there were already way down so far this year. and again hit even hard or. travel expert lee says airlines are working together to crew us. dave manny says it is far from collusion. dave to you first. why isn't this collusion, just good business? >> all businessmen have to look at the market environment that they work in. and gather as much information as they can. it so happens that the article industry is one of the places where it is easiest to see where
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there's the most publicly available information via every website. via orbits every pricing mechanism you can see in the marketplace. you know what your competitor policies are and rout schedule is and you know everything about them so reacting to it becomes relatively simple compared to other less publicly available information industries. so it is easy to say gee it look like they're acting in concert, in fact, what they're doing is reacting to great gobs of publicly valuable information, and making rational business decisions about it. >> lee it look like justice department is concerned about these airlines cutting back on their growth plans to add capacity even though capacity will be up in the third quarter. about five and a half%, but wouldn't the justice department have to have knowledge that they were communicating with one other to prove collusion? >> well i'm not a lawyer but i know that collusion is difficult to prove. so it isage interesting charge. but i think it would be hard to
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believe that airlines weren't talking to each other especially when you look at prices different flights and when one article does one thing. other one is so quick to match i don't understand if they're competing why they wouldn't try to beat each other's prices especially with the price of oil being down over 30% this year. >> lead to that point they don't have to. because the planes are almost completely full record number of people flying on airline this is summer. they don't need to cut prices because they don't need to fill all of these fees. >> ridiculous construct lee. you can see every airline can immediately know exactly what the next airline is charging for a -- for a flight. they have web spiders crawling that price data constantly. they have entire departments devoted of mathematician devoted to price algorithms to suggest that they're talking to each other blatantly against the law offense. that is ridiculous. >> lee. >> why can't the airlines add
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more flights so there's like mother seats available, prices can go down? why can't people have more choices with mergest there's airlines like you have in canada where air canada rules everything and prices are enormous. >> i'll respond to that because airlines are a business, it is not run by the government like amtrak and they're in the business of making money. american right isn't cheap flight. even though people -- it is annoying to fly. but the airlines are not in the business of making sure that everybody can get to where they're going at the cheap test price possible. they have to get to where they're going safely, and they do that. >> not only that but they have -- capacity. everts let lee respond real quick and then the sound. >> of course they're a business ins i understand that but at the same time they have the greater responsibility that is why government is stepping in because they're afraid of collision. they're afraid that the public -- fly public people like myself and you, and others are getting
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screwed by the airlines and it has been for years nothing that consumers can do about it that is why government is looking into it. dave final word? >> most political department in the united states in administration that is not at all economically sophisticated to imagine that this justice department comes in purely on basis of data o posessed to on basis of what looks good politically for a democratic administration is rather naive. >> that is right. you know you let them merge because they're struggling financially and then you start investigating them that makes sense in this world. lee and dave manny good to see you both. have a good holiday weekend. iran postpone next guest say it is iran has two vulnerabilities which u.s. can exploit on his own. he recollected know he's a former hostage there. he joins us, next. we live in a pick and choose world.
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>> u.s. and iran moving closer to a deal that will control iran's nuclear enrichment program as two countries agree to interim deal, and iran agrees to reduce uranium stockpile next week july the 7th my next guest says tehran cannot be trusted ever. iranian -- hostage in iran don cooke. mr. cooke good to see you heist joining us from washington, d.c. so is any deal a bad deal in your mind? >> not at all a. i think that the that everybody across the board is looking forward to halt the nuclear weapons plan soy wouldn't say at all that any deal is bad. we just have to have the right kind of deal. >> can we get right kind of deal by july 7th?
