tv Varney Company FOX Business November 18, 2015 9:00am-12:01pm EST
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with best he can, and mr. carson seems to be stumbling and the president-- . dagen: and right now, it's all about another fabulous individual, a lot to cover, stuart varney, it's all yours. stuart: thank you very much, dagen. now hear this, a military style battle in paris. the fbi warns terror may come here for the holidays if not before, but president obama turns his anger on republicans, his fellow americans. what a day. good morning, everyone, it's wednesday. intense gunfire, explosions, heavy weapons, in an urban setting just outside paris. two terrorists dead, they were looking for the mastermind and don't know if we've got him. it looks like, it feels like
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war over there. the fbi is taking agents off-white collar, and they're active. and the president obama says migrants are shameless if they bring in christians first. this is shameless, greece plays turkey in a friendly soccer game. during a minute of silence for the paris victims, there were boos and shouts of allah akbar, which is what the terrorists shouted as they killed their victims. shameless indeed. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ to the battle in paris, the raid in the paris suburb of saint-denis is over. ashley: this began at 4 a.m. local time, stuart, it's in an
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area north of paris, the same area of stade de france. police officers were injured and this is a stand yoo of that landed seven hours, during which a female suspect detonated the suicide vest that she was wearing and another suspect was shot inside an apartment building and then we had arrests following that. why did they pick on this area? they have been stamping phones and they were under the belief that the mastermind of the paris attacks, abdelhamid abaaoud, was in fact in france in this apartment building. what we don't know at this hour, was he there? was he the terrorist that was killed or has he been arrested? they're not saying and it's very much in the air. stuart: but the operation is over withohether saying the guy the-- there's a growing unease here in america, and copenhagen airport shut down this morning
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because of a suspicious bag. and ashley, got to fill me in about the two paris-bound flights originated in america and they were diverted. >> on bomb scares, one leaving washington dulles, to paris, had to be diverted to halifax, nova scotia. and another from los angeles diverted to salt lake city. stuart: we had a german soccer match that was called off. can we concentrate on the agrees greece-turkey game. there was a moment of silence for the victims of paris and some from turkey were scouting and nothing shows the rift more than that. and the greek prime minister
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was there and this is what they heard during a supposed minute of silence to honor the victims of the terror attacks. stuart: because for a second and listen to this. >> incredible, i've never-- this has been done at soccer games around the world and it's silent. it's shocking what we're hearing. adding to the sense of anxiety, here at home and america, a warning from the fbi, watch out this holiday season and by the way, the fbi doesn't have the staff required to follow the possible jihadists here. here is james coalstrom, a former director at the fbi. we're grateful to have him here. what is this about warnings? vigilance, how big a deal is this? >> the borders are wide open, we have 350 sanctuary cities, people can jump off ships in the harbor, we don't know who
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comes and goes in the united states. the fbi has about the same amount of people that they had a decade ago, i wish they'd bring the retired guys like me back, i'd like to spend time there again. stuart: the fbi says we don't have enough people to follow the possible jihadist. >> so are many, many others, we're in a big problem. we cannot keep track of all of these people, this wide open society, this wonderful society of ours doesn't blend well with psycho paths. stuart: are you faulting president obama who says we will have 10,000 migrants here and 100,000 after that. >> his deputy, what's it called, the national security advisor came out and said that they have this elaborate process to make sure this no bad guys get in. that is crazy. there's no such thing. we don't know who these people are.
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there's no data basis that are in syria or for that matter any of these places. stuart: so what's the president do? >> well, i mean, some people would question that maybe he's -- i don't know, i don't want to say that, but i don't know why he's doing that, rome is burning and he's fiddling and not only that, but when people with good intentions-- i'm a patriot and i fought in vietnam for this country and i spent 28 years in the fbi. i'm not interested in doing anything, but protecting the people in this country. and we are not doing that. the congress needs to octobact. stuart: am i right to feel anxiety? >> you are. we need to have nsa in the company and we used to have the phone companies, and now there's many ways and half of encrypted and we have no indication from the googles of the world and apples of the
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world. stuart: can i come back to you shortly in this block? okay. not a lot of passion in president obama's speeches when he's talking about the war on terror. what happened in paris, he says, quote, a setback. it seems like the president's only passionate, he saves his fire for when he's taking on republicans. roll that tape. >> apparently they're scared of widows and orphans coming into the united states of america. first they were worried about the press being too tough on them during debates and now they're worried about three-year-old orphans. that doesn't sound very tough to me and it needs to stop because the world is watching. stuart: okay. liz peak is here and what's your reaction to that. >> and that's unconscionable from this president, here we have a moment to unify the country in the fight against isis to talk about what's seriously happening here as
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we've just discussed, the entire refugee program is, you know, sort of a creation of the obama mythology, there is no security in that program. he talks about how it's all women and children so we shouldn't worry. it was a woman who just blew herself up in the paris suburbs. let's face it, to ex-- folks, we don't know who these people are and it's perfectly reasonable to push back. stuart: and john kerry compared this with charlie hebdo. >> there's something different about what happened from "charlie hebdo", and i think everybody would feel that. there's a particularized focus or even a legitimacy in terms of -- not legitimacy, but a rati rationale you could attach
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yourself somehow and say, okay, they're really angry, but-- >> wait a minute, he can't figure out why the latest attacks were lost, but the january "charlie hebdo" attacks were understandable? james, he's offering a rational for this? >> there's no rationale for murder or mowing people down. stuart: this is the secretary of state of the united states of america. >> you know what's offensive, really, we talked about things that are offensive, the secretary of states of the united states going to the airport when the bodies came in from libya, when the bodies came in, full knowing there was an act of terrorism, transmitting that message to her daughter and telling the families and one of the victims is a very close friend of mine, the family, telling the families that it was a video and they were going to do everything possible to arrest the man that did the videotape.
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stuart: all right, james kallstrom, former assistant to the fbi. we value your appearance on the program at this particular time, thank you very much indeed, sir. >> thank you. stuart: let's get to the markets. it's a big day on the terror front and maybe also a big day on the march. dow jones is 50 points up. it looks like the nervous money is coming here, america has a safe haven money. terror rules and wall street goes straight up. how about oil? the numbers are coming out later on this morning and show us how much oil is in the supply chain. if there's a big increase, it could, i repeat, it could push oil below $40 a barrel. you'll have those numbers when we get them 10:0 eastern. here is what we have for you. senator lindsay graham has a plan to take them out.
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>> it has been a great honor for me to run for president of the united states. this is not my time. i've come to the realization that it's not my time so i came to say that i'm suspending my campaign for president of the united states. stuart: bobby jindal is out and look who is here, candidates lendsy graham. i have to ask. bobby jindal is out and how about you. >> i'm in. bobby is a good voice for conservative, and family. i'm all in. you need a chief to defeat an enemy that need to be destroyed. this president has no idea, and i'm ready to destroy isil and reset the world.
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stuart: you want to put before congress a motion for war against isis. >> a year ago the president used force against isil limited to three years and did not allow troops. and not limited by time, geography or means. i'm going to do with isil as we did with al qaeda. declare war on them, and do whatever is necessary to destroy isil before they hits here at home. stuart: the use of the word war. >> they're at war with us, the french declared war on isil, i'm trying to get the congress to do the same. after 9/11, the american family came together and gave the president authorization to destroy al qaeda and give this president ap all presidents, hopefully me, whatever is necessary. stuart: he would veto it. >> well, that would be up to limb. i don't think he would. well, so what.
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stuart: and then you'd have a situation where the commander-in-chief would not go to war where congress would say we would go to war. >> he would have a place in history. i didn't make him do what's right. let's have this debate. let the president of the united states veto a congressional action to give him unlimited authority to destroy the most radical organization on the planet. they are he a more lethal than al qaeda. they're coming here. i intend to protect america. stuart: you say that 10,000 u.s. troops would do the job. >> you need 100,000 troops, most would come from the region. 10,000 would include the american component. here is what-- >> 10,000 americans on the ground. >> as part of a regional force. 10,000 is not enough, but that's enough to give the arabs and turkey the capacity to win. let me try to explain something.
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nobody ever believed the taliban was going to come in and take over egypt. no one believed that saddam hussein was going to depose the government. and isil is a different threat in the eyes of the region and that's why they're more willing to fight, 90% them, 10% us, we're flipping what we've done in the s pa. stuart: absent an attack in america, you think that congress would approve a declaration of war after giving, you could get the congress to go with you? >> i hope so, if the congress doesn't realize that isil represents a direct threat to our homeland then we are missing an opportunity to protect the nation. any member of congress who rejects the idea that we should be involved in total war against isil doesn't understand the threat, our homeland from isil and we'll go down in history as a very sorry soul. stuart: senator lindsey graham,
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still a republican candidate for the presidency. >> all in. lindsey gram.com. stuart: all in. >> all in. in it to win it. declaration of war-- >> and putin is not our friend. a check rah ration of war not limited by times or means against isil. wake up, mr. president. stuart: mr. senator, thank you very much for joining us. >> i'll be back. stuart: here is what's coming up on a very busy and big day. new york city's mayor welcomes migrants. he says closed borders-- >> and president obama tells gq magazine, the president says he's surprised how much of his job entails playing well with others.
