tv Varney Company FOX Business September 21, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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>> dagen mcdowell, thank you for joining us. dagen: you missed by hillary clinton impression, you've got to tomorrow back. sandra: and we'll be talking with ghosn and can't miss television, and more can't miss television, stuart. stuart: you're dead right. the post debates are in and the winners are-- good morning, everyone. carly fiorina and marco rubio, very, they broke through in the debate last week and you can see it in the polls today. fiorina in second place behind trump whose support level may have stalled. rubio now scores double digit support. ben carson, oh, he's all over the news and told an interviewer a muslim should not be president. that's about as politically incorrect as it can get and there's the predictable
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firestorm. and the unhackable apple hacked, days before china's leader arrives here. on the program today, wait for it. two legendary quarterbacks, what will they say about this? >> this is-- you don't know what i'm talking about here, but it's one of the greatest sports unsets of all time, japan, those guys beat south africa at rugby. ashley: it's like the u.s. beating the russian hockey team. stuart: it's better than that. ashley: for the american reference point. stuart: let me finish the script, always new, "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ >> all right. monday morning, look at this, please. down 300 for the dow on friday, we're going to open up 90, maybe 100 points this monday
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morning, i call that a fairly start to the week. wait though, 28 minutes from now, we'll see exactly what happens. how about the price of oil this morning? we closed out last week in the mid $40 range. and now 45 bucks now. and opec says we will not see oil at $80 a barrel until 2020. how about that. and gas, down another penny, 2.28, that means that gas dropped for 38 straight days. ashley: keep smiling. stuart: and the pope was in cuba before coming to the united states. he met with fidel castro after he had the biggest mass ever, 220,000 in the square. cuban dissidents say they've
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been kept from greeting pope francis by the security agents. this one, dr. ben carson treading on the third rail of political correctness. roll tape. >> do you believe that islam is consistent with the constitution? >> no, i don't. i do not. i would not advocate that we put a muslim in charge of this nation. i absolutely would not agree with that. stuart: as we said earlier, that's about as politically incorrect as you can get. so let's bring in ohio republican congressman bill johnson. congressman welcome to the program. good to have you here. >> good to be with you here. stuart: what ben carson said was clearly politically incorrect and there's a firestorm this morning. how do you see this statement. >> the american people are very tired of political correctness and that's very true what ben carson said is testimony to that fact, but, stuart, you know, we are a nation governed by the rule of law a representative republic.
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that takes us back to the constitution and in our constitution, article 6 says a religious test cannot be used to determine qualification for any elected office holder. i don't think it's a question about religion, it shouldn't matter what religion a person is that runs for the highest office in our land. stuart: i think that ben carson was going to sharreya law incompatible with the law. >> absolutely, and this administration refuses to call radical islamic fundamentalism exactly what it is. stuart: which side of the fence are you on? are you saying he shouldn't have said it or right to say it? >> no, i think that ben carson should say what's on his mind. the question is, what do the american people think about it. the good thing in it, the american people are electing our president and not--
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>> there seems to be a trend hereof political correct correctness being cracked, being cracked open as if the people, the voters, have had enough of it. because there are so many issues you can't really discuss with vigor and passion because you might be insensitive to somebody. i'm personally glad to see that swept aside. i agree with that. the american people want a conference about the substantive issues. they don't want to talk about what's going on inside the washington beltway, that's covered with all the glassy, fancy political rhetoric. that's not what they're looking for. they're looking for genuineness and transparency. stuart: i want to see a candidate to say that the president's policies have failed, it would be politically incorrect to say it, but-- >> i agree with you. stuart: it's been a pressure. thank you very much, sir. >> thank you. stuart: the latest national cnn
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poll, here it is, carly fiorina is second place just behind trump. here is what trump had to say about it this morning. roll tape. >> i think that she's got a good line of pitter-patter when you listen more than five minutes, you develop a tremendous headache. she drove a big company, hewlett-packard, made a horrible transition. she made a horrible purchase with compaq computer and forced to cut tens of thousands of jobs. in fact, they're still recovering from her disastrous tenure cut jobs last week. i don't see it as something that would last because her performance was terrible. bush came in with 9%, but scott walker not in this picture came in with less than 1% perform. i'll bring in former actress
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and conservative radio host janine turner. welcome to the program. you support carly and now she's number two. i think, as you heard from trump there, they're going to attack her because of her tenure at hewlett-packard. the layoffs, stock cut in half. $40 million golden parachute. the left is going to eat that up. how should she respond? >> she's going to respond by being a principled problem solver that she is. the thing about carly she started out with a secretary and worked her way up to the first female ceo of a fortune 50 business. you don't do that without being a principle problem solver as well as understanding the art of strength, the art of teamwork and assessing the situation and the art of negotiation. so, look, those people that voted to oust carly were later part of an embarrassing investigating by congress. and one of the ones who actually voted against her has now taken out an ad in the new york times. stuart: saw that. >> saying he was wrong.
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the company was much better with carly's leadership and trump is going to attack her because she's now-- she's his big threat, you watch. carly is going to be one very soon. stuart: do you support carly fiorina primarily because she's a woman? >> no, i do not. i saw her first give an interview with brett baier back in february and wanted to meet her then. wait a minute, i've got to support her. i don't support her because she's a woman i support her because she's strong, fearless and not afraid. and she is immensely qualified. you not it's not about gender. stuart: she revealed in the debate that she lost a child to addiction and i believe she's also a cancer survivor and she's the kind of woman who has seen a lot of life's challenges and come through on the other side. i think it's a qualification, in my opinion. >> well, i agree. and she's spoke been this and the fact when you go through
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something that's that tragic, you're not afraid anymore, and carly is not avoid. and that's why we saw her in the debate to flatten everybody else. it's a dirty business and-- >> i described you as a former actress, but you're still in the business? >> sure, i am. i'm developing a screen play, but this is my passion. stuart: i can tell. i'm glad we got it right in the end. you're still an actress and this is still your fashion, we got it. janine turner, everyone, thank you for being a part of the program come back soon, okay? >> thank you. stuart: thank you. let's get to your money, shall we? look at dow futures, we're up 70, 80 points in 20 minutes' time. keith fitz-gerald is with us from seattle. i keep going about stability every time we don't open points, and i think though, that you believe we're in for a big drop fairly soon.
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is that correct? >> well, i certainly don't know about big and soon is a tough word. the market is shaky here, stuart, for the first time in a long time. >> keith, are you hemming? >> i'm a trader, stuart. i'm a strayed -- trader, if you've got a market, that is doing what it's supposed to be doing you wouldn't have the rabble rousers looking at every skwig squibble. now you've got companies unfortunately recognizing that this is the ka is -- case, traders for the first time recognize the fed is no longer in control and i think that creates a wall of worry. so, yes, i think the market is going down this week.
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stuart: stay there, keith. we'll bring you on as the market opens in 20 minutes's ti netflix and h.b.o. won huge, people watch it via streaming. lauren simonetti? >> i've got the roundup from the 67th emmy awards. amazon nominated, but jeffrey t tambor took home an award. and the actress won for crazy eyes in orange is the new black. game of thrones a record for most wins in a single year, it won 12 awards nominated for so many more than that, one was
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outstanding drama series and stuart, it wouldn't be a hollywood awards show without a target. this year the target, conundrum. >> donald trump. donald trump is running for president to the delight everywhere. sure, donald trump seems racist, what else? [laughter] >> what a great honor it must be for you to honor me tonight. no, no, i'm so sorry. donald trump said that, i'm sorry. >> there is one category of television that allows us as a society to sit back and enjoy the speck suspectcle of reality where millionaires battle like sharks to be chosen by americans, enough about the republican debates. let's get to the award.
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>> it keeps donald trump in the spotlight. stuart: always there. thank you, lauren. >> thank you. stuart: don't forget, tune in mornings, 5 eastern. and nicole, your first look at the day in business, big deal. up next, a shocking new study about the nfl and concussions, raises some questions for parents who are thinking about letting their children play. hall of fame quarterback fran tarkenton is here and he's here later-- in fact, here he is. ♪
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this is a big deal. a big sunday night game as the packers beat the seahawks, a rematch of the nfc championship game. it's the first time the seahawks started 0-2 since-- >> and think to win the super bowl, kiss the death. stuart: a new study on the dangers of playing pro football. a staggering 96% of former nfl players who donated their brains to science after death tested positive for a brain disease called cte, believed to be linked to repeated head drama and concussion. joining us now is fran tarkenton, a hall of fame and the author of "the power of failure" book. >> good to be with you. stuart: i want to make three statements. that study, i think, will result in three things, changes to the rules, changes to equipment and changes to parents who may not any longer
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to see the children play football. >> the last one started. parents are saying no to children playing football and they should. you can never make football completely safe. stuart: wait a minute, you're fran tarkenton. you're great and i know this. >> yeah. stuart: and this has started already. >> yes. stuart: that children should take their children out of football. >> my son just took his son out of football. i would take my son out of football, it's too dangerous and it's getting worse. we were in denial for years and saying that the head contact concussions didn't cause cte. we know in the last study 96%, it's epidemic. i suggest, we're doing things safer. let's go to leather helmets. >> these helmets are missiles today. and drug enhanced, in football,
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your a bigger, faster tronninger, you win. stuart: did you do testing? >> when i get to talk to the federal testing agency when give nfl and edgecle football an f. as part of the association and national football league, we need to test vigorously for ped's because these guys are blown up artificially-- >> that's what makes it popular. >> partly why we did that, they like the old time players and the game was as good as it is today. today it's more dangerous, because they're bigger, faster, and the helmets are missiles. stuart: what about rugby-- >> what you're learning from rugby. stuart: it sound like you're talking profound change, but
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probably won't because it's-- >> i think our commissioner has got his heart in the right place. he's trying hard and i think they're not there yet. the player's association needs to come along with them and we're asking players require in 24, 25 years old and saying, i don't want to do the things i've got to do to play. they say i don't want to juice myself up and get artificially built up and get more vulnerable to do that. will that make it completely safe? it will never make it completely safe. and also pain pills. they give high powered pain pills on the day of the game and after the game. that's not being investigated, a lot of things we need to do to clean it up. we all love it about you we
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want our teams to win, win, win. the fant -- fans really-- >> i've got to go. >> read "the power of failure". stuart: it's a good book and fran tarkenton wrote it. secretary of state john kerry says the u.s. will take in migrants by 2017. what are they fleeing? are they fleeing war or economic migrants? there's a difference and it's important.
