tv After the Bell FOX Business September 10, 2015 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT
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castle is standing by to tell us how his chain will respond. he has breakfast for dinner. david: he also brought us sliders which is very nice. the market ended with a healthy rise in the dow. [closing bell ringing] basically all the indices. but it was much higher earlier in the day. it did climb in the last minutes but didn't get into triple digits on the dow. it is all green, including gold and oil. both of them up. oil about a 3 1/2% pop. melissa: not nearly the gains we had earlier in the day. david: not anywhere near it that is the situation so often past couple weeks. we seem to go great guns and lose steam. the dow was up 180 points earlier. hasn't closed up or down triple digits since last thursday. let's bring in scott martin, united advisors chief market strategist and fox news contributor. lance roberts,sta wealth market
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management. scott, first to you. i was looking at "wall street journal" headline. if you go see a picture of weak niece you see the federal reserve. no wonder the markets can't decide what to do because the fed can't decide what to do, am i right? >> i'm totally with you, man. this is the most botched rate hike or non-rate hike in history. the market knows. i'm super disappointed because coming off bernanke fed i thought yellen had great transitory period. i thought she took the reins well and i liked her communication. something happened to yellen and fed governors last six months with communication and everybody getting involved and conjecturing and posturing the rate hike or non-rate hike or beliefs or outlook where independent mf got involved said don't hike rates because they want to control things. i think that is what the market is rate weighting on.
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i still think the fed shunned hike rates and if they do it will be bad for market. david: we had indecisive markets mostly negative side. we come down from 18,000 to, down 2000 points. when you see this much question and indecisiveness in the markets that is not a good sign, right? >> no the short term that is not a good sign. there are reince the other guest enunciated what the fed might do which in my view it is totally inappropriate to raise rates. to be lone cowboy among all central banks cutting rates. you have longer term horse southern start picking your spots. the other thing analyze china because in some ways china great deal of effect on multinationals out there. david: lance, i think fed has more effect than anything else. if we wait to make any decision to pie or sell a lot of what we have until the fed decides what they are going to do? >> there are two things going on here. first of all, when we talk about
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the federal reserve, the federal reserve realizes we're potentially closer to the next recession than not. economic cycles don't last forever. so they're in a real bad situation here. if we get into recession with interest rates at zero they have no monetary policy tool to offset any type of recessionary drag. if they raise rates they might upset the financial markets simply because you're tightening monetary policy. why do we raise interest rates? we raise interest rates in order to quell inflation and slow economic growth to keep the economy from overheating. there is no evidence of that occurring right now as we speak today. i think the risk is, raise interest rates and trips up the market. risk currently right now and what the markets are trying to price in potentially downside risk here. david: yeah. >> investors need to be a little bit careful about being overly invested at this point. david: i would say a little bit. that is understatement. i think you should be very careful. guys, leave it at that thank you very much. appreciate it. >> thank you. >> showdown on capitol hill the senate voting right now on
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resolution to block iran deal. any minute we are expecting the house to vote on a key measure regarding the iran nuclear deal. joining me is peter barnes live from washington. peter. >> reporter: that's rights, melissa. we'll start with the house where conservative republicans force party leaders to scrap a vote on that, formal resolution, the kind of convoluted one, to disapprove the iran nuclear deal. instead in the next few minutes the house will begin voting on three related measures. first specify the obama administration has not properly submitted the agreement to congress with complete documentation, specifically with those separate side agreements. iran negotiated with the u.n. nuclear inspectors. because of that, ted cruz and other critics say the 60-day congressional review period congress and president agreed to back in may never formally started. tomorrow the house will vote on second measure, straight up-or-down vote on the deal itself. and they will vote on third bill
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tomorrow that would prevent the president from lifting congressionally mandated sanctions on iran. >> this is a bad deal with decades-long consequences for the security of the american people and our allies. and we'll use every tool at our disposal to stop, slow, and delay this agreement from being fully implemented. >> reporter: now the white house repeated today that the side deals on inspections are not part of the formal treatment between iran and the u.s. and five other world powers. the president again accused republicans not giving diplomacy a chance. he spoke at a meeting with with veterans. >> they know the consequence when we rush into war. they understand what it means if we act without broad international support. when we fail to consider unintended consequences. >> reporter: despite this move by house republicans, iran deal is expected to survive because
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enough senate democrats support implementing it. melissa? melissa: peter, thank you so much for that. >> reporter: report you bet. david: it is kind of confusing. you need a play bill to figure out what is going on in congress. to find out what the key votes on iran deal mean let's bring in fox news's chad pergram, fox news senior producer. we lost chad. ed henry is next. presidential contender -- we'll get back to iran in a minute as we get chad connections in the beltway are very tenuous. presidential contender hillary clinton on the campaign trail today as man who set up hillary's secret email server pled the fifth before the house benghazi committee. here with the latest is fox news's chief white house correspondent ed henry. he is in columbus, ohio. we have better connection than we do at beltway. >> david, can you hear me now?
