tv Varney Company FOX Business May 2, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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obama will eventually host a late night show and he knows to deliver and bombed like i don't know how many bombed before. >> a good analogy, the audience was served gin and butter milk cocktails. maria: kat, good to see you and michael block. charles in for stuart. over to you. >> i'm charles payne. stuart will be back. the latest polls shows donald trump ahead of ted cruz. it's do or die for ted cruz. bernie is not going away. in fact, now he's talking about a contested convention. more violent protests from the left. these are anti-capitalism
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protesters in seattle. can the left demonstrate without being violent. we have several answers today and looks like it might be no. a student at u-mass goes ballistic because the conservative speaker on campus actually criticized feminism. wait until you hear this. and the man who killed usama bin laden, rob o'neill joins us in 15 minutes and he'll talk about the fifth anniversary of that historic night. "varney & company" is about to begin. is. ♪ i was born in a small town ♪ >> that's indiana native, john cougar mellencamp. i think he dropped the cougar. giving what donald trump what he needs, all the momentum.
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he's backed by bobby knight and the latest poll over ted cruz and carly fiorina. more in a minute. take a look at dow futures right now. we've been gaining a little momentum throughout the day. remember, it's back to back hard weeks for the market. looking for leadership. on that note look at apple shares, under 100 and the company announced a buyback hoping that would give the stock oomph, but coming off the worst week in three years. and making main in gold, charles payne told you to buy this months ago. it's over 1300, and old holding at 45. hang on because stuart varney is not going to like this, driving around the country in this mini van. gas is 2.21, remember, it was under $2? to the anti-capitalism protesters.
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there were rocks, bricks, even molotov cocktails. similar in paris and istanbul. turkish police fired tear gas at protesters. thousands were marched across the globe for the national celebration of workers rights. seems like the left, they can't protest without breaking out a molotov cocktail or two. ashley: unfortunately, you're right. not only in seattle, but across europe and elsewhere. it's interesting to me this is a workers rights day, if it wasn't for the capitalists there wouldn't be any jobs and any workers. it's completely, you know, you look at france, for instance. they're complaining about a new bilk put forth by a socialist government to extend working hours and allow companies to more easily fire workers. that's outrageous in france. we saw not only in paris, but across the country some very violent protests and in seattle, anti-capitalism more than anything else. a lot of anarchists worked into the groups, taking
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opportunities to create chaos. >> not only that, these people are upset to begin with. ashley: they think just go from demonstration to demonstration. >> thanks a lot. ashley. want to get into politics, donald trump has a 15 point lead and ted cruz 34% and john kasich at 13%. ed rollins is here. ed, g.o.p. establishment. >> good morning. >> will this be the last stand for them and afterwards make their way-- >> i think for cruz this is the alamo, his really last battle and it's 30 large delegates and nine congressional districts, three apiece, so you could walk out with 57. certainly trump will walk out with the vast majority if not after it. that's it, he has a clear path after that. >> no doubt momentum-wise, but
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some argue that he can't or won't get 1237. do you think they'll put up resistance. >> i don't think that cruz is going away. i think they'll go to the convention and fight to the bitter end. i don't think it will matter. the establishment will start getting op board. and they need to because ford doesn't have a fund raising base and he's self-funded. it's a billion dollar campaignen it's an effort to get that put together where hillary has 7, 800 people on their staff and all that money and resources, trump has a long ways to go. >> we talked about the establishment. i think a lot of people conflate all anti-trumpers are being with different views along the line of ted cruz and ones i consider the john boehners of the world and seem to be warming up to donald trump and going to the extent that he's gone to with name calling of ted cruz. are they going to come on board with the enthusiasm. there will be obviously, hey,
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he's the nominee and i back him. >> that depends on the campaign. he can go out and talk about things, and he'll stir a lot of stuff up and hillary will stir up things. and equally important senate battles, race ins jeopardy. if we lose those, it changes the dynamics of the game. my sense is trump will lead the party and the party will get behind him and the other races are important. i've been reading where a lot of folks running for the senate are trying to find a way to balance out running for the senate while donald trump runs and not be connected to them. >> all i can say is lots of luck. the truth of the matter is he generates the vote, more voters come out in the presidential year. he has-- they have to get those votes. he's the unified party. >> thanks a lot. >> thank you. >> and let's talk about the
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democrats. because hillary, look at this, 50-46. >> it doesn't matter. it's a proportional race, even if they split the delegates and each get 50, she's so far ahead she can't be stopped at this point in time. sanders is like a piece of gum on your shoe. you want to get it off. >> he's a big piece of gum, he's a wad. the guy has won a lot of states and a lot of people show up. >> certainly has a lot of energy among young people. somehow she's got to get it back together again pat the convention and move forward. young people and african-americans who made obama the lelectorate the last time, she has to get those people. >> i see her outpolling with the millennials, but the question, to what degree will they come out and what kind of deal will she broker with sanders. a, she can avoid a contested convention and c, do everything to help him out. >> that could make him the vice-president.
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obviously, a 73-year-old vice-president, a 73-year-old man, i would not advocate putting 73-year-old man in the vice-presidentsy. >> and a 15 minimum wage and-- >> something outrageous to democrats. >> well. >> outrage to us and outrage to the democrats. >> thank you, appreciate it. >> thank you. i want to stay on politics, donald trump doubling down on hillary playing the woman's card. listen to this. >> she's a strong person, she's going to have to be able to take it. the only card she's had is the woman's card. she's done a lousy job in so many ways, women don't lining her, but it's the woman's card and she plays it and i'll let you know in six months whether or not she plays it well, but i don't think she'll play it well. >> well, hillary and the woman's card, is it a gamble for her?
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>> to for her? no, because people who love her and support her will support h her. >> what does she get out of this. >> hillary clinton, would be a historic moment if she was elected president as the first female president just like with barack obama and we should celebrate that as a major step for democracy. but what she gets out of it, she puts herself in the place of the victim and she does well when she's in that place and invites the attacks from donald trump. and people who love donald trump, she's playing that and-- >> and she had issued some women's card. >> i'm not a hillary clinton supporter so it's not going to make me vote for her. it's clever and the same kind of clever things that donald trump comes up with. he's sparring on this letter and going to the lowest digs and she went there with him.
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>> how does she overcome the idea that-- talked about women a lot the last couple of years and just like you, the historic nature of it all. how does she overcome the idea, what are her other qualifications rather than being a woman. and i think that donald trump missed the area for the presidential area. he could have after her on issues of substantial, handling libya, the judgment on the e-mail scandal and issues he could do well with if he pifrts that. he did this for a pr move and he's still in the headlines. ashley: no one disagrees with the women being president. that's not the issue, it's which woman and those people that don't care for hillary clinton-- >> the millennial women-- young millennial women say it doesn't matter whether she's a woman or not. >> this is ted cruz here right now live. let's take a quick listen in
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evansvil evansville, indiana. that's retail politics right there. all right. guys, again, ted cruz pressing the flesh, retail politics, going diner to diner to diner. i think he'll shake every hand in indiana. ashley: kiss every baby. >> i want you to check it out. another crash at talladega. the rookie driver went airborne on the 96th lap and barrel rolled and he was able to walk away safely. out of the 40 drivers, 33 were involved in some sort of crash on sunday. still ahead, president obama spends trillions in stimulus, and record amounts of money and what we've got, less--
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>> this is a fox news alert. bin laden is dead. may 1st, usama bin laden's life came to an end. >> the leader of al qaeda, shot in the dead. >> pop, pop, pop. >> the united states conducted an operation that killed usama bin laden, you can say that those families who lost family members to terror, justice is done. charles: the day that usama bin laden was killed. the man responsible, rob
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o'neill. congratulations again, watching that introduction, chills going through my body. what was going through yours. >> when we went upstairs to get bin laden, i could see it every time i close my eyes, going upstairs, he hasn't blown up yet, this going to be it, only two of us, it wasn't a bravery thing, it was like get this over with, we are going to see what it's like. the guy in front of me took down some of the people in front of us, i turned right and i saw 0 he is-- usama bin laden, he was upright and he didn't blow up, and took him down and started to sink in, we just did this, we might live now and then five years later watching that montage there, it's just something. five years flashes by, unbelievable. charles: that was a threat that he would blow himself up and everybody else with him. his exit plan, so to speak? >> when we were flying into pakistan-- the whole mission was dangerous, we could shoot us
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down on the way in. charles: one of the helicopters crashed. >> the pilot crash landed and if he would have in a quarter of a second made the wrong decision, it probably would have rolled and killed everybody. it was dangerous, the house should have blown up. that was one of their tactics to blow the house up and make martyrs. we didn't see any explosives. if anyone's going to put on a suicide belt, it's usama bin laden. the last room he's got to be there. this is where it's what it feels like to get hit by a suicide vest. >> did he hint that anything was a shocked surprise. >> he wasn't surrendering, in that brief less than a second. he's skinnier than i thought, and that's his nose, not
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surrendering, he has to go down now. >> the other team, got him together and pulled him out and the preparation for this, did it go almost exactly as you guys had prepared for? did you have a layout of the structure? >> we know everything on the exterior, nothing on the interior, we don't want someone to tell us what it looks like, it looks opposite. i don't want to know how many men, women, children the analyst thinks are there, how many people. i'll figure out who they are when i get there and you never want a perfect plan because the only time the perfect plan works is when you're planning. once you leave, murphy is going to show up and everything changes. we came up one of the first things that happens. one of the guys said the helicopter could crash in the front yard. >> no. >> and we've been in much worse gun fight than that, and target. >> i want to shake your hand on behalf of all of america and
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the free world. >> appreciate it. charles: let's take a quick look at the dow futures and the market is going to open slightly higher. the major earnings, going to continue momentum. and facebook had a great week last week and that's going to open just slightly higher. and you've got some of the momentum stocks higher. we have a guy that says that 930, $930 is his average there, 930 and we've got a guy that's going to pick one of these names for you, amazon or facebook. ahead, you thought you could escape the story about the british royals because stuart was out. and he dvr's this and if i don't show this. look at this. >> and hillary clinton using an offensive term to talk about native americans and men. where is the outrage? she's insulted two groups with one remark.
