tv Varney Company FOX Business August 14, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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thanks my guests today. kevin kelly, dagen mcdowell, several times and you said today, you play maybe six or gary smith, jenna lee talking seven rounds of golf a year, is with all of you and we that true? >> that's true. appreciate your time this i mean, this year-- >> you're one of the greatest morning. see you next week. thank you so much. in the world. you're brilliant. check out jenna on the fox news you could shoot par right now, channel today and every weekday you could shoot 2 under right at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. eastern now, i know you could yet, you right on the fox news channel. that will do it for us today. don't. i don't understand that. >> well, because i do it thanks for joining us. i'll see you sunday morning on building a business. i listened to you and listened sunday morning futures on fox. to what happens in the business stuart, all yours. world and a great position sorry we cut into your show. have a great hour. about with what my company is stuart: anytime, don't worry about it. talk about image, hillary doing, i have all opportunities it grow all over so i have to clinton wants to come across as a regular person. make the decision somewhere hold on, that's not going to fly. along the line. last time i played i made six good morning, everyone, news today that bill and hillary have taken a two-week, $100,000 birdies the back nine so i can still get out there and find vacation in the hamptons, but the hole, you know. stuart: greg. until be a working vacation. if there's anything that i she's tapping her billionaire neighbors for campaign cash so better than anybody else in the it's okay. maybe that's why the new york world, i'd do it the rest of my times has jumped from the band life every single day nonator wagon. what. joe biden. we're about to close out. they now say, is considering a i've got to have a forecast for run and maybe that's why the you, greg norman, who wins? rumor mill is churning about al
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>> i'm leaning actually towards gore. he denies he's making a run, jason day. but democrats are clearly in i think he's got to be right there at the end of it, and i panic mode. think i've spoken to him since drivers might be panicking in james bay closed at the british the midwest, the gas price open, going back and forth spike is surging again. one refinery in indiana goes there. i think his determination is going to push through this down and millions pay through time. if it's not jason, i think dj the nose. what's that? question of the day, will will be there at the end and diversity in the work force make a better iphone? honestly, stuart, it's all about the weather conditions here we go, everyone, the and what happens the next couple of days. friday jam-packed highly charged edition of "varney & whistling straits can play easy company" is about to begin. and it's a fairly wide open ♪ golf course, deceptive, but there's plenty of room to hit the golf ball when there's no win. stuart: yeah, yeah, a man who let's start with this. hits six birdies on the back isis fighters reportedly using nine should be playing in a chemical weapons against kurds in northern iraq. fox news citing pentagon pga. officials saying they saw >>. images of kurds with blisters come back. >> i will when i am a he -- consistent with mustard gas i'm back in new york. exposure. stuart: we're waiting for the it could be a game changer in the fight against isis. american flag to be put up in this is a developing story, cuba. we're waiting for it to go back more to come. to the markets, check out the up. john kerry, secretary of state
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futures first thing this friday is right there. morning and we're going to open i don't know whether we'll see him at the flag raising, but he about 25 points down. 17-3, that's the level to look is in havana cuba at this moment. at. you could say that this is history. there's been at best-- 17-3. the price of oil, bounced back a little. the price of gold is also let's bring back augusta maxwell. bouncing back after a 6 1/2 at least the relationships between america and cuba was week year low just the other day, and it's now 11-17 today. hostile and frigid. now it's not. >> we had a face-off with and the big story for you money nuclear powers facing off with today, quite clearly, gas. up another 4 cents overnight. that is a spike. cuba and it's been down the national average is now 2.65. tremendously. it means that we've seen a 7 it's been sort of like a siege cent per gallon spike in just where my community in miami, the last two days. the cuban-american community and it's mostly in the midwest, has been influential in trying that's where the big effect is, to limit and put limits on cuba michigan up 28 cents, we're to see the kind of change we'd talking now just a matter of like to see. ashley: once the ball starts days, two days at most. rolling here in the internet gas prices are level elsewhere world, and going back to 1961. in the country and the cheapest gas by state-wide is south no matter what the old school carolina, 2.17. cuban dictators want, is it too i've got another developing story for you coming fast this late? once the ball is rolling will friday, hillary's e-mail things continue to advance?
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scandal. >> i think it's a generational there are reports that some of the top secret e-mails were issue, the government in cuba about military drones. hasn't provided the internet ashley webster, details, access that you'd like to see, please. ashley: interesting, one of but the cubans are resourceful these discusses news articles about what was supposed to be a secret drone program, the point and flash drives that they use is that the program about to download information and the drones had been talked about in government has begun to open up the media quite some time and the media reportedly revolve some other areas. around what the media knows, what if there's any leaks. and certainly classified and to change the policy, a lot material. the other e-mail that's been of rules made it difficult for targeted talks about issues american companies to export and provide the services. that point back to classified stuart: right. >> the rules are now very clear materials. so it's in the weeds and murky, on the u.s. side it's open. let's not forget the inspector stuart: okay, augusto maxwell. general the one that overseas we're going to keep watching 17 spy agencies says these two for the american flag to be e-mails were classified, top raised in havana cuba, a secret documents any way you historic event. look at it. we'll take you there when it stuart: any way you slice it talking about the drones, it's happens. hour two of "varney & company" is what, two minutes away. secret. >> that's right. stuart: and she should have known it. ashley: yes, she should. stuart: what was she doing on a private server in the barn. >> she's got her defense lined up. a lot of debate in the community what is classified or
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not? i can imagine her lawyer is ♪ already researching and how to defend that. fresher dentures with polident. stuart: judge napitano says if you don't know, ignorance is for those breathless moments. not a plea of innocence. hug loud. live loud. polident. ashley: and lead to-- how can we trust that the number 1 dentist recommended. deleted e-mails did not contain secret information. stuart: a little skepticism. more to come. there's also this from hillary, the supposed candidate of the people, renting a vacation house in the hamptons for reported $100,000 for two weeks, i repeat for two weeks. tammy bruce is here. ashley: lady of the people. stuart: what's going on with this? >> she's renting from a republican and out there to do fund raising, so when you're going to be giving hillary money when you're in the hamptons, it's going to a republican and i'm for that. stuart: the optics of the situation, $100,000 for two weeks.
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>> it's four bedrooms, the family is going there. stuart: four bedrooms? >> i don't know, maybe everything is made of gold. i don't quite know. stuart: is it a mansion among mansions? >> it's not a mansion, but this property is splitting hairs in the hamptons. >> it's secluded one of the draws of the property and they rented it last year, and remember they said they were dead broke after years in the white house, that was fun, but this house is very secluded and very kind of off the grid a little bit and that's why they prefer it. having said that, the hamptons is about to get smacked around with the hillary love everywhere. >> i'm all for people being successful and being able to rent whatever houses they want. her message has been, we're just like you. trump is doing the opposite, yeah, i'm fabulous and i've got tons of money and that's why you should like me. we want some honesty versus in the one:00 on the button. hypocrisy out of the clintons.
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stuart: and the operatics. elitist 2016/, chris christie ashley: the $600 haircut and taking a shot at donald trump private jet. saying that donald isn't >> it was a good haircut and presidentially enough, doesn't she always looked like a drown have the right temperament. many would say the same about rat. that haircut was an excellent the new jersey governor himself. haircut. i was wondering, you make $100 isis more sophisticated, the million. stuart: for $600 it should be. u.s. says they are using chemical weapons on their >> we have to look at her, i enemies. we are talking to a war like the haircut. we should be haircut she got strategist who said that is a game change. one. stuart: and took on a direction more cars at risk of being hacked, more cars, different i wasn't expecting. >> so, look, again, if you're going to do what you're going marks and makes are vulnerable, to do. don't pretend you're not who bmw, mercedes, luxury cars at you are. risk. second hour of "varney and the clintons are paranoid, they company" starts right now. want secluded houses and pre tent to be something they're not. this is what americans don't like. >> that's what tripped up john kerry, remember he was out for the people and then out yachting. stuart: wind surfing. >> and he's a yachtsman, as it is about to happen. well. he does all of these very like, historic moment in cuba. secretary of state john kerry fancy things. stuart: and john kerry was the will raise the american flag guy who bought a very expensive over the restored american embassy in havana. yacht, but did not have it delivered to his home in more on that when it happens. massachusetts. ashley: that's right, that's you will see it when it does right. stuart: because he would have happen. check the big board. had to pay a whooping big tax
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we are half an hour into the on it. no, had it delivered someplace trading session and we are up 44 elsewhere there was no tax on points. it. with at the price of oil, >> that's very smart. stuart: but lost the presidency. dropped to $41 a barrel earlier, >> that's the thing, bounced back significantly to disconnected from the democrats. $42.60 one cents. stuart: and start out on a friday like this. >> pure cold, mania from gas prices another $0.04 just heaven. >> fun for the next year. stuart: i've got this one for overnight. national average is $2.65 you. >> all righty. meaning we have $0.07 per gallon stuart: apple releasing new speights in two days. numbers on diversity as in how most of this is happening in the many women, blacks, asians. midwest, the source of the problem. how many are they hiring in these groups? gas prices are lower elsewhere. tammy, this is a big thing from apple. they want to get out there and those are individual midwestern cities. hire more of the groups of that is what happened overnight to the price of regular in those people. why should i care? i just want a good iphone, cities up $0.25 a gallon. that is a spike. they're the best in the world that's what i want. we have a developing story for i don't care who makes it. you. >> it's, of course, one of the hillary's e-mail scandal. biggest companies in the world there are reports that a and there are billions and billions of dollars, it's top-secret e-mails were about massive. i'm all for affirmative action military drones. in the classic sense of making another e-mail roofers to classified information in a, sure disaffected groups or quote, inappropriate matter. please e-mails force found from
