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tv   Lou Dobbs Tonight  FOX Business  August 29, 2015 3:00am-4:01am EDT

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inheritance" story you'd like to share with us? we'd love to hear it. send me an email or go to our website, strangeinheritance.com moment of "making money." right now lou dobbs is next here on fox business. tom: good evening, everybody, i'm tom sullivan in for lou dobbs. and hillary clinton once again confronting scandal, this time over her husband bill. newly obtained state department e-mails say the former president had such a hunger for six figure paydays, saw the to give speeches to two of the most oppressive regimes in the world. a full report tonight. former florida governor jeb bush changing strategy when it comes to dealing with donald trump. bush insisted he did not want to get into, quote, a food fight with donald trump, but ever since trump has been surging, bush faltering, so now bush is firing direct attacks
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at the republican front-runner and can you bet trump is hitting back. we take up the bush-trump war of words as trump is set to take questions from reporters this hour. we'll take you live to his event. you don't want to miss that. florida's governor declaring a state of emergency ahead of tropical storm erika. the deadly system is churning towards the u.s. mainland and expected to make landfall monday. erika already bringing heavy rain and mudslides to the caribbean. we'll have the latest from miami. we begin with hillary clinton's faltering campaign facing new trouble. the former secretary of state already has her hands full with her e-mail scandal and her alleged mishandling of classified information, but that is not stopping other controversies from popping up. republicans now trying to find out whether a top clinton aide violated conflict of interest rules by conducting work on a private business or private business on state department
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time. and new revelations that former president bill clinton tried to get approval for lucrative speaking engagements in two of the most oppressive regimes in the world. fox chief white house correspondent ed henry has our report. >> reporter: a delicate balancing act for hillary clinton who today used the democratic national committee summer meetings to convince the party faithful there's no need to turn to vice president joe biden. without directly attacking him. and also trying to turn attention away from her own e-mail fiasco. >> the party of lincoln is the party of trump. >> reporter: one day after comparing republicans to terrorists, clinton used a news conference to charge front-runner donald trump wants to throw illegal immigrants into boxcars. >> to go and literally pull people out of their homes and workplaces, round them up, put them, i don't know, in buses, boxcars, in order to take them
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across our border. >> reporter: yet clinton got defensive when fox news pressed her with three questions including one about new e-mails obtained by fox saying former president bill clinton sought permission to get paid to give speeches in oppressive regimes. >> let me answer one of the questions because that's what you are entitled to. >> reporter: the one is about speech requests reported by abc news, she stressed there was independent review and the north korea and congo one were denied. >> there were some unusual requests but they all went through the process. >> reporter: she would not answer fox's question about new conflict of interest issues for one of her closest aides, huma abedin. they show her using e-mail account to set up a state department dinner for clinton, it included donations for clinton and a consulting
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company. charles grassley demanded to know why the state departme department -- grassley declaring the latest revelations raise questions about the intersection of official state department actions, private business and secretary clinton's personal interest and fund-raising for the clinton foundation and related entities. some of clinton's rivals seem to acknowledge the elephant in the room, though lincoln chafee of rhode island insisted this is not a swipe. >> in all through the almost 30 years of public service, i've had no scandals. >> reporter: former maryland governor martin o'malley suggested the party is protecting clinton with too few debates. >> this sort of rigged process has never been attempted before. >> reporter: the donkey not in the room is biden who did not make the trip to minneapolis, they were here in a suite at dnc hotel pitching democrats to wait for the vice president's decision. >> i think there is a genuine
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desire to see the vice president join this race. >> reporter: and bernie sanders repeatedly brought the delegates to their feet. >> bernie! bernie! >> reporter: and had fans in the street. >> vote for bernie sanders. share the wealth. >> reporter: the third question i asked clinton is about the claim that her e-mail situation is not unique, i asked her if she could name one other cabinet secretary who had their own e-mail server. she never answered. tom? tom: i'll bet she didn't. thank you, ed. on the republican side, presidential candidates are equally dividing time between attacking clinton, president obama and front-runner donald trump. fox news chief political correspondent carl cameron has our report. >> reporter: focusing on national security, gop rivals warned that donald trump's insults and threats put the world at risk. jeb bush with veterans near norfolk, virginia's naval stations. >> politically counterproductive to say that
