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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  August 17, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT

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senator scott brown. it begins here at 6 a.m. eastern. we're having too much fun. "varney & company," it's next, stuart varney, please take it, sir. stuart: okay. i'll take it. thanks very much. the political ground is shifting. newcomers to politics surging. the old guard in sharp decline and that's true of both parties. good monday morning everyone. the latest fox poll shows the impact of the big debate. politicians not popular. jeb bush lost more ground than any other candidate. dr. ben carson gained more than any other, and trump stays way out in front. and he is outlined what i'm going to call a radical immigration plan. trump says the illegals must go back. put a hold on new green cards and visas, and no more anchor babies. how about that? hillary clinton's e-mail trouble just got worse. 60 reportedly contain classified information. not just two.
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and 58% of the fox poll says she knowingly lied about it. to the markets this monday morning, it looks like the gas price surge is winding down. so, cheer up, everyone, our guy says it will be much cheaper very soon. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ let's see where the stock market is going to open this monday morning. there has been a shift, about a half hour ago, we received news that the empire state manufacturing index came in at the lowest reading since the recession. implying a problem with manufacturing, certainly in the northeast and maybe nationwide. down goes the stock market. we're off about 70 points at the open. now look at the price of oil. down 2. we're at 41.76 on a monday morning. how about that? 41.75 right now. and price of gasoline up only
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slightly overnight and the spike in the midwest affects the national average and appears to be winding down, maybe it's over. now, that refinery problem in the midwest, did that have an effect on gas prices over the past week, will you look at this? those four states in the midwest up 50, 49 to 59 cents per gallon just in one week. and the gas buddy will join us shortly to sort out just where the midwest is going and the rest of us,oo andpolics, d'tnow at y'veeenaiti r, i know. the polls, donald trump, leading the first post debate fox news poll. and dr. ben carson got a big bump up. second place, 12%. senator ted cruz, and jeb bush, the biggest loser, down 6 points to a 9% support level. walker losing ground as well and carly fiorina coming in. and now on the democrat's side.
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58% say they believe, hillary clinton knowingly lied when she said her private did not contain classified information. now, by the way, hillary's troubles got worse over the weekend. in case you missed it, 60 of the e-mails found on her serv server, contained secret classified material, that's up from just two last week, hillary, however, is joking about it. roll tape. >> by the way, you may have seen that i recently launched a snap chat account. i love it. i love it. those messages disappear all by themselves. stuart: well, it's kind of funny and the audience did laugh it up. >> unbelievable. stuart: she says this is old, just politics, it's a joke and is that going to get her out of trouble. >> it's just a joke,
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unfortunately for the fbi, they don't think it's a joke and a spate of federal judges don't think it's a joke. remember, stuart, we're getting this information because there's a case going on in washington where federal judges are forcing the state department to give them more information, to release the e-mails that they have from hillary, but also, remember, we have tens of thousands of e-mails that she has deleted, that we may be able to recover something, we don't know yet, from the server that hillary turned over just in the last days, so, there's no joke here. stuart: how about this one, president obama vacationing in martha's vineyard and he played golf with former president bill clinton. can you imagine that? knew, what did-- i think i know what they talked about and that's joe biden. >> i don't think so, stuart. stuart: no? >> no, i don't. no one can compete with hillary clinton when it comes to the fund raising and the money machine behind her. if joe biden got in or john kerry got in, they might take a little slice of what bernie sanders has, i don't think that
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she touch hillary clinton. what i think they were talking about is the idea that if the justice department goes after hillary for this e-mail scandal, what would hillary do? i bet she would go to the president and say, people in the white house knew that i had a private e-mail server. people in the white house probably knew that i had thumb drives. so if you touch hillary, she's like a box of dynamite stuart, it might blow up in your face. stuart: bill wants barack to say i'm not going to prosecute hillary. >> the justice department is a deeply politicized institution, again, the only reason that this e-mail scandal is pursued is because of our federal courts. thank god for our courts. stuart: and barack wants to know from bill, what will hillary do? >> and this is all speculation, of course. stuart: it's monday morning, come on, get with the program here. pan here is the story that we cover far more expensive in politics, that would be gas prices. >> one refinery shut down in
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indiana and look what it did to the price of gas in the past week in the midwest. that's a huge spike. that was the big news story in the midwest, you can bet. gas buddy, patrick dehaan is here. you alerted us to the refinery shutdown in the midwest. has that been fixed? is it back on-line and is this surge in the midwest over? >> no, it's not back on-line, and to go on your previous politics, i think we can talk about both here, politicians in michigan and indiana are looking at the situation and letters to bp and what is going on? nothing is going to change in the next week with this refinery and we'll probably get some sort of time line as the week progresses. gas prices are going to remain at elevated levels throughout the midwest probably for a few more weeks. that's ripped-- ripped out, 54 a gallon in four
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weeks and that affects the national average and it looks like we're all feeling it, but i don't think that's the case. >> absolutely. stuart: i don't think that prices have gone back up again in the carolinas or in texas or the southeast, for example. i don't think that's the case. >> yeah, you're absolutely right, stuart. we should separate that national average out. if we pull the midwest out of it i'm sure it would show flat to no change. areas of southern u.s., florida, georgia, all still going down. virginia, $1.79 a gallon. east coast, northeast, south, the gulf coast and even california a minor decrease here in the last week, so obviously, the national average is really skewed by what's going on in the midwest. stuart: patrick, you're sticking to your forecast, by the end of september we should see a sharp decline nationwide. >> a lot of that hinges on bp at this point. they haven't been too trustworthy with this refinely, i'll hold onto that, but give
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me a little flat here. stuart: we'll give you a couple of days to come up with a decent answer. thank you for joining us. we appreciate it. the new york times criticizing amazon. it was a front page story over the weekend. speaking with former employees, the times quoted them as saying things like this, amazon is where overachievers go to feel bad about themselves. it was a wildly nasty article on amazon. all right, lauren, what else did it say? >> i always wanted to work at amazon until i read this article, other things it said, workers were encouraged to tear apart one another's ideas in meetings, toil long and late, and held to standards that the companies are unreasonably high. e-mails after midnight and text messages, and expected to respond if they had family obligations, health concerns not considered. the managers were callus. so what, in a very rare response, in a news report,
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jeff bezos says if this is happening, e-mail me, this is not a company anyone would want to work at. he's denying it. a health concern or a family concern, you wouldn't want your boss to be considerate? >> lauren, who is forcing people to work at amazon. they're choosing to work at amazon, it's a successful company. it's ridiculous. stuart: and you put in an ad for amazon and you'll have thousands of people lined up to get that job. >> absolutely, 100%. stuart: they want to work, they don't mind a little competition. >> this is a-- this is classic new york times, denigration of the work ethic. it's terrible these people are working hard and making money. stuart: we have to interrupt everything because donald trump is arriving at court. for jury service. this is trump not just any old candidate. this is donald trump right there. we're interrupting our discussion of amazon and the
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nanny state too give you donald trump. he's arriving for jury duty. now, we're told-- >> so is his hair, actually. stuart: we're told that he's happy to stop campaigning to fulfill his duty. >> they'll never let him on a jury. stuart: probably not, but donald or amazon. >> you guys beat me up significantly so i think that this report was unusually harsh and not completely accurate. they take a very disgruntled employee. stuart: we're done with amazon and i'm staying with trump. he's laying out his immigration plan, roll tape. >> make a whole new set of standards and when people come, they have to-- >> you're going to split up families and deport children. >> we're going to keep the families together, got to keept. stuart: what if they have no place to go. >> we will work with them, they have to go. stuart: there's more. it's important, he said, no more anchor babies. that's what trump said.
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so if an illegal gives birth in america, that baby is not automatically a citizen, that's what he wants. what do you think of that, mary. >> i think it's good that the american public is finally starting to hear what donald trump's policies are so this he can evaluate him on the specifics and not on this bomb bombast and superficial stuff he's been throwing out the last couple of months. what did he tell us, he's populous, anti-economic growth, he doesn't want to win the election because he's going to alienate a very large section-- i'm sorry, stuart, mitt romney was all for self-deportation, how did that work out. >> here is where i agree with you he's anti-growth and to some degree anti-business, because he called for a pause on green cards and visas, that's a serious thing. >> it's a serious thing. last week the wall street journal had a huge story on worker shortages.
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dairy, farms and fruits and we have a broken system. donald trump is not telling how to use the legal system so they're not incentivized getting through the border. he's not telling how to help the businesses and fix the problem. good for him. it will be interesting to see how he does in the next debate and what happens in the next poll after we get-- >> you've got the wall street journal-- . and jason day, he's australian and he wins the pga championship and shattered the record for low scores. he burst into tears. that's the part i like. and former attorney general on hillary's e-mail scandal. he says it's no joke. >> i love it. those messages disappear all by themselves.