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disenfranchised groups know a random sample of 40, 30,000 about opportunities and asked to apply. stuart: outreach. e-mails to sort through. >> i'm against bean counting senior u.s. officials that it is likely that isis has obtained chemical weapons and most likely and quotas. being technology capable use them about the kurds in iraq this week. transcends gender and race. the institute for the study of war, chris joins us now, why is there's no reason why women and african-americans shouldn't be this a game changer? more involved in the processes. >> isis has always had access to chlorine gas. the game changer is the using stuart: why was the iphone mustard gas and our weapon i designed and created by men? think it, when you have a gas >> look, there are all kinds of-- >> it was. bomb and use an improvised >> that's fine. hey, hey. explosive device that is a stuart: it was designed by x static web and. number of gays, x number of once you put it on a rocket you women and-- >> you're focusing on the have a 30 to 40, range plus company as a whole. you think about it the diversity groups as he says, mustard gas is more lethal than tim cook has said bring a chlorine gas and more difficult to obtain. different voice of perspective to companies. a lot of companies are trying the real question is where is isis getting these chemical to diversify and it's good for weapons. business. you want to get. there are three possibilities, >> the community. >> you want input for marketing recovered from stockpiles left and sales. over from saddam hussein's stuart: corporate image? >> it can be good for business. regime in iraq or they recovered it from the government interior stuart: you know what's good for business? or the worst case scenario is you make the best damn phone in
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they have developed the the world and sell it around technological capability to make the world. on their own. that's what's good for business. >> you need a support staff to either way they demonstrated the do that. you need a support staff and there's more than-- ability to compound mustard gas there's a finance department, a and send it 30 to 40 kilometers marketing department, a sales at their enemies. department. this is a horrible development you need that, and you also need good company culture. for our national security. i'm sorry, but company culture in the one last time the new chemical weapons had been used a can be good for a company because people work harder when breed used by the 20 in syria. they like who they work for. president obama drew a red light tim cook knows this, i've seen and said don't cross that line. this in several companies like nothing happened when they did cross that line. the airlines. ashley: i just want a good it seems isis has crossed exactly the same line. phone. stuart: last word, tammy. >> we've got a responsibility what do you think should be the response of the administration in capitalism i love, in the wonderful world that we have, and what do you think will response be? to make sure when you're as >> what should be the response is overwhelming force to destroy isis. successful as apple you can what will be the response of share that success and reach this administration if they out and means you're going to get mortality, more information, you're going to remain true to form is to ignore have a better return with the the problem entirely. community in general, i see nobody respect our read lines nothing wrong with in at all. it's only good e all right. anymore. stuart: are you calling for a the white house is using-- lot of boots on the ground? no, no, i'm not-- you said the overwhelming force to smash isis. >> a different perspective here we have not done that with our on "varney & company." air power. stuart: what you said first was are you suggesting we go out
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with tens of thousands or 10,000 outreach is good. >> yes. stuart: making opportunity available. troops on the ground? >> yes. stuart: so everyone knows, hey, >> i said all along if we want we've got this going for us, to feed isis we need to take the come on in. lead. mow problem with that doesn't need tens of thousands whatsoever, but if you start of troops but at a minimum giving me quotas, 50% here several hundred or several and-- >> that's different. it doesn't have to-- thousand special operations forces that can accurately call >> no, no, it doesn't have. the moment you reach out and in air strikes. get into other pools you're the biggest problem the american naturally going to get people air power campaign has is its in with that talent and be inaccurate targeting, rely on surprised the talent is out there, especially the locals, security forces, kurdish millennials, they've got it. i want apple to bring jobs back forces, syrian rebels, they are out of china back to the united well intentioned but not nearly well enough trained or equipped states ap start giving jobs to-- to accurately call in american >> that's great, but in the airstrikes. real world they'll look at the until we get accurate airstrikes numbers and allocating percentages. against the islamic state we they don't have to, but. won't defeat them. stuart: i just got it the it cannot be done with air power alone if we wanted to let iphone 6. america has to take responsibility. "cavuto coast to coast" don't do >> apple is watching the it isis will continue to grow program probably and they can and eventually they will be attacking as in europe, the do it both. diversity without quotas. pacific rim or in north america. stuart: do you think at that apple watches-- tim cook, 6:10 where they are. stuart: you are talking about a >> sure, dvr. change of policy, change of strategy, more forceful approach. >> he doesn't sleep. the approach at the moment, i am an outsider but it seems to me
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stuart: who doesn't sleep? >> tim cook. the approach to isis is containment, boxed in, stop them stuart: he's watching. i was starting another story, expanding, just contain the threat. and i was rudely interrupted. if we were to start putting. [laughter] on the grounds that would be a >> the white house using what some would say is an completely different policy, inappropriate image to sell the different strategy. >> if we wanted to see isis, the iran deal on social media. >> taking heat for a tweet. policy we are pursuing in point the white house used an meme of of fact is containment, up a poster for a new hollywood trying to box in isis and movie to push the deal with contained from. with porous borders you are iran. this is the parody of "straight bringing in thousands of prices recruits being trained, out of compton", a hip-hop radicalized and sooner or later they will disburse to their countries of origin. we have literally thousands of group, but this says straight isis fighters that originated out of your. out of uranium. when this fight is the back they're not going to set up boy and we've said this a lot of scout troops. americans love their trucks. they will conduct major terrorist attacks inside europe. and with cheap gas they're buying them. all the things we saw, in paris general motors is boosting production of big suvs and the charlie hebdo attacks, multiplied at times 10 that is trucks at a texas plant with the goal of making 60,000 more what you will see in europe because of fighters returning from the islamic state to their each year. and the industry has a new homeland. favorite letter, h.b.o., the i stuart: real fast you mentioned
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they put this mustard gas on 2 oi-- rockets. iconic children's show is did you say they have a 40 kilometer range? moving there and only available if that is the case, which to pay subscribers. cities or population centers are now within 40 kilometers of h.b.o. is known for provocative where isis is operating? content and it's trying to get to kids content as well to >> it is 30 to 40 kilometers depending on the exact rocket type and all kinds of cities compete with netflix and will be in range. most of the kurdish population will be in range, baghdad will amazon. be in range. stuart: i say this, don't this is a problem for everybody forget to tune in 5:00 and who wants to contain isis. lauren, and sandra and nicole you cannot contain isis, you have to destroy it or it will will be there. gas spiking in the midwest grow. because of one refinery in stuart: you know what you are indiana. why doesn't an issue at one talking about, appreciate you being with us. that box on the bottom left of refinery cause gas to spike in your screen, you will see what one section of the county and is happening live in havana, cuba. we are awaiting the raising of then ripple all over the place. the flag, the american flag at the american embassy in havana. the man from shell oil-- >> three to four weeks before john kerry will be doing that momentarily. we return to what you'd call we are waiting, you will see it when it happens. normal levels or i will stay on national nonthree-handle prices so this is something that's still starting to hit, especially in security, donald trump posting a
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video juxtaposing president obama golfing with jihad the cities like chicago. john. look at this. ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. politicians are having fun on that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. your dime. sixer opposing the two. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on ashley: very harsh indeed. everything i buy for my studio. ♪ the president smiling, hillary dancing with bill. and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands meanwhile an image of the embassy in benghazi burning down of dollars each year going back into my business... in 2012 and jihadi john and his that's huge for my bottom line. tagline politicians are having fun on our dawn while the world what's in your wallet? is burning. donald trump says he has a plan to defeat isis. stuart: stock juxtaposition, very stark and harsh. we saw it. back to the markets, london share prices of apple and google.
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hackers were able to break into both of their apps stores and balancing both companies while revealing another way your information can be stolen and compromise. elizabeth macdonald, you have details on it. tell me. liz: hackers to break into the will you be a sound sleeper, apple apps store and the google store but look at the air when or a mouth breather. they can hijack. a mouth breather! facebook, facebook messenger, well, put on a breathe right strip google chrome, we're talking and shut your mouth. allergy medicines open your nose over time, fiber which i think you have but add a breathe right strip and pow! used, blackberry messenger apps, even sky. it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more. the apple is moving and has been racing to plug the security so you can breathe and sleep. add breathe right to your allergy medicine. hole, the shoe patches to it but shut your mouth and sleep right. they can hijack of information, breathe right and look for the calming scent of content, your camera, and your breathe right lavender in the sleep aisle. e-mail. stuart: we somehow believe hillary clinton with the private server everything is fine, don't worry about it. that won't be hacked. if you can hack into my apps on my phone right here, why can you not hack into a private server?
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i don't want to get away from the central nature of the story. liz: it raises serious national security e issues with hillary clinton and a separate study, ibm's fell 55% of google android phones could be packed the apps. that is the thing we have been reporting on and watching. we will keep your folks updated on this issue. stuart: nothing, nothing. the keyboard thing, make it electronic, it is gone and you lost it. that is another way it is. the moral of the story is right letters. more private, but when you get from, you don't rip them up, burned them. liz: sentimental value, i like it. stuart: i have a typewriter. they prompter says it may be time to take a vacation.
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indeed. headlines. >> the prompter says that. i am telling you that. travel insurance says 135 million of us have not taken a >> we talk about money on the weeklong vacation in the past program and talk about gas year. apparently we are worried about prices that spiked just over falling behind on work or 265. missing the adrenaline rush that the spike is felt particularly apparently comes in the office. taken hard in the midwest. look at those numbers, if you stuart: that is america. squint, you can see it. that's how much gas has gone up this is good. this is absolutely good news. in a couple of days. this is the work ethic in detroit, fort wayne, in that america. i think it is a wonderful thing. midwest area because of one oil >> i agree. refinery in indiana. the adrenaline rush when you are it shut down because of an the airplane heading somewhere electrical problem, could be down for a month. really nice. come on in, a former shell oil stuart: you asked me a question. >> you get an adrenaline rush when you're going somewhere on president, john hofmeister. what am i missing here? an airplane when vacation is coming. that is the real adrenaline. i can't believe in the united states of america, one refinery goes down and tens of millions i feel it on those days. of people pay billions extra liz: when you look your smart for their gas. phone on vacation? what's going on? >> of course. >> the first thing, stuart, is liz: you stress that everybody that most people don't know is around you doing that who are also on vacation? the refining system in the u.s.