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>> lots of pressure to assist europe's growing migrants crisis. john kerry looking to increase the refugees that we would take her, 185,000 around the world for the next years. >> the blame has to lie at the seat in the white house, this is a direct response from president obama and the middle east. it's coming from syria. stuart: so we have a responsibility? >> we absolutely have a responsibility, but we're going to have to vet these people
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carefully. stuart: how do you do that? >> should we take economic migrants? these aren't economic migrants, they're fleeing war and assad-- >> refugees. >> these are refugees. and we've done this before. well, i want immigration reform, too, another topic. stay right there. we'll keep you here fwor for the opening of the market. we want your expertise. and you never know what you can expect at the opening bell, especially on a monday morning. expect this, a gain of 70 points minutes away. it's more than a network and the cloud. it's reliable uptime. and multi-layered security. it's how you stay connected to each other and to your customers. with centurylink you get advanced technology solutions,
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>> all right. monday morning, we're off and we are running. the dow jones industrial average is open for business. we're expecting a 70-point gain roughly speaking and at the moment we're up 34 and rising. joining us to discover all of the above, ashley webster, mary kissel and keith fitz-gerald and scott shellady in chicago. i say the economy is in trouble and the markets know it. how would you respond to my statement there? >> absolutely agree with zero reservation, how about that? >> i'll take it. we're not saying that this morning we're at 16-4, still a lofty level. scott, what do you say to my
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suggestion that the economy is in trouble and the markets know it. >> i hate to agree with you all the time. i agree with you this time. markets are taking a breather, we heard about the bank of japan with stimulus. we haven't had the banks around the world that involved with our market ever before so how can we normallize rate in a nonnormal environment. that's why the fed didn't do anything and why they still won't do anything. >> what did you say? the bank of japan, the japanese are printing more money, more stimulus. >> they're mulling the opportunity to bring more money, they're thinking about it. look, with us not raising rates and put the pressure on everybody else because they've been trying to devalue the currency. when we didn't raise rates, the current is is stronger, this thing is a house of cards going around the globe. stuart: i can see that, i agree with you. mary kissel.
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how do you respond to that statement, the economy is in trouble and the markets know it. >> absolutely, yes. i disagree with scott here, i think that the fed should have started to normallize rates last week, talking 25 basis points. we have a 2% economy, it's not a strong economy, but the idea that we're what, six, seven years into this expansion and the fed is keeping this near zero. stuart: you're exactly right. ashley: how can the markets interpret it any other way if the fed says the economy can't handle a quarter of a% rate hike. >> i think it would be a boost to the economy at 25 basis points. stuart: the futures are right, looking for 70, 80 point gain and up 73 points, 16,459. got it. look at the price of oil, because opec's coming out, has made the statement, you won't see $80 a barrel oil again
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until the year 2020. so they're looking five years down the road before you get to $80 a barrel again. scott, come in again, you trade oil, i think. what do you think of that statement from opec? >> well, let's rewind the clock a little bit, stuart. the great prognosticators are out with the next prediction, they're going to stay lower longer and now opec the next five years, might see oil at $80 again. i think it's got a lot to do with supply and demand and how well the world economy is doing. if you think what i think about the world economy, it's hard for oil to have to stage a strong rally anytime soon. after two or three years out. it's anybody's call and we could see some slippage. at the end of the day, the economy needs to fire on all cylinders. >> it's interesting to see oil go up a dollar a barrel and that's what it's doing and the dow jones industrial average going up 100 points. oil is up, stock is up. oil down, stocks down. that seems to be happening at
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the moment. time to move onto individual stocks. let's start with apple, supposedly unhackable. it's been hacked in china. ash, is everybody at risk. ashley: the chinese consumers, they're stuck behind the firewall, they can't access western websites, the chinese government prevents it. download speeds are poor. there's a malicious program with apps, they go into the apple store in china and download the malicious software. that's what's happening. stuart: so it's only chinese consumers who are-- >> the concern is there could be copycats that will try the same thing outside of china. stuart: that's interesting. come in, keith fitz. you said you'll see apple two a year.
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>> anybody who has a technology related product is vulnerable to it. what makes apple different is the eco sphere. if they've been hacked, they'll fix it and they're still more robust. it's a learning experience albeit a bad one. stuart: and you've been forecasting $200 for apple, did you put your money where your mouth is. >> and that's my family and-- >> and we have the disclosure rules. remember, please, this stock has lost about a third of its value since the ipo. insiders now can sell freely, it's called a lockout period and it's over. how many shares could be on the market. ashley: 1.6 billion shares, stuart. the biggest stake holder that has not said what they're going to do is it yahoo!. as we know, they thought they were going to take that stake
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and spin it into a separate company. lo and behold we might not get the tax advantage that we thought we'd get. if you max selling, they're pushing the prices down. >> let's make that big screen for the dow jones industrial average, not just hide it on the ticker cape. monday morning, up 122 points, 16-5 is where we are. by the way, i'm told 28 of the 30 dow stocks are in the green. there you go. and two of them are on the down side and they're merck and cisco systems. the rest are green and that's a totally different picture. merck just went green. >> it's totally a sea of red and a sea of green. i prefer the green. my kind of column. and gopro, baron says it could go down another 25.
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keith, are you buying gopro at 33? >> no, baron is the stating of the obvious, i don't think that gopro is a great investment at all. stuart: was it around 50, 60, $80 a share not long ago as i recall. now it's 33 and barron's which has -- gopro's all-time high was 98.47. it's languishing at 33. ashley: lack of new products, especially coming up on the holidays. what did you say, keith? >> probably worth 15 at best and there's an acquisition in there for somebody to buy the application. stuart: i'm shocked because we have given gopro so much free publicity with the videos. >> another 15%. stuart: lennar, okay, they've sold more homes at higher prices. therefore, nicole, the stock is
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a winner? >> those have gained 10% in the particular time period so the current quarter and the outlook, wowing wall street revenue and future orders. it pushes the stock up 2%. that's named in the area and on-line, pulte homes, hovnanian and kb homes. stuart: i think it's 10:00 eastern. >> 10 a.m. stuart: we get existing home sales part of the key number in real estate. all right, nicole, tune in for every morning, 5 a.m., lauren and nicole will greet you for the first show on business, fox business network a.m. look at volkswagen, reports of cheating on emissions and now the company is halting u.s. sales of some diesel models and apologizing to its customers.
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did i see that right. ashley: absolutely. stuart: 8%. that's a black eye, mary. >> there's a lot of risk in america, volkswagen. stuart: 18%, what a drop! they're going to get a fine. ashley: up to $18 billion fine. they knew software when tested for emissions would alter the information. once that was over, it would revert, the car ran fine. stuart: what did you say about the fine. ashley: $18 million. stuart: did i hear a mass sucking in of breath from keith fitz-gerald, 18 billion? >> 18 billion is a huge amount of money. i don't know if they've got the reserves for that. ashley: i don't either. stuart: i can't believe 18 billion. >> they took 25 billion out of the bank.
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stuart: more than that, actually. >> took that right out. stuart: i want to playoff onto the european migrant crisis. secretary of state john kerry has agreed to take in 185,000 refugees from around the world in the next two years. mary, i believe that they're drawing a distinction between people who may be economic migrants fleeing a lousy economy to those people who are fleeing real terror. >> these people are fleeing real terror and these are obama's referees, from leading from behind in the middle east. effectively what we're learning is the cost of disengagement. we talked about the cost of u.s. engagement under bush and this is the other side of it when you're not there and you have the global disorder, america has to deal with it. stuart: so you think we've got a responsibility? >> we absolutely have responsibility to help these people and we've done it before. remember the vietnam war after the fall of saigon how many people the united states settled not only here,
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australia, and elsewhere. stuart: what if you say it's far more than that. 185,000. when you open the doors-- >> it's time to talk about the real cause of the crisis. if you don't want that situation, then we need to think about what we're doing in syria. look at what the president has gone over the last couple of days, stuart. he's talking to putin as if that's going to change anything. stuart: i see your point. >> it doesn't beg the question, that's the question. that's the problem here. the reason we have the refugees is because of syria. syria is a small company. ashley: it's backward looking. i think forward looking, my biggest question, how do you background check a 100,000 and end up letting more come in, it's an issue. >> it's an issue and our responsibility to deal with it. and it's this president who caused the problem and the next president did. >> i've got 30 seconds left and got to throw this to scott and keith.