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>> remember, i had a lot of experience dealing with men who sometimes get off the reservation in the way they behave and how they speak. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like grandkids equals free tech support. oh, look at you, so great to see you! none of this works. come on in. poallergies?reather. stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right.
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bit on princess charlotte's birthday. look at that. all right. ashley, our resident brit. ashley: beautiful, look at princess charlotte, pushing a pink walker. these pictures were taken by her mom, kate. yes, duchess of cambridge, they put out a series of photographs. the last time charlotte was seen in public they got her privacy very, very carefully. last time she was seen in public was her christening they put them out and now she turns one, very sweet. charles: i think that's my favorite. hillary clinton is under hot water with native americans and men after her off the reservation comments. listen to this. >> remember, i had a lot of experience dealing with men who sometimes get off the reservation in the way they behave and how they speak.
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i'm not going to deal with their temper tantrums or their bullying or their efforts to try to provoke me. charles: all right, last time, a moment ago we were talking. >> right. charles: off the reservation with men. >> how can you offend two groups with one sentence, they did it effectively. you know, it's interesting, when donald trump responded to it this morning, of course, he pointed out this is demeaning to men and he called native americans indians. so there he goes, offending people. it was poorly worded on her part and what i don't understand is she said i'm not going to respond to these and she said i'm not going respond to her bullying and then she put her foot in her mouth. take your advise-- >> we're looking at this myopically. things are coming out of your mouth. ashley: they would jump on
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donald trump. charles: the agenda has been set. we're a few moments away from opening bell pointing higher. amazon, facebook, apple all in the news and another development on hillary clinton's e-mail scandal, i've got to tell you, i think we're closer to an indictment. judge napolitano is here at 9:45. whether it takes place before or after the election. opening bell is next.
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>> all right guys opening bell nine seconds away dwattering there at the knock stocks exchange and nasdaq rough weeks for the stock market that made remarkable rebound from the 11th with job report on friday. let's take a look first pick not bad up 12 points, 14, 15 on dow. dow jones industrial average. all right guys let's start with apple tough week for it last week. i want to check here coming off the week of 2013. ashley webster. elisabeth mcdonnell and keith first to you. going to 200 in two years. are you still sticking with that? >> i am. i took a couple of weeks to sit back because i thought there was weak there but talking about hundred hads of billions in cash. what poem are upset about is a slowdown in sales because they're not growing as fast as people thought they were.
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this was about value, that's not in the xan and i'm onboard. >> when a guy sold all of his does that put a nail in his coffin, so to speak? >> no. i'll tell you why people think it should. but icahn is a rate orer he did two billion dollars but most average investors did not of profit on that. he depends on short-term move. don't pay attention to icahn. >> let's tack a look at nasdaq something of a losing streak of late ashley. >> it has two consecutive weeks two of the last five months a tough, tough go. tech sector, of course, that is heavy on nays dock down 3.6% last week. i think to the point apple and twitter results gave the whole secker to a bloody nose we have facebook and amazon coming back a little bit with better results but i think that overall sentiment is iffy right now. >> i think ash is right this
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isening loest losing streak since the middle of january. so what we're seeing here is reality check has clearly bounced the gut check is coming in. what the it can evaluation really should be, their price really cheap some of them can get them dirt cheap right now. >> i like the idea that they rebound led by old blue chip names. but what's going to spark technology? >> well you know what maybe technology is the coal mine era because they've been high flyer all of a sudden they start to stumble. it is unfair one of the best quarters of all time and then this one will ruin everything. what they built up until now. so i like amazon and facebook. i just think this could be o canary in coal mine and outpacing for several years but now things slow down i think with unicorns blowing up maybe average investor will say maybe we're getting out oh our skis get ahead of ourselves.
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>> i want to start with two, first facebook. facebook relatively unchanged but had a huge weeks last week and now share of amazon huge week both on earnings keith if you have to buy just one, which one would it be? >> no question it would be about facebook. i think amazon is a big warehouse they can never make more than just lacet of money. facebook makes a lot of money. >> iconly i think amazon siller that kills every company in every category. i'm worried about law of niching returns but facebook over o amazon. >> two numbers. you know, one out of every four people are on facebook around the globe so they have another say 25 or 50% more to go they don't get everybody. but they have room to go u up. half of the internet traffic around the world already goes through amazon servers.
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so how much more are they going to grow been their high flyer so that's why i so lean towards facebook. >> either way my wife uses amazon every day so we're cutting a deal with fulfillment at the house. you've got what, you know. big merger 28 billion dollars has been scrapped lements go to lauri new york stocks exchange for exactly what happened. >> done, 2 billion down the tube. combine number two, services company, behind but the concerns were the problem here. you have department of justice and fc filing lawsuits to block this one. halliburton said forget about it. worth it to pay $3.5 in the breakup fee. they'll use that money to pay down a billion dollars of that and also buyback billion that are worth of its own share. so use shares as you saw they're higher here at the open. both stocks up at the moment. charles. >> thanks a lot.
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i have to tell you guys i think it is unfair and dumb on the administrative part. number one it's not ab american company . they weren't merging for ma monopoly but to sure voof. we don't want to forget commodity hanging tough around that $45 mark. you think next leg should take it to 50, of course, o gold which has been rallying all year lon e-long. scott what's the deal with gold specifically? yeah dollar that has gotten cheap or that has helped but number one global commodity have the go and a boost and that's not because of the dollar but beaten up for last five or six years but i think gold has got room because -- global investors are ig tay a chance that gold will be either this price next year or high or. rather than put their money someplace where they're going to get a negative return guaranteed
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by their bank. >> don't be fooled last year there have a runup in beginning of the year and then oil wept down. so it's still a supply glut story for oil. >> lately some of the number look like drawnout have been better. at least we have some draw downs scott what do you think on crude? >> i think we're building a base. i mean, bad numbers are we've at a 40-year low when it comes to counts and more than 50 declare bankruptcy this year. so slowly but sure isly that would build a base. but i agree with elizabeth we have too much supply to get through to have this get out of our hand on the upside. j back to gold thing central bank have been buying like crazy. you don't know what that's like bub p but they've been big buyers. we know about target controversy with the new bathroom policy. it allows mores to use bathroom of the gender they identify with and consequently a petition with more than one million signatures.