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david: we can hear you fine. how is all of this affecting the clinton campaign. >> i think she is in real peril. she is in columbus. obviously ohio is battle ground state. it is less about the primaries but a battleground in the general election. she is looking ahead to show organizational strength here if she gets nomination but that is becoming increasingly more difficult prospect for her. there is new poll, quinnepiac in iowa. bernie sanders is beating her only by one point, within margin of error but basically a dead-heat. bernie sanders was far from her in iowa. but now in the respectinged quinnpy crack poll it is dead heat. bernie sanders leading her in some new hampshire polls. i can tell you i was posting pictures on twitter, we shot video of very sparse crowd in this very large state of ohio. columbus is not a small city. ohio state campus a few miles away from hillary clinton had women for hillary event.
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she is here trying to get away from email scandal. trying to show organizational strength and trying to show enthusiasm. she is struggling with it. why? the think about this, bryan pagliano was on capitol hill. remember him? he was clinton i.t. staffer who set up server. democrats say this is political sideshow. that republicans knew he would take the fifth to parade him in front of the cameras. republicans insist if we want to hear from him, if he is taking fifth officially they might grant him immunity to hear what he has to say about the server. david: you look attain any crowds at hillary event you see how this is having an effect. ed, thank you. we go to the hill with chad pergram our senior producer. chad, the key here what most interests people, the move by conservatives to the stop irrather than deal has any chance of working. what do you say? >> there is no real pathway to kill this outright because they
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had a very narrow gambit here where the house and senate were going to vote to reject the iran deal and then send this to president obama, force him to veto it and try to override the veto. president obama had four vetoes in his presidency. there has never been a veto override of an obama veto. and once the house of representatives changed course yesterday, saying we're not going to consider that at all, in fact we're going to consider resolution of approval which is what is going to pass probably tomorrow. they will debate that in the house later on, the gig is up. this is done. david: chad, let me just jump in here because you do have the corker bill and the corker bill says unless congress has a chance to look at every side deal, we can't have a vote. they haven't seen the side deals. >> right. david: what happened to the wording in that bill, in the corker bill? >> well that is what is so remarkable about this that the house of representatives as recently as yesterday morning was forging ahead with a plan to say that we had all of the
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paperwork and they were going to vote to reject this. less than 24 hours later they reversed course, saying no, we don't. this morning house speaker john boehner said we might go back to vote to reject this later on. how on one hand saying you had the paperwork, you don't have the paperwork and you might have the paperwork again in the future? that is what is confusing to people right now. david: seems words used to have more importance than they do today, i'm just saying. chad, thank you for explaining as best you can, a very difficult situation inside of the beltway. appreciate it. melissa. melissa: the fight for '15. vice president joe biden joining new york's governor to make the case for $15 minimum wage. >> middle class wages are still stagnant and working poor are living in poverty. every working man and woman in the state of new york deserves $15 an hour as a minimum wage
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and we're not going to stop until we get it done! >> four more. melissa: that was andrew cuomo. i made mistake earlier. jamie richardson, vice president of white castle. we have lot of issues to get through before we taste the delicious food. the new york governor talking about $15 an hour minimum wage. you guys have 38 locations in the state. what would be immediate impact? >> it would be devastating. if you're a fan of representative democracy not like what the governor did today. he picked fast-food. with one wage board set the wage at $15 over next three years here in new york city. that already happened. melissa: tell me on practical basis what that means? you say you have tons of profits. you're a rich guy. you can afford to pay working class and working people in the restaurant. what does it mean for price of one of these? >> anytime you raise the key input costs 71%, we have to consider price increases. 22% of fast-food restaurants are
