tv After the Bell FOX Business January 29, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EST
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before you travel. we're going to sort through it. david: dr. manny knows. and more shocking details in the crisis in flint, michigan. new government e-mails showing state officials arranging deliveries of purified water for themselves while telling the public the water was safe to drink. melissa: amazing. but first stocks soaring into the close. the dow up about -- look at that. 382 points to end the week in the green on wall street. here's a look of where we are ending the day. the s&p 500 up 45 points. look at the nasdaq. up 2.4%. david: meanwhile all 30 dow components are -- let's go to lori rothman at the new york stock exchange. a sea of green. >> you said it, dave. great to see you guys. all right. so we've got a second day of a stock market rally. though, it's still going to worst down as the worst month for stocks since just last august. looking a lot worse, though, a couple of days ago as you know. mention the closing numbers,
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came by about 50 minutes before the close and said 90% of the orders are to buy stocks. so tremendous amount of optimism, all triggered first thing this morning when japan cut a couple of interest rates. so that got a lot of folks thinking. hey, central bank easing may be the seem around the world, including our federal reserve charlie gasparino talking a lot about this today. not likely to raise rates four times this year. so obviously central bank easing sells great bullishness for u.s. substantiating. we also have the gdp print come out. disappointing but not a surprise. everybody knew it was weak. so seven tenths of a percent in the fourth quarter. a couple of notable losers. amazon.com absolutely crushed on a disappointing number, netflix, also a couple of health care names, gilead was down but everything else, guys, back to you. david: let's hope we don't go to negative interest rates, but meanwhile we'll take the
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gain melissa. melissa: joining me now, financial times u.s. managing editor, thanks to both of you for joining us. damon, let me start with you. i am confused by the two indicators here. because if you look at today, what a tremendous rally to end the day to end the week 400 points. but as goes january, so goes the year according to so many metrics. i mean almost 90% of the time. which one do you focus on, david? >> well, i focus on what the conditions are going forward. coming into january, the big concerns was the fed rate hike and the ecb that was less dubbish and wandered. right now we have monetary easing around the world, which i think is going to force the fed to stay lower longer and keep those four rate hikes away. and now with a ten-year treasury at about 1.9 and s&p 500 yield at about 2.3, that's a huge gap for the next foreseeable future. seems to me stocks are the place to be. melissa: i don't know. that's a bold call. jillian, especially when you look at how first quarter
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growth is looking to shape up. not very good. i mean it seems like things around the world are stalling. >> well, right now they -- as far as the u.s. economy is concerned because frankly the number we had today was not great. there are a growing number of economists saying a recession this year is probably still not a definite possibility but definitely there as a possibility. and china is looking worrisome and europe not exactly flourishing. but a big issue that investors are grappling with is policy uncertainty. people are not expecting that japan to be basically going into negative territory today. people are trying to work out what the fed is going to do. the ecb is uncertain as well. and you have this political uncertainty too. so it's a very uncertain, nervous period. melissa: it is. david, how can the stocks be the place to be? >> well, it's all about expectations. and what i like is the fact that a number of companies have been very beaten down
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have actually beaten the street. for example, caterpillar at a 52-week low. the expectations were so low that actually jumped. same thing we saw of course with microsoft. so what i like now is the market is looking for this winners and losers and because so many companies set such low expectations, they're actually moving up in the face of mixed earnings reports. melissa: yeah, jillian, what do you think of that? >> well, one thing to know what's going on is you've had a rising tide lift or boat for the last couple of years. central bank easing, basically there's been an upward push on a whole range of asset classes. now you've got similar policy. but david says it's much more idiocratic which are doing well and their fundamentals? and that's going to require a lot more homework on the part of investors. melissa: it sure is. jillian, david, thank you to both of you. >> thank you. >> i will apologize to nobody for the vigorous with which i will fight terrorism. >> the caliphate of isis has to be destroyed. get the lawyers off the damn
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backs of the military once and for all. >> i don't think you have to give up your liberty. >> i will gladly confess that i am the only one on this stage with no political title. >> there's the establishment lane, the antistatement lane, and then there's the kasich lane. >> let me tell you who's not qualified to be president of the united states, chris. hillary clinton did that to our country, she's not qualified to be president of the united states. >> i will reunite this party, and we will defeat hillary clinton, and we will turn this country around. david: what a lineup. meanwhile this is the final debate before iowa. republican candidates are back on the campaign trail today just days before the first votes are cast in the 2016 election. fox news carl cameron is in >> reporter: a day after the debate he skipped, donald trump did something even more remarkable, he left the state of iowa. three days before the caucuses, it was the only debate iowa was going to have before the caucuses, only three days left of campaigning, and donald trump is in new hampshire. said he'd basically been up all