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>> american family association putting the this petition calling for a boycott on target because of their position with transgender people and public bathrooms. they say look, target says everyone deserves to be protected from discrimination and treated equally. but american family association counters that with this, quote, target policy is exactly how sexual predators get access to their victims. j you know, keith. is keith there? >> oh, yeah. e., my subscribers in target we got out of 4 a week ago day before it flew up because of the technicals. how much of this kind of stuff influences people who buy stocks a million people avoid going to the store. >> well you're now getting into numberses that matter, charles because you know if it's a couple of hundred thousand investors and customers really not a big deal in the scheme of things. but a million plus people that build social -- now you are starting to worry a quarter from earnings are impact
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ed. i'm staying away from it personally. >> let's talk about starbucks facing $5 million lawsuit. get this, over the amount of ice -- in the iced it beverages. [laughter] i think here we go . ask you about this. short someone orders iced coffee in it and has ice in it. >> saying when you buy a starbucks drink, an iced drink half it is ice. and basically she's saying starbucks is misleading the public. it's overcharging, they should show number of ounces in their drinks, and it's true when you go into the starbucks there's ice in their iced drinks here's the deal. layoff on ice and lower amount of ice in the drinks. >> or you don't order the drink. you can say knock it off on ice but she's going back ten years. anybody who has ordered iced bemple from starbucks overs last ten years.
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>> is it sphiewrt was here he would be talking about loser pays. at this point. go ahead, scott. >> there's too many pages in her complaint. cut it in half. if that gets femoralled up nothing more these days than ceo pay -in well you'ring loo the a marissamaner. she's entitled now to package that is worth $55 million. or a change in ownership in the company. >> i say something wait a second. she has acquired more companies and endured that has more writeoff and look at that golden parachute she's going to walk out the door with. >> red carpet a lot of money to come in. actually. >> nearly four years to turn this thing around that -- that is not golden but platinum parachute. >> should be charged -- exactly.
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stock has done absolutely nothing. all right president obama says don't believe that the reagan tax cuts created growth and process prosperity that's mythology. tell many about that pfnlg he's been fiddling while rome burns. to look at economic stuff in the rear-view mirror while he can not create a policy during his administration and moved this country forward strikes me as disingenuous. >> economic policy is akin to rearranging debt chair on titanic but back over last three, two-term president president clinton, bush, and reagan at 86th marks worse out of the three as it comes to jobs
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so you have to look at the numbers. numbers don't lie. >> reagan had a million jobs in a single mongt and a lot less people in the country back then. thank you a quick look at the big board a moment ago we were up 30. up 50 about markets struggling trying to find some traction here looking for leadership ahead of this jobs report on friday. in the meantime we have yet another donald trump hillary clinton e-mail scandal and tszuj andrew napolitano says this is bad for hillary he's next. plus a week of protest and going violent all because of donald trump. why? and we have jeff dewitt and two trump supporters with us in the next hour or so as well.
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>> okay guys let's check on being board. in opening higher that's exactly where we are sort of mark hadding time for the moment. but there's going to be a crazy, crazy week i can guarantee with jobs report later. now to this, elephant perform their final act as part of the ringling brother circus on friday bringing to an end 145-year-old tradition. new state and local laws place place restriction on use of exotic animals performing. l fangs placed in a wildlife conservation center at the end of an era. another development now hillary clinton e-mail scandal, a new freedom of information request denied by the justice department and the doj reasoning for denying is bachelor's degree news for hillary clinton or judge andrew napolitano. all over the story, all right this one, judge. >> so we have a lot of moving parts here on one let's put a
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line down the middle on one side are 39 civil litigation these are freedom of information act requests in which private individuals and groups have sued state department for copies of mrs. clinton records. on the other side we have two fbi investigations one public corruption and other espionage improper use you have state secret in e-mails in the freedom information act request a reporter for something caught vice news, asked for mrs. clinton accumulations with the fbi. the justice department responded by saying with we can't give you this because it involves a law enforcement matter. now, this is the first time that the clinton investigation on the other side of the line bit fbi has been referred to publicly as a law enforcement matter. mrs. clinton called it a security review. a review of whether or not these document were confidential secret were very, very telling that the fbi meads this
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recognition at the tail end of its investigation of her and did so in writing and before a federal judge. >> what is complication that e-mail aided or abetted a crime. >> absolutely. we know that brian paying was paid $5,000 to commit a crime to migrate secret e-mails from a secret government seiver to mrs. clinton not secure personal server. >> given immunity for that? >> well, "the washington post" is reported that he got immunity. you can get immunity either by a letter from the justice department promising not to prosecute you. or by an order signed by a judge. i haven't seen either of those. his lawyer has told katherine hairnlg our colleague that he did get immunity but lawyer will not say which species of immunity it is. >> so this potential crime that
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was referred to for the -- crime would be espionage that is the failure to protect by moving from a secure venue to a nonsecure venn u ewe -- >> but the denial, though, for the freedom of information requests that refer or reference a potential crime. that does not have to be -- the brian that could be something else entirely different. in other words a crime committed with information cleem or taken from her e-mails. can i dig that seat and infreeness? j you can dig that deeply and i'll help you dig deeper. one of the things that fbi did in the past three weeks was to extradite a romanian intelligence agent who is in jail in romania for compute hacking one of his victims is not ringing a bell. clinton confidant to whom she e-mail state secrets.
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they want to know when you broke into blooming that will e-mails did you see anything from hillary? >> people believe one of the reasons that she did this whole thing with a private server because she didn't want president obama to know she was communicating with blumenthal. that she continue hire him. so instead of state department hiring him, the clinton foundation hired him. which, of course, leads to the other investigation of her. the public corruption one. which is all go allegations in the public domain she was committing sovereign government to do things in return from foreign government to the clinton foundation. all tied in. >> this is web and plot is thickened and plot is all over the place so can we reasonably belove there can be a indictment before november elections? >> congressman darrell isa told
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our colleague yesterday he expects a public decision on the e-mail before the democratic national convention. but not a public decision on the public corruption until afterwards now one involves hundreds of thousands of documents. and the fbi as far as i know didn't get them until january. e-mail while it cause that many documents they have more than a year. >> wow, judge thank you for keeping abreast of this. >> a break only a friday evening. you know. all right thanks so much. [laughter] listen another example liberal lunacy on college campuses conservative speaker criticizes feminism and wantings students rent goes us nuts we're going to talk to the person who caught it all on tape, next.
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>> oh. my. wow, yeah. that was a student activist interrupting a conservative event on the campus of umass joining us the person who shot the video from the campus reform. cassie golly. i saw that floating around the internet last week, and i don't know what had to make of it. it was sort of a joke or it doesn't -- it seems surreal back us through tweact what was going on there. j trig rs has political correctness gone too far on college carwases there's protest already going on. and you know, the speaker came on stage greeted with people attacking them already before they have a chaps to spook. i say throughout the entire event these speak rs might have had 200 secs of silence. entire events was people shout, screaming. you know i was embarrassed embarrassing to be a college student there who shows how these students are in the work
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place . >> yeah. [laughter] >> did you know that -- was there organization before hand did you see posters or o flyers or hear people talking about going there specifically to disrupt the speakers? >> yeah. so on their facebook page there was people talking about how they were going to disrupt it and stink bombing the event. >> the young lady who really just went berserk for lack of a better word or precisely the better worked for it is she a college student there and if so what are people saying about it since is? >> well i don't believe she goes there but one of the other schools in mass a hamster college. but people are saying it's embarrassing a and she threw an adult temp earl tantrum. >> speakers themselves, you know, again we're seeing this
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more and more, obviously, particularly when it comes to conservative speakers did you have a chance to talk to any of them? >> they've seen the video and tweeted it on twitter. but you have to remember that this isn't -- this isn't unique. this happens all of the time. campus reform with a leadership institute they report all of the time and this went viral but this mans all of the time almost every day. >> here's a thing cassie quickly is it that structure was wrong of event that more people need to take the triggering debate and women didn't have five seconds. do they have enough speaks on stage countering the other speakers? >> well plan was to only give them 20 minutes to speak and then have a q and a but they couldn't wait until that. but that was the way to deter it. >> cassie we appreciate it. you're right that captured it all and hope you write it and good work. we appreciate it. thank you. >> left this in california turning viability because of
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>> new this morning, bernie sanders says he's not going anywar. he's about to hold an event in indiana. and the virtual tie in the latest poll. we'll monitor the event and bring you highlights. it's 7 a.m. on the west coast. and in california, they're turning to violence in their opposition of donald trump. protesters across that state all week long and more to come as california votes in republican primaries. ashley, what is it about the left. ashley: they join in and revert to violence, burning flags and egg throwers and holding the mexican flag and stating no hate in our state.