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knees", i'm not sure whether you can hear that well on the tape. you're going to see a lot of this kind of tape. and everybody has a phone these days, hanging out around from windows and look at that, they got him. new york city mayor bill deblasio says he welcomes migrants to this quote, proud immigrant city. this is bill deblasio, he says closing our borders is a victory for terrorists. >> getting them into new york city would be a victory for terrorists. terrorist s have targeted new york city since 9/11, 12 attacks shut down by an alert and well-trained counterterrorism force and new york city cops, but this is insanity, truly, because this is the target. we are the target in new york city. and isis has mated it clear that they are going to infiltrate the country via this refugee stream.
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as people have said on this program earlier, there's no way to vet these people. we won't know who is dangerous and who is not. stuart: what was the comment from bill deblasio about chris christie. ashley: he called him callus and heartless and prejudice for not accepting refugees. >> by the way his polling is much worse than new york city cops now. stuart: that's deblasio's polls way down. >> he does not have much of a following at this point, who can blame-- the new york city voters are fed up with his political correctness and sort of cop brigade. stuart: another story on terror, ash. ashley: turkey authorities detained eight suspects at the istanb istanbul -- and they are trying to get to
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europe and they said this is our hotel, no recordment and they found a hand drawn map to germany. stuart: they may have interrupted a cell. >> absolutely. stuart: they stopped the paris people, the attack on paris, that just stopped another incident before it was due to take place. >> they believe they were going to attack the business district of paris and why they were forced to move in-- >> no wonder there's a high anxiety time. we're going to discuss the oil markets, that's a key market in the world of money these days. we've got a guy on the show who says it's going to go down to $30 a barrel. how about that? and facebook only cares about the west? being blamed for not caring about terror attacks outside of europe and america. we're on the story coming up.
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but it is not the device that is mobile, it is you. when there is a game, when there is a training, when there is a goal, our duty is to bring that information as fast as possible to the people. real madrid have about 450 million fans. we're trying to give them all the feeling of being at the stadium. the microsoft cloud gives us the scalability to communicate exactly the
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>> we're going to introduce after thanksgiving an authorization to use military force not limited by time, geography or means. i'm going to do with isil what we did with al qaeda after 9/11, declare war on them, allow this president and every other president to do whatever is necessary to destroy isil about of it hits here at home. stuart: you heard it, that's
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lindsey graham put a motion before congress to declare war, war on isis. we're expecting a 40, 45 point gain for the dow industrials. and the market has been up despite all that's been happening overseas and we're going to be up just a little with that-- now we start, it's 9:30 precisely and dow industrials have indeed opening so slightly higher. we'll follow that for you. 21 points at 17-5. now, the world, you could say, let me introduce who we're going to talk to today. shah galani is here, ashley webster and liz is here, too. shah, the markets are going up. >> it's the safest, and after the terrorist attacks after 9/11, they were down 9%, 11%, and recovered that 30 days after that. whatever happens the united
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states is the strongest place to be. stuart: dan, america as safe haven for your money, is that the play this morning? >> that's absolutely the case, today and almost all times, you see everybody flock to the united states when there's a world-wide problem because despite our flaws, we are the most stable country in the world and have been for a long time. stuart: dan, still with you for a second. there is some feeling, i believe, which says if america is not going to do anything, and president obama will not put boots on the ground, then us staying out is good for stock prices here. what do you say to that? >> i don't know that that's necessarily a good long-term strategy and even short-term, i don't think that's the best idea. we have to address this more severely than we have in the past. this leading from behind thing isn't working, we've got to go aggressively after them. i think that long-term they might have more problems there and cause a problem across the whole world, not just the u.s.
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>> shah galani is here and he says every time we failed to make 18,000 on the dow it's another nail in the coffin for stocks. you're still sticking with your 20% correction call would take us down about 3500 points. >> it sounds like a big move, but trying to get to 18,000 and we need to have some support there. psychologically if we don't get there. this is not about technicals, about that number, it's about the sentiment that investors have that we can't get there and hold it. earnings season has been terrible. stuart: nothing to do with terror, knowing to do with paris. >> because the u.s. is a strong place, that does not preclude. ashley: the earnings, the feds, why are we as high as we are? my question is we're inflated because of money in-- >> it could be that the federal reserve will not raise rates next month. they don't want to step into that liz: in europe the travel and leisure stocks have not gone
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do down. people don't abandon plans to spend, they postpone them. stuart: we could break below $40 a barrel today if we get a big buildup in the supply of oil in the pipeline. dan, if we do get that big buildup in supply, is it possible we drop below 40? >> i think it absolutely is. we're only a few sense away from it now. you had some supply, decreases yesterday in the overnight report. today if we get a big build ap i think they're expecting a couple million, you could well see it. there's plenty of supply and it's coming for some time. take a while to work off the inventory. so $40 is easily attainable. stuart: those storage inks at that are virtually full the last time i checked. and shah, you're looking for $30 oil? >> i am. because not only the tanks are full. ers tankers are full. and they're around the world
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because they're full. demand is lessening. with less demand, more supply, oil has nowhere to go, but down. stuart: we're watching this closely, obviously, and if we see oil drop below-- just if we do, i'm going to expect to see the dow industrials come down sharply. >> i think if we break through, say, 38. 38 and 24 is the low. we break that and i think that the dow is going to get hit hard. stuart: elsewhere, i've got target lifting after higher profits. give me the stock, please. >> hi there, stuart. very confounding here. down more than 4% is falling here, despite raising the full year earnings forecast, target met earnings expectations and revenue, same-store sales are higher and investors are not satisfied with the turn around plan. you remember that 2013 data breach. we know from the ceo, targets are zeroing in on children's
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apparel and so far electronic sales are soft and some of the food plans to sell groceries hasn't taken traction. stuart: they take target down 4% just like that, ouch. lori, thank you very much indeed. how about staples, profit and ales down. the stock is one cent lower. we've been talking about the possibility of a retail ice age. >> i don't agree with that. i think there's a shift, of course, and there has been in the way people shop. you look at tj maxx stores. their sales are up since 2009. even though their sales are just around where macy's is, the market cap is multiples of that. wall street knows this is a direction where people are heading to shop. it's a discount. >> it's just a shift. >> that's right. stuart: and lowe's their profit and sales were up. that fits your description
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there? . lowe's doesn't compete with on-line. >> no, they do not. we talked about that as a possible space for amazon. it's an indication that people are still buying things for their home and home depot coming in strong as well. ashley: that's right. stuart: shah galani i want to go back to target, down 4%, doesn't it make it cheap enough for you to buy it? >> no, the dividend is reasonable, but they missed revenues by 2%. they're getting hit hard. the stock has more to go if i have any interest on it and if i do, it would be a peck speculative basis. stuart: you don't own it now. >> no. stuart: what a guy. here is the news i really like. the price of gasoline down another penny overnight. look at this, $2.13 is the national average for regular. the lowest price in america today drive quickly to oakville, missouri. the phillips 66 station there is $1.51.
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the rest average is 2.13. >> there it is. stuart: missouri 1.51 liz: what about by you. stuart: $1.80 in new jersey and that's shopping around a little bit i think 1.75 by this weekend when i get my fill-up liz: and mcdonald's coffee. stuart: and dan, you trade this stuff, you trade gasoline. aaa still says $2 a gallon for us consumers by christmas. do you agree with that? >> well, i think it's going to be $2 or maybe lower. given all the supply we have and the price of oil going down where it is. it's conceivable that we're going to get real close to like $1.80, 1.90 level near me. we're just above $2 right now and i'm waiting for it to happen. >> everybody is saying with the extra money in consumer pockets because gas is so cheap that they should be going out and spending that money. i don't think they are. i think that-- i think they're trying to take care of the deductibles on
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their hands. i think that-- >> and tuition and all of that. stuart: they're mopping up the money. that's what's going on. >> the premiums are going up so much exponentially. they have to pay the premiums upfront and as it increases on the upside-- >> new york times had a great story. the new york times had a great story, it was buried because of the events to paris, but showed you what happens to these obamacare plans with these astronomical deductibles. >> and that's by the seasoned health reporter who has been there for decades. >> now, it's a huge problem. >> and look at facebook. i'm not sure i understand this, but there is a controversy about activating the safety feature on facebook. >> it's called a safety check feature. it was introduced for natural disasters such as hurricanes and earthquakes and allowed people if they were in the affected area to check a thing that says i'm safe and it would be in friends and family on facebook. that changed last friday. during the paris attacks, they
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activated it for that. in other words, a human emergency as mark zuckerberg called it. they were criticized. 24 hours earlier, there were bombings in beirut and pooh em were killed and mark zuckerberg says well, we changed our minds after paris, it's an evolving in progress type of thing. and they activated it where bo boca haram and they're saying they don't count? >> i don't think it's a big deal about facebook. i think it's a big deal that 30-odd people killed in an explosion in nigeria, it was boca haram that did it. there's a huge number of people killed in beirut and it's barely reported and that's the story that -- this is a worldwide terror campaign. >> that's true. ashley: and people in beirut are saying, what about us.
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stuart: we're up 73 points now, want to talk about safe haven investing, that's what you've got. five seconds liz: a bullish target on apple. 163, that means market cap exceeds 900 billion in the next months. big price target out of goldman sachs citing apple tv, music and pay. and apple will increase moneyization of the iphone. stuart: goldman sachs says apple goes to $163 liz: in the next 12 months. stuart: and it's up now. it's moving. thank you, liz liz: sure. stuart: the apple shareholders, they thank you, too liz: you're welcome. stuart: something much more serious ap disgusting, turkish soccer fans booing a moment of silence in honor of parisian victims. disgraceful. and president obama's gq man of the year, executive power ain't
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what it used to be. judge napolitano joins us in a moment. the future belongs to the fast. and to help you accelerate, we've created a new company... one totally focused on what's next for your business. the true partnership where people,technology and ideas push everyone forward. accelerating innovation. accelerating transformation. accelerating next. hewlett packard enterprise.