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someone's stupid or someone's an idiot or all the stuff we hear in the political discourse. this has no relevance to the challenges we face. >> reporter: fear that trump may go nuclear has emerged in town halls. >> the guy in the red hat, an obvious jerk. i won't mention any names, but it seems, i don't want him answering that phone at 3:00 in the morning. >> reporter: bush bashes trump for backing abortion rights and universal health care in the past and acknowledges the millionaire's message. >> i totally get it. and i respect the fact that look, this is a guy who's the front-runner. >> reporter: at the citadel military college scott walker delivered first foreign policy speech. >> the retreat is over. american leadership is back. american leadership is back and together with our allies, we will not surrender another inch of ground to terrorists or any other power that threatens our safety. >> reporter: saying it's no
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time for untested leaders, walker disputed trump's charge that all u.s. leaders are corrupt and incompetent losers. >> there are some that question the challengers capable of rising up to the time. i do not share that view of america. >> reporter: walker knocked bush for having said he'd consult with advisers before nullfying the iran nuclear deal. >> i don't need to appoint a cabinet or consult a committee. anybody who doesn't know today, today that the iran deal is a bad deal is not ready to be commander in chief. i am ready to be commander in chief on day one. >> reporter: walker urged the president to cancel next month's state dinner for the president of china to protest cyberspying and currency manipulation. rolling out a hard nose but more sophisticated china policy, marco rubio said the official state visit should be downgraded to a working visit. >> i do not believe we should
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cancel xi jinping's visit to china next month and do not believe we should roll out red carpet for him. this is an opportunity to speak bluntly to the authoritarian ruler, not to treat him to a state dinner. >> reporter: carly fiorina may have sent the best tweet of the week -- never a dull moment. tom? tom: no, there isn't, thank you very much. donald trump will be taking questions apparently from reporters in boston. if he starts that, we will bring you there when it happens. republicans are hitting president obama for not being tough enough with china as the administration dispatched national security adviser to beijing, susan rice meeting with chinese president xi jinping and other meeting officials ahead of the chinese president's visit to the u.s. next month. rice not commenting on what
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disagreements were discussed but tensions have flared over cyberattacks against our government and the territorial claims in the south china sea. we'll have a lot more on the cyberattacks later in the broadcast. less than three weeks to go before a skeptical congress votes on the president's nuclear deal with iran, but with congress in recess, the president today turned his attention to jewish-americans who are outraged at what the agreement means for israel. fox news white house correspondent kevin corke has this report. >> reporter: same song, different verse, president obama again making the case for the iran nuclear deal. friday's web cast, a direct appeal to the north american jewish community who expressed grave concerns about the agreement. >> i recognize where the anxieties come from, but i think it's important for us to remember the bonds that hold us together more than that go well beyond this particular issue. >> reporter: under the deal
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with the six world powers including the u.s., iran would allow restrictions on and supervision of nuclear program in exchange for an end to crippling economic sanctions. on website, the white house outlined four pathways for iran to obtain a nuclear weapon. saying each would be blocked by the deal. >> i think as an african-american, i understand history teaches us that man can be very cruel to man, and you have to take threats seriously. >> reporter: while today's web cast underscores the importance of securing support of jewish-american groups, getting jewish-american lawmakers to buy in remains a high priority for the white house, looking to secure enough backing to allow a filibuster, providing gop led congress for voting to disapprove the deal. to date, six of the ten jewish-american senators agreed to back the deal. three remain undecided with senator chuck schumer the lone
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opponent. analysts say there is a reason the president is having a problem closing the deal given iran's fast behavior. >> they have a terrible track record, no reason to believe that iran will stick to the deal. they have a history in the past of negotiating with the europeans and at the same time, continuing their nuclear program. >> reporter: meanwhile, the white house did pick up a bit of support today in the form of democratic senator tom carper from the state of delaware, that brings to 30 the number of senators who will bactpresident. tom? tom: very interesting, kevin corke at the white house. we're coming right back with much more. stay with us. donald trump says he's coming out with takes plan that hedge funds won't like. >> nobody knows the tax code better than i do. i'm king of the tax code. tom: the question now, will voters like it. and ever wonder what it's like to fly? like to fly? we have insane foot@
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♪ ♪ ♪ get excited for the 1989 world tour with exclusive behind the scenes footage, all of taylor swift's music videos, interviews, and more. xfinity is the destination for all things taylor swift. . tom: we have breaking news for you, donald trump answering questions from reporters in boston there. to attend a fund-raiser at the home of a local car dealership. let's listen in. >> the tremendous cost of food for 2,000 people. this is not a fund-raiser. it's going great, it's going great.