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and donald trump was escorted by his security guards and had to leap over a small fence to get into the back building and said it was easy to get across the border. sometimes i think easier going getting into america than into that event. holding the mexican flag, i remember when the students marched in california and mexican flags. if you want liberty and rights, hold the american flag liz: free speech, but i don't like the violence. charles: i don't like the violence, but i don't understand that, if you don't feel like you're not represented properly and your rights are infringed on, hold the american flag
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liz: i hear you, bow flags. >> demonstrators are angry in iraq, and stormed the green zone. they with temporarily end the protests only after the prime minister called for their arrest. we are going to have more on that in a few moments with colonel ralph peters. fake a look at the dow, still essentially flat. we've been up as much as 55 points, just sort of skimming along here and take a look at apple shares, a challenge big time last week, way under $100 a share and it's coming off the worst week in three years, oil is down a little bit, but holding around that $45 mark. could be consolidating maybe for the next leg higher. big names that you do know leading the s&p. wynn resorts, monster beverages, sunoco-- sisco with an a "s", the food providers, and donald trump ahead of ted cruz and kasich a distant third.
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and lee is with us. all right, do as i say for ted cruz? >> it is for cruz, definitely not for trump, but cruz. he put his chips down, most of the money he's got left. yeah, i think he knows it. charles: what do you think is going wrong here? this is a very conservative state and he's got a campaign today and wrote an op-ed. do you think that the air is completely out of his campaign? >> i think there's a few problems. i think he made a number of miscalculations in indiana much like trump did in wisconsin and he couldn't afford to make the mistakes right now. number one, his alliance with kasich, a huge mistake, he handled it completely wrong. he said it wasn't a alliance, and kasich saying, knowing to see here, it was an alliance. 65% of people in indiana say i don't approve of this alliance, it made it seem like he was a back door politician, all the
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things corrupt and put him in the same category of insiders people don't like. and it was a big, big blow to him. what's ironic about that, donald trump wrote the art of the deal. ted cruz running if well, delegates in arizona. from public relations, when he's doing well, it looks like what he's doing-- the way he handles it behind closed doors. if he was transparent. look up until this point. 70% of votes are going for people that weren't donald trump. we want to make sure these people's voices are heard doing into the convention, he would have a different result. >> the press release, and he's something of a loose cannon and vote for him anyway, it's an
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unmitigated disaster. what about carly fiorina, helped or hurt? >> i don't think it helped him. i think he had polling numbers that said, look, donald trump loses with women. i'm going to win with women by having carly fiorina on the ticket. what he didn't estimate properly, carly fiorina doesn't necessarily draw women. she has-- she's pretty polarizing if i can himself. so the two of them together don't necessarily add up for a better ticket for cruz. charles: speaking, let's stick with that whole thing about women. your next one, trump doubling down on hillary clinton, saying that she's playing the women's card and all she's got. want to take a listen to this. >> she's a strong person, she's going to have to be able to take it. the fact is, the only card she has is the woman's card. she's done a lousy job in so many ways and even women don't like her. they don't like her, but it is the woman's card and she plays it and i'll let you know in about six month whether or not she plays it well, i don't ng she's playing it well. charles: we'll all know whether or not she plays it well. what do you think now?
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>> i have mixed feeling about the comment. as a woman, oh, it hurts, but quite frankly-- >> what part of that hurt, what donald trump was saying? >> there's a lot of issues around women's right and are women equal and all this. i hate to hear that, but at the same time hillary has been playing it and the truth is, when people say what's so different about you. i'm going to be the first woman president and when she went out with madeleine albright and she said there's a special place for with i am-- women in hell that don't support other women. she's got to be prepared to have that used against her. donald trump does something else no other candidate does, when there's something controversial, he does not back down. it gets people energized and talking about the issues as no one else does.
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charles: having said that, we had kirsten on earlier, it would be better for him to go after her qualifications or lack thereof rather than focusing on the women's card. there may be some women, particularly young women who think he may be a bully. >> people going after qualitycations 2008 even before that running for senate and you know what? 91 is% of people will talk about her as the most experienced candidate. so, that hasn't necessarily worked on its face, but this might. we're having conversations, it's all over the news. she's going back and saying, yeah, i'm a woman's card. it's having more conversation and sparking more debate than any other conversation about her experience has in the last decade. charles: yeah, it looks like it could be an interested double-edged sword. thank you for breaking it down. >> anytime. charles: appreciate it. now i want to get back to the video of the protesters angry over corruption storming this on the weekend.
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colonel peters, is this another example of how unstable iraq is and-- >> charles, of course, it's a result of the incompetent policy defeat of barack obama. i want to be fair because the problem is even greater than one bad administration. it's a fundamental problem of american diplomacy for decades. >> american diplomates, first of all, and leaders, we tie ourselves to individuals instead of institutions. we fall in love with foreigners in well cut suits that have oxford action sent and say the right things. we do the charlton early in iraq, we did it with the nut case, hamid karzai in afghanistan. there's that. and the other problem is our state government can't accept over history borders changed.
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and several thought that iraq, with borders drawn by imperialists for their own interest, couldn't work and break it up. even as iraq is going to remain an integral state, it's breaking its self up. it didn't help, i'm trying to be objective. the bush administration poured so much money in the iraq and afghanistan, and we pour money into poor societies and we back men instead of institutions, we don't want borders to change even though they're dysfunctional and fix everything by pooring in tons of money and turning iraq and afghanistan into looting orgies for u.s. contractors. this is what you get, brother. charles: we must admit that karzai did cut a dashing figure. having said that, having said
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that, we do that, i think, with all third world countries even when they're not in war. to your point all the african dictators have swiss bank accounts. how do we get to say iraq, it's smart, let the kurds have their own particular country. how do we get around this. what are the these institutions we appeal to rather than the individual. who are they? >> we had the shock of building institutions and the rule of law. the one thing we're so impatient, but if you look at the history of democracy in northwestern europe and north america, what came first? the rule of law came before democracy. without the rule of law, of constitutionalism, you don't get to democracy. i'm sorry, i was all for trying democracy in the middle east, but it clearly doesn't work and by the way, charles, you know, i try to be honest. i might be wrong, but i'm trying to be honest and about a decade ago, i took a lot of heat for a column i wrote in
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the new york post pointing 0 ut in an artifical country like iraq with multiple concessions, people who hate each other, the only thing that can hold it together in the long-term is a dictatorship, a strong man. i don't like dictator as a strong man i'm just pointing out the reality. if you want to hold iraq together, i say a strong man or nothing. i say stand by, the kurds, and iraqis will settle it. supporting true allies and killing terrorists not trying to nation build when there's no nation. charles: i think most americans have sort of given up on that idea. >> thank you, charles. charles: the anti-trump protests, every time it sells out at his campaign events, it turns ugly. we're turning to someone from the trump campaign next. >> it's not the easiest entrance, i've ever made.