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going to have to close pause of this. this is 71% of key costs key invests with make which is our people. melissa: what is your pricing leverage like right now? could you raise the price? or what you have to do realistically cut hours? >> we have to look at everything but to raise prices 71%, what doesn't get report ad lot, what about that person making $13 an hour right now been with us eight years. they will want increase too. it ripples too. it doesn't create more opportunity. it robs job creators chance to create more jobs. melissa: absolutely. other stupid thing, new york city is becoming first-in-the-nation to require salt warnings on menu. i'm not an advocate for salt. they did this with calories and everybody had to redo menu. they think money grows on trees. how do things get paid for? maybe it is good to tell people about salt and list and reprint all the menu, how do you pay for that? >> restaurants everywhere,
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including white castle reducing sodium levels, already, to that point federal guidelines are not written on implement year-and-a-half. we have two different ways to approach this. makes no sense. melissa: another cost. we went through this whole thing request calories of the you think they would do it at same time. who will pay for that? it is crazy. let me talk about the delicious sandwiches. hamburgers are my secret pleasure. you're having breck gas for dinner. i can't take a bite because i'm still talking. i will the second camera is off me. why is there demand for breakfast at nighttime? we're seeing mcdonald's do this. this is a big move. >> customers want anything anytime they want it. white castle cracking fresh eggs to make sandwiches. anything on the breakfast menu, not just a few items anything you want, anytime of day. what we're hearing, especially millenials. they're not bound by formal times. they want to enjoy, flavor of
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freshly cracked eggs and belgium waffles, the most important meal of the day. melissa: the most important. i like that. you're talking about having more menu items through the day. that is one of the complaint with mcdonald's, one of the reasons they weren't hitting profit targets is too many choices having that prepared and simplifying menu is better for shareholders. do you think this is good family decision? >> as family decision we've been around 95 years. we have best team members in the business make this possible. more than one in four are with us 10 years. big thing we've been working two years. we launched today. officially get anything you want on white castle menu anytime including burger for breakfast. melissa: can i have the cheese and bacon on waffle. >> you can. belgium waffle. melissa: david, i have to, darn it. let's get through this read quickly so i can eat this. white house says america will be prepared to take in 10,000 more
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refugees, leeing syria. dr. saudi jasser's family left in the '60s. part of his family is staying put. we'll speak about that decision or history. david: don't take another bite you have another read. donald trump says whatever he is in his head and why you shouldn't street for rival carly fiorina. melissa: new species of humans has been discovered. no, we already told you about donald trump. who wrote that joke. that was not me talking there. i don't want the blame. we'll be right back. ♪ tburn with it neutralizes stomach acid and is the only product that forms a protective barrier that helps keep stomach acid in the stomach where it belongs. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. try gaviscon®. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. hi mi'm raph. tom. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here,
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refugees fleeing their homeland could have hope. -- president obama is offering a plan. sued sy jasser founder of american president of islamic forum of democracy. he knows about the situation. his parents fled from syria in the '60s. thanks so much for joining us. every time i look at these pictures i think of you. you and have been talking about this for years. you said this day is coming. you continue to have family in syria. why they stay. are they still there? >> yeah. they're still there. you know, so many millions are affected, you know, over the last 40 years, 60 years, more expatriates outside of syria than inside. now 22 million remaining. looks like almost half of them will become refugees, both internally displaced and externally. my family thought about leaving couple years ago. said no, we can't.
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if we leave our house will not be here when we get back. now they're living in wasteland destroyed around them. they see barrel bombs. chemical weapons being used. isis thriving. it is turning into horrific wasteland of revolution. melissa: so sorry. >> unfortunately they still have sort of stuck. they have, i have family members they're thinking of getting on one of those boats going to greece or somewhere. it is interesting, melissa. they're thinking about going to the west. why? because we still, despite apathy of our president and we're still the beacon of freedom in the world. they're not thinking about going to russia or saudi arabia, prisons of a society. melissa: what do you think of the response around the world? people are understandably concerned about the economics of accepting more people, the security of accepting more people? what do you think other countries should do? >> well the first thing is security. absolutely there will be jihadists that try to exploit this and try to come here.
