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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  July 14, 2015 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT

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deal with iran oil would be down because of all that extra oil eventually will be in the market. not so. [closing bell ringing] the market changed on oil and changed on all the stocks as it ended the day up. as we mentioned volumewise the market is 10% off where it usually is at this period. that is the 25th day this year where the market crossed over that 18,000 line on the dow. seems that we can't stay up above 18,000 but again, it was a plus day on the markets. melissa: absolutely while markets wait for tomorrow here is everything you need to know now. a deal for iran, the u.s. and five world powers reaching an agreement to curb tehran's nuclear program. >> today, because america negotiated from a position of strength and principle, we have stopped the spread of nuclear weapons in this region. because of this deal the international community will be able to verify that the islamic republic much iran will not
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develop a nuclear weapon. melissa: fox news's rich edson is in vienna with the latest. rich. >> reporter: well, the administration is touting some of the concessions iran has made they're subjecting itself to international concessions that iran could delay an inspection requested by international inspectors by more than three weeks if it desired but there are requirements that iran cuts its centrifuges by 2/3. that iran get rid of 98% of its enriched-uranium. in exchange for that, iran receives a roll back on a handful of financial sanctions, access to $100 billion in frozen assets and something originally not part of the deal, according to the administration, in next five to eight years a rollback on an arms embargo and missile embargo. we sat down with secretary of state john kerry and asked him why that was included. >> we said we would keep it, what we mean not part of it, beg your pardon?
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>> it will terminate though. >> at some point in time it had to terminate because the united nations security council pass ad legislation if iran came to the table and negotiated, sanctions would be, taken away, suspended. >> reporter: the administration is getting criticism from this from the israelis from some arab states, from democrats and republicans and even some democrats in congress. congress will have opportunity to review this deal. they can with 2/3 majority in each house to override it. seems possible but maybe unlikely but again that has to go through a congressional process and it starts now. back to you. melissa: rich, thank you so much for that. david: the landmark deal not met with open arms around the world. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu corn eming the agreement earlier today. >> by not dismantling the program will give unreformed,
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unrepentant, terrorist regime the capacity to produce many nuclear bombs. in fact an entire nuclear arsenal with a means to deliver it. what a stunning, historic mistake. david: here now former israeli ambassador to the u.n., dan gillerman. he is also a fox news contributor. ambassador, senator lindsey graham says this agreement is a guarranty that iran will get nuclear arms. do you agree? >> i fully agree with senator graham. i think he's right. i think that what we're witnessing today is to a great extent deja vu all over again. this is a repeat, nearly exact repeat of the horrible mistake done with north korea. the problem is that north korea is, you know, far less dangerous than iran. if iran is much more dangerous because while north korea acquired nuclear weapons out of desperation, iran is seeking them out of aspiration.
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and it is shocking to me that the world leaders and the people who sat at the table in vienna, across this evil, extreme, fundamentalist, terrorist regime did not realize they're making the same mistake again. and this will be a very costly mistake, not just for israel, but as for civilization as we know it. which iran is out to destroy. only three days before this agreement was reached, iran's leader, shouted death to america. david: right. >> death to israel. and he means it. and, what i expected from the world leaders is to listen to him and take him at face value. that this man is dangerous, and has to be believed. david: would israel, that has so much on the line here, would israel actually attack iran to prevent it from getting a nuclear weapon? >> well, i believe that prime
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minister netanyahu feels that he was actually elected to prevent a second holocaust. and if we feel, and if israel feels and he feels that the iran is actually nearing the point of no return, and acquiring a nuclear weapon, israel will do what it has to do as it has done in the past. israel was condemned for destroying the iraqi nuclear reactor in 1982. now just imagine, iraq as you know it would have had nuclear weapons. afterwards the world applauded israel. david: ambassador, if in fact this agreement guaranties that iran would get the nuclear weapon, doesn't that then guarranty that israel is going to hit iran before it gets one? >> well i hope that before israel has to do it, and has to do what it will do, i hope that the international community, led by the united states, will
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realize it too, because this is not just an israeli problem. this is a problem for the world. this is a problem for civilization as we know it. iran is out to destroy the values we grew up in and believe n therefore i hope very much that the world, led by the united states will realize that before it is too late and act together with israel to prevent this evil regime from becoming nuclear. david: ambassador, this has to be quick but does israel feel abandoned right now by the united states? >> i don't think we feel abandoned. i think the united states is still a friend of israel. the american people share the same values as we do. i think have a very deep commitment to israel's safety and security. i think that, as far as the negotiations were concerned, we were sidelined and i don't think we were listened to. but israel is, you know quite used to being the canary in the coal mine.