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night long and immediately resumed his criticism specifically of ted cruz with yet another variation of his doubts and raising of questions about whether or not ted cruz is eligible to be president since he was born in canada. watch. >> you know, he's an anchor baby. ted cruz is an anchor baby in canada. but canada doesn't accept anchor babies, they just waited a long time. okay. [laughter] but look, it is a problem for him, by the way. i think that's one of the reasons he's crashing. i think that's one of the reasons he's a nervous wreck. >> reporter: ted cruz is competing for the lead here in iowa, and there's a great deal of discussion about whether or not the cruz ground game can surpass the donald trump volume and amplificationing with his television appearances and his bombast. cruz is about two hours, roughly, north of where we are right now in cing aroll, iowa.
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he's, obviously, in total disagreement about his citizenship issue and trying to coalesce the evangelical and home school vote that has been known to sway these caucuses. david: okay, thank you very much. we'll deal more with that citizenship later in the hour. meanwhile, here to weigh in on the debate, steve hayes, senior writer at the weekly standard and a fox news contributor. i just wonder, first of all, was there anticipation last night that we might have a show from donald trump, or was that out of the question in the beginning? >> you know, i think about a half hour beforehand there was an interview i think that he had given to the washington post in which he ruled out showing up at the last minute. but, certainly, a couple hours before the debate i was talking to bret baier after "special report," and they were working on two different sets of questions, and bret was trying to narrow down the questions to
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ask if trump was there, expand them if he budget. it was quite a scene. david: well, and then the most bizarre scene was to see huckabee and santorum at the trump rally. they were practically doing a campaign stop for trump. >> yeah, very interesting. huckabee and santorum have both been hoping to pick off some of the evangelical vote that boosted them in 2008 and 2012 respectively to victories here in the iowa caucuses. they've been working hard to pick up some of that evangelical vote from ted cruz, so i don't know if this was really a play for that vote, but what was most interesting for me, i was watching the debate on fox news channel, and somebody had an iphone set up that was playing the trump rally. and huckabee has, his super pac has a very tough ad here in iowa hitting both ted cruz and donald trump as being unserious and clownish and, you know, not worthy of the presidency. and so the guy that he's hit anything this ad -- [laughter]
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was airing on fox during the debate, and huckabee's standing next to him at the same time. it was bizarre. david: not only standing next to him, but standing behind a podium that said "vote for trump." >> exactly. david: all right. everybody's talking about how rubio did extremely well, he was the surprise winner, but don't count out cruz. cruz made a lot of good points, did he not? >> he did. the best way to describe his performance in my view was uneven. he had some good moments, he had some moments that weren't as strong, he had a couple jokes that didn't quite work. it's like he couldn't feel like, he couldn't determine whether he really wanted to own his pushback on the moderators and to be aggressive, or if he would rather be presidential, sort of contrast himself with donald trump in absentia. and i think you got those two different sides of ted cruz. david: yeah. >> i didn't think rubio had a knock it out of the park night night. i thought he did well, but judging marco rubio against his performances in the other debates, this wasn't one of his
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better debates, but rubio's just good at this. if he has an okay night, he usually is mentioned among the people who did well. david: here's the overall reason why i think cruz did better. he was asked why does washington hate you, you know, the trump line, he's an unlikable guy, everybody hates him, but he turned that around and said that's why i'm the guy to have in washington. the whole nation hates washington right now. >> absolutely. david: it's true that washington hates me, but that's why i should be president. >> his best moment of the night, clearly, was that question. that was in the electability section of the debate where the moderators asked a series of candidates no to not all the candidates, but most of them, sort of probing where they were most vulnerable in terms of the electability argument. cruz hit that out of the park. at a time when congress is at, depending on the policy, 9% approval, 12% approval, to be the guy who has worked in washington against congress, against what he calls the washington cartel, that's a
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. >> reporter: as you know, polls have shown that in iowa and nationally vote ors are concerned about this issue and have reservations about how much they can trust the former secretary of state. in a statement, the clinton campaign said, quote: we firmly oppose the complete blocking of the release of these e-mails. this appears to be overclassification run amok. we will pursue all appropriate
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avenues to see that her e-mails are released in a manner consistent with her call last year. melissa? melissa: peter, all right. no doubt we will stay on top of this story. thank you so much. david. david: story that won't go away. melissa: no matter how much they want it to. david: dire warnings from the world health organization about the zika virus. >> the virus was detected in the americas where it is now spreading explosively. the level of alarm is extremely high. melissa: explosionoffly. david: dr. manny alvarez joining us next with what you need to know about the threat here at home and when you travel. melissa: and the white house is proposing a plan that would submit companies to release salary data to the government each year in an effort to bridge the gender pay gap. david: and michael phelps, the most decorated olympic athlete, what is he doing here so far away from the water?