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>> we will be filing a lawsuit. there is some sort of collusion between the cruz and kasich campaigns. our slate button was checked more than any other and yet, our people are not getting in. our people that we submitted in many cases the names were not showing up. so we are very unhappy. >> well, that's donald trump's campaign chairman over the weekend. jeff joins us now. so what is the gripe here. you were outmaneuvered unfairly or something? what happened? >> you know, the ted cruz campaign is trying to say, oh,
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we didn't work hard enough or we should have done the-- i tell you nobody outworked us, nobody outplanned us, we were absolutely ready and did everything we could to win donald trump's delegates and we did not stand a chance. we were fed so much misinformation. the way it went down was changing and change, ted cruz and john kasich, it seemed like when were on the loop what happened. they did everything they could to disenfranchise people and feed them misinformation and steal delegates. i'm the guy planning for everything. i have a backup plans to my backup plans and we didn't stand a chance. i've been replaying this in my mind and knothere's nothing we could have done. the establishment and government working together with the cruz and campaign delegates, to steal the delegates and there's nothing i could have done. charles: is there one person or
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two person, you said the game change changing and the rules are changing minute to minute. who is in charge of that. >> we kept seeing the huddles between the safe of governor doocy's office who doesn't like trump and the staff of cruz and campaign. and things would happen. we'd be called to a back room, when they'd take the leaders in the back room, people had been going around and telling our people, hey, there's not going to be vote. the second vote where we good killed was supposed to happen at 1:00, it happened at 4:00 and they were delaying and delaying and delaying. they were going around telling just our people, the vote is not going to happen and convinced a lot of our people to actually leave. so this was a systemic destruction of the will of the people. it's absolutely terrible. you know, i saw this happened early, the states, me must be doing wrong. we worked hard and there's no
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question we worked harder than any other campaign. nothing we could have done. you know what scarce me about it? >> go ahead, jeff. >> we know that ted cruz is mat mat ll lly -- math matically eliminated and he's doing everything he can to steal the delegates. what does he know that we don't know, there's a master plan how they're not going to make him mathematically eliminated. charles: i read last week that some are saying perhaps the idea even on the first ballot that delegates are bound, that that only happened one year and that's not written in stone. so that's something you may want to check out. of course, on his side. they're saying, hey, they played the gunman and they outhustled you guys once again. because this has happened in so many states before your state, maybe you guys should have been prepared. let's take a look and talk
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about california for a moment. we know what's going on there with the violence in the past week, all of this offense your guy, donald trump. can you win california in general election, particularly with this kind of stuff happening? >> yeah, absolutely. you know, a lot of these protesters are paid by organizations to come out and do this. we saw this in arizona. i was a part of getting a lot of these people out of the tucson rally and i personally escorting some of them out. what you find out. they don't care about donald trump, they're there to make a point. they didn't have a passion level. the ironic thing when they're escorted out. they have to right to free speech and they want to use that to shout out someone else's, they're vulgar and violent. charles: former governor
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january -- jan brewer. >> cruz was heckled by a child and he responded the way i think my mother would have. >> when a child behaves that way, they get a spanking. poor mouth breather. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? take that. a breathe right nasal strip instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right.
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for a free quote, call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> happening right now, ted cruz is campaigning in indiana. >> can afford seeing their taxes go up 40%. in contrast to donald trump's massive tax increase, as president i'm going to cut your taxes. we're going to pass a simple flat tax where every american pays 10% and you fill out your taxes on a post card and we're going to abolish the irs, that's what this election is about, it's not about more
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power in washington. that's the hillary clinton approach, that's the donald trump approach. more and more power in washington over your lives. instead, i think this election is about getting washington off of your back. getting it off of the back of small businesses and unchaining the incredible ability of small business to generate jobs and raise wages. >> and what are the circumstances you would drop out of the race before cleveland. >> i am in for the distance as long as we have a viable path to victory, i am competing to the end, and the reason is simple, lessen, this isn't about me. it isn't about donald trump. it isn't about any of the candidates. this is about our country and our future. i'm not willing to give up on the constitution and bill of rights. if hillary clinton or donald trump become president, we will see liberals on the u.s. supreme court and we will see the heller decision overruled which means the second amendment right to keep and
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bear arms will be stripped away from every law abiding american. if we allow the next president to be hillary clinton or donald trump, we will see the same economic stagnation, we will see taxes rising on the american people. we will see jobs going overseas. donald trump's massive tax increase would put us into a recession. i'm fighting for the working men and women of this country. if we allow hillary clinton or donald trump to become president, we will see america continue to abandon israel, both hillary and donald say they will be neutral between israel and the palestinianens. i think it's high time we have a president who stands with israel and both hillary and donald say they will keep in place-- >> well, ted cruz in indiana stomping. he was asked about dropping out before cleveland and his answer has gone right back to the campaign speech, saying he's working for the working man and woman. and therefore he won't drop out.
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you get the chain there. and now, up 78 points and gaining a little bit of traction. last couple of weeks we were down a little bit. maybe some people are starting to buy now. of course, we cannot ignore the rally in gold. almost 1%, it was up about a buck now and up a little bit higher. oil holding steady, $45 because hang on, well, stuart varney will not like this. gas is $2.21. that's your national average per gallon. president obama calls out president reagan's economic record and says that the reagan mythology needs to be thrown out and also anti-capitalism protests turn violent in seattle. several officers were injured. more varney next.
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>> take a look at the dow. trying to get a little bit of traction. first, let's take a look at apple. it has been one heck of a year. they are inquiring on all syllables. meanwhile, president obama says the reagan tax cuts created growth and prosperity. albright. how much of the reagan recovery is missed, if any at all? >> those are fighting words. you look up assessed with trying to explain the big boom. the big tax rate reductions.
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not day losing the economy with cheap money. on and on, deregulated. government is not the solution. it is the problem. after president obama made those comments over the weekend, i did some analysis. since the recovery began, the economy grew by 34% in seven years. 13%. one third of the growth rate under obama. >> one thing i like to look at is the population ratio. president obama inherited one holding on pretty well. you are missing the money supply. playing an important role here.
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with respect to history and ronald reagan. articulating to the american public. taking a little bit of pain before we take off. they kind of told us, listen, we will do some things that are heard initially. >> yes. a few good points. if we had that the kind of growth rate under barack obama like we did under ronald reagan, it is pathetic. $3 trillion larger. making a really good point. he was the said chairman back then. the late 70s, early '80s. it did cause some short-term pain. you remember that. we had corridors where the
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economy grew seven, 8%. can you imagine? he would be doing cartwheels down pennsylvania avenue. >> it cannot happen because of his policies. they do not care about anything but redistribution. >> charles, they also believe that cheap money is a way to stimulate an economy. that was the other interesting thing about that interview. we should be borrowing more money. we borrowed a trillion dollars. why not maxed it out. hillary says that we need to act.
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>> puerto rico is such a sad story. you want to see the end result of bernie sanders socialism. half of the people on welfare. it is a very sad situation there. a very credible plan, charles. trying to pop puerto rico on solid footing. we did that in washington, d.c. at the mid- 1990s. it worked beautifully. we need to do that in puerto rico. if you do that, we welcome back two or three years. >> winning new york and florida in november. >> porter reiko starts taking government transfers. they had great growth. it went downhill.
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>> thank you so much. >> more violent protests over the weekend. high noon strategies. along with ashley. you know, every time they sort of get together and protest to get really ugly and violent. >> it is really ironic that they are protesting. they had a minimum-wage increase. studies that have shown we have seen an increase in unemployment as well as job losses. this is a 61% increase in labor costs for him. the irony here that we're seeing this violence. >> these guys go out there and create mayhem wearing masks. >> just go from one demonstration to the next.
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i do not really care about anything. >> a cocktail party everywhere they go. >> there are some agencies that seem like they kind of help you as well. some very deep-pocketed anti-capitalists out there. >> president obama daughter attending harvard university. >> if you can afford it. if your school allows for it, why not. it leads to an increase in gpa. others saying it increases the likelihood. getting into a harvard university. good luck to her. >> he goes to school in london. he is doing extraordinarily well. [laughter] >> an article.
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>> some guys on colleges. the best thing you could do. >> president obama going to the same thought process. >> a helped my son. >> you have seen this kid being escorted out by the cruz campaign. the boys actually yelled out, you suck, at ted cruz. take a listen. double logo. >> you know, in my household, when a child behaves that way, they get a spanking. [cheering] >> children are brats these days. my parents would have -- i would have gotten in trouble.
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[laughter] >> free speech or lack thereof. >> he did take a shot at trump with this comment. >> i would not have said it. let's go down to lori rothman. having a fantastic day. the price of gold hitting that important level of $1300. still up, as you can see. 1293. that is giving the gold stocks. the gold miners etf. some of those stocks.
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back to you. >> thanks a lot. transgender bathroom policy. getting really big. we cannot get enough of this amazing video. should i enter showing the moment like the gens. technology has finally caught up with the pro-life movement. what we are seeing is it is the folks on the left. the pro- abortionists. they are absolutely -- there is no question about the humanity of a pre-born baby. ♪ it's the little things in life that make me smile. spending the day with my niece. i don't use super poligrip for hold, because my dentures fit well. before those little pieces would get in between my dentures
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gotta manage your risk. an honest opinion is how edward jones makes sense of investing. 9:00 a.m. here is an example of what you missed. as for mrs. clinton's communications with the fbi. we cannot give you this. it involves a law enforcement matter. this is the first time did clinton investigation has been referred to as the law enforcement. mrs. clinton has called it a security review. a review of whether or not these documents were secret or top secret.