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if you look at terror attacks in the west, most of them were done by homegrown terrorists and not by refugees. having said that, to hear the state department saying we have no way to filter for jihadists is absurd. if they were working with reform-minded organizations anti-islamist like ourselves we would tell them how to do that they're unfortunately hamstrung. they bring them all in. yes, there is a threat. but the bigger threat, medical list can continues to change the narrative where we say we won't help them. we'll not close our doors. be the beacon of freedom for world war ii refugees and vietnamese refugees. every war in history, the west provided some solace for those seeking freedom. we can do that in smart way but not over the top where we let everybody come quickly. melissa: let me ask you about the other conversation going on right now and of course when they look at the pictures they start with the blame game. they say this is the result of toppling of dictators around the
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world, whether qadaffi or mubarak or what happened with assad. he is still there but the fight's there or saddam hussein. that thetoppling of these sectarian dictators is what caused isis to come in and is what caused this whole problem. they trace it back to that. what do you think of that reasoning? >> i can't tell you how backwards that is. if anything, syria tells us lack of toppling a dictator, military become a humanitarian disaster caused this. if we got rid of assad in 2011, 2012, 2013 before isis the refugees would not be refugees. they would be staying in syria the way tunisias stayed in tunisia and yemenis stay in yemeni. now they are not because continuing to be vacuum. where we don't allow ideas of anti-islamism, we'll see cancer spread. we'll eventually pay a cost for
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security and economics when we don't stand up for freedom. meanwhile we let russia and iran who will hand billions to continue to infuse evil into countries like syria. melissa: years ago i first talked to you maybe three or four years ago, when people were first trying to starting to pay attention what assad did, you predicted if we didn't get involved to at least give weapons to syrian rebels somebody like isis would come in to take advantage of the situation to take over for assad and you predicted. real quick what is the right response? what should america dot? >> continue to have a strategy to get rid of assad, to decimate isis. to try to help more than 50 or hundreds of thousands of rebels taking control away from the assad military and help in humanitarian way. we don't need boots on the ground. we need no-fly zones against helicopters and bombs and transition them away from military regime. then the refugees will have place to go back to.
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melissa: you predicted all of this. you have so much insight we appreciate your time. >> thank you, anytime, medical list. melissa: a live look at capitol hill. we're awaiting house vote on the iran deal coming up. hillary clinton losing ground in a new poll but don't worry, she is shaking it off. david: yeah, look at that. aye yi yi. we live in a world of mobile technology,
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melissa: coming to you with breaking news. the senate voted against the republican measure to block the iran nuclear deal. senate democratic leader harry reid is speaking right now. we're expecting the house to vote in moments. david? david: it was majority of 58. a lot of republicans went on board with that. tennis fans now have to wait until friday to see if superstar serena williams comes close to getting calendar grand slam title, thanks to the wet weather in new york. women's semifinal match between
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williams and roberta vinci originally scheduled tonight will be played friday morning. gerri willis from the national tennis center in queens, new york. you still have a great time even if it is raining there. >> david, we're having a great time. fans might be disappointed they can't see semifinals tonight. it will happen tomorrow. hopefully the sun will be out tomorrow. david, meantime, we're looking around, trying to figure out how much it cost average family of four to come here to actually see all the cool stuff, right? say you bring your family of four to have lunch. you're paying $81. here is what you get. a couple of beers for mom and dad. some sodas. four sandwiches, 81 bucks. if you want to buy souvenirs it will really cost you. say you buy sweatshirts for the kids, a shirt for mom, a couple of jackets. that will add up to $740. a lot of money people are
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spending here. it is money, money, here at u.s. open. finally if you want to see serena, and really believe she will make it, many people do, the finals on sunday, how much will it cost you to four tickets for you and kids in $3800. women's finals tickets are highest they have ever been, $968. we did our only retail therapy. i spent $10 for the wristlets. the ball was $45. david: $45! wow? in studio we're eating white castle sliders for free. >> that is so good. a little jealous. david: actually sliders don't keep very well. melissa. melissa: another major sporting event this week. boxing champ floyd mayweather who created buzz with the fight of the century against manny pacquiao in may, will take on
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andre berto in mgm in las vegas on saturday what will be mayweather's last match. fox business's charles payne talks to floyd mayweather tonight at 6:00 p.m. don't want to miss that one. david: that looks good. melissa: donald trump becoming the first republican presidential candidate to top 30%. what this means for his campaign moving forward? david: the time is here for football fans with the nfl kickoff coming tonight and of course tom brady playing. we'll give awe preview. their predictions. we have leigh steinberg with us the guy who that movie "jerry maguire" was based. he will be here for a preview of the nfl season. that is coming up. ♪
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david: now to a little 2016 presidential race stuff where trump continues to crush his rivals. in a new poll, trump is on top gaining eight points suns august with 32% support. dr. ben carson landing in second place with 19% between them. there are over 50. in third place, former florida governor jeb bush, he has 9%. joining me townhall.com editor, katie pavlich and former massachusetts senator scott brown, both fox news contributors. and marianne marsh, a principle of the dewey square group. scott, this to you. this is getting very personal with donald trump. surprise, surprise. we have the stuff this morning. i quote some of this. his comments about carly