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>> before we go on, look at this. stunning video of the northern lights. that's what you're looking at taken from space. the video is shot by astronaut scott kelly on the international space station. he shot this just before going to bed one evening. now, that is a nighttime view and a half, is it not? all right. enough of that. let's get to the hillary e-mail scandal. look at what michael mukasey said. once you assume a public office your communications about anything having your job are not your personal business or property. they are the public's business and the public's property. michael mukasey is here. she did have secret information on her server is she therefore guilty of a crime? >> there's an element of
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judgment. the question is whether she knew she had it and whether she was directly responsible for putting it on there, we will hear a lot about how staff was involved in this and there will be an attempt to kind of muddy it over. stuart: whether you knew about it or not, whether you sent it to your own e-mail server or not, to have it on there is in fact a crime, isn't it? >> not unless you know. stuart: not unless you know? >> yes. stuart: but then if the e-mail is about the whereabouts of our ambassador in benghazi. if the e-mail is about drones, if the e-mail about the positioning of french jets and all of those facts are correct, then that's top secret and it doesn't matter, then her judgment is called into question. if she doesn't know that's top secret, there's something wrong. >> not necessarily knowing it's top secret, but knowing that it's on the private server, it's clear that anybody who gets that information in that position knows that it's-- it has to be treated carefully so that if she knew that it was
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on a private server and it was on there at her direction, or with her participation, then, yes. stuart: what kind of judgment did she display in the first place by having a private server to conduct state department business? >> poor judgment. the kind of judgment that says that i could make decisions based on my own convenience and the rules that are made for other people are know the made for me. stuart: in your view, is she fit to be the president of the united states? >> if that was the judgment that she made, she certainly won get my vote. >> does the president now, barack obama, does he have any discretion on whether or not this is prosecuted? >> oh, of course he has. he has discretion and i'm sure that it will be exercised, but-- >> if the fbi comes to the president and says, that information was on there, it was top secret, and that's a
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crime, he has discretion as to whether or not she's charged? >> he could always pardon her. stuart: yes, but he has discretion? so the future of her campaign is in his hands? >> well, it's in actually in the hands of the attorney general. i think that the president will probably have some influence over how that decision comes out. stuart: a lot of influence presumably. i don't want to put you in a corner, judge. >> yes, you do. and you're a dog -- you're doing a very effective job of it. you wouldn't vote for her and she should be prosecuted? >> we have prosecuted other people for lesser offenses. you take general petraeus, there was a marine who disclosed information to-- tried to disclose information to his buddies about a sexual predator and that, one of the victims of that predator wound
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up killing three marines. when he tried to blow the whistle on that he was attempted to be drummed out of the marine corps even though it was found he hadn't done anything wrong on the pretext that his message contained confidential information. somebody like that, in that way then. stuart: we hear you. we hear it all. michael mukasey, judge, correct form of address, thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. stuart: totally different subject. james harrison, super bowl hero for the pittsburgh steelers, knows a thing or two about what it takes to win. he's throwing away his sons' participation trophies. and plus, tim tebow steals the show on the field. that's right, i'm talking football. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> golfer jason day won the pga championship and he finished with a record setting 20 under par performance. what a day. and look at that. that was a poignant moment for me, he burst into fierce with his little daughter. the man was in tears for several minutes. i love this, what a player, what a guy. and now this, he's taking away awards given to his children for participation.
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and on social media, those are the trophies that he's taking away. sandra smith, mother of two, former and current athlete is with us. sandra: yes. stuart: what do you make of that. everybody gets a trophy. sandra: good for him, good for him. and he's not saying other kids have to give back trophies and this is the way he decided to parent. he doesn't believe that everyone deserves a trophy. and he said i'm not going to raise them saying that they are doing their best. sometimes your best is not enough. stuart: it sounds harsh, but it's a reality and i think we're in agreement. sandra: we're in agreement, sir. stuart: tesla moving up. big time at the opening bell. is it time to buy? we're on it. have you seen this youtube video? and that's tesla, by the way. and this video, it sets up a
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teenager, sets up a meeting with a girl, a guy sets up a meeting with a young girl, films it with her parents' permission and it's a cautionary tale for teenagers using social media. the full story coming up. >> what would i do if anything happens to you? what would i do if anything happened to you? [crying] >> i love you.
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tree in two okay, we're almost there. about 10 seconds to go and we will start trading on this monday morning. looks like we are going to be down 60, 70, maybe 80 points. there was a rip in the manufacturing sector. possibly a slowdown may be across the country. we are down 22 at the opening bell. it's a stock which could be the stock of the day zoo lily, the amazon phenom. qvc you buy stuff on tv. they are buying it for a couple billion dollars and it is up 47%. there is the winner of the day just fire. "the wall street journal" warning that global recession may be brewing in china appeared joining us, adam shapiro, sandra
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smith and pete fitzgerald and seattle. he's moved to seattle by the way. sandra, this is yours. "the wall street journal" global recession may be brewing in china. sandra: there is a lot to this and it's taking some by surprise because the chinese story was supposed to come to fruition in things like law materials and commodities. the price of those continue to rapidly decline. here we are in the middle of earnings season finding out just how exposed some of our u.s. corporations are to china and now the slowdown they're really hitting them where it hurts. the chinese growth story not really panning out and a lot of investments hurting. stuart: scott shellady come a global recession may be brewing in china. >> i absolutely agree with that. 7% and there have been some whisper numbers that their growth is only two or maybe even less than the u.s.
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supposedly talking about a soft landing in china. last week they devalued their currency twice. i think it's as bad as people predict or maybe even worse. i'm sticking with the fact that it will not raise rates in september. stuart: we are down 105. stainless steel, scott, the price of oil keeps going down. i think we are at 41 and change. are we going to touch 39? are we going to hit 39? >> slowly but surely will grind down to those levels. we've got a problem with the bp refinery. sixty cents but we seen the oil price go down. the world is slowing down. i don't know what everybody's looking of an attack about the u.s. economy growing at a great rate. we are doing now well.
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we are in trouble. we need to find a way to boost the economy. oil which is 20% to 30% of job creation, if this happens and we have a war with opec, it is not good for the economy or stock. stuart: i am interested in whether you are buying entergy stocks. they are seriously depressed. are you buying? >> that's an open invitation because if you buy about with delhi, that is the game. i don't care about the price of oil whether it's 30 bucks or 40 bucks. it's historically low continuing. this is a short-term operation. >> look at the big board. we are down sharply. down 130 points. i have to believe that report on manufacturing which show big time slowing in the northeastern part of the country in the headline in "the wall street
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journal," global recession brewing in china. sandra: the u.s. bond market is rallying. big reaction. >> easy way to look at this as apple. 60% of the revenue and today if you buy an apple phone in china it will take more of the currency because the dollar is stronger. online revenue could be smaller for apple. sure into apple holding $115. that is down about 20 bucks from its all-time high. come back in again. we've got this reported looking on a self driving car. it will hit 200 at some point, don't you? >> the game is longer about devices. the game under tim cook is very much the ecosphere. the watch is a good place to get started because what apple is looking for is to see how information flows.
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the car is a laudable extension of what apple is doing, how data works. cars will tell buildings, all of that. apple take him anywhere you turn that want even the apple world. that's the value in the not yet recognized by the marketplace. stuart: tesla stock is a big winner today up about 12 bucks. lori rothman, what's going on with tesla? reporter: work and family analysts looking for shares to nearly double. shares up about 5% at the moment. trading at about 254. this analyst said that could rise to $465. tesco is kind of a disappointment saying they can only build fewer electric cars. now they shift their focus of strategy to driverless cars. apple and google also testing the waters at this analyst thinks tesla is best positioned
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to snap a the most market share. keep an eye on the business plan in the next 12 to 18 months. stuart: hold on to second. i kind of miss that. analysts say $465 for tesla. reporter: you are not mistaken. stuart: timeframe? reporter: year, 12 months. stuart: i agree with that. reporter: my initial thought was he's trying to make a name for himself. >> and analysts trying to make a name for himself? shocker. tree into back in sports at "the new york times" put in an article out i think it was sunday, front page criticizing amazon quoting a former employee who said nearly every person i work with ice outcry at their desk. here it's just based those wrist
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on name. it promised features and make to. the article doesn't describe the amazon i know. sandra: who was right, who is wrong. bezos saying i don't know what they're talking about. this is the amazon i know. they talked to apparently "the new york times" talked to 100 current and former employees are expected to toil long. some complained that the company edged out workers suffering from personal problems like miscarriages and cancer. the culture calls for employees to respond to e-mails after midnight. as if that's not ever wanted space-bar is culture. stuart: i am sure scott is laughing at this. if "the new york times" is all over again whining about
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successful america. is that it, scott? >> something to do with it, absolutely. ask any american on their way out of their job today if they are not working longer, harder for the same or less money. i don't understand. the guys behind me would say the same thing. that's why we tried to get ourselves out of the recession by cutting herself with the efficiency and profitability. maybe a small truth to the story, but it's running through every company across america. we just have to pull ourselves up by your bootstraps and get along with it. stuart: i want to climb that food chain. i'll do whatever it takes. transport if you don't like the company you are working for, leave. is a free market system. in his note he said the company depicted in the article could not survive in this highly competitive market. correct, sir. >> they are the largest retailer in the united states.
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stuart: one more story for you. target expanding curbside pickup to new york and new jersey. what is that all about? >> it is about competition against amazon. i want to go buy t-shirts. i can do it on amazon.com. now i have the option of getting them almost immediately from target and i don't have to leave the studio. i can order online and they'll be at the apartment when i get home. stuart: very good. you look like you've got something else to say. sandra: they are directly targeting me as a consumer. i don't have time to go into the store and do shopping. i want it delivered to my doorstep. i need next day shipping. stuart: who said wow? >> that was me.
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stuart: disney says get ready first are worse in the land. is that a winner for you to buy the stock? >> that is a huge win for this brand. you are talking about a billion dollar enterprise here. "star wars" is one of the greatest ever created with the magic of running a theme park and all the intellectual property goes with disney. >> now an issue we will discuss. a new report from salo shows the first-time home buyers are getting older. the average age of the first-time buyer is now 33. sign of the times. sandra: absolutely. people saved their money which is bad for spending economy like the united states. they are putting off, renting longer and by the way, what affect do you have by the time they're 33 years old and it's
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not acquired an act that appeared to asset. >> millennialist are not done. they saw people get hurt. in some cities that make sense to buy, but many cities that makes more sense to rent. >> no property tax on a rental. >> i can hear you chattering away in the back round. >> owning is totally over rated. over the long-term it's really an excuse to keep you out of the rail market. unless you have banned it doesn't make sense to own. >> i am a missionary. the first thing you should do is get yourself a tax break by buying a house. you're going to go up in the world. what is wrong with that? they make the tax break is only good if you itemize.