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>> [crowd chanting] . those are turk iish soccer fans almost entirely muslim, booing a moment of silence held to memorialize the victims of the paris attack during a friendly soccer match between turkey and greece. it was a match attended by both the turkish and greek prime ministers. the moment of silence came and turkish crowd, it was in istanb istanbul, booed.
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>> they've been holding moments of silence at the soccer games and you could hear a pin drop. stuart: but turkey, a muslim society, they boo. let's check the big board. we're a safe haven, that's america. bring us your money liz: prosperity. >> interested in money. stuart: america is stable. ashley: it is. stuart: and we want to go towards prosperity and one hopes that we can move in that direction and the money is pouring in. trouble over there, bring it here. don't forget about gold, please. you'd think that at times, gold would go straight up. it's not. it's down to $1,068 per ounce and look at go pro, nothing to do with the terror or anything else, of course. that's a new low. 1932, and 1929 as we speak. an ugly number for you.
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now this. president obama interviewed in gq magazine about problems that he did not see coming with the presidency. here is the quote. what i didn't fully appreciate is how decentralized power is in this system. t only do i ha my own party, not only do i have to prevent the other party from blocking what the right thing to do is. that take your breath away, judge andrew napolitano, a constitutional scholar. >> correct, and obviously, one thinks of that. one would have to think what did he expect the presidency to be? the mod certain american president has so much power, so much discretion over the lives of individual americans, it would make george washington and thomas jefferson and james madison and any president pr prpre pre- woodrow wilson say is this
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the power. it's a democracy, he's only one of three branches of government and the more successful leaders in american history have been able to be leaders and they have people behind their ideas and work with people rather than badgering them and embarrassing them and as he said earlier today in the philippines, there are certain debates i don't want to hear. when did you hear that from an american president. stuart: it's astonishing, a constitutional scholar, that's what he was, the editor of the harvard law review. >> the editor in chief of the harvard law review. stuart: maybe he's not having a good week, i read to interview because you asked me to and we were going to discuss it. he was having a bad day. he's more intelligent than in that interview.
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it's a shame with someone with his education and background to express wonderment of the american presidency. stuart: he's railing against them and he has to persuade them to do the right thing. the other guys are doing the wrong thing. ashley: he's the anti-reagan, he was successful with both houses of congress, and leadership skills and-- >> this president is unwilling to use what leadership skills he has, and intellect i know he has to find common ground. he's willing to do that. i think it's going to get worse in the last 13 months of his presidency because of the l-word, legacy. he wants to do things unilaterally to leave a legacy he was unable to do by persuasive abilities. stuart: i'm breaking away, i've got an item of breaking news
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here from sweden. sweden raising its terror threat level after its security police received concrete information of a threat. again, sweden raising its terror threat level, a concrete threat, they say. coming up, i'm going to turn away from the migrant and refugee situation for a moment-- no, i'm sorry, i'm not. [laughter] no, i am not turning away syrian refugees from the u.s., that is islamophobic, or is it? he says they have to look at this. >> if i'm going in, they're going out. we can't take a chance. it's what sparks ideas. moves the world forward. invest with those who see the world as unstoppable. who have the curiosity to look beyond the expected
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haven, bring them here. bring us your tired and hungry and bring us your money. and s&p 500 up 2062. how about this one, more than half the country's governors are saying no syrian refugees in my state. well, the left is screaming xenophobia. isl islamophobia, actually. if i say i don't want syrian migrants in my state, am i islamophobic? >> you're know the islamophobic, every family is afraid of islamic extremists coming here and blowing us up, in l.a. and times square. my concern is if they open fire at chick-fil-a or cafe du monde?
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>> i say let the christians in first, they are the true refugees and genocide in the middle east. i say let them in first. am i, as the president says, shameless? >> not only that, unamerican, the president said. absolutely not. look, the krchristians are the ones getting slaughtered, systematically exterminated by the islamic radicals. at the same time we need to be prudent. give us your tired and your poor, your hungry, that's great, but as governor mike huckabee said we don't want the terrorists as well. what's interesting about this president, stuart, a couple of months ago this administration deported iraqi christians. chaldeans for immigration fraud. and had a german-christian family deported from our
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country they came here wanting to home school their children and obama administration wanted them deported. why are they deporting christians, but importing the muslims. stuart: if i say no to syrian migrants in my state. am i an islamophobe. >> then some said the sons of islam are taking war against the united states and taking it directly to the united states and fbi and officials are saying, syria is a failed state. we don't have a paper trail to track these refugees. stuart: one more point here, you brought it to us this morning, ashley, eight potential jihadists. ashley: from moracco arrested in istanbul. stuart: on the way to. ashley: they said they may have posed as refugees, they said,
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no, no, we're tourists. but hand it hand drawn mop to germany. stuart: thank you for joining us and is a very important day, appreciate it, sir. the coming up, the fbi is stepping up security, warning of a possible terror attack on american soil this holiday season. we've got that for you. russia and france, they are taking the lead to take out isis. not america. second hour of "varney & company" is two minutes away. why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use, is the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. ♪ reaction,
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a huge train station evacuated. suspicious badge. it appears we are indeed at war with isis. now, here at home the fbi steps up security. warning of possible terror attacks this holiday season. president obama, he takes shots at republics he calls them shameless and offensive for reducing to take syrian migrants. and, ladies and gentlemen, i have a personal story to tell you. our government at its finest and why i am so proud now to be an american. ashley: yay. stuart: hour two starts now. ♪ ♪ . stuart: fresh video out of france, the suburb of paris, courtesy of the daily mail, shows french authorities arresting two terror suspects involved in friday's paris attack.
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the man is cornered by armed police are riot shields, they shout out in english, you can't hear it very well, but you can see the scene here probably taking on a cell phone hanging out of someone's apartment window. they shout in english get on your knees. ashley, got anymore on this? ashley: just real quickly, seven people arrested in this, again, 4:00 a.m. local time. two terrorists dead, one a woman who blew herself up with a suicide vest. there were reports in french media that she made a phone call before she blew up her vest suggesting there are accomplices elsewhere. what we don't know is the alleged or believed mastermind behind all of this was captured or killed in this. so abdelhamid abaaoud the guy in the crazy hat, the belgium national, we don't know and they're also looking for eight suspects from friday night's attack. stuart: but they don't know if
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they got that guy or not. ashley: they don't. stuart: sweden, the terror threat level is obviously rising. it has raised its terror threat level. it says they've received quote a concrete threat and also we're getting a warning from the fbi. basically be vigilant during holiday season because there are potential attackers out there. be vigilant is the story. now, liz, you've got something more. liz: yeah, they're saying no specific threat but heightened vigilance at this holiday season at sports stadiums, shopping malls, restaurants, and what they're talking is the fbi has been training for a attack, the 2008 attack launched by 10 militants, 164 people were killed. so they're looking at crowded foot traffic areas as well. they've been training for a possible attack. i will say this that the fbi has basically charged more than five dozen people in the isis with isis being isis
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sympathizers, 250 american have traveled abroad and 47,000 people now on the no fly list. fbi has 10,000 open cases, including isis. stuart: one more update for you, ashley. ashley: , yes. stuart: i got it on the wires that the -- ashley: huge train station, the one that the euro star, the train comes into paris led a badge found suspicious immediately. the entire building evacuated. we're going to hear a lot of this i have a feeling in the coming days and weeks. stuart: now this. i'm going to call this shameless. in fact, it's disgusting. the scene at a soccer match. greece playing turkey in they have a moment of silence and that moment of silence was interrupted by boos. just listen to this for a moment.
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. stuart: turkey is majority muslim, in fact, entirely muslim and that game was being held. ashley: the tension was high in that game because there was conflict between would it greece and turkey, the first time since they've played each other in eight years and then this happens in the moment of silence for the victims. stuart: an absolute disgrace. ashley: yeah,. stuart into the european union. that you know? >> they do. liz: not seeing any statement from turkish officials condemning the booing. it's developing story. stuart: i'll restrain myself. however, what you're looking at now is the big board and safe haven investing, trouble over there, bring your money here, we're safe here, this is the united states of america and up we go with the dow industrials. same story with the s&p 500.
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that's on a roll and that is now positive for the calendar year. how about the price of oil? now, there's an important indicator for everything stock market included. very important numbers coming out in 24 minutes. they will tell us how much supply of oil we've got. if the supply goes way up, it is possible that the price of oil would drop before $40 a barrel and that would be a very big move for all the financial markets. 10:30 we'll find out. gopro, new low there. they're only at $19 per share. that thing has gone straight down recently. target, numbers look good on the surface. investors gigging a bit deeper, they don't like what they see. target's down 4.5%. however, look at this. now, this is apple, and it is a winner. 3% gain. why? because goldman sachs says buy that thing, it's going to -- what was it, liz? 163. liz: 163, that will be about 55-dollar bump up.