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is running flat-out to meet stuart: i don't listen to you. higher demand from consumers. that really isn't fair. absolute flat-out. we're about 6% above a year ago, which is 5% above the >> americans in all give up an average of five vacation days prior year and we're at record the year. stuart: it is not greece, that highs of around 17 million is for sure. barrels a day of consumption by this is america. we work, we like working here. americans from american refineries. >> we work and we love our cars so, you get a big refinery like whiting, which is in a huge gas and we are taking on more debt to buy those cars. demand and diesel demand region new york federal reserve says auto debt has surpassed the one trillion dollars for the first between detroit and minneapolis, and you've got this huge, this huge part of time just under the amount of student loan debt carried. the country that is just stuart: i will break in again. without oil. and so, that affects the price right away. the second thing that's happening is there's more outages than just whiting. >> funny or die. there's a shut down and there's >> is there anyone onstage who the california problem which is unwilling tonight to pledge had as been reported previously. your support to the eventual so people are worried about nominee of the republican party? supply. stuart: why don't we build more mr. trump? refineries. i know why, i don't think we've built a new refinery in america you can say tonight --
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in over 30 years, and i know >> they got the hair right. i want to know what funny or die why, the greens won't let you. that's the case, they won't let does with the democratic. you. >> it is, it's the air quality stuart: wait for that one. every weekday morning, get more at issue, trying to get of this with lauren, sandra and permits, that are in areas that it's very difficult to get more nicole aunt "fbn a.m.". >> we keep talking through my refineries built and it's also water permits. when i was still at shell oil, we did add a 300,000 barrel hits. very sorry. john kerry raising the flag in addition to a refinery, it took cuba. historic moment and not everybody is happy about it. three years and 5,000 permits and this, al gore, remember him? to build a 300,000 barrel rumors that he is considering a addition. stuart: are you kidding me? run for the white house, watch out hillary. 5,000 permits? more varney next. 5,000? >> 5,000 permits, local, state, federal, permits for construction, permits for water management, permits for air quality. permits after permits after permits and that's the at ally bank no branches equals great rates. regulatory regime and that's in texas which is an oil friendly it's a fact. state. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. so, imagine trying to put a refinery, let's say in new ...that sound good? jersey today. not being on this phone call sounds good. forget about it. stuart: you can't, simply can't it's not muted.
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was that you jason? do it. look were part the pardon the it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda. expression, big oil, president hi mi'm raph. tom. my name is anne. of shell oil, you were in the i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. top position right there. why didn't you come out don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, storming and say, come on, because we're here, let's get this thing done. we're here, and we've got your back. legalzoom. we want to supply people with legal help is here. good quality gasoline and sell it to you at a reasonable price, let me build a refinery, did you ever do that? >> i did. stuart: oh, okay. >> i testified in front of congress six times in 18 months, i took 250 shell executives to 50 u.s. cities. we talked to 25 governors. the top ten mayors of the top ten cities in this country, we talked to tens of thousands of everyday people over a period of 18 months, stuart, the american people really need to listen to what's coming out of the oil industriment i even wrote a book called "why we hate the oil companies" to try to get the message out and despite all of this, the obama team would not even talk to me
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about energy. in fact, the president himself talked away from me when i tried to talk to him about the issue of not enough oil, not enough gasoline in the economy during his administration. only go so far. >> it was a face to face meeting and he turned his back when he walked away? >> i walked with him. and i walked with him until he shut the door of the car in my face and just drove off because this is an important issue for the american people and really needs to be talked about because citizens are paying through the nose. stuart: yes. >> that's why my foundation is all about affordability of energy today. stuart: john hofmeister, thank you for joining us, a very good story and you'll be back to discuss this more. thank you, john. all right. new jersey governor chris christie, candidate for the presidency, goes after donald trump and says the donald doesn't have the temperament to run-- what? trump doesn't have the
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temperament and christie does? >> you want to have the conversation later, buddy, i'll be happy to, but until then, sit down and shut up. stuart: we are up but only just. a gain of 34 points. 8 chicken joint shares plunging and i mean plunging, 20%, the number of diners falling for the first time since the company
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went public, down she goes. king of digital make the candy crush game also sinking to the tune of 9%. fuhrer people playing games across the board. to china, listen to this. our next guest says it is big ponzi scheme. you know this guy, todd horowitz appears regularly on this program and trade commodities out of chicago. you are saying essentially that china is a huge bursting bubble. >> exactly what i am saying. china is a big bursting bubble. let's look at where china is. go back to what they call the hidden city, it has been around for a long time. nobody talks about a randal of a sudden a few months ago they are talking about it. those are assets they have on the books, at full value, only -- stuart: got the money the books. at full value and much less. >> they create nothing and they have never been -- no
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maintenance, nothing. than they took copper. they reusing it -- stuart: where scoffeis copper n? >> 230. stuart: what else have you got? >> they are creating new money to payback old debt. we know that never works out. you can't print them up. and continue to grow which will create the bubble. they're trying to make up for the exports they missed out on. stuart: don't they have $3 trillion of foreign currency reserves? they got a big reserve right there. >> of course. do we know all the other products? we only see what they have on
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the top of the surface. we see 8% drop. stuart: i am about to go to cuba but before we go there, what is the end point? if you are right and this is a bursting bubble what happens to me and my money? >> it gets hurt pretty bad because it has a ripple effect, stocks down huge. stuart: commodities down. stocks down big. i am sorry to interrupt like this. appreciate you being here. interesting story. it is about to happen. historic moment in cuba. john kerry is in havana. our next guest does not agree with this opening of cuba to america. america's opening to cuba. you see john kerry making a short speech, moments from now he is going to raise the flag, historic moment. the heritage foundation justin as we are about to seek, you >> chris christie said on greta van susteren that donald don't approve of this, you don't
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trump doesn't have the want this opening to cuba. temperament to be president. >> i don't think his you don't want to see our flag temperament is suited for that and his experience. joy on the embassy. he's got great experience in >> not as dangerous but where we business, but a perfect example if he doesn't get what he wants give everything and the cubans from john boehner, he can't fire him. have done nothing to change mr. speaker, you're fired, their behavior, their repression mr. majority leader, you're and now today fidel is demanding millions of dollars from us. fired. you've got it work and best this is a bad deal again. utilize the skills. stuart: should we contrast that stuart: in diplomatic terms with sit down and shut up. would you say it is okay because we had 50, 55 years of ashley: it's great stuff though. animosity, we are neighbors christie has the governor, and virtually, time to put all the attorney background, but his other egis with dissidents and political prisoners, put that on temperament in the highlight one side, get together, make reels shows he's no much some progress, the castros are going anyway. different than donald trump of what is wrong with that? he loses his temper. >> maybe he needs to lose his temper and maybe help his poll >> first of all they owe us about $8 billion in american numbers. he's been calm and he could use property in assets that were donald trump anger. stuart: maybe, but an odd seized. they are still rifling through our diplomatic pouches wherever juxtaposition, you don't have the temperament, sit down and we go.
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we don't know if diplomats will shut up. oil is the market moving today. meet with dissidents, travel stocks not so much. around the island without east it hit 41 and now it's bouncing german style oppression and back 42.50. okay, what's going on in the surveillance, and we basically markets? you'll find out precisely what abandoned the dissidents, the human rights activists that we when the market opens precisely supported for those 50 years, we two minutes from now. have blown the law. this is not a good well thought out arrangements. stuart: are you criticizing the at ally bank no branches equals great rates. president, the negotiator? it's a fact. that was the criticism over iran kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. nukes. same with cuba? >> we may all the changes. we took them off, dropping sanctions, the president's lobbying, getting rid of the embargo, we released some of their spies. they haven't done anything. they have made no concessions, no changes in their behavior. that is not a successful negotiation in my opinion unless just getting the deal is all
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that counts which seems to be the mode this administration uses. stuart: any moment john kerry, secretary of state john kerry will end is short presentation, he is speaking at the new embassy of america in have and and we will see the u.s. flag rise up the flagpole, first time in 54 years. that is the historic moment. thank you very much for joining us. looks to me like it is a done deal with you won't get your can a a subconscious. mind? way, we won't go back to sanctions. a knack for predicting the future. is a done deal and we are about to see it happen. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. coming up, we will probably see can a business have a spirit? that flag go up. hillary clinton is fighting of can a business have a soul? the 1%. billing herself as a woman of can a business be...alive? the people and spending $100 on a rental home in the hamptons for two weeks. and chris christie says donald trump doesn't have the temperament to run the country. really? what is this? >> wants to have a conversation
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>> 13 seconds to the start of trading on wall street. we're looking for a modest loss, 10, 12, 15 points, that's about it. five seconds from now, the trading day begins. you premium like clockwork. it's been a lackluster week month after month. year after year. thus far. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. and we ain't getting them at the opening bell of the we're yeah... down a point. all of three points. surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. 17-4 is where we are. however, look at oil and gold. why pay for insurance if you have to pay both of them are near six and a even more for using it? half year lows, but bouncing a little today. if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™, we're discussing that one. joining us, ashley webster. you could pay no deductible at all. cheryl casone, lee munson and sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. scott shellady. i'm going to start with you. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. oil, gold, commodities, down then continue to earn that $100 every year. and strangely, stocks have been down at the same time recently. there's no limit to how much you can earn you want to explain this one and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. for us? >> yeah, i mean, the old call traders behind me will tell that a lot of teams the to learn more. commodities will give you an switch to liberty mutual idea about what is about to and you could save up to $509. happen in the economy, in six
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months time. call liberty mutual they're leading indicator and for a free quote today at they've been depressed in price and maybe use the word deflated see car insurance in a whole new light. in price or deflation. liberty mutual insurance. what we're worried about, the commodity indexes saying hey, things aren't as good out there so the governments around the world and the chinese the last few days, they're trying to cheap p their own currency or stuart: tesla about to raise its import inflation and export $40 million through a share deflation. but there's no where else for it to go. this is something to be worried sale, $500 million was announced about and we're not bouncing, the yesterday. really, it keeps grinding elon musk is buying $20 million of the new stock, up 3.1%. lower. ashley: at what point do the bargain uhunters come in. appleby lane live tv service and the next year. we've got iran coming back on there are retorts they could be board here. just too much oil? working on a digital windshield >> it's too much. you know, we have less demand, more supply and some black for cars. stock down slightly. clouds on the horizon. two you mentioned, but another talk about a blast from the one is a stronger doll. past, al gore rumored to be there's no reason to file-- considering another run for the white house, joe biden too, the new york times is speculating. pile in, don't get too excited at being cheap at 42. one bath room for all.