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you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. melissa: growing concerns over the zika virus, the dangerous disease transmitted by mosquitoes, is spreading across the united states at, quote, explosive rates. here to break down the details, dr. manny alvarez, senior managing editor. we were driving in the car this morning to school, we heard on the radio, pregnant women, you may want to skip that warm weather vacation. you heard the quote into the last commercial break when they said an explosive rate. how frightened should people be? >> look, i think we have to be a little concerned. number one, i'm critical of the cdc. just today a couple of letters went out by some of the congress leadership telling the cdc, hey, what's going on? again, 4,000 cases in brazil
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over 2014, 2015, perhaps many more because they just started counting. and 4,000 cases of children born with microcephaly, okay? this is a very lethal type of condition in newborns that are born with small brains, small heads. so these children are going to be, are going to have a lot of difficulty. when you look at the transmission rate of zika that is happening in the different countries, about 22, 23 now, all from south america, all through central america, the caribbean, many cases including here in new york already we have reported, this is going to be a problem, you know? the mosquito, this mosquito that is infesting all of these countries needs to be eradicated. and that's the first thing the cdc has to concentrate, you know, to do. melissa: so what would you tell people who may become pregnant? one of the things is that it's really dangerous in the very beginning when you may not even know you're pregnant. >> listen, we -- you know, a lot
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of scientists already are saying -- melissa: i have it. i'm kidding, i'm just coughing. keep going, please. >> listen, we know for sure if you're pregnant and you happen to be pregnant early in the game probably and you get infected with this virus, you're going to have a congenital malformation maybe if the baby's more advanced, maybe not. but this is a true factor already scientifically that has been shown. so if you're mr. president and you're -- if you're pregnant and thinking you're going to any of these latin american countries -- melissa: forget it. >> this is not a good idea, for sure. melissa: so what does the center for disease control do from here? do we rad candidate this? >> a couple of things. they have to bring support to some of the public health departments in those countries so you can have the eradication of the virus. second, they're working on a vaccine, but it's going to take a year, it has to be tested, so we're not going to have a vaccine to market just yet. it's all about prevention, eradicating the mosquito and
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monitoring the pockets of outbreaks that are happening. melissa: can it happen somewhere that's not one of these countries that are showing? now all of a sudden you have mosquito bites, you think you shouldn't have it in the middle of winter. everyone's in a panic. >> this virus has been around for a long time. it did not get off the bus the other day. yellow fever, west nile virus, dengue and zika, they all belong in the same family. it is the mosquito that is now growing so much, because we have stopped fumigating for many, many years, and this is the same mosquito that was around when we were building the panama canal and had the yellow fever and killed thousands of people. so it's all about that, but in this particular case zika virus, you know, in pregnancy is the problem. and also we have seen pockets of a disease called gee yam beret, and already we've seen pockets of that through south america. melissa: i'm going to cover myself with a mosquito net and stay inside.