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so that means semi-nearing in goldman's mind a $1 trillion market cap in the next 12 months. stuart: okay. now this. we've been hearing from some generals, retired generals that 10,000 troops, american troops could take out isis. senator lindsey graham on this program earlier today. >> going to introduce after thanksgiving author to use military force not limited by time, geography, or means, i'm going to do to isis what we did on 9/11 for whatever president to do what is nose destroy isis before they hit here at home. stuart: declare war, that's what he says. former ambassador joins us now. i think you heard what lindsey graham said if not i'll pair phrase it for you. after thanksgiving he introduces a bill on congress that declares war on isis. you're the former ambassador
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to kuwait. what do you say to that? >> well, one thing i would say is the president asked him for some time to give him authority to use force and, in fact, penal criticized if by a number of members of congress from going ahead and using force so i'm pleased that congress will move in that direction that that's essential as a country that we be unified. stuart: what do you make of a president what authority he's got to use force, he doesn't use it. take, for example, the oil tankers that isis has been moving around in the former iraq. that's their money supply and we've been letting them pull this oil to a safe port so that they've been making money. we've been doing this for a year. we haven't stopped them. we couldn't stop them. whys has the president use the force available to him to go after isis? why not? >> well, i really can't explain what goes on in the president's mind. stuart: well, do you approve
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of it? >> no. i was going to go ahead and say that you're quite right. that trying to cut their ability to earn money, raise funds is criticallily important in bringing them down ultimately, and i was very pleased to see that we hit them last week and very surprised that we hadn't done that before. what else can i say? . stuart: would you approve of american troops, 10,000 of them being part of a multinational force that goes after isis on the ground? >> absolutely not. absolutely not. we need to be very sober about this. putting troops on the ground, we've done that before in a couple of different places, we've not had tremendous success. could we actually wipe out the islamic state? that structure? yeah, of course. probably major loss of life and some other consequences but you're not going to kill the ideology by destroying a structure. you're just not and that be needs to be done with the people in the region.
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stuart: i take your point but wouldn't you if you knock out isis the state, knock out the infrastructure by which they deliver terror around the world? >> only moderately. look, for these people, they're easy to go out and about and do things. you don't need a lot of planning, you don't need a lot of infrastructure, we saw that with al-qaeda after we succeeded in putting them down for a while that they were still able to do things. i think the consequences of scattering them around the world could even be worse. you have to think about these things. stuart: okay., mr. ambassador. thank you very much indeed for your expertise. we hear you loud and clear. thank you, sir. appreciate it. i've got two news items about the election for you today. first of all, donald trump, he's leading in the latest poll. it comes from the university of massachusetts. 31% trump, 22% carson, and rubio has 9%. that's the line up in the university massachusetts poll.
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bobby jindal drops out of the race, saying it's not his time. that happened on last night's fox news special report. now to president obama mocking the states that have chosen not to accept refugees. watch this. >> apparently they're scared of widows and orphans coming into the united states of america. first they were worried about the press being too tough on them during debates now they're worried about three-year-old orphans. that doesn't sound very tough to me. and it needs to stop because the world is watching. stuart: by the way, it was a woman who blew herself up with a suicide vest this morning in paris. ashley pratt is with us. ashley, i made the judgment that the president was mocking his republican critics. i used that word, mocking. what word would you use? >> i would use the same one, and i thought it was very
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shameless of him to say that especially since his rhetoric against republicans isn't something the country needs, what we need are an edge because they're not confident in his strategy to defeat or destroy isis and i think right there would tell you when isis threatens to attack washington d.c. and merge at heart, americans are on edge about that and the fact that they would rather play word games rather than declare war on radical islam i think is the problem. stuart: now, that seems to be the divisive issue at the moment in america. whether we let in 10,000 syrian refugees and another 100,000 later. i'm not sure that it's -- that it's all republicans united against all democrats. i see some democrats on this side on the republican side of the fence. is that what you're seeing too? >> yes. actually my home state of new hampshire, the governor there is a democrat and republican senator kelly i know has made a push to not allow this to happen and the
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democrat followed that lead. and i think at this point what we're seeing is i think three or four democratic governors who stepped in with republican governors and showed some unity and said this isn't the good well-being of the american people and have said this vetting process is not up to snuff of what we need if we're adding massive amounts of people. and one thing i would like to point out, the boston marathon people, they were refugees. so there's a lot of unity which the president alluded to from the boston attack. there was but i think we need to have a serious conversation around our vetting process and why they were allowed to come here. stuart: ashley pratt, thank you very much for coming today. liz: a new york times poll done a week before the attack, 68% of democrats believed that the president's fight of isis was going badly. stuart: wait a minute. i'm going to repeat that.
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this is a week before the attack? liz: november 6th, yes. stuart: new york times. liz: cbs poll. stuart: 68% of democrats said that the fight against isis is not going well. liz: not going well and 72% in general. stuart: and later the president said right before the paris attacks that isis is being contained. ashley: correct. stuart: there's a juxtaposition -- i can't -- liz: there's a clear disconnect. stuart: a disconnect. thank you very much indeed. "the new york times" says ben carson's having trouble grasping foreign policy issues. more bias from the media? or a legitimate concern? which is it? we'll have details. and the leaders of the house and the senate now calling for a pause on america. can they stop the president's plan? good question. more varney in a moment
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so jill, i know the markets have taken a hit lately. mmm hmm. just wanted to touch base. we came to manage over $800 billion in assets, through face time when you really need it. it's how edward jones makes sense of investing. it's more than it's multi-layered security and flexibility. with centurylink you get advanced technology solutions. including cloud and hosting services - all from a trusted it partner. centurylink. your link to what's next.
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that russian planted on the plane. ashley, what do we have? ashley: yeah, the magazine posted photos of what they claim as the bomb that brought down the russian airliner goes on to say it was initially planned to bring down a western plane over the sinai but changed to russian target after russian began syrian strikes, it goes on to say that the bomb was smuggled onto a russian plane after finding security loophole at the airport in egypt. stuart: here it is. check that big board. high anxiety everywhere in the world pushes the money here. that's why the dow industrials are up close to 100 points at 17,575 and the same story with the s& s&p s&p 500 now positive for the year. this is safe haven investing in america. here comes the money. a new low, however, for gopro. there's one investment firm that's cut its price target to 15 and down it goes. another 8% lower today.
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got to get to the migrant crisis. more than half the country's governors, i believe the total is now 33. they're saying "no" to steerian refugees. congressman luke joins us from capitol hill, republican from indiana. you -- one of those states which says "no" to these refugees. now, overnight, president obama held a press conference, it was in the philippines, and he says that you are un-american for doing what you're doing in andy. your response, sir. >> well, america is one of the most fair-minded and generous nations on the planet. but we also have to look out for our national security. the president's comments don't make our country any safer, and they ignore the very real concerns there are about the vetting process we have that the syrian refugees that come to this country mean no harm. of course a five-year-old orphan is not a national security threat but a
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combat-aged man is, and we need to make sure that we're being careful here. stuart: now, the president also called -- i believe he called jeb bush shameless because jeb had suggested that maybe we let the christians in, the christian refugees, they can come in first. i think you are a jeb bush supporter if i'm not minimum of. so what's your response to the president? >> well, i mean i wish the president would spend more time leading and a little less time trying to be a cable tv commentator. the reality is this is that many of these refugees are fleeing religious persecution and all jeb bush is suggested is that we ought to look out for christians that are clearly fleeing religious persecution in that area of the world being murdered, slaughtered, raped, of course we should look out for them. stuart: congressman, real fast, i don't mean to throw this at you unprepared. but they really morning senator lindsey graham was on the program, presidential
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candidate, and he told us that after thanksgiving he would introduce a motion in congress that would declare war on isis. i know i'm throwing this at you, i know you've not heard this before but your response, sir. >> i would support it. we should very clearly put forward an aughtization that says the president is authorized to use military force to defeat isis. we never to get serious and one of the challenges we face as a nation is the president has not called us to the true and yet death of this problem. this is a generousal challenge, and we need to defeat them. stuart: congress man luke, republican, indiana, thank you very much for being with us today, sir, we appreciate it. >> thanks, stuart,. stuart: all right. coming up. a very personal story of immigration and, yes, the government. the government at its best. my take on why i am now so proud to be, yes, now, an american. i have asthma...
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stuart: shortly on this program. putin. he's come out swinging against islamic terrorists and judy miller says he could be the key to taking out isis completely. she's here at 10:30 and a new dietary supplement claims to help women get pregnant. we'll talk to the cofounder of pregprep. last thursday i became an american citizen. yes, i did. with immigration, a very contentious subject, i want to tell you my very positive story. last thursday was one of the best days of my life. certainly one of the most emotional. well, i arrived at the federal building at
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newark, new jersey in the morning. i was there with 100 other applicants, it looked like a convention. you're waiting and your name is called and you go in for your interview. the immigration officer goes through paperwork and administers the test. the last question was when is the last day for filing your federal tax return? well, i know that one. april 15th. yes, i passed the test. then there's more waiting. nobody seemed to mind, though. we all wanted to be there. it was the happiest crowd i have seen in a government office. then you're directed to the swearing in room. in comes the director of immigration and right from the get-go, he is smiling and so are we. this is a celebration. 85 people in my group from 31 countries about to become americans. you stand for the oath and officials walk up and down the aisles to make sure you are saying it, no faking, you sing the star-spangled banner,
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america the beautiful, and there's not a dry eye in the world, it's a joyful occasion. three times a day, five days a week, that room is filled with annual midnight americans. they say it's always the same. tears and cheers as a cross-section of planet joins the club. citizens of the united states of america. hats off to the immigration department. they conducted a ceremony that had greatly meaning. it was made clear that citizenship is more than voting, serving on juries or getting a passport. it is being part of an idea, a unique idea that people from all over the world can come together live freely under the rules and responsibilities of the constitution. that's america. no place like it. i feel honored and privileged to be here. thank you, everyone.