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>> i forgot 18 a barrel in the city of seattle, passed a new law that set all bathrooms 2002. commodities down, oil down, must be a gender neutral, not gold down, stocks at the same everyone likes the idea. more on that shortly. time. waste going on at the heart of it. >> we don't have the global demand. and china aren't using what stuart: let's go with this. they used to and too much fracking in north dakota. stuart: that's it? general david petraeus ran the >> that's basically it. cia. if you want to go with in you capital buy cheap stocks, before that led the successful especially the commodity stocks surge in iraq but confidential information in his desk drawer. like freeport mcmoran and you 4 that he pleaded guilty to a can buy that for the same price crime. christian, a u.s. sailor on a as it in 2008. stuart: long-term you'll buy nuclear sub took pictures on his the beaten down commodity cellphone inside sensitive stocks, oil companies, drillers areas. that is a crime. and hold it a long, long time. he is being charged. >> you've got to give it three he faces a prison term. see where i am going with is the to five years. >> i think it's fear driven. gis security breaches badly punished. there's so much uncertainty out bradley manning, a treasure there. he brings up china and there's trove of secret information. a lot more to the story than when he was charged hillary that. buzz me if you want, i don't clinton said there is so much really care, hey, i'm out, i'm information in cyberspace it deserves to be protected now you
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not-- see where i am going? hillary clinton had top-secret [buzzer] information on a private server >> you should start a game called fear factor. she kept in her private house. i want to talk about gas, look that is far more serious than how much it's gone up in the what general david petraeus or midwestern cities. christian did. he clearly didn't follow her own overnight. the national average, up four guidance. cents overnight. in what has become part of the can you get me the graphic, that's horrendous, that is just course with clinton scandals up overnight. goes the stonewall, underlings detroit up 22 cents. chicago, 26. get blamed, ignorance is claimed you read that off the screen there, that's a horror story. and it is just another political scott shellady, you're in attack. chicago, what are you paying? wrong on all counts. responsibility lies solely with hillary clinton. can a business have a mind? >>. >> it's over 2.65 and i was paying just over $2.40 last week. the problem is that that bp refinery shut down and i drive by it on the way to work that's why we've got the short-term a subconscious. spike and won't last long. a knack for predicting the future. >> the voice of reason and reflexes faster than the speed of thought. reassurance. only for a month, won't last long. stuart: you have to pay it, i can a business have a spirit? don't, i'm in new jersey. look the a the share prices, can a business have a soul? i've got to get the
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pronunciation right. can a business be...alive? el pollo loco, it's a chicken chain. it hit an all-time low, disappointing sales. 18% down, watch out. chipotle. that's a darling for the ♪ market. it's raising prices on beef and pork, 63 cents up, and that's on a $744 stock, that's dead flat. next up, king digital entertainment, the company that makes the popular candy crush game you play it on your phones, most people do, some people do, not many people. nicole, not many people do. nicole: i'm laughing because you said popular candy crush game. and it's popular, but not popular enough. the current bookings, a guide of how they're doing also, you see the stock is down 14%. and then they introduced a couple of new games in case you thought that candy crush was the only thing going for them. alphabety saga. a word game. heard of that?
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probably not. me neither. how about the simulation game, paradise bay, do you play that in maybe not. maybe it's big. zynga, they have farmville. this is a difficult platform and they're working on it. stuart: lee munson, you're rising your eyebrows and heaven knows what. >> this is your classic one hit wonder stock. don't tell me they have other stuff. zynga, don't buy stuff with one particular hit because you're a one-trick pony. stuart: and zynga had phantom pigs and they went way down. >> these are bad stocks, you want something with more meat on them. a couple of years, nobody will remember candy crush. stuart: at 5:00 eastern on the
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fox business network, watch lauren, sandra, nicole, weak day mornings, 5:00, must-see television. the big one, apple, the company announcing delays to its apple tv service. now, this apple tv service, they say they're going to do for tv what they've done for music with itunes. that's an interesting concept, but the whole thing is delayed. >> it's all about content, stuart. exactly right, they need to get deals done with the broadcasters in order to provide the service and they want to provide it half the average cable bill and you can't do it unless you get the content. >> this would be 40 bucks a month. >> yes. >> and you get to pick which tv shows routed through apple. >> through live apple tv. that's how it's going to work . stuart: friday morning, modest in theory. now they say next year, they're going to come out with a set rally, dow's up 43. top box in september next price of oil dropped to 41, month, but that's not the live earlier, bounced back 42.61. tv, the apple-- >> and lee munson is shaking price of gas up -- woe. his head again. up 4 sunniest overnight.
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what's up? >> we have problem with media that's a spike. >> uh-huh. stocks, right? because i still can't find all of my shows on any one stuart: we spoke to former shell president, john, listen platform. and we've been talking about to this. this future where you're going >> the first thing, stuart, that most people don't know is to pick exactly what you want, that the refining system in but just like the refineries in the as you say running flat the midwest, the content is a out to meet higher demand from consumers. absolutely flat out. bottle neck. and apple is big and strong, we're about 6% from a year and they think they're going to, look at amazon. ago, which 5% for the prior do you think at that apple is going to do what they did to year and record highs at music? lightning can strike twice, but i'm not going to bet on it. 15 billion barrels a day. stuart: let's bring in our stuart: so if you have one cultural sage from chicago, refinery go down, up goes the also known as scott shellady. price. would you like to make any and the price of j.c. penney, comment at all for apple tv. investors are hoping that the doing for television what they company has managed to lower its loss. did for apple iphone. there's progress. up 8%. put him on the screen. hillary clinton the candidate there he is. of the people. >> i agree with the previous comments, i think they're going renting a vacation house in to struggle to do that and i the hamptons for a reported think if we could have done it, $100,000 and that's for just we would have done it already. two weeks. this coming from the same i like the idea of disrupting person who promised a battle things and netflix, but i don't the 1%. think they're going to be--
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it is, by the way, a four they can't get the content. the reason why they can't get bedroom home in a behind the content, it's a bigger cul-de-sac, she's running a jonathan they set out to do. campaign for the billionaires i don't think they'll be able next door. to do it. stuart: how about this one, and al gore said to be considering another run for directing this to cheryl, i the white house, his people think. >> yeah. stuart: sesame street, i think denying the whole thing. it was 45 years, sesame street but reports saying he's was on regular television. reconnecting with past supporters just to see if you press the button. there's enough financing on comes sesame street, that's available. how it works. and joe biden expected to now they're going to shift and challenge hillary? we might. it's going to be streamed at there's been no news from him, you via h.b.o. he's on vacation. >> it's going to be airing on but now "the new york times" h.b.o. and let's split the is writing about a potential difference. it will be on the channel and it will also be streaming. run. yesterday it was the journal >> to me the point of the story today it's the times, he was is know the cess-- in deep discussion with his closest political advisors. watch this space. now this. sesame street, it's streaming. it's taken over from an governor chris christie established tv program. new jersey guy taking aim at donald trump. listen to what he said on greta. >> and streaming as an entity-- >> i don't think his >> that's what it's about. >> and other thing that's temperament is for that, and interesting, sesame street was if he doesn't get what he created to serve, you know,
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wants from john boehner, he can't fire him. he can't say mr. speaker, undeserved-- you're fired, you've got to >> under served children. learn to work, and i don't >> underserved and-- think it's best utilized for his skills. stuart: and, adam, welcome to >> i've got to tell the story. the program, republican guy. back in the 1960's when sesame before we get to you, i have street first appeared it was on to tell everyone that the bbc in england. new jersey's governor chris christie says that donald trump doesn't have the right there were questioned raised in temperament to be the the british house of commons president and yet we've got about sesame street, would it give an unfair advantage to him on tape to say sit down children who watched it and had and shut up. a television in the house. that's the interesting that was the question that was question, so what do you make of that? asked in the house of commons. chris christie, doesn't have ashley: that upsets me about the u.k. stuart: that was a long time ago. the temperament, and yet he your comments on sesame street. does that type of thing. i've got a 7-year-old standing >> if nothing else he has another style, he prefers a off set. zoe. the concept that you had to sledgehammer. turn on tv and wait for a particular time and channel. she doesn't know. let's be honest about it. she just says, you know, get it trump is now moved from on demand right now. entertainer to contender with and so, the new generation, they don't have that concept and plus, even people who are
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in impoverished areas, they legitimacy that you can't laugh off now. stuart: now, i don't know what your position is with trump still have a smart phone and but it seems to me as a middle of the road republican, donald watching sesame street than a trump is a nightmare, isn't bad environment in the house. he? >> and they've lost a lot of >> well, he's hard to figure government funding as well. out. stuart: this is another one for you, lee of the let's see if and for all the people who are you raise your eyebrows at this trying to pass their analysis one. nordstrom, the stock is up, i on the donald phenomenon, they believe, they've got strong found out where this is going sales, 4 1/2, 5%. because they haven't seen anything like this before. he checks a couple of boxes. they cater to well-off people. he's an outsider, he tells it like it is, very important doesn't it tell me that the with the american public, and well-off people are doing well he's not afraid to bring it at and nordstroms is going with a time that i think america is looking for answers and not them. >> i understand how-- seeing it in transitional ways. we've got clients, new mexico, now, with that said, stuart, i think this appeal, which is certainly directed at hatred considered upper middle class and wealthy. and fear in this country is they feel better, they want to not going to be long-lived. spend. gas prices are slow and stock ultimately we need to find a leader that's going to bring market in general going up for six years. this is a sign of a top. it without the boomerang of just like commodity prices are unintended consequences. soft. stuart: so you're suggesting is this the last grasp of a that he will fade.