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scott, you first-- scott is gone. keith, do we have a responsibility to take in 185,000 people. >> yes, we do. we have economical and-- . what happens if it's 2 million people? >> we've got a serious problem. stuart: that's for sure. stuart: thanks, everybody, thanks for playing on a difficult subject. to the big board. a gain of 103, 105 out of the box. 16, 490. this monday morning, a big difference than last friday. ben carson says he doesn't think a muslim should be president. one reason why, because of our constitution. and judge napitano -- you say the word constitution and the judge is here.
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awe believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform. because active investment management isn't reactive. it's active. that's the power of active management. >> nice gain for a monday morning after a 300 point loss
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on friday. we're up 136 at 16-5. don't forget about gold, please. we tend to put it on the back burner because it's been around for a long time. down 5 bucks, 11.32. dr. ben carson treading right on the third rail of political correctness. roll tape. >> do you believe that islam is consistent with the constitution? >> no, i don't. i do not. i would not advocate that we put a muslim in charge of this nation. i absolutely would not agree with that. stuart: did i hear the word constitution? in which case, judge andrew napitano is here to pass judgment. now, the statement was, islam is not compatible with the constitution, what do you make of that? >> i think it's a statement born of ignorance and i'm sorry to say that because i'm a fan of dr. carson. i've spent time with him and--
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>> i'm jumping in there. since when has sharreya law become consistent with the constitution? >> since when does someone in islam have to follow sharreya law. stuart: under slam church and state are one. there is no separation. >> i don't know how ben carson could get into somebody's heart, and saying that. stuart: he's go eth into religion. he knows that church and state, or mosque and state, he's bound to make that statement. >> he's going to say that catholics can't be president. stuart: no, he's not. >> because they believe that, you're going to hear this thursday when the pope speaks, that church and state should be united just as europe was and christianity was enforced for 500 years and queens and kings and monarchs. stuart: it's not now, is it?
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>> i think that catholocism is the state relation in italy. i think it's the last one, and you go in italy and there's a cross on the wall, and they gain with hail mary presumably in italian. the constitution expressly says there will-- there shall be no religious test for the presidency. the president can be an atheist and claim to be a catholic, the president can be a muslim and admit to be-- >> he did say i would not an advocate for a muslim to be-- >> if he's takie talking about his own opinion, and say i ben
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carson would not vote-- but if he's suggesting that the government ought to impose a religious test because some religions are incompatible with the constitution. that argument is incompatible. stuart: today there are strong calls for him to apologize. >> that's a political judgment. sometimes they they apologize they look weak and. stuart: freedom of speech. stuart: thank you. >> he has the freedom of speech, the right to be prejudice, has a right to vote for someone or against them or advocate-- >> he has the right to be prejudice. are you suggesting for a moment a man who questions whether a man should sit in the oval office is prejudice? >> yes, prejudice-- all right, say biased. he's making a judgment on the basis of a person's religious commitment.
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a hypothetical nonexistent person. stuart: he's making a judgment on the religion itself. if they combine mosque and state and you have sharreya law then he questioned the religion not the person. >> you have a regular guest on this show who is a regular contributor on fox, dr. jasser who is a muslim, like mind of what many people in the conservative wing of the republican party, who is as american as apple pie, who condemns what ben carson said because of this one size fits all. you see, when you say everybody in this category is qualified or everybody in that category is unqualified you're not looking at the individual and that's what i think you should do. stuart: here is where we agree. political correctness is a straight jacket on free speech. gets in the way of policies and solutions.
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and the people, the voters in this country are sick and tired of it. >> maybe what he says will help him politically. if he believes that, he will not apologize for it and this is an era of not apologizing we know from a person whose office is not far from here. stuart: mention that and-- it could make you episcopalian. >> my stomach is churning all week what they're going to say. . stuart: i've got a pastor to introduce you to. apple's china apps are hacked. and a question for kirk the cyber guy, is every chinese apple app therefore vulnerable? welcome, he's next. well, he's next.
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a chinese-based app and that's affecting potentially tens of millions of people. stuart: just china folks, that's it. >> yes, however, this-- the part two of this, the headline, this is the first time apple's eco system of ios apps has ever seen this level of breach and it's remarkable. it's remarkable. stuart: does that mean that potentially, perhaps, the chinese government can now spy on everything that's going on within iphone apps from apple in china? >> what do you think, they couldn't do that before? [laughter] >> the fact is, there is no data yet that would provide any factual basis for that. if you don't think the u.s. government, if you don't that the chinese government has access to every aspect of our personal communications, you've
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got another think. it's not in terms of big brother watching, we don't want people raiding our accounts or charging on our phones 0 or download spending more money and that's what it adds up to. stuart: this is a downplaying for this and apple's reputation has taken a hit. >> everything that has passed through apple is very, very clean until now, and this is the first breach, apple would tighten it up quickly. thank you, sir. the latest reading on existing home sales, there's an important statistic in the housing market. a lot of up certainty there. some are saying that owning property is a better investment than stock. that's a reversareversal. and ben carson started a firestorm, he says that a muslim should not be a commander-in-chief. colonel ralph peters on that. second hour of varney two minutes away.
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if. stuart: here are the big stories at this hour. carly fiorina closing in on donald trump. the latest poll puts her in second place since the second gop debate. marco rubio coming on very strong. and vladimir putin, many countries nervous about what he's up to. and china's big state visit coming soon. over shadowed by cyber crime. the unhackable apple hacked by chinese hackers. second hour of "varney & company" starts now. ♪ . stuart: here it is. existing home sales numbers. an annual basis, existing homes are being sold at the rate of 5.31 million. that's per year sales -- >> that's not a great number.
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down nearly 5%. stuart: that's month over month. >> yes. >> so that's what you want to watch, the important number two-thirds of all home sales, really great in july but they seem to be slowing down and home prices also seem to be coming back down too. stuart: okay. 5.3million. >> that's it. stuart: that's the number to look at. i've always looked at the naturalized sailing rate because if you're a realtor, you you're going to want to know how many of these things i'm going to sell. >> that's right. stuart: and the numbers coming down a little. got it. let's see. we've got jason on this housing numbers in just a moment. and check the big board, on a monday morning, 31 minutes into the session and up 106 points. remember we were down 300 friday. 29 of the 30 dow stocks in the green. merck in the red.
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and barons says the stock could plunge another 28% a gopro is now down 5.7%. how about the price of oil? still around 44, $45 a bear barrel. and opec, they say we're not going to see $80 a barrel until 2020. how about that? >> that's a long time. holly cow. stuart: that's opec. >> they're keeping the tabs open; right? stuart: yeah, and american frackers are still pumping. and they got an upgrade from morgan stanley. that's the yoga pans people; right? >> right. stuart: i don't mean to dismiss them. >> fashionable hot. stuart: they got over that problem. >> they did. stuart: 2.28. you're looking at it. that's your national average for regular gasoline down again overnight.
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on a streak, a 35-day streak of falling grass gaas prices, and i love it. a paid 1.82 in new jersey on sunday morning. >> you've been doing that for two weeks now. stuart: i have. >> yeah. stuart: i love it. stuart: driving deliberately because i can afford it. isn't that crazy? listen to this. a new cnn poll of republican voters following last week's debate. donald trump leads 24%. but that's down from 32% earlier this month. carly fiorina, soaring into second place 15% up from 3% in the last poll, and marco rubio in the number four spot, 11%. and governor jeb bush, still in it, 9% right there. carly fiorina says now that she's the front runner, she is ready for attacks on her record. show me that tape. >> the job as a chief executive is to build
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sustainable value over time. that is what we did. the hardest thing for a chief executive to do is tell someone that they don't have a on job anymore and that's why we preside the richest packages in the industry, provided employees with counseling so that they could go on and find another job. but when you have a big, bloated, bureaucracy that costs too much and, by the way, that's what we have in washington d.c. stuart: we hear you. at the top of the hour joining us on the trump slump. and i'm not sure i can call it the slump. >> no. stuart: can i call it the stole? >> yes. stuart: is he over exposed? but we're going to ask brit. they knows tough. 11:00 this morning he's on the show. later kiersten powers on the surge and how elected media will attack her. >> pretty quickly. she is so well trained in defending her record at hp,
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she went through a bruising campaign in california where she lost to barbara boxer and they dubbed her carly failure and that was the line of attack and it stuck. >> by the way, after carly stepped down, hp was so dysfunctional, it went through six of the ten ceos it went through after a decade, six of them only lasted a year. stuart: and one of the foals on the board of directors went with a full page ad saying carly was all right. she was good. >> yeah. stuart: a full page ad in the times. we're going to stay on politics and dean with ben carson who is taking a great deal of heat saying the muslim shouldn't be the president. >> do you believe that islam is consistent with the constitution? >> no. i don't. i do not. i would not advocate that we put a muslim in charge of this nation. i absolutely would not agree with that.