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i'm turning down millions of dollars for the campaign. everybody is offering me money, and i don't want it. i'm turning down millions of dollars and no interest, no interest. and again, we have a lot of veterans coming in tonight free, and we're taking care of their food. we have a lot of great people coming in. wounded warriors, a lot of wounded warriors. the best people. they're coming in free and people are making contributions, only if they want to. if they want they can make a contribution. we have a woman, $7, $12, $19. we see them coming into the office. that kind of a donation they want because they invest in the campaign, they feel invested. to me that's very important. it doesn't amount to a lot when you add it all up. to me it's very important. i turn down a lot of money. one thing i noticed today, i was told there are five or six pacs and they're supporting trump is from what i understand
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and they're being raised all over the country. pacs, because they want to see something happen with the country and want to see something good happen. thank you. and i think -- frankly i think that's terrific. but i don't know any of these people. they have five or six pacs are opening up. yes, ma'am? >> reporter: [inaudible] >> i don't see many protesters, i see thousands of people, and a few protesters, and i figured you'd ask that question. you know? that's the way it is. cnn is terrible. you're with cnn. are you with cnn? you people do not cover us accurately at all. they have a few protesters outside and they have thousands of people and the first question from cnn is about protesters. yes. [ applause ] . >> reporter: do you have a campaign theme song yet?
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>> a song, no, but the theme is make america great again. that's the theme. yes, ma'am. >> reporter: i know you're going to be announcing your tax plan. can you explain that and who you're going to raise taxes on and are you rejecting trickle down economics? >> we will be announcing a tax plan sometime during the month of september, who knows taxes more than me? i know the taxes very well. i would say that probably before the end of september we'll have a very comprehensive plan, and one of the things will be simplification, and i believe we'll end up with a tax reduction which is very important. you know the united states, we pay the highest taxes in the world. we're going to be asking for a reduction. i think overall, people are going to be very happy. yes, sir, go ahead. >> reporter: you have a controversial law in massachusetts, steve wynn has something, when this started, how come you didn't want to build a casino in massachusetts? >> i'm doing so many other
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things. in steve, he's a friend of mine, that's where it's going. but some other people are competing, they are very good. i don't know what the final outcome was. >> in massachusetts? >> i don't know where it will be, potentially it could be. >> reporter: what do you want to say to them? >> i think the female voters because -- ivanka, my daughter, my wife, they feel so strongly about the women's health issues and they said to me, you know, there's nobody that feels more strongly than me, it's true. women's health issues. as you saw jeb bush was really almost against it, it was terrible where, he didn't want to fund women's health issues, and i will tell you, we will work together and we're going to take care of women. i cherish women. and my daughter and my wife said you have to talk about that because they know how i feel. ivanka will be part of the
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campaign so will milania after september, it will be kicking in really big league. hard to think of what we accomplished. i didn't even think of that. tom: all right, we got a little problem with the signal out of boston. but donald trump, it was not a fund-raiser in the sense that i would have $30,000 dinners or anything like that. it was $100 ticket to cover the food and the band and everything else that was at this location. a car dealer is putting on in the boston area. when we reestablish the signal, we will find out what donald trump is talking about. joining me executive editor of the weekly standard fred barnes and caitlyn huey burns. this was right up your alley talking about he cherishes women, and you're a woman, do
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you feel cherished? >> well, you know, trump has been saying that line over and over. i mean, he's been trying to go after jeb bush specifically on this issue and on other. so it's a window into going after bush. i do think it will be interesting if we start to see his wife and daughter out on the campaign trail. that will signify seriousness of getting the family involved and that sort of thing. tom: fred, what do you make of donald trump, what's your position on him? >> my position is he's fun to watch. for sure. no question about that. and he continues to do things as we just saw that you're never supposed to do as a candidate and they work for him. he attacks cnn, they asked him a question which he didn't answer and attacked them and moved on. you're not supposed to be able to do that when you're running for president. but he does, and it works for him. tom: it's very, very unique. pardon us, we'll go back up to