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dr. manny, thank you. david: o.j. simpson is back in the spot light, and one doctor says he might have a new alibi for o.j., plus, the water crisis in fingerprint, michigan. while -- flint, michigan. while state officials were telling residents their water was safe, well, guess what? the bureaucrats were warning their own workers to drink from bottled water. >> it just shows the reaction was to take care of the state workers while they were still telling flint residents, you know, your water's safe, go ahead and drink it. is not competition, it's protecting customer trust. every day you read headlines about governments and businesses being hacked, emails compromised, and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime, and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to investigate and fight cyber crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information, so we can track down the
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enough said. david: mission governor snyder and his staff may have known about the unsafe flint water for months before they did anything about it at e-mails obtained by progress michigan's show the state not only knew about the water but decided to give its own employees clean bottled water. flint residents were told don't worry about the stench of the color and the lead contaminated water. lonnie scott joins me now. congratulations on getting the scoop. by the way how did you get the e-mail? >> the e-mails are given to us from a foia request. david: the e-mail itself and i think we can put up a copy of it on the screen is dated january 7 , 2015 and it says while the city of flint states corrective actions are not necessary dtm b. which i guess is the state entities in the process of providing a water cooler on each floor so you could choose which water to drink. so it's clear from this memo
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that the city of land was actually still under the belief that their water was safe to drink, correct? >> it sounds that way. there were several issues with the water then this was one of the advisories put out by the city. david: this is dated january but as late as last summer months after this was issued the epa was telling the mayor of find that the water was okay, correct? >> i believe that's true. there were lots of folks including governor snyder and the deq that were telling the folks of flint as they complained about disgusting water that their water was okay to drink. david: from my did the epa is the final word on the subject of whether it's clean or not. if they are giving the word that it's okay when it's not okay and it still bad smelling contaminated water gets the epa that deserves the blame, no? >> i don't believe that's true. i think the state is the bad
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actor here. david: wait a minute the epa has the final say on whether the water is contaminated or not and just last summer they were saying the water is okay. why shouldn't we blame the epa? >> there is plenty of blame to go around of the residents of fund would tell you they were failed at several levels and i think we can agree to that. what the e-mail that we released yesterday shows is the snyder administration and folks within the administration were providing clean drinking water for employees while telling the residents of flint and town halls and other locations that their water was safe to drink. david: you know what lonnie i'm willing to bet that the epa had arrested -- represented in flint they were telling that represented to drink bottled water even though they were saying the water was safe, no? >> i don't know that. david: i'll bet you money they were doing up at the point is bureaucrats always look to save themselves and put other people at risk. that's the way it works.
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lonnie thank you very much, great research by the way. congratulations on that. melissa: when candidates attack cruz go from hunter hunted during the face-off at the iowa caucuses will it be enough to help him win the hawkeye state? agrees my campaign is here to respond coming up next. david. >> the last questions have been please attack ted. gosh if you guys ask one more mean question i may have to leave the stage. born with a hunger to fly and a passion to build something better. and what an amazing time it's been, decade after decade of innovation, inspiration and wonder. so, we say thank you america for a century of trust, for the privilege of flying higher and higher, together. ♪
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david: with a front rauner innate republican -- is missing from the republican debate the spotlight fell on ted cruz. >> i'm not the candidate of career politicians in washington. [applause] i will apologize to nobody for the vigorousness which i will fight terrorism, go after isis, hunt them down wherever they are and utterly and completely destroy isis. by monday you will welcome any and all 99 counties in iowa. david: he talked up his polities top policies. here to weigh in on senator chris' performance ted cuccinelli former virginia attorney general and the ted cruz supporter. it's great to see you again thanks for coming in. a lot of people were saying, i got e-mails from people saying that revealed seem to be the
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winner last night at frank luntz puts together these groups of people that watch the debate and give simultaneous translation of what's important to them. they seem to believe -- let's play table. >> how many of you walked in here supporting marco rubio? one, two, three of you. how many of you are going home is likely to vote for rubio grazier hands. that's the impact of the single debate. david: what you think ted? >> certainly the biggest impact from last night is on polo bull and we won't know until monday and that is that donald finally make his big mistake? his snub of iowa which is what this looks like by not appearing has not historically been taken well by iowa's caucusgoers but you can't pull that in this short amount of time. we really won't know the outcome of that until monday night and about a third to a quarter of the iowa caucusgoers are still
