tv Varney Company FOX Business June 17, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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five years, are investors go to say was that vote crucial, no. how important were the investments you were making and the bonds are expensive, i don't care what they do in the next five years. around the world there are good deals. >>. dagen: a charity for joan rivers, check it out, doing terrific work. maria: have a great weekend, everybody. happy father's day, stuart, over to you. stuart: thank you, maria. gun sales takeoff, now we know why the orlando killer was allowed to buy. one gun owner says he saw 20,000 ar-15 rifles since the orlando outrage whi was saturday. the other says he's selling 15 an hour and you'll see a gun stock take offment how come the killer could buy. after several warnings, the former director of the fbi say that agents are told to back
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off if muslims are the president says we're making progress against isis much the director of the cia says not so. how can this be? and disney, and an alligator chased the child in the property last year and employees warnings were ignored. bad pr. it's friday, the news flows thick and fast. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ breaking news from the political world. reports that marco rubio will indeed run for the senate again in florida. that's according to congressman david jolly. kind of let the cat out of the bag this morning. rubio is back in the senate race. okay, got there. now, stocks, let's get to the market. they're going to open slightly lower today. they snapped a five day losing streak. listen to this, mid morning thursday, news of the shooting of a british politician who favored staying in the european
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union. that affected the markets here. the dow recovered from a 160 point plunge. come on in, ashley. how does the shooting affect next week's vote? >> there's a belief perhaps the remain vote gets a boost, i hate to use that, i don't want to be insensitive, but the remain side will get a boost from this, based on what we don't know about the shooter's actual motive, but it does lend because of the lawmaker who was killed, she was strongly for remain. and the parliament has been recalled. they're on a break and much like congress gets a break. they're standing up there, jo cox-- >> they suspended the campaigns. ashley: still suspended. stuart: but they're con to convene parliament. ashley: i think primarily just to pay tribute to jo cox. stuart: will this last on thehe markets? this is a temporary.
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ashley: it's temporary, but it could be a pivotal point in the debate. stuart: we don't know. ashley: we don't know. stuart: okay. don't forget, "varney & company" will have a special coverage, special report on the british vote. it is thursday, june the 23rd. we start at 11 p.m. eastern, we go through until 1 a.m. friday morning. the results should be coming in at that point. now, look at apple. china halting sales of the iphone 6 and 6 plus in beijing because of patent infringement? the stock is down-- >> the property regulator says the design of apple's 6 and 6 plus, just too similar, it says, to a chinese phone. it's unclear what that means. apparent apparently stalls selling smart phones have pulled them from the shelves because there's a setback because tim cook was just there, trying to, you know, generate some goodwill. so this is not a good
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development for apple at all. >> it's a patent dispute about the design, the look of the phone? >> similar to a chinese phone. don't they all look pretty much the same? >> that's a thin read, if i've heard one. i think. my opinion liz: the thin end of the wish. stuart: very british of you. and a gun story, and there are various elements to this. i'm going to start with a gun stock, smith & wesson, which is going to be sharply higher at the opening bell today. they just reported a big jump in sales. numbers, please? >> up more than a fifth. profits boosted by a half. look at the sales, smith & wesson for guns, tripled since president obama took office. so, they're selling guns like never before. stuart: and what about the latest period? >> up one fifth. and the boost on a year over year basis. and projecting growth in the next ten months in gun sales. stuart: that stock is a kind of
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a proxy for a hillary clinton victory. if she wins, that stock goes up liz: hockey stick action. stuart: that's a prediction i shouldn't be making, but i think that's a proxy for hillary clinton. the question all this week has been how come the orlando killer could buy guns? listen to what former fbi assistant director james karlstrom told megyn kelly about investigating muslims, roll tape. >> the rules of engagement, what the bureau is told about what they can do and can't do. they can't go sniffing around anything to do with muslims. they can't go around to mosques. they can't do things that they would normally do. i'm not talking things that are off the charts. i'm talking about things that normally would be done, but the orders have come down from the white house. stuart: back off with muslims and then there's this. a florida gun store owner says he tried to flag the fbi after omar mateen, the shooter, tried to buy body armor and an
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arsenal of ammunition. this was two months before the shooting. tammy bruce is here. this political correctness is killing us. >> well, it is and this is what makes the gun argument and the hate crime argument so dangerous. you know, those important issues, of course, and matter to so many americans, but what we're not doing is having this conversation, is the fact that you've got structural problems that are moving this forward, that are literally making-- it would be like sending our troops from the battle of the bulge and tell them to ignore the germans, but if you see a swede then you can go for it. this is where we're at right now. if we can only-- when we talk about those other two issues, with another context, would be very relevant, within the american culture and society. in this case, we have a dangerous situation that they're causing us to not address at all. it will continue to go on. it's a real problem. stuart: yes, this is what we must discuss, we must discuss how we can go after full tilt people that we suspect of being
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dangerous, we're not allowed to. >> with with hundred person, something that somebody comes out of the blue, unfortunately, just discussed with jo cox, a man with mental problems, who was known to have mental problems. this was a man that we knew about, the fbi knew about, that you had your gun store guest saying, you know, we've-- in the news we alerted the fbi, they had multiple alerts and yet, with the orders, with what karlstrom is saying now, we know there are orders to ignore these issues. stuart: that's absolutely extraordina extraordinary, from the former fbi assistant director. just back off. extraordinary stuff. ashley: yes. stuart: we've got a warning from cia director john brennan, he says clearly, isis is as dangerous as ever. however, that does not jibe with what the president said just two days before. listen to this. >> we've seen that this
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continues to be a difficult fight, but we are making significant progress. >> despite all our progress against isil on the battlefield and financial realm our efforts have not reduced the group's capabilities and global reach. >> isil's numbers are shrinking as well. >> the number of fighters far exceeds what al qaeda had at its height. >> these are not religious warriors, they are thugs and thieves. >> they're hard core fighters. >> as isil continues to lose territory, it continues to lose the money that's its life blood. >> yet, isil is adapting to the coalition's efforts and continues to generate at least tens of millions in revenue per month. >> beyond syria and iraq, isil is losing ground in libya. >> the branch in libya is probably the most developed and most dangerous. ashley: wow. stuart: i wonder if you can get a more direct contradiction, bullet point by bullet point.