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the calculus is administration thes to get something done so congress which has a review period of 30 days would then be able to vote on it, review or prove it before the august recess. but do you think as mitch mchas said that we need to take a breath here and take more time? >> well, i'm -- we've already gone past the fourth or fifth deadline extension. i think taking a breath and taking more time just plays into the hands of the iranians who want to stretch out the negotiating period and want to stretch out the negotiations so that they can continue nuclear weapons work. sol if i would like to see a final decision, agreement, and have that opportunity to have our elected representatives make a decision as to whether or not it meets our objectives. >> having been a hostage in iran, something that has been
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talked about recently appoint of debate is that -- the porps of getting a deal with iran because it would be a ten-year deal. over that ten-year period you would potentially have leadership in iran. there was very different fr the hardliners who were still there today. you would have an older generation of people who have more exposure to the wetion. you -- as people age that they've had greater internet access and it would be a different iran ten years from now. others say this merely empowers headliners. what do you say? >> well we've been waiting for 30 plus years for a more moderate group to take power in iran, and last set of elections hard liners are not shy to put in the kind of people, the kind of leadership that the itola and religious leaders want, and i don't see as if i say we've been
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waiting for 30 plus years for them to step aside for a more moderate government i don't see that happening in ten years or frankly 15 or 20 years. absent with some kind of internal pressure. >> with this deal what has to be in it in your mind in order for it to be a good deal for us, the great satan is we're referred to by those in iran. >> well, frankly what it ought to do is absolutely eliminate enrichment because the iranians are enriching uranium for the purpose of building a nuclear weapon, and any degree of enrichment that you permit allows them to move in that direction. it appears from everything that the administration said from the things that have been leaked that we've already given in to the concept that the iranians will up the allowed certain several of enrichment. >> right. >> what we need then is strict restrictions on the amount of
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enrichment they're allowed to conduct and have an absolutely airtight agreement on infections and looking into exactly what they're doing. >> don thank you so much for being here. great to see you we'll see if that is achievable. don cooke take care have a happy holiday weekend. >> thank you. >> next hour everybody buckle up bitter business schoolers are here and they're chasing and they're mad. and they're going to yell. and we're gong to all get excited. the charlie's lids mack and steve lee voice their gripes.
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. >> first, the white house, then the capitol, now the naval yard. three false alarms in a little over a month. are authorities being too aggressive handling possible terror threats? to retired colonel alan west who says we must remain
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vigilant but not reactive. good to see you, welcome back to the program. >> thanks. >> are we being overly cautious at this point? >> the interesting thing is you can't be too overly cautious. one of the things you have to realize on the modern 21st century battlefield where it is not just iraq or afghanistan, right here on our homeland, they only have to get it right one time, we have to get right every time. we don't want to get into the sense of the chicken little effect where we start not to pay attention and the enemy is able to exploit us and take advantage of a gap. especially now that we know we have a vicious enemy such as isis who through the ms 13 mexican drug cartels and other gangs, they're able to funnel across our porous border. >> in terms of the holiday weekend and cities around the country and smaller towns on high alert, on the lookout for potential attacks, suspicious behavior. do you feel confident in what
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the law enforcement authorities have been able to do so far in nabbing people who are trying to join isis, but in terms of the crackdown, what you're seeing, do you feel safe and comfortable? >> well, i think that they have done a phenomenal job. look, i have relocated to dallas, where i live is 20 minutes away from garland, texas where the law enforcement officers there were able to shoot down the two individuals that drove from arizona to here. even though they were on the target list and watch list, we should really increase our vigilance against these individuals and make sure that we are monitoring social media and other type of chat lines and means of communication so that we can try to foil these attempts. we just have to be proactive and not be as reactive as some people may want us to be because the political correctness. >> something i brought up last hour, the economy clearly struggling. you had a jobs report that was
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weaker than expected. unemployment falling 2/10 percent because more people fell out of the workforce, wages aren't growing. a situation ripe for terror recruiting. >> well, of course it is, because you look all across europe and suey the disaffected youth in places such as france and some of these other european countries. when have you these individuals that are in communities that are sequestering themselves away from the greatest society of western civilization, you absolutely have instances for these losers to be ripe for recruiting. that's one of the key things we have to start doing is tracing down these recruiting bases. it's like going after the mosquitoes, you got to drain the swamp. >> colonel, great to see you, have a great 4th of july weekend, a safe one, a fun one.
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retired colonel alan west, thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> yelp is down 11% after being halted after bloomberg reported founders are deciding to wait to sell the online review site. in makers the "wall street journal" ran a story that yelp hired goldman sachs to explore a possible sale. now that doesn't seem to be the case. you can watch the stock it's fallen through the floor, now down 13%. thereabouts. we'll keep monitoring this. yelp taken to the woodshed. meantime president obama to push new overtime rules in wisconsin today. ashley pratt says it's only going to hurt jobs in the long run. joe disagrees. ashley, to you first, what do you think? >> i think this is absolutely absurd, another job-killing regulation from this administration, and this place is undo and unnecessary burden on small business owners which are the back bone of the american economy, and i think what honestly is going to hurt here are the people he's intending to help.