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we have been in this case again. i don't think we're abandoned. i think the bond between our people is still very strong. i think congress will prove it pretty soon. david: ambassador dan gillerman, thank you very much. appreciate it. melissa? melissa: the iran deal goes to washington. congress now has 60 days to approve or reject the agreement. house speaker john boehner not mincing words, saying how he really feels about the deal. >> based on what i know now, it doesn't look like a very good deal. i want to review all the facts but but based on what i know, i'm highly skeptical at best. melissa: here now is republican senator dan coats. welcome to the show. what is your reaction to the deal? >> i'm also very skeptical. i've been very skeptical for a number of years as i watched this process unfold. what was originally intended to achieve, that is to keep iran from gaining nuclear weapon capability, has not been
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achieved. as they now are on the path to having nuclear weapons. and whether it is a delay, of course, as long as they keep their word, not many of us can find a way to trust iran to keep its word, based on its past performance. but nevertheless, even if they do, they're going to end up with that weapon. it means nuclear armed iran in very destablized part of the world. there will be an arms race. other countries will not simply stand by and not protect themselves. armageddon can be the ultimate result of something like this, a nuclear armageddon. we need to look at this very carefully. every senator, every congressman, needs to know every detail of this before they make a decision. they need to convey that to their public in terms of the problems we're going to have based on this deal. melissa: so now it is coming your way and the president has vowed to veto any legislation that would revoke the deal.
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what does that mean to you? >> it means we have a president very uncertain about his position to say i'm going to veto it before you even have a chance to look at it, dismissal of congress. dismissal of the american people. learning what is in the deal before judgment is made. we don't need to take the president on the basis of what he thinks this is. we need to look what it really is. we don't need to take the iranians what they say or others. we need to follow through on what it actually is and that's going to be a real task for us and one with great consequences for future of the world. melissa: what does it leave you that you can do? if he says he will veto anything that strikes it down what does that mean for you from a strategy only view? >> one way only to deal with, override the veto, with that we need support from the president's own members of the democrat party. they have a stake. this should rise above politics.
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this could go to one of the more consequential decisions any elected official will ever make. we want to make sure in 60 days we bring everything forward in terms what it does and doesn't do. melissa: you must already be having conversations. do you feel like you have that group that can come together to override the veto? or do you think that will be tough to build? >> i think it will be tough to build because it is one thing to say. you have concerns with this another thing to stand up to your own president as some democrats will be pressured to do. so i think there is a real task ahead for us. melissa: yeah. it is a shame because it really, you know, unfreezes those assets. and we're not even able to go in to really verify what is going on without going to an iranian committee first. looks like a treacherous deal. senator, thanks for joining us. >> thank you. david: that landmark deal between the west and iran could pry open one of the world's last closed markets. u.s. companies, virtually banned
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from iran for decades have their ice on iranian invests. companies like apple, general electric have been in touch with potential iranian distributors. boeing started selling aircraft manuals, just the manuels to the country last year but the doors are not yet wide open. american and european businesses can only move in after iran implements a deal, setting up an uncertain timeline for lifting of sanctions that could stretch until the end of the year. but a lot of businesses chomping at the bit, melissa. melissa: we're learning president obama will hold a press conference tomorrow morning from the east room of the white house. fox business will bring it to you live just as soon as it happens. david: and an earnings alert. yum! brands, parent of kfc, pizza hut, and taco bell reporting second quarter results just moments ago. lori rothman on the floor of the new york stock exchange. how is it doing now, lori? >> hi, there, david and melissa. great to see you guys.