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. stuart: okay. pretty clean cut. joining us now fox news strategic analyst, ralph peters. you heard it there, ralph. what do you say? >> well, first of all, dr. carson got sucked into a hypothetical. but second, you know, there's not going to be a muslim candidate for a long time to come. so that is a red herring issue. but, stuart, i would ask even your most conservative viewer who they would rather have as president. wouldn't you rather have an iranian american patriot who loves this country because what the opportunities it gave his family or would you rather have hillary clinton who's loyalty is only to her toxic vanity? . stuart: dr. carson was talking about someone being the
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commander-in-chief un arms forces. and she's he's a saying that it's not capability with the constitution. >> of course it's not. the old test meant and new testament aren't either. we have a separation of church and state. we're americans. we judge on individuals. as you know very well, i want every slams terrorist dead. no prison, dead. but when it comes no matter their race, no matter their religion, the american thing to do is judge them individually to the extent we should judge them at all, and i am not going to blame and condemn every muslim american. i'm not going to do it because when i was in the army, i was so i think dr. carson was foolish.
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but, again, i go back to my state. i would rather have a patriot -- a patriotic iranian american president than hillary clinton any day. stuart: now, you've been sharply critical. donald trump on this program. you've done it. now, i just want you to listen to donald trump who this morning on fox news seemed to back up ben carson. just listen to this. >> i've really gotten to like him. during that database did it, we were high-fiving each other. we were having a good time. but he still keeps speaking his opinion and we're supposed to keep freedom of speech and he feels strongly about it. and i saw some of his representatives, he feels very strongly about it. stuart: i've got to say, ralph, the freedom of speech to be politically incorrect. trump's everything. i'm a big free speech guy. >> of course i am and i say what i believe to be true and
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i'm willing to take the consequences. and, by the way, you know this whole thing of trigger warning on camps. well, we've got to stop calling them because when you say the word trigger, it might trigger someone's negative response. of course we're for free speech. but donald trump, he's making a mockery of our political system, and i'd rather talk about serious issues, stuart, i know you would too. stuart: vladimir putin sending military support to back up syria's president. the russians are now flying unmanned drones over syria. what is putin up to? give me 30 seconds on that. >> putin got a strategic vision, we don't. putin went russia in the middle east. it would not surprise me if putin used his air defense missiles and air-to-air fighters that he sent in.
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islamic state doesn't have an air force. he sent them in to opus, and i would not be surprised if there was an action where one of his planes or missiles so the schott it down a u.s. aircraft to just rub it in obama's face and say, oh, of course it was aban accident and obama was handcuff and puff and accept putin's explanation. stuart: it looks like a putin's triumph right there. >> it is. stuart: ralph peters, you covered a lot of ground today. come back and do it again soon okay? >> okay. stuart: thank you very much, sir, and now this. the view. you know the show. losing even more sponsors because of its sarcasm about nurses. in case you missed it with the story. >> i've got it. the view has lost three more advertisers followed by the hosts about nurses, party, city, struggle, and the latest to cut ties with the show because of what they said with
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nurses. well, volkswagen under fire in and did you say europe for selling cars that might have violated federal omission standards. to stop selling about half a million diesel vehicles as a result. the german parking lot also investigating the company, and the stock dropping significantly, almost 20% in europe at one point. pope france wrapping up his visit to cuba before making his first trip to the states, new york city and philadelphia later this week, are you ready? that's bad news, though, for folks who preordered the iphone 6s or 6s plus, increased security potentially affecting deliveries, patience is a virtue. got works in mysterious ways. it might be harder to get booked on a another flight because delta has ended their agreement to transfer passengers and you were just
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looking at the phone. >> oh, great. stuart: patience is not a virtue in all circumstances. >> no. stuart: get on with it. >> yes. >> get a move on. stuart: i just we're all in agreement. >> yes. stuart: 5:00 in the morning, fox business lauren's there, nicole's there, good stuff. coming up the terrifying moment tony romo broke his left col armenian bone. and bringing in 100 refugees around the world. more on that in a moment. >> you see many people want to go and get jobs and of course you see in the background an organized network of militants. so you have three layers moving into europe
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stuart: holding onto a triple digit gain this monday morning, up 111 just shy of 16.5. look at the dow 30, please. very different from friday. all of them except merck are in the green. that means they're up. a british chip maker. i've never heard of them, called dialogue semi. well, they're buying a u.s. chip maker, going to pay $4.5 billion. no wonder it's up 15%. and i don't get this. sootch volatility? where does that come from? i've got a whole pound of experts and they're all stumped by this one. >> yes. all just sharing blankly. >> when does that happen? . stuart: i hold it into the upside too. when does that happen? >> we'll get on it. stuart: and existing home sales. 5.3million being sold on a annual basis but that number is down 4.8% from a month ago.
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jasonmeister is here, he's from the real estate people. jason, forget that number for a second. i get the general impression that some people are turning around and saying, well, you know, maybe a home makes a good invest mean now. not so much the stock market, we're going to go back to the home. you've got that look on your face that says i'm wrong. >> i'm very careful about saying it's a great investment. i think -- we were still talking about housing recovery, stuart, it's been eight years and the fed's been at zero, you were talking about earlier in the program. stuart: yeah. >> and i think asset introduction begun to be creative because money's been free. . stuart: so you think there is a bursting of some bubble coming and real estate takes a hit because of bursting of bubble in other areas. >> ingrain, new york city, miami, i think you've seen developers jumping in on this swing, i think in the next two and a half years you're going
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to see a lot of inventory hitting the market. the free market has not been at work. i think commercial real estate is a better investment if you look at commercial real estat. stuart: wait. that's your area, isn't it? >> i'm in both. stuart: oh, you are? >> i'm a developer and also in commercial real estate. stuart: it's very unusual for me to hear a guy in the real estate basis say watch out prices are going to come down. meats most unusual. >> well, i'm an unusual guy. i'm trying to give your viewers the right advice. stuart: well, we like that. that's very good. but, again, you think there's a lot of inventory, a lot more homes are going to come onto the market, flooding the market so to speak and that brings prices down. >> also we have a lot of overseas buyers that are coming in. i think the market is not fundamentally working properly. and that's because the free market is not working because government has been intervening since '08. i've had the modification program, harp, way too many government programs. commercial real estate did not have the intervention.
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it recovered in 2010. stuart: you're killing me, jason, you realize that? i'm thinking of buying a piece of real estate, a house. >> even if interest goes up just a little bit, i think prices will come down and people still get those opportunities. but i'm not as bullish as a lot of people. stuart: so i should wait on this house purchase. >> yes. stuart: you take a lot of responsibility. >> i would wait. stuart: i'm not saying i'm buying it in new jersey -- well, that was interesting. better be wrong. >> hopefully i am. stuart: you're on the show no matter what. thanks very much. check like that big board, holding ona nice gain, triple digits, we were down 290 on friday. and a man who is very well known in his industry, he's a chief economist at moodies and his name is john, and he occasionally appears on this program.
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>> thank you. stuart: the economy's in trouble and the markets know it. discuss. >> i think the markets know it, they know the global economy is in a lot of trouble. you not only have energy prices sinking, and as a result the fed's going to keep monetary policy on hold until we get a decisive upturn by global activity. a lot of downward pressure right now on the prices of internationally trading goods and services. stuart: do you think we've got the possibility of no growth at all or even a recession in america? >> not right away, but i wouldn't be surprised that if we don't have a rejuvenation of global activity quickly enough by the time the election rolls around later in 2016, recession risks become material. they become noticeable. stuart: here's my problem. we don't have any tools left to deal with a slow or receding economy. >> all we got is qe4. we could go ahead and buy bonds. so those people that said, you know, the ten-year treasury
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yield has set a multitudey decade low, i think you're going to be proven wrong. you can't do much with short-term interest rates. so following the next recession, allegation the way of the government bond yield, make a run for it, 1% if not go lower. >> that's all good for housing. stuart: whoa. did you hear that. >> the reason why the yield is going to be so low is because income growth is going to be weakened. stuart: but mortgage would tumble if it gets to 1% on the ten queer. >> refinance. you're probably doing well but i think the other guest was right on target. i think this is an real estate market. all you've got to do is walk down the street and you see tower after tower of apartments under construction. >> it's true. >> not all of those apartments are going to be sold at the intended price. stuart: john, everyone, on hedged opinion and we love it. you can come back. that was wonderful. >> i still have a job.