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i would like to think he says he wants to help the middle class. what this will actually do is cause small businesses to cut back hours or cut back staff in order to afford a regulation like this. >> joe, i said earlier, if you can't grow wages organically and grow jobs, you just change the rules and hand money to people. that's essentially what this is. >> no, what this is, is saying if you have an 80 hour work week and paid for 40 of it, you are deserved to be paid for 40 in appropriate manner to a, spend more time with your family or, b, get a second job that makes extra income. if you make $25,000 a year and you are paid for 40 hours in a work week and employer asks to you work additional 40 or 20 hours a week, you're not compensated justly under the law, you have to do that. you have to pay these people for the time. you got to respect the worker. that's what the president is standing up for. >> he's standing up for big labor policies. >> no, he's standing against
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employers abusing employees by making them work a whole bunch of hours. >> being abused by putting forth their own money, they're abusing employees when they're taking a hit especially with obamacare and other job-killing regulations, i don't think so. >> if they don't have the money to pay the worker for the hours the worker is working, they shouldn't run the business. if the worker is paid for working 40 hours and is working 80. they can hire another employee to work the other 40 hours. a full-time worker is a 40 hour work week. >> the administration is positioning this as a raise for 5 million people. it's not going to turn out that way, what businesses are going to have to do is hire somebody at a lower salary, or they will cut your pay and make you work the same number of hours so there's no net effect in terms of what they have to pay you. >> no. >> yes, they can.
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let's say you make $50,000, rather than paying you overtime, they will cut your salary and make you work the overtime and the net effect is a same thing. >> that is an unrealistic view. >> no, it's not. >> you're saying they'll take them down to part-time workers, then? >> or cut the salary. >> they have to pay someone for the hours. if it's an 80 hour work week, they have to be paid for 80 hours of labor. >> i completely disagree with what you're saying. if you're going to ask an employee to stay away from their family for additional 20-30 hours a week, you have to compensate them. >> anybody working every time is working 80 hours a week, that's not true. >> 10 hours, 20 hours, doesn't matter. >> fine, when you are salaried, you understand that when you sign the contract you are salaried at x amount and any amount is a blessing. i don't think it is a right idea. first of all, that business
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model is not going to sustain itself, and these small business owners alreadying way up the was oo for the regulations that are job killing and not only that, but the red tape and bureaucracy coming from the federal government makes such a disincentive for anyone to open a small business, which are the back bone of our economy. >> the affordable care act basically was an incentive to hire more workers. >> i'm a business owner myself, we pay our employees fairly and justly for their time. we don't have overtime at our office. >> we gotta go. sorry, great conversation, ashley and joe, thank you, both. to quote the "wall street journal" editorial page, no free lunch. it costs somebody something, and it will cost jobs and people's wages, that's all. thanks guys, have a great weekend. rick perry speaking, the presidential candidate touting economic plan in washington, d.c. texas adding jobs while many others are cutting them. yet the former texas governor
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is lagging behind a lot of other republican contenders in national polls. so if his jobs record is so good, why is he looking? to jack kemp's son, jimmy kemp, good to see you. i'm going to try to say this nicely. rick perry had his shot, is he seen as an also-ran, texas is struggling with job losses because of the energy sector? >> well, look, it's absolutely way too early to say whether or not anybody is in it or not. the great part of what we have in this republican primary coming up, this competition, and as you know, we've got to have competition in our politics. we have to have competition in the economy. what you all were talking about with what the white house is doing on overtime pay is going to make us as a country less competitive. one of the things candidates have got to focus on is how we're going to create jobs in this country again?
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how are we going to restore our culture of aspiration as opposed to the culture of expectation which the current administration clearly with policies like the overtime expansion are establishing. so rick perry has a great shot because his record from texas is strong, and we need to think as a country about how we can really create jobs, it certainly doesn't happen from the stimulus or the -- you know, other policies that our government has had. >> as a candidate, the republican candidates, some people tell you it doesn't pay to get into the nitty-gritty what your plans are in terms of economic reform and economic reform and prosperi an the race. but so far, based on what you've heard, whose plan do you think you like, and it's solid? >> well, look, i think you do have to look to performance, and we have a number of governors who have proven they
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know how to create and attract jobs. it's not government, it's not politicians who create jobs. it's people. and so i do think that governor perry has shown that he can do it. i think his interest in creating a fair and simple tax code shows that he understands that we need limited government. government is not the source of solution. having a complicated tax code doesn't help businesses grow and jobs created. >> happy 4th, have a fabulous weekend, jimmy kemp weighing in on the republican presidential candidates. >> thanks. >> speaking of candidates, rick perry on fox business live later today at 4:00 p.m. eastern time on "after the bell," you don't want to miss that. neil cavuto's gone missing! we'll get a social media report where he is. turns out he might be grilling, and how much he's paying is
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flat-out chilling. the apron makes neil look very, very slender. the guy who says you're about to pay up for all of that food, after this.