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>> from his own administration contradicting him. stuart: and the author of the bags defeating jihad. >> have you ever seen such a contradiction between a president and cia director two days apart. what is going on here? >> i've never seen anything like that, stuart. and it just smacks of-- remember that kid's fable of the emporer and the little boy? we've got, you know, brennan, who used to carry the water for obama and his narratives about how we're winning, is the little boy pointing at the emporer and saying, look, he's naked, he's naked. this is finally the rats seem to be jumping the ship. we've had this narrative of they're on the ropes, we're winning, this bubble created and now the director of the cia is going directly against that story and saying, sorry, we're not winning. stuart: but, sebastian, that leaves our policy against isis in shambles because i don't
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know what tt policy is. >> can i go even further? if you go later that's a great juxtaposition, brennan's testimony he later said in nigh 30 years in the intelligence community i've never seen the world as unstable as it is now. >> wow. >> that's a direct indictment of his boss and hillary clinton. think about that, he's saying in the last seven and a half years, hillary, secretary of state, the president and the commander-in-chief, they've made things as bad as they've ever been, stuart. stuart: okay. you've got 30 seconds to tell me where we're going with this. i don't think president obama's going to change or turn around or retreat at all. >> no, he's going to kick the can down the road, he's going to nibble at the edges of the problem and he's going to pass the whole thing over to the next president. he's not interested. he's failed, but he doesn't want to admit it, stuart, pass the buck.
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stuart: which means that we've got at least another six months, probably nine months before there can be any change about our stance vis-a-vis isis, vis-a-vis refugees coming into the country. vis-a-vis muslims coming into our country. this will be no change, impossible to change anything until at least what, january the 20th of next year, am i right? >> absolutely. and it means that americans will still be in grave, grave peril because these policies have facilitated the danger we see in america today. there will be more attacks, stuart, because the policy will not change. stuart: sebastian, thank you very much for joining us. we always appreciate it. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: all right, now look at this. quite an impressive catch by a dad, barehanded, he was holding a child. this is during the blue jays. the ball comes forward him and he reaches. let's see it again, he reaches out and got it!
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>> oh. >> now, that's a dad. >> superman, super dad. happy father's day. stuart: a fine american. and this, the pope petting a tiger when a circus act went on a visit to the vatican and gave thanks to the circus performer for bringing joy to the world's poorest. here is what's ahead. steve hayes mistakenly put on the watch list, because he traveled overseas. what does he think about the no-fly, no buy proposal. family road trip! fun! check engine. not fun! but, you've got hum. that's like driving with this guy. all you do is press this, and in plain english,
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>> residents and visitors, three were basically, had birth defects and that's what's scary. the headline is, pregnant women infected with zika show no symptoms of the virus and they have babies with birth defects. so, three were born with birth defects and three pregnancies ended and 80% of people who contract zika never show the symptoms so that's scary for a lot of people in the united states. >> so they do not know. >> they do not know. they don't know what shape their babies will be in when born. >> that's accurate. >> looks like a higher open for london liquidators. that company agreed not to stop-- not to resume selling, i should say, resume selling china-made flooring. that was their problem. it's up a little. and elizabeth arden, revlon is buying them 870 million dollars. let's get to politics,
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something different for you here. donald trump and the n.r.a. according to reports essentially in agreement on the no-fly no buy list. if you're on the no-fly list, you can't buy a gun. here is steve hayes put on the broader terror watch list. i want to talk to you about that, steve. this is outside the regular course of politics here. what happened to you? >> yeah, it was an interesting -- it was an interesting episode to be sure. i had taken a oneway flight to istanbul with my wife to participate in a cruise for hillsdale college. we flew to istanbul, and i presented by boarding pass at the airport and caused great alarms to go off. shut down my lane. did this hour plus search. it was quite an ordeal and at last i was on the list for several weeks for six weeks.