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major signingle? i think when you see the pops donald trump posted a national in nordstroms, you have to say, security video juxtaposing you know, on wall street, when president obama golfing with your boss buys a ferrari, jihadi john. that's the top of the market. you can see what's going on here. we haven't showed you the stuart: interesting. would you sell stocks now in general? audio, but that's benghazi in general? >> here is the strategy, if i had nordstroms who have clients, i want to take the juxtapose with the clintons profits i've gotten for the last two years and hold my core dancing. et cetera. position and take 10, 15% off what do you think about that? the table. this is a great time to >> i don't recall it's a rebalance, just rebalance. little rough, isn't it? >> it's a classic thing, if you that video. but, look, what he's really saying is get the politicians have a stock, sell half of it. out of the way, let's go get the bad guys and get >> in canada, done well with jn everything fixed. well, i line services and i think it's would like to be able to say that, stuart, i would like to think that that's the way it could play, and growth payers. >> it appears to upper middle class and-- >> as you know, it's friday, therapeutically but after he takes off from the clintons sometimes on friday we do after having one moment of unusual things and that's this. i'm going to revisit something political, personal pleasure, from the top of the show, really hides the one fact that favorite guest on this program. no one talks about. here's what no one talks tammy bruce commenting on about, stuart. there's a diabolical part to hillary clinton. roll tape. >> i'm all for affirmative
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the trump phenomenon. action in the classic sense making sure disaffected groups he is criticizing the very system that he benefited from. or disenfranchised groups know the politicians that he gave about opportunities are asked contributions to, the causes to come out and apply. that he supported, much of stuart: outreach. which helped create the >> and that's the reaction. success that donald has had. i'm against bean counting and so both hypocritical and diabolical and so far he quotas. stuart: i'm terribly story, we hasn't been called on it. stuart: thank you so much for rolled the one wrong. joining us. we want today roll the one i'm going to interrupt the interview to look at cuba. where tammy browse criticized hillary clinton's hair and she that is havana, cuba. said that hillary looked like a that is the american flag being carried by american drown rat. that's going far. >> it's a bit far, talking armed forces guys in uniform, and they are about to raise about the one year secretary of the flag. state. she didn't get her roots done we haven't seen that in 54 years. and witness notice these i'm going to go quiet just listen and watch this. things. her roots weren't done and ♪ brushing her hair, pony tail ♪ and no makeup. ashley: the content of that is she paid $600. ♪ and tammy said it's a great haircut. stuart: with unmore story from ♪ me as a youngster. if you had your hair all messed up my mother would have said, you look like you've been
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♪ through-- it looks like you've been dragged through had a hedge backwards. remember that one? >> i do, my mother used it as well. stuart: historic moment about ♪ to happen in cuban. the first time in 50 years our [cheering and applause] american flag will be hoisted ♪ in havana. watch history right here. 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
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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 ♪ . stuart: i don't think many people in our audience expected to see that happening on this day. i've been fernando many, many years, i remember the cuban missile crisis, i remember the embargo, i never expected to see -- >> january 1961 that flag came down. nice touch, it was the marines who brought the flag down in 1961, and there to present the plastic bag to go up today. so nice little transition there. >> presidential contender rubio upset saying cuban dissidents were not invited to the ceremony. they don't want the flag of freedom and liberator to be
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flying in a country that's denying human rights. stuart: mixed feelings about this. >> mixed feelings. stuart: you saw it, and it happened right here on "varney & company," and elsewhere too of course. and up next, the c.d.c. says that school is starting too early for many children making it harder for them to get the sleep they need. deirdre is here with the details. >> there are a lot of high schools that start at 8:30 in the morning and the c.d.c. is saying felony teenagers who need sleep, they need more sleep, that's too early. stuart: wait a minute. the c.d.c. is saying that if you start school, the opening bell is, like, 7:00 or 7:30. that's too early. >> that's too early. they're saying that adults think teens are lazy, but they need more sleep and those who don't, something like two-thirds of teenagers insides country don't get enough sleep. stuart: so they want to push forward, 8:30 they want schools to open. >> in other words, 8:30 is the
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earliest that you should require students to be in school not 7:30 because a lot of people are 45 minutes away, the bus route starts at 6:00 a.m. stuart: and you pass an opinion on this? >> i'm going for sleep, stuart varney, although a lot of us here don't have a lot of experience with sleep. stuart: you agree with that? >> i do agree with it. i'm the mother of two >> okay. live look at havana, cuba. children, and i think 8:30 is we're waiting for the formal early enough, if not the c.d.c. says higher cause for opening of the first u.s. depression, anxiety, type 2 embassy in cuba in half a century. diabetes, people need to secretary of state john kerry is there, about to raise the sleep. >> and you have some some u.s. flag and haven't seen that students start at 7:00 and start later in the day and go in i think 45 years, a long, home later in the day. long time, put it like that. >> and if the teens don't take when the flag goes up. the early shift say the 7:30, you'll see it. 8:00 a.m. start, the younger waiting for that to happen. kids do and they have to wait we're up 5 points, 6 points. at a bus stop in the dark in the winter. stuart: next case. the market is a go nowhere seattle changing its public friday morning thus far. bathrooms to be gender are we going to check tesla? neutral. okay. go. why not.
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>> so, stuart, the next time elon musk is buying 20 million we're all in a fancy new shares. restaurant, i'm going to look i'm not sure whether that's a plus or minus. over and say, hey, stuart, do a look in a moment. you mind passing me the towel? let's bring in augusta maxwell, these are individual bathrooms a cuban-born u.s. attorney. have i got that right. online, small mom and pop >> august a maxwell, actually shops, but it's the lgbt community -- stuart: they're doing this because they don't want american born and my parents, transgender people to be in the bay of pigs, emotional-- offended; is that correct? >> basically -- >> i might have a sense of >> not offended but not uncomfortable which ones to go which side you're on. in. you oppose the opening? stuart: i suppose i am >> no, actually i don't. uncomfortable in a i'm excited about it. transgender -- >> i'm going to be -- no, but it's a generational issue. it's just a single. my parents fought very hard to it's not -- establish a democracy on the stuart: oh. island, were very supportive of the embargo, but i think the >> quickly pushes on to do the community is seeing a different same and new york city and philadelphia and west hollywood and in boston approach and i'm in favor of it. city hall, we have gender stuart: now, i've got a problem neutral bathrooms. with the deal. because i don't think we got anything out of it. so it's kind of a trend. >> right. stuart: did we? stuart: time for the sector >> that's a fair point. report. i think-- i think the idea that the cheryl, what are you watching today? american government should be >> change -- looking at actually travel, it's a negotiating with the cuban friday, i want to look at government regarding what cuban united airlines. technology is really changing
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should look like has been the the way that we travel. focus for many years and hasn't united debuting an updated served the cubanses. version for their app for the i don't think that we should smartphone. have the equivalencesy between it gives you interactive guides for the airports, the u.s. government and cubans better flight tracking, rebooking rebuke cancelation options as well, united is a negotiating. we should set our policy. big mover and also looking at the hotel chains in >> everything else is extraneous, treatment of particular, we're looking at dissidents, treatment of hilton because hilton launched prisoners, repayment of debt. something cool, you can look all of that should be outside of it. at your smartphone, bypass the it's an agreement in principle. we're getting back together, front desk, go to your room, scan the front door and walk that's what you approve it. into your room. >> i approve the role of no interaction with anybody diplomacy. stuart: not go back because you're american born, but dr. needed. fast, simple, easy,. >> no interaction because your manny on this program, phone's being hacked and somebody else is in your room cuban-born, came here when he . stuart: waiting for you. was 11 and he wants to go back >> yeah. exactly. stuart: the good guy hacker and stay there and develop the country of his birth. that took cell control of the do you have that same feeling? >> i've been to cuba about 50 chevy volt, he says the same thing could be done to a bunch of other cars. times, i teach a class at our residents car guys say you columbia law school. might have been better off walking. that's next i'm american and live in my ♪ family with miami and don't hope to live in cuba. i hope to be helpful to that
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process, but i'm an american. stuart: you want to see democracy restored to cuba. >> yes. stuart: how long is that going to take? i built my business with passion. >> it has to be-- >> castro has to go? but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. >> i think that's what democracy is, they said they're leaving. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. stuart: they're going to die off. >> we'll see, raul announced i earn unlimited 2% cash back on he's stepping down and we'll see what that means. everything i buy for my studio. i think the cubans are doing ♪ three things at the same time that are interesting. and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands they for the first time have said that the castros are not going to be in power. of dollars each year going back into my business... and at the same time, they're taking steps within their system to liberate their that's huge for my bottom line. economy. and the third thing is they're what's in your wallet? having this opening with the united states. stuart: and you approve, you like this? >> well, it's marginally better than the situation we had before. cuba, history was about sieges. havana is the most fortified city in spanish colonial empire and a lot of cuban history is about siege warfare and we had it for 50 years and it didn't give us what we wanted.
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stuart: we're a financial pro program and the sugar business so you're a small business expert from at&t? yeah, give me a problem and i've got the solution. kicked out and going back. well, we have 30 years of customer records. and baba cardies, kicked out our cloud can keep them safe and accessible anywhere. my drivers don't have time to fill out forms. tablets. keep them all digital. we're looking to double our deliveries. and they're-- our fleet apps will find the fastest route. the bacardis, they're going oh, and your boysenberyy apple scones smell about done. back, kicked out. ahh, you're good. >> and come on, remains to be i like to bake. seen. >> you've got to get back there with at&t get up to $400 dollars in total savings on tools to manage your business. from columbia university, right. stuart: you're supposed to know something about democracy. that's interesting. you're in deep trouble now. you're in deep trouble now. >> where is the door. >> i'm nicole with your fox stuart: columbia university has business brief. problems with democracy, is the dow jones industrial up 32 that what you're telling me? points right now. i'm not putting words in your 17,444. we're watching oil and gold mouth. mix. >> no, no, don't. right now oil is gaining 15 cents after being in a six and that's not true, what he is interesting in miami when i'm a half year low and gold is up at home with some friends i at three bucks. appear to be like a left wing and gold taking eye look at communist and when i'm at new
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york at columbia, then, places like here, i'm viewed as this the s&p, the s&p down, transport higher and the conservative who opposes the nasdaq pulled back this week. cuban government. take a look at your dow so-- winners, caterpillar, >> are those in cuba do you home depot, but on the think, that are still downside, you have boeing, and vehemently against the verizon under some pressure as relationship with the united well as chevron. states and purists, the older we have a lot of retailers generation? >> i think, absolutely. you know, i think what you see we've been focusing on, and in cuba is ideological thinking nordstrom and j.c. penney came and you have a lot of folks who out with quarterly profit and believed or bought into the good news out of nordstroms, revolution or took actions, profit there, that's a winner, frankly, that bound them to the and also j.c. penney up about 7% after its quarterly revolution that's hard to undo revenues have been on the that. augusta, stay there. rise, with jewelry and is he forea, he will 19%. and we think of you as columbia start your day university. my columbia tie. stuart: stay there for a second. we're waiting for the flag to be raised. that will be a historic moment and we're going to cover it and you will be right there. >> wonderful. stuart: i want to turn to the pga. let's turn to golf, why not? dustin johnson is in the lead, he's six under. he played yesterday in the morning with the wind. by the time the big three teed off at 2:20, the wind was up
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and the scores were lower. i think the story about the pga for everybody is mcilroy versus jordan spieth. we've got a shot. watch this, this is the 5th hole. that's rory. now, that's not a bad shot, i'd say. >> i'd take it every time. stuart: and that is very, very shallow water and wades into it and gets his feet wet, chops out of it. >> his ankle looks fine, it looks good. stuart: do we have greg norman on the line? >> we do, indeed. stuart: how are you? >> i always figured you would have played a lot of shots out of the water. stuart: oh, very funny. it must be friday. humorous. [laughter] all right, if we don't see rory and jordan spieth in the top five on sunday afternoon, this pga is a bust. what say you? >> oh, i don't necessarily agree with that.