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fiorina, look at that face, would anyone vote for that. can you imagine that the face of the next president. she is woman and i'm not supposed to say bad things, really folks, come on. he called ben carson an okay doc. this is neurosurgeon, first guy to split conjoined defense at the head, i called him an okay doc. what do you make of all this. >> this is donald being donald. voters have their say up or down. remember who was in front last name in michele bachmann was there and herman cain were in front. so it is not close to being over. what i find more fascinating are poll numbers coming out of iowa with hillary clinton 20-point swing. she has 82 i think paid volunteers. she spent millions. another couple million to improve her image. reset four times. it is amazing what is happening not only in iowa but in new hampshire. she is in deep trouble. people don't like her. she don't trust her. bernie sanders seems like he may be the man.
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david: ones nobody thought are making a comeback. katie, here is what trump says about his style and the way it is perceived and the way the voters perceive it. take a listen. >> woman came up to me, said i'm not sure that you're nice enough to be president. i said you know what? this is not going to be an election based on a nice person. it is going to be based on a competent person! david: in fact when he comes out with these comments that are not so nice, his numbers go up. >> i don't know if they're necessarily not nice. i think they're extremely immature and i have heard these insults in middle school years ago. i don't necessarily want to hear them from the president of the united states. but the fact is that he is getting more support in the polls. i think it is very important for people to understand that there are very few people paying attention to the primary process at this point. i have to say, republicans have been really, really bad actually pointing out donald trump's real progressive record. they have brushed him off as a non-serious candidate as soon as
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he entered the race. it really come back to hurt them. he is getting away with saying things yes, bring in syrian he have are fugees. david: hold on a second, every time republicans push back, he goes up in numbers. i think they do push back. look what bobby jindal said today. katie? >> i wasn't sure if you were going to play a clip. sure. but at the same time they should have done this earlier. they're pushing back now but they didn't start pushing back immediately when donald trump got into the race. they knew his progressive record in june when he launched his campaign. he should have started then talking about his record, just pretending he is funny, gets away with it because he is celebrity. those are very bad arguments to make for someone sitting in the oval office. david: mary ann, i seen republicans push back and every time they do his numbers go it. how will democrats make hay of this. >> economic populism are driving this election. voters are really mad, the
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common denominator they're mad at washington and wall street. when they look at donald trump and bernie sanders they're political outsiders. on right they're drawn to donald trump in this case because of his position on undocumented immigrants. on left, 1%, hedge fund managers and all that. but donald trump is also saying raise taxes on people like me. i want to get rid of carried interest. i don't like hedge fund guys either. he is broading his support and appealing to lots of voters. david: scott, the fact he said on one hand i wants to simplify the flat code. give us a flatter tax. on other hand he want to get rid of special interest helps that the rich folks get through the tax code. >> well, listen he is putting out things that people care about. obviously dealing with the border. dealing will legal aliens and also dealing with the costs of education. the only one that i'm aware of put out detailed plan, jeb bush, dealing with tax code, four
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prong plan, deal with rates and immigration and deal with obamacare and deal with the regulatory agencies running amok. bottom line, donald is talking about things that people care about. david: so is bernie sanders apparently on democratic side. got to ask, finally, scott going to the big game tonight between patriots and pittsburgh? >> i'm a season ticket holder. i gave them to my friends. i will sit home with the family and watch it but go pats. david: thank you all. appreciate it. stay tuned to fox business by the way. governor bobby jindal who took on donald trump today, he will be on with lou dobbs. that is at 7:00 p.m. tonight. you don't want to miss that. keep it hire. melissa. melissa: hedge fund guys don't get carried interest benefit. people don't understand that. anyway. scientists near johannesburg, south after -- africa, discovered mass underground cave
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with what they say is new species human family. wow. they stood like us with similar hands and feet although their brains were a third of the size of ours today. so many jokes to make at that point. i will move on. experts say this species could date back as far as 2.8 million years. new government report shows that our fight against isis might not be as strong as some people think. we're going to have more on the concerning complaint when we come back. ♪ it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping. with toothpaste or plain water.an their dentures and even though their dentures look clean, in reality they're not. if a denture were to be put under a microscope, we can see all the bacteria that still exists on the denture, and that bacteria multiplies very rapidly. that's why dentists recommend cleaning with polident everyday. polident's unique micro clean formula works in just 3 minutes,
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at ally bank no branches equalsit's a fact.. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda. melissa: concerning new reports on the fight against isis with dozens of intelligence analysts blowing the whistle claiming that their assessments were altered in order to fit the white house's public line, that the u.s. is winning the fight against the terror group. joining me is pete hegseth, concerned veterans for america ceo. we have former massachusetts senator scott brown and katie pavlich, townhall.com news editor.