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. dagen: your barbecue is about to get burned, because this year's 4th of july may seem a little pricier than last year. to jeff flock at the chicago steakhouse. what's a sirloin going to cost me, jeff? >> i tell you, people don't seem to care. prices have been rising, back in the kitchen chicago cut steakhouse, one of chicago's most fashionable steakhouses.
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i want to show you something you don't get to see, dagen, this is a chicago cut. what is it? >> a bonin ribeye, 26 ounce, dry aged for 25 days. >> if you look at last year, the prices have jumped up, right? >> they have jumped up, people are continuing to look for the quality and look for the better steak. it's the human nature, the american way to always find the best. >> i'm going to show you something, dagen, you really don't get to see in the dry aging room. and i want to you tell me, david, why dry aging makes so much sense. look at this meat. why do you dry age? >> we dry age because you take the moisture, the water out of the steak which makes the meat become tighter. when you do, that the flavors intensify immensely, every european chef will tell you this is the best way to eat beef or steak. >> when it's beef, it's not
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just steak, the prices for ground beef, chuck roast, round stake, take a look at them all. they're all up. and david, i think the reason, we're getting cold in here, aren't he? the reason for this is foreign demand, right? >> there's a huge foreign demand. >> and on top of it, demand in america, we're eating a lot of meat in america right now. taken carbs out of our diet and protein is the basis for a lot of our diets. >> and there it is, that is what you call a chicago cut. >> bone-in ribeye, dry aged for 25 days. look at that marbling. >> you might not know this, but i'm a vegetarian, i haven't eaten meat in several years. >> you? >> i am more apt to eat your shoe than eat that cut of beef. >> i did not see that coming. >> although the shoe would also be cow, unless it's canvas.
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[ laughter ] >> we got a salad for you here. this is for dagen, give her a salad at least. there you go. >> thank you, so much. i bet you it has bacon on it. there you go. thank you, jeff, good to see you. jeff flock at chicago cut steakhouse. and it's not just steak prices, vegetarians are taking a hit as well. to supermarket guru phil lampert, if you look at cheese, lettuce, potatoes, potato chips, it's all going up, why? >> you are right to say even vegetarians are getting the hit. has to do with the weather problem, the drought in california, we forget that 40% of our produce comes from california. even in new york and in new jersey, but you showed before a picture of neil with the barbecue, he might be asking his guests to chip in. that's what a lot of people are doing, we just did a survey that said people are co-hosting barbecues, asking other people
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to bring food with them, we've got a real problem, and for those people who like organic beef, and i know you don't, those people who like organic beef, bottom line, they are hit worse. because of the drought, the ranchers are not able to put cows out to pasture for the period of time. so they're selling them off. dagen: but with food inflation, it always self-corrects, does it not? people complain about higher food prices, but at some point the drought will be over and the ranchers or farmers will be able to produce more of their agricultural goods, prices will come down? >> i'll agree with half of what you said, when it comes to beef, those prices will come down, it takes a year, year and a half to have more cows. when it comes to the drought, look around the world, we're having more weather problems, whether it's cacao for chocolate or coffee.
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we're going to see food prices going up. dagen: what's cheap her? porkchops are down? >> pork is down, chicken is down, onions are down considerably. i guess we can have a pork and onion sandwich, but you have to put it around lettuce because bread is even up. dagen: it sounds delicious and i don't eat pork anymore. good cooking, phil limpert, can we show the illustration we did? i want to point out this is before neil knocks the grill over and burns his entire neighborhood down. there you go. could the president's recent win with the supreme court on obamacare and on gay marriage earn us a bad new deal with iran? my next guest connects the dots.
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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.