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our were as a couple of days ago and decided and it isn't that donald's lack of appearance will lose him his own supporters he has now so much as it weakens his case to win over those undecideds who are going to make the difference monday night. i think ted is in a very strong position and he did in her deposition by being center stage last night. david: trump is doing everything he can of course to hurt him and he's doubling down on this canadian birthing. let's play a soundbite from today on that. >> ted cruz may not be a u.s. citizen, but he's an anchor baby. ted cruz is an anchor baby in canada but canada doesn't accept anchor babies. david: now he is using the term anchor baby for ted cruz. i know the hyperbole and that's trumping trump at the same time a lot of people are saying even the people that think that cruz is fully qualified to be
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president say we should take this cloud away from his campaign by getting a court ruling. what do you think? >> certainly donald investigated it was his own lawyers last september and he took the cloud away. he was asked and said in september my lawyers have looked this over. this is clean. there is no problem and it donald verrilli believe this was a problem he would have standing to sue and he hasn't done it. that tells you this is all show for him. he is worried because ted has a better ground game. it's been churning along for a longer time and even reporters who the talked to iowans who you were hearing from the most, it's the cruz campaign so when it comes to going after the undecided ted's consistent conservativism combined with the best ground game are thus closing arguments out there in the last three days. david: by the way new piece in the march harbor lot review says he does have standing. thank you very much for being
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with us, can cuccinelli. >> there was one kerman target against ted cruz. i don't know if his arms are that big. former senator scott brown is a "fox news" contributor star parker center for urban renewal founder and president. you. ted cruz was the target but a lot of people say he didn't necessarily rise to the occasion. he had the opportunity there was trump not around but i'm not sure he made the most of it. what do you think? >> it's tough to be in the big seat melissa. obviously when you are number one everyone's going to come at you and i thought the questions quite frankly were a little bit tame and to draw comparison to contrast between your opponents on the left and right that's what happens when you are in the number one seed. i don't think anyone, any positions were necessarily change. i think that bush and rubio and christie and kasich to a into
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the antenna and fifth. i don't think it was his best night and i love the fact that they keep saying he is more conservative, with all due respect news alert not everybody in the republican party is conservative so we have to appeal to everybody in our party in order to make sure we can take the white house. melissa: two guys who went at it, jeb and rubio. let's see what they had to say about it in star i will get your take on it on the other side. >> he used to support a path to citizenship. >> still do. >> you wrote a book where you change your position. he wrote a book where you change your position from a path to citizenship to a path to legalization. melissa: sort of going after it there. star what do you think lexi was good for jeb. >> it was good for jeb and with the absence of trump jeb bush came out far ahead.
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he's getting his game because we need look at ted chris and his it could come down to ted cruz versus jeb bush. one of the blessings like suppose you could call it is trump going after jeb so early is clearly he understands the issues and is able to showcase what is done as a governor. marco rubio was fantastic as well as night but the challenge for marco is this question of his changes on immigration. one is saying i change my mind when i got to washington and the other is being much more consistent, jeb bush saying i know we can't deport 11 million people so we are going to have to reasonably answer this question of illegal immigration. melissa: another flip-flop was chris christie. let's hear what he had to say about that. >> i feel like i need aid english dictionary converter. it's perfectly legal in this country to change her mind that when you were a governor you to
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admit it. that's the difference and that's the kind of leader we need in the white house. stop the washington ball and let's get things done. melissa: senator a lot of people like that but chris christie doing the governor are the only ones that work for a living is getting old in my book. did you like that? >> there was actually waiting for it. i thought what fox did was brilliant to show the clips of the senators actually stating their positions and then contrasting that with what their positions are now. it was brilliant and i didn't think quite honestly any of them added good answer. they did washington doubletalk i call the, the old two-step in that i was going to vote for the bill, i had an amendment and i voted for the amendment and i would have voted for the bill of the bill included amnesty, ted. by filing your amendments he would have included amnesty so it's all gobbledygook. melissa all right guys, thanks. david: on the other side i'll
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days left until iowa. bernie's -- bernie sanders is stepping up his attack on hillary and her wall street ties. >> was one of the wall street banks that triggered the financial meltdown goldman sachs just settled with authorities for their part in the crisis that put 7 million out of work. how does wall street get away with it? millions in campaign contributions. our economy works for wall street and that's the problem. david: billions in speaking fees. joining me is a host of alan combs show on "fox news" radiant capri ferrero democratic state senator from a high of. capri hillary got $675,000 and a one-year period from goldman sachs, three different speeches and bill her husband at.$2.2 million for his goldman sachs beach so clearly this is a direct shot at hillary, no?