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the boston area and find out what donald trump is talking about. >> we have a mental health problem. if you use the word gun violence, chicago has the strictest gun laws in the world, they say, and certainly in the united states, and look what's happening over there. you take a look at baltimore, tremendously strict. so many of the places so strict. those are the places that have the biggest problem. we have a mental health problem, and an illegal immigrant problem. you know a lot of the gangs, it's true, a lot of the gangs in st. louis and ferguson, the toughest and the meanest, the worst dudes in baltimore, you've seen it, they're illegal immigrants. i tell you one thing, if i get in, they are going to be gone so fast out of this country. they're going to be gone so fast. i mean you take a look what's happening, and you have illegal immigrants and gangs. tom: we're going to come and pick up on what donald trump
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. tom: that breaking news, back up to boston, donald trump answering questions from reporters in norwood, massachusetts. >> a movement, call it silent majority, call it whatever you want, there is a movement going on. thank you all very much. [ applause ] >> yes, of course, of course, we would join right as he was leaving the requirements of our breaks in cable television. at this point, i want to go back to executive editor of the weekly standard and real clear politics editor caitlyn huey burns, you were saying he was picking a fight with cnn, you know who else is picking a fight with them is carly fiorina, she's trying to get in on the debate they're holding in the middle of september. does she have an argument
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saying they're using the old polls from before the fox debate which really reset the whole race. >> yeah, i think she has not only an argument but an extremely strong argument. she was in that junior varsity debate the last time and she was the star. her poll numbers have gone up since then. she's getting large crowds. i mean she's the only woman running on the republican side, but that doesn't make any different. fact is she has become a serious, viable candidate, and for cnn to use these old polls and keep her out, you know what? i think they're going to find a way to change their mind, and she'll be in that top debate. >> i think you're right. because really the fox debate did reset the whole order. there were some people that did not do as well as everybody thought, and she was really, other than trump, she was the star. >> right, and the problem is that the republican party outsourced these decisions to
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the networks so the networks get to decide, so carly fiorina's argument is against really how the party structured this. i will say, though, she was able to really stand out in that junior varsity debate as we've been calling it. perhaps she is not able to make that stage, she can make a greater impact on a separate stage again, not really be overshadowed by donald trump on that bigger stage. but it is remarkable how she has climbed in the polls. tom: i'd like to see her in that, i know that. today i was watching hillary clinton taking questions from the media, and when it came time to answer about some of the e-mails, she would look down at her notes and then look back. she was looking down the the notes. she was being very careful in her words. it wasn't spontaneous. >> contemporaneous. tom: yeah, it was very carefully worded. that seems like it gives all
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the wrong, it's the opposite of trump. >> certainly is the opposite of trump who is one big ad-lib. she's very careful and she didn't say anything new. she said she never sent nor received any classified material, and at one point and then said anything that was marked classified which seemed a little different, and we know that the investigators from the intelligence agencies have looked through a small number of her e-mails and found obviously classified documents. look, she's going to be in trouble in this, and i guess she's trying maintain her same story, but it doesn't look like this is going to turn out well for her. tom: all in the hands of the authorities right now. but she's also trying to deal with the democratic national committee. she's trying to cut a deal with him, saying if you fund raise. give the money to me, not joe biden. is she going to be successful?
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>> this is interesting, the democratic national committee is meeting this week and the last few days and hillary clinton want toscoa less all the support around her, strong challenge from bernie sanders, martin o'malley and others are in the race, and joe biden is thinking about it. she's trying to make sure she has that support, and she also has to start to show a little more energy, and i think that's why we saw her go offscript the other day, comparing the republican views on women's issues to -- >> you want to shake up the presidential election cycle, joe biden, come on in. welcome to the circus. fred barnes, caitlyn huey burns, thank you for joining us this evening. >> you're welcome. tom: if you've ever wondered what it's like to base jump with a wingsuit but don't have the guts. we've got you covered. take a looked at professional
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b.a.s.e. jumpers, recording incredible points of view in jaw dropping flights off a cliff in switzerland. that looks like fun. the daredevils fly dangerously close before gliding into a beautiful valley. not for the faint of heart. i'd like to do it. we're coming right back, don't go away. much more, stay with us. republican leaders openly admitting they don't have the votes to kill president obama's nuclear deal with iran. so if the white house won't keep iran in check, who will? major general bob scales joins me. and a massive show of force to deter one of the most volatile regimes on earth. we'll have details of the joint
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. tom: i'm tom sullivan in for lou dobbs. in the main news, hillary clinton is aiming to quiet the buzz surrounding joe biden's possible run. clinton attended dnc summer meetings to convince the party elite her campaign is on track. gop presidential candidates donald trump and ted cruz are planning to headline a capitol hill rally against president obama's nuke agreement with iran. that date is on september 9th in d.c. and national security adviser susan rice meeting today with president xi amid final preparations for the chinese president's visit to washington next month.
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u.s. and south korea holding largest ever, i mean big joint live fire drill on the korean peninsula. about 3,000 troops, 100 tank, armored vehicles, 45 helicopters. more than 40 fighter jets participated in the exercises under the scenario of the north korean invasion. the drills come after standoff between the north and the south last week with both sides threatening strikes against each other. north korean leader kim jong-un firing several top official in the wake of the standoff. joining me retired major general bob scales and a fox news military analyst. good to see you. >> hi, tom. tom: this business with korea, is that a show of force, or are they really knocking the rust off to be ready to go? >> yeah, that brings back a lot of memories. that film clip was of nightmare range which i used to command
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back in the day. brings back a lot of fond memories. this is not a big show of force. it had a brigade minus two battalions of tanks, two or three squadrons of f-16s and a-10 squadron. it's not big by standards of the past. but very pyrotechnic. whole object was for south korea and the u.s. forces command in korea to make a statement to kim jong-un, next time he tries something stupid like firing a rocket in the south, the south and the u.s. forces have an overwhelming response unlike what they've done in the past. so in that sense, it was very encouraging, tom. tom: but at the same time, one of the things if you're sitting in seoul, that's what north korea is telling you, too. we're going to have a big response right on your head? >> absolutely. here's the thing, if you look at the correlation of forces, a military term of a balance
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between the two, the north korean military is in theility to. their equipment is museum pieces left over from the 60s. most soldiers spend their time trying to keep from starving to death by raising crops. military leadership is nothing more than just a bunch of sycophants to kim jong-un, from a conventional military standpoint, the south would win, that's the message they think the south is trying to send to the north. now, if the north does invade the south, they're dumb enough to do it, they'll lose. but the cost any of war in the peninsula will be huge. what the u.s. command is trying to do is send a message to kim jong-un, try it and you'll lose. tom: other side of the globe for a minute and you talk about the proxies that iran uses, and now israel is saying once again, here we go. syria is launching things into us in israel, and it's all being directed by iran, agree? >> absolutely right, and think
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what another 150 billion will do for that, tom. the iranians have been using surrogates for many years and yemen and hezbollah and lebanon, obviously the shia militia fighters in iraq, and building almost like something akin to a terrorist hedgeemmon in the middle east. the go to guys for conventional weapons, chemical weapons, all out of the terrorist factories in iran. and by the way, this is the very nation we're trusting to do the right thing on the nuclear deal. it's not a good story. tom: they have proxies all over the place. pakistan, the fact they're really increasing their manufacturing into the nuke warheads and nuclear capability. they've had nuke capability for a long time. please bring us up to speed because i thought their beef was with india. is there a bigger danger there because of their proximity in the middle east?
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>> no, it's an arms race, tom. and india is also not only increasing the numbers of their weapons but the quality of the delivery systems, and as you know, right across the border they've been facing each other off since independence in 1947. the pakistanis are trying to increase the number of nuclear weapons, increase their ability to deliver them through the use of aircraft and intermediate range ballistic missiles. think how the arms race is going to escalate three or four years from now when iran not only gets the bomb but the means to deliver the bomb against israel and adjacent states. no, we're beginning to face a condition, a circumstance that will make the cold war look like the good old days, tom. tom: aren't you glad you retired? . >> no, i actually miss it you. >> want to be in the middle of this one. general bob scales, good to see you. >> thanks, tom. tom: vote in tonight's poll. is bill clinton an asset or
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liability to hillary's campaign? cast your vote at loudobbs.com. up next, wall street closes out one of the most turbulent weeks in years. we'll tell you what to expect next week. and solving a rubiks cube is hard enough on land. i'll tell you about the teenager upping the puzzle's degree of difficulty.
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♪ ♪ ♪ get excited for the 1989 world tour with exclusive behind the scenes footage, all of taylor swift's music videos, interviews, and more. xfinity is the destination for all things taylor swift.
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. tom: on wall street, stocks closing believe it or not, flat after an extremely volatile week. the dow off 12 point, s&p up a fraction. nasdaq gaining 16 points. volume on the big board, a little quieter, 3.9 billion shares. despite sharp losses early in the week. the dow and the s&p had weekly gains of about 1%. the nasdaq was up more than 2 1/2%, and crude oil, this is the biggest weekly gain in crude oil prices in more than six years. we're out now a little above $45. we were at 37 a couple of days ago. joining me the chief economist for stifle nicks income.
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and lindsey, good to see you. >> thank you. tom: you want to throw your economic guess into what the fed is going to do now after all this volatility? >> we certainly heard from several committee members over the past few days with very different messages and this made it more confusing for market participants. you have charlie evans out of chicago talking about a second half 2016 liftoff. then have you lockhart out of atlanta talking about the fed being on track for a near-term rate increase and everyone in between from powell. vice chairman fisher, brainard talking about needing more information, still being very data dependent. you have a full range of forecasts. in particular, i think given the lackluster pace of the economy and nonexistent inflation, i would err on the side of charlie evans in 2016 for liftoff. tom: speaking to the choir, i'm with you on that one.
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gordon, talk about china, given a lot of blame for all our markets' problems, and i heard you throughout the week talking about the fact that the growth in china isn't what a lot of people think it is. and if that's true, what's the impact on the markets going forward? >> long-term, i think it's going to be very difficult because china is not growing at the 7.0% everyone says, it's not even growing at the 2.2 people in beijing are privately talking about. that means although beijing can engineer stock market rallies like thursday and today, nonetheless, that's unsustainable, and i think what they'll do is keep the markets high through september 3. >> i know you china very, very well, they're going to close 10,000 factories is the story so the air will be pretty, and if they close the factories, that has to affect
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productivity, affect output. >> yeah, the factories have been closed since 1920 when the government shut them down. you have a lot of steel production of the country. this is going to be a real hit to gdp for the quarter, and it's probably going to get worse because those steel mills, you know, afterwards, may not actually open for a little while because steel production has been down. in the first half, it was down 1.3%. that's the first reduction in nearly 20 years. this is a problem. tom: lindsey, listen, this thing about china, i saw the report on our exports, 7%. that's it. goes to china. so you go, if it's not huge, it's important, but why did the market react so strongly if we really don't sell that much to china? >> well, i don't think it's just about exports, it's about global uncertainty, and certainly china being one of the largest economies, certainly the largest consumer
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of commodities, raw materials, if we see a decline in demands there, it translates to further downward pressure on prices. we talk about import prices off 10% in the past year, that means we're importing deflation as a result. from the fed's point of view, if you are trying to gauge the near-term rate increase will be september, october, december. if, in fact, there is no inflation in the pipe lining the fed could be on hold much longer than expected. that slowdown giving further justification for no near-term rise in rates. tom: gordon, quickly, you said the numbers have been overstated, but where do you see it going into 2016? are we -- what kind of economy is china going to have? i'm trying to figure out what to do with the stock portfolio? >> china in 2016 will be in contraction. you're going to see continued devaluation of the currency. beijing has been spending $10 billion a day to support the