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. dagen: could two good rulings
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force a bad deal, momentum with president obama after last week's big supreme court win, former u.n. delegate robert o'brien says a president going for a trifecta could force a bad deal with iran. i want you to explain, good to see you. >> good to see you, dagen. the president is on a roll and, of course, opened an embassy in havana. we don't have an embassy in jerusalem but now are going to have an embassy in cuba? and he wants to get this deal with iran. that's part of his legacy, and he'll do the deal at any cost at this point. we'll see in the next few days or next week a deal. you'll see secretary kerry coming home with some sort of treaty. dagen: but the president said he would not do that if it was a bad deal. he would reject it. >> hey, remember we had six u.n. resolutions that were passed. those are resolutions that went through the security council and that prohibited iran from enriching uranium, and under the deal we get, iran has the
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right to enrich uranium? we will not have inspections of their military sites where of course they would be weaponizing nuclear material and bombs. it doesn't dismantle their hardened facilities. bunkers they built deep into the ground to do the nuclear research. it doesn't free americans that are held in iran as hostages. so at every turn, this deal is about as bad as it can get, and yet secretary kerry is pushing as hard as he can to get something signed. dagen: mitch mcconnell pushed for more time on a deal. i pointed to this last hour, the urgency is the july 7th deadline, congress gets 30 days to review it, and so they would potentially move on it before they leave. before they all go to recess. but what about just more time? is any deal a bad deal? >> well, that the point, the deal that's being discussed certainly is not a good deal, for example, governor scott
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walker said he'll walk away from it on day one. i don't think the deal will get a majority of votes in the senate. in fact, what will happen is a majority of senators will vote against the deal and president obama will have to veto it. he's going to get the deal done, whatever he has to give to the iranians he'll give them and whatever he has to do politically in the u.s., he'll do it. this is part of his legacy, he wanted to open cuba and make iran an ally and, of course, the danger for the deal to get to the substance of it is we have an iranian regime that kept american diplomats hostage that killed hundreds including the afghan war with the ied's killed american gi's in the field. it wants hegemony in the middle east and we're going to give them a nuclear weapon. in ten years, they can do whatever they want. just from a substantive standpoint, this is bad. and we're going to give them billions and billions of dollars to pursue their nuclear
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dreams and pursuit recent hegemony when the sanctions are lifted. not a lot coming from the deal, but president obama's decided this is part of his legacy, and you know, i think he's going to get the deal, whatever the iranians are willing to give, he's going to take, and i think we'll have a deal soon. not good for america or allies, but i think it's going to happen. dagen: robert o'brien, former delegate to the u.n., great to see you, have a great 4th of july weekend. >> thanks, dagen, happy 4th. dagen: thank you, the bitter boomers are whining, bitching and moaning, who's going to be entitled? who's going to turn us into greece? they'll tell you.
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. .
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dagen: they're here. charlie is gracing us with his presence. showed up late because he is old. has greece taken a page out of the millennial playbook? charlie fast says the protesters are acting a lot like the younger generation here. he is joined by steve lieb, liz macdonald and fox business senior editor charlie brady. we refer to them, this quartet as the bitter boomers. >> by the way, there were lots of millenials in that crowd. did you see them there going nuts and cheering and clapping.
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underscores how absurd the millenial generation is. >> i started out being very sympathetic for greece, i really did. >> you saw all the millenials. >> i did. then i started reading data. i realized greek economy right now is larger than the polish connie. larger than hungary and latvia. four times larger than vietnam, you don't see them waving flags and protesting. >> those millenials are working. that's why. >> let me ask you something, what is the life expectancy of greece versus us? >> this is crazy. this gets me mad. life expectancy, their life expectancy is 8 is years old. >> you know why. >> ours is 79. >> no stress. >> lots of olive oil. >> these people don't have a lot to complain about and they could have made it so much better for themselves. liz and i were talking before
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about this port. basically the chinese have half this port, the greeks have the other half. the chinese are running it twice as fast as the greeks. they're making it a southern gateway to all of europe. now they're going to end up with 100% of this port. what this says to me, if the greeks have been willing to roll up their sleeves -- >> this is port been around since plato. >> plato, exactly. could have been southern gateway to all of europe. they turned this over to china. >> how old is the prime minister, what is his name? >> 40. >> he is a millenial. dagen: no, he is gen-x. >> you're such a boomer. you don't even know what it is. >> his wife is 40 and she is -- >> she is very good about that. >> she is very pro-russian. they're very pro-russian. dagen: there is nothing worse than a young, hot lazy person
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because being hot makes you lazy. why? because if you're pretty, you sit there, nobody will make you get to work. >> you're not lazy. >> i'm not pretty. >> yes you are. dagen: you know how long this take. >> ben stein wanted to give her a foot massage. >> did he really? >> that is bitter rumor. give you one data point, dagen. this is interesting. as pen institute did a poll with millenials and "atlantic" magazine. they found a stunning finding, millenial definition of the american dream is a life of luxury. highest percentage recorded in any age group. that is what i think speaking to the people in greece, they do want to just, not work and have a life of luxury. sorry a bitter boomer giving you -- >> that's crazy. that is like nuts. >> they want dolce vita. >> you're being silent and angry, charlie. why is that?