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stuart: we have been telling you about the rising target of anxiety of terror all around the world. that is pushing money into the united states of america. that is why the dow industrials are up. this is safe haven investing. moments ago we started to receive news on oil. very important. do we have the numbers? okay. is that a bill, please? >> 1 million barrels. stuart: and increase of 1 million barrels of oil in storage. >> 1 billion. stuart: hold on a second.
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justin, tell me what was billed and oil? have not gotten not yet. okay. okay. a bill of 252,000. it is not as big in storage as we were expecting. forecasting 1.9. that is why the price of oil has not gone down. it has helped pretty steady. the amount of storage did not go up as much as we were expecting. you have to use them. 250,000 barrels. we've got it. a russian news anchor tweeting who tunes remarks on terrorism. this is a good one. putin, to forgive the terraces up to god. to send them to him, that is up to me.
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judy miller is with us. i do not want to start with that. i want to start with putin. >> he has a very good person writing his tweets. stuart: he appears to be leading the charge along with france. >> the two leaders that have declared war on isis. so has president cc. he is are ready fighting a war within his own country. he has no troops. >> president obama steadfastly refuses to use more force than he has already. >> he refuses to acknowledge that the strategy is not working. reclaimed 25% of the territory. isis ideology itself and the
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little palisades are spreading all over the middle east and north africa. stuart: i know you cannot get inside president obama's head. can you explain this to me? >> yes, i can. between targeting isis and all islamic extremists. we do not want to do this because then you alienate the people you need to do the fighting and win this war. stuart: a shot at where the battle was this morning. the century of paris. you have been there. so have i. >> more arabic script on the street signs and store signs then there is french. you go around and talk to people. the young people tell you.
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stuart: you have no go areas. >> a french parliamentarian called the second european. that is the uprising of people feeling more of kin with isis and the countries in which they are living. they will act against their states. these states have to be ready to confront that. stuart: that is a civil war. >> that is a civil war in france france has refused to it knowledge it. he wanted to get along with people. he wanted to outreach to them.
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you cannot outreach to isis. it will not work. >> law enforcement is so overwhelmed, stuart. i do not know what they are going to do there. >> judy miller, thank you. i have got something else for you. secretary of state john kerry. he is under fire. roll that tape. i think everybody would feel that. there is a particular prize, focus and even a legitimacy in terms of, not a legitimacy, but a rationale that you could attach. stuart: offering a rationale. he is a terror.
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>> that french magazine. it was absolutely appalling. i understand that. this is a different type of attack that we saw in paris last friday. >> to blame the victims and not the serial murder terrace is beyond. stuart: he cannot figure out why there is the latest attack. the rationale on charlie have no the secretary of state in paris. >> he was speaking english, not french for a change. this time, i think that he just misspoke. i am sure that is not what he intended to say. gerri: thank you again. appreciate it. i will bring you the sector report today. we are following oil. scott, we have a build. 250,000 barrels of oil in
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storage. nonetheless, oil is at $40 a barrel. your comment, please. >> it is about supply and demand. the numbers that we got today, bullish for oil. because of such oversupply, we really needed that to send a number higher. i think that oil will trade heavy. probably down to 35. we have four wars we are worried about. it will get dangerous. stuart: you do not watch the show every day. is there such, are we really swimming in oil? >> yes. you really want to make it simple. almost double what it was this time last year. probably four times as much this time than last year.
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we do not have anybody doing anything in the middle east. we have done well with our production. we need bullish numbers today to really get us going. it is not enough to keep it above. stuart: thank you for joining us. a very important day. certainly for the world as it confronts terror. a new dietary supplement claims to help women get pregnant. the makers say it could be an alternative to expensive fertility treatments. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on everything i buy for my studio. ♪ and that unlimited 2% cash back from spark means thousands of dollars each year going back into my business...
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♪ >> good morning from the floor of the new york stock exchange. stocks in rally mode today. it looks like the s&p is swinging back into positive territory. the federal reserve revealing more clues. rate hikes. plus about apple. shares up about 3% year. goldman sachs saying it is one of their top picks. shares could rise another 43%. go pro. this is your loser today. shares plunging a present. $20 below for the first time. the company just ipo.
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investors are not too impressed. more "varney & company" coming up straight ahead. ♪ surprise!!!!! we heard you got a job as a developer! its official, i work for ge!! what? wow... yeah! okay... guys, i'll be writing a new language for machines so planes, trains, even hospitals can work better. oh! sorry, i was trying to put it away... got it on the cake. so you're going to work on a train? not on a train...on "trains"! you're not gonna develop stuff anymore? no i am... do you know what ge is?
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a 3% gain. goldman sachs says by it. they have a 12 month uprights target of $163 per share. apple is up $3 at 117. president obama speaking about the frustrations of being president in an interview with gq magazine. here is the interesting quote. what i did not fully appreciate is how decentralized power is in the system. not only do i have to persuade my own party, i have to prevent the other party from blocking what the right thing to do is. ashley: amazing that he did not realize that this is what it is to be a president of the united states. he also said in the interview, somehow in the first two years of my presidency i think a certain arrogance stepped in. again, sewing some naïve.
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liz: what ashley said. we really capture the countries of imagination with our campaign. would you consider being a supreme court justice and you pause. the g2 reported that you pause. it is very important in this country. stuart: does not have the temperament for it. making it clear that he would consider it. that is all purely speculative. he did pause when he was asked the question. stuart: all right. thank you, everybody. this is interesting. a new product on the market. it is called preg prep. an alternative to expensive fertility treatment.
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doctor laura. the name of the product is preg prep. >> preg prep conception kit. you say it encourages conception. easier or more reliable, so to speak. what evidence do you have that it is induced to of those conceptions? >> the first is a vita prep. a preconception vitamin. women do not realize they really have to have full again their system before they get right and it appeared the second component is called fertile prep feared how this works is the main barrier between the sperm and egg. if it is sticky, they can have trouble getting to the egg feared this printed out and hope to get to the egg easier. advertising it as pro- conception. what is your evidence to say
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that it works? >> there are a few things. recommending yuko x to help women get pregnant. stuart: i am sorry. i have to interrupt feared you have a reliable study done by an independent authority that says yes, preg prep does work. >> a study that looks at our main ingredient here at. stuart: where is the study from? >> international journal of of stature x. nine or 10 women. it is basically showing that these women got pregnant more with this than with placebo. stuart: we spoke with doctors before we did this interview. we asked them, what is this product all about, does it work? is it a legitimate product for conception. a lot of them, in fact all of
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them said, no, it is not. it is snake oil. if you really were reliable getting women pregnant, did some drug company would you pay do $100 million for this product long time ago. that is what they say. do you agree with that push and mark what you have to say? >> i disagree with that. i just spoke with a doctor yesterday. doctor sandy davis. the first ibf for seizure in new york state. about how to get pregnant naturally. stuart: you do not have a reliable study of that product. >> we do not have our particular product. stuart: the accusation is that you are preying on women in a very difficult situation. >> this is not four infertility. this is not someone with an fertility. you need to speak with your
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doctor before using this product. interestingly, plan b, sarah birth control pills, that thickening cervical mucus. stuart: how much? >> $29.99. i am the cofounder. stuart: a private company? >> yes. stuart: over-the-counter? >> yes. stuart: sales this year? >> since we launched, four months, 15,000 hits. stuart: 15,000 kids at 29.99. trying to do the math. thank you very much. we appreciate it. the fbi on high alert. warning of and i -- warning of a possible attack here during this holiday season. republican saying no to serious migrants.
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my take on that at 11:00 o'clock this morning. ♪ e sense of it all? a simple, unbiased stock score consolidated from the opinions of independent analysts... is that too much to ask? nope. equity summary score, powered by starmine, will help you execute your ideas with speed and conviction. and it's only on fidelity.com. open an account and find more of the expertise you need to be a better investor.
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these are the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp, an organization serving the needs of people 50 and over for generations. plus, nine out of ten plan members surveyed say they would recommend their plan to a friend. remember, medicare doesn't cover everything. the rest is up to you. call now, request your free decision guide and start gathering the information you need to help you keep rolling with confidence. go long™. ♪ >> any member of congress rejects the idea that we should be involved in total war does not understand our homeland
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faces. we will go down in history as a very sorry soul. >> putting troops on the ground, we have done that before in a couple different places. we have not had tremendous success. could we ask or wipe out the islamic state, that structure? of course. a major loss of life and other consequences, but you will not kill the ideology by destroying a structure. >> a really busy jampacked first two hours of "varney & company." those are just some highlights. tune in every morning at 9:00 a.m. sharp. do not miss a second. ashley: the fbi on high alert. concerned about the possibility of an attack on the u.s. during this very busy holiday season that is coming up. rick grenell, former spokesman for the un joins us. what was being played out in europe and elsewhere must raise
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the alert to the very highest level for here in the united states as we do get geared up for a very busy holiday season. >> there is no question. sleeper cells inside the united states. we know that. we know that we are at war with isis. isis is putting out propaganda and video. american blood is the blood that they want. they are saying that we are a target. we have to be vigilant. we also have to remember that we need to go on with our daily lives. we should not try to cower in fear. we need to be able to rely on our leaders together the intelligence and protect us and make us safe. i think that that is why many people are trying to push the obama administration into taking more action. some of us are not feeling like they are doing enough. stuart: a russians news anchor
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tweeting putin's remarks on terror. forgive the terrorists is up to god, but to send them to him, well, that is up to me. is putin the key to taking these guys out? he certainly comes off as very strong. >> he is always a laser focus on russia and defend in russia. he has not been that interested in taking out isis. he has been interested in defending aside. assad is his ally. a russian passenger jet. hundreds of people were killed. mostly russians. they are demanding action from putin. i think that isis has picked the wrong fight like taking down the jet. putin is reckless enough to actually just go after them and do something. now look, you see french
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president hollande who is just as angry and just as focused on taking out isis. the russian french combination is clearly going to go after isis. i am just a little worried that we are off to the side and we are not trying to make the plan, make the world plan implemented. it is always better when the united states is involved. stuart: 15 seconds. i never thought i would hear the day that the russian and french leading the attack on terrorism. how strange is that. we just lost him. the satellite went down. all right. coming up. a black lives matter protester gets aggressive. even violent. the supporter of the movement says the protesters just went too far this time. he will join us at 11:45 a.m. eastern. directing his anger at republicans. not isis. he says that it is shameful.