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value of the renminbi. that's completely unsustainable. 21 weeks mea$21 weeks means esse trillion dollars loss. >> gordon and lindsey, thank you very much. appreciate it. >> thank you. tom: most people can't hold their breath underwater for a minute. and fewer can complete a rubiks cube. one teen did both at the same time. he had his friends record him sitting on the bottom of a pool as he furiously tried to solve the puzzle in 90 seconds. he solved not one, not two, he did three rubiks cubes underwater. a breathtaking literally fete, certainly. that's for sure. up next the ashley madison hacks scaring not just cheaters but millions of folks who hide behind the anonymity of the internet.@
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♪ ♪ lou: the ceo of ashley madison stepping down today, the decision comes a week after hackers linked to data about millions of clients in a massive cyberattack. the parent company said that the departure of this man was a mutual decision and it was in the best interest of the company. our next guest says that the company is liable for not
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protecting the information on their websites and once not to tie your personal information with any organization that you do not want people to know about. to me now is the ceo of main nerve, bruce parkman. bruce, for every kind of website, i have to sign up. my bank, amazon, you name it. you click yes. so in today's world we are sharing our information and it's impossible not to. >> thank you for having me on the show. dealing with amazon or ebay is not going to destroy your life. and when you engage with those internet commercial portals you have the ability to pay securely. the problem is when you tie yourself to a questionable activity, whether it is a moral or legal or anything that would ruin your life, the last thing
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you want to do is enable the release of that data to display your life. that's what we are looking at here at ashley madison. >> it makes you wonder, even though porn was one of the leading industries of the early days of the web, all kinds of folks said that they were the ones leading the technology. so that was an area that i wonder if they will be the first ones to die out because nobody is going to want to do business with them because of the fact that they know that their information could be hacked for the world to see. >> absolutely. here we have a case where a company did not use best cybersecurity practices. they did encrypt the data. the ceo even stated, and his fear was what happens at this data gets released on the internet. because they knew that was going to affect 33 million lives and this goes beyond that. look at the edison that are now
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harmed. those 33 million people that went on that website have spouses and children and they have companies. they might even have countries. all of those people are tainted by association and are going to get dragged through the mud. >> the other night there was a lot of fake information as well. so i don't know what to make of that fake list as well. lou: this brings up another item in the news. the tragic news crew was killed in virginia, the shooter was using social media, uplinking the video of the murder as he was running from the police and one analyst said that they should have not taken on this website because he was telling police where he was by live streaming and tweeted his whereabouts. >> in the case of that particular part of the case,
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that could be true. but the social media portal is, they have an obligation to screen material. any material that is found to be in support of seditious activities needs to be removed. but when we can help law enforcement find someone before he attacks and kills someone else, i could make a partial case for that. but these other social media portal is they cannot tell what it is offensive and the people notice that the videos are out there. >> it's interesting new information to what we know in social media. that's good information and thank you. well, it's time for a look at the poll results. last night we have to do think that congress will pass or reject the iranian nuclear deal. 61% said reject. so that is pretty overwhelming
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as well and not a surprise although experts have told us that it looks like there's enough for him to get thoining . lou dobbs is back on monday. you can catch my radio show on fox news radio. good night from new york. >> do you care who the next president is? >> no, i do not. >> but i care. i don't want her or him to win either. >> this type of economy is not what america is supposed to be about. stossel: democrats want to spend all of our money and republicans claim that they won't. but is it true? >> we need to build a wall. this candidate makes the race more interesting. if it weren't for me, you wouldn't even be talking about illegal immigration. >> we balance the budget, cut taxes. >> republican voters have lots of choices and candidates sa

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