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>> we have our own unemployment report, 5.3%, lowest since 2008. in greece right now the millenials, half of them are unemployed. half. >> by the way our unemployment report does mask the high underemployment among millenials. >> true. >> now the question is, i don't know this answer. i want to blame president obama, but i know millenials are so damn lazy, is it obama's fault these millenials are under employed? maybe they don't want to work or dig ditches and do stuff. >> charlie, the other thing about the employment report, how many of piece people dropping out of the labor force? that is what you're saying. >> 440,000 left. >> that's are the ones dropping out. i'm it is not me. i'm working like a dog. >> i know millenials served in the military, they are some of the best. >> they're not typical millenials. >> we're talking about mainly ones that work for "national review" and all these stupid
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blogs that attack us for criticizing the work habits of millenials. these are sort of educated elitists of millenials, who they don't want to work! >> speaking of charlie, coming from the survey i just mentioned. watch this. 1/5 of the millenials polled, it was lowest of any of age groups, helping others is their definition of the american dream. astonishing. a lot of millenials think of helping others, being generous, doing charity work, that is not -- >> so many are liberals and want to give back and all this other garbage. >> lowest percentage of any of the age groups. >> it is your generation's fault that young people are spoiled. because you spoiled them. you don't make them work. you let them live at home! >> worked for me. >> ask millenials that work for me. i make them work. dagen: we can't keep people on staff. >> but boomers grew up here
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during kennedy's inaugural address, ask not what your country can do for you, what you can do for your country. that is important. >> now it is ask what your government can do for you. >> do your your country. contrast, israel, one of the most elite jobs you can have is in cybersecurity. >> right. >> in china. in this country, cybersecurity, no one's going in. we don't even have programs in our colleges for cybersecurity. and that is one reason the chinese are literally eating our lunch, learning every piece of data about us. our millenials don't believe in serving this country. charlie, i agree with you, some of the best soldiers in the world. >> i know millenials that served in iraq and marines and special forces. they're amazing kids. i think elitist millenials we run into all the time that work for the -- >> people in greece are elitist. >> a lot of them are. dagen: i will say this because y'all are two weeks away from
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having to go buy burial plots. every time -- >> i candying my burial plot, unlike the millenials, would-be millenials right? i candying my burial plot. dagen: if a politician says we'll touch entitlements, we'll fix entitlements, we'll cult your benefits so we can fix social security, medicare, you lose your minds. >> not me. dagen: ultimately -- >> they will carry me out. my last stop is, whatever, where they bury people. i will not stop working. >> i thought your last stop was here? >> maybe i will die. the way i'm going, charlie, i will probably pass out here. dagen: charlie is the one most frightening actually. cut you before any three of y'all will. whatever you want to say. >> god bless america. >> god bless america. on this wonderful day. >> i don't want you to think
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we're beating up on millenials. there is building full of them, 50 miles from here, west point, they're not millenials. they work hard. love their country. sacrifice. >> millenials that we work with and see, that work at "national review," which hasn't broken a story since bill buckley interviewed cap winering. -- weinberger. dagen: i love you all. i don't think that you're going to buy burial plots next two weeks. maybe couple months, when it is not so hot outside and don't get so the vapors. >> is that southern? dagen: get the vapors. liz, charles, charlie, and steve. >> aren't you glad you did this segment? dagen: i love you all actually. trump getting flak for his immigration strategy. see what former border governor jan brewer thinks. she is here next. ♪
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>> hi, i'm lauren simonetti, this is your fox business brief. twitter facing backlash after company's latest equal employment opportunity report that social media giant employs 49 african-american people out of workforce of 2900. this represents 1.7% of twitter's u.s. staff. twitter's lack of minority employees does not follow nature of its users. pew research center poll shows 27% of african-american adults and a quarter of hispanic-americans use twitter.