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here are the numbers for yum! brands, 689 cents a share versus the 62 cents. 69. that is down from 73 cents a share quarter year ago. yum! brands posted revenue of 31 -- can't even read my own handwriting. 3.11 billion. that is right in line with estimates we'll call it. you can see the after-hours trade. looks like the bid is a little bit lighter. so some selling there on the report. a bit of a disappointment. the big trouble spot for yum! brands even though taco bell is doing home deliveries in some big cities here in the u.s., really struggling with the slowing economy in china. i will send it back to you. david: they bet a lot on china. china is not delivering. thank you very much, lori. melissa: very true. a new bombshell in the brazen prison escape from the top drug lord. why mexico has more explaining to do. that is just ahead. david: blasting the iranian deal, gop hopeful donald trump saying it's a horrible deal for many, many reasons.
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his reactions coming up. melissa: nasa gets excited about historic rendezvous with pluto. david: you're excited too. melissa: i love this. this party is only getting started. don't go anywhere. ♪
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david: really incredible drama out of boston where the son of a boston police captain appearing in court after allegedly plotting to detonate a pressure cooker bomb at a university all on behalf of isis. the 23-year-old's father actually alerted the fbi after he noticed very suspicious behavior from his son. molly line live in springfield, mass. molly you can't make this up. >> absolutely. we got our first look at 23-year-old alex ciccolo as he stood before a federal judge in springfield, massachusetts. the massachusetts man is accused of plotting an isis-inspired attack of the targets in this specific attack were college students.
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to attack college dorms and college cafeteria to use guns and improvised explosives. he was taken into custody on the 4th of july after according to investigators he accepted weapons from a witness cooperating with the western massachusetts joint terrorism task force. he was arrested immediately with the two rifles, with the two handguns. also goes by a ail line. he is an isis supporter who shared his jihadist sympathies with the cooperating witness. he also shared his support of isis with special agents. in court just a few moments ago, we watched a nine-minute video that showed him being questioned by agents following his arrest where he consistently supported and defended the islamic state. court documents reveal agents found partially-constructed molotov cocktails in his apartment. they witnessed him actually buying a pressure cooker on july 3rds the day before his arrest. he is the son after boston police captain of the sources
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say his father first alerted authorities to a radical change in the younger man who suffered with mental illness since childhood. the ciccolo family released a statement saying while we are saddened and learning about our son's intentions we're grateful that authorities preventer ad loss of life or harm to others. the defendant actually did according to investigators caused harm. when he was being booked in the franklin county jail, he grab ad pen and stabbed a nurse in the head, breaking skin, leaving a bloody hole snapping the pen in half. ciccolo is charged as a felon with possession of weapons. he faces 10 years in prison. when i stepped out of the courtroom the prosecutors were arguing that he should be kept in custody and not released. david: wow, like a tom cans sy novel. molly, from boston. melissa: a few other stories on our radar. new revelations in the prison escape of a top mexican drug lord. the associated press reports that the u.s. drug enforcement
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agency warned mexico last year about a plot to free joaquin "el chapo" guzman. guzman escaped over the weekend through a massive tunnel built from his cell. u.s. safety officials are investigating a second company for potentially faulty airbags. now under scrutiny, ark automotive inflators made for 420,000 fiat chrysler minivans from model year 2002 and 70,000 it 004. kia sedans. it comes weeks after takata agreed to recall nearly 34 million inflators linked to dozens of injuries and eight deaths. the number of americans on food stamps topped 45 for 48 months for four straight years. u the usda says the recent data, that food stamps cost american taxpayers $5.7 billion in april. a lot.
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david: and it is going up. donald trump speaking why macy's fired him and why the deal for iran is bad for america and so much more. they're calling it occupy the hamptons. our panel weighing in on the angry protests outside the house of a well-known hedge fund manager. that is coming up. can a business have a mind?
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melissa: houston which have reiched pluto. that's right, pluto. they flew by the planet nine years after traveling into space. can you imagine? this is the most distant planet ever explored. phil keating live in miami with the latest. phil, people are pretty excited. >> reporter: triumphant day for nasa and usa.