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stuart: coming up. the unhackable apple hacked in china and right before the country's big state visit with president obama. more varney in a moment is it our insightful strategies that make edward jones one of the country's biggest financial services firms? or 13,000 financial advisors who say thank you? it's why edward jones is the big company that doesn't act that way. if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before, making it the most loved electric toothbrush brand by americans and their dentists. innovation and you. philips sonicare. it's more than tit's security -
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omissions and now the company is halting u.s. sales of some diesel models. also polling to its customers. down 17%. that's volkswagen. later on this program, hillary still struggling with her public image. she now insists that she's the we'll deal. and the donald getting some unflashing attention at the emmys. more on that in just a moment. you know, political correctness is the direct enemy of free speech. pc is a rotten straightjacket for a vibrant democracy. c makes speech, they don't want to say anything that will offend, because they're not addressed directly. that's why the nonpoliticians are doing sole in this election campaign. direct talk -- yeah, sometimes it's harsh and tough, but it's
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approving popular. over the weekend ben carson said i would not a muslim in charge of this nation. when was the last phylum any establishment politician mentioned islam? last week donald trump did not refute a questioner who said president obama is a muslim. the sky fell on that one and in the debate, carly fiorina passionately challenged hillary clinton to watch the planned parenthood videos, the elites, they were angry. she had bought passion to the defense of humanity. here's the good news. she's up in the polls. i would like to see the nonpoliticians, trump, carson, fiorina, i want to see them going after the other sacred cows of the left, income inequality and socialism. they really do love bernie sanders, you know. there's plenty to go after for a courageous candidate. we don't tell speak up? what we have is a shrinking middle class, an impoverish middle class, as a direct result of president obama's
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failed, repeat failed policies. when will a candidate say this help helped kill the american dream? this president has ruined our made worse our health care system. this president has divided america. put it out there, please. tell us the truth. so many people see it that way. it will be, oh, so refreshing, just tell us the truth. the way you see it. you can't say that. oh, yes, you can. in this election season, voters are clearly ready to listen. hey, you might win.
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accepted next year and then 100,000 accepted in the year 2017 now, there are critics, people who is that's not enough because of the million migrants trying to swarm into europe. we'll see how this one plays out. check that big board, please. the dow jones average is up nearly 150 points. big difference from friday. existing home sales, the numbers were released at the top of the hour. down about 5% from the previous month. housing not that healthy at this point. the stock market up. look at the share price of the streaming and content kings, that will be amazon and netflix. amazon at the emmys wins for its original show transparent, and netflix took home an award for "orange is the new black" and hbo, game of thrones, i think that alone took 12 awards. remember, though, a lot of people stream hbo through the hbo go app. so it is becoming a streaming.
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>> transitional network tv now taking backstage. stuart: that's the truth, isn't it? >> yeah. stuart: your juggernaut -- so many of my kids and friends stream and don't watch television. they don't watch me. look at the price of oil, please. i think we're around $45 a barrel today, opec says it's not going to get back to $80 a barrel until 2020. five years away from $80 a barrel. and a penny lower overnight, 2.28 is your national average and that means we've got a streak going, 35-straight days where the gas price has gone down. i want to get back to my take, you may have seen it moments ago. i say there are cracks appearing in the pc to political correct wall that we've i couldn't around
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ourselves. they're breaking through that pc barrier people's no. and president of concerned veterans for america and fox news contributor. i don't know how you feel about this, pete, but i for one just love the cracks in this wall of silence that we have because of political correctness. are you with me? >> stuart, i'm with you 100%. i could agree more. political correctness lays like a wet blanket on free speech. i was talking to my dry cleaner, the liquor store, they're all cheering for this because political correctness goes down to the city council it. it goes to the public school, to the local newspaper. everyone feels it and they can't break it until a leader steps up or leaders in this case steps up and tell hard truth. they're saying go get it because it provides an opportunity for the little guy to have an honest conversation and they're being squished. stuart: when they break through the political correctness, people are cheering. they are cheering. but listen to this. i want to stay with this pc
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theme for a second. ben carson says he doesn't think that a muslim should be president. now, that means he doesn't think that i muslim should be commander-in-chief. so you're in the armed forces, you for everybody many years what about do you say? >> well, he's speaking his opinion and carson clarified. the constitution doesn't have religious sets, a muslim could certainly be elected president, he's not saying barring it, but he does believe the two are compatible, and if you look at our history of this country, it doesn't mean that muslims can't be great americans or great president. i believe that could be the case. but he's looking at the general arc of those two things and i'm telling you having looked at it, islamic law properly implemented doesn't have a whole lot of free speech, freedom of association if you're associating for the reasons. he's opening up the possibility for a
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conversation, stuart, about islam and an asimulation and i'm in minneapolis here, we've got a large somali population and ben carson is, again, opening it up. stuart: and i think he will gain support because he is opening it up. >> i do too. stuart: it's a courageous move to take on that particular issue at this time. that is a courageous new approach if you like. i think he gained support. i'm intrigued to hear from you because you served in the armed forces, you're going to have to make a judgment about whether or not you see a muslim being commander-in-chief. i'm intrigued by that. >> we're a long way away from that. but of course a muslim that was elected by our country that has -- that would of course have a full allegiance to america, i would serve them proudly. i don't have issue with that. but before we get there, we need to have a conversation about how we properly ensure and engage with islam today.
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there's a lot of ugly manifestations because of political incorrectness we're unwilling to engage or talk about. that's the near opportunity that ben carson has opened up. and he swatted back comments at barack obama -- no, we take him at face value that he's a christian. but this is a larger part of the debate right now. and because of political correctness, don't talk about it. ben carson will gain support because he's being honest about his personal reservations that are shared by a lot of citizens nails it yet again. thanks so much for joining us, pete. >> thank you. stuart: i want to break away and take a look at the dow jones industrial average put it up there, please, because in the last few minutes we've gone straight up, 189 points higher as we speak. what a contrast to friday when we dropped 290 points after closing bell. >> yeah. stuart: a complete opposite. >> that's correct. opposite. >> more than half of the losses on friday now. stuart: yes. and one of the
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themes of the show today is the economy is in trouble and the markets know it and yet we've got 190 point gain. >> now it's moving higher. stuart: i don't know what has happened in the last few minutes but we're taking a hike up there. all right. streaming, netflix, amazon, both took home awards and h -- sometimes i have trouble with hs. >> hbo. stuart: was the big winner. got 12 emmys. but donald trump, he was the man they were all talking about it. let's listen to this. >> but i've got to say. sure donald trump seems racist. what else? >> what a great honor it must be for you to honor me tonight. oh, no, i'm sorry. donald trump that said. i'm sorry. >> there's one category of television that allows us as a
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society to sit back and enjoy the simple spectacle of reality. a reality where a panel of millionaires fight like sharks to be chosen by average middle class americans. but enough about the republican national debate. let's get to the award. stuart: we're all sitting here, all laughing, it was funny. >> it was funny. >> it was good. >> . stuart: where's the mention of hillary clinton? where? was there -- >> how do you joke about hillary clinton? >> donald trump loves it. they got his name out there. hey, the polls reflect it, whether we're talking about it or not? stuart: directed at hillary clinton -- >> i thought it was light humor. it wasn't nasty. it was light. stuart: we were all sitting here, three of us around the table looking at those clips, we laughed. >> right. stuart: it was funny. >> yeah. stuart: it's like when stephen
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colbert makes fun of me. it's funny. >> it is funny. i've got to mention. >> and peers morgan mentioned you at one point; right? stuart: i believe he did. nothing funny about that. oh, it's time for the sector report. let's get to it, shall we? cheryl, what are you watching? >> i make fun of you all the time and you don't think it's funny. stuart: i do. i take it lightly. >> i want to pick up what you were talking about. amazon, transparent was one of the big shows last night that won for the emmys. so this is the stock, you've got to take a look at amazon. look at the last year on this chart. it is really amazing and something that i want to try really quickly and, oh, look at that. it's tv magic really. netflix versus amazon. this is the streaming story. look at both of these stocks over the last year. this is the new way for consumption and netflix and amazon are the two to watch today. stuart: well said.
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don't make fun of me because i like that. >> a complement wow. stuart: yeah. >> all right. thanks. stuart: just listen to this for a second. i've got this coming in here. a terror scare at the eiffel tower. three suspects are now on the run in paris. i'm going to give you more details on that one as they become available. >> yeah. stuart: and i'm going to call this a shocking study in football about concussions. research suggests that nearly every player could be suffering brain trauma from their playing days. hall-of-famer said he would not let his grandson near the sport. more varney in a moment nagement, we believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform.
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at at&t we monitor our network traffic so we can see things others can't. mitigating risks across your business. leaving you free to focus on what matters most. >> i'm nicole petallides with your fox business brief, about 10 points away from the high, the dow jones up 180 points, the s&p 500 up 1%, and the nasdaq also gaining 1%, all three of the averages gaining really well after a big selloff on friday, include home depot, visa, travelers, microsoft, nike, but it has been green across the board. and gopro on the other hand coming under pressure, you can see it here at 33 and change. under pressure. and $25 over the weekend. priceline to the upside today,
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stuart: you are looking at texas where emergency crews are responding to a house explosion. the call came in 8:15 local time. we're hearing that 10 nearby homes are damaged. it was an explosion and look at that damage. that's a big blow. a terror scare at one of the world any most famous landmarks, that will be the eiffel tower in paris. more on this now. three people are on the run. they tried to climb the tower in paris. police say they each had a suspicious looking backpack. the suspects jumps off the tower using a pair chute and now the cops are using thermal imaging helicopters to dispatch to try to find them. paris has been on high alert since the gunman tried to open fire on a train last month. it looks like three people who maybe just wanted to jump off the tower with a pair chute. we don't know. speculating here. >> thrill seekers. stuart: yeah, so you think they're terrorists. >> yes. of course.