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that is compared to just 21% of caucasians. the company's diversity stats drawn outrage from jesse jackson. he says he is disappointed with the social media company. twitter staff shows gender imbalance with men making up 70% of the it is workforce. stay with us. "cavuto: coast to coast" will be back in just a minute.
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>> we need security at the border. we have to stop the illegals from coming in. they're coming in and lots of bad things are happening coming in. not all of these people are lovely, nice people, believe me. dagen: more fallout from donald trump after that comment heard round the world. new york mayor bill de blasio's office now saying it is reviewing city contracts with donald trump, calling his comments, disgusting. former border state governor jan brewer on the presidential candidate now tripling down on his comments. governor, good to see you, should he apologize or say, hey, i phrased it badly. >> when i heard it i thought is what he was saying along with all the immigrants coming across into the united states that some of them are criminals and that's a fact. dagen: but it is not, he didn't say quite that way elegantly or eloquently.
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he talked about rapists and drug dealers and, again, we had governor boring pataki on fox business. he was on with trish egan. he had this to say about trump's comments. >> that type of comment is just beyond the pale and i reject it. by the way, trish, i'm calling on every other republican candidate to stand up to say what donald trump said is wrong and they should repudiate the way i am now. dagen: not the message. it is how he phrased it, governor. do you afree with mr. pataki. >> he possibly could have used or chosen different words, the bottom line, arizona being gateway for a lot of this illegal immigration, we're faced with criminals day in and day out. they're coming across our border and that doesn't include all of them but they need to be arrested and they need to be returned to their country of origin. that is a known fact. we need our borders secured. dagen: but if you were running
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for the republican nomination, if you're running for president, you do want to court latino vote. you want to court the spanish speaking vote, or english as a second language vote in this country. if you talk too tough, on that, you will not get them to vote for you. >> but you know, the majority of those people believe in the rule of law. we have a law. we have, we believe in the rule of law and our border needs to be secured and we won't be faced with this criminal element coming across our border and other borders into the united states. and that is a pure, simple fact. dagen: well, trump was getting tough. will you back him for the republican nomination then? >> you know, i haven't made up my mind yet. we have a good bench, sitting back watching and listening, will make my decision soon. dagen: soon. how soon? >> well, when they all get in and have declared.
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dagen: we have a few more, not many more can we handle? will be like 852. governor, quickly, new report says school standards might impact military base closures, a big issue for you. >> absolutely the report makes it very clear military has 300,000 students enrolled in our school system and they believe the security of the country is based on the retention of those military, they like the rest of us families in the united states, they want to be assured that their children are going to be able to compete globally and with other states. this sends a very strong message that common core is an ideal situation to established which it has been done in 42 states, plus d.c. so that when these families of enlisted, enlistees move, their children are equal where they are headed. dagen: governor, great to see you. thank you so much.
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enjoy your weekend. happy 4th of july, governor jan brewer. >> thank you. dagen: so why are these crowds cheering? because they love "cavuto: coast to coast." that's why. the best of a big debut next. you're driving along,
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and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $423 dollars. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. dagen: it has been one month since "cavuto: coast to coast" debuted on fox business. and what a month it's been. take a look. >> congratulations on your new show. you must be so rich. how many shows is this? dagen: h-o-t, on fire. >> newell cavuto. here i am. >> coast to coast, planet to planet. >> telling me you're going to run for presidency?
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>> at the end of the day we'll make a decision whether we can win. if you can't win, don't do it. you wouldn't be starting this show if it you didn't think it would be success. >> very valid point. dagen: you always sound like mike meyers as austin powers. >> referred to a character and not -- [laughter]. angela merkel said it is thursday or it will be a long week. that is my german. which isn't much better than my scottish. i'm sorry. >> actually have a man crush on two men in my life. one is tom brady actually. and the second is you. everybody ever said that the ink in your pen has been deflated, i will come on your show and defend you, neil. >> you've got a good gauge what could be this horse's future. what is it? >> i feel more pressure and should wrap him in bubble wrap. >> summit to end all summit. he and i were on the same flight
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from hello or religious man, flight from heck. >> it was flight from hell. >> tony little gets me jazzed, yes, yes, you can have your cake and eat it too. you just have to run 60 miles after you have it. food to have you, my friend. >> can't outtrain a bad diet. >> good-bye, tony. it has been great. >> americans want republican, democrat, in between they want leaders that stand up to say how we make everyone better. how we help everyone live american dream. >> i think executive experience is incredibly important whether you have a major piece of surgery. you want most experienced surgeon you can have. >> i trust the american people to understand the american dream is not about redistribution. it is not about envy. it is about growth. it is about opportunity. >> says it is time to have another cannoli. time goes by so incredibly fast. dagen: you own what you eat. everybody else is sneaky. >> thank you. dagen: they're sitting at home, hiding in the bathroom, eating twinkie. >> hello.