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family bathrooms that are single stall places where people that feel uncomfortable can go to. speaking out to the transgender people. speaking out to people that are uncomfortable that transgender people may be in the women's or men's bathroom. we go so far off the course. people that do not manifest physically what they find is true in their minds. >> nobody believes that the transgender community represents danger to the girls. they take advantage of that policy to create new victims. >> i know a lot of moms who are now saying i am going to walmart. >> a lot of people joining the debate on the fashion policy. 1.1 million people have signed a petition to boycott.
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>> charles, i think that there are two factors. concerned about protecting. sexual progenitors that would misuse this policy. exploited i those that would blur the distinction. it is interesting. jesus addressed the transgender issue 2000 years ago in matthew 19 when he said god made them male and female not male, female and? i think the most loving thing we can do to transgender people is
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not paid them or bridge will them come up but sure them that their gender is a part of god's loving plan for them in their life. >> i do want to ask you about something else. the flash of bright light. this is an amazing video. americans have moved to the left on social issues in every area except for the abortion area. a blog. it deserves protection. martin luther king jr. recognized this decades ago when he said how can we keep the dream alive.
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it is a slave and mothers will. i think we need to protect life and not destroy it. >> donald trump supporter. up by 15 points in indiana. the state has a lot of these evangelicals. a larger percentage of republicans. cruz has to do better than he did in the northeast. is it misleading? >> it looks like it may be very accurate. there is a reason that donald trump is registering with evangelicals. the only outsider left in the race. i also think that many people believe donald trump is only person that has a chance to beat hillary clinton. the holy grail for evangelicals
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beating clinton. trump has received 10 million republican votes in the primaries. that is more than mitt romney. even ronald reagan received all of the primaries put together. after california, trump will have received more republican primary votes than any republican in history because he is withdrawing from democrats into pendants. >> before i let you go, there are some evangelicals that are really fighting very hard. they cannot come to grips. what do you say to your fellow, the southern act convention. what do you say to them? >> thank you very much. really appreciate it.
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this is going to be in. let's get this over with. i'm going to see what it is like. taking down some of the people in front of us. i saw osama bin laden standing on 2 feet. he did not blow up. i took some shots. hit them in the face. hit him again when we went down. we just did this. we may live now. >> you see anything there. anything? shots? >> he was not surrendering. his beard is shorter. that is his nose. >> then, the other team, everyone got him together. pulled him out. >> the preparation for this, did it go almost exactly?
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did you have the layout? >> everything on the exterior, nothing on the interior. we do not want someone to tell us what it looks like on inside the inside because it will look opposite. i want to know how many people they take. you never want a perfect plan. once you leave, it will show up. everything changes. what is the worst thing that can happen? let's talk about that for 30 seconds. i was with the greatest team ever assembled. we have been working together four years. much more complex targets. ashley: thank you. really appreciate it. coming up in the third hour of our new company, a lawsuit against starbucks. too much ice in their eyes coffee. that outrage.
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a commencement speech. suggesting that it is a bad idea. we will play it for you coming up. dow jones industrial average is up. we cannot ignore gold. a 20% for this year. in the meantime, oil is holding out 45. maybe $50. new this hour. forcing the closure of all the schools, cities public schools. joining us now with elizabeth macdonald. the city cannot guaranteed teachers pay. all right. we cannot be guaranteed way, we will not show up. >> detroit was predictable behavior. that means he took it from his father. gave it to his wife.
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they will have 100 years of leadership. the detroit teachers are the same model that has failed the city. too many heavyweight on their pension contributions. bad contracts. bad success stories. kids that cannot literally, out of school ready to go to work. ashley: here is the thing. someone is looking over it. the teachers. what kind of obligation do they have to help the kids? we saw this with the chicago teacher strike. what about the children? do they have a right here? hopefully, we will figure out the money later. >> this is an old story. >> not about the teachers
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either. they get screwed. >> that does not mean that they cannot show up. it should be about kids first. we have seen this over and over again. when are we, when are our parents going to stand up and say enough is enough. keep the teachers union understand. they cannot get away with this. the leadership does not care. i reiterate. they do not even care about the teachers. one of the schools, by the way, the ben carson school. one of the greatest to come out of poverty. one of the schools affected by this, ben carson. one of the great examples of what you can do when you have good teachers and public schools. this is the failure. detroit will continue to fail.
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it is capable of being they are when they want to move back. >> there has been a conservative effort to bring detroit back. all of these tax plans and save zones, a lot of smart people coming here. all right. the supreme court says -- georgette, what do you make of that? >> i tell you what, as we all know, the markets, it takes, i think that the supreme court did the right name. let the market decide that. you have to be ready for the market to decide they will not pay that. they will find other means to get their job done where it is affordable. robots, etc. you have to be prepared for both sides of that argument.
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>> it is what is going on. you franchisees, mcdonald's or burger king, you have to keep paying. wait a second, we really are not business units for mcdonald's. we pay a lot of money. this is a big wake up call. ashley: anti-capitalism is that. >> going after make donald's. how many more burgers do you have to sell to make up the extra cost? unemployment compensation. you get rid of workers because he will not put yourself out of business. >> we know that that is the drill. mike bloomberg. the university of michigan.
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>> it is to learn how to deal with difficult situations. not to run away from them. it is exactly that. might grow. in a macro sense, one of the most dangerous places on a college campus is this space. >> more liberal lunacy. >> mike bloomberg is a new yorker. they went after 16-ounce did goltz. on the other side of the country, you can go get it. liberal lunacy is extended beyond all measure. safe spaces are exactly that. they are lunacy. you take critical thinking. when you get to work, when you
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go to work for some company, you do not get a safe space. somehow in life, there is safe spaces. where are we, what are we preparing our young people? >> they teach stupid things like that. >> must always be protect it. >> somehow you can be insulated from reality. we all know that it can throw a lot at you. >> a will be voting tomorrow. senator ted cruz. make a call.
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>> he will win. it is inevitable. you should get behind it and make it work for you. that is where we are in the republican party. trump will win tomorrow. it looks very good for him at that point on. he takes off 57, 57 tomorrow. 224 that he needs. guess what, it is time for us to face the inevitability of this. get behind trump. >> had cruz does not sound like he will do that. >> this paul went up. all of these became outliers. i do not have a horse in this race. it has been very difficult. trump has momentum. it looks even more inevitable for trump.
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crews went back to the delegates. he is playing the delegate game. >> all the other stuff. >> do not under estimate the momentum of what that means. >> a month ago, ted cruz was supposed to win indiana. i want to say thank you to david webb. a come back a little later. now to those violent protests from the left. they are getting really nasty. they would be vilified a lot more. >> certainly. a lot more media focus about who they are. about two they are breaking the law. not to attack the lease cars. not to engage in violence.
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it happens at these trump rallies. also the things that will bring on trump. is he condoning it? >> initially in the beginning of this election cycle, the mainstream media will not let us forget, if you will. we will see a loop after loop. that is what they are trying to lose. a counterbalance. i do not think that the two are related. >> i did think that it was legitimate earlier in the cycle. some were getting involved in scuffles at the rally. he has stopped doing that. i think quite deliberately so. i did not read any great articles. i did not see a lot of television coverage today. who are these people? this happened outside the event.
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it does seem like there is almost a blame trump first mentality. they are clearly showing up at some of these events. donald trump has gotten this amazing amount of pre-slashed earned media, if you will. the mainstream media is also. to set them up. ushering him in as a candidate so they can help destroy him going in the general election. >> the media is totally lapdogs for donald trump. they think he will be the weakest candidate against hillary. the mainstream media did not take trump seriously four months and months and months. he gets hammered by pundits on the right. he seizes a lot of airtime that he get. far more than ted cruz.
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marco rubio was hard to book. too much television coverage of the rallies. saying the same thing over and over again. not everybody knows that he is good for ratings. the idea that we just handed this to trump on a platter because we think he will collapse, i think that he could give hillary a very hard time. secondly, a lot of the coverage she has has been negative coverage. bouncing off of him or helping him. >> media 101. all coverage is good coverage. >> inc. a lot, buddy. i want to check out starbucks. a few still putting too much ice in its iced coffee. judge napolitano. he is so eager. we have him over there. also, the man that knew ronald reagan personally. we will get a take on president
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it president reagan and his economic mess. >> the person that knew him best. the chief of staff. jim baker. in my book, he wrote, he brought us through a tougher session and helped establish one of the greatest periods of peace and prosperity. noninflationary economic growth. i think that that really puts that to rest. i don't know why. on the left, wanting to take on and denigrate reagan all the time. he was one of our great residents. >> the perfect proxy for what made america successful from day
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one. the pull yourself up by the bootstraps. the notion that any of us, no matter where we are born, can decide where we end up because of the way the system is laid out. completely countering to what president obama and others are trying to sell us. >> he was a masterful art reaching bipartisan consensus. we have not had that in a long time. i think that reagan was a master. he showed how he could do it. tip o'neill was an opposite party. reagan and he worked out things, and they fought like heck. at night they got together. >> one more, ambassador. you say he would be fighting ices very differently. how?