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new horizon spacecraft and high resolution camera rewriting book on pluto starting with this. out ofth world, absolutely best, most detailed photographs anyone on earth has ever seen before of the icy dwarf planet, taken from 8,000 miles away. this is one how thousand times better than the previous best photo by the hubble space telescope on left all pixilated a couple years ago. scientists described this extraordinary accomplishment, a golfer teeing off in new york and making a hole-in-one in los angeles. this is the new horizon team reaction this morning as the space probe whizzed by. >> four, three, two, one, whoo! [applause] >> reporter: american flags aflying, just absolute pried and elation. all day today the space probe has been silent, using the close fly-by taking as much data as possible.
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we'll find out in few hours tonight whether everything in fact did go well. new pluto facts discovered by new horizons. there are a giant heart shape on the ice pole has icy cap and little pluto is 50 miles wider than we always thought before. roughly the size of a planet that fits in between boston and oklahoma city. >> it is truly amazing that humankind can go out and explore these worlds. and to see pluto be revealed just before our eyes, it is just fantastic. >> reporter: here's something cool of the united states is the only nation on our planet to have successfully sent a space probe to eve single earth planet in our milky way. melissa? melissa: very cool. i love it. phil, thank you so much. david: we got them all, all the planets. melissa: there you go. david: here is another check
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where the markets closed. the s&p seeing its longest winning vehicle in five months. the biggest leader on s&p 500 was micron technology, soaring on news of a whopping $23 billion bid from china's largest chip manufacturer. the largest chinese takeover of an american company will likely face a lot of regulatory hurdles but investors didn't seem to care. they were still going for micron. look at shares of amazon hitting a 52-week high today. of course tomorrow is the big day. the online retailer already offering big deals ahead of what it is calling prime day. that is tomorrow. it is on my calendar. i don't know if it is on yours. melissa: my son has been telling me for a week. i thought he was kidding. david: i may not get anything but knowing me i probably will. melissa: that's right. a historic day for iran but what about the rest of us? our panel is here to weigh in. david: no expectation of privacy here today, virtually none at all. one app that won't delete your photos even after it is removed. you want to stay tuned for that. ♪
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if you can't stand the heat, get off the test track. get the mercedes-benz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off. share your summer moments in your mercedes-benz with us. . >> well, assailant landmark deal with iran. under the agreement iran is supposed to reduce its current stockpile of uranium by 98%, supposed to reduce the number of operating centrifuges by two-thirds and an embargo will gradually be eased.
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so let's bring in today's panel. former congressman dennis, she is also a fox business contributor. and first what do you think of the deal? >> well, this is a map. synwinning strategically. but to a point. and of course russia will be winning by sending a lot of weapons. on the other hand you have other arab countries worried about what has happened. israel will oppose in a limited fashion. so the real battle is going to be in the building what congress will do when this project is -- this treaty will come into these doors. >> dennis, doesn't it make you a little nervous about the fact that iran has been so bad about keeping its commitments in the past, and we were relying so heavily on it to keep commitments as part of this deal. >> well, i've read the agreement.
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159 pages, and i would urge everyone is interested to do so. here's what it contains. there are strict metrics that iran must follow to take down any kind of nuclear program they had that could be weaponnized. and the international atomic agency will play a vital role in a iran has done that. and the only way iran can get all of the sanctions regime is to take steps that was set fourth by the joint parties. >> all right, but steven, these are words. you read the russian constitution, the soviet constitution and some wonderful words, but they didn't mean anything because the soviet government never abided by those words. are you worried the same will happen here? >> very worried that the same will happen here. it's not just an iranian thing too. we've been through this before with north carolina. in the 1990s and the last decade. and even with iran, the iea has been active there.