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yeah, ring dings on the set. i am who i am. people know what they're getting did they warn you in advance you do this, this is what is going to happen? >> well, they didn't warn me in advance but chairman chaffetz said exactly is the reason for it. >> did you punish him for voting against your will? >> it was a factor but there were a variety of factors in my making that decision. >> don't have a rule like this announcement that you can have kidnappings. >> right. >> you're going to see, isis takes a look at this. hey, great. we made ourselves five, six million. >> all the republicans coming at navel gazing saying it was a mistake to get involved in iraq in the first place? >> i wrote more letters of condolence to americans mothers and fathers than anyone else. it is completely inappropriate for me to look at those decisions. >> the president has every authority under the law to issue executive orders. >> not talking about executive orders. no, no. >> neil, i disagree with you.
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>> this court slapped him down he went too far. you can disagree. >> here is what the court said. >> the court said he -- >> then what? >> i love bernie sanders because he sounds like the cowardly lion in the "wizard of oz." like, oh, oh, oh. >> rick perry seems like a regular guy. you remember the clark kent glasses we talked about? they're working. >> marco rubio, he has vowel at the end of his name. this is a good thing. >> back in 2007 you supported hillary clinton. do you feel disappointed? are you now anti-democratic presidential candidate? >> to me it is all politics. it is trying to get elected with the nomination. >> who is your karn date now? >> will be supporting secretary clinton. >> you still stand by her all these problems notwithstanding. >> everyone has prompts. >> we're about to head off the cliff that promises politicians make to get votes from unions that can't be changed. >> one thing you say about donald i think is great he say
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what he believes. he is not afraid to say it. and you should really talk about what is happening in our economy. i think it could be extremely dangerous. >> i think he is not only the whiner, but generation of moo customers. i don't have a lot of patience coming on tv saying we're moochers. give me a great gift with this i don't think you're a nice man. i'm looking forward to writing your obituary. >> i part of nice guy. i'm a jerk. read my "playboy" interview. >> look at the time. we got to go. >> watch them like video clips of taylor swift. >> that is so cheap. that is so cheap. dismiss the notion that it is just a green thing. i'll be waiting. i'll be watching. we'll be reporting. dagen: i love neil. remember this guy though? he is the governor official that
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partied in las vegas with taxpayer money. guess what? he is going to jail. details after this. ♪ you wouldn't take medicine without checking the side effects. hey honey. huh. the good news is my hypertension is gone. so why would you invest without checking brokercheck? check your broker with brokercheck.
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dagen: remember this dude? remember that photograph? it went viral back in 2012. former general services administration executive jeffrey neely is facing three months jail time for doubling down on spending taxpayer funds on hot tub vegas party. one count of defrauding the government. neely became public face over a flap of lavish spending on conferences at gsa and other agencies. the former government executive spent over $823,000 on a las vegas conference. the judge imposing a
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$2,000 fine, required neely to pay $8,000 in restitution. neely pleaded guilty earlier this year to one count of submitting a false money claim to the federal government. he retired rather than fight dismissal from the gsa two other executives dismissed won their jobs back in civil service proceedings. but it doesn't pay. hot tubs are a bad idea for number of reasons. "the intelligence report" with trish regan starts now. trish: thank you, dagen. we have breaking news. right now crossing the wires we just heard from the prime minister of greece, alexis tsipras. he is saying, and i quote, we are certainly going to stay in europe. no one doubts the country's presence in europe. of course everybody has been saying essentially this vote coming up on july 5th, this sunday, is a referendum, it's a yes or no on whether or not greece is going to remain intact in the eurozone. they need to agree to certain austerity measures.

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