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stuart: how can you get off? >> it was a funny story, bret baier was hosting homeland security jay johnson for an interview on special report and talking to him mostly about inlegal immigration and i talked to bret beforehand, i said hey, i'm on this list, i talked to the fbi and sent me back to the department of homeland security to get off. it requires me to go to the airport several hours earlier every time i fly. why don't you ask secretary johnson about this and bret played it like the pro that he is, looked at secretary johnson squarely in the eye and said, you know, i have this regular panelist, steve hayes, mr. secretary, do you think steve hayes is a terrorist? a and. [laughter] i suppose he can't afford to joke around, but he look right back at bret and said, you know, bret, i can't speak to steve's individual situation, leaving the possibility open that i was in fact a terrorist.
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stuart: look, in all seriousness, this is the problem with no fly, no buy. because you are deprived of your rights to buy a gun if that's what you want to do, not by an elected politiciby a face once you're on the chris then-- you can go to court to get off the list, can you? >> there are procedures set up to get yourself off the list. i mentioned i couldn't get the right bureaucracy. i filled out a warm on the dhs website and called to follow-up and talked to the press officers and said, hey, you guys really think i'm a terrorist? and the bigger problem to me, stuart, they have these broad sweeps to identify potential terrorists. literally the only reason i made the list is because i took this oneway flight from washington to istanbul and istanbul is a major transit point for people coming from the west wanting to go to syria and fight alongside isis. you shouldn't be blocked from
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buying a gun because you take a oneway flight to a suspected-- even if it's okay, wise for them to add scrutiny to somebody who makes that kind of a trip, you can't deprive them of their constitutional rights, what i think we're talking about in this situation. stuart: steve, we're very pleased to have you back. as far as i'm concerned, you're all right. >> anybody who thinks-- >> hillsdale college is all right with me. good people. steve, thank you very much for joining us, appreciate it. >> you bet. stuart: now this, i'm going to call these kind of disturbing pictures outside of a trump rally. protesters waving mexican flags in dallas, texas. they were shouting obscenities about donald trump. and more than 400 refugees settled here, over 400 despite the cia saying that isis is going to be in the refugee
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>> bernie sanders says not dropping out of the race for the presidency. listen to what he actually said. >> the major political task that together we face in the next five months is to make certain that donald trump is defeated and defeated badly. and i personally intend to begin my role in that process in a very short period of time. stuart: all right. tammy, i think he's waiting to hear from fbi director comey on an indictment. >> yeah, look, all politicians think of themselves first, it's not about defeating trump. he has an opportunity. here is the fact of the matter if he drops out and hillary gets indicted or her health which seems to be a reemerging issue he has no footing if they parachute in joe biden, a joe biden, elizabeth warren ticket. if he's out his delegates can do what they want to do.
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in this case they're bound and he's got some handle on it and and i respect that. stuart: his delegate, maybe, terrible thing to say. all right. and philadelphia is clamping down on soda sales. they're going to tax a big-- it's a new tax, the first american city to do this, a tax on sugary drink. more government interference, you can say that. we've got more momentarily. ♪
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>> all right. it's exactly 9:30 this friday morning, we're off and running and expecting a fairly flat opening. we're down just 7 points. remember the market, maybe we're looking for a two-day winning streak. that's not exactly a streak, is it. ashley: wow. stuart: let's see how we close this afternoon. how about the s&p 500, modest gain yesterday and tiny loss today. look at gold. big jump yesterday on this world problblems and volatility gold this morning is down just four bucks, just below $1300 an ounce. this is how we're opening up today. the price of oil as of right now is up a buck, that's at $47 per barrel. apple's very much in the news
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today. china halted sales of the iphone 6 and 6 plus, just in beijing, there's a copy right infringement complaint and apple has opened up down. and smith & wesson, it's a gun stock, it's up big. 8% higher, sales through the roof and it's raised its forecast, up she goes. look at the 30 stocks on the dow industrials altogether. this is a picture of the overall market's performance. mostly in the red, which means we're going down, just a few in the green, just four or five stocks, right now. four stocks that are actually going up. that's what it looks like from the big picture. who is joining us this friday morning right before the weekend? i'll tell you anthony scaramucci, and ashley and liz in new york. anthony, yours first. apple, they need china big time and now they're halting the 6 and 6 plus in beijing.