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iran was a treaty member, and we are where we are today because we violated this commitments before. and the iea wasn't able to detect and stop those things in time past. so we've seen this before with and i know north korea. i think as we should conscious with this. . >> well, the satisfies easiest is israel. and we just had the ambassador, former israeli ambassador for the united nations on. he said israel will not allow iran to get the bomb. in other words, he pretty much guaranteed if they violate the treaty in any way, shape, or form, israel is going to go in and hit iran before they get the nuclear bomb. >> here's the problem. iran's leadership is very smart. they're not going to begin by not abiding with the treaty. they're going to abide with the treaty while building something else. they're going to increase the load of the long-range missiles. they're going to increase
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their capacity of antiaircraft, that is against israel, and they're going to continue with their intervention with lebanon and yemen and when they receive most of the cash they want, they will not abide because of some little process here and there. so they're in control of the process at this point in time. >> doesn't that concern you? >> look, i read that agreement. you have seven major powers coming together to be able to fasten something. it took two years. there are specifics in here in a at that deal with iran's capability. there are real metrics for torino meet florida to rejoin the community and punish the sanctions. so there are a lot of incentives for iran to participant and we have to get this agreement a chance to work and i'm hopeful that congress will read it, first of all, and provide its input and then approve what president obama is trying to do here. >> dennis, you give a good point. of course they pass things
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sometimes without reading it. so we'll wait. melissa. >> and something else speaking out against iran. presidential candidate donald trump talked exclusively to our own cheryl. mexico and is falling out with macy's. joins us from trump's new winery in virginia. what did he say? >> well, of course it was a day about wine and grapes and so much more. it was a political day here in charlestonville, virginia. i asked mr. trump, if you were president, trump, how would you handle, iran? here's what he told me. >> i think the deal is horrible. i think the deal is absolutely horrible for us. but it's really, really bad for israel. we don't have the right to go in there and check whenever we want to, anytime, anywhere. we don't have the right to do that. so what kind of deal is that? we know they're going to cheat. we know that. >> okay. so mr. trump does not trust the iranians.
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that was topic number one of several topics they covered today on neil cavuto's show earlier today. also, melissa, we asked them about particular with mexico handled about the comments with. hillary clinton coming at him this morning. so we asked any regrets. here's what he told us. >> mexico is sending a lot of bad people over here. they're sending people that may be in their jails, a lot of great people are here. but you have illegals coming in, they're causing tremendous problems, tremendous amounts of crime, and i've been bringing it out. i respect mexico, their leaders are sharper than our leaders, and frankly if mexico can get away with it, my hat's off to them. >> okay. and finally, melissa, with the topic of macy's, we've had the ceo on several times. here's what he said about macy's and the ugly part of the waiting. he said quote macy's is being politically correct and does bad things for this country
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end quote. on anybody was safe from when it comes trump today. and donald trump tends to say it. he's shot safe and on his way back to new york as we seek. >> he's unlike any other politician. he doubles down on the comment and then insults you again. it's amazing. it's amazing. thanks for doing that. >> yeah. >> david, over to you. >> charley, i couldn't stop laughing. >> right.? >> and uber is making its way around the big apple. and charlie gasparino back with all the details. >> remember new york city is a huge market for uber; right? if they can really crack this market, which is dominated by yellow cabs and the street hail okay? and i should point out that the taxi in the street is now suing the city saying uber is equal to street hail.
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so uber chief advisor david you know that name,. >> from the obama administration. >> so he's meeting with them, they're ramping up their lobbying pressure and we should point that city it officials won't comment what went down and what was exactly discussed but they will confirm that these meetings took place. and this comes as uber as i said is coming under tremendous pressure from the taxi industry in the city to limit its use of the uber app that is essentially a street hail; right? >> and the taxis we should mention had tremendous political poll in the past. they had all kinds of connections with city hall. >> right. >> but apparently less so than uber at this point. >> we should point out that the taxi industry was regulated heavy by city hall. city hall sets the places that's on the -- >> which used to be the value of the medallion has come down tremendously since uber. >> let's point out what a medallion is. you can't get a cab in the
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city, you can't own a cab unless you have a medallion. >> it's stamped on the hood. >> and you're able to pick up a street hail when you have that medallion. and these guys have spent a million dollars on these things. now, the prices have come down. and that's why the medallion financing banks are suing the city. by allowing uber in here essentially screwing around with their investment that the city set. do you see what i'm saying? >> right. it's an interesting case. this is going to go forward. but we do know this. uber ramping up the political pressure on new york city, new york state. and key political guy in the obama administration, and he's uber chief strategist. we don't know exactly what was discussed. i wish i was there, but you can imagine, it's, please, help pickups. >> it's very interesting because the taxi medallion lobby used to be the common guy, the union sort of lobby with democratic politicians. now its turned 180 degrees. >> because uber -- like a lot