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the best return is not real estate. maybe 2% to 3% if you're lucky you can do better in the market. stuart: my only friend on this panel. scott shellady. >> here's the problem. the reason why the numbers are looking better or because there's more people fighting from the one guy who can sell and does not underwater. number two, millennialist realized what the economy in as bad shape it as it is today they need to be more nimble and move quickly and they don't want to be tied down to a mortgage because they might not get out of bed. stuart: i didn't get a chance to ascii why he moved from portland to seattle. we'll get back at some point in the future. let me check the big doors for you. we are 12 minutes into the trading session of the dow was
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down 126-point. air bnp is at the center of what may become a huge liability case. an american customer said he was held hostage, sexually assaulted, contacted his mother who got no help on air bnp. the judge on that next your extraordinary video of a garbage truck slamming into a highway sign. down it goes. ouch. it's more than the cloud. it's security - and flexibility. it's where great ideas and vital data are stored.
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stuart: >> really fun to watch. stuart: that is 10 tivo. he scored a touchdown on his return to the nfl. now at quarterback for the eagles. that's my coverage of the ball.
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to the big board please. the dow industrials down 126. new york area manufacturing showed its worst read since the recession. that is bad for the overall economy. all 27 of the 30 dow stocks -- i'm sorry, 26 of the 30 dow stocks are now on the red. the amazon phenoms qvc is buying it for $2.4 billion. qvc is a homeshopping basically channel. up go zulily 74%. security people using air bnp called into question after raid u.s. team traveling madrid claims he was held against his will and sexually assaulted in an apartment he rented on air bnp. during his confinement he texted his mom who tried to appeal to air bnp.
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but the address, get the cops involved. all rights. judge andrew napolitano is here. does airbnb not take care of their customers overseas. the mac they have for liability for that behavior but it would depend upon coming to be happy to hear this, the state in is filed. airbnb did nothing to help this guy. the remedy is a lawsuit for damages. he is claiming trauma as a result of this forced activity, which may require years of eric p. to resolve. so with for example he worked from and where to sue our home state of new jersey, i believe is in massachusetts in which it's the same. it is extremely favorable to the business and i.t. so you invite someone into your business. you invite this guy made to use your business come airbnb. you have an obligation to
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provide a safe place for the business to be conducted. so the best state in which to sue someone, not the landowner madrid, forget about it. you are going to sue airbnb in the united states. the best are the high duty of safety to the invitee. the person you invite your business for their benefit in yours. stuart: airbnb in some states is liable. >> they will say how could we anticipated. that's their problem. they chose to bring in this person to madrid where they ended up assaulting the sky. stuart: what about the guy in madrid who rented the apartment. it was a man dashboard born a man, dressed in women's clothing. does the person have been a liability? >> answer is yes and that would be up to airbnb to go after him.
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the lawyers for the young man would not bother going after him because the asset, every time you look at it, and more billion dollars asset is airbnb. stuart: they are essentially operated like a hotel. >> without any bricks and mortar whatsoever. stuart: they can't operate like a hotel for the people they placed. >> you sound like an appellate judge in new jersey. kidding aside, this is a virgin area of the law. this is an area of the law to which there is no precedent. stuart: what liability does uber have for the performance of the drivers and customers? >> i agree it is the same. provides the same in new jersey and massachusetts. the highest duties to protect is to protect the business and i.t. the person you invite into your business realm for your
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financial gain and their receipt of your services or goods. stuart: it would seem to be a negative for their sharing economy. >> at lynn's liability insurance if they don't go through some protocol. stuart: i'm sorry i'm out of time. >> hillary is now up to 63. 9:00 this morning and now it's up to 63. stuart: he is coming back. viral video of a call of their chasing a woman down the street. there it is. koala bears have razor-sharp claws. an op-ed in the washington post same lawyers sorry waste of time, money, resources that we have this eeo of an on-demand lawnmowing company explain why the laws are just fine and dandy. new smart --
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stuart: this video popped up over the weekend.
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a koala bear chasing a woman that she wrote of right down the street. unusual behavior for a koala bear. they can be aggressive especially in breeding season. now in case you ever get ambushed by a koala bear and australia. the average american spends 70 hours a year on lawn and garden care. the "washington post" says that's a waste of time and money. look who is here. the ceo plows and most, the uber for landscaping. willis mahoney is back. i understand you are doing well. >> we are. we are growing incredibly quickly. we continue to expand. the stuart: if i get your app on my brand-new iphone six, you will get me a lawnmower to my suburban house real fast. >> you get to choose when you want the job done and you can be out of town and get a picture of the job so it gets done.
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>> you are watching -- >> people love their long that they don't like the hard task of knowing it. customers started in the beginning of the season they mow their lawn and then they are sick of it after the first or second time at doing it. and then they use us. stuart: how much? >> how much to mow lawn? around $30. there's a couple of variables. the size of your property, grassland, location. stuart: you are growing 30% month over month. >> yes we are. stuart: in your private? >> with investor backing us right now. we are at a stage where we are looking to go the next level. if i give you $100 million to mobile you give me your share? >> i would think about it, but i
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think the company is worth a little bit more. stuart: it was a pleasure. first of all, donald trump keeps his lead in the polls and not talking about immigration, stopping visas. that is new at 10:00 and we start in two more minutes. 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?
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can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪
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and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... that's huge for my bottom line. what's in your wallet? >> 10:00 eastern, 7:00 california, here are the big stories at this hour. the first post debate fox news poll shows trump still ahead. carson surging, bush falling. today, we have details of donald trump's immigration plan. here it is. sends all the illegals back. no more anchor babies, and stop and pause work visas. a scathing article in the sunday new york times ripped apart amazon for pushing its employees too hard. i say that's exactly what makes america great. amazon ceo responds. "varney & company," hour two starts next. ♪
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and this is what is happening now. a magnitude four earthquake hits the bay area in california. and the geological survey says it hit outside san francisco. details are just coming in. we will have the latest as we get it available. we're also following this. a developing story from back on thailand where at least 12 people are dead and 78 injured. and an explosion that rocked the area near a shrine in the central part of the citiment and this area is popular with tourists. thailand's national police chief says it appears the explosion was caused by a bomb. no claim of responsibility as of now. and now, look at this. donald trump is reporting for duty at a courthouse in lower manhattan. last hour, of course, a throng of reporters and onlookers and others were there to meet him. and he said he would gladly serve on the jury.
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and there was a negative read on the empire manufacturing index and sent stocks lower we're now down 117. and stocks going the other way, zoo lilly. we-- zulily and up it goes 47%, we all it the amazon for moms. and tesla i guess got an upgrade from morgan stanley. they raised their target to $465 for that stock. it's at 252 now. it's up 9, 465, says morgan stanley. how about that? look at oil, where are we? $42 even right there. down 50 cents. gas, up ever so slightly overnight. 2.67. the effect of a national average appears to be winding down. there was a refinery problem in indiana. it had quite an effect on gas
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prices in those four states. in the past week, gas went up 50, 59, 39 cents in those states. that's a spike and that was a big story there. it was one refinalry in indiana shut down from an electrical problem and that's why gas prices spiked in the midwest. now, michigan's attorney general demanding answers from the company on how the shutdown can have such an impact on the pump. former shell oil president john hofmeister had this to say. >> when i was still at shell oil, we did add a 300,000 barrel a day, it took 5,000 permits, three years and 5,000 permits. stuart: you simply can't build a new refinery in america, certainly not quickly. jeff flock is at the cme. the governor of michigan, would be the attorney general there, is he trying to blame the company that runs and owns that refinery? >> well, first of all, i beg to differ with you, two new refineries have opened in the u.s. in the last year, but i
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will agree with you, they were very small refineries. it's very difficult to get one like john hofmeister is talking about built because people don't want it in their back yard. and yes, they wind up blaming a refinery like bp. >> which is a huge refinery, over 400,000 barrels a day, and that has a huge impact. if you can't refine that gasoline, that's where most of the gasoline comes from in the midwest. nobody wants a new refinery, who wants it in their back yard the. stuart: very true, nimby, not in my back yard. >> not on your farm. [laughter] iment. stuart: the latest polls have trump ahead he's got 25%, carson 12%, ted cruz, 10%. big drop for jeb bush, losing ground to a 9% reading. he's down 6 points after the
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debate there. and with us now, i'm particularly interested in the decline in support for jeb bush. he dropped six points, all the way down to a 9% support level. what does that tell you about republican party politics? >> well, you think right now the race is incredibly fluid. we're talking about 17 candidates that are in the ring and look, right now, the national polls can really only tell us so much. we're talking about over a year away from the election, we're talking about 160-something days until the iowa caucuses, so it's incredibly earlier and we're seeing the dynamics of the race change significantly. we have 17 candidates in the race and at some point, the individuals are going to start dropping out and things are going to shift and change. >> but these polls show something very fundamental here. politicians, establishment politicians, whether they're establishment or not doesn't matter. politicians are not doing well. it's the non-politicians who are surging. trump stays up there with 25%.
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and dr. ben carson moves up five points. he's not a politician, he's a neurosurgeon. doesn't that tell you something about what republicans want and don't want? >> well, i don't argue that there's this, you know, anti-establishment mentality right now on the party and i think we're also seeing it on the democrat side as well with the surge of bernie sanders. so i really think it's happening on both sides of the oil here. i think what's important to keep in mind, look, 12 years ago, joe lieberman was leading in the democratic primary. if you look at eight years ago, rudy guiliani was leading in 2007. in 2011, rick perry was leading at one point and so was herman cain so the national polls can only tell us so much. be careful to try to learn too much from it at this point because it's still very early. stuart: the republican party surely has to come to terms with these newcomers, whether it's donald trump or ben carson. it's not that they've got to
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make room for them. they've got to come to terms with them. what impact is trump going to have over the next few months for heaven's sake. look, if he's got 25% support now. 25%, enough to win iowa and win new hampshire. you've got to come to terms with that. >> as i mentioned, iowa caucuses are over 160 days away, but look, stuart, i think it's important to have all different types of people in the republican party and i think we should be a big tent party. i think it's great to have someone as smart as dr. ben carson. he's articulate and able to speak about issues that are really important for the republican party. look, i appreciate the fact that donald trump is such an important businessman and the fact that he's been able to be so successful because i think that's important for republicans to be able to articulate opportunity in the country and being able to achieve the american dream. so, i think it's very important to have, you know, different people and different kinds of candidates in the republican party. stuart: i'm trying to read between the lines and listen to your tone of voice. i i think you want the
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moderate, the jeb bushes of this world to make a new surge. i think you're on their side as opposed to the trump-carson side. i'm reading between the lines, you tell me, am i right? >> i think you're speaking in generalities here. i'm not saying that. i'm saying, we've got a lot of great candidates in the race and some phenomenal current senators, you know, current governors, former governors that are running and i think it's very early and important, but, stuart, here is what i think is important. i think it's important for the republicans to be thorough in the vetting process. if you look at someone like donald trump, things he's saying now aren't consistent with things he's said previously. he's rolled out his immigration plan and where previously he said we should give a path to citizenship to illegal immigrants he believes are in the country and that's a direct contradiction on what he's saying on the immigration. stuart: bottom line, lisa, you think he fades? >> i think there will be a vetting process at some point with the republican party with
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these candidates and what he's advocating for now is in direct contradiction what he previously said and i have some concerns about that and i think other republicans should be as well. stuart: we hear you, lisa, thank you for joining us. i'm going to interrupt fast because i want to get to the earthquake that hit the bay area. adam you're following this. >> outside of oakland was the epicenter of this earthquake according to the geological section, peedmont, between oakland, they could feel it in oakland and bart, the bay area rapid transit put their trains on stand by to make sure there are no problems. go to twitter. one guy said was that an earthquake or my apple watch alerting me to stand up. stuart: it was 4.0. that's not considered-- no damage reports, that's not considered terribly dramatic. stuart: excellent, let's move away. the dow industrials were down well over 100 and we've come
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back, now down 85 this monday morning. look at wal-mart. one wal-mart store is being declared a public nuisance by a mayor in indiana. there's been some violence at the store. the mayor of the town says, you're a public nuisance, which means you're going to charge them when the police comes to visit. elizabeth macdonald, is there more to this than the mayor doesn't like wal-mart. >> there's a lot to this. this is a beach grove, indiana store, a number of incidents where people have died shopping near a wal-mart. at that store. and this store, there's a famous viral video where two women were brawling in the shampoo aisle. so, it happened when two guys go in there, they shop lift and police are on the run and one shoots himself in the head. the mayor says, enough, enough, at least three police visits a day. now he's saying we're actually going to slap the local wal-mart store itself with tickets and fines for being a public nuisance.
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$2500 maximum per ticket. stuart: so that means that it costs wal-mart more to be in business in that location? >> that's right. >> because of the violence and the constant calling of police officers to that store? >> we've got a statement from wal-mart itself when we reached out to the mayor, we need to hear from the mayor, the wal-mart says we certainly don't want people in our store for the wrong reasons any more than other businesses do and we have safety and security measures in place to handle this accordingly, meaning they've got an off-duty cop in the store to stop any shoplifters or violence. this is a problem for wal-mart stores across the country as violence has broken out at these stores. stuart: it's because in some cities mayors do not like wal-mart for all kinds of reasons. >> that's right. stuart: declaring them a public nuisance would be a way of restricting them. >> sure. stuart: thanks, liz. soon there will be "star wars" attractions at disney theme parks. lauren is here in case you mississippied it--
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missed it. >> and two themed attraction one in orlando, anaheim, disney's largest themeded expansion ever. and transporting guests to a whole new "star wars" planet years after the new "star wars" movie hits theaters, we can't wait, december 18th. well, new reports show that hackers have been able to get into our cars for years. and one auto maker, volkswagen, not only knew about the security flaws in its technology going back two years, but went to great lengths to keep those flaws a secret. and this is what we're calling a cash grab video. godaddy has a cash machine in its headquarters. not an atm, but a cash machine that blows money at you and a certain lucky godaddy worker gets in there and picks up as much cash as he can in 15 seconds and he gets to keep all of it.
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here, you can get, 6, 700, 800 every time. pick up the cash as soon as you can. stuart: what bills are in the machine? $1 bills or-- >> probably an asortment of bills. stuart: an asortment. >> in 15 seconds if you can get $800, i would be inclined more likely hundreds. stuart: i would go in with a vacuum cleaner. if you want to watch this young lady and her colleagues at 5:00 eastern time. get up in the middle of the night if you have to because it's worth it. lauren, sandra, nicole, 5 a.m. best early morning business show there is. all right. donald trump calling for a halt on visas and green cards. will his radical immigration plan hurt the economy? i've got some gee-whiz for you as well. gee-whiz tech. a group of scientists wants to make space travel easier and cheaper by building a 12 mile high elevator. full explanation coming up.
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at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda.
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hi mi'm raph. tom. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, and we've got your back. legalzoom. legal help is here. >> more on this breaking story out of thailand.
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a large explosion in a busy shopping and tourist district in central bangkok during the evening rush hour. at lea at least 12 have been killed and many injured. the police in bangkok say it was a bomb. more as it develops. the canadian firm called thot technology. they're looking at an elevator into space, 12 miles high and inflatable and a runway at the top. it could reduce the cost of space travel by a third. as of now there's no plans to build that space elevator. all right, to trump. he's doubled down on immigration, he's getting specific, too, he's gone so far as to say no more green cards or visas. a temporary hold on the issuing of the green cards and visas. steve moore is here and he cannot be pleased about that idea from donald trump. and that would really, really
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hurt business, wouldn't it? >> yeah, the next thing you know, stuart, he's going to send people like you back out. this is a really bad idea. immigrants are the backbone of our economy and we need them. we need the workers, we need their contributions and the vast majority of immigrants, stuart, come here for the right reasons, they want to work and share in our freedoms and our free enterprise system. now being look-- >> hold on, he says you don't need these newcomers. we've got people unemployed in america, we've got people who can do this job. give it to them. keep them out and give it to them. you can understand the appeal. >> except i've done 25 years of research on the issues, economics of immigration. immigrants like you and the millions who come to this country, they create jobs, they don't take jobs. you know, stuart, someone like you, you produce, you know, you pro he -- produce things and a contributor of our economy and that's with the immigrants
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here. it's not that immigrants are taking job it's that we have the crazy policies in washington that are destroying so many of our jobs and energy and through regulation and so on. what is interesting is that trump also says, which i think it was yesterday or on saturday, that he wanted to move towards a policy of deportation, and you know, that is an issue that killed republicans politically in 2012. i think the whole term deportation is so toxic with hispanic and asian voters, you know, those are the voters, stuart, the republicans are going to need so that made me cringe when he said that. stuart: how about no more anchor babies? so if an illegal comes to america, has a child in america, that child is it not automatically a citizen, as they are at this moment. what do you make of that aspect of trump on immigration. >> you would have to amend the constitution, actually, to do that, because this is part of the-- i believe it's the 14th amendment that someone who is born in the united states is a citizen here, so if you want to
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go through the process of doing that, it's a very difficult and laborious job. here is my position on economics of immigration. it's important that we get this right as a country. people who come here, stuart, who want to work, who want to work, want to fill a job, those are people we want. and i'm not big on people coming here and getting on welfarement if yo-- welfare. if you come here and commit a crime, you should be deported. we're talking illegal immigrants, a lot of immigrants who are in the kitchens in america, and people who are working in the hotels, there are people who pick, you know, our fruits and vegetables. and for the most part, they're contributing to our economy. but it's the ones who go on welfare. my position is immigration for those who want to work, yes. immigration to come on welfare, no. and that ought to be the policy. stuart: steve, we hear you.
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thank you for joining us as always on this monday morning. >> thanks for coming, stuart. thanks for being in america. stuart: i've been mere 40 years. and loved every minute of it. >> still haven't lost that accent. stuart: see you soon. much more on this subject from the sound bite machine himself, colonel ralph peters. he's called trump some disparaging names, shall we say. we'll find out what he has to stay about the immigration plan this morning on "varney & company." then the new york times, it penned a scathing hit piece on the ultra competitive work environment and amazon. i think they got in one totally wrong and i'll tell you about it. and then we have a private jet service for every man. a new service lets you ride in luxury, a surprising low price, the 29-year-old chief of one jet is going to join us. i want to know if there's a catch.
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>> look at this. we've come all the way back. we were down about 120 and now down only 23. that's a near complete turn around. coming up this hour, the pga championship wasn't the only big golf match this week. president obama, former president bill clinton hit the links in martha's vineyard on saturday. were they discussing a possible biden run, or prosecution of hillary? they play it and do you think a ride on a private jet is out of your price range. a new service might bring luxury travel to the masses. 29-year-old chief of one jet is coming up next.
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more whining from the left. the workplace is just so unfair, isn't it? the new york times on sunday had an expose' of amazon, what it's like to work there. giant retailer tests how far it could push white collar staff, that's what the times said. nearly every person i worked with i saw cry at their desk, that's another quote. long hours, tough management, intense competition to climb the ladder, that's amazon and the times does not approve. last week came the shocking revelation that many americans don't take all of their vacation time. we're told that this is bad for us and it implied that we're way behind those enlightened european who gets six weeks off a year and take it. the left wants us to be like them. vote for us, the politicians, and we'll make the bosses cringe. we'll give you more time off. we will give you more parental leave and sick leave, and we'll bring you in the unions to
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protect the workers. they've bought the european myth. you can have your cake and eat it, too. that partly explains europe's bankruptcy, doesn't it? what the left is missing and what they don't want to acknowledge is america's basic character. america is a competitive place, americans don't mind competing. offer a chance to climb the ladder and make a fortune and most americans would jump in. they're not looking for guarantees. they want opportunity, they want scope, they want upside. as a reformed european, i find this fascinating and so sad. in watching my adopted country go down the european road. american technology companies rule the world, amazon, apple, google, netflix, facebook, a very long list, they got there by attracting talented people, prepared to take on the risk that they might fail for the reward of creating a brilliant enterprise and earning a ton of money. please, don't hold them back. the promise of the cloud is that every organization
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. stuart: this is called a bounce back. we were down 121 now we're down 21. that is a bounce back. look at j.c. penney, please. one firm says buy it. it's going to 12.50. that's you go. 12.50 says one analyst. one analyst said, yeah, i'll buy it up, j.c. penney still $8 a share. and amazon, very critical piece in the new york times about the company's stressful work environment i'm going to quote one employee saying nearly everyone i worked with was crying at their desks. jolene kent has more.
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>> there was a lot of the description of the culture inside amazon saying it ruthless pursues innovation at the cost of some of its employees. so jeff did not give an interview to the times. he actually sent out an internal memo once the story came out to the employees and he said that this is not the amazon he knows. he said i strongly believe that anyone working at a company that is the one described in yt would be crazy to stay. i know i would leave the company, and that's jeff. stuart: jeff owns the washington post. >> he does. stuart: a great competitor of the new york times. >> indeed. stuart: so the new york times does a hit piece of jeff, the owner of the washington post. >> that is -- he does own the washington post. stuart: yes, he does. >> the thing about amazon and this story that stands out so much to me as i cover tech, you look at the different cultures of different tech companies and so many of them have these benefits and these perks if you will that are so
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welcoming to a lot of time employees where amazon does not give some of those perks. i understand you're not entitled to perks. but in order to attract some of the best talent, that's how google, facebook, have gone about it. whereas amazon is not going that route. stuart: look, if you wanted is to create the worlds greatest technology companies, you want to attract people who are going to climb that food chain. they're going to work like the devil because they want to be a billionaire. >> hungry. stuart: what is wrong with that? >> but also he himself is saying that he doesn't condone negative culture. >> throwing people under the bus for this new york times story. stuart: no, he's not. >> he's saying i wouldn't work at that place. stuart: he's saying "the new york times" doesn't understand what it takes to make the greatest retailer in the world from scratch in 20 years. that's what he's basically saying. >> he said i wouldn't work at a place that's doing that. stuart: are you with the new york times on this? >> i am not saying that.
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i'm just saying it's striking that he's throwing his own workers under the bus. >> there's a solution to this . stuart: what? >> if google is until competition with google and apple, why do they stay? there's a reason they're staying there. stuart: there's no prisoner to amazon. >> that's the point. they're understand handcuffed. >> and there's a lot of employees turning over to the piece and if you look at the people who work there and the growth inside the company, it's been massive in terms of sheer employee volume. >> they're focusing on the white-collar workers, the people who work at the fulfillment hours they sued headquarters and lost and they work incredible long hours. >> the bottom line is here it's an evaluation of how these tech companies work. the more we try to know, the better. stuart: okay. okay. [laughter] they just want to make america
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like europe for god sake. look over the pond, they're bankrupt, they're losers and here we are hating at the greatest companies in the world because they don't treat every single employee just right. that's pathetic. >> not every employee gets a masseuse. >> that's google. >> that's google. stuart: jolene, not your fault. >> i'm not worried about that stuart: calm down. >> i just love seeing you how you react to these stories because it taps into how people feel. stuart: i'm a missionary in those company and "the new york times" is trying to make you look like the europeans. am i done? >> i don't know keep going. stuart: let's get to hillary clinton's latest e-mail problem, shall we? 63 of the e-mails found on her server contained secret, classified material. it was only two last week. but hillary think so it's
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funny, watch this. >> by the way, you may have seen that i recently launched a snapchat account. [cheers and applause] i love it. i love it. those messages disappear all by themselves. . stuart: okay. last hour we heard from former attorney general michael. listen to what he said. >> poor judgment. the kind of judgment that says that i can make decisions based on my own convenience and the riles that are made for other people are not made for me. . stuart: all right. i think hillary clinton is in some trouble in the polls recently. come on in, emily, who is a democrat who joins us now to contempt on this. emily, welcome to the program. >> thank you so much for having me. stuart: i think hillary is in serious trouble, and i don't think that trouble is going away, and i think democrats are very, very worried about ho having a wounded candidate. what say you? >> look, i think this comment
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that she made over the weekend about snapchat, i think it was a moment of levity, and i think she put the right lens on where we are talking about these e-mails now. when asked the question of would she have done it differently, she said, yes, i would have done it differently. but we've now moved from having a serious conversation about e-mails, she was cleared by two separate investigations, now it just moved into political theater, and i think that is a moment for levity. stuart: what do you think of her judgment? she's the secretary of state, and she runs our foreign policy business, including top secret material through a private server, accessible to chinese hackers. what does that say about her judgment and suitability to be the president of the united states? >> look, i think that we can say her judgment is strong. if we look at her actual record, that is strong. you know, i was looking. stuart: what did she strong? wait a minute. what is strong about having a private server in your barn
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when you are the secretary of state and you're having top secret messages through this private server. that is strong judgment? you really think so? >> look. stuart: look? >> nothing had been able to see that there were actually messages moving through that server that should not have been. the -- stuart: 63. 63. >> they were only. stuart: 63. it was two last week now it's 63. do you think that's strong judgment. >> and they were only classified as such after the fact. stuart: but she didn't know -- wait a minute i know for a fact that some of those e-mails contain the whereabouts of our murdered ambassador in benghazi, the jets where they were at any one time, and the drone story, what tactics we conducted to drone our enemies. she knew that and you don't think that's top secret? what's her judgment she knew
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that, she read those things. and you think this is ask strong judgment? >> look, that was her job as secretary of state. that is the kind of information -- stuart: it was not her job to run it through a private server that was hackable by the chinese. >> no. and it does not look like that server has been hacked whereas the state department was actually hacke. stuart: you're prepared to take that risk? >> look, she has said that it was poor judgment and that she would have done it differently if she could have done it. but that was 2008 the way we dealt with e-mails was different. we didn't have them all on one device. she made that choice to cut out the second device and put it all on one. it's not like she was trying to invade anything. she's been transparent by showing us her e-mails. stuart: you can't say that. she's been incredible transparent by showing us her e-mails, she deleted 30,000 of them. >> i delete e-mails every day stuart: there was nothing to
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see here boys and girls, nothing to see. no, it was 38,000 e-mails related to my daughter's wedding. that's it? we have to take her word for that? and now we found 63 e-mails that we've gone through, showing it was top secret information. >> look, out of tens of thousands. but i think the man point her. stuart: we haven't gone through the rest yet. look, you've got a problem here. who would you rather see in the white house joe biden or hillary clinton? >> hillary clinton is coming out with strong proposals of what people want to be talking about. they want to be talking about debt, they want to be talking about wages, they want to be talking about working, they want to be talking about health coverage, these are the things she's hearing when talking to regular people, and she's responding, she is not getting caught in this echo chamber of washington. that's what people ultimately want to see. stuart: okay. we hear you. but thanks for joining us. come back again because i don't think this story is going away by any means. appreciate it, emily.
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>> thank you so much. stuart: time for the sector report. we have some retail winners for you today. take a look, first of all, at j.c. penney. is that making a come back? it's about $8 a share. got a new ceo coming on who board. nordstrom is also getting a pop today. that's the sector report some retail stocks are doing nicely. thank you. a man is killed in a terrorist bombing in the 1970. the killers fled to cuba where he was granted a asylum. now that man is speaking out against phenomenon open diplomatic relations with cuba. he's here to tell us his storyrf next suting time, 3 million lines of code, 40,000 sets of eyes, or a million sleepless nights. whether it's building the world's most advanced satellite, the space station, or the next leap in unmanned systems. at boeing, one thing never changes. our passion to make it real. ♪
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online and on the usaa app. >> good morning, everybody, on the floor of the new york stock exchange, i'm lori, fasten your seatbelts, folks, it's already a roller coaster ride with the dow making up 20 points, we were down 120 at the open this morning, and a survey that came out highest level in a decade. so in light of that, let's take a look at the home building stocks. coming up in a strong week, all those shares up. about a half percent to over 1%. thornton, though, 1.3%. and before the bell earnings down about 3% right now. disappointment sales hurt by less demands for skin care products and that stronger dollar. much more "varney & company"
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contact your health plan for the latest information. . stuart: historic moment in cuba friday. the u.s. flag raised over our embassy in havana. not everybody is happy with that, especially our next guest whose father was killed
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by puerto ricoian terrorists in manhattan. the killers were granted asylum. now, your father was killed, the guy who did it went to cuba and is still there. >> yes. william morales was the chief bomb maker, he was convicted and sentenced to 99 years to prison, he escaped prison with one finger and half haze face and been in cuba since 1988. stuart: and you think we should not establish this relationship with cuba because of what happened to your father and the killer who is still there. >> well, i think there's a lot of reasons we shouldn't establish a relationship? stuart: sure. >> i think one of the main reasons we need to seek justice. we're the most powerful country in the world and we get nothing out of our negotiation. it's not even negotiation, it's very similar to what we've done in iran. stuart: big picture argument that is it's more important to establish a relationship
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between countries than it is to establish justice for individuals in this case. >> well, perhaps. but the relationship that we're creating with cuba is a very one-sighted relationship. there's been no giving on the cubaian side. in fact, as we're negotiating this, they owe a billion dollars in seizure of our assets. so you could say we want to accuracy a relationship, but creating a relationship with the person or country is not one sighted. you have to get something back. bring morales back and he's hanging food in cuba right now. i talked to people very closely to the joint terrorism task force. he's low hanging food, he's not liked in cuba, he's the person we can get back. there's about 70 fugitives in cuba. stuart: yeah, sure. but do you think we're going to get them? >> i think we will eventually get him back but we should never have got this back without demanding justice. it's such a simple rule.
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stuart: negotiate in that way -- >> the president doesn't negotiate at all. stuart: wants an agreement, so he negotiates to get an agreement. >> right. but that's not what an negotiation is. that's a can a pitchlation. and you don't negotiate for agreement. you have goals in mind. the goal is to get. >> yes, ma'am, something, and in the case of iran, the goal is an agreement. not something that's tangibly good for our country. stuart: is there anything you can do to get your father's killer back here? >> well, i personally can't but what the people can do is speak out. we have 13 congressman righting a letter to john kerry last week. look, the founders were afraid that you could have tyranny and elected tyranny. unless the leaders fear the people, we're going to fear our leaders, and we need to
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have people stand up, i'm just one, but there's a lot of people out there who feel like i do, and we need to talk. stuart: joe corner, thank you very much for being on the program. we will see you again. >> thank you very much. stuart: private jets not just for the ultimate rich, a new survey lets you rent a plane for an affordable price. the 29-year-old ceo jet after this security. it's how you stay connected to each other and to your customers. with centurylink you get advanced technology solutions, including an industry leading broadband network, and cloud and hosting services - all with dedicated, responsive support. with centurylink as your trusted technology partner, you're free to focus on growing your business. centurylink. your link to what's next.
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stuart: well, look here, the dow has gone positive, we were down 120 and now we're up 3. there's a headline for you. and a 4.0 earthquake hit california's bay area they really morning, centered around the town of piedmont, witnesses describing it a quick, short shake. authorities say no reports of injuries or serious damage. 4.0 on the scale. and now this. dallas area taxpayers reported pay more than $825,000 in costs related to last year's ebola outbreak that left one foreign visitor dead and two other nurses effected. cost include decontamination of the nurses, and the nurses' dog. $800,000 plus. a weekend for golf fans, jason day, 28 years old, wins the
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pga, a record 27 strokes under par, that's a record for a major. he was seen tiers of joy in his eyes, especially right there when he picked up his young daughter. check the big board, we're up one point, i call that dead flat this monday morning. now check this out. onejet, if i say -- i want to describe this precisely. private jets with cheap flights. how about that? basically what this guy's offering. this guy, by the way, is 29 years old matt mcguire, he's like that ceo of onejet, it's not quite private jet, is it? >> no, it's not. stuart: it's about commuter jet. >> it is. it's about taking a private aircraft and making them into a product that's accessible to corporate travelers, so to a much larger group of the population making nonstop connective. stuart: $300 is the average price? >> it's sold by the seat through all the corporate
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booking tools through expedia, through book it's and it's $300 one way. stuart: how many passengers have you flown from april to now? >> 1,000 passengers. stuart: that's not a bad start. >> it's not a bad start. what's really important us to is to see if this is a product that could be purchased by the mainstream traveler. so fortune 500, we wanted to see if they would buy this, and so far we have agreement with 8 fortune 500 companies. and bear in mind we operate from the main terminals, we have tsa access, so for customers through their existing points of sale, they go through the airport, very normalized experience but then we're getting them to their destinations, say, 45 minutes versus four or five hours with a connection. stuart: you're 29 years old. >> yes. stuart: did you start this idea. >> i did and that's a good way to put it. . stuart: and how much money did you put into this venture? >> i put in every dollar i had, and i started with
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friends and family, and then i went and cold called a couple of retired ceos from network carriers and got them to write checks and then all the investment bankers in new york said, oh, yes, we'll come in now as well. stuart: so if i was in memphis. >> yeah. stuart: and i want a short flight, a couple hundred miles to a badly served marketplace. >> sure. stuart: you might be there with a private jet on a specific schedule. >> sure. stuart: and i could jump on for $300. stuart: well, bear in mind these are markets from, like, memphis so pittsburgh. stuart: yeah. >> one we talk about is fedex, so you have 30 to 50 people a day traveling in each direction and many of those from management programs. stuart: you might make some serious money if you're not careful. onejet guy, thank you, sir. >> thank you. stuart: president obama and president clinton playing golf on martha's vineyard, what they have what were they talking about. and plan to send troops to defeat isis. can a business have a mind?
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stuart: so how about that little chat on the golf course between bill clinton and president obama? what could they have been talking about? well, they're not saying much but i don't mind speculating. bill wants to know if his wife will be prosecuted. she kept top secret information on her private server, that's illegal. so will they charge her? legally, they should, but in reality the president doesn't have to. here's his call so bill needs something from barack. president obama wants something after he leaves office, he wants his legacy to be preserved, not reversed. so what is he going to do? if he fours hillary's prosecution, he ensures for his defeat. so how is he going to respond
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to hillary's e-mail problem and should he push joe biden to enter the race? that conversation may be critical to the entire campaign. the fact that it took place at all suggestions the desperation in the clinton camp as hillary's ship keeps running on the e-mail rocks. the president holds the upper hand. he can use his pen and his phone to destroy his political rival, buttory has figure out the consequences for joe biden if he alienates a whole lot of hillary supporters. as for the golf game itself, we are told they didn't keep score. ♪ ♪ . stuart: we'll get back to that in a moment, but look at this approximately, first of all, a bomb has exploded in bangkok, tiled. at least a dozen people are dead, at least 20 injured. reports say more of the casualties are foreign tourists and that the bomb
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could have been on a motorcycle tied to a electronic pole. according to authorities, no one's claimed responsibility yet for the deadly attack. bangkok, tiled is where it happened. news breaking from california, a 4.2 earthquake hit the area, details here. >> yeah. the rampant transit had been on shut down and it's open now, no reports of damage, and we do have some sound actually from people on the ground. take a listen to what they're saying. >> you name it, everyone was obscured, other r, oh, my gosh we're having a earthquake. oh, my goodness, this is a good one. all right. >> pretty much all clear, and it startles people but no damage, no injuries and the rapped bay area transit running. stuart: then i was in california for a couple of years in san francisco about four years, went through two earthquakes and you know when
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there's been an earthquake. >> they're not fun. stuart: no, they're very troubling and worrying and you know you've had one. >> we've seen smaller ones in that area but they're worried that's where the devastating one could happen. stuart: i had a house on the fault line, by the way. >> fault, low down the scale. >> very little damage, but it becomes worse, a 5 is as if not that bad, it doubles. stuart: well, we're glad to see that the bay area has recovered successfully from a 4.0. got it. check the big board there. some news for you. we were down 120 now we're up 33 in the space of 90 minutes. not bad. look at tesla, you won't believe this. morgan stanley says it's going to hit a price of $462. 251 right now, it's up $8, long way to go. >> it sounds like trying to get some banking business. stuart: how about apple? look at that, reportedly working on a self-driving car and all the electronics to go
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in it. that's given about a dollar boost, 117 on apple. then we have disney opening two star wars themed attractions at hollywood. >> no, it doesn't. stuart: orlando. its least visited theme park, the stock is up 1.30. 108 this morning for disney. and zulily, qvc is buying it for 2.4 billion and up 47%. $18 on zulily. president obama and president clinton golf game this weekend, martha's vineyard. what do you think they were talking about? i've been speculating. what do you think they were talking about, charlie? >> you know, i don't think they were talking about e-mails at all -- no, i'm kidding. listen. one thing about bill clinton probably better than donald trump, he knows how to smoosh people, he knows how to get business from them and deal
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with them. stuart: what do you think they want from barack obama? >> they might have not brought up the e-mail thing specifically, but this is a cozing up, as you hear joe biden maybe. stuart: cozing up? i think you're wrong. >> they never had a great relationship. stuart: they never did, and i think bill clinton wants to know, barack, mr. the president, are you going to prosecute my wife. >> i think it's the whole thing, there are a lot of people standing in the democratic party whether he's going to support biden or encourage biden. stuart: and bill clinton wants to know. >> well, i think this is his way of. stuart: bill says mr. president, are you going to prosecute my wife? and barack obama says if i prosecute my wife, what will she do? >> what leverage does bill clinton have barack obama right now? none. stuart: what will hillary clinton do if barack obama supports joe biden.
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>> what leverage does he have on barack. stuart: the leverage is -- >> he can do whatever he wants. i mean one of the things is that bill clinton has to woo president obama right now. that's what he has to do. because if he doesn't, this guy could really make life miserable for hillary clinton. all he has to do is say it's an open contest, i told joe do whatever is your heart's content, and that's the problem. that's what i think it's all about. stuart: cozing up? >> i tried to pull this off on bowing this morning, but he wouldn't take. these are gummy bears. stuart: please keep them. i know what they look like. i got it. all right, charlie, thank you very much indeed. staying on politics, donald trump calling for ground troops in the fight against isis and suggesting we demand money from mid-east countries to pay for veteran services.
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lieutenant colonel ralph peters is here. colonel, we know what you think of donald trump, you've described him in disparaging terms, what do you make of his plan to put troops on the ground in the mid-east. >> i have to say, stuart, i'm coming around to a measure of grudging admiration for trump. he's the force of nation that crashed the republican ladies party bridge club. and -- watching him with the other candidates, it's like jessie james versus -- so his land of craziness and common sense that he delivers has real appeal, as for bernie sanders for our william jennings brian on the left. and brother trump, if huey long had been a billionaire, that's what you would get. donald trump. as to his absolutely nutty proposals for the middle east, that's not the common sense part. that's the crazy part. troops on the ground, and i believe there is a military solution to islamic state, and it must be imposed, and it's going to be tough and fierce.
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but trump's not offering a plan. he's offering sound bytes. and military operations, contrary to what he sees from talking heads, military operations are incredibly complex. it's not just organized the 82ed dropping and i can say i cai can saying. people where you take them to, it's just -- how do you supply people freshwater? it goes on and on. stuart: of course but a declaration of intent, and it's believable. he says i'm going to do this. and he says it without conviction, all the caveats of what politicians come up with. he says i'm going to do, it's believable, it has credibility. >> i think it's believable to the believers, it's not believable to me because i want to hear the details. but let's go to the ugly part. he says we're going to take
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their oil and use it for our purposes. that's exactly what saddam hussein was trying to do, if we took their oil, if we should be anyone's oil, you legitimatize with vladimir putin, i mean we have to fight for international law and, again, first world war, one of the things we can be proudest of is we didn't take other people's stuff, we didn't take their territory. so he's saying things that sound good to the hard-core true believers. they're i am practical, they're morally and ethically wrong. so if he wants to get people like me to take him a bit more seriously, he has to flash it out with details. building a wall on the border. are you going to build it in the middle of rio grande? . stuart: yoa lot to say about
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immigration, including no more anchor babies, i'm just picking up on that one aspect. what do you make of that? >> that's another application of common sense. i mean the guy is such a fascinating miss more than. now, anchor babies, that's a scam that has been running for a long time, not just mexicans, but wealthy pakistan, the president can't issue a directive and say no longer tolerate anchor babies. it's part of the constitution. you need a two-thirds majority in congress to change that, and he's not leveling with people, he's saying i'm going to do that. tell us how, mr. trump. tell us how. stuart: we hear you. you're very popular on this program. still very popular on this program. >> thanks for letting me get it in there. stuart: all right, ralph, we'll see you again very soon. thanks for being with us.
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>> thank you. stuart: look at the price of oil, 42.23 right now. earlier hit a drop way down into the 41-dollar level. but we're back up 42 right now. 42. gas up slightly overnight, 2.67 is your national average. that midwestern spike is by that refinery, the spike appears to be winding down and we're holding on in the midwest. i spoke to gas buddies patrick about that spike earlier. this is what he had to say. stuart: i don't think prices have gone back up again in the carolinas or in texas or the southeast, for example. i don't think that's the case. >> yeah. you're slightly right, stuart. we should separate that national average out. if we pull the midwest out of it, i'm sure it's flat to no change. stuart: the conversation on the commodity markets right now is the price of oil. is it going to drop below $40 a barrel? come on in. the shark report founder, his name is steven shark, he's been a stranger with us in the
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past few months but been with us twice in the last week. he's back again. are we going to get to 39 a dollar oil? >> yes. stuart, i do think we are, and it's simple is supply demand commits here. from the demand standpoint, we are at the peek season and the next couple of months, demand will fall off significantly. so we've already had the strongest demand for crude oil this summer ever, and all we've seen is oil prices. drop by 35%. so now we have to ask ourselves when the seasonal demand passes and we continue to produce a lot of oil here in the united states we are producing a lot of oil, opec is producing a lot of oil, at a three-year high. so we're bringing a lot of oil still to the market at a time when demand is going to continue to fall off between now and it into the holidays. so if we are going to break $40, it's going to happen sooner rather than later. stuart: do you think gasoline is going down from here?
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2.67 national average now affected by the refinery problem. absent refinery problems. are we going to get down to $2, 2.20 cents national average gas? >> inning it's a very high likelihood we will. yes, you strip out the problem we're having in the midwest from a refinery standpoint. also having a all summer long tremendous refinery issues that california so gasoline prices are extra ordinarily high there. but when you factor out those two, certainly -- the biggest driver is come september 15th, the refineries can produce a cheaper blend of gasoline, it's easier for them to blend because the stocks to make it more plentiful, cheaper, therefore we're going to see at least a 15-cent decline in price just because of that epa seasonal roll over on september 15th. and therefore if i'm correct and the rule of thumb, stuart, is for every one dollar moved in the price of crude oil, you get about a 28, 2.5 cents drop
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in gasoline price at the retail level. so if i'm correct and we do break that $40 level and, stuart, look, i think the u.s. industrial economy, it's in recession, i think economic demand is extremely poor. we saw what's going on with china and their devaluation, something clearly is wrong there. so from a -- an industrial standpoint today's state manufacturer numbers bear it out, the real unemployment number is over 12%. so i think from a macro economics demand standpoint we are really kind of sucking wind right now. stuart: we hear you. >> and i can see prices not only breaking 40 but going significantly into the mid- to lower 30s. stuart: woe. okay. saves the best until last. steven shark, thank you very much indeed. >> very welcome. stuart: hillary clinton's e-mail scandal gotten bigger? now up to 63 classified e-mails on her server. the judge on that next
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>> by the way, you may have seen that i recently launched a snapchat account. [cheers and applause] i love it. i love it. those messages disappear all by themselves. stuart: all right. hillary clinton making a joke about the e-mail scandal. however, the number of classified e-mails found on her private server is reportedly now over 60 and growing. it was just two last week. i spoke with former u.s. attorney general michael about this earlier. roll tape. >> what kind of judgment did she display in the first place by having a private server to conduct state department business? >> poor judgment. the kind of judgment that says that i can make decisions based on my own convenience and the rules that are made for other people are not made for me. stuart: all right, judge
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andrew napolitano is here. judge, you heard what the former attorney general had to say there about the -- the judgment made by hillary clinton. he also went on to say that the president has some discretion over whether or not hillary clinton is prosecuted. >> yes. stuart: by having those top secret. >> yes. stuart: on her server. >> yes. foreman attorney general is right, and he knows exactly what he speaks of because of the jobs he once held. here's the thing. if president obama wants mrs. clinton entitled, she will be entitled no matter the political uproar. if he does not want her entitled, she will not be entitled no matter what the fbi finds. but if the fbi finds serious evidence and the agents recommended entitlement, this is a highly professional team of career fbi agents and career prosecutors not interested in politics. and the white house says, no,
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you'll see resignations, and you'll see a scandal on your hands. . stuart: so the president holds a great deal of power over hillary clinton's campaign. >> yes. stuart: and if he says, yes, prosecute, there's a real trouble for hillary clinton. >> i couldn't imagine she could get the nomination if she's entitled. stuart: criminally. >> correct. and right now we know her two aids have their own lawyers. that's a very, very bad sign. stuart: lawyering up. >> yes. yes, that's a very bad sign. they cannot consult with mrs. clinton's lawyers because their interest may be adverse . stuart: so i -- they can't get their story straight between them. >> they can't do that anymore. they could have done it before they had lawyers and if they do it, it's got to be through the lawyers in some sort of agreement. it can't be calling up hillary because that's a conversation one of them has to tell the fbi about. and listen these things work
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when the fbi believes there's a conspiracy is to entitled the lowest level people and then trade away a lower charge in return for information about the person at the top. let me also add that if she intentionally wiped clean that server, the fbi will be looking although obstruction of justice charges. stuart: all right. so -- >> when you wiped it, where did it go? who has it? did it disappear into thin air? . stuart: see what you've done, judge, over the last two weeks is to lay out the extreme difficulty that hillary clinton has with the law. >> yes. stuart: to lay out in detail her problem with the law and her -- the position of her campaign, and it is a very serious position that she is in. >> yes. stuart: jokes about it or not. >> it's grave and as we say in the country. you know this. don't taunt the alligator until after you cross the stream. she's basically mocking the justice department that's investigating her. that's insane. stuart: very true. judge, as always.
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thank you very much indeed. >> sure. stuart: a rising point in this investigation. >> thank you, mr. varney. stuart: mr. napolitano, thank you very much. and a new fox news poll saying 58% believe hillary clinton knowingly lied when she said her server did not contain classified information. blake berman with us on this. >> the state department now confirmed 63 e-mails that passed through hillary clinton's private server were indeed classified. that is the amount that have been reand since released out to the general public, however, that number is likely to rise as only a small percentage of the 30,000 e-mails have been released so far for public viewing. the remainder are scheduled in the up coming months. gop presidential hopefuls continue to question clinton's judgment. >> her arrogance is breathtaking.
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mrs. clinton, this is not about politics. why did you have your own private e-mail server? if she knew it, is she's illegal, if she didn't, she's incompetent and not right for president of the united states. >> 54% put clinton at risk for handling her e-mail. and of course the intelligence commute and inspector general said two were of the highest classification that being top secret. stuart: we heard you. thank you very much, blake. and tim thiebaud is back, can he live up to the hype this time around? we have the one jewish republican from congress here to commentator on that the only way to get better is to challenge yourself,
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and that's what we're doing at xfinity.
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we are challenging ourselves to improve every aspect of your experience. and this includes our commitment to being on time. every time. that's why if we're ever late for an appointment, we'll credit your account $20. it's our promise to you. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. . stuart: a canadian company has a patent to build a space elevator. this is a 12.4-mile inflatable elevator to the stratosphere to make it easier. by having what it calls space planes launch from the top of it, it cuts the cost of space flight by a third. that is a projected space elevator. they haven't built it yet. check the share price of j.c.
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penney, marvin, new president and ceo joining the company, up goes the stock 3%. look at netflix. up adulthood. a wall street firm boosting its price target from 120 to 140. so says one analyst. tim tebow returned to the nfl yesterday receiving a standing ovation from the eagles fans upon entering the game midway for the third quarter. he ran for a touchdown. joining us on the phone, eagles linebacker who is usually sitting next to me in the studio but today he chooses to appear on the phone. are you at training camp? is that why you can't be here? >> i am, stuart, we just had a game yesterday against indianapolis colts, so i'm still trying to recover from that. stuart: what's your explanation of tim tebow getting a applause when he returned. >> i can say this. i've never heard such a loud standing ovation for a back up quarterback in my life.
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but nonetheless it was a fight to see him going to the game for the first time in two years, the fans loved it. stuart: and did you love it? >> i did. i was more so eager to see how he performed. mind you he hasn't played in a game since 2013 and that was a preseason game in and of itself. so bank account not doing go something for two years and having to do it in front of an audience waiting to see you fail or make a magical play, i loved it. stuart: also you're a committed christian and so is tim tebow, that has something to do for your welcome for him, doesn't it? >> definitely. tim and i actually got together the night before the game and just shared our thoughts on the game coming up, you know, just kind of got to pray with each other and enjoy's each other's company, wish each other the best. so it's been an honor to see him now again develop on the field, and i just hope the best for him on the field and obviously off the field. stuart: okay. what are you doing this week?
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full-time training camp right now, isn't it? >> yes, sir. we're going 7:00 atom 7:00 p.m. ruffle every day with one or two off days a week. we play again the baltimore ravens on saturday. stuart: okay. i bet you can't wait. i'd love to see that. emanuel, our frequent guest, thank you for joining us as always, appreciate it. >> of course. hope to see you again soon? stuart: yes, sir. this is truly a parent nightmare here. a pedophile connecting with your kid, your child online. one youtube star made did his mission to show parents how easy it actually is. his video is going viral. kobe person is the man who did it, and he joins us in 15 minutes. presidential hopeful ben carson calling a speak that obama gave in support of the nuque deal quote complete with innuendoes and antisystematic themes and he's not backing down. we'll hear from him
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at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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he is at a meeting breaking news to 4.0 earthquake hit california's bay area around the town of piedmont. witnesses described the quake is a quick, short shakespeare no reports of injuries or serious damage. republican presidential
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candidate and carson is defending his recent suggestion that president obama holds anti-semitic release. listen to this. >> go to israel and talk to average people. i'm all into drum. i couldn't find a single person there who didn't feel the administration had turned their back on israel. stuart: near congressmen than feldman, the only jewish republican in congress. ben carson said right there that he couldn't find anybody in israel who takes that the president is on their side for example. you just come back from israel. i know you've done exactly the same thing. is there a difference between being a flat out anti-cinematic, anti-sunlight and not supporting israel and the way the israelis want. there's a difference.
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>> i would say yes there is. when i was in israel, i just got back yesterday, some people went there and leadership or military leaders are a citizen who may be more politically correct than others in their criticism of the president, but there is unanimous concern over the iran nuclear deal, concerned with actions at the united nations, specifically whether there's a viability of those two state solution but as far as talking to average everyday israelis, i was coming across individuals concerned about america's foreign policy, but they were calling the president in anti-semi. stuart: do you think the president holds anti-semitic views? >> i don't know the president is enough to justify what he doesn't say publicly. publicly he expresses opinions
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that in my opinion are not in the best interest of american foreign policy. he is not trying to strengthen america's relationships with our strongest allies enough. he has had more of a focus on treating our enemies in a way that will make them good citizens of the world as if that isn't divorced from reality. i think it is more with regard to the president's foreign policy that i can speak to. i don't know him well enough to justify what he says when he's not in public. stuart: in the last election 2012, democrats received north of 70% of the jewish vote. do you think democrats will get 70% of the jewish vote in the next presidential election? >> i would highly doubt it. still not way to go between now and november 2016. what i've experienced is a lot of voters who vote democrat their entire life. they are more open-minded than ever before to vote republican
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weather at the presidential level on down. i've spoken to individuals who have been lifelong democrats are independent minded individuals who have been leading democrat. it might be a more realistic is 40, 50% of voting republican which is the highest number we have seen. still long way to go between now and the election of november november 2016. stuart: thank you for joining us. appreciate it. check the big word. the dow has turned positive. down 120, now a 25. market watcher jamie cox. quite a turnaround on wall street. what's the reason for the turnaround? >> a lot of people got worried about empire survey the negative 13. about 9:45, people say the homebuilder survey is better than we thought. that's exactly what happened
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here to homebuilder survey is better than expectations and by the way, empire index not that big of a deal. pay more attention to the philly fed to clean anything about what the fed is going to do and what the economic conditions in the united states will be peer i think it was a false start if you will. >> sounds like an awful lot of inside baseball. i bring to your attention a global recession may be brewing in china. be a concern for wall street. >> of coors. >> of course. china is a very large economy. it has established itself as the second or third depending how you calculated economy in the world. if there's a problem in china able filter to the u.s. and europe. i think you saw that last week when you have china in the last month stock market upside down. the currency devaluation with a lot of things going on we filter the currency markets in the u.s.
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and that's where you see the volatility of the stock market. stuart: i don't think i fill it out much of the stock market. 17,500 downloads in a thousand points from the all-time high. what is the risk that suddenly we get a nasty selloff? >> the risk is rather low. what you've seen it many corrections of 4% to 5% and then we turn around and go higher. we are beholden to the fed. until that happens, you see small many corrections continue whether it's september, december or 2016. i don't think run the precipice of anything large. economic conditions are still strong and if that changes i'll change the narrative. until that time i don't think run the precipice of anything of any size. stuart: morgan stanley says it's going to go to $465 a share from $2.50 now.
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>> that's definitely a moon shot from here. there's sort of a narrative that there is a google or at&t affect what they shared mileage concept with tesla where you pay by the mile to own the cars, which is possible. that is not the way americans by cars. right now we still drive them. there are many robots to drive cars. we have a long way to go before that is the reality. i don't think that's a possibility on tesla. sure into bringing us back to earth. we appreciate that. jamie cox, we will see you soon. have you seen this on youtube? a man pretends to be a teenager online and arranges a meeting with a young girl at their parents permission, gets it on video. a parents worst nightmare. a cautionary tale for kids everywhere.
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>> in mourning for the new york stock exchange where stocks got off to a rough start. nice turnaround for stocks with the one stabilizing. leaders right now with united health and apple and disney. the news from disney, you thought fantasyland that the theme parks was a lot of fun. how about "star wars" land. that is what we hear from ceo bob iker. shares rising largely with that news. shares of zulily at 47%.
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it would buy a deal retailing at $2.4 billion. shares again a 47%. 3.7%, 66%. more "varney & company" after this.
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stuart: go daddy has a cash machine. it is in that orders in arizona.
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this one is a giant news filled with money. a lucky go daddy employee goes inside and whatever the salesperson can rather tough in their pockets and 15 seconds if there's. i'm trying to find out whether they to find nobody there 1 dollar bills come a 5-dollar bills, 10-dollar bills. the guy they will grab as much as he can and 15 seconds and keep it. now this. youtube kobe persons in showing how very easy it is for to prey on teenagers via social media. this video shows him chatting up three girls age 12, 13 and 14. his pretending to be a 15-year-old boy. shockingly, they each agree to meet him. one climbed into his van to find out it was a scary hoax put together by a person and their parents. watch this. >> the fate profile on facebook
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with their parents permission of fran requested three girls. we're supposed to meet up later when her parents leave the house. just got attacks. my parents just left. >> are you crazy? are you out of your mind? >> next is giuliana. we are supposed to meet up tonight. >> what is wrong with you? >> the next girl, her name is jen a 14 years old. we have been talking online. stuart: well, you saw it. joining us now is the man behind the shocking video. youtube star cody person in the flesh here in new york. that reminded me of scared straight. >> a mixture of scared straight and to catch a predator.
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stuart: you are making a business out of it? >> it is a business but at the same time i like what i'm doing. stuart: it is effective? >> you are scaring parents to death here. >> it has to be out there. they talk to their kids and show their kids to bring about awareness. this one has 31 million views than five days. stuart: 31 million? i'm not being cynical, but that translates into a lot of money because you get paid per eyeball. >> it does translate into money. i can't tell you how much i make because it's against google terms. stuart: i'm not being cynical seigneur into the money. you are doing something valuable. i'm astonished you got 31 million views in a couple days. what is next? >> part 2 of the video as the boy version.
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we'll show you how fast we get the boys to meet up your stuart: it is amazingly easy. >> at insane. you've got three girls to meet you. >> this one i made a fake grove isle is a 15-year-old girl and within a day, some of these boys would come meet me. rizzo ripped them into different situations which you will see in the video which is literally crazy. stuart: isn't a how-to? >> more of a parent how to. stuart: cody, thank you for joining us. come back again. >> end of the week i will be back. stuart: another obama carrots taxpayer 40% for the so-called cadillac tax on cadillac health care plans. we will deal with it in a
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stuart: you know, turns out the higher-end cadillac bands have a rate of 40%. jerry is here to explain it all.
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if my employer pays $10,200 per year for me as an individual, for my health care, that is fine. but 1 penny over, $100 over, $1000 over comedy overages text of wordy% and the employer has to pay the tax. >> this is an excise tax. 40% that starts in 2018. let me tell you the big employers are making moves so they won't have to pay this. it is changing health care as we know it. this is part of the reason why. as you know, the irs narrow shoulders have been saddled with the burden of implementing obamacare. what they do now is try to decide how they will impose an excise tax. how will it be collected as a practical matter. the law says the insurers have to pay it. it is a practical matter, itis the employers, city, state, private sector who give money to
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the insured to pay it. they are giving the tax money to the insurer and that will come in the front door is income that will be taxed. double taxation. stuart: the unions escape this, don't they? >> massive supporters of obamacare hate this because they've got major exemptions. if you're a firefighter, if you're a cop, all the folks that these unions represent are getting a free pass. and this is one of the big ways obamacare does paid for. stuart: extraordinary stuff. thank you very much indeed. yet americans waited longer than ever to take a big step towards buying their first home. a new median age of home buyers, 33. lauren, have i got this right? first-time homebuyers, the median age for buying the first of is now 33.
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>> right. they rent for six years on average and then they die. back in the 1970s he would rent for two or three years and buy it that point. if you look at the first time home buyer what they do eventually buy at 33, so much annual income is going towards the first-time purchase. they say the number is 140,000 which is two and a half times your income. back in the day was one, 1.5%. stuart: people are delaying the point at which they get the tax break. >> you sound like a real estate agent. the house pickled applies to people itemizing taxes. you have to have a certain income to make it worth your while. that's the number one reason to buy. for a lot of people it's not a great investment because you only get a return of 2%, 3%. trained to do that than it and get a tax break. >> so many people are saying we
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are top.as it is. it's the new american dream. train to more "varney & company" after this.
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>> she made earlier like taunting me as we say in the country. taunt alligator until you cross the stripe she's mocking justice department that is investigating her. that's insane. >> he's serious what he does this opinion okay that was judge napolitano on hillary's joke about disappearance her classified e-mails all right comments from you on facebook about the rest of the show, wayne says this about trump's immigration plan. recession to hear a candidate say that he'll i think force the law importing illegals is the duty of the government. james says about this doing lawn work. i love finished product but with a full-time job, i spent all of my days off mowing, weeding, trimming, 15 acres. yes jane, 15 acres is a gigantic lawn. you need a week for that. neil cavuto my time sup.
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got to go mow the lawn. it's yours. ♪ >> we've got breaking news on a possible terror attack, a deadly explosion in heart of bangkok killing 27 people and many more injured. government there is calling this an attack on the economy. jo ling kent has the latest. jo. >> this is a developing story so far a death of 27 dozens injured. this happened at the shrine hindu shrine in the center of hank you can see the blast that happened. reports from the government say that there were a second and third bomb in the area that were removed and made safe. the government said that this attack was aimed at foreigners specifically. reports that it was a motorcycle bomb. and it has wounded dozens ever people in the area. the defense minister of island

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