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both fox news contributors. steve, let me start with you. does that sound like something that would happen to you? do you believe that story? >> under this administration it sure does. this is same administration that altered talking points on benghazi. didn't like the intelligence or evidence made before them so they made up different ones. you have 50 intelligence officers at ground level saying intel they sent up on isis in iraq and syria is different than intel presented to the president at higher levels. somewhere in between, someone said, this is really inconvenient intelligence, information, data, facts about the strength of our enemy. we're going to manipulate and change this to look like, well, things are a little better on the battlefield. that is the worst manifestation how you a, conduct a war, but give distorted information to the president and media, meaning we don't know what is happening and if true, which it looks like it is, this is really damning piece of evidence. melissa: senator, this is a new report in the "daily beast." they say reports were changed by
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centcom higher ups to adhere to the administration public line that they're winning the war. do you think that centcom higher ups would do that. >> well, certainly i hope not. if true, they should be fired or go to jail. not only illegal, it is immoral, to take information take information and alter it to suit a political purpose is completely immoral and dangerous to the american people. let's remember why we got here. president left without a transfigures, quick reactive force, and where criminal elements came in. i and others asked the president not to do it via letter and other inquiries but he chose not to do it. here we are with the jv. god forbid, they're not jv and they're a hit list and ready to take more casualties. melissa: katie, last word on topic. every time they got out there and took to the podium to say they were winning the war against isis, who believed that anyway?
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didn't most people watching that feel like that was propaganda? >> i hope so. keep in mind generals testifying on capitol hill were essentially saying the strategy we're using isn't working. you would equate isn't working was not winning that the information given out publicly is not necessarily true. i have to make this point quickly. we understand 50 intel agents that took the risk to give "daily beast" that story, given how whistle-blowers are treated in this administration. will not be the guys altering talking pints and were not being in danger. the people told the truth will be hunted down and lives destroyed. they will be turned upside down and face retaliation against this administration. count on it. melissa: good point. before we end, pete, i want your opinion on this one. i don't think it's a coincidence that the terror groups publishing the online magazine, inspire, put a list of people on their hit list right before 9/11. these are al qaeda targets.
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they're businessmen. if you look at david koch, larry ellison, bill gates, warren buffett? what do you make of this? >> yeah, michael bloomberg. hey, at least, charles and david koch, michael bloomberg they have private security with weapons armed to defend themselves. the soft targets that individuals that want to take the secondment right away from are most vulnerable to terrorist attack this adied magazine listing businessmen. they have done it before. they're trying to sow fear. this is terrorism -- melissa: do you think it is real? >> hey, i don't like to call them loan involves but inspired jihadist in america to take this action would be certainly high-profile attack with al qaeda which is seen itself supplanted by isis and islamic state. al qaeda wants to show it is relevant and saying connect the dots in "inspire" magazine with tsarnaev you make a bomb in the kitchen with your mom they love that talking point and reality.