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>> he proved it with the russians. a committee under the national security council. he asked me, since i headed usia , talking about everything america did overseas, with that, what we did was, we had fbi, cia, state, everybody around the table. they are wandering in the desert right now. they have not got a cohesive plan. they are not talking to each other. what we really need to do is, general motors. we need the insurance companies. the great minds of this country and advertising agency. what we need to do is what reagan did. we brought in the top advertising people.
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>> let me ask you about that. cam -- hamstrings, any government did the american public has had a weak stomach for violence. a weak stomach for war. particularly on their failed leadership. we are ready to throw in the towel. >> we are losing the war. the way to do that is to bring in private sector brains and the government and marry them. we did that. reagan administration. helicopter getting shot down. i asked kirk douglas. people go to afghanistan in
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which they did. >> i think that that is a great point. ambassador robbins, thank you very much. really appreciate. big names leading into ohio. monster beverages. cisco. amazon and netflix all higher. yahoo!'s chief melissa mayer, we have more on that coming up. also check this out. they say they have made a spray. we will put it to the test next. ♪ show me movies with romance.
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show show me more like this. s. show me "previously watched." what's recommended for me. x1 makes it easy to find what blows you away. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. ashley: take a look at this. the first u.s. cruz ship in nearly 40 years crossing the florida straits docking in havana today. the ship is from carnival cruise lines. they look like they may have a good time. marissa mayer. she guarantees $55 million. forced out of the company.
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a very successful businesswoman. >> if i did, i would not the here. on the cruz ship. this is exactly. now in this election. they are giving her this parachute. this is exactly why people are angry with the system. they're working hard. they cannot get ahead. a ceo that has literally decimated their savings. she is getting 55 million. >> i follow the market very closely. i know there's a lot of pressure.
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i see a few of these women, high-profile, struggling and companies. do you think they get a longer stay at the job even though they are struggling because they are a woman? >> i hope not. it is a legitimate question. the board has the responsibility. gone a long time ago. >> they may feel intimidated. >> i personally think they should be doing better as an investor. they make $36 million / year. 42 million a year before that. they rolled out the red carpet for her. >> four years of turnaround.
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accomplish nothing. >> absolutely. >> anti-trump protesters in california. we know that it turned violent. we still have a month until that primary. we will hear from a top official in one of the state only republican counties next. >> a l care about donald trump. paid from somebody to do this. they did not really have a passion level. they get upset when they get escorted out. they want to use their right to free speech to shoot down someone else's. ♪ ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one. i earn unlimited 2% cash back on
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>> take a look now at the dow jones average, up 70 points, gab a huge make or break point for this rally. the rally cannot be ignored, up 20% this 'and gaining more traction today. again, oil holding in at 45 bucks. but this is a remarkable rebound. maybe setting the move to 50 this month oil numbers come in. 2.20 your national average for regular. jeff flock live from caramel, indiana.
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does cruz have a chance? do you have a sense of whether or not he has a chance tomorrow, jeff? >> you know, i certainly think he has a chance, but i tell you. it is a tough road ahead. take a look at this. actually we moved to bend. donald trump will be in carmel earlier today. but south bend rally. this doesn't start until 7:00 eastern time tonight. and look at the people lined up here already. people have been here since 7:00 this morning. and this is the kind of passion we're seeing for the trump campaign. but ted cruz spending a lot of money -- newspaper ads, print ads, radio ads, television ads, you know, this is in some sense ted cruz's last stand. at least that's what these folks here are hoping. >> with cruz, you lose. >> hey, if you voted for hope and change, all you got was dope and broke. drugs going up the border, jobs going down the border. let's remember that, people. >> just a few comments from the trump crowd that is
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growing here in indiana. it's going to be a tough one from ted cruz. but we'll be here at day, charles. [laughter] charles: thank you very much, jeff. well, the left is being -- [laughter] two days past and last week it has been absolutely incredible. so we want to bring in fred whitaker, orange county republican party chairman. fred, what the heck is going on in the state? already up in flames, and we haven't gotten into the deep part of the election cycle yet. >> well, charles, thank you for having me here with you. my father-in-law is a great fan of yours. you know, the left in california is like left initials. they are using tactics to silence people who they don't agree with. 30 years ago i was college republican chairman at berkeley and every time we tried to have a rally, every time we did simple, they tried to. silence us.
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they've been doing this since 1968 and tom hayden and the sds disrupting the democratic convention in chicago. charles: fred, what do you make of the composition of these crowds? a lot of it looks organized. some of them look to be, like, bernie sanders supporters at least. what level of sophistication is there, you know, to separated from any real organic anger or animosity? >> well, certainly i think there's a level of organization that's very professional in it. some of the people there's rumors that they're getting paid to do this by move on.org. and well organized anarchists, which is a little bit of an ironiy. and then if you look at the 17 people arrested inform costa mesa, they were all millennials in the 19 to 23-year-old range, and they all want supposedly bigger government. and the bigger government they
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got was riot police. so i think they all had common core literature classes or they don't understand irony. charles: let's talk about anaheim because there you had the entire city council try to denounce donald trump because they didn't agree with him. do towns get to do that in your state? >> well, thankfully i'm not on the anaheim city council. i'm on the council in the neighborhoods city of orange and we don't have some of the problems in anaheim in the last years. that resolution got voted down on a 3-2 vote. you have to understand some of the dynamics that have happened over the last three years in anaheim. there was riots about three years ago from a police shooting that happened. anaheim got sued by the aclu saying that they didn't have any latino representation on their council. so now they've had to settle that lawsuit, had to go to districts, and it's well predicted in the fall four of
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those districts will be held by latinos. it could have been definitely an effort to try to -- charles: right? >> from the council's point of view to try to, you know, make some peace with the latino community. but resolutions that don't have the binding effect of law sometimes don't go very far and this one didn't either. charles: craig whitaker, thank you very much. how's this? we have a new development happening right this hour. virginia republicans are suing virginia's democratic governor over his executive order. all rise judge andrew napolitano is here. judge, i've been talking about this personally for about ten years. you can see this coming, two states to talk about this. it was tilt elections in my mind to the democrats for years to come. >> well, there's actually a lot of states that allow it. but there are two states that allow the governor to allow it. so what governor macdonald did was to commute the sentences
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of every convicted felony in the state of virginia at the present time, which was about 210,000 people. that cometation removes the thousand shout not vote for the rest of your life disability. he did that in the face of the opinions of two attorneys general of the state, which said you can't do it in large numbers. you can't do it in groups, you've got to do it individually, and you've got to examine the record individually and you can only do it after they apply to you. so that's what the lawsuit will be. what the governor did is not an act of clemency because clemency is to individuals because clemency is mercy. the governor allowing every convicted felony to vote has effectively changed the statute. charles: what do you think? >> well, it depends where they file.
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if they file in the federal courts, they're going to say we don't want to get involved. charles: well, i have to tell you. i think this movement is strong, and it will happen in a lot of states. and it will tilt elections, in my opinion. >> well, in our home state, felonies are already able to vote, new jersey. charles: yeah. >> same here in new york. virginia and a couple of others, they've considered that a lifetime banjoo, yeah, some people think it might be a good deterrent against crimes. especially felonies. i want to ask you something that's really deep and a real serious constitutional issue. >> what's that? charles: starbucks. too much ice inized coffee. >> you've got to be kidding. charles: there's a $5 million class-action lawsuit saying they're putting too much ice in the ice coffee. >> i think this is really the height. can you say to starbucks can you give me a little bit less ice and a little bit more coffee? i think you can. they're known for their customer service and pleasing customers. but to suggest this is an appropriate use of the
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judicial system, i almost wish varney were here today because when he says you lawyers are ruining the system, i would say, stuart, you're right. charles: instead now he's sipping anized coffee. >> with too much ice in it. he is too cheap to go to starbucks. charles: that's true. liz: sound byte. charles: probably has ice in the house, though. it does speak to the open money grabs. ever since the hot coffee mcdonald's. >> money grab is for lawyers. because the people in the class -- how big is this class? every human being that has ever ordered ice coffee from starbucks. it's impossible to find. liz: that will take ten years. >> they'll get a 50-cent discount on their next ice coffee and the lawyers will get a couple million in legal fees. where do legal fees come from?