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of these -- it's interesting these liberals when they get into the private sector, they become conservative. >> they like making money. i should point out my dad was a cab driver. >> he always has a family member in whatever profession we're talking about. >> as long as it's salt to the earth. >> there you go. wall street protest hitting close to home for one hedge fund manager literally. and why activists showed up to hamptons. and facebook just hit a milestone that took google twice as long as to hit. ousted what and who is making money. don't go anywhere we are beginning a journey, and at this moment,
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disapproving of the fundraiser for new york governor andrew. joining me to discuss this is jamie, and fox news contractor steven is here as well and ceo of advisor and president of the accountability project. thanks all of you for joining us. tony, i'm going to start with you. because you are the political lobbyist hee. what do you think about these guys? what do you think is behind what they're doing because there has been chart that this is more of the fact that daniel is on the board, which is a very successful charter school group that gets charter schools in new york up and running and flies in the face of the teachers union. and that's what the signs are protesting outside his house. so political what is your bet why this group is here? >> well, this is an organization that really galvanized by the teachers unions here in new york. by the way, new york public school teachers make the highest salaries in the
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country. they may not be the top 1% in east hampton, but they're not doing too badly. but when you put their salaries together, melissa, they are actually close to six figures. they make double their counterparts. now, he is somebody who is on the forefrond of the charter school movement and nothing exposes the hypocrisy of the left it more of the education reform. they say they're pro-choice. but not when it comes to kids getting indication and giving the parents of their children a real choice a chance at success. and that's why you have some democrats who support the idea, particularly here in new york having these charter schools and school choice initiatives. because some of our schools fail beyond for kids. >> and the group is called hedge clippers and they're holding up signs that say hedge equals inequality. if they're out to protest is it okay toking to dan's house?
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would it make more sense to -- i don't know protest in washington, protest politicians. he's playing by the rules. >> well, to be fair it's the governor of new york. >> well, that's not what their sign says. their sign says they're against daniel because he's a rich guy. >> he's raising money to specifically influence education right now. and the charter schools that he has invested in because he's a return on investment by keeping education cheap, by stripping education away from public schools. and that is an investment for him. it's a direct form of lobbying. so they're in effect -- they're lobbying for two things, they're protesting over two things here. income inequality and the education issue against andrew. . >> you know, i've got to stop you there because there are a lot of better ways for him to make money. his return on investment almost anywhere else is better. this is a charitable thing that he's doing. steven, do you want to respond?
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>> well, i believe of think there is some relevance to the governor being there. and i don't really shed a lot of tiers for a democratic governor have to take a little guff going to raise money in the hamptons to come back to the rest of new york and governor the way democrats tend to governor. but i think -- this is another example -- i give them props also for having clever scissors and other kinds of things out there with their demonstrations. but they're against success. there are forms that he's promoting through initiative actually make a difference and improve success in education. they're against his success in the marketplace. >> right. >> and ultimately i think that's poisonous in the education industry. >> and free speech, they have every right to be there. if i was daniel lobe i said i would go out there and give them mcmilk and cookies. everyone in the situation has the right to do what they're doing here. so thank you very much all three.
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>> lemonade and cookies. >> indeed. no one wants the middle seat on a airplane when you're wedged in between two strangers. but listener to this. frontier airlines plans to make the experience a little better for travelers. frontier is widening its middle seat by at least an inch wider than those in the island on i'll o -- aisle or window. >> it's not a bad idea but still the worst. >> i know. >> let's be honest; right? you can't get up. you can't lean on the window and fall asleep. the best thing about this story is that the chief marketing officer for frontier, he's even saying this middle seat will become less uncomfortable. so that's not even a ringing endorsement from frontier. but you highlighted some of the stats and you're right. you get a little bit more wid width. so it's about 19 inches versus 18, which is what frontier is
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flying with now. but heads up they say the pitch is a little bit shorter. you only have two inches between your seat and your knees basically hitting the front seat in front of you. they say they're saving space by cutting down galley space. and then they say passengers don't to need stand up in the laboratories. i'm not even -- >> what? >> yeah. that's what i said. >> what? >> so i guess, you know, if you want to, like, stand up and splash cold water in your face in the lab you are -- >> some details are better left to -- >> all right. we go. we love trains, we love cars, and maybe a little bit less frontier. it let them squeeze in 30 extra seats. >> we will see you at 5:00 p.m., deirdre, risk and reward. we'll see you soon. well, thank you very much and speaking of baggage fees might be dangerous for your health. we're going to tell you how one spearmint landed someone in the hospital.