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i think there's a lot of great players. and looking at jason day through his first major and dj going for his and justin rose playing well and matt kutcher hasn't won a major and a lot of interesting stuff, plus, it will generate over the next-- if today is it indicator, you hit the nail on the head yesterday afternoon the scoring stuart: nordstrom way up 6% serging on good news, the was higher because of the windy conditions. store beat all of its sales rory and jordan are out early forecasts it's going to do even better in the future. this morning and unfortunately it's the top guerrin in the had a bad day in the afternoon s&p 500. up 6 percentage points. and yeah, they could do what d and look at this. j. did yesterday. nasa testing out a new engine, coast to 6 under. this one could take us to a 5 under and put it up on the mars, the ferrari of rockets, scoreboard. stuart: don't you miss, it it could take us to the red plant in the next couple of decades. greg? you were in the center, one of that's a test. the world's greats. and drones now more of a you still are, i know you don't hazard than ever before. the faa says irresponsible use play much these days. on the rise. don't you miss it? >> look it, i miss the thrill flying too close to planes more than doubled, 650 close of the competition, i do miss calls in the past seven playing tough golf courses like months, up from 230 last year.
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whistling straight and when we the faa says drones should never fly higher than 400 feet. cover for the u.s. open, i this is a story that's developing. really miss the opportunity of and now this. playing chambers bay. the white hat hacker recently it's a quirky looking golf discovered how the hacker gm course, but from a players through its on star system has standpoint, i was dying to play. now found the same issue in first time in a long time i had other cars as well. the desire to get out there and look who is here. gary, fox sports -- no, fox hit it. stuart: you've been on the show car guy. >> i like sports. stuart: which cars can be hacked by this guy? >> yeah, so he made this device called $100 to build, he hacked on star, and when he did, he said other cars are vulnerable, he's managed to god into bmw, mercedes, chrysler, which was already hacked a couple of weeks ago, and also the viper smart start system, which is this aftermarket product that you can put on any car. stuart: seems to me virtually any car. we've had endless stories of cars hacked into. controlling the breaks or this
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or that i think this is a scare studio and i don't think as it should. when i drive out of the studio later that i'm in any danger driving into a ditch. am i? >> it's also a theft issue. this hack, for instance, is really about more about unlocking the cars and starting them when they're in your driveway. nevertheless look it here's the thing. we've said it yourself. we've heard of several of these, these are the white hat hackers that are telling us about them. for all we know that cars are being hacked because if cars are being hacked for real for a crime, they're not telling us about it. stuart: you're telling me that cars are being stolen by this hacking method, that's a possibility. >> it's plausible. >> and investigators aren't going to look at that. >> will car insurance cover this? >> that's an interesting test case. i don't know. we really don't know that it's happened yet. >> right. >> so it's not something we can look at. stuart: your point is, as it gets more sophisticated, more depicted hacks can take place and the scare level rises.
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that's the story, isn't it? >> absolutely. and the big problem, though, is that a lot of these hacks are really older systems that the car companies aren't orchids anymore because they really can't fix them anymore. because the cars not much they can do to go in and build a system. the real focus it needs to be now on the new cars, the new systems, they need to be secure, and moving forward, they need to be developed so they can be made secure every day like, you know, when you log onto your imac and the thing tells you to update it, you're going to have to update your car every couple of days stuart: just stay away from my john deere tractor, that's a lethal weapon. >> somebody hacked into a electronic skateboard the other day, so as long as there's connectivity, there's trouble. stuart: get out of here. an annual meet your shower. this year better than most, we'll show you the spectacular images in just a moment. good stuff (vo) me? i don't just wait for a moment. i watch for the perfect moment. the one nobody else sees.
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moon to light up the sky giving a good vivid spectacle. and colorado governor trying to prove the river is safe again by drinking from the water, when the cleanup crew accidentally released mine waste into the river. 3million gallons. the colorado attorney general, though, says it's too soon to know if the states are being hurt from this school will take legal action against the epa. and the world's most expensive annual car show gets ready to kick off this weekend. adam joins us. >> yeah, i wouldn't mind have $16 million to buy a ferrari or mercedes-benz, but let's talk about something, this is a 1959 hudson italian, now, you've heard about cars that
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are behind away in barns and people discover. take a look at this. this car was behind away in an apartment garage, apartment building garage for several years and they can't find the original owner, that person seems to have disappeared, but it's now coming up for auction. no engine and yet it's still because it's such a rare vehicle, this hudson, it's going to go for $100,000. if you have $100,000, is and, ashley, i know you do, how about a ferrari? we set for record-setting prices for ferrari last year, $38 million, that was a world record, but this 2011 ferrari, $100,000. i think a car deal. i just want to show you one last car, though, because a, ashley, you would look much better in a mercedes sl, and $100 million. >> my wife would kill me if i bought a car with no motor. hour three of "varney & company" continues
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team campaign staff. but the whole operation is rapid and running off rails. not staffers, it is the candidate. what a difference between what she says and what she actually does. she wants to topple 1% but she's in the top 1 tenth of one persian. free college but she charlgs six figures to speak to students. but war on women, but her foundation takes money from governments where women are flubbed. woman of the people, but she's taking a $100,000 summer rental for two weeks in the hamptons. experience, a secretary of state, benghazi, reset was russia, iran, mideast chaos with all of these contradictions with surely no surprise that she is sinking in most polls. democrats are anxious to say the leasting a serious rival joe biden is considering a run. and we haven't even mentioned e-mail problem to her opponents that will get her through the campaign. back in 1974, president nixon
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was in deep trouble. group of senior republicans went to himming and said your time is up. you've got to go. and he went. will we see something similar now from senior democrats? io ron egg, that hillary was a staffer on congressional committee that brought down president nixon. >> more on my take in just a moment look at the big please 20 point higher this friday after the price of isle we hit 41 a barrel bounced back to 42.30. real story here is gas, big spike in the midwest. and a four cent spike nationwide overnight, 2.65 an average. gas has gone up nationwide 7 cents gallon in two days. this is krons traited in the midwest taken out of one big
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refinery in indiana. look at that. major cities all showing a spike literally overnight 20 to 30 cents gallon. again that's overnight. elsewhere in the country, prices still depressed south carolina i believe that is cheapest state on average that is. i think at 2.16 in the state of south carolina. let's gets back to hillary lees. what kind of example she's trying to set all about income equality. helping students, just as she pays 100,000 dollars for a two week vacation rental in the hamptons, of new york. charles faine is here. guess what he's going to think about this. >> i'm going to use word hypocrisy. >> falcon 9 00 cost $5,000 an hour to operate. so you take a trip from kallie to hamptons, and then you settle down in a hundred thousand dollar two week estate and she's
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for the little people. haven't driven in two decades so par for the course. >> it is optics isn't it? >> because we would celebrate this if it wasn't for the fact that she's demonized. i hope people watching the show believe that they and their kids can do this. if you weren't demonizing it saying i'm up here and now a ladder so none of you can get up here. that's what she's doing she's going to saw ladder wherever you are where you, your grandkids will be forever. >> hypocrisy. >> i like to see you pound the table on a friday. >> say that lees. >> couple other suggests back to you in a second. senior u.s. officials say it is likely isis used chemical weapons against kurds in iraq this week. i spoke to chris from the institute for the study of war earlier, listen to this.
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>> until we get accurate air strikes against islamic state we cannot defeat them. so it can't be done with air power alone. america has to take responsibility. if we don't do it isis is going to continue to grow and eventually be attacking us either in europe, pacific rim or god forbid here in america. >> bill, welcome to the program. >> thank you stewart. >> vat gist chris said it is a game changer when you have mustard gas i think on the tip of rockets that got a 40 kilometer range that's a game changer. is it -- >> think it is? >> there are reports that they used chlorine gas against iraqi forces. but i think that reality is, they have access to chemical weapons either from saddam stockpiles or things that they're picking up in syria and there's no question these guys isis will do whatever they want to wherever they want to irrespective of international law or norms, we can't expect to
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see more of this more of these kinds of attacks we don't do something dray mat toke stop them. >> you don't expect another red line in the sand speak they did that with syria and assad and walked across the red line 37 you don't expect another with isis, do you? >> i absolutely do not stuart. i think this administration is fumbling around trying to decide what they want to do in a general level. you know, the guest you just had on or reference a few minnesotas ago he's absolutely right. we have 75% of the aircraft going out to run strikes taking ordinance and going back home without dropping it. we're not aggressively pursuing an air campaign. distinctly kurds are most effective fighters that we have right now against isis and we're barely supporting them. >> okay. do you think that we will put some boots on the ground to guide our aicialght to the right target? >> what we should have been
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doing well over a year is training locals. iraqis, kurds maybe some egyptians maybe some -- jordanians should be treating those guys to call in air strikes i'm from vietnam era there's no rocket science to it. it is pretty basic once you have the ability to communicate from the ground to those aircrafts. we just don't have all of those pieces put together for other foreigners for foreigners to be going in air strikings not u.s. troops. >> do you think the country is behind that kind of thing? i think america is looking at what is going on there. beheadings. burning alive mustard gas, appalling rape and torture running of christians out of the region. america looks at that and says we don't want to be involved in that. we really don't want our guys getting chopped up for that. let them sort it out themselves that's the attitude. you have to fight that. >> well 65% recent polling 65% of americans said we're not doing enough against isis. soening there's a large percentage of americans that really want to see the fight
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taken to them. but don't want to see u.s. boots on the ground so you know, we have failed to get jordanian troops on ground. egyptian troops on ground. saudi on the ground. emirates other armies over there that can be on the ground but this administration has ill pad to bring in all of those coalition forces and have them put their people on the ground with our air support backing them up. >> not a question of failure. do you think administration will want to do that? >> good question. i think they're pretty con tengt right now stuart to just let this muddle along and hope there's no major terrorist attack in the united states while this administration is still in power but we all know isis is just using mustard gas and next time it might be sarin and gas which they have access to all in bashir assad and didn't destroy them as he said he could. i would venture to guess that isis has a lot more lethal, chemical weapons out there they
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haven't used yet because they want to use them against europe, west, or united states and we're going to have that kind of attack at spoant if we don't get off ours cans and really take that fight to them. >> we what are you. bill thanks so much for joining us bill always a pleasure. back to the markets because we're now absolutely dead flat that's a gain of two points on a 17,000 index calling flat. s&p 500 where that flat on the dow, flat for the s&p 500. flat -- up flat. the word of the day like the opening of that movie vietnam what was that apocalypse. the weather tomorrow? >> hot. [laughter] >> how's the market today, flat. flat is better than craziness we saw monday and tuesday. >> look white house who's here we have a government watch saying a lot of information comes your way as investor and it can be too much information. what do you make of that?