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melissa: frightening stuff. thank you. >> thank you. david: throwing footballs and catching cash, how the nfl keeps on minting money. that is coming up. plus tom brady take the field for the first time since "deflategate" began. super agent lee stipe berg with a -- leigh steinberg with a preview. that is coming next. ♪ have you ever thought, "i could never do that"? have you ever thought... you just didn't have anything left in the tank? well - you do. because the courage is already inside.
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wrangling, they are earning more money than every. we have a reporter that had great piece in the "wall street journal" with all this, and leigh steinberg, author of the agent, the my 40-year career and rules changing the game. matt, great piece in the "wall street journal." why haven't all these could not verys affected nfl ability to earn money? >> this is the last mass programing out there. if you want to reach the biggest chunk of america that you can reach you have to be with the nfl. you take a company like hyundai, which is struggling to really make an impact with the american market. what is the way to do it? take over the nfl's official automobile sponsorship that gm left. david: nobody has the reach of nfl. leigh, tom brady, i am kind of surprised his image didn't suffer. if your image suffers in nfl you get fewer endorsements and a lot
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less money. his image seems fine. am i wrong? >> i think there has been a tarnishing of his image but let me say this. last year at the worst point i ever seen which was antipathy towards the leagues over ray rice, how did fans get rid of total anger to the nfl? they went to nfl games and they watched them on television. this is a dominant sport in terms of culture and entertainment. 45 million people a week play fantasy football. when i started each team realized two million dollars as their share of the national tv contract. that was back in the mid '70s. they just cash ad check for $226 million. david: wow. >> per team, per season. this is a bonanza that shows no signs of abating. david: unbelievable. dan, could it be that at the end, of this "deflategate" thing both tom brady and roger goodell are winners because the nfl is
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making a lot of money through roger goodell's work and tom brady is playing, making a lot of money as well, right? they're both winners, right? >> you could look at it both ways. roger goodell is pinata for the owners. when they attack roger goodell they are not attacking owners. that is critical distinction. during the lockout, roger goodell was the pinata. during the player misbehavior scandals, roger good dell is the pinata. once again roger goodell is the pinata. all the calls to step down. not going to happen. he serves a useful purpose. david: leigh, i want to come back to you, a little bit on you yourself. you don't like to be the story but you are the story. you come out with a book. america loves a great comeback. you lost everything as a result of kind after spiral down in alcoholism but you made a tremendous comeback. how has the nfl, how has the whole sports world been in your comeback. you made successful, past five years you've been doing pretty well? >> it has been terrific.
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we're out recruiting a new crop of players for the 2016 draft. i've been doing a radio show and crisscrossing country giving speeches. the values of our practice, which are the athlete as role model, retracing his roots to the high school, collegiate and professional community make a positive impact don't really fade. it is relevant today that athletes have extraordinary power to trigger imitate tiff behavior and make a positive difference. david: we're glad you made your comeback. it was a great struggle. i know it was very difficult but you came out of the on the right side. leigh steinberg, thank you very much, my friend. >> thank you. david: matt and dan. great to see you as well. guys, appreciate it. melissa? melissa: hillary has new moves she is breaking out for the campaign. she might need to issue an apology for this one. eww. oh, boy. ♪ i search. i research. i dig. and dig some more.
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david: look at that. this happening near pompano beach. happened near the fishing pier. unbelievable in the emergency lanning there were no reports of injuries, melissa. looks like it was very successful landing on the beach. >> speaking of pictures. watch your neyney. hillary clinton's planned spontaneity tour marchs on. ♪ hmmm. david: i don't know about this. >> oh, that hurts. presidential candidate learning new moves on the ellen degeneres show. or not. david: i'm sure ellen was trying to do her a favor having her on, more humanized hillary clinton. but i'm not sure, that these moves prove that point.
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♪ i don't know. >> you know the video really speaks for itself. david: kind of hard to go beyond that. >> you know. david: folks, we leave you with a neyney. that does it for "risk & reward" starting right now. >> he informed his team he would like them to accept at least, make preparations to accept at least 10,000 syrian refugees in the next fiscal year. so. now we know the scale of this problem. it is significant. there are millions of people driven from their homes because of this vie lendings. deirdre: more than four million refugees have fled violence and war in syria. in a surprise announcement, president obama says the u.s. should accept at least 10,000 in 2016. so far, the u.s. has been the single largest donor, if you're counting dollars, to the
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