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from starbucks profits. charles: yeah. >> and from the profits of investors. charles: right. thank you very much. really appreciate it. so coming up a company that claims it has made a spray that would make almost any item virtually indestructible. check it out. they have an egg out there covered with this stuff. they say you can't break it. well, lauren simonetti is going to give it a try
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. >> and good morning from the floor o of the new york stock exchange. well, call it the buffett down, stocks in rally mode this morning. up about 90 points, a session high. s&p up one half of 1%. one stock taking part in the rally, groupon after falling last week. up another 6% today. arby's downgrading groupon saying it has deteriorating fundamentals. and look at race, this is ferrari, shares down more than 2.5% today. ferrari, one of the automakers from distress of strengthening. and cheryl will take over as expected as ceo. strength in the eatingers and home builders. back for more
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. charles: take a look at hathaway. liz claman spending the week in omaha for the annual shareholders meeting. she got a chance to sit down with warren buffett. liz, what did you find out? >> i'm looking at the chart. he must have said something shareholders like. the stock up $800 a share, standing at 219,000.
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i want to know where his mind is right now when it comes to economy and investing. they really want him, charles, to ask him a lot about politics and where the country is going right now. and of course we have the presidential election coming up. there were a lot of questions. he is very, very serious about supporting hillary clinton. he thinks quote she will win and she will win big. he told me that on saturday morning as we walk through this massive crowd of media and of course shareholder fans, there it is. that huge crowd. you know, i have to tell you more and more questions were about donald trump too. and one of them was, you know, that there's the sort of tough and contentious feel to what's going on right now. country can't be stopped, no matter who, no matter who is going to be the president. in fact, he said, look, we tried warren and calvin coolidge but guess what? the country is still great. and coming up at 3:00 p.m. eastern, charles, we're going to ask him a lot more. charles: i cannot wait.
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i thought coolidge was okay. 3:00. see you then, liz. well, our next guest has created a special fruct product that they say when sprayed onto an object, it makes it virtually indestructible. come on in, dennis, president of line x to explain all of this to us. it sounds too good to be true. >> you know, it really is a fantastic product with lots and lots of applications. and we have had some fun demonstrating that this morning on the laz a. charles: yeah, give us the genesis. i would like to spray myself a few times before getting on a new york city subway. >> you know, we've been around for 23 years and the product has really benefited the last few years from just the -- again, the increase in the automotive industry. we got our start spraying bed liners and coming out of the financial crisis of '08. the car business has come back in a big way. and now the product has become increasingly more accepted.
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so we've had more opportunities to showcase it. charles: so is this one of the things where consumers see it -- it sounds like you have that industrial demand from the automakers. but now are you starting to see consumers want to buy this stuff and use it in different applications? >> we are. in addition to the automotive demand, we're seeing commercial and industrial customers from other industries saying, hey, there's an application here as well. but, you know, they look -- they see the trucks driving around, see how durable the product is and say, hey, what you know? we would like that as well. charles: all right. we've got to put you to the test. >> all right. charles: we have one of our reporters, lauren simonetti outside she's got a baseball bat. you're telling me she won't be able to damage this car. ashley: look at that. charles: iis that a paper cup? >> that is a solo cup. she crushed the one without the product and standing on the one with the product. and, by the way, great balance. ashley: yeah, i was going to
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say. charles: that was a regular egg. >> that was the regular egg. the noncoated one. and here's the coated one. charles: wow. liz: now what's this? charles: lightbulb. >> i'm afraid to throw this one. smash. >> to demonstrate the strength of the product. liz: maybe you could sell it to the presidential candidates. >> absolutely. they could use that in seattle. stuart: in 23 years, i've never heard of them, but it does seem there's a lot of applications that you can use something like this. >> we are. we're seeing it more in construction, there are marine applications, a number of our partners that we have in the manufacturing world have put
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it on rtvs and utvs, so there really are a ton of applications. charles: well, there's a lot of also -- okay. impressed with the solo cup. impressed with the lightbulb. but we heard it could do even more than that. so i tell you what we want to do. we've got a jeep outside covered with the stuff. >> yeah. charles: when we come back, we're going to put it to a real test. ready? >> all right. charles: we'll be right back. >> driving through buildings? [laughter] this just got interesting. why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions
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call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. charles: all right. we're back with dennis, line x president, his company claims that it makes items instruc instructible. elbow. >> as hard as i can. i'm hitting that bumper. and my hand hurts from the vibrations. and now drive over the solo cup. let's go, mike. and wait. if you can come out on the other side.
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ashley: something crunched. >> they're totally. charles: the tires crunched. >> pretty amazing. charles: lauren, i was told you're going to hit someone wearing an armored suit. >> is there someone i can hit? come out here, charles. we'll gear you up, and i'll hit you. charles: now, the jeep itself. is the whole jeep lined with this or certain parts? >> the jeep is and if someone gives me a key, we can do what we used to do in high school, charles. charles: oh, boy. >> anybody have a key? charles: here we go. now, new yorkers really need this protection. elbow grease in there. ashley: amazing. >> i'm putting elbow grease in there too. charles: all right. let's get down to brass tacks. it's not available to consumers. so if i want to go around
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spraying the house, you can't. >> no you can't. you have to visit our franchisees. we have a new york of about 485 franchisees that would love to treat your vehicle with this product. charles: you take your pickup truck, how much would it cost it? a regular-sized pick up. an f-150. >> yeah. if you get an f-150, the bedside will matter. but it's going to be roughly about $500. and what that does is two things really. it enhances the value of your vehicle, it provides an incredible esthetic. but more importantly it is more durable. the guys that are in trades throwing equipment into the back of these, it holds up the wear and tear. charles: how has business been? >> business has been great. we have benefited from the up particular in detroit. charles: the truck business is outrageous. >> trucks are very pop right now. low gas prices, the vehicles
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have become incredibly lifestyle choices i think. so, yeah, we're really benefiting from that. charles: do you find that people need the trucks from work and they're still coming from longevity? if i'm going to buy a pickup truck to line this. >> yeah. absolutely. if you think the average truck today is going to be about 45,000, adding in another 500 bucks is very reasonable. but, yeah, we've seen a lot of people bringing it in just to enhance the value of the vehicle that aren't in the trades. charles: i tease on twitter that maybe we can call this trump spray because it's indestructible. does it come in any core besides black like orange. >> it does. we're able to color match. and i'm not going to touch that. [laughter] charles: but it comes in different colors. >> it does. absolutely. charles: you know, this is a beautiful thing. an american company, 23 years old, you've started from scratch. and this is the kinds of that things get promoted enough.
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have you found any regulatory hurdles? because i wonder it's a spray, it's -- any identify obstacle so far? >> municipalities, this is 100% solid so, no, we have had challenge. in education. charles: dennis. absolutely. great stuff. >> thank you. charles: if you come out with a can -- [laughter] thanks a lot. all right. guys. more varney after this
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. charles: one more check of the big board. dow hanging in there up 50 points. right around 45 bucks. all right. liz. we pulled back a little bit. wee still at a all-time high watch. this week it's going to happen with the jobs report. liz: yeah, this is the week. that's been disputed off and on. but it hangs in there, you know? it's not a good rest of the year. ashley: did a piece from
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there. said last four or five years, it has been one year up. one year down. charles: a little too cute for me. liz: yeah, it rhymes and it's annoying. ashley: it doesn't work. charles: speaking of cute. connell mcshane is in for neil cavuto. >> ashley got her hands on the tel teleprompter again? welcome to cavuto coast to coast, i'm not neil cavuto, i'm connell mcshane, the last mad dash for the indiana. 57 delegates, that's your number. the magic number up for grabs tomorrow on the republican side. just moments senator cruz will be hitting the campaign trail in indiana with the governor, mike pence has endorsed him. so we'll check in on that rally. right now, though, donald trump certainly has the edge in the hoosier state when you look at the polls. and blake burman is covering the whole thing. joins us now on why this may be, blake, an uphill battle for senator cruz the way
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