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>> i agree to a certain extent. you know there's a thing called efficient market theory. and i had this argument with ben stein forever and essentially says with all affiliate information out there, stocks always act rationally rather because we always know there's a big difference when it a company reports earnings and we see the surface and one does research and looks inside of it. but i do think that investors have become so -- glued to everyone single tick in the market that they become their own worse enemy. you guys are talking about it couple of days in earning support. indicating 77, i think that high for that day was maybe 75 buckings. it is yesterday closed at 54. 20 points to the downside, and two days after a great earnings report. why does that happen? >> it is exasperated emotion on the tape -- >> can't hang a in there. here's the thing, though, more people got crushed than made any money, and why did they get crushed? they sold because someone before them sold. and almost inverse of the greater fool theory.
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more people sell to get selling and instead of someone saying let's go. so about two weeks ago on the show i talked about average holding period in 1960s i would say six years, apparently mid-60s it was eight years people held stocks. they didn't worry about this quarterly minutia stuff they bought an investment people are afraid these days. >> but you have to get out of the trading mentality. inch whech you want to be investor you go to shake shack and rule for 20g years and you brought that stock at $69 when it hits 54 yesterday you were like -- the fact that you remember held up in a fetal position. >> back to the original point, though, charles because of the information we can we have today do we think we're more expert at this than we really are? >> information is not used wisely. it is like if i went to that car show out there listen -- >> no way i would know. adam knows i would have bought that car without the engine. an engine i wouldn't have looked
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under the hood. we get the shiny like it, we don't ever look under the hood. >> if you want more of this i suspect you do watch charles faine show is called making money with charles payne airs week days every weekday 6 fm eastern. you'll be on that tonight? >> absolutely. got you charles, thank you. "don't ask, don't tell" forget tune in every -- 13 hours earlier an you get lauren simonetti, sandra smith and nicole petallides. >> yeah. >> do i have the next story? >> no, not yet. >> hang on. [laughter] >> talk overt top of you, next irs scandal lois lerner calls republican investigators evil and dishonest we talk to a conservative targeted by the irs, watch this. >> i'm a born free american woman, wife, mother, and citizen, and i'm telling my government that you've forgotten your place.
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>> jcpenney stock is up. investors half of the company managed to lose less money. it also has a deal with sephora up 7% from jcpenney. nordstrom up on prediction that store sales will beat expectations later this year. it is the top percentage gainer in the subpoena s&p 500. keeping close eye on the price of gasoline for you. national average a went up 4 cents overnight to $2.65 up 7 cents in last two days. mostly in the midwest where spike is being concentrated and blamed on one refinery shutting down in indiana. which it could be closed for several weeks. now, earlier today i spoke to the former president of she will oiler, roll time. >> the obama team would not even
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talk to me about energy. in fact, the president himself walked away from me when i tried to talk to him about the issue of not enough oil, not enough gasoline in the economy during his administration. >> walked -- it was a face-to-face meeting and he turned his back on you and walked away ?rnlg yeah, so i walked with him. i'm not going to give up. soy walked until he shot the door of the car in my face and just drove off. buzz -- this is an important issue for american people and needs to be talked about because citizens are paying through the nose. >> through the nose because -- all of our refineries in merck are working flat out when one goes down, the supply chain is interrupted and price goes up. we're paying through the nose john tried to confront the president on the issue, turned his back on him, walked away. scott come on in from the chicago -- stage. i know as cme. now john, makes an important point there.
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refinery capacity of america is working full tilt no room for that whatsoever but we can't build another refinery we're not allowed to do it. what's beginning on? >> obviously, it is bad policy and a problem here as you know we have a bp refinery that closed our gas prices not just 20 cents stuart but last night iftion talking to people who saw a 40 cent jump in just a couple of day. so that should tell you right there that there's a problem and there's kind of a problem getting all of that oil through and we can't continue to do that. so why can't we just address that and call it like it is? >> well because i don't think that the greens want us to build more refineries. i don't think they want us to drive more an use more gasoline or cheaper or expense eve. greens are behind this, and i know you're shaking your head but that's why i'm coming from there. how about you? >> greens are behind. but you think also the administration because they know what to do with our money better than we know what to do with our
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money. they know what to do with our choices than we do. over arching trust us we know better than you sit down and relax that irritates me so we need to get american businesses back to money for oil and overall economy because we still aren't firing all cylinders and seeing oil prices going down. >> you can't do anything in america these day you can't build anything. john told us you need 5,000 ferments. when he expanded and existing refinery, 5,000 permits. how do we -- three years. 5,000 permits what in the devil is beginning on here? you're paying what, 40 cents a gallon extra overnight because one refinery goes down? >> me -- >> yeah. it has just all within a two-day period and all over the place. 20 cents is the wrong number. much more. >> we feel for you lad. we do but weekend approaches
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don't drive too much. [laughter] >> all right i want his footprint and carbon footprint to be gigantic. mine will be. we're learning more about lois lerner former irs official caught in the targeting scandal. now, newly released e-mails of her shows thoughts about republican investigators. i'm going to quote, yesterday was a dews doozie i took the fifth because they've been so evil and dishonest in any lawyerings dealings with them. tea party president is here, this is the lady who was brought to tears by in front of congress. how do you feel when lois lerner says this about the people investigating the case? >> well i'm just amazed that her attorney would counsel his clients to take the fifth just to get back at the gop. that makes no sense whatsoever. i believe she's not being truthful. she took the fifth because she's guilty.
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we have e-mails that that she was targeting citizens, and that is why she took the fifth. >> they went right after you. they shut you down i think in the 2012 election. i don't know whether you get become on your feet for the 2012 election. are you still shutdown? for friday? >> no, we're still very active in alabama, and actually we do a lot of things across the nation. but we were slowed down for sure fund raise was harder. members that were afraid to come. yes it definitely had an impact and on the movement all across the nation as you saw in the election. >> are you gearing up for 2016? >> i am. but stuart i want to make one comment real quick about the way that investigation is going, there's a huge piece of this puzzle that has not been talked about. we were given hundreds of questions conservative groups were given hundreds of questions situation give us your members names all kinds of crazy stuff.
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i think the focus on the investigation needs to go now to who drafted those questions. we need to know who was sitting around the room and why were they asking for the contents of prayers? why were they asking about what books we were reading? why did the irs need to know that? i think that's the direction we need to go if we're ever going to get to the bottom of this. >> another element that is not answered, that is it -- was there a connection between the reelection campaign for president obama and/or the white house, and these operatives in the field. were operatives given orders from on high, the campaign or the white house to go out and do what they did? that we do not know at this point are we any closer at finding out what happened? >> we're not yet. but there are still tens of thousands of e-mails that are unaccounted for that are missing, and a i believe that the doj really wanted to get to the bottom of it they would start looking to the sendee
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files to find out where those were sent and look there. >> if i sending you an e-mail, and i delete it from my side of the fence, it is still on your side of the fence. so -- >> absolutely. >> we could go and look at these e-mails but we don't you have to believe it is a politicized justice department don't you? >> it is, and we have e-mails that the justice department was working with lois lerner and the federal election commission to piece together false statement cases on these applicants. so they are right in the middle of it. i believe that's why they don't want to get to the bottom of it. >> i hate to say this becky but you're on this program for several years to come until we get to the bottom of it. that is not a happy process but glad to have you on the show. but i wish it was for a different about reason? right? >> i wound we are hillary's e-mail it is makes me wonder into the future if hill rit an lois will be cell mates one day. >> oh, wearing orange i noticed.
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[laughter] for justice. that is why we're orange today. >> is that true? >> you wore orange -- i didn't know. fast food -- thank you. have a great day. thank you everyone. donald trump versus chris christie, now there's a matchup the new jersey governor has some choice words for the donald. since trump isn't fit to be president. let me remember, remind you, rewind please, this is christie a little earlier. until that time we have that time sit do down and shut up. >> scream and yell all they want. ty love it. i can't wait to shake hands with all of them. [inaudible] >> so angry. this allergy season,
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will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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we have chris christie that the donald doesn't have the temperament to be the president. watch him. >> i don't think he's temperament is suited for that or experience. great experience and doing things with business. but i give a perfect example if he doesn't get what he wants from john boehner you can't fire him. you can't say mr. speaker you're fired. you have to learn work, and i just don't think it is best utilized the skill. >> remember that chris christie says donald trump doesn't have the temperament to be the president of the united states. now go back to listen to chris christie just a few months ago. roll it. >> you want to have the conversation later i'm happy to have it buddy. but until that time, sit down and shutup. [laughter] >> temperament there. ioironic i would say. >> no difference between you're fired and sit down and shut up. what is the difference in those two at the same statements absoy nothing. it has more experience in the political theater. governor of new jersey but famous for his fiery
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temperament. very criticizing donald trump for. >> of course to you criticize you're guaranteed some coverage. get out there at least they're talking about you. >> look at us. all over this all morning. for chris christie -- good point. check this one out a meme put out by the whowtion. it touts the iran deal. it says, straight out of uranium. what's that all about? we'll figure it out for you in a moment. do you want to know how hard it can be to breathe with copd? it can feel like this. 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.
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>> go nowhere friday lunchtime up 5 points that's it. the price of gas, yes, that's moving up another 4 cents overnight. national average 2.65. the price of oil went down to 41 dollars a barrel this morning. bounced back to 42-35 close to a six-year low. gold dropped an bounced back to 11.12 back to 3 as of now. been a week since epa is now infamous toxic spill that made animas river the orange river. in colorado they warn clearing irrigation rivers temporarily make it is orange all over again. ditches are flushed out to have sediment left behind by that 3
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million gallon still that by the way did contain heavy melts. rks pennsylvania is under a lot of pressure to get this cleaned up before winter comes you can look at the progress of the orange tide. by the way, watch "cavuto: coast to coast" right after this show neil is speaking exclusively to the owner of gold king mine. that's where the spill came from. and he says an even bigger spill is beginning to happen because of the epa. noon program cavuto "cavuto: coast to coast" good stuff. >> at home here in america, how about in israel, they're affected by this. congressman lee zeldon is in israel discussing the deal over there. congressman, have you found anyone in israel, anyone of authority or anybody in position of a position who is gung ho for the iran nuke deal?