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syrian migrants should not be allowed in the states. meghan mccain has that. ♪ the pursuit of healthier. it begins from the second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen.
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. stuart: president obama made a forceful statement today, but he directed his anger, not at isis, not at terror, but at republicans. yet again he saves his emotion, his fire for his fellow americans. speaking in the philippines he says republicans were using offensive language when they called for a pause on syrian migrants. he said it needs to stop. the day before he said his critics were shameful because they had suggested letting christian refugees in immediately. shameful? this from a president who did absolutely nothing when muslims were slaughtering christians by the thousands. he did nothing when isis filled the vacuum he left in iraq. he dismissed them as the jv team. he did nothing when americans were beheaded.
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he did nothing when they were butchered and women sold into sex slavery. and now does nothing when isis strikes in paris. does he ever speak of any action of that? no, he does not. instead he grows testy when the media asks pointy questions. he's have i seenably upset when asked why can't we take these bastards out and now disagree on americans who insist on thousands of syrian migrants. there's always one thing this president does. always campaigning. he's good at it. and the job of the president is first and foremost the safety of america. turning presidential anger on americans is frankly insulting. yet again our friends are in despair, our enemies are laughing. ♪ ♪
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stuart: i've got -- what i've got here is first to go to turkey, authorities have detained eight suspected isis terrorists at an airport, they were posing as refugees going to germany. one had a hand drawn map that took them through greece, syria, and hungary, meanwhile today, gun fire explosions flat out military battle frankly. two dead, one woman blew herself up with a suicide vest. 25 others arrested overnight, there were 36 weapons confiscated. i want to bring this. we just got this in. it's from ted cruz, republican presidential candidate. here's what he says about president obama's remarks. now, let me backtrack to president obama's remarks for a moment.
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he said that it was un-american for republicans to oppose bringing syrian migrants into their states. and earlier, he'd call jeb bush shameless because jeb bush had suggested bringing in the christians before the muslims. ted cruz's responding to what the president said. he said the president's remarks were offensive and contrary to american values and bunging of a president. so ted cruz going right at it. there's a battle royal here between and the president his critics who the president is bad-mouthing. we're on it. want to back to my take which was at the top of the hour. president obama, yes, redirecting his anger at republicans, not at isis terrorists. roll the tape. >> apparently they're scared of widows and orphans coming into the united states of america. first they were worried about the press being too tough on them during debates now
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they're worried about 3-year-old orphans. that doesn't sound very tough to me. and it needs to stop because the world is watching. stuart: fox news contributor megan mccain is here. you heard the president, you heard my take, your response is? >> first of all, i'm horrified and disgusted how much president obama politicizing this tragedy right now. this is my other thing. if we shouldn't be worried about the face of terrorism, which we've been told for a long time doesn't have a face, that's why little old ladies are patted down at the airport and kids are. there's no face to terrorism, why are you now making fun of people who are now scared of things who have legitimate reasons why people should be fearful right now? and i don't understand where we got to a point in our country where where he would rather be politically correct than keep our country safe? and it's really scary and dangerous. stuart: i want your opinion. i just declared to the world that i became an american citizen. >> congratulations. welcome. we'll go to walmart and buy a
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gun. [laughter] . stuart: i wasn't expecting that. am i a good american? am i a decent american or am i just an islam if i say put my head against american migrant migrants. >> i'm not an islam phobe and i don't think i need to prei say that by saying i want to keep americans safe, we have a lot of reasons to be fearful and a lot of reasons to be cautious and i don't think it's un-american to want to take a pause and vet these people if we can, i'm at this point why i don't think we should be taking any at the moment. stuart: i want you to listen to donald trump. here's his take on what he had to say about how he would handle isis and those syrian refugees. roll tape. >> if they come into this country, they're going out. if i win, they're going out. you can't take a chance. you know, if you take thousands of people and, again, i hear it's going to be many, many more
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than what you're talking about right now. but if you take thousands of people, sean, you will you need is a couple. you don't need 25, you don't need hundred. stuart: now, megan, he's telling it the way he says it. he's going straight at it and i know you're not a trump supporter because he did say something unpleasant about your father. >> it got personal. stuart: it did indeed get personal. i understand your position what what do you say to what he just said? >> i agree with him. i know one rational person it only takes one marco rubio set, you take in 1,000 and 999 are good, it takes one. the things i don't understand what are going on right now, there are legitimate reasons to be fearful. i live in manhattan, the last thing i want is another terrorist incident to happen. there's proof now that there were warnings this was going to happen in paris. our president says we're not going to change the course with after all of this, things are going to be the same. there are legitimate things to be fearful. i don't think this president is keeping us safe right now
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so maybe not letting in syrian refugees when we can't fix the post office, i don't have faith that they can screen these refugees. stuart: well, now 33 states where the governors and some democrats in there who have said "no" to syrian refugees. this seems to be a gigantic split and it's not simply along party lines. this is a split. i see eventually the president having to accept a pause on new syrian migrants. how about you? >> i think he's going to have to accept a pause, i think any rational personal would know in this moment and climate we're going to have to. what happens in the future? i don't know. but my home state of arizona, my governor saying he's not going to accept refugees and i don't think he's wrong. stuart: i say eventually the president will have to yield a little bit and pause. ashley: why would you want to rush through given we've seen so far. liz: do you think paul ryan could hold the coalition and build the house and the senate? >> i think people are more liberal in their leadings. the last thing people want is
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another terrorist attack to happen in this country and just pausing and taking your time to get through this, i don't understand -- liz: i should have said mitch mcconnell. stuart: you're right, liz. very soon it's ryan, mitch mcconnell build that goes through congress saying pause on the syrian migrants. liz: right. stuart: then what does the president do? >> what happens when assad was gassing these people? there was a redline, the president did nothing and now we're all scared, now we're going to politicize this? i don't know. i thought you were right. stuart: you thought i was right? >> i always think you're right. [laughter] . stuart: megan, thank you so much. >> thank you. congratulations on becoming an american. stuart: thank you very much indeed. we'll go to walmart, shall we? >> buy a gun. stuart: okay. now this. the fbi's warning of the heightened risk of terror attack over the holidays. specifically sleeper cells sympathetic to isis. liz? liz: they're saying heightened
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vigilance and what they've been doing is training along the lines -- preparing according to sources of along the lines of 2008 attack where it just took ten islamic terrorists to kill 164 people over four days. a series of coordinated attacks, they wounded over 300. so we've already seen heightened vigilance, for example, the giants stadium and also in cincinnati. it's not big cities, but small cities as well. so wherever there's an area of increased foot traffic this holiday season, there will be heightened vigilance and calling in the police department, the fire department, and local port authorities and the transportation authorities as well. stuart: did you know that the new york city police chief reports that he is training in an exercise for 24 separate and simultaneous attacks on the city of new york because it will be like mumbai, it will be like paris. liz: there are a series of
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attacks in mumbai, so that's what they're training along those lines. stuart: all right. everybody, move on. we can't move far. the big board. this is safe haven in america, bring me your money, please. looks like the money is arriving too because dow's up 94 when the rest of the world is on high anxiety alert. here comes the money. here. how about oil? we got a smaller increase in supply than was expected but nonetheless we're still at $40 a barrel. pretty low. how about gopro? eye got a new all -- i think it's an all-time low for that. nineteen dollars a share. down another 7% as of right now. and then we have target. numbers look good on the surface but investors started digging a little deeper, didn't like what they saw, down 5% on target. however, apple probably the stock of the decade this far in the decade. a winner today because goldman sachs says buy it, it's going
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to $163 a share within the next 12 months. 116 now. going up says goldman sachs. still on the markets. i've got to return to our theme of the day. that is the terror threat rising that the markets here are up. i say it's safe haven investment ashley webster you're going to say, no, stuart varney annual midnight american you're wrong. ashley: i would never say that. of course the safe money is coming here. no doubt about it. the treasuries, the price go up, the yield go down. although interestingly gold yesterday you would think that would be a safe haven, finished the day low yesterday, hadn't been seen in five years. almost down to 1,000 an ounce. it was 1,000 i believe in $80 per ounce, which is remarkable it shows you there's defiance in this market. stuart: gold is about inflation and not about world crisis. ashley: no, but it can be seen as that. liz: even after 9/11 the markets recovered very rapidly
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regaining their losses within about a month. stuart: well, up 88 points now, 75 on the dow. safe haven investing, is it not? ashley: yes. stuart: now, there is a plan to defeat isis. 10,000 american troops on the ground. that will be the plan and don't stay there very long. just a matter of weeks that they say would neutralize the threat. lieutenant colonel tony shafer on that plan. next ♪ is it the insightful strategies and analytical capabilities that make edward jones one of the biggest financial services firms in the country? or is it 13,000 financial advisors who take the time to say thank you? 'night jim. gonna be a while? i am liz
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backtrack a little, the president blasted republicans over migrants coming here, now, ted cruz calls his comments responsive contrary to american values. he said he sounded unpresidential. he said to the president, addressing him correctly, come back and insult me to my face. this is -- ashley, this is personal almost. ashley: it really is and it's sad it's gone into this, i find it very undignified and -- stuart: but it was the president who got personal first and foremost. ashley: absolutely. stuart: shameless. ashley: shameless and, you know, what's wrong with putting safety first? that's my question, that's the point of the republican governors and one democrat, by the way. wait a minute, what's the rush? . stuart: what is the first job of the united states of america? ashley: keep this country saf.
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stuart: the safety of the people in america. you can't have that. ashley: exactly. and of course tax people who even suggest that maybe there's a better path which is -- stuart: ted cruz has fired right back. liz: and the president in his speech said essentially, you know, criticizing folks who want to pop off. stuart: used that expression. liz: well, senate intelligence ranking democrat chair senator diana feinstein popping off when she contradicted president obama saying she's essentially saying isis is not contained. it's actually expanded and never been more concerned. stuart: and she was not popping off. liz: no, she wasn't. stuart: no, she wasn't. presidential candidate lindsey graham says we should send 10,000 troops, american soldiers to syria to defeat isis. listen to what he said earlier on this program today. >> you need 100,000 troops, most of them would come from the region. 10,000 would include the american component. here's what. stuart: what did she 10,000
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american on the ground. >> as part of a regional force. 10,000 is not enough. but that's enough to give the arabs and the turks the capacity to win. stuart: shafer knows a thing or two about military planning, 10,000 military soldiers, would it be isis? >> no. it wouldn't and i think this is the issue. we can have former commander central command and give him two brigades of marines and wipe out isis in 30 days. that's not the issue. the issue here is long term victory to reestablish good governance in a region now dominated by terrorists. it's not simply taking a hammer and beating people to death. listen, use the house comparison. if you want to build a house to stand, you've got to remove the old one off there. bombing it back into the stone age creates the second barrier creating the ground turned. what we need to do here is think through this. we need to be architects not people coming in with sledgehammers, his plan is
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naïve, it's a plan that an air force lawyer, colonel would put together based on his limited knowledge. stuart: wait a second. he's talking about taking them on directly. not bombing them back into the rubble stone age. just taking them on and hanging them. that's what he's talking about. >> we plan on doing that. general is now putting together a coalition to do what we're talking about. what graham is saying take 10,000 troops, put them in the field and achieve victory. it's much more complicated than that. the gulf war into '91 using a lot of arab folks and then what we have to do here, stuart, is create a nato. nato-type organization to help bring peace in europe and stability. this is not simply about putting troops in the field and leaving. this is about putting together a condominium which can take over civil military actions after the victory. he didn't think that through and that's why i'm critical of his plan.
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it's one thing to say you need to put boots on the ground to do x, y, z, he didn't clarify that to begin with and secondly, my mentor once said president clinton would say can we go do x? yes, we can but what next? so it's the what next piece that he and other folks on the conservative side tend to miss. stuart: i'm with you. i understand you've got to think it through. i've got 20 seconds left. you wouldn't object to 10,000 soldiers going through and wiping a few of them out, would you? >> i don't. and it's not the number. it's never been about the number. it's the mission of he has to rebuild the confidence in all the arab leaders that president obama squandered. it's not saying we stepped up, it's about being there after we stepped up, that's something that takes time, simply him saying we can do this does not mean it can be done. stuart: all right, tony with we are hearing you loud and clear. thank you for joining us. >> thank you, sir,. stuart: now, it is being called the hot new thing about
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crowd has assembled to grieve for the 129 people killed on friday in paris. that is taking place in belgium as of right now. a somber crowd. bated the dow jones industrial average is up 111 points with all that's going on around the world, this is a safe haven place, the united states, the money's pouring in here, and we've reached 17.6 on the dow. up 111. how about this? a messaging app called telegram, uses two layers of encryption to keep messages private and undetectable. being used by isis to communicate freely and secretly. ashley, details? ashley: yeah, it's being called the hot new thing among jihaddists, as you mentioned two layers of encryption, very hard to break into, isis is using this to great effect, they can create group chats up
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to 200 members, spread information using this and they use it to broadcast big messages, they also use it to raise money in an environment that's very difficult for those that would like to get this information to get access to. so they say -- people talk about what's app and all of that, this is the preferred app for terrorists. it's based in berlin, by the way, which is interesting. the app. stuart: that is. now, many had it. more than half the u.s. governors oppose refugees coming to their state. they say the threat is too great and then there's new york city mayor bill de blasio will welcome them with open arm. de blasio says closing borders, that's a victory for terrorists. we're on that story
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stuart: now this is war. the russians stepping up their attacks in syria. russian air force says it launched a mass strike on isis targets. the russians carried out 59 flights today, they say they destroyed 149 isis targets. that's from russia. triple digit gain for the dow industrial, this is safe haven investing, which everything is going to pot, violence over there, here the money comes in.
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up to 122 now for the dow industrial. more than you'll half of state governments say "no." no state refugees coming into their states. former governor for ohio is with us. yours, ohio, you're one of the states that says "no" and president obama says that a you're shameless and b you are -- you don't -- you're not a good american. what's your response to that? >> well, i just think that this thing has been overblown. the bottom line is that during the last four and a half years we've allowed in about 2,200 of these refugees and put them in vetting process that involve the fbi, the state department, defense, homeland security, and i think we ought to continue to allow that to take place. but we're certainly not going to be able to take care of -- you know, 85,000 people is one of the things the president talked about.
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and we did 2,200 in four and a half years. so you know that in order to really continue the process, the vetting process, we're going to have to expend a whole lot of money to get the job done. so what i would say is this. let's not take the position that we're not going to let them in. we're going to let them in and vet them as we have in the past to make sure that the right people are coming in and we're not going to get bad people. stuart: what's wrong with the pause? isn't that what ohio is saying? governor john kasich, isn't he saying wait. wait. wait. we can't let them in. let's have a pause of these people coming in. what's wrong with that? >> i don't -- the point is this. we should continue to allow them to come in under the vetting process that we have, and we shouldn't come out and say "you can't come to our state, you can't come to some other state, you can't come to america" because that plays
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into the hand. stuart: what did she how do you vet a young man in his 20s who comes from syria where there's no paper trail that's reliable. >> well, you don't let them. stuart, you don't let them in if you don't have the paperwork. how did we allow in the 2,200 people during the last four and a half years? you don't let them in. stuart: you did not let them in. i'm confused. did you let them into ohio or not? >> i'm saying to you that the states that i don't know how many people have come to ohio. the states that are taking the new refugees it's california, it's texas, and it's michigan, but we have a process in place, we'll just let the process continue to work and that means we're not going to be able to get as many people in here as the president has represented we get in here because we can't do it. stuart: do you think you're un-american? >> i don't think -- it's got nothing to do about un-american. it's about basically doing what. stuart: what did she that's what you just said.
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>> well, the president is -- still doesn't understand how to deal with people. he has incited people to react the way some people have reacted to him. and what he doesn't understand is that never has. he's going to have to work with the legislative body and talk about these things in a normal way and not do some of the stuff that he's been doing over the last -- not only now but over the last several years. i want you to know something. and as far as i'm concerned, stuart, we are in a war. back in 2006, i said on the floor of the senate that we are in the fourth world war. the third world war was the cold war. and unless we get nato involved, the arab nations involved, all of us together understanding we are at war that we're in trouble. . stuart: okay. >> now is the time to come together to get the job done and make sure that we have
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some peace and in the world. stuart: thank you approach joining me, sir. >> thank you. stuart: i've got to get to this. michael mccall chair of the homeland security. he has a hearing and focusing on the bail remains as set threat of isis inside our borders. listen to this. >> here at home, we've arrested more than 70 isis supporters over the last year. that's on average more than one per week. and the fbi says it has nearlyed investigations in all 50 states. if this is not a war, then i don't know what is. while we are proud of our humanitarian tradition of welcoming refugees into our condition, this is a special case. the president's own intelligence and law enforcement officials have warned this committee of the
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risk involved with the syrian refuge program and the high threat environment -- stuart: i think we got the gist of congressman's mccall's statement there. don't let them in at the moment. let's have a pause on the refugees. liz: yeah, you did. the fbi is fathering that they don't have the paper trail from a failed state like syria to catch these guys. and, you know, dianne feinstein is saying there's only one way to diminish them and that's to take them out. stuart: she said that? okay. got to move on because this is a fast flowing story and lots of angles to it. moving on to new york city mayor bill de blasio. now, he says let the syrian refugees in. come to my city. here's my question, and it's for the judge who is back with us in this hour. judge napolitano. all right, judge. let's suppose we bring people into new york city. two weeks later one of those people that we brought in kills somebody in new york
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city. i don't know whether that's going to happen. >> legitimate question. stuart: who's liable? >> well, mayor de blasio would be politically liable, but he cannot be sued for any decisions he makes in his official capacity, nor can the president, nor could governor. because the government has given itself immunity so that its officials and employees and agents cannot be sued when they make a judgment call within their official capacit. stuart: so it's my risk. i take the risk on behalf of a politician who wants to maybe gin up his vote. >> well, i think your concern on the risk should be more focused on because the president quite frankly what de blasio says i want them here and christy says they're not coming here, those two statements are meaningless because under the law, all of this is under the hands of the president. the president needs to reevaluate whether he wants to act under the authority he has, a because of the
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potential danger, b because of the political resistance he's getting from senator feinstein and other people in his party as well as most people in the republican party but under the law, under the 2005 law of republican president george bush the president has no limit on his authority to bring in refugees as long as he has satisfied they are seeking political asylum or bringing them in for humanitarian purposes. i can't imagine that the federal government could possibly certify with any agree that it is safe to bring garb as you pointed out they come from a country where there's no database as to their background. stuart: now, judge, i don't know whether you this afternoon before today, but i recently became a u.s. citizen. >> i am very happy for you. but i wonder what your ancestors. stuart: okay. >> do you mean? >> because at the time you became a u.s. citizen, you
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swore the following. i here by declare that i absolutely and entirely renounce as a juror, all the allegiance to any foreign prince, state or sovereignty of whom or which i have to subject to a citizen so help me god. [laughter] . stuart: i willingly took the oath, i don't know if you saw my take on this. >> yes. stuart: i stood there with people from 31 different countries, 80 odd people standing there, everybody wanted to be there. >> yes. stuart: everybody was smiling, it was a joyous occasion. >> i can remember in my prior life as a judge manager the oath to new citizens. it is joyous and emotional. it's about the happiest thing that a judge does and -- stuart: it was the happiest crowd i've ever seen.