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and how google keeps uploading your photos even if you delete it. sometimes you can't stop stuff from being on the web. here at td ameritrade, they love innovating. and apparently, they also love stickers. what's up with these things, victor? we decided to give ourselves stickers for each feature we release. we read about 10,000 suggestions a week to create features that as traders we'd want to use, like social signals, a tool that uses social media to help with research. 10,000 suggestions. who reads all those? he does.
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for all the confidence you need. td ameritrade. you got this.
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. >> whether it's wall street or main street, here's who is making money. facebook, the market top has topped $250 billion. this is only three years after it went public. for perspective, it took google eight years to reach the same milestone. zuckerberg a wealthy guy. >> wow and now all of you who continue to use the google app. it turns out that if you delete the app from your noticeable device, it will continue to upload your photos to google's cloud.
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david discovered this, and he joins me now. the assistant news editor. tony is back along with fox news analyst, she joins the panel as well. so let me start with you, david. you decided to delete the app, and then you realized it was still taking the pictures from your phone and put them into the cloud even after you got rid of the app, is that true? >> that's true. it turns out as soon as the app came out, i decided to download it, check it out. i decided i didn't like it, so uninstalled the app. and months later found out that hundreds of photographs had been uploaded to my cloud from my phone. so it turns on you the that the upload function is part of android, the operating system, and it's not attached to the google photos app. but that's not necessarily clear from the flow of uninstalling the app and what a user would expect. >> did you complain to them? >> i called them when i was
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trying to write a story about it, and it was very interesting their reaction because their reaction was simple, and it was one sentence essentially which is the back up was as intended. and other than that, they told me how to change the android setting. >> wow. lisa, does he have any recourse because that's creepy. >> really creepy and not knowing what you should be doing and you see those photos out there. recourse? probably not because i bet in the teeny tiny print in the things we sign up for, it says it could be out there and it will be out there. what they should do going forward is have a bigger notice telling people, hey, this is what's going to happen. you can opt out. >> tony, how big of an issue is this? one hand it's creepy. and the other hand i've almost given up. i feel like between my phone and the photos and the apps that i use because i like them and because i need them and they're grating grate for
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sharing pictures of my family all over the place and my kids that i've just given up my privacy and that's it. >> i'm so happy these apps weren't around when i was in college. because it's so concerning. what exists on this cloud that most normal people have no idea what the facts and process is. for example, with this app, you have to disable the function to back up your photos on the android. >> yeah. >> not using the actual google app itself. so these are the areas where you have to remember that we've got to read up before we use them. >> what's your bottom line, your take away, warning for people out there real quake kwik? >> my ultimate warning is that when you're messing around with an app, double-check. make sure that you look at all the settings that you know are there. and, you know, what? go ahead and -- sorry to say. google what there might be -- what issues there might be out there to see if there's something missing. >> thank you to all three all of we'll be right back
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copd includes chronic bronchitis and emphysema. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva respimat does not replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva respimat. discuss all medicines you take, even eye drops. if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain or problems passing urine, stop taking spiriva respimat and call your doctor right away. side effects include sore throat, cough, dry mouth and sinus infection. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. to learn about spiriva respimat slow-moving mist, ask your doctor or visit spirivarespimat.com
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can a a subconscious. mind? a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive?
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>> 19-year-old james scottish boy band piled on 12 layers of clothing to avoid his $70 luggage fee. now, he ended up fainting in the aisle of the aircraft. he did have to pay a fine. so he suffered as well as paying a fine. >> poor thing. >> and deirdre is here with risk and reward. >> i was going to say that's a creative solution. and welcome to risk and reward. a nuclear deal has been reached with iran when the changes of power structure in the middle east. expert, political, and investing analysis coming your way. iran has the fourth largest crude oil reserve in the world. we're going to tell you what the nuclear deal means for energy prices. and we're going to bring you the very latest from technology from google photos, privacy issues, the details on the new u2 streaming service. risk and reward starts now. ♪

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