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>> i've met with herzog, i met with the president, with military generals, i've been to the border with syria, lebanon jordan, gaza all against this iran deal. >> how does that weigh on say congressman -- senator charles schumer? he leads the jewish congressional committee i believe i think that's the proper name of it and he opposes this deal. i wonder if senator schumer has been lobbying hard against it or just making his position known and letting stand? >> all evidence so far is that he is going to be voting against the deal. but that he from news reports that are out there he's not calling colleagues to try to influence them to vote against it, and members who are on the fence even those who have said that they'll support it need to change their mind. nied to understand that that is
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a just -- israel problem or a issue for our allies. this is, you know, an american issue. you look at the map of the middle east. you have a assad in syria, you think this is a great deal. what would hezbollah or hamas and gaza. but for israel, jordan, syria, i'm sorry, egypt. the uae. saudi arabia, all of them, this is a very bad deal. so, i mean, all evidence when you just look at the map of the middle east making a compelling argument for those on the fence to come out against it. for those who are a fever of it, to rethink their blind coolly drinking loyalty it no president. they need to put national security over party royalty. >> quick question for you, this is a major a break in the israel america connection and the relationship. this is a real break. what's the mood in israel bearing in mind that this is a break in the traditional relationship?
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>> well, i have noticed whether it is meaningless leadership or it is meaningless average everyday israelis, that they feel towards americans is still very strong. there is deep, deep concern about the president's foreign policy about the who horrific negotiation that took place led by secretary kerry, that concern is there as far as the leadership with the obama administration. last night i was with a few colleagues who were grabbing dinner at night, and the owner of this restaurant spontaneously got over a loud speaker to thank us and start to play god bless america. thank you once for standing with israel at this critical time. they had a pope come in out of nowhere and blow up fireworks, the relationship, the love for israeli for america stands very
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strong despite huge frustration with this particular deal. >> all right congressman lee joining us on the phone there from vealing. thank you very much indeed sir. >> thank you. i guess you can call this bad news for the obama administration more it have taking heat for this meme they made to try to gain support for the iran deal. the meme is based on the artwork for the new movie straight out of compton that's a movie based about the rise of the 1980s hip-hop group. lauren i'm not sure i understand what's going on with this. >> straight out of compton opens monday night. see how they did universal fir. but it is about the rise of the dangerous -- nwa that founded hip-hop gangster music also name of their best selling album. in los angeles where it opened last night with everything going on in ferguson, around the country they beefed up security at the movie threat or to make sure everything was going smoothly. >> no problems.
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>> this is a big movie that is coming out white house decides to use straight out of compton image as a meme for their iran deal. it is linking one dangerous thing to another. so they're selling this -- straight out of uranium and people on twitter are blowing up saying this is absolutely wrong. so let me show you what some people told your show at varney koa. one says don't me this is a parody account. i don't to believe this is the idiotyi of people associated with this administration. and one say physician the iran deal they put it out is using strait out of the memes on buzz feed you're straight out of the credibility. it is a very awkward parody. >> flipped. very flipped. but awkward listen iran nuke deal with a movie about hip-hop. i don't get it. >> me neither. >> childish. >> we saw it at some point they
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picked it from buzz feed so buzz feed tried to reemp out to celebrities to show how he were using straight out of the insert their hometown. i think they were trying to get in on that. going -- viral? it didn't work. >> no. somewhat confused by it. price of apple stock please where are we now? said to be getting into the car business not quite the way you think. apple stock was down a few cents earlier. varney & company family that's him. the look on his face. going to call this a huge leap of faith. [laughter] it is funny and you'll see it. can a business have a mind? a subconscious. 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?
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>> nicole petallides with your fox business brief. dow jones industrial average up about 43 points. 17,433 a mix week on wall street and seeing that evidence right now with the s&p high or to nasdaq pulling back by 7. moving to upside goldman sachs adds to the conviction buy list with 48 dollar target like in the natural gas company. and then there's a surprise material. and hitting new low and down over 4% they determined with that business. shake shack on the move. this has been a big loser for the week down 22% this week still gaining today. been very volatile did cool out with good quarterly numbers so qept we want you to begin your day with the fox business network every day 5 a.m. i host this show along with sandra
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smith and lauren simonetti get this started with all of the news you need, business, and breaking news. you focus on making great burgers, or building the best houses in town. or becoming the next highly-unlikely dotcom superstar. and us, we'll be right there with you, helping with the questions you need answered to get your brand new business started. we're legalzoom and we've already partnered with over a million new business owners to do just that. check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is here.
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figure out how you're doing on the job. i don't know if i like the sound of it? >> does it help or hurt you so your company they do this with ats athlete but bank and tv station they can do this to monitor if you're tired if they ascertain that you didn't sleep enough or your heart is yeah -- saying go home. the law for truck divers that they have to follow when they have to keep track of how often they slept. >> i don't like the sound of this. >> i know. >> i don't that. but you can get a day off because of it. >> it will be held against group do you ashley want this? >> no. before based on -- >> what is your heart rate? >> before doing the job based on your performance can you dot job. well you need some more sleep you should go home. you'll be better tomorrow. >> i hate it. sports teams are doing this to get the optimum.
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performance nothing wrong with that. >> not in the office. >> but saying you're not eating healthy. smoked and insurance rates go up. >> how do you know about that me? >> i know a lot a about you. >> are they related, note listen to this as gas prices come down, large suvs and trucks may be coming back in vogue. gm is seeing already a large jump in demand. look who's here jet block. you going to drive an suv, say it ain't true. what do you got? >> can't make them fast enough arlington plant down in texas they added a shift to it apparently sales are outstripping their plans for what they thought they might do. increasing capacity there and adding a shift on saturdays. just take a look at one set of vehicles for chevy. the chevy traverse versus the chevy sonic charles payne wouldn't fit in that but traverse is up 30% last month. sonic fuel sipper 40 niles to te
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gallon down 3%. >> green is going to hate you for this. they're going to hate you. >> what i will hate you for this -- >> not any worse than they hate you. >> have a nice weekend in the suv. i'm gong on any tractor. >> listen to this new rumors speculation, about apple's next venture that could be cars. specifically apple is reporting a apple dashboard your car windshield. josh march issue knows a thing or two about this running converse social. today's having its fifth anniversary as a decent company. right? >> that is for sure. decent. you know all about this. apple is creating a windshield but all kinds of electronic displays like a fighter jet. is that accurate? >> that's the rumor. here's what we do know, 15 years all cars are going to be
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self-driving. at that point, the car will be radically changed from a to b to a massive place of needed consumption. video consumption i know that apple knows they need to be a part of that future. whatever they're doing a heads up gley or electronic minivan. yeah, they're doing all of these things experiments which one will come market. >> we know this ten to 15 years all car listen self-driving you sound confident of this. >> i'm confident on that. i believe fundamentally porpt important to et so. 90% car self-driving but 2030. >> well, we get there a pod you sit there and entertainment going on. all provided by apple or any other computer company. so the car becomes a computer. >> that's a big part of it. >> the future i think what we think of as a car now is beginning to change radically
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right when cars first came about, they looked like horse-drawn carriages and then the fact they were self-powered to resign them into different ways. i think that once cars are self-driving there's no need for, you know, you to be sitting there driving the thing there are social hubs, community hubs a lot more cars already shared ownership. people predict that -- >> fascinating. >> what is beginning on with that windshield though. on the windshield movie wouldn't be on that, or would it? >> could be anything right -- >> rumors that cam out today is just information. maps, dashboards, applications, apple has car play which is -- dashboard at the moment. and there are like basic heads up displays in cars already taking that to the next level. >> distracting right now as we drive cars as people? >> it is minimal as possible but driving the car is that you can stay looking outside. you don't have to be looking
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down. useful. >> interested that apple is making this big push. this is apple going into technology in the world if they're getting into this, that is the way of the future. are they going to build the whole car or just the electronics of the car? >> there are strong rumor they're working on the entire car. so they may be just doing that to approach their own ideas. i mean, spoken about cars hacked into it, i think that's a really major issue. a lot of the tech companies are really good at security. right they've been dealing with hackers for a long, long time and cars become more -- >> great to have a self-driving car. but there's no infrastructure for them is there? >> l well, everything that's on the roads today is more infrastructure for them. more exciting is to remove -- >> motor driven cars are interesting. >> infrastructure is the internet and everything else. ting that every car will be internet enabled and city they'll be enforcing
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self-driving cars. if you can remove -- >> say it is best to last. >> you can reduce congestion, reduce accidents by 90%. >> up from up town to downtown in new york. >> you are out of time. what is the social? >> the company -- >> the things people do for fun or to defy death. all of the aging process -- by the way, we have an experienced to show next.
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>> and no i, the man who says he created, he says he runs this show, varney & company, we put him on the show because we want to know why he did that. jump out of a plane name is justin executive producer of varney & company and great guy. explain yourself. >> i'm a great guy? [laughter] >> roll the tape. i want to see him coming up to the door of the plane as he's about to jump out. now take me through it. >> i'm definitely concerned to say the least right here. >> scared to death. >> very scared you can see -- i will not look down. >> froze it right there. what happened? did they shove you? >> yeah, i did not jump. they pushed me. pushed me. roll tape. i want to see a jump.
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>> yeah, when we got out there -- the plane ride was the worst part of it. and i'm afraid of height it is afraid falling. and this was all about overcoming fear i turned 40 on this day, and there's my family, and a -- i just wanted to overcome the fear. that is what i wanted. amazing second i was out of that plane i loved every minute it. i loveed it. what lauren told me the day before i did it. >> i would do it begin. i wouldn't actively try to do it. i wouldn't say hey let's go skydiving today but if a friend wanted to do it said would you mind going with me, i would do it again? >> display your own card? >> no, someone else has to be in charge? >> why does money matter to you? >> always a about money with you. prchg how much, a financial program. >> a little over 300. with the video 320.
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you've got a deal. not with video -- >> totally worth it. a ground -- i was excited it was very cool. it was sure veal feeling you can't describe it. >> that was a moment of exhilaration about to kiss my family right there. >> that's a good idea because you survived. produce on monday as well? >> if i stay, i'll make it in. >> happy birthday. >> executive producer. >> created and run the show. [laughter] >> and a raise -- [laughter] >> a good man, welcome back. >> thank you. back in a moment. more varney after this.
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stuart: my time is up. i now want to see neil cavuto, waiting to go on the air. neil, are you there? neil: yes, i am. stuart: wait a minute, before you launch, you tried to fire your producer, we chucked ours out of a plane. go. [laughter] neil: your producer wants to volunteer the same ride without
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a parachute. [laughter] thank you very, very much. by the way, ralph -- unfortunately -- is still here. a big drop in oil prices this week, bouncing around the $42, $43 a barrel, but here on "cavuto coast to coast," we're wondering how much lower this goes because it has fallen about 4% this week. we're in and out of lows we've not seen since early mar of 2009 -- march of 2009? what if i told you the good news in this very well could be that this is the oxygen, if you think about it, for isis. this is the sole means of survival and financial where
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