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>> your british passport has been revoked and you cannot go back. stuart: i most certainly did. liz: you still have affection for the queen. stuart: let me repeal. i here by declare an oath that i absolutely and entirely announce juror allegiance to any prince potent take the -- >> i can't believe he said that. [laughter] that judge made him sade him say that. stuart: you're shouting so much you can hear that. >> she already wants to hang me. stuart: who can see the justice in that? thank you very much indeed. liz: congratulations. stuart: a lot of fun. i've got some congratulations coming in from the strangest sources, which i will not reveal. ashley: let me do it. stuart: glad to get rid of me. >> is your london school of
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economics diploma still valid? . stuart: yes, it is. thanks, everybody, for a warm reception to every one of you. and a black lives matter at dart myth university has now one supporter from the movement now rejecting them. you'll see it and he's on the show next jeb bush: leadership means you've got to be all in. it's not about yappin'. it's not about talking. it's about doing. i know how to do this because i was privileged to serve in florida for eight years. and we turned the systems upside down that weren't working. 1.3 million new jobs were created. we cut taxes every year. income rose in people's pockets. people were lifted out of poverty. children started to learn. as president of the united states, i pledge to you that i will solve problems. announcer: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message. theand to help you accelerate,. we've created a new company...
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>> and good morning once again from the floor of the stock exchange where stock trading at session highs right now. the dow up 132 points. markets being led higher by the crude oil sector, got an inventory report, not as much analysts were looking for, so crude oil is higher and that's giving list to some of the big energy names. and today investors, 2:00 p.m. eastern looking for more specifics to the timing and pace of interest rate hikes. want to zero in on shares of amazon.com here. shares up 2% over the last 52 weeks, amazon up 998%. two stories with amazon. martha stewart american made. a brand-new is to on amazon. no surprise. and jewelry also opening performance centers in ohio with 2,000 jobs. more varney coming up you total your brand new car. nobody's hurt,but there will still be pain.
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come on, wake up!!! come on, why ya sleepin'? come on! >>what time is it? it's go time. >>come on. let's go, let's go, let's go. woooo hoooo!! yeah!! i feel like i went to bed an hour ago. >>i'll make the cocoa. get a great offer on the car of your grown-up dreams at the mercedes-benz winter event. it's the look on their faces that makes it all worthwhile. but, hurry, these offers end soon. thank you santa!!! stuart: let's take a look at this video from dart myth university. shows black lives matters protesters disrupting students trying to study. very aggressive, even violent. listen to this. [chanting] . stuart: now, what you can't hear on this video, you can't
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make it out is that some of this were shouting explicits at those students calling them races. here's charles, a dart myth university student. charles, welcome to the program. i understand that you have now -- you now reject black lives matter tactics. you were a supporter and now rejecting. have i got this right, sir? >> i think that it's important to recognize that what happened in that video was really a small event -- like at the very end of the protest, and i was very happy with how it went. up to the very end where it began to be a little bit more disruptive. also what was said earlier about this protest being violent was not true. no one has come forward to the college saying this was violent, and i think it's really an indication that, like, the media as a whole has
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miss characterized this movement. stuart: i want to look at that protest at dart myth university. that was the library, am i right in saying that some students -- or one white student was reduced to tiers because she had been called a filthy racist? it seems to me this is kind of a racial attack, and i'm sure you don't support that, do you? >> well, i think really the question we should be asking is this: why are the protesters so angry? . stuart: no, i'm asking the question and my question, sir, is are those tactics justified and what is your response to those tactics? >> well, i would say considering that on campus prior to this protest there were hateful and racist about students of color at dart myth and native student was egged and black lives matter memorial was defaced. i would say that the anger was
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justified, and i don't -- i was sad that this had to happen this way and -- stuart: well, what you've got here is flat out racial conflict, haven't you? you've got black versus whites or that movement versus whites. that's what you've got. it's astonishing it comes from an american university. >> there were support both white and black and latino and asian people who were protesting throughout the entire thing. so it's not -- it's not like a -- i think that you're really oversimplifying this and it's incredibly complex. stuart: hold on a second. i'm not oversimplifying it. we just run video of a disruptive administration in the library in a leading university in the united states of america. and we've got white students -- i'm told we have a white stuced reduced to tears
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and a black student saying your tears don't matter. you're a filthy white racist. now, i'm astonished that we've come to that on the campus of an american university. i'm astonished that we've come to that point, and i wonder is it truly justified? >> again, i don't think that is -- it's not -- that's not my position. i think that what i would like to get across is that the protesters' anger is justified considering, like, every day what they have to go through a at school and navigate this and ultimately this institution responded to it and i think it was not created a constructive dialogue. after you see people on campus really starting to think about structural racism in united states, a lot of important
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issues as well as lack of color at dartmouth. so i think this ultimately has been a good thing for our campus, and i think that, like, just the media always focusing on this one really -- like the basically the very small number of protesters. it was of small -- this is maybe something that occurred in about 30 seconds and this was a 20 -- this was an hour-long protest. no one talks about what happened in the entire hour; right? there was a great community coming together under dartmouth haul shouting for justice -- stuart: i think our viewers, charles, are astonished that those scenes should come from an american university of your reputation in 2015. i'm out of time, charles, thanks for coming on the show. >> okay. have a good day. stuart: thank you. senator ted cruz harsh words for president obama. find out what he said after this the pursuit of healthier.
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ashley, what's the tweets? ashley: four tweets here, stuart. let's kick it up. protecting the american people is my top priority he says. 65 global partners we're leading the campaign to destroy isil. and comerica ensure our own security while welcoming refugees desperately seeking frequency isil. and he says we will provide rescue for 10,000 refugees fleeing syria over the past year after they pass the highest security checks and then he says here our focus is giving the most safe haven to vulnerable syrians, women, children, and survival of torture. stuart: that's a backtrack. is that not a backtrack? because you let them in after -- now he says after. ashley: the highest security checks. liz: right. stuart: the highest security checks. that's a new input. liz: that's what peter king has been talking about too. stuart: i think he's being forced to accept the political reality inside america.
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that would be my view. a little bit of a backtrack. then we've got senator ted cruz taking on president obama directly and very forcefully. remember now. the president blasted republicans when they spoke out against taking in syrian migrants. now ted cruz calls the president's comments offensive and contrary to american values. he said he sounded unpresidential. and he said this is what he would want to say to the president. ted cruz. what he wants to say to president obama. come back and insult me to my face. ashley: that's fighting words right there. stuart: direct clash. ashley: direct clash. stuart: almost personal direct clash. ashley: and i think it's interesting when you point out the tweets from the president backtracking, there's a sign of, oh, wait a minute maybe i've got this wrong. liz: and state department official telling c-span that they could do more with -- stuart: wait a minute. the state department says, well, maybe the saudis --
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>> our president says we're got an change the course, we're not going to do anything different, things are going to be the same. there's legitimate reasons to be fearful, i don't think this president is keeping us safe right now so maybe not letting in syrian refugees when you can't fix the post office, i don't have faith that they can't screen the refugees. stuart: megan mccain clearly expressing doubts to president obama's responding to the attacks. now, what do you viewers say on facebook about trump saying kick out syrian refugees? here's what rosemary says who supports trump saying thank you for putting american lives first. and america first. let's make america great again
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before we help elsewhere. it's been quite a program. not only we have terror in europe, the syrian crisis over here and look at this. the dow jones industrial average is up now 130 points. that is safe having investment. my time is up but, neil, it's yours. neil: you know, i want to welcome you as an american citizen, stuart, and in my family, they come in dribs and drabs of citizens, we celebrate with a game of bocce ball. so you're invited now to the cavuto household. we'd love to have you. stuart: you want me to socialize, neil cavuto? neil: what was i thinking? i haven't got much sleep, buddy. but welcome. you're about 89 years old and you discover, hey, it's kind of good here. stuart: i just want to vote, neil. neil: seriously my friend, that is great news. i had no idea. stuart: thank you very much.
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