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>> no question and i think this is one of the best opportunities for bernie sanders to draw a stark contrast between himself and hillary clinton. what i think is trying to do and i think this is -- the across our midwest as someone who is so closely tied to wall street is not going to be looking out for people on main street and i think that's what he's trying to get across. david: allen said bernie said he wasn't going to get personal but this is really personal. >> is personal. as we get closer to the actual vote this happens. he's not as personal as some people would otherwise stay. david: he's not talking talking about or e-mail us yet but i wonder this coming. >> isn't he infamous for saying and that's about the dam e-mails, remember that? david: capria and other problem for hillary right now is her husband bill is imagined he took 2.2 million from goldman sachs. his cachet as an asset to the campaign is going down.
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look at this bill clinton's favorability has never been this low, 39% rate even when monica lewinsky was in the news it wasn't as low so she's losing one of her main asset on the campaign trail. >> well i'm here in des moines and i'm interested to see being out here on the ground in iowa and i know president clinton is going to be barnstorming over the next several days between now and caucusing on monday monday so will be adjusting to see whether or not that 39% holds up out here in ohio. people still love president clinton but i do think that people are maybe getting a little bit tired of the clintons as they are a little bit tired of the bushes. david: allen it's the women that started with the sexism charge. one-eyed of broderick came back into the picture and of course all the clinton foundation stuff. >> a golden oldie. david:'s numbers are going down, 39%. >> by the way bill clinton lost
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iowa, remember that and still became the nominee so i'm not sure how relevant that is at this moment. david: allen and capri thank you very much. melissa: the amazon crush and just bezos is feeling the pain did billions lost, the poor guy. david: a bombshell new report may provide o.j. simpson with another defense. details, coming up.
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that forms a protective barrier that helps keep stomach acid in the stomach where it belongs. for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. try gaviscon®. lots of vitamins a&c, for fast-acting, long-lasting relief. and, only 50 calories a serving... good morning, indeed. v8. veggies for all. david: 22 years after the murder of o.j. simpson found another alibi. dr. dennis albaugh of the doctor credited with discovering the brain disease caused by discussion says he had his medical license that simpson has the disease. joining me for reaction is defensive end marvin -- the first reaction a lot of people i have talked to had is this is just more from the oj team and they looking for excuse.
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>> this came from him based upon his experience. he's the guy that founded dte. and i think you get a list of the things that leads to it for the symptoms of oj would hit most of them. david: this is the doctor that inspired the movie concussion. >> he's the one at that inspired it and he is the expert on it. zte the reason why o.j. simpson is in prison now, i don't know but it could be a contracting factor. david: we will never know and i'm not pushing anything on the guy until he is dead because in fact he can't tell unless there's an autopsy for matter of fact someone has this disease right? >> that's true. they are doing research and i believe in the near future they will be able to connect the dots
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and look at living recipients of the postmortem. david: you personally must have known guys this behavior changed as a result of getting head and getting a lot of concussions. >> when i played in have this information but looking back on it and hindsight is 2020 even guys who see today you see there something off with them. there's as a good friend of mine is a hall of fame player -- david: what you mean by that? that they are not playing up to speed or their characters have changed? >> cognitive. they are not the same in the character is changing. david: of east timor violence behavior because that seems to be the case for oj here? >> no i haven't seen out but i have seen guys i believe that have zte and it's manifested in other ways. i don't think zte leads to violence and i want to use that as an excuse but i know there are guys that have zte that have committed violence like lawrence
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hillis who died last month in prison, killed his cellmate. dr. omalu has his brain and i believe he will show that he had zte. melissa: the gender wage gap taking center stage. the obama administration push to open the curtain on exposing salaries. that's coming up. your path to retirement... may not always be clear. but at t. rowe price, we can help guide your retirement savings. for over 75 years, investors have relied on our disciplined approach to find long term value. so wherever your retirement journey takes you, we can help you reach your goals. call a t. rowe price retirement specialist or your advisor ...to see how we can help make the most of your retirement savings. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. then, a brutal act of teterror here at home.. it's time for a tested and proven leader who won't try to contain isis.