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we think it's a flimsy patent infringement deal here. >> you've got to understand, this is the hypocrisy of tim cook and they're going to fight with the fbi here, but there, they're going to roll, i actually believe that it will be a different-- that's my opinion, i think they'll have a different form of iphone, slight modification of the design. they're also accepting in china apple stores that are cloned, that the chinese, you know, apple tried to stop those cloned stores from staying in existence and the chinese have backed them off on that as well. stuart: so, china is sticking it to them. >> 1-0, china versus apple. if i'm following the soccer match. stuart: take it down a buck, a
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long, long way from what it was recently. >> and pad apple watch sales cut in half. stuart: the apple watch is a failure. >> and the stocks trade at item, nine times earnings, it's down and-- >> with that cash pile. stuart: 235 billion dollars. >> there you go. stuart: smith & wesson, a gun stock, it's up 9 the -- 9%. i'm going to call this a proxy for hillary clinton in the election. scott, let me explain myself. if hillary clinton wins gun stocks go up. so smith & wesson and other guns stocks are proxies for hillary clinton. where am i wrong? >> i can see where you're going-- >> oh, what happened there? have we got scott? are you back there, scott? yes.
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>> i'm here, yeah. stuart: keep going. >> no, i understand where you're coming from, because we've had that second amendment creep for a long time from the left. slowly, but surely trying to erode away the rights. we've already got 300 million guns in america as it is. but when you see gun sales rise like that, as we've said before, president obama's been the best gun salesman you've ever seen. but hillary clinton and this being approximately for her and the white house. stuart: later on on this program, we're going to have a gun owner and that he sold over 20,000 ar 15 rifles since saturday. they're flying off the shelves. 500 a pop and up. some other stocks we're watching for, that stocks is up 2% today. oracle on the verge of $40 a share.
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how about mgm. $24 a share. lumber liquidators, they will refrain from renewing selling flooring made it china. that's good, they're up 10%. barclays, i don't know what the story is up 3 1/2% just shy of $10 a share. how about this one, revlon buying elizabeth arden, 870 million dollars, i presume the stocks are moving? >> big time. and lelizabeth arden, in all cash deal and basically puts two age names in the cosmetic and beauty division together. revlon and elizabeth arden. ron pearlman has been speaking strategic options and what do they get? they get to refinance their debt. they get geographic poot prints bigger than they have and famous names, including, taylor
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swift, and others. it should have about 3 billion in annual sales. stuart: 3 billion. there's a big number. we can take that. a dreadful week in terms of pr, the stock, however, has gone up and i suspect that's got a lot to do with the shanghai park opening and then there's this, the alligator story liz: we're working on other stories, guests were seen feeding alligators. and where is the fence around that lagoon. the boy's body was found 15 feet from where he was last seen. and disney could be hit with a wrongful death case by the familiar le and the local sheriff saying this is not a criminal probe into disney right now. stuart: we're six and a half minutes into the show and we've got disney up a fraction and
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the dow jones average. 17, 6 is where we are. morgan stanley fears policy makers against america are repeating mistakes of the 1930's. ashley: the economists say high debt, slower yields, policy missteps, that's what helped to extend the great depression and by the way shall the similarities between then and now are they striking. stuart: that's interesting liz: and fdr's policies extended the great depression, watch in, seven years and economists are looking at the mistakes he made with president obama. >> two things are having, rising nationalism, seeing that with the exiting of u.k., and second is the deflation, they're 1930's style event. we have no policy response to either. stuart: scott, would you come in here, please, repeating the mistakes of the 1930's, you say
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what? >> i say you're right. technology creep in and middle part of america, we've got drones, kiosks robots, driverless car. 29 states, trucking is one of their biggest industries. 29 states, what happens when they go to driverless trucks. this is going to happen in the country and those people have the trillion dollar in student loans and car loans. that's going to crash. we'll create wealth where we've been and we're on the wrong trail. stuart: i don't think we've gotten to grips with our economy today and the roll of technology in crashing prices. i don't think we've got the grips on it, not there. dish network, they are dropping the nfl network, what's that about? >> the contract expired at midnight and they can't see the nfl network on dish.
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stuart: the stock is up. >> the nfl network referring everyone to a website, saying, hey, don't worry, we have many more outlets for you, like comcast, verizon fios and time warner cable. it will be back up by labor day, just made. back up. [laughte [laughter] >> think of soccer, stuart, and we'll get an idea. stuart: that's scott scaramucci. microsoft, i own a little of it. partners with a financial firm to track legal marijuana liz: the first big company to do this, the stock not hitting new highs, no pun intended. what is happening here? mo microsoft hooking up-- not cooking up, and getting in on the government compliance side of it. state and federal laws are con flinting and basically on ad hoc basis and tracking, these
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are usually crash sales. watch this, this is the play. tax collectors in the states and fraft want to tax them for revenue, microsoft is in on the action. 59 states have pot laws and-- >> it looks like microsoft has a program for the pot-- >> beginning to track it. the government. stuart: how about the soda makers? we've got news there. we've had this news all week, ashley. philadelphia becomes the first american major city with pa soda tax. i don't think it had make-- i don't think it will make a difference to the companies. >> if 40 million around the world start doing it. ashley: it shows no impact at all about the amount of calories intake. stuart: what's the british study?
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>> 2% of a can of tomato soup, the consumption. >> people's consumption didn't change at all. and in mexico and-- >> and shellady, i can hear him climbing in. >> you don't get it, they want money on the tax. they want you to continue what you're doing so they can get the money. >> they say they're going to go a daycare and-- >> it went to pensions, actually. the british exit votes, are they going to leave or stay? that's next thursday. i want to go around the block, if the brits leave do we have pay a price here? >> the voting is close to tied, leading to brexit, but the
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markets, stuart, they're doing what they're going to stay. >> you could say 63% of jobs would have an impact, that sterlings and exporte exporters there's a safe haven play and-- >> you people here right here from a financial point of view, you favor the brits staying, is that accurate? >> no, i favor them leaving. >> i want them to leave. >> what point of view? >> financial. stuart: i'll take the risk, please, with my money. and shellady, you say the shame, take the risk? >> if the state's right, yeah, take the risk, number two, only thing we can say for certain, nobody knows what is going to happen. >> it smells a lot like y2k to
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me. ashley: a great analogy. i've got news on the vote here. the swiss have withdrawn their application to join-- they have applied to join the european union. ashley: they've had a longstanding application and parliament got together, do we really want in? they voted and said absolutely not. they're part of the market, they're not a part of the european union and they say to britain, you know, you'd be-- >> wait a minute, the swiss-- shellady, you heard the news, what do you say? >> i was on a trading desk when this whole thing started and i can remember think, hey, we've got a come common background and we're trying to keep texas and california with us. i can't believe it's played out this long to be honest.
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stuart: scaramucci, anything to say? >> i will say this, there's real value from the 30-year treasury. if it's over the swiss 30-year treasury. stuart: can i bring you in, you said the italian government-- >> whether britain decides to get in or out the eu, basically push the restart button or we're finished. stuart: not a prayer, by 20 they'll reform themselves and they're out of here. that's italy's prime minister saying that. stuart: time is up. thank you very much indeed, scott, thanks a lot, scott. and tune into a new episode of wall street week. that's with our friend anthony
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scaramucci and it's on the fox business network. nor more flooring from china. >> the stock, they like this, get the news and decided the consumer product safety commission, they're not going to sell this. the stock is up 14%, however, it's a job for this year, down over 20%. they had 22 million board feet of flooring in inventory, but they have to get rid of it, they can't sell it. stuart: i was distracted, i didn't realize you stopped talking. the bottom line is, london liquidators is up and we kind of like that. check out very much in need. >> we're down 33 points, holding around 17-7 to be precise. now this one, since the orlando terror attack, since last saturday. 441 syrian migrants have been
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admitted to the united states. details. ashley: they have and they've been spread out across the united states. we know that 49 are resettled in florida. ten in the orlando area. florida governor rick scott has been opposed to the resettling of syrian refugees. he's looking at the vetting process, but they won't share information with him or anyone else in florida because of privacy rights. he says that's great, what about our security rights. >> that's a very good question, is it not? >> okay. now there's an issue here, what are we going to do about isis. president obama says we're kind of winning against isis and the cia director said yesterday, oh, no, we are not. what are we going to do. we've got with us the man who shot bin laden.
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you said clearly you want to go after them, chase them down, boots on the ground, kill them. >> i'm a big-- as a lone super power as of right now we need to show leadership and defeat the islam state at its capital where it wants to fight. stuart: what do you mean by the capital. >> raqqa. it will be a house of cards, once we show them and take the capital, and it's not what they thought was divine, we take syria, iraq goes away. and lose their foot hold and when you hear the president say-- the extension to syria. stuart: that's a very optimistic point of view. people like you go in there. >> it's not going to be as simple as it sounds. there are several ways to get
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in there. ten carrier strike groups and nine-- you need boots on the ground through turkey and deal with their politics. stuart: do you think that america would accept casualties? that there would be large scale casualties? >> they're not going to be happy with it, but they wish we could be apologetic and get along. >> you want them to take with american fighting and urban situation, with civilians used as civilian shields for isis terrorists. >> whatever has been said, they're expanding, social media, getting bigger. right now, what happened in orlando, he wasn't necessarily an isis fighter, but he was inspired by isis and what isis is telling people now, the lone wolves, don't just fi--
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if we get them or our children get them. stuart: you're an attack guy. >> right now i am, oh, yes. stuart: do you think the country is behind you? a little besides. >> war weary is an interesting one. 1% of the country has fight. it's not the people who have fault dthe reasons are ready, military is ready and you'll see the slowing growth and more and more people die on the ground as a result of syria. they're starting to come around. maybe we need to fight these guys. it would be a question of whether we fight them there or here and by here i don't necessarily mean in the united states, i'm talking about up in europe. they're expanding and they're using the guy guy gra-- and once we prove it's not their prophesy, that's when we can start to win this thing and
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turn it around. stuart: rob o'neill, move you being on the show. appreciate it. >> yes, sir. >> we have breaking news on the egypt air crash, the flight recorder liz: yes, the second black box has been retrieved. this is a flight data recorder. they've recovered the cockpit recorder. the memory unit appears to be intact. this is key to chiing what went it down. -- the key with two black boxes could help with that investigation. stuart: thank you very much. this, the left making terror all about gun control. donald trump fighting back, and he says he's going after catching the terrorist and will make a deal with the n.r.a. the trump campaign comes in a mome moment. >> back in a moment.
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>> you know, gun stocks could be the stocks of the day, this is smith & wesson, stronger sales and up 7%, that's helping its rival, sturm ruger, up 3 1/2%. 61 on sturm ruger. let's talk movies, "finding dorie", it premiers today, it's expected to make a lot of money. in fact, it's kind of bucking the trend. "finding dorie" will be popular, make a lot of but other sequels have not done well. in fact, if you look at box office takings since memorial day, they're down 22%. sequels ain't making it. look who is hear? the editor of blaster.com.
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have you seen "finding dorie"? do you like it. >> i have, not as good as the first. it's heart warming, but darker than what i thought it to be. stuart: what about, there's a transgender stingray in it? >> it started because there was going to be a trans sting in there and she clarified she joking. and i saw the movie and if the stingray was transgender, i couldn't tell. stuart: it's a success, a sequel to "finding nemo" it's going to be successful. >> it's going to be huge. stuart: now the other sequels are not working, i can't put names on that and the sequels are not always working. >> it's not the sequels themselves that are the problem. because that's an inherent part of the hollywood business model. studios are making too many sequels to movies nobody wants to see. i don't know anybody who wants
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to see a sequel to alice in wonderland. and neighbors 2, i don't know anybody who was saying i can't wait to see that. stuart: is it a lack of originality? the sequels? >> that's an ongoing concern, but look at captain america civil war and kicked off the summer movie seen, biggest hit in a year, about to cross 400 million. a domestic box office. a good movie, critics and fans enjoyed it. if you make it in a creative and entertaining fashion, people turn out. stuart: bottom line you like "finding dorie" and it's going to make millions. we appreciate you being here. hillary clinton pushing tough gun control after orlando and the result of that is gun sales are surging, literally flying off the shelves. we're on that story and got numbers for you. and donald trump on the defense, he will meet with the n.r.a. on no fly, no buy.
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there's a lot at steak for mr. trump. we'll deal with this one, two minutes away. should not be doing anything. i just had botox. i know exactly what's happening! ah! whoa! this is a bad streaming experience. "the girlie show" is a real fun lady show. (vo) don't let bad streaming ruin a good show. don't look at me! (vo) only verizon has the largest, most reliable 4g lte network. can your network say that? switch now, buy two samsung phones and get a free tv, plus up to $650 back. only on america's best network.
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>> 10:00 on the east coast, 7 on the west. california you're waking up to this. it's a wildfire, it's spreading this is west of santa barbara. 1400 acres 0 containment important part is jumped over the 101 freeway and they closed a portion of it. that's the big deal. you closed 101 in california, you have a traffic problem. breaking news on that crashed egyptair flight. the second black box has been recovered. s it's the flight data recorder. the cockpit voice recorder found yesterday. both black boxes recovered. maybe we'll find out exactly what happened. let's get to the market. a half hour into the trading session of the stock of the day it is smith & wesson a gun stock it's up 7%. they said they're going to sell even more guns going forward again it's the stock of the day. how about apple?
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it is down this morning. 96 dollars share. why? china halting sales of the iphone 6 and 6 plus just in beijing they claim patent infringement similar to the chinese made phone. do you think apple may be being poked by china? we do. here's what we have for you. new this hour. a member of the british parliament murdered on the street just a week before the u.k. vote on whether or not to leave europe. this moved the market. we've got more on it coming up. and the president says we're making progress against isis. the director of the cia says not so. last hour, man who killed osama bin laden said we need troops on the ground, go get him. check that big board, we're down 46 points. 17686 is where we are. how about broader based s&p 500. down 6 points that's not much. .2%. how about gold? straight up yesterday, down $4
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today below 1300 an ounce. ten year treasury unit at 1.60%. that is historically, very, very low. how about this, morgan stanley fears that policymakers today are repeating the mistakes of the 1930s. ashley. >> they say that fed better watch out. they say high debt deflation slower growth, an lower yield, sound familiar? that was the recipe for extending the great depression back in the 1930s added to the policy mistakes made then, they say it is looking earerly similar to what's beginning on today and that should be a warning. >> okay. i do want to talk about the vote among the british. whether or not to leave europe. i say let's e -- leave let the brits -- brits shuled should leave and i accept risk doing that would hurt us financially, briefly here, and you say -- >> i agree it's unhinged the
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fear mongering going on about great britain not basically leave -- >> unhinged? >> let me give you some information. what happened when the great britain decided not to use euro as currency margaret thatcher said stick with your own kurn i city great britain there was talk about armageddon it didn't happen, and guess what they made a lot of mung betting that pound would drop, and it did and got pound because of that armageddon stuff. they were relying on who have been failures at projecting world growth. they have overestimated it. they're overestimating right now, the armageddon scenario as great britain leaves. . scott was made when he made analogy with y2k not the case. i was very interested this morning when the swiss said no we no longer want to be a part of the european union. just said it. and the guy is -- prime minister said we've got to reform by 2017 or else we're finished.
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>> yep. you can't reform by 2017. not anything -- >> why should great britain answer to dysfunctional unaccountable bureaucrats in brussels? >> faceless bureaucratses? >> we've got universal agreement here. let's leave. [laughter] ouch. [laughter] strict american politics. let's get to it. immediately following attack in orlando, democrats ceased the moment. they made the debate about guns and hate. not terror. joining us now donald trump senior press representative haley baumgartner good see you then. >> thanks for having me. i think democrats, republicans hillary clinton made running in this debate and donald trump has catching up to do. what do you ?ai >> americans can see it for what it is. the left in thes manufacture haded narrative instead of focusing on what is actually happening, you know, major terrorism threat on u.s. soil, thes worst attack since 2011 by
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radical islamic one terrorist time they're manufacturing narrative to be if gun and finding ways to take away our civil liberties. >> this is not news but every media outlet apart from fox is concentrating on what president, hillary clinton says, it is about hate. it's about guns. you've got the whole media against you on this. ands it's really i think pushed mr. trump into the backgrounds just a little. are you going to make me on? >> facts of the matter is mr. trump said from day one not only does he support second amendment right but he's been earliest candidate historically endorsed by nra in order for us to protect our homeland question of make sure that right is protected. that's something that's guaranteed to all americans, and for any voter out there as hell by a candidate or frankly a president who wanted to tick or limit that right from me. >> how is meeting with the nra
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taken place yet or is it -- scheduled for next week is it? >> that has not happened yet. it is scheduled in the coming week, yes. >> yeah a long time away meanwhile issue is getting away from donald trump i suspect. >> i don't think issue is getting away from him at all. he's been consistent with his position on this from day one. you know, we've remained in constant communication with nra, but i think americans see through this manufactured rhetoric by the left. >> how about the appearance before the lbgt q community in dallas, texas, yesterday. he seemed very well received. was he kind of -- wasn't -- >> advocate for the lbgt community unlike any other. hillary clinton talks out of both sides of her mouth when she said that she advocates for that community when sheceps millions of dollar from countries overseas that fund terrorism and stand for everything against that lbgt q community is for.
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so it is what it is. >> forecasting a big rebound for mr. trump i'm making the judgment that he's not had a great week. is he going to come back? >> i think we've had a great week. look, these -- polls who are they polling and not to mention again there's a plus or minus for typically on average. so you know, he's overwhelmingly received positively -- the energy amazing on the campaign trail. and we're going to continue to campaign hard, and you know he resonates with american voters. historic turnout 13.5 million votes never happened before. >> look forward to -- keep working hard had. tiff to complement you you're just like your boss. you are -- no matter what i come at you you have a smile -- we're going to kill them. just like your boss. you are. >> thank you. >> next time, will you please bring mr. with you? >> i'll let him know he's a busy man. but i'll let him know. >> all right, haley a pleasure
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thanks for being with us. appreciate it. >> thank you so much. >> appreciate it. stay on politics. hillary clinton's line on donald trump is -- he's, quote, temperamentally unfit to be president. well, our next guest know mr. trump personally former select apprentice contestant clay aiken is back with us. hillary says look he's temperamentally not equipped to be the president and say he's off the wall, unsuited, unstable that's what she's saying. do you know him -- you worked with him had. i know you're not a trump supporter. i know you're a democrat. >> right. [laughter] >> thanks for being here. so can you give us -- >> comfortable here. >> can you give us an honest assessment l of your understanding of donald trump and his fit to be president. >> listen, i think that he is probably not unstable. i don't know if i would use that word. he's had a successful career in
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media. arguably in real estate business also. but in media and he plays a character. but he -- >> seems unfit. i don't think he seems unstable but to some people they would say that because of the outrageous things he says almost off the cuff. but playing a character. >> i think that's the thing that concerns me the most. he's -- about certainly marketed himself over the years as a very good businessman. and when you watch apprentice you know i think he should start every speech with i'm not a businessman but i'll play one on tv. he's played this character on apprentice and people believe that he's this great businessman and you can be a wonderful businessman and be very mature, you can be very intelligent, and still not be qualified to be president and i think that's the thing that concerns me. people you see on the stump, i don't believe is necessarily real trump. i think -- >> who is real trump? >> the real guy? >> a lot more liberal than people in the primary believe he was. and i think -- >> what do you mean by liberal? >> already come out he came out in support of keeping --
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people on the watch list from being able to get guns. he's got a few gun control positions. he's certainly disagrees with the conservatives on citizens united it's an issue i happen to agree with him had on is way too much money in politics that corporations shouldn't be giving blindly be giving money to people. but the outrageous things he says i think are this character that he believes he's -- playing a pied piper fund a niche that he can get femoralled up with. >> that's what people like is supporters love that approach. >> then he can keep trying it until november but it will help my candidate a lot more than -- >> hillary is your candidate -- >> bernie -- no hillary will be nominee i've been supportive of hillary and if i like bernie a little bit more and freerkt he's got a strong position against money and politics too. but -- >> appeared yesterday drumple donald trump before the lbgt community if i can use that expression in dallas, texas. [laughter] >> that's fine.
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>> he was entertaining in the extreme laughing, joke about about his hair. took complements from the crowd. what do you say about that? >> he should be jokeing about his hair. [laughter] he said the lbgt loves his hair i'm not a member of that group. you know, i think that his spoke person is a very good job of saying that hillary speaks both sides of her mouth. donald trump came out said that he wasn't support of same-sex marriage you don't say you're a supporter of the lbgt community when you're not -- i don't necessarily buy any -- not accepting of the fact that he's an advocate for that group >> clayache it been we will welcome you back at some point in the future. >> even as a democrat. depending on outcome of the election. welcome to come on the show. thank you very much sir. appreciate it. now to richmond, virginia where a cashier at a burger chain refused to serve trump supporters called cookout in richmond, virginia, they went there, they ordered food.
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they were wearing -- come from a donald trump rally they're wearing make america great again you know swag, and one cashier said we're not going to serve you. now, they said that they got a refund. another person offered to serve them. but once they start is talking to local media, and then people got really made and facebook page for cookout fast food joint that is swamped with criticism by -- for this one cashier deciding not to serve them because they were trump supporters. >> in texas where trump opponent waved mexico flag and showed you that very, very briefly nothing to do with what you're talking about. there got it. learning about meatloaf condition that collapsed you'll see it. now look at that. collapsed mid-show in canada last night. >> in edmonton alberta, canada doctors say he's doing okay.
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there's this statement meatloaf collapse due to severe dehydration i should say. he was admitted to a nearby hospital to undergo routine tests. his vital signses are stable, normal and responsive and recovering well. we wish him one. one result of all of this talk about gun control. you have seen this before. gun sales are soaring. sales of the ar-15 surging. gun storeses say they're selling out of them and looks likes hillary will win in november -- all bets are off. gun stocks go up. right now smith & wesson up 6%. also talk talking about fight on terror. one way to beat them put our soldiers on ground in syria in combat. face to face with radical islam. we're on it. every day you read headlines about businesses being hacked
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at the white house he just walked in. there you have it. that is the deputy crown prince of saudi arabia he just walked in. the president and the saudi prince expected to discuss conflicts in the middle east including the fight against isis. by the way, important point here, no press allowed inside anywhere near that meeting. and they seem to hurry him in rather quickly. that just happened. check the big board down a tiny fraction now pup if that's not much of a loss 17 points. on a 17,000 index. how about thes price of oil? we're up today. a buck 25 that's interesting. normally when oil goes up stocks go up a little different today. how about this number 161 the yield on the tenure treasury still historically very, very low interest rates. let's get back to the fight against iceis iraqi army making progress in fallujah.
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>> gotten to the city council build chg is a symbolic building in the central of fallujah this has been a month long assault on this city. isis took fallujah two and a half years ago as city they held on to the longest. there are reports that isis fighters rushing to the webcast to get out so it could be that the fallujah as a whole retain by iraqi forces but continuing reports that isis fighters using civilians that attract in the city 50,000 of them as human shieldings. it's a humanitarian crisis. there's very little food or fresh water. but the -- effort to retake fallujah is moving on. >> i'm going to stay on isis remember on this programming few moments ago form navy s.e.a.l. said we're going boots on the ground in the mideast to get them and beat them. come on in chris ham tear from institute from study of war. chris. this is the guy who shot bin
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laden. and he's saying unequivocally go in, fight, we do the fighting. take it town by town. we've got to do. and you say what? >> he's wrong on that point. look isis is both a ruling governess entity and foreign terror entity we don't need u.s. boots on the ground to defeat that. enough forces in the area that want to defeat isis and fighter counts they're down from high of 30,000 to somewhere around 20,000. eventually isis as a kale will collapse and how we suppress al qaeda by remost offing safe haven in afghanistan and al qaeda and we deny them the ability to have a safe haven where they can generate attacks from. that is what u.s. boots on the ground. >> you can't have it boapt ways. you can't either way boots on
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the ground beat them in one area or we don't. which? >> so we cannot defeat isis as a terrorist organization unless we have boots on the ground. >> okay i think isn't that primary objective beat them as a terrorist organization? go get them. is that way do you approve of that? >> yes, so you and i agree that that's the outcome we're looking for. i'm not sure the political narrative in america supports that right now. but keep looking past the problem here and ideological component of the foreign terrorist organizations. we keep thinking we're going to defeat these guys from arms length and it is simply not going to happen. if we want to defeat isis as a terrorist organization and defeat rad islamist theology that hezbollah then we need to put boots on the ground and need to engage in responsible governess. only way we stress these organizations long-term is if we have responsible state based actors, to offer an alternative to local population. other than radical islamist
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theology. >> