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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  August 19, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT

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continue to do her best shecky green, and make jokes. maria: and tomorrow on the lineup. former house leader eric cantor and republican candidate donald trump here 6 to 9 a.m. eastern. "varney & company," over to you. stuart: what's got everybody talking about this this morning? female viagra, but can you invest? that's another story and we've got it for you. and pharmaceuticals get an okay on a daily pill, significant side effects, doctor approval required. you may think it's a great new product, but for you, this is not an investment opportunity. we'll explain. and politics, hillary clinton looked irritated, evasive and her media performance will not help her campaign. with the media she's the exact opposite of donald trump.
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how is this for opportunity, george soros, investing in coal companies, making money beats being green. watch out cheaters, all those ashley madison patrons revealed. who sues who? big show today. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ we start with this, new information from the hillary e-mails. fox news has learned that two e-mails found on her private server, one from staffer humma abaden, and the other by jake sullivan, both were about benghazi and it was those e-mails that prompted the fbi to investigate hillary as use of that private server. fox news learned that clinton aides sent information on the private server.
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dow futures right now suggest a decline of an about 70 or 80 points. the german parliament may vote down the greek bailout, repeat, may vote is down and that's causing anxiety in our markets this morning, we'll be down 70 or 80 points. target will open up big time today. raise their outlook, profits are up, and as far as the eye can see, all looks good at target. it looks like they put that thanksgiving data breach two years ago behind them. they'll open up about three bucks. and as for apple, maybe this is a chink in the armor, half the people who signed up for their free trial of apple music are no longer listening. no movement in the stock expected at the opening bell. price of oil near that six-year low. look, bank of america says the commodity selloff may be over. more on that later. 42 on oil this morning. gas went down again overnight. national average down about 1/2 a cent. we can hear the cheer.
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2.65 we're at now. i say it again, i like it, where is the cheapest in you will a the land. buck 85. in costco, charlottesville virginia. buck 85. a lot of people are talking and what's called the female viagra, fda approval. i want the details, please. let's talk about first the side effects, the risks of taking this drug. low blood pressure, loss of consciousness, you have to avoid alcohol, that increases the risk by 300%. dry mouth, insomnia, that's the initial labeling on the drug that's available in mid october. a doctor has to be certified, a pharmacy has to be certified, go on-line to get the certifications just to prescribe or provide the drug. stuart: actually certified, pharmacist and doctor for one drug. >> for one drug. more controversy around this drug. in trials, women that took this reported one satisfying
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experience a month in trials. which is what many doctors say you need to really consider if this is worth the risks or not. and it's for pre menopausal women that have to have a disorder, hyposexual active disorder. this was rejected twice and these are the reasons why this drug was rejected device. there are serious side gettings and women are going to have to make a serious decision whether they want this drug. stuart: let's turn to the investment side of this. this is not like viagra from pfizer. i could invest in pfizer stock if i wanted to, if i thought it was a good deal, but this is different, sprout is private. i'm locked out. if i think that female viagra is a good idea, i can't invest. >> right now you can't and you remember when viagra came out that was a blockbuster drug for pfizer, led to major multiple
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expansion on the stock. and sprout, this could could likely be acquired-- >> this is not viagra, it's not. stuart: they're not going public, having the people look over your shoulder, all the hassles, i'm not going to be able to get into this investment. >> i agree. >> would you want to? >> that's an another story, that's not my account, like uber and air bnb. let's get to the hillary scandal. new revelations came out, she dismissed a question from fox news ed henry. watch this. >> and wipe the whole thing. >> my personal e-mails are my personal business, right? so, i-- so we went through a painstaking process and turned over 55,000 pages of anything we thought could be work
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related under the law. that decision is made by the official. i was the official. i made those decisions. >> did you wipe the server? >> what, like with a cloth or something? i, i know you want to make a point and i can just repeat what i've said. >> it's a simple-- >> in order to be as cooperative as possible, we have turned over the server, they can do whatever they want to with the server to figure out what's there, what's not there. thank you all very much. >> to go away for the campaign-- nobody talked to me about it other than you guys. stuart: all right, katherine from the national review is there. you saw that, katherine, what do you make of her ability to perform in the media. >> so ugly. it was so bad. it was a disaster. and the wiping with the cloth thing, that was-- nobody thinks hillary is funny.
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nobody thinks you're funny. bad joke. polls show no one trusts you, people want answers from you not jokes and it's insulting. stuart: she didn't answer the question. did you wipe that server. >> what, with a cloth? >> she did not answer the question. >> she didn't answer it and she wasn't funny either. stuart: where does she go from here? i think she's going downhill with that performance. >> she's probably not going to talk to the press for a while. i don't know if she's being coached by people. >> she's out of the race by christmas. out of the race. stuart: oh, that's drama for you. anthony says she's out by christmas. you're a backer of scott walker. >> i am. it doesn't matter who i'm backing, it's about the law here. and even though they're going to try to help her and try to block things happening on the fbi side it's not going to matter. if you understand-- you understand the pay petraeus case as i am friends with the
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general, what she's done one of the most important officials in the obama cabinet. >> in social media she's getting beat up for wearing orange, orange is the new black and the prison color. >> it's on social media. it's know the whether it's better or worse, the fact that now voters are noticing. polls show that voters are noticing, i don't trust her. i think that she lied on purpose, that's what matters. >> she's going to get indicted. stuart: out of the race by christmas? >> i wouldn't be surprised. stuart: got it. moving on. donald trump, very clear about his immigration plan. send illegals back and don't issue any more visa, don't issue any more yet. and some say that immigrant bashers are going to loose the evangelical vote.
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stuart: trump will lose the evangelical vote? >> and 70% of evangelicals started mitt romney, it's a core constituency of the core republican movement and that constituency is very pro immigration reform. we are opposed to amnesty. we are opposed to sanctuary cities. we want the application of the rule of law. we want people to come into this country legally, but the idea of deporting 11 million people runs counter to our christian faith. that community will be alienated. either the republican party of abraham lincoln and ronald reagan and jack kemp, the conservative republican party or the conservative party or republican movement of tom tancredo, pat buchanan and donald trump. that runs counter to our evangelical-- >> let's go donald trum saying
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to 11 million people you've got to go back. if his policies are implemented at some point a federal agent has to go to those people and say, pack your bags, you're out. i'm with you, reverend, no way that's going to happen. >> it's not going to happen and it's not practical, of course. the optics of that are eagree gist to the republican movement. there's a demographic of latinos, and emerging millennials not attacked by what's coming out of the democratic at all. the democratic party has shifted radically to the left. this is the moment, this right now is the quintessential moment to engage latinos, african-american and next generation-- >> reverend, real fast. absent trump and what he's had to say, would evangelical hispanics vote republican? >> yes, especially with the platforms of a jeb bush, marco
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rubio or others who get it. entrepreneurship, religious freedom, personal responsibility, indeed. stuart: reverend rodriguez, thank you for joining us, you're in california, you must have gotten up early, we appreciate it. >> just for you, my friend. stuart: thank you. general motors wants to import buicks from china, made in china and bring them over here. the union doesn't like that. lauren has the story if case you missed it. >> the united auto workers blasting general motors for considering importing buicks from china. the uaw is using it in bargaining talks before a deadline to reach a union deal. uaw is hoping to win pay raises and jobs for members. american airlines the first to offer a nonstop charter flight from los angeles to havana. this december the flights will be sold by cuba, travel services and they go out every saturday. and russia president vladimir
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putin goes for a dive. watch him here, getting into that submarine in the black sea. he's searching for an ancient ship wreck off the coast of crimea and yes, that's his latest stunt, stuart. stuart: at least he didn't-- he kept his shirt on, put it like that. thanks so much, lauren. check this out, please, pem percepem-- tempers flare during a scrimage. is that necessarily bad publicity for the nfl? not so sure about that. a massive hack of the cheating website ashley madison and hackers are releasing information on what's called the dark web. they're making threats to the company. sounds like extortion. the judge is next.
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maria: >> a brawl broke out between the cowboys and the rams. nobody seriously injured, but the coaches had to end practice. the second time a joint
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practice has been canceled because of fighting. in our next hour, this kind of thing is not necessarily bad for the nfl. we're on it. new developments in the ashley madison hacking. well, this, too. this is the website for people who wish to cheat on their spouse supposedly in secret. the hackers dumped the information for 37 million people on the dark web, that means names, addresses, credit card info, it's out there and takes simple software to access to the dark web. what is ashley madison's liability in all of this. and joining us is judge andrew napitano. kind of smirking, what is the responsibility. >> any unauthorized entry into someone else's digital information is a federal crime unless you are the federal government doing the unauthorized entry like the
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nsa. once you demonstrate the existence of criminal activity, it becomes easier to demonstrate the existence of civil liability, however, in this case, the issue is, what expectation of privacy did the people have who used ashley madison. stuart: the guarantee? >> it wouldn't be a guarantee, it would be crazy to give a guarantee, but what words were used to induce them to put the most private information about themselves in this website and depending upon the nature of those words or representations, would determine whether it was fraudulent, whether it was serious or what did ashley madison do to protect this information. >> well, ashley madison is either liable or they're going to go out of business, because who on earth is going to use that website in the future, bearing in mind the release of information. >> which means that it's going to be transferred to the insurance carrier assuming ashley madison has that, it would be hard to believe that
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they didn't. however, certain policies, mr. scaramucci knows this and miss casone, some policies have exceptions for criminal acts of third parties which is really what this is. you have the customer who says i want to have sex with so-and-so. you have the vendor who says, here is how you can reach so-and-so, but then you have the third party invading that. and the vendors, and-- >> be careful, judge, you've got to come back this morning. your point man on the hillary clinton e-mails and your information on it. >> i shall be back. stuart: coming off of this program very, very shortly, presidential candidate marco rubio accidentally hits a youngster with a football. a lot of people watched that. greeny billionaire george soros now investing his money in, wait for it, coal.
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it's gone viral. greeny billionaire george soros has demonized those fuels, and now hypocrisy? >> let me show you some of the anti-green coal companies, and ellen baker center, green for all, the center for american, and he's put tons of money into this and he worked with van jones and pressure the obama administration. 110 billion dollars with green initiatives and drive down coal down 35% and start to scoop it up. >> mr. scar mariucci economy? >> buy it alongside of him and total hypocrisy and this is an investment that our viewers can make. this stock is very cheap and what do we know about coal? it was our past and it's our future. true, isn't it a conflict of interest as well. if you're influencing policy,
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but with your money and you're driving the price of something down on political grounds, on policy grounds and then you jump in and buy that i think this to make money, that's and conflict of interest. >> he's done it with oil and. >> the worst word in our lang language is ought o-u-g-h-t, i tell my children don't use that in front of me and-- >> we can change the world. thousands of americans great jobs, and blackrock matters, if he destroys coal and then doing this, be careful. george soros doesn't care about human beings. i want to change the world, but these stocks are cheap. >> and i'm sorry, we'll come back. stuart: and coming up, we're moments away from the opening
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bell. apple music not gaining much traction and we have details on that. and jeff flock out and about again. he's headed into this thing, it's a ford simulator for distracted drivers. what will flock do next? >> we've never done this on live television before. we've got 30 mile per hour winds, we've got minus 40 fahrenheit and i'm going to stand in 80, minus 80 wind chill. this is what it is. i'm suing varney for everything he's worth. it's more than a network and the cloud.
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a triple digit drop. looks like we are down over 140. question about whether the german parliament will bail out. we are going to open significantly lower in two seconds. here we go. we are down to 42. we are down 47 and moving lower assist me. check it out. down to the points where we are appeared with us today, charles payne, cheryl casone and didn't savage in chicago. i want to go back to china. i think it still overhangs our market. charles, is the china threat still there? absolutely. not the market per se that the overall economy. stuart: it really is burst in. >> they've done an amazing job
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engineering the soft landing. you wonder if some point at the run of the whole is. stuart: are they really burst in now? >> and super worried about china. but the federal reserve will raise rates in september and that is affecting the market. stuart: you think that day. data 113 points. >> even though a slightly less than did the data suggest they will raise rates. speech last week indicated that. >> it is raising rates in an economy. stuart: you are killing me, guys. you are killing me. thank you. look at oil and copper thin and six-year lows. bank of america says the selloff in commodities may be over. look at copper way down today. if the selloff in commodities
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over? of course that's related to china. >> i don't think it quite is yet. you have to ask yourself what the commodities, particularly oil, how much more downside do you have there. if you want to job in over the long term will be okay. short-term will suffer a little more pain. stuart: anthony, what about you? >> i agree it's going lower. a softening in the underlying economy. cheryl: i think 40 bucks on oil and that's the end of it. >> i agree with dan. a lot of these big-time guys are buying gold now. stuart: be dealt with china and the fed to give you a second moment. look at apple. here's the story. nearly half the people who tried apple music had stopped using that. is that a negative show?
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cheryl: very much a negative. music watch did a survey of 40% that tried apple music gave it up, walked away. really good for pandora and really good for a spot of five. this is supposed to be the pandora killer. that is a huge number. the things been going for six weeks of the world of technology 25-year-old is an eternity. you might as well kill it now. trained to look at target. i noticed a big winner today. lori rothman, what is the story? >> a big winner. the top performer on the s&p 500. golly now with a gain of 5%. 8434. significant of the data breach way down in the range. you can see a nice turnaround taking hold for shares of target. the company is to turn a billion
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dollars to its investors. thanks for target and another wife and disappointing market. stuart: charles, real cheap after the breach a lot of people dead. a lot of people buy stocks right after a nasty episode, either made a lot of money. stuart: you think about ebola and the cruise ships back then. just when it looks the darkest fear stuart: low 70s because of that problem. >> you have to give kudos to the new guy. he's done an amazing job. >> at aig to god. an unbelievable story. target is a great company. stuart: we are now done 130-point spirit of 30 stocks in the dow industrials. every single one is in the red. they are all done as of right
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now. amazon reportedly working on a new program that can let you pick up your packages rather than wait for them to be dropped off. down to bucks at 532 with a great run. what do you make of amazon? >> listen, probably not the best place to work. but this is a great place to shop. stuart: is the greatest place to work. you can make your fortune, work hard. >> i'm probably the only one of us reading "the new york times." here's the bottom line. the stock is a powerhouse because he focuses on the right things. customer service and topline revenue growth and he's delivered for 20 plus years. stuart: in a down market he said to bucks at 530. >> i agree. target announced the other day you can pick up stuff. is a battle everything sad
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state. wal-mart at a 52 week low. cheryl: this is good for amazon, the pickup option. they will have the drone issue off several years with the faa. i think it's a good thing. stuart: the drone delivery may come sooner than you think, especially in rural areas. maybe the google robot will deliver it. >> we preferred not in the ups guy ringing the bell. stuart: were you sure did stock or something. survey says chief financial officers believe in any given year 20% of companies intentionally fudged their profit report. charles, what you make of that, and this is why people don't trust wall street? >> is exactly why people don't trust wall street. forget about the place and wall
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street. certainly to find ways around it. one of the best ceos in part because you always find a way to beat the numbers. cheryl: you need to be a rhodes scholar's to get through these earnings. the way they manipulate their earnings and operating expense of mass, i would love to see simplification of earnings reports from american companies. >> cap is simple but we don't use it on wall street because it's not flattering. we like the shenanigans. cheryl: you like the shenanigans. stuart: you are real-life investor. >> find me somebody who understands this stuff. a bank balance sheet or income statement. tell me something at the bank that understands it. stuart: is almost impossible. >> it turned out the average investor who you want to invest and to buy stock. in the stock a lot of americans
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don't. >> we become so knee-jerk selling off the stock 20%. stuart: expectation is word i don't like. >> there's no market. stuart: here is your chance. attention, everyone. the fed minutes this afternoon. talking about the language used, passing every word, every sentence, won't you? anthony, are you ready for this? >> i'm ready for it. i had to change my tune because i was talking about no fed increase until 2016. this is a data dependent said. they've got to raise rates by 25 basis points. >> that's why we been down the last three weeks. >> ironically i disagree. i don't see any strong data. we have inflation today.
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we've got global deflation. they would lose credibility and that the only true tool the fed has. stuart: stecich in chicago has been waiting to get a word in edgewise. why don't you join the conversation on what they're going to do. >> i'm halfway between charles and the previous guest. the data has been iffy the past month or so, past two just based on the way the fed has been telegraphing things, it looks as if they may. i'll give a slightly 50% chance they race in september. it is data dependent up until the point. we have to watch it closely. stronger numbers mean i'll do it. stuart: let's check the big word. down 142, almost below the session so far. 10 minutes in the session.
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later, we have someone on the program has the program is that the market will drop another 20%. charles payne is not the same. tonight at 6:00 more of charles. making money is the name of the show, by far the most successful "varney & company" spinoff. [laughter] >> they liken it to archie bunker. the modern-day version of that. stuart: next, the latest on the tom brady trial, while even as the ball seemed be losing interest. quite a way of promoting the story. why one test is coming on the show later as we should really be google's new humanlike robot.
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>> there is no way my luck is that bad.
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stuart: people in bangkok still reeling from that blast that left a reporter and 20 people dead. police say the attack was part of a network. they haven't specified the character or nature or name of that network. officials have released a sketch of a key suspect seen leaving it back back pack in the area where the bomb went off. police say he did not act alone and the thai citizens were involved. a blast occurred in a popular tourist area now reopened to the public tourism is that bone. to the markets, looking south and a moment down nearly 150 points. remember we've got a fed minutes released this afternoon.
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the question is are they going to raise rates next month yes or no. some people suggest they will and it will be done 152. the german parliament may vote down a greek bailout. a full report on that later. also another word for the migrate. american eagle, strong numbers down 5%. hormonal comment they make spam on which i was raised. they hit a new high. why are you looking at me like that? stuart: i was a child in england and the americans spent on trains and over spam to feed the english after world war ii. kfc parodied john is a winner new bigger ship for its china division. markets of $1.85. look at this. this is the world's luckiest
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steel. the men captured this video of a shark off the coast of cape cod reaching the water to grab a seal. the field managed to avoid the jaws. it missed. look at this one plays. time lapse video of pluto. a spacecraft flying by for the first time in history last month. until we've only seen still shots. this shows the whole flyby and 15 seconds. never seen anything like that before. we can't get enough of this one. google is walking robot. cheryl: atlas. stuart:.if his name, isn't it. a little unnerving. eric shepherd. using this video i know all about this robot. do you think i should be worrying about these things way, way down the road, 10 or 20 years down the road?
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do you think they are unnerving way down the road? >> i think they are, stuart. you have a situation where we don't know how bad it could really get. there are many people suggesting it could get to the point of destruction of the human race. there is a lot of logic behind that when you consider at some point these devices in combination with artificial intelligence will be smarter than the smartest humans on earth. when you calculate what that could be, our brains don't have the ability logarithmically when you go ahead and did about the levels of intelligence they will have two be able to think what is possible when they have all these different powers. it's a big concern. a lot of people like me and others certainly perhaps when you look at bill gates and elon musk who are for a much greater control and artificial intelligence. the u.n. needs to be involved in
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a bigger way to create some internal ethics. stuart: you think it's that bad. it would take a quantum leap in artificial intelligence to get a brain under that robot that would damage the human race. you are talking a quantum leap in technical development, aren't you? >> i'm talking a quantum leap. i don't think we have anything to worry about right now. in the next five, 10 years we are fine. when we project out 15, 20 years, for artificial intelligence will be that robust and powerful, we are looking at what could be a catastrophe. we need to be prepared and thinking about it on a global level because we wouldn't want groups like i says to have that power and it could be the levels that could do such damage. stuart: don't we want to be in the lead. don't we want to be in front.
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i do want to be shackled by the united nations. >> understood. we definitely are in front when you consider the united states right now as darpa, an adjunct of the military. they are out in front. google through boston dynamics is one of the leaders. i'm suggesting more of a way to rein in other countries. we do not want to be behind. we want to take the lead on our own. the united states is absolutely the leader which is a good thing for the safety and security of our country. >> that was a good interview. we appreciate it. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: tom brady has another hearing today. even tom brady doesn't care anymore. he's not going. only his lawyer is going.
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adam shapiro is at the courthouse. add him, does anyone care? >> yes, people who speak english without accents care because they want to see tom brady, especially patriots plans play september 10 between the new england patriots and pittsburgh steelers. let me put this in terms you can understand. an obscure part of the lot because what they are arguing essentially is no matter what the decision is binding in the court is not authorized to review the arbitrator decision despite allegations the decision rests on factual errors or all of us whether you played football or not we sign contracts with sign contracts have clauses that the arbitrator will decide any disputes. if the judge were to overturn not, contracts are all up in the air after that. stuart: very fine american expression. adam, thank you indeed. cheryl: stuart, nobody cares
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because this is a big ego driven event by tom brady. take your four games off, move on. stuart: coming up, strengthening in the atlantic, experts say could soon become a hurricane. you have been warned. just walk out and about again this morning. in a simulator for distracted driving. cheryl: is it warm? stuart: i don't know what is going to do. he'll break it. ♪ when a moment spontaneously turns romantic, why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use, is the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night.
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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. stuart: look at this. a weather map showing tropical storm in the atlantic and experts say it could become a hurricane coming threat to the lesser antilles next week. so far sustained winds at the miles an hour tracking it as it moves west. now look at between typhoons in southeast asia. they could hit taiwan in the philippines by the end of the week. it could pose a risk even to japan. both storms are gaining strength. they could sustained winds of more than 150 miles per hour by
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tomorrow. looks like eyes staring at you. distracted driving clearly a problem. come on in jeff flock from "forbes." driver distraction simulator. though they let you do some acting, just don't break it, jeff. >> here's the problem. -- confession to make -- in the early 80s traveling around doing things like holding something in your hand, holding a beeper in your hand and all that sort of thing. what i like about this at ford as they are trying to deal with that in some way. take a look at what they set up here. this is i would call it a full scale real-life videogame. it is a huge dome and they have all sorts of cameras and measurements around. you get to interact with the traffic when you do things like a live television broadcast, you hear these little heaps, by the
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way. that's when i go out of my way in somehow. they are not going to let me crash it, maybe they will if i'm not careful. there you go. i like this because i am steering with my knees, which is what i typically do when i drive because i've got my hands doing something else and i've got the radio on and that sort of thing. i have a libertarian sort of attitude about it, which is don't tell me what i can do. if i do something wrong i'm in trouble and i should pay the price. stuart: you are okay in a simulator, but not in real life. we will be back to see how you're going. carry on. the story everybody is talking about. the new drug for sexual arousal in women. we have a feminist who is not happy with this new drug. disney has done another way to cash in on the "star wars" franchise. the entire rides are in the
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works and lands devoted to "star wars" themes. that's very interesting. dominic patten on that joins assuredly. the second hour of "varney & company" shortly. . stuart:
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>> precisely 10:00 eastern, here are the big stories. it's called the female viagra a new drug that claims to increase sexual arousal in women. it's received if. da approval and not all people are happy about it. new revelations on hillary clinton's e-mail server as she dismisses pointed questions from fox's ed-ry, she's not performing well in the media. the ugly truth with wind power. hundreds of thousands of birds killed every year, including golden eagles. where is the outrage from the greenies. you'll hear that on my take. hour two of "varney & company" straight ahead. ♪
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in you this hour, jared fogle, the subway pitchman in trouble. >> we're getting the documents from the court and federal prosecutors after releasing this say basically what they're charging him with, engaging in sex acts with minors and 37-year-old fogle agreed to pay a little more a million dollars fine, 1.4 million in restitution to the victims, to 14 minor victims, each victim, minor victims of jared fogle will receive $100,000. he has to register as a sex offender and undergo treatment for sexual disorders and all in the plea agreement and subject dropping officially, and jared fogle, what he's agreed to-- what he has coppeded to that he's done is horrific, it's horrific. stuart: thank you very much. and to thailand, people in bangkok reeling after the report of 20 dead and now say
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the attacker is part of a network, at of now, an unspecified network, we don't know yet, they've not said who they think organized this bomb blast. officials released the sketch of the chief suspect, seen leaving a backpack in the area where the bomb went off. police say he did not act alone and they say thai citizens were involved. the blast occurred in a popular tourist area which has now been reopened to the public. tourism is the backbone of the thai economy. to the markets, we're still way, way down. this afternoon, we get a report from the federal reserve, some hint that the fed will raise rates next month. that's not going down well op wall street. the dow is down now 130. the german parliament could vote down the greek bailout later, that's a maybe, it's a minor factor on the markets at this moment. look at target, it's raised its outlook and it's a 4% winner today. we keep a close eye on twitter
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every day, price target cut by one big firm yesterday. twitter at 27 this morning. oil, down around $42 per barrel. however, bank of america says the commodity selloff may be over. price of gasoline, yeah, went down a little bit overnight and national average off 1/2 cent, 2.65 is what you're looking at right now. let's get to the latest on hillary clinton's e-mail scandal. fox news learned that two e-mails found on the server, one from staffer humma abideen and sullivan, both were about benghazi. hillary was asked about the use of the private server and she dismissed the issue and made a joke, listen to this. >> did you wipe the server? >> like, what, with a cloth or something? something? >> did she wipe the server? she did not eventually answer.
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and joining us from the women's forum, hadley, we have women on the program today, she's not going to be the democrat candidate. what do you say? >> i say it's hers to lose. this nomination has always been hillary clinton's to lose and she's still the front runner when you look at polls. she leads bernie sand,by a significant percent although he's gaining on her. stuart: you know what i'm getting at here. this e-mail scandal is spiraling down, she's in deep trouble politically and legal. voices are raised saying she's not going to be the candidate. i want your judgment, do you think she's going to be the candidate? >> i believe ultimately she will pull through. the question is, if not hillary, then who? we're looking at joe biden to potentially make an announcement in september. i don't think he'll jump in the race and other democrats may be tempted, but there's no one else to be the front runner for the democratic party. >> that leaves the democrats with at the best, a wounded candidate. i think "the washington post" referred to her as a wounded
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queen. that should make life of it easier for the republicans, shouldn't it? >> well, remember, ultimately, general elections can be about the lesser of two evils and many americans feel the last several elections have been that way. democrats may feel that way and go to the polls even though in the latest fox news poll, 47% of people say they completely distrust hillary clinton. at the end of the day, the question, who will she face on the republican side and is that person less popular with the general public. stuart: i think you're a republican and right of center, a big smile, saying yes. okay. which candidate, not asking you to pick your favorite candidate, but which candidate do you think would best be able to beat hillary clinton? >> well, of course, i can't endorse anyone, but when we look at the very broad republican field, we have to recognize it's still very early and there are a lot of candidates polling for 4, 5, 6% of support. i believe once we see some of
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the candidates drop out, then republicans will pull around several, a handful of frontrunners and i believe that donald trump has the energy and the steam to continue a long campaign and i believe that jeb bush has the money to stay in this a long time and i believe there are some formidable candidates like marco rubio and scott walker and even carly fiorina who has seen her rounds. those are the serious contenders in my point of view. >> here is the background question, you know it's coming, if trump were the candidate, would he beat hillary? >> that's, again, a question that i think a lot of americans would say, which is the lesser of two evils because i think those people, while they are the frontrunners in their own parties, my answer would be that i don't know. i don't know who wins that contest, i think trump is popular with the republican base and hillary popular with the democratic base, but then the question becomes will independent voters go to the polls and who will the independent voters choose. i believe in this case probably hillary. i would have to say hillary.
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>> if it were trump, hillary, won that be entertaining, interesting, exciting and alive election? it would, wouldn't it? >> it would absolutely be entertaining, but let's hope that the election ultimately is more about ideas, policies, political issues, rather than the candidates and their personalities. stuart: it never is. a presidential election is not always about policy. it's about the person and how they come across on television. very important. hadley, i'm sorry mai'm out of time. come on back. check the share price of two coal stocks, we're going to do that now. arch coal, peabody, they're all up. why is a coal stock up all of a sudden? because lefty billionaire, george soros, who's always demonized fossil fuels, been doing it for years, he is now investing in those stocks. cheryl? >> i say this is brilliant investing. i mean, george soros, i mean,
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he knows how to play the game. he's playing it legally. and he's making-- aiming to make a lot of money on it. all, but haters when it comes to coal and in the last hour on your show, learning the lesson we need coal. we need the lights to go on, soros knows that, come on. stuart: wait a minute, there's two points here. >> yes. stuart: the guy spends his life as a climate change guy beating up on fossil fuels and then he invests in them to make money. now, what does that tell you about it? >> remember, forget him, but that he played the game. the obama administration was handing out green subsidies like they're candies. >> it was in the game, it was his policies which drove down the price of coal, drove oil companies awayment -- away. he did that, and now he invests to make it from his own policies conflict of interest. >> it may be, but the administration allowed him to do that. >> oh, sure. >> of course, he's given them
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the money, of course, exactly. >> and do you remember what happened with brazil? he rants with no off-shore drilling and promptly puts his money into brazil where they're doing a whole ton of off shore drilling and he makes a fortune. come on, it's gross hypocrisy. >> i'm not disagreeing with your point, i'm just saying that he's making a lot of money. >> and not pounding the table. >> if i could make money and he doesn't seem to care. stuart: we hear you. let's get to the female viagra, it's not a fda approval and expected to hit the market, i think in october,nator, october. the fda had rejected this drug twice over concerns of potentially dangerous side effects. our next guest not happy with the fda giving approval to this female viagra. national women's health network executive director cindy person joins us now. welcome to the program, great
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to have you with us. >> thanks, glad to be here. stuart: i have to point out, there's a group called even the score, which is a feminist group, they pushed for this approval from the fda on the grounds-- i'm quoting, 24 drugs for male sexual dysfunction, for women, zero. therefore, they wanted fda approval. what's wrong with their position? >> well, even the score is not a feminist group, it's an industry-funded group and their statement about the number of drugs available for men versus the number of drugs available for women is wrong, has been. they know that, it's a very successful marketing advocacy campaign that persuaded the fda to prove to approval with no new data. >> your objection is primarily on the side effects and the dangers and the risks of this drug. >> that's right. >> would you spell that out for us, please? >> yeah, this drug is very different than viagra. it has to be taken every day, it affects brain chemicals, not
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blood flow. it causes in some women dangerous low blood pressure. you know, 70/40, practically needing to be rushed to the emergency room and it seems to be worse with certain drugs and with alcohol. the fda asked the company to do a study to really figure out just how dangerous that interaction is, so that women could know how to keep themselves safe and the company refused to do it, they did a study with men instead of women. so they just didn't measure up on the data. stuart: i think there's going to be a calculation made here. the risks versus the potential rewards. the potential rewards, as i understand it, are maybe one extra sexually satisfying experience per month. i take it that you've done the equation and you say it doesn't work out? >> well, i think that each woman needs to make that measuring for herself. you've got the number of benefit exactly right, you've understood the statistics exactly right, but the number
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on the other side of what is the chance that i'm going to have a dangerous fainting episode maybe when i'm behind the wheel of a car and is it worse if i have a drink or have three drinks, those numbers aren't there and that's what women deserve. the fda should have stood strong and insisted that the questions were answered. stuart: so you're saying in this instance, don't approve it, the fda made a mistake. >> yes, we believe the fda made a mistake, they caved to pressure, unfortunately. stuart: you don't think it's a freedom of choice element for women? you know that they could make a choice? >> absolutely-- women can have and should have freedom of choice to make a decision to use a drug that has risks. that's absolutely women's right, but they need to know what those risks are and what the likelihood is. stuart: thank you very much for joining us, cindy. >> you're welcome. stuart: the voice of reason on a very interesting subjects. thank you, ma'am.
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first, ashley madison, the on-line site for cheating spouses, it was hacked. lauren, in case you missed it, you've got more. >> ashley madison was hacked and that data revealed on-line. the hackers go by the name, the impact team. leaking this information on the dark web, we're talking about more than 30 million members with their user log-in names, their street addresses and some of their financial information, even their preferences, what they like to do with people they hooked up with on the site. all at risk here. this is-- i'll wrap it here, stuart, because it's got to wrap. i was going to go into a sound bite and discussion. stuart: we're coming against a hard wrap, you've got it. next, you'll see him riding a horse shirtless and posing with a tiger and now vlad is taking a ride on a submarine. the full story behind his latest act.
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>> the latest publicity stunt, he took control of a mini sub diving nearly 300 feet to the bottom of the black sea. it was exploring a trading ship that goes back to the 10th century. putin hopes exploring the wreck would help shed light on russia's historic development. he wore a shirt. now this, it's called the intel smart clip. it attaches to your car seat and communicates with an app that sends alert to your phone to warn you if you've left your child in the car or if the conditions in the vehicle are dangerous. joining us now is marci miller, she's the engineer at intel that invented the smart clip. marcy, welcome to the program. good to see you. >> good morning, thank you. stuart: it's a wonderful thing, i've got it. i've got six children of my own and nine grandchildren. it occurs to me that the kind of person who would leave a
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child in a hot car is not going to be buying this clip. >> well, i think that's a big misconception, it doesn't really matter, you know, your socioeconomic status, education level, profession, this type of incident unknowingly happens to good people who care and love for their children, too. and so, having-- >> really? >> does it really? thinking, intelligent parents. >> absolutely. stuart: let this happen? really? >> we all, as a working parent, run busy schedules and in today's modern society there's so much going on that it's easy. we're only human and it's easy to have your brain kind of go in one direction or maybe if you're not in your normal routine to get -- to have this unknowingly happen to you. stuart: okay. all right. i think-- >> it's not unlike-- >> look, i think you've got a way of soming the problem. i got it. and i think what you-- where you're going with it is
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not sales to individuals so much as maybe incorporating this into car seats, or have the auto maker incorporate it into the vehicle. i think that's where you're going. >> so, absolutely. so we're teaming up with a partner right now who is going to bring this to market through knobby brand of of products. it's an after market attachment. anybody no matter the car seat you have can use the technology, but going to as many car seats as possible and seamless as part of the car seat and get it on purchase. >> maybe you've got a liability problem, if on one occasion, your product doesn't work and a child suffers because of it, i think you've got a problem. how do you deal with that? >> well, that's why we have legal departments involved. but, yeah, absolutely, that's a concern, and so we definitely designed for redundancy.
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and when the battery is running low the parents can know they need to replace the battery. or if there's an indication that the clip is actually communicating with the phone as soon as you clip in your baby. we're designing in some redundancy to make sure to take care of as much of that is possible and that the product is working. >> you've come up with a solution with a difficult problem and marcie miller, thank you for being with us. >> thanks for having me. stuart: president obama's push for green energy wreaking havoc on birds, eagles, too. the greenies, nowhere to be found. my take is next on that.
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scrimage between the cowboys and is violence necessarily a turn off for the fans? i don't think so. plus, the girl who threw out the first pitch at that baseball game, thanks to a 3-d printed prosthetic hand, we're going to talk to one of the people who developed it. that's next hour on this program. the wind industry hides an ugly secret. those wind turbines kill an estimated 573,000 birds a year. just one wind farm in northern california kills an estimated 60 golden eagles a year. that's a shock, isn't it? america's symbol killed because the greenies insist that wind will save the planet? it's going to get much worse. the president's clean power plan relies heavily on wind.
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robert bryce says it achieve its goals, the plan will need tens of thousands of new turbines covering the size of new york state. where is the fish and wildlife service, surely they would leap to the defense of wildlife, especially the american eagle? wrong. they wanted a 30-year period where turbines could kill golden eagles without reviews, bird, bats, eagles, chew them up, no consequences. fortunately, a district court judge told them to get lost that that doesn't change the greenies mindset. they don't care what damage they do to the economy, to your wallet, or to wildlife. so long as they can beat up the wicked oil companies and save the planet. they're like children, stamping their little feet when big oil stands in their way. meanwhile, on july the 25th, a female golden eagle was found injured near one of the
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turbines at the wind farm in northern california. its winning had been shredded by the blades. it could not be saved. it was euthanized. the fish and wildlife service is looking into the circumstances. ♪
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. stuart: to the markets, please. we're down 139. why? well, this afternoon we get a report from the federal reserve, are they going to raise interest rates next month or not? some say they are, down goes the market. there's a computer hardware maker, it's called dot hill systems, it's not ate household name, but it is a huge winner today. up 86%. and let's get the latest on the hillary clinton e-mail scandal. fox news has learned that two
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e-mails found on the server, the other sent by her aid contained sensitive information about benghazi. those e-mails that prompted the fbi to investigate the use of hillary's private e-mail server. now, let's listen to hillary dismissing a fox news question. >> no personal, no official. >> well, my personal e-mails are my personal business, so we went through a pain staking process and turned over 55,000 pages of anything we thought could be work related. under the law, that decision is made by the official. i was the official. i made those decisions. >> you're in charge of it. you're the official in charge of it. stuart: with a cloth or something? >> i don't know. did you try to -- >> i don't -- i know you want to make a point and i can just repeat what i have said. >> it's a simple question.
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>> in order to be as cooperative as possible, we have turned over the server. they can do whatever they want with the server to figure out what's there or what's not there. thank you all very much. >> the issue isn't going to go away for the remainder of your campaign. >> nobody talks to me about it other than you guys. stuart: leslie marshal is with us, leslie, i think i'm going to call a democrat, excuse a little bit left of center. you okay with that description, leslie? yes, you are. >> i'm okay with that description, yes. stuart: now, we just saw hillary clinton there, i don't think she performed particularly with that in that incident there. we've had people on our program this morning that is this e-mail scandal just spiraling down out of control and she will not be the candidate come november of next year. what say you? >> oh, she'll be the candidate. you know, the e-mail is not going to be her swift vote if you will as it was for john kerry.
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but i would agree with you, stuart, on her performance. if you meet hillary in person, she's warm, funny, we know that she's smart, and she's really engaging if you will, and she needs to be that way with the press, the public, my mother used to say it's not what you say the way you say it,. stuart: yeah. >> and i think that was a clear example with the exchange with hillary. ed was very well within his right to ask the question. she could have answered, no, i did not wipe the server clean. and i would bet money, guild to vegas on that. . stuart: the ability is to perform well on television is a talent, it's not a skill that can be learned over a period of time. and i don't think there is time if, you know -- instruction were available, i don't think there's time for hillary to learn how to come across on television. i think she has to be honest. she has to answer the question. why did you put the state
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department private security business onto an unsecured private server? why doesn't she just come out and say. this is why i did it. >> well, i think she has already said that, it's just many people out there among media -- stuart: no, she hasn't said it. >> don't like her answer. what -- stuart: we all know she's got 100 devices. >> well, i think what she needs to say is, look, this was poor judgment on my. stuart: yes. >> behalf. i shouldn't never done this. this is -- i want to move forward, i apologize for this, let's let the investigation play out, which she did in a sense say because at the end of the day i think we all would bet there's not going to be a charge brought against her, we have a lot of e-mails marked after the fact at being, you know, top secret if you will that that was not stated in the subject and they're being sent to her at this point not coming from he.
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stuart: would you agree with this? she is at the very best a wounded candidate? >> no. she's ain't wounded candidate because bernie sanders is within 10 points, she still has a did you believe digit lead in iowa, she's leading everywhere else in the country except new hampshire. and a lot of folks from vermont have moved to or work in or live in new hampshire as well as vermont. she will be the candidate, you have it here, she will be the candidate. what do i bet you? $5? . stuart: i never gamble. but i think she is a wounded candidate. but there we differ. leslie, thank you very much for being with us. always appreciate it. thank you. look at the price of oil. we just received a weekly inventories report. there was a build, that means there was oil added to the inventory. 2.6million barrels, that's quite a lot. so if you have more in storage, that means we're not demanding as much, therefore
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the price goes down, and it's down 2%. 42.74 as we speak. all right. now this. another deflate gate hearing today. can you believe this? even tom brady doesn't care. he's not even going to show up in court. his lawyer will. but big daddy to those of us who call him a friend, he is with us right now. are you not sick and tired of this whole deflate gate by now? >> this is old already. six months, keeps going on and on, wasting time, wasting money, right now people are only concerned with football starting and they're only going to watch opening night whether or not tom brady is playing. so where is the answer, the solution, someone's questioning did he do something? and then someone's questioning rodger goodell's power. so where is there ever going to be abend? . stuart: the nfl will win and you'll never stop the patriots haters, do you agree with both of those?
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>> i do agree for both of those. stuart: well, done. stay right there. i've got something petroleum just watch this for a second, it's a brawl. they broke out during practice against the cowboys and rams. nobody hurt but coaches had to end the practice early. it's the second time they had to do that because of fighting with these preseason matchups. here's my question to you. do you think that this kind of violence is bad for the nfl? bad for the sport, bad for football? because i don't, do you? >> i don't -- well, they're not going to run out and start showing clips of fighting during camps and, you know, practices. but it's part of every training camp. someone gets the extra push, someone's agitated, they're in 100-degree weather, they're wearing extra equipment, fights break out all the time . stuart: it's a violent sport and people want to watch that. that's ain't downer. >> no. not at all. it's a violent game and this
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that are able to adjust to the violence and do it intelligently are the ones who succeed. stuart: here's the problem as i see it. maybe the nfl may have peeked and a lot of parents will not want to put their kids into a sport which is so obviously violent when you've got fights like that breaking out. so maybe you've got a very steady downturn in the participation of youngsters. what douse to that. >> well, i do agree with that. and one is you only have to buy a pair of cleats and shin guards to kick a ball. when you go in football with you have to buy a lot of equipment and a lot more time and the physical pain and bruises when their kids come home, i used to come home with bruises and my parents were liked it what are you getting beat? and i'm, like, no, this is football. stuart: you played football. >> yeah. the american game. stuart: hit a few people. >> yeah. i did.
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stuart: ever been in a fight. >> only once. stuart: who won. >> well, there was no winner or loser, it got broken up. and you've got to realize when a guy's wearing a helmet and you're wearing one, the hands hurt after a couple of. thank you very much. >> thank you. stuart: time for the sector report. all right, cheryl, come out. what are you watching today. >> after that very interesting discussion with you, i want to look at kohl's stocks. and, again, you're going to disagree with me, where i think it's brilliant, here's a down. he's buying, it's cheap cheap, based on the charts i'm looking at, his investment will pay off. stuart: i believe you, i think he should be onset the president honest about driving the price down and then investing in it to make a profit. i've got a problem with that. >> yeah. we'll see anybody else does. but for now he's going to make
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a lot of cash. stuart: we shall see. thank you very much. >> uh-huh. stuart: star wars coming to disney parks in a big way. we're not just talking about a couple of rides here and there. we're talking about the entire section of the park dedicated to star wards. the, in other words, are already happy about the possibilities. we'll deal with it in a moment 80% of the poor in africa are rural farmers. 96% of them are doing rain-fed agriculture. they're all competing with each other; they're all making very low margins, making enough to survive, but not enough to get out of poverty. so kickstart designs low cost irrigation pumps enabling them to grow high value crops throughout the year so you can make a lot of money. it's all very well to have a whole lot of small innovations, but unless we can scale it up enough to where we are talking about millions of farmers,
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we're not going to solve their biggest challenge. this is precisely where the kind of finance that citi is giving us, is enabling us to scale up on a much more rapid pace. when we talk to the farmers and ask them what's the most important thing. first of all they say we can feed our families. secondly, we can send our children to school. it's really that first step that allows them to get out of poverty and most importantly have money left over to plan for the future they want.
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. >> good morning from the floor of the new york stock exchange where a sell offis on the way, right now the dow down 154 points, what's going on? well, investors getting jittery about an interest rate happening sooner rather than later, the inflation it seems is rather tame so that opened the door for the fed to raise rates. in the meantime take a look some of the home improvement retailers. out with earnings, same store sales topped expectations. the shares of home depot -- lows, and it's chief rival home depot are both higher this morning. so two out performers and otherwise lower market. starbucks shares also down a little bit here after announcing plans to open five more locations serving alcohol today. bringing the total number of starbucks where you can order beer and wine to 70. the goal is to increase that
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to 2,000 of its 12,000 stores in the next five years. more varney after this what if one push up could prevent heart disease? [man grunts] one wishful thinking, right? but there is one step you can take to help prevent another serious disease- pneumococcal pneumonia. one dose of the prevnar 13® vaccine can help protect you ... from pneumococcal pneumonia, an illness that can cause coughing, chest pain, difficulty breathing, and may even put you in the hospital. prevnar 13 ® is used in adults 50 and older to help prevent infections from 13 strains of the bacteria that cause pneumococcal pneumonia. you should not receive prevnar 13 ® if you've had a severe allergic reaction to the vaccine or its ingredients if you have a weakened immune system, you may have a lower response to the vaccine. common side effects were pain, redness, or swelling at the injection site. limited arm movement, fatigue, head ache muscle or joint pain, less appetite, chills, or rash. even if you've already been vaccinated with another pneumonia vaccine, prevnar 13® may help provide additional protection. get this one done. ask your healthcare professional about prevnar 13® today.
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stuart: profits improved at the analog devices company, they make chips, one of the biggest winners in the s&p 500. 2% gain there. now, this is -- i'm going to call this the real estate
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battle of the old money. with us with her real estate stock. hello. what does $1.25 million buy you in real estate? newport rhode island, chapel hill, north carolina. >> definitely the aepitome of old money, in the point, very good neighborhood, very close to down the. 1,574 square feet, it's a two-story, got a big staircase, elevator, mahogany wood, heated driveway, and you get a lot of snow in rhode island, that's what you get in newport, rhode island for that price. stuart: seems like a lot, although the view is fantastic. >> yeah. you do have water view. stuart: same price. >> usually i know what you're going to like or not like, i don't know about this one. this is north carolina. right by the university of north carolina. 1.25million, you get
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1.26 acres, so you get an extra acre on top of the other home. built in 1964, fireplace, walls of windows in some rooms, an office as well. more space obviously. it's 3,600 square feet and change with a much bigger property. again, though, you're close to downtown chapel hill with the restaurants and franklin avenue, real hip scene. both good. usually i can say i like this one over this one. i can't decide on this two property. stuart: newport, rhode island for me because i like that view. look at the view of the sea. >> okay. stuart: we've got a selloff in progress, and it took another leg down on wall street. dow industrial down 184 points. we're back to 17.3. remember, please, later this afternoon, the fed will make some kind of announcement about how it sees the economy and the economists are going to be looking at that passing every word, are they going to
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raise interest rates next month? at the moment, the feeling seems to be, yes, they're going to raise next month, and down she goes, we're down 190 points right now. >> as you were speaking, we hit a new session low. stuart: i think so. down 193. we're on it. check the share price of disney. they made big news this week they announced they'll be building entire star wars lands in their amusement parks. acres of attractions dedicated to the movie franchise. a just couple of rides, the, in other words, are already lining up for this one. dominic patton, legal reporter is here. you say -- now, this is not a ride or two. this is whole lands in all these parks around the world. you say that this is a huge winner for disney. go. >> i think it's massive, stuart. i mean disney has pretty much given the north american theme park market over to universal the past few years. putting $5.5 billion into the creating of shanghai disney
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and other overseas businesses. this is their back home. this is a $2 billion expansion both in the orlando disney world property and the anaheim property. massive expansion, 2017 opening, they're going to be lining up at the gates, my friend. stuart: but it's a huge bet on that particular franchise. and you think it's a good bet. you think that that franchise holds up in a theme park? >> very much so. you know, i think we've seen already disney investing with james cameron in their avatar land, which is going to be huge, basically recreating the pandora world of the blockbuster movie. they're bringing back the star wars movie starting this december with the force awakens which people anticipate could make up to $2 billion. so what you're looking at here the theme parks is a massive expansion into a growing industry. we often forget out here in hollywood how big a part of disney's business the theme parks are.
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it's a $15 billion a year business with over $2 billion a year in sheer profit. so to them, this expansion is part of the overall reaching they've been doing since they bought lucas in 2012. of course there's always a caveat. stuart: of course. i do want to make it clear, though, that there are two areas here that they're going into. star wars, big time, and the avatar land. again, avatar, that's not just a ride or two. that's another separate land, separate section. they're going into that one as well. "so they've made two bets. >> a whole other separate land. and they're expanding their toy story property with more acreage and more rides too. so this isn't just getting on a star wars roller coaster or playing on a avatar machine. this is a whole full experience as ceo talked about. the last head of theme parks tom stags is now seen as the era parent in the disney battle.
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so, you know, theme parks is where you make your bones at disney, especially if you want to make them against universal who has been expanding hugely with things like their fast and furious rides and other expansions at their theme parks. take us real war, not a star war, and it's a war for your vacation buck. stuart: that's a nice laugh line. very good. thank you very much indeed. quickly to the price of oil. we've hit a new six and a half year low. we have news earlier this morning that there was a big increase in the amount of oil in storage. that means we're not demanding as much as we did before, so oil is now down $1.31. we're down at 41.35. price break just happened. and apple music, the free trial ends, a lot of users call it quits. details on that in a moment. and donald trump on his immigration policy. that was last night on the factor.
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rates and people on wall street don't want that to happen. and watching apple, apple's streaming service may not be the is success that they're hoping for. research from music watch says that 48% of people who signed up for the free trial has stopped using that service. apple's offering three months of apple music for free. after that, the price goes up to $10 a month. well, let's take a look at the stock. the report really not hurting the stock to be honest with you. down about 1%, but apple used to be a lot higher than that we should say. and american airlines is going to offer the first nonstop flight to cuba. the flight from los angeles to havana is going to begin this december. check out shares of american airlines right now. look at that, aal is the ticker, stuart would say dead flat and it is his show, so we'll see dead flat. and donald trump calling to end birthright citizenship, which grants citizenship to anyone born in the united states. strong praise and criticism from his opponents.
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blake berman joins us now from dc on a very controversial statement by mr. trump. blake. >> indeed, cheryl. jeb bush said this specific part of donald trump's plan would require a change to the u.s. constitution. part of his plan ending birthright citizenship which guarantees anyone born in the u.s. including the kids of illegal immigrants are citizens. that has been protected since 1866 and trump calls it the biggest magnet for illegal immigration. last night he was pressed on the legality by bill o'reilly. take a listen. >> you were born here, you're an american. period. period. >> but there are many lawyers are saying that's not the way it is in terms of this. what happens as their in mexico, have made going to have a baby, they move here for a couple of days, they have the baby, no, but bill they're going to say it's not holding up in court.
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it's going to have to be tested. but they're saying it's not going to hold up in court. >> trump also says the millions of immigrants quote need to go. several gop contenters have up and down his plan, marco rubio said it's unworkable, and cheryl. >> great story. we're following. blake berman of our dc. well, first the first two hours of "varney & company" in the books. >> we do not want to be behind, we want to take the lead. and the united states is doing it. the united states is a leader, and it's a good thing for the safety and security of our country
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stuart: playing the media. that's my take for this hour. here's the story in a nutshell. trump is brilliant, hillary is not. this is playing out daily on tv and on your facebook page too.
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trump shoots from the hip. bang straight at it approximately build a wall. illegals, send them back, they've got to go. china's eating our lunch, steeling our jobs, et cetera, et cetera. the direct approach is working. precisely because it's not the usual political speak. he looks supremely competent, even when confronted with the impossibility of his positions. make mexico pay to build a wall, are you kidding? but it is working. trump plays himself, and he plays well in the media. it is playing well because voters are clearly tired of politicians from both parties. hillary clinton is the exact opposite. she is not doing well in the media. and it's not just because she's wrapped up in scandal. she doesn't look competent. she does not answer questions directly. fox's ed henry asked her if she wiped clean her own server. what? like, what cloth she said? that was a nonanswer to a very important question.
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keep her away from the media but the people she meets are selected very careful. she looks and sounds like a politician and that's not good. this is fascinating. it's the most important election in a generation and we're off to a exciting start. we're watching it unfold in the media. no matter what your politics, the trump versus hillary media matchup is a very informative and b very entertaining. i think trump's winning hands down and this election year so far is playing the media, playing the media, that is key to the contest. ♪ ♪ nerve. stuart: all right. we'll have more on my take in a moment but first here's what's new at the top of this hour. we have a triple digit selloff on the dow industrial. the selloff could continue. he's looking for maybe a 20% correction.
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you will meet him in the next half hour. did you see this heartwarming video of the little girl throwing out the first pitch at the baseball game with a 3d printed hand? we're talking to one of the people who helped make that hand for her. speaks of robotics, watch this. google's walking robot. we've got a lab that has grown a human brain, it is the size of an eraser. what would that be like if you mutt putt that in that monstrous robot right there. and the markets down 182 points for the dow industrials. this is a big selloff, a couple of hours from now we'll find out as to whether or not the fed is going to raise rates next month. we shall see, the betting at the moment is they raise rates. down we go. check oil. more oil in storage, we're demanding less of it so the price goes down. big drop. down a dollar 20, 41.43. target raised its outlook for
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profits. it is a winner. 2.5% up at 82. apple. half of the people who signed up for that free trial of apple music no longer listening. that's all a negative, the stock's down this morning. all right. let's get to hillary's handling of the media. here's the joke she made when ed henry, fox news ed henry asked her if she wiped her personal e-mail server clean. listen. >> did you try to wipe -- no e-mail, no personal, no official,ly whole thing. >> well, my personal e-mails are my personal business; right? so i -- we went through a pain staking process and turned over 55,000 pages of anything we thought could be work related. under the law, that decision is made by the official. i was the official. i made those decisions. >> you were in charge of it, you were the official in charge of it. did you wipe the server. >> like, with a cloth or something? >> i don't know. did you try to wipe the whole server. >> i know you want to make a
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point and i can just repeat what i have said. >> it's a simple question. >> in order to be as cooperative as possible, we have turned over the server. they can do whatever they want to with the server to figure out what's there or what's not there. thank you, all, very much. >> this issue isn't going to go away for the remainder of your campaign? >> nobody talks to me about it other than you guys. stuart: joining us now, media buzz host howard. all right, howard, in my judgment, she's not handling the media well. what say you? >> not only was that uncomfortable to watch, stuart, i mean hillary clinton appeared defensive, legalistic, not giving a centimeter and that's just not my opinion, that's the mainstream media who might side with clinton on her issues are giving her a big thumbs down for the handling of this fiasco. stuart: it's not just handling the question questions, it's how she appeared in the media. i think she appeared irritated
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there. she was distracted at the very and lost irritated and be i don't think that goes down well in a presidential election where the personality of a candidate is as important almost as the policies they espoused. what say you to that? >> as you know, stuart, the 25 year history between hillary and her press days going back to her first lady and scandal of the '80s, she's always been defensive, not giving much access to the press, a few weeks ago the clinton campaign should be doing, national tv interviews, she's done one with cnn and her next appearance is with ellen did he generous. . stuart: now, switching gears, howard, listen to donald trump taking aim at hillary in a new video posted on instagram. just watch this.
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. stuart: sorry we lost it. donald trump was using the media in that instance really, really well. i say -- i'm going to make the assumption that trump uses the media in a very, very effective way whereas hillary does not. what say you? >> i think that's a key point because i'm getting a lot of blow back, well, you in the media, you made him number one giving you him all this airtime. now, it is true. when you put donald trump on, eason on a phone, your ratings go up, you get more clicks to your website, i can see all of that. but being able to say things to generate media attention is a skill and trump is a master of it, and it's a skill that many of the other candidates do not have unless they're talking about donald trump or reducing to talk about donald trump. so i think he has earned a lot of this media attention and then he the kicker is even when journalists are attacking donald trump saying his
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positions are unrealistic or he's a demagogue or sideshow, that's popular too. stuart: that's right. he's going to be like this. howard, a pleasure. thank you very much for being with us. we'll see you soon. don't miss donald trump tomorrow morning on the fox business network. he's on with maria. that will be 7:00 in the morning. 7:00 a.m. right here on the fox business network. the judge presiding over the deflate gate says there are has been no deal between the nfl and tom brady over his four-game suspension. he says he hopes to rule on the case by september the 4th. that will be six days before the patriots season game. have you had enough of brady? i have. fox news has learned that two e-mails found on hillary clinton's server contain sensitive information about the benghazi embassy attack. one from staffer, the other by her aid jake sullivan.
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judge napolitano is here. okay. you want to deal with that breaking news first. >> yes. stuart: two e-mails about benghazi on hillary's server. what's your point. >> what would then characterized as? top secret, secret, or confidential? or as mrs. clinton would say, without a stamp on them telling me that they're top secret, secret, or confidential. i am free to put them on a server no matter where it goes. the essence of what is top secret is what's in the e-mail not what's stamped in the subject line. mrs. clinton is presumed to know that. i have not seen these e-mails. no one has seen them in the public domain. kathryn, our colleague had them described to her. it is clear that because they were about benghazi at which an american ambassador was assassinated by a terrorist group using american arms that had been sold to another terrorist group, that's classified. stuart: yes, it is. now, you're watching the sound byte that we ran there.
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first of all, she gave a nonanswer to the question, did you wipe your server clean, she made a joke out of it. she did not answer the question. what do you make of that. >> well, she said a couple of things that were wrong. first she told ed henry and the other press that the decision is lawfully hers to decide what's personal and what's governmental in e-mails is to keep personal and -- stuart: the e-mails. >> shelf the law upside down. the desired is the government. the government keeps what's governmental and surroundings what they think it's personal. she did the opposite. she kept everything and gave the government what they thought they wanted to receive. and secondly she didn't give them digitally, they gave them paper, that destroys the metadata a, which would allow the fbi where did it come from and where did it go to. that belongs to the government, she kept it for
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herself, which is theft, or she destroyed it. thirdly -- stuart: it's a long list. >> yeah. well, i mean it is a long list. she has been mocking the process. she said in iowa to a group of democrats, i like my snapchat because the e-mails disappear automatically. nobody in the audience laughed. this in the morning ed henry or whenever that press was she said what do you mean wipe clean, you mean like with a tissue? when you are being investigated by the federal government for alleged felonies, the last thing in the world your lawyers want you to do is make jokes about the investigation. i assure you the investigators see all of those jokes. now, if i lived in the south, i might say it this way. you don't taunt the alligator until after you've crossed the street. stuart: she should have done that. >> right. she may think the audience for her jokes is the people right there.
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her audience for the jokes are the people that are investigating her. she's in their hands. they're not in hers. stuart: i rate to raise this. but this consequence of events reminds me of watergate. >> it does because -- and bob said this the other day. watergate fame. she doesn't seem to recognize the gravity of her situation just like president nixon until the better end didn't seem to recognize the gravity of his situation. stuart: judge, thank you very much indeed. you're the point man on this story. >> you're kind to say that. stuart: check that big bother. we are euro selloff mode. we were down 200, now we're down about 100 -- where are you. we are now down 175. okay. we're in selloff mode. let's get to something completely different. female viagra. >> that's different. stuart: yes, it is. >> the little pink pill. stuart: still on the set. it has received fda approval. i cannot invest in the company that's creating this drug.
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they are a private company. i can't get into it, can't invest. here's what anthony had to say about that way back in our 9:00 hour. roll tape. >> if you remember when viagra came out, that was a blockbuster drug that's a major multiple expansion on the stock. but likely if this drug is successful and they get the demand for the drug that they expect, this company will likely be acquired -- i don't see this company coming publi. stuart: that's the investment angle. you and i cannot get into it. the other side of this coin is the risks involved in taking this new female viagra. lauren, list them for us. >> and these lists are on the label which i think will affect the sales of the drugs. so because women are taking the drug, we're more sensitive to the alcohol affects. so if you take it with alcohol, it could increase the chance of low blood pressure, fainting, and dizzy spells. so some people are saying when
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it comes out in mid-october and therefore you'll see great sales but you won't see those billion dollars sales that you saw with viagra. stuart: it's a daily pill, you've got to take it every day before there's an affect. >> one and ten women suffer from loss of sexual desire. stuart: there's a market out there. >> there is. stuart: more on this female viagra. now this. five-year-old girl throws out the first pitch of a baseball game with a 3d printed arm. one of the men who helped make that arm, checking up. and also ashley madison exposed hackers released information on tens of millions of users. uh-oh, ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count.
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stuart: yes, it is a selloff this wednesday morning. down 190 points right now, watch out for the federal reserve, they will make an announcement a couple of hours from now. are they going to raise interest rates? they'll be watching the tea
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leaves to see if they are. check out arch coal, check out pe energy. and bashing fossil fuels for years is now buying major stocks positions in those two companies. did you see this? the five-year-old girl throwing out the first pitch of the baltimore orioles game, that hand 3d printed let's her grip and hold. one of the engineers behind the 3d printed hand is brendon from the university of nevada, las vegas. welcome to the program. >> hi, stuart,. stuart: i think the expression 3d printed is misleading. it's really a computerized manufacturing process which gives you cost cutting, it gives you precision, and it allows you to customize things. that's what it all about, isn't it? >> absolutely. it's called additive manufacturing, and that hand
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has 39 different parts in it. and we can print those in a day. you would never be able to do that with a transitional manufacturing method. stuart: so with this young lady, this five-year-old girl, she was fitted very specifically for an arm or hand for her made to measure so to speak; is that right. >> that's right. when her mom first contacted us, we didn't know anything about the prosthetic hands for children, so we did a lot of measurements on her, we did a 3d scan of her arm, we cassette a mold, and then we're able to basically take an adult design for one of these hands and scale it down to fit the dimensions of her arm. stuart: how do you connect the nerves from the natural part of her arm from the prosthetic because that's what makes her grip and hold. how do you connect the nerves? >> well, there's no -- we're not connected to the nerves in her arm but there are tendins that run from the gauntlet to the fingertips and it's just fishing line.
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so there's fishing line strung between that. and the action when she flexes her wrist, the tension in the fishing line squeezes her fingers. stuart: is there some sort of commercial application here? can you put this into an industrial setting? >> you could. the amazing thing about this design and one of the reasons we accepted to do it was the preliminary design was already available free on the internet, there's a site where you can download 3d printed designs. so we were able to download a design, modify it and then print it out. stuart: i'm sorry i was just going to ask -- how long did it take from the time you got the measurements to the time you produced the hand, how long? >> the whole process from the first e-mail to having a finished hand for the first time was five months. and that's because we knew nothing about any of the process. we had 3d printers, we had students that knew how to use
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them, they learned in their design classes how to use the 3d printers, but we had to learn about the prosthetic hand. so the first one took five months, and now we can repeat that process in about two weeks . stuart: look, this is fantastic. what a revolution this is. congratulations thanks for being with us. >> thank you. stuart: i want to get back to the developments in the ashley madison hacking, this is the website that wish to cheat on their spouse supposedly in secret. the hackers have released account details on 37 million users. i spoke to judge napolitano earlier about who's liable on this. listen. >> what words were used to induce them to put the most private information about themselves in this website. and depending upon the nature of those words or representations would determine whether it was fraudulent, whether it was serious, and what did ashley madison do to protect this information.
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stuart: yeah, that's the question. can you sue ashley madison the website. can you? lauren is here. i want to know what the hackers want. >> they go by the name the impact team, and they want ashley madison, the site taken down as well as another site that the owner operates established men.com. that's basically a site that hooks up young women with sugar daddies more or less. but they have an ide ideological here. they say these criminals are pointing themselves as the moral judges seeing fit to impose a personal notion of all society. stuart: that's what ashley madison is saying about the hackers. >> yes. stuart: well, i would suggest that ashley madison is in deep trouble here. >> they are. stuart: who is going on on that website if they're exposing their information to the public. >> this is a billion-dollar company that was trying to ipo in london. so when we first learned about the hack and now we have the
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data dump of millions of people secret fantasies and information, what happens to that? it's bagged. stuart: it has to be. lauren, thank you very much indeed. >> sure. stuart: distracted driving. one of the biggest dangers on the road, yes, it is. we're going to go inside a simulator to see what the worst distractions are. jeff flock is in the middle of that thing the only way to get better is to challenge yourself,
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and that's what we're doing at xfinity. 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.
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stuart: how do the automakers handle distracted driving? what do they do to fix this problem? well, number one they create a simulator. jeff flock is in one of those similarities right now. so here's my question right from the get-go, jeff. what solutions to distracted driving have they come up with? >> they -- what they try to do -- what i love about what ford is doing is, you know, don't text and drive, don't be distracted and drive. all you've got to do is run down the express way and you see people who are. so what are they doing? they're trying to come up with ways that undistract you. did you hear that beep when i got over too far. if i go over to the right, that alerts me. hey, i'm getting off the road. there's also vibrations, they can vibrate the seat, the steering wheel, and the tests
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that they do, what they'll -- you know, put text up so that you kind of have to read numbers like we often do if we're texting and driving, and then it kind of gives you -- they just put me through one where a bus cut me off where i was trying to -- and, oh, it's a pretty dramatic -- good distracted -- stuart: i think -- i'm sorry. jeff, i think we're losing the audio there. maybe we can't pick it up very well inside that simulator. we like the gist. jeff flock, be safe. and we've got the dow down 214 points, yes, it is a selloff and the price of oil is way, way down. we're up a buck 50 there, 4113, that is another six and a half year low. we're on both stories. and how about this for government competence and waste? you make nearly half a million dollars a year, you still get to live in government subsidized housing, that's the story, and it is legal. we're on it.
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and hillary, what about the her jokes over her e-mails and server. they fell kind of flu shot. fox news ed henry talked to her yesterday. he's here in five minutes
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>> i think this is pretty close to the load for the day down 117 points. speculation that the federal
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reserve will raise rates next month. now this, actually now this. oil is below 41 dollars a barrel i want to get that in real fast. oil is now 40.97 that's a big deal. sh public housing outrage, inspector general finds more than 25,000 wealthy tenants living in subsidized housing by you. housing and urban development released this statement in response, here's the quote, taking additional steps to encourage housing authorities to establish policies that were reduced number of families an housing. i got it, okay. some housing advocates say residents who went above average income should stay because they're good role models. my next guest is not buying that. republican david jolly calling for a congressional investigation. good morning congressman. >> thank you for having me performing you can investigate i know you're going to. this is beyond the rules you can
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say, you're a role model. this is good. they can say that within the law to do that. aren't they? >> i think that question is as american people, we willing to spend 100 dollars year to pay for families to live in subsidized housing, taxpayer subsidized housing, when they don't financially need it. if there are laws that need to be changed great. but i believe this resides within the policy and ability to change that is why i want an investigation. let's fix this for the american people. >> i think the of outrage might be on your side because confronted with that outrage, hud may well change the rules or shift their position. i think you ever got a good shot at success, here, sir. >> for 100 million dollars we're housing household that already has 100 million with subsidized housing. we're housing a household that earned $500,000 last year. we have 25,000 families that should be financially disqualified from subsidized housing, but we have 300,000
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families in need who on the wait list. it is a reflection of a broken washington frustrates the american people. we've seen what the administration did the va and did with their obamacare promises that turned into the life of the year. this is hud an a administration that does not know how to operate a government. the american people are rightfully frustrated i intend to have an investigation into this. what's a the time frame here how long will it take to organize o the ftion in how long will it last? when do you think we might see some action here? >> we saw hud move a little bit and suggesting today it might be legally acceptable but it is morally unacceptable so i think hud is realizing we have a problem here. i have asked our community to begin an investigation so i would hope early in september we could launch this investigation. >> representative david jolly, republican, florida thanks for joining us sir, appreciate it. >> thank you, stuart, i
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appreciate it. >> to hillary fox news senior white house correspondent had an a exchange with hill rit. hillary clinton yesterday. watch this. >> personal e-mails are my personal business. pain staying process, and turned over 55,000 pages of anything we thought could be work related under the law that decision is made by the official. i was the official. i made those decisions. i want to repeat what i have said, in order -- in order to be as cooperative as possible, we have turned over the server, they can do whatever they want to with the server to figure out what is there, not
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there opinion >> thank you, all very much -- ed henry afore mentioned with us right now, fox news correspondent, ed, point number one, i don't think she handled your question very well. point number two i don't think she answered your question. point number three if i suspect democrats are in panic mode because of what you did yesterday. >> i think you're absolutely right i'll go through all of them and we can go back and a forth here in terms of panic mode there's a story that is me not trying to pump up exchange with hillary clinton saying republicans at lies of hillary clinton you know fundraisers, donors, strategist are say they can't believe she couldn't answer that direct question. to your point, you wipe server that is a relevant question. yes she's said she deleted personal e-mails it was unclear if official e-mails were deleted after she turned it to the state
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department and wiped completely. one thing to delete e-mails but wiped of all data in the irs issue for example, and what happened with their servers, bottom line is, hillary clinton could not answer that yes or no. reason why it is relevant is nbc news voterring that fbi now believing someone did try to wipe the server take all of the data out. but more important fbi believes that you go through the treensics and they can get at least some of this data go back. find e-mails about benghazi that were deleted about the clinton foundation, any pay to play, there have been allegation as swirling around. i don't to buy into any of them. just saying they've been out there and we don't know what was deleted and what was not. and then, obviously, the whole issue of classified information. you have these two inspector jns saying there might be hundreds and hundreds of e-mails classified. hillary clinton has denied that. but other bottom line is apologize noisy here on the road but the joke about what do i wipe it with a cloth, it was a
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joke she is tried might have fallen flat. rem ninsing in iowa what she was talking to a political crowd and said i love this snap chat messages disappear joking about this. this is not a joke. this is not just republican the like trey pushing her but this is the fbi letters involved here nonpartisan and all about criminal invest so not just political fallout that democrats are in panic mode but it is the fbi looking at this from a criminal perspective. we don't know where that investigation is going to go stuart. >> ed henry we appreciate that. to the markets because we have real movement going on todays, the price of oil is at 40 dollars and 84 per barrel that is a 4% decline so far today. dow jones industrial average, way down, we're up 205 points at the latest now, of course, we just showed you some oil stocks there, of course, they are way,
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way down with oil tumbling to 40 dollars per barrel. dow is down 203. >> chime in quickly if you look at the exxon and chevron contradicting 200 points of that selloff this is about more than oil o in my opinion. >> quell said thanks very much. >> my next guest you better buckle up. we know him very good well. good trend of this program he sees maybe up to if a 20% drop for the market. starting now -- what is your point? >> there's no leadership in the majority place no good news on the horizon. all of the interest that the fed provided on the self right now. global mac koa economic issues are front and center, and the most important one that they have to watch is china. right now, the chinese stock market is the coal mine if the chinese market stock falls and it has doubled other. hasn't fallen out of bed yet but it is very close.
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market is 20%. we're at support right now at 5,000 on the nasdaq the dow has some support of 17,000. if not it is going to drop to 16,000 like a stone so these markets are holding support right here if they break it, there's nothing to sport them. >> would you advise ordinary investors to lighten up on stocks just incase? >> listen, if you have profits why not? we're fairly close at the highs but if we see a big selloff you wish you had taken profits and get in lower levels. there's no reason not to hedge your position by protecting yourself on the downside. >> a lot of investors don't do that. i mean, they buy, they sell that's what they do. are you telling your clients some of them, hey, sell this stuff and then >> weave gone, a huge position in cash. we've been talking profits we're selecting shorting different things right now, and enjoying that.
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>> is there anything that could turn it around. anything to make you say we're not getting a 20% or 10% drop. look at this? >> nothing supportive. there's nothing that i'm optimistic about out there. there isn't any good news on the horizon out there. >> glad you came on the show. down 204. >> coming back. that was wrong. thank you very much, sir. a bike day for women, female viagra gets fda approval. more on that, on varney, next.
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>> bonds oil, down dow jones industrial is down 206 points and that is not worst level we've seen so far today. blame is on oil. oil is up 3% right now. the inventory data came out. we saw bills as opposed to a drop that has pressure on oil, and oil related companies especially emp, exploration companies among leading lag rs on s&p 500. new lows, in fact, for marathon oil. quick check the stocks that reported earnings staples, targets lowes mix picture there. about 2% of target lows are holding up. much more of varney & company after this. you total your brand new car.
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so you're a small business expert from at&t? yeah, give me a problem and i've got the solution. well, we have 30 years of customer records. our cloud can keep them safe and accessible anywhere. my drivers don't have time to fill out forms. tablets. keep it all digital. we're looking to double our deliveries. our fleet apps will find the fastest route. oh, and your boysenberry apple scones smell about done. ahh, you're good. i like to bake. add new business services with at&t and get up to $500 in total savings. >> new drug is being called the female viagra, it has been approved by fda not about the problems. a teams doctor marx is here. first of all, doctor listen to this. i'm going to tell you something. there are serious risks with taking this. low blood pressure, fainting, about especially mixed with
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alcohol. doctors must be especially certificated to deal with it. it is a daily pill. you've got to take it for a long, long time to have any effect. >> 400 a month. >> i missed that. starting in october of this year. do you think it is going to be to popular? >> yes. first of all the doctors that -- have to be especially certified because of those side effects. second of all this is a first of its kind a pioneer drug first time we've had a drug that worntion the brain. calling a female viagra givers the wrong idea. it doesn't work on the sex organ but the brain never had a libido pill for men or women. >> a sexual desire. >> that is modest one a month, and critics have been saying wait a minute it is not worth the side effects. but as a practicing doctor i'll weed that out. say you're not having those side effects for you you have a low libido maybe this is a patient by patient basis.
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>> people will ignore warnings they do on all a kinds of drugs. >> all drugs have warnings. >> the ones that have the side effects, but when they go to take this drug, a lot of people are going to try it, i believe. 400 for one sexual experience a month. >> some would say that is worth it. >> new fair of shoe it is from jimmy chu is nice too. >> that may work out better. [laughter] but i think insurance will cover this stuart. a copayment. >> you have to go to a doctor who says yes this patient has this, this condition -- therefore, she needs this drug. therefore you guys pay for it. >> a lot of people have this condition. 10% of all women have this condition a lot more. now it may be stress, tired it maybe that the guy isn't treating you well. i don't know. >> all of that -- but even after that there's people that have this problem. a serious problem this is the first of its kind. kind of like the prozac more and
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exciting that was approved because people have always said why can't women have a pill but only men. >> you think it is beginning to be popular. next guest, ohio state university scientists there, they claim that they have grown the first almost formed human brain. they grew it in a lab. it is size of a pencil eraser. what do you make of this doctor? >> well here's my biology thing. i want you to understand that skin cells and brain cells are very similar. so they made this out of skin cells and they actually made a brain that's about the size of a tiny fetus brain that is small. and it is not going to be terminator here to make a human robot out of it that's going to go take overt qortd. the purpose of this is for disease because we're going to be able to use this as a map an say wait a minute, how do we treat a brain tumor? how do we prevent strokes? this is what it is going to be for, very good research. >> not the brain that can be
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implanted into a robot like google has come up with. >> because it doesn't think. >> this brain doesn't think, it doesn't feel, it doesn't sense. but it is otherwise the road map of the human brain over 90% similar to your brain, stuart. [laughter] >> very funny. >> all sides. >> you're good on viagra. [laughter] parents up for 70,000 a year for college? we're on it. can a business have a mind?
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and start gathering the information you need to help you keep rolling with confidence. go long™. ♪ >> college tuition keeps on getting more expensive, doesn't it, and students are more and more in-depth 1.2 trillion worth of student debt outstanding here's the question which schools are most expensive jerry willis has a list. >> oh, is right. so this is state by state most expensive list of the most expensive starts with engineering school take a look at this by the way, this is just a full screen of the most expensive logos college by college state by state. new york is number two, columbia if you've ever been there 66,000. >> that is room and board. >> room and board so it is tuition, room and board no pizza and beer there.
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university of chicago, that's the most expensive of the most exensive. flip side of that least expensive out west university of wisconsin at 25,000. north dakota state university 26. so -- >> at the most expensive schools these are the least expensive of the most expensive list. >> you've got it. thing that blew me away. i've been studying this a long time 23 of the 50 states most expensive schools in excess one year tuition room and board $60,000 plus. >> so in 23 states you look at the most expensive colleges in each of those 23 states, and all of them have a college at least one that is over 60,000 a year. in 23 states. >> yeah. >> if you're thinking of the sticker price, negotiate, director of admissions, my son or daughter wants to go to your
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school, we cannot pay this amount. what can you do for us? don't call it a no negotiation they're very sensitive to saying that. let me tell you that's what everybody is doing now. you can't take these numbers as the last word on what you're going to pay. >> or else you're broke. jerry that was fascinating i'm astonished by those numbers. >> thank you jerry willis imagine this an electric car that never needs to be plugged in, it charges down the road. i want details on this one lauren. >> it is happening in britain investing government there. 780 million over five years make the highwayses supercharge ad it. using some sort of receiver so when you're driving electric car, the road actually picks up the signal and charge a car as you go along. also they're spending money to up the number of charging ports that they have. to have one every 20 miles or so. >> so you can drive along an they've got the roads to the wire so that you recharge as you drive essentially on the sides.
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>> as you go yep. >> are they doing this? >> about to test it. planning to test this. >> how much does this cost? >> costing government $780 million over the next five years. >> cost the government. >> to the test it is cost -- they're going food a great job at that. >> doesn't that solve the problem of how to charge electric car to get more people to buy them. >> we assume that it works, yes. solves a problem. wouldn't that be nice. >> i'm for the supercharged highways. i love it i was here. [laughter] >> we'll steal their technology that they invested in. do it cheaper and we're set. >> brits pay for it. [laughter] >> all right. we'll be back. more varney after this.
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>> as you know stuart 25-year history of tension between hillary and the press corps. back to hurl days aside first lady.
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back to the scandal of the 0u89. white water and forth she's been defensive not giving much access to the press. few weeks ago a hillary campaign should be doing national she's done one with cnn next appearance is with ellen degeneres. >> there you have it on hillary clinton's history with the media. now donald trump is playing the media very much to his advantage. fibs he's a master at playing the media. karen disagrees with me. sheshe says this his display is pouty offensive and he lacks character and dignity. another viewer say this is about the newly approved female viagra. research shows it doesn't really help much, so i'm saying it was pushed through due to the made up war on women. comments were excellent today. selloff mode down 200 points. my time is up.
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and david in for neil cavuto dave it is yours. >> you're handing me a market selloff here on a very tough day for the markets not only for the markets look at what is happening to oil. markets were actually worse than they were right now, they were down about 230. but oil is way down. well over 4% it looks leak it is heading into the 30s and that, of course, is an indicator of an economic worldwide economic slowdown. we're going to stay very on markets on this red day for those markets particularly oil, a lot to cover here including breaking news on the battle at the boarder republicans may be balingsing on how to keep illegals out but blake burman reports immigration courts are getting overwhelmed with the illegals that are already here. blake. >> hi there david that back log is at an all time high according to american immigration counsel. that number now stangdz at roughly 450,000 pending cases

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