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stuart: what a situation. look at the price of apple stock, please. i think it's slightly lower this morning or dead flat? slightly lyre. up a buck. 114. i'm going to call that pretty flat. this is coming just days ahead of china's president's visit to the u.s. we're learning three dozen of the most popular chinese made apps in apple's appstore infected with software. so there's information of chinese consumers can be stolen from their iphones and apple was previously unhackable be i thought. joining me now one of the good guy hackers and he's the head of threat intelligence at immunity, inc. now strain us all out here. the only people in jeopardy are those chinese consumers, chinese people who downloaded apple apps in china. they're the only ones in jeopardy here; is that correct. >> yes. i believe so.
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so what happened was the way that you download and develop applications for apple requires of some tooling that is difficult to get or let's say annoying to get in china. so someone hosted another version of that that was infected, the developers who use that, which was quite a bit of them, then had their apps they developed with the infected software further infected and that made it onto the apple appstore. with 500 million chinese. stuart: so the danger here is twofold. number one to apple's reputation, which i always thought that apple was unhackable and therefore the good guys. and number two, doesn't it mean that the hackers can now read the personal information of hundreds of millions of chinese people and that would include the chinese government, am i; right? >> yes. you're absolutely correct. so, yes, that is the privacy implications of this
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particular hack, however, i would have to dispel a bit of a rumor that apple is unhackable, they're certainly not. you know, they've had issues before, i mean you'll remember the celebrity photos being stolen off of i cloud, there have been other incidents that involve apple software. apple makes a promise that they're going to do their best to review apps that come onto the appstore. but they can't read every line of source code and think about everything within the context of that app. so what happened here we had a couple of bad apps, they happen to be very popular and now, you know, 500 million plus chinese apple users are now at risk as a result. . stuart: okay. one last question. i've only got 30 seconds, but i've got an iphone. i've got lots of apps. you know what you're doing. if you wanted to, could you hack into me and my iphone? could you do it? >> yes. but it would be very expensive. stuart: why would it be expensive? >> apple is actually -- so you're right.
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apple does have a good security reputation. however, we run into issues where you have a lot of apps, you target the weakest link, which is the apps. if you're targeting just the phone, then it becomes more expensive. stuart: why is it expensive? what do you have to do? buy a supercomputer or something. >> no. just the flaws that we would use to take control of your phone awould fetch quite a premium on the market for such tools. you know, you're talking above $250,000 typically. stuart: i'm not worth it, alex, believe but he, son. and i'm out of town. but, alex, that's good information. we appreciate that. clean, cut, direct, clarity. like it. thank you very much, sir. a scary news study on playing pro football. 96% of former players who have donated their brains to science after death tested positive to brain disease to link concussion. i asked former nfl quarterback about this last hour. just listen to this. >> my son just took his son out of football.
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i would take my son out of football. it's too dangerous. and it's getting worse. and we were in denial for years in saying that the head contact -- concussions didn't cause cte, we now know in this last study, 96%, it's epidemi. stuart: that's a guy who knows what he's talking about, and later we're going to talk on that subject. coming up hillary clinton trying to cleanup her public image. joe on this program 11:45 today and hillary trying to cleanup her public image, why she's now making an effort to convince people she's just an ordinary run-of-the-mill grandmother. more varney in a moment
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on cbs clinton was asked to describe herself in three words. this was her response. take a listen. >> look, i am a real person with all the pluses and minuses that go along with being that. and i've been in the public eye for so long that i think, you know, it's, like, the feature that you see in some magazines sometimes. real people actually go shopping. you know? >> well, the democratic front runner received some improved polling data, her numbers bouncing back up wards, 42% while joe biden continues to pick up support at 22%. ashley. >> real person. all right, blake, thank you very much. hour three of varney three minutes away
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but it is not the device that is mobile, it is you. hand apparently, they also lovee stickers.ing. what's up with these things, victor? we decided to give ourselves stickers for each feature we release. we read about 10,000 suggestions a week to create features that as traders we'd want to use, like social signals,
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fiorina, there is a bull's-eye target on you after the debate performance you've moved up to second place in the polls. everybody is going after you. i think the attacks will center on her time a hewlett-packard. donald trump this morning on fox news that it was a disaster in her performance terrible. earlier the left when after her because of her $40 million golden parachute which he received after being dismissed by the hewlett-packard board. they are clearly trying to link her to the mitt romney approach to business. her political opponents will have to be very careful if they try to attack her on anything else. carly fiorina has strength of character. she is a survivor amongst a child to addiction. she has seen and gone past some of the worst trials that life can throw at anyone. and yes, she yes, she's a woman, a republican woman who has seized on the planned parenthood issue. she dared hillary clinton to watch those videos and she made that dare with real passion.
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this is one women's issue the left cannot take it a woman's opinion shared a try, but hillary clinton will have a hard time making at stake. the attacks will center on her time a hewlett-packard. the capitalist attack work with mitt romney. maybe harry reid to lie about her taxes as he did with mommy. i don't think it will work. carly fiorina is one tough lady your is not >> we are talking more about carly fiorina with kirsten powers come a democrat with whom i have a great deal in common. ms. powers will be joining us in 15 minutes. ms. carly fiorina will be under attack because of this. the latest cnn poll. the first since the debate. it has her in second place, surging ahead -- is in second
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place behind donald trump who's dropped eight percentage points from the same poll just a few weeks ago. move on to the markets because we've got a rally of 175 points for the dow industrial. the contrast would drop to 90. the dow 30 you will see 29 are in the green. that is a broad-based rally there for the stock market this monday morning. let's get right back to politics. him and hear him talk and political analysts fear who saw him in. dare i say for one shining moment afp via >> it certainly is a suggestion that he might well have appeared in a small dimple for a national poll about 404 voters in the margin of error is pretty wide which means we could soon have
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another poll with a contrasting result. does say a couple things. carly fiorina help yourself in the debate as did marco rubio who rose strikingly about 11 points from where he stood before her. those three takeaways is seems to me our legitimate. stuart: dr. ben carson this morning facing immediate virus or worm over the comments he made yesterday. >> islam is consistent with the constitution. >> no, i do not. i would not advocate that we put a muslim in charge of the nation. i absolutely would not agree with that. stuart: been persons into a broken right through the strait jacket talking straight out there. what do you say? >> perhaps the one that is all well and good. it is a controversy about some incompletely hypothetical.
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there's not a muslim running for office for the presidency this time around and none in sight. is talking about something that will stir controversy that doesn't advance any issues he is running on. it is just a provocative assertion. if someone would've run for president and as a full-blown, full-scale devout muslim advocating sharia law, which is no question about it inconsistent with our constitutional freedoms, that would be another matter. that is not happening. he has waded into something that will stir controversy. taken it on. he's not afraid. he is not. >> the question is, sewer, it is his having said that going to make republican primary voters more likely to vote for him or
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not? my guess is perhaps not because they look at him and say he is prone to saying things that gets everybody all stirred up indefinite and the issues he's running on. stuart: and may suggest nonpoliticians breakthrough the politically correct façade we have erected in america and that makes them popular. >> it may indeed. donald trump been at the top of the list i'm not sure if ben carson can win a political incorrectness race with donald trump. stuart: why do you think marco rubio broke into the top four so clearly? >> what is suggested as people are looking at the front runners say this is fun and we left the idea of tighter, but who else out there might be appealing with more experience than let's
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take a look. for the second debate in a row, marco rubio comes across as young and energetic and exceedingly articulate and informed on the issues. sooner or later this is going to get noticed. is really quite well as and conversant and that is impressive to a lot of people. not the majority by any means so far, but given time. stuart: would you agree politics and political debate today is far more interesting and entertaining than it was when you were running fox washington bureau a few short years ago? >> at this moment is certainly more lively. it's liveliness and entertainment and what you are looking for, this is the political season to watch television because there's a lot going on in both parties. trying to guess, it is a track
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in a lot of people to discuss the issues. >> that's an interesting point, stuart. to remember senator judd gregg, republican from new hampshire. i do conversation some weeks back in his view of the trump phenomenon was to get people interested in the republican party republican race in candidate and they would be more likely to vote republican in the fall. i am not sure his analysis is correct. stuart: what is it they say you must never say? only time will tell question or >> you are looking for something to say that would provide an analytical top. ew iat a cos avo and the mmite wi meeagaiin th mning don't say that. try to say something. >> thank you very much. back to the big award, please.
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close to session highs up to 160,571. we've got the chart. 29 in the green, one in the red. >> microsoft is a leaderbyhey. >> i do on i do on some microsoft i'm not retiring at. stuart: the floor manager is doing because i'm not retiring. take a look at go pro after barron said the stock could plunge down all the way to $25 a share. it is at 33 now, down 5% and could go down to 25. vw, reports of cheating on the missions u.s. sales of some diesel models has apologized to customers. it may be on the vote for a huge fine or penalty of some sort. it is down 18%.