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call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. david: shares of amazon getting clobbered today ending 7.5% as wall street reacted to yesterday's -- and jeff bezos net worth getting hit hard. the ceos of fortune fell more than $6 billion in the first hour but he still has more money than just about everybody. melissa: the obama administration announced a sweeping new policy requiring employers to disclose their employee salaries by gender. star parker and senator capri
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cafaro has their own opinions as to whether this move from the white house really helps fix the gender pay in a quality program. star, let me start with you. what do you think about this? >> i think it's a huge overreach of government. this is what happens when government agencies lose their charter and outlived their usefulness and for the barack obama administration that asked for no wages, this is crazy madness to have your employees, your employer to have to tell them you how much money you are making. i think it's why there are so much anger in society today and american voters today because government has crossed the line too many times before and they are crossing it yet again. melissa: senator if you accept the data that the success i'm not sure that proving it to the government solves the problem. it seems to me there are a lot of different ways we got here whether it's you know choices women make along the way about what jobs and careers they want
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to take with the time off they take. i don't know that this is the solution is the problem. >> if essentially part of the solution. let me back up and say this is absolutely within their purview of the eeoc and i would argue the eeoc has not come it should not go away and it's certainly not outlived its mandate so well with them they eeoc's purview to do. real center member it's only for employers with over 100 people and will not create undue burden on small businesses. i think it's a step in right direction. i get the fact that people may feel it's an overreach by government that if we don't have the data to understand the underlying reason why there are conflicting studies about equal pay for equal work we are not going to be able to drill down and ascertain what the true motivating factors are the true contributing factors to pay inequity in america. melissa: star would you think about that just looking for data? >> i don't think we live in the
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system of slavery so people have choice of a job they want and they negotiate with their employer. if government would mind its own business. he don't talk to your friends about how much money you make that yet we are going to allow the eeoc to start passing -- tasking businesses. the economy is stalling out because of technology. they're not going to be that many businesses left in our country that have over 100 employees if he keep this up. melissa: senator what is your response to that? >> i mean i think again i understand the view of overreach in the state of ohio i have been intimately involved with things like regulatory reform, tax reform so i'm certainly not going to espouse the benefits of big government. at the same time we do need to understand that i think this data, we are not going to be telling each individual story to the government.
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it won't have identifiers. melissa: we have to leave it there. thanks to both of you. david: the word will get out about how much everyone is making. michael phelps bringing his olympic talents to the student section at arizona state. we will tell you how that burden of distraction is rattling college basketball players all over the nation. business today is not competition, it's protecting customer trust. every day you read headlines about governments and businesses being hacked, emails compromised, and intellectual property being stolen. that is cyber-crime, and it affects each and every one of us. microsoft created the digital crimes unit to investigate and fight cyber crime. we use the microsoft cloud to visualize information, so we can track down the criminals. using our advanced analytics tools, analysis that used to take days to run, we can now see in real time. and we're
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>> oh, my goodness, have you seen this? distraction kicking it up a notch making his debut in the student section olympic gold medalist michael phelps with gold medals around his neck. the opponent was no match for phelps and the student. he missed both of his free throws. >> is that right? the distraction is no joke.
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caused a 5% rise in missed free throws in each half it was deployed or one to two points per game. it works. >> can i tell you how many ladies were talking about that today? david: yeah, i'm not surprised. that does it for us. risk and reward starts right now. >> was it because of a protest or guys out for a walk one night decided they would go kill some americans? what difference at this point does it make? . deirdre: the state department may release more e-mails from democratic frontrunner hillary clinton but there are reports that the government will not meet the deadline, and it has. this is risk and reward i'm deirdre bolton. state department says that 22 clinton e-mails were deemed top secret but will not be released yet. peter barns is with me now from these. peter, what's the latest? >> well, deirdre, the news here is that in previous e-mail releases, the
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