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possibly 18 billion. >> that a huge number. look at tesla, please. tesla is a winner today. 3.5%. there's a morgan stanley named alvin jonas may be the biggest bull on wall street. he thinks elon musk will take on uber. not sure how it would take on a uber. stuart: i wouldn't put it past him. stuart: that would be amazon and netflix. amazon won an emmy. netflix took home an award for a just a new black. hbo was the big winners. "game of thrones" all the words. a lot of people streaming hbo for the go ave. boyle, $45 a barrel. opec says we won't get back to $80 a barrel until 2020.
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regular guest on the penny overnight. 228 is your national average. 35 straight days where gasoline has gone down. days ahead of the arrival in the u.s. comes word of a supposed first of its kind heart of apple's mobile platform achieved through malicious chinese apps are now where placed on those apps. former u.s. spokesman to the u.n. and contributor rick grenell joins us now. i want to talk about the chinese leader in his visit to the united states. i'm told they are getting together in a cybersecurity deal with president obama. what is going on if we have a cybersecurity deal of apple's apps in china are being hacked into. >> that means once again the united states is on the low end of the deal.
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we don't know how to negotiate. the obama team is atrocious at it. let's be honest. tens of thousands, maybe millions of people had their information hacked. top-secret security clearance application hacked by the chinese. was still haven't seen the obama administration react to that. we're told the visit to chinese is about climate change in the president did want to upset the apple cart. he wants to get the chinese to do something on climate change. meanwhile the chinese are bullying us in the south china sea and we are not react to them. last week the assistant secretary of defense testified in congress at a congressional hearing and said the u.s. military has not failed within 12 miles of their raise the chinese are now claiming. the fact is they scared us away from the region and the u.s.
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military is backing off. the direction comes from the white house. stuart: i believe you had your personal information hacked by china. am i correct? >> yes, it has. anyone who applied for clearance in anyone but reported, all of the information, millions of people have had their information hacked. we are not reacting. we'll give them a 21 gun salute and a taxi to a driven state department steak dinner and that's outrageous. we can have conversations with the chinese over lunch. why can't the president have lunch with the chinese president talk about these issues. we don't have to do a 21 gun salute. stuart: we hear you. thank you for being with us. up next, how carly fiorina will handle attacks now that she's very much in the race and
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stuart: first of all, that is now the high of the day up 181. 16565. what a difference a weekend makes. a very different story of lies. now we've got a sea of green up 181. to politics. this is "varney & company" appeared to like this stuff here. donald trump's appeal showing signs of slowing down a little while carly fiorina is clearly surging. donald trump didn't waste any time going after her college into fox and friends this morning. >> i think she's got a good line
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of patter patter but if you listen for more than five minutes you develop a tremendous headache. she drove a big company, hewlett-packard, a horrible transaction. that can happen, but she made a horrible purchase when she bought it and was forced to cut thousands -- tens of thousands of jobs. they are still recovering from her disasters. they cut 25,000 jobs last week. i don't see it as something that will last because her performance has been terrible. stuart: don't hold back, please donald. joining us now kirsten powers with whom i have a lot in common mci to light even though you're a democrat wearing red. i didn't think much of the response from donald trump. i don't think it'll work. >> pitter patter, if there's one phrase that would not associate with her it is pitter patter. he's trying to make her sound like she's silly and maybe a sexist vibe there.
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she's one of the most articulate persons in the field. whether you support her go support her, she knows what she's talking about. the way he is trying to diminish or is pathetic. stuart: i like the way she speaks directly to the issues of the day and in particular in that debate i like her hair to hillary clinton, no smile on her face, i dare you to watch those videos. hilary clinton's response which was thought over the weekend was well i've seen was well icing was well i've seen some of the videos but they are all contrived and edited. i don't think there is much of a strong response. >> it is not a strong response, but her approach is to pretend like it's not that big of deal. for her to say who cares, who cares, certainly when it has
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been a terrible political with murderers onto it. it's not a moral way to respond to it aren't ethical way. stuart: affect the sound guy the sound bite. let's roll that tape. >> what i'm troubled by the misleading was the inaccurate allegation from republicans at their debate. >> i think you and i agree when we saw those videos, it's not a question of ideology. it's a question of humanity. >> that's exactly right. i don't believe she's watch the videos. maybe she saw a clip of something somewhere. the way they lunch on the fact that carly fiorina did take a couple different videos and put them together. bush is said and we are going to
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jump on this and focus on the fact she didn't get her story exactly right even though the truth it was true what she was saying. stuart: you are a democrat. do you prefer hillary clinton or carly fiorina. >> i don't prefer either of them probably. i'm not particularly excited about the field, but if i had to save my life i would talk to bernie sanders probably. sorry. stuart: i said you and i see i do live on a couple things. >> or if joe biden got in the race. stuart: you ruined it. >> i know. i'm still a good person. stuart: how can you sit us for one moment you would support a socialist. don't we want prosperity back in america, jammu on economic
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growth? >> he calls himself a socialist democrat. he votes 95% democrat. in terms of policy he is in. stuart: a 90% tax rate is not way out there? >> that's not his official policy. he doesn't have an official policy. you think you answered a 90% tax rate on all americans? i don't think he is against prosperity. i am not saying i'm 100% on with bernie sanders. i am saying i find hillary clinton completely unappealing. she's been very disappointing. stuart: you salvaged it. i think you'll be coming back on the show. [laughter] thank you indeed. the popes visit this week affecting things.
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around $11 to expect today. how about existing home sales. they dropped more than expected in august. a cautionary sign for the housing market. this is a question i've asked all day. buying into a house has got to be out of fashion or a few years now. do you think i should come back into fashion? >> absolutely. smart investors have been buying up those for the last several years. you asked me if buying home is a good investment. yes the turnaround for the market. a lot of first-time buyers we would like to see the twentysomething to mature girls buy homes have been on the sidelines, priced out of the market. would finally see prices even out and start to go down this wall. you want to see price is at least a life. stuart: jason meister was here, our real estate guide.
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more are coming onto the market. the prices will come down. ashley: that's pretty good. stuart: is that? ashley: former was coming from, absolutely. >> inventory looking better, all of these are good things. i think it is worth it if you think about buying a home before interest rates go higher. stuart: thank you very much. the pope may preach forgiveness, but here well in them for late anger a few people during his visit this week. apple lovers especially. jo ling kent is on top of it. >> the important if you want your iphones 6s right away. ups has issued alert to people in certain zip codes in washington, philadelphia and new york city say they will be shipping delays on things coming to your home.
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that would include the iphone which comes out friday september 25th. you could be an impact here. but if you are concerned and stressing worried about getting your iphones during the popes visit,, go to a retail store. that is where you can get a phone. right away. maybe the apple store is the place to be instead of where the pope is. depends where you live. >> and the ipad mini four. am i in trouble? >> yeah, you might be in trouble. it's up 1.33%. stuart: the story on apple as the hack in china. >> unless you are me waiting for her many.
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stuart: this is not the high for the day, but still a nice rally. the 157 s. was a third the price of oil about $45 a barrel much of the day 46 now. opec says he will not be $80 a barrel until 2020. the price of gas keeps falling to 20% national average down in price 35 days in a row. still on the market, advice or founder and ceo jason roth. tell us about facebook first of all. >> do i like it? that's an understatement. i've been calling for facebook triple digits for 12 to 18 when facebook was in the 60s. listen, at the end of the day is the ultimate growth stock. that is the phrase i'm coining for facebook. no better growth stock. you don't need a dividend when
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it's growing at the rate it is and i don't think it will stop a long time. stuart: i was interested a couple weeks back when i was looking at netflix going straight out. i saw him aside and go straight up, big gains for google. facebook at that time wasn't left behind but it went from 60s to high 80s. now you say now is the time. this is where it goes well above 100. >> well above 100. i'm very glad you brought up netflix because they are two entirely different companies in the same category of the new media infrastructure. the cool thing is facebook owns three other companies that could be highflying companies in and of themselves that they were publicly traded. thanks to graham, oculus virtual reality. that is what makes facebook the sleeping giant that is.
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stuart: one of the stocks you really like is the blackstone group. give me 30 seconds on why you like it and where it's going. >> you cannot go wrong with owning a company like lack stone. event right now is the time to get in because the 52 week highs in the mid 40s trading almost 25 and below that. i have no idea when it's an incredible value right now. stuart: i admire you for saying you have no idea why. that's an interesting market guy says i have no idea. >> sometimes markets overshoot. lack stone is too low. we hear you. jason rotman, thank you for joining us. stuart: the nuclear deal between the u.s. and iran causing backlash for the president. my next guest that it is tantamount to deliver the $150,000 bailout to al qaeda's allies that must be stopped. welcome back to roy murdoch. so you want to stop this your
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>> i do. stuart: i don't think you can. >> even that they botched the effort to kill the deal, they can give obama the spending he wants except one thing. no one under $50,000 bailout. stuart: that would make a difference. these are european banks all over the place. >> these are frozen assets all over the united states that are shifted immediately to iran. if you behave a little bit here, they've got one big trunk shot once and if they cheat next year, we can't get the money back. >> you say pass a bill that says this is frozen. the reason is people not iran supports hamas and hezbollah. they don't really seem to attack us but there is evidence from the demott rate that iran works closely with al qaeda.
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one of the documents found was al qaeda with six to eight of his pals. they start moving them and distributing them for their missions and national teams. another guy has a $10 million or where to find him and it says iranian made authorities may maintain a relationship and permission to operate in the borders and 2005. iran is working hand in glove and a bomb has been to send $150 billion not as hamas and hezbollah were busy killing friends in israel, but al qaeda has a record of coming over to kill us and our friends. stuart: you are the first person who has come up with what looks like, sounds like a viable way of stopping iranians from getting a hold of $150 billion. can't do to surely you can do it.
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>> simple as this. said obama you have the spending you want the one provision says no bailout to the iranians and if you want to shut down the government that's his business. only 21% of the american people support this bill. stuart: which congress and will sponsor the bill? >> ted cruz will jump on an idea like this. i think it's important to try to do this. stuart: thank you for being with us again. don't be such a stranger. >> i'll come back anytime. stuart: congressman paul kosar. -- chaucer. he says the pope's ban on climate change in an op-ed, if the pope wants to devote his life to fighting climate change, he can do so in his personal time. to promote questionable science of catholic dogma is ridiculous. this requires a response from a man who is indeed a catholic. judge andrew napolitano.
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he's not so much for boycotting the pope, but the pope shouldn't be involved in such obvious politics. >> i agree with you. i agree with congressman gosar. although as you know, i'm going to the stock. i was invited to be on the floor of the house and i will be their god willing on thursday morning with great joy because he is the vicar of christ and earth than it's an historic moment. i will also have nuts in acid in my belly because i don't know what is going to say. am i going to applaud when sound left-wing nonsense about the environment comes across as if it catholic dogma? stuart: we are in agreement. the pope should not be involved in politics of any kind. >> what i don't object to is when it's an intermediary
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between rall castro and john kerry or whatever you think of the outcome. that is a legitimate role. the secretary of state and for the pope to speak publicly with his moral authority to identify with a narrow area of science rejected by many people cannot conclusively proven is very, very dangerous. stuart: why do you think the pope is doing this course like this? where is it coming from? >> blonde hair almost dictator of argentina in the early 1950s. he nationalized everything and attempted to redistribute wealth and was raised at the environment. the ones that everybody from that race in that era is the corona. stuart: ibis ruined argentina. >> for perot not come argentina was the 10th or 12th --
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>> the wealthiest country in the world. stuart: so wires supporting this catholic pope? >> he is the victor of christ and if he stays i will throw my self at his feet. stuart: does he have the authority of the pope since he took over the mantle from a pope who resigned the first resignation in papal history. stuart: it's not the first comment to third. it wasn't a resignation. it was the pronunciation. stuart: he has a valid pope. >> i fear what might come out of his mouth. by the way, this thing we talked for 400 years we won't teach it anymore. [inaudible] >> i don't know but he did the right thing.
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[laughter] stuart: with a look for you applauding. >> i will have to wear a mask. new statistics showing the risk football players are taken without the extent of the dangers. legendary quarterback says he wouldn't even let his own grand and play the game. another legendary quarterback, joe biden on this issue is next. at mfs investment management, we believe active management can protect capital long term. active management can tap global insights. active management can take calculated risks. active management can seek to outperform. because active investment management isn't reactive.
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it's active. that's the power of active management. usaa makes me feel like i'm a car buying expert in no time at all. there was no stress. it was in and out. if i buy a car through usaa, i know i'm getting a fair price. we realized, okay, this not only could be convenient, we could save a lot of money. i was like, wow, if i could save this much, then i could actually maybe upgrade a little bit. and it was just easy. usaa, they just really make sure that you're well taken care of.
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usaa car buying service. powered by truecar. online and on the usaa app. >> i am transfixed with your fox business brief. mix action and commodities. oscar is across the board all day long. right now the dow jones industrial average at now the dow jones industrial average at 1.4 to the upside. up 105-point. the s&p up 12 and the nasdaq higher. we did see health care. i will correct that because it is tipping into the right of day. the information technology and discretionary consumer discretionary doing well and leading the way today. also watching ceo on friday, penn is the ticker symbol.
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customers. jeff flock has more details on the ongoing story. quite a story. >> i've got to believe how serious you take epa regulations a mission. this appears to be unlike the problems that toyota and gm which are problems of failures of the system. this appears to be an overt attempt to circumnavigate diesel engines. the engines of the golf, façade and the audi a3. if you were to point out the cell engine and a late model vehicle, your vehicle is being recalled. the stock today is in the tank about 20% down at its worst. $10 billion loss. there is a potential fine out there. the epa can find the can find dw as much as $37.5000 a vehicle
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and made almost a half million vehicles. if you do the math that computes to $18 billion. i doubt seriously you would get that kind of a fine. when i heard this thing we have to reverse engineer this and start marketing it. stuart: slight mistake on the graphic they are. 18 billion is the potential fine. it is remarkable is tough. thanks for joining us that we will get back to you later on this program. this is a startling new study on professional football. 96% of former players who donated brains to science after they died testing positive for disease linked to concussions. for nfl quarterback earlier today told me the game is so dangerous he would let his grandson play. roll the tape. >> my son took his son out of football. it is too dangerous and it's
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getting worse. we were in denial for years say in the head contact the concussions didn't cause cte. we now know 96% is epidemic. stuart: one of the greats joining us now come another hall of famer, quarterback job iceman. you heard what he had to say. i was pretty song stuff. he wouldn't let his own grandson play the game. >> my opinion is thursday june 10 technologies that can help in that area. studies prove an issue and a problem being addressed at the national football league that there are technologies available to aid in helping kids participate in football. as a part of it is aspect to team sports. if you're not going to let them participate, what would they do? soccer is the option. but when you hit with a soccer ball? you hit your head.
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when you look at the elements are part of the concussions situation, it is a complex initiation. i would encourage my children and grandchildren to play football but i would be concerned about the teaching of techniques and technology available. it is something i don't think we'll go away but certainly warrants discussion. >> what about changing today's comment that is like a missile and you can want yourself to somebody else and do damage because of the nature of the helmet. he suggested to go to leather helmets the way it was many years ago. some people suggest go the way of rugby. not many concussions in rug being that you have no padding or headgear whatsoever. do you think there's a change in equipment and that might help? >> there are things available inside the helmet. technology, a company called unequal creates a technology
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that will hopefully reduce the concussions access. there are different aspects of the whole thing. removing the helmet isn't the answer. france is right to a large degree when you put a helmet on you will use it as far as you can for whatever you need to get the job done. i still think you can't just eliminate the game completely and take away an element of education working together as part of a team, learning how to cooperate in winning this and taking authority from people other than your parents. so many different elements are positive when it comes to football that we have to considering the safety part of it and like a positive aspects of participation in the sport as well. stuart: class one, 20 seconds for this. japan beat south africa in the rugby championships. that doesn't mean a thing to you, does it? >> it really does and to be
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train to former lehman brothers ceo dick fuld was right at the center of the storm when he saw the 71-acre son valley ranch for a record 20 or $30 million. i don't know the precise price. he held onto it for about a year. he originally wanted 59 million. >> you want a 59.9 million they couldn't get it. he's got a record in idaho -- he set a record for any home going to auction. $20 million that leaves. -- it was a very active bidding process about 25, 28 million. we don't have the exact number. stuart: you can tell he needs the money because he had to go to auction because it has to sell if it goes to auction.
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>> that is one of the property he owns. i don't know what is done with this florida place. i'll check and get back to you tomorrow. the fourth-largest bank in the united states. dick fuld is now selling his home at auction. it's amazing sometimes. stuart: cheryl, thank you very much indeed. more "varney & company" after this.
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. >> her approach to this is to not -- to pretend that it's not that wig of a deal. so for her to say, oh, who cares, this is a right wing thing that has been stirred up, i think probably isn't a terrible political way for her to respond to it. it's not a moral way. >> that was kiersten on hillary clinton's respond to the planned parenthood videos. and here's what you were saying about the show on facebook. ben carson doesn't believe a muslim should leave the country, yes, she should have it said because he's right. hit the nail on the head.
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go, dr. carson. and says this. i have unlimited respect for the catholic church, but i would like to see its leader stick to faith and religion and not politics. there you have it. my time is up. neil cavuto, it is yours, sir. >> thank you very much. despite the criticism that the pope gets for being anticapitalist, the fact of the matter is that the markets are up. >> any reason for that? we have no idea, the dow is up about 110 points, and the pope has come to town and three of them visited the united states, on average the markets do go up. now, the record holder, he came up within seven times but for our purposes we are focusing on and we will a little bit later the times he visited the u.s. president. that particular visited more presidents than any other. but seeing as we are now on the 40th anniversary or close to the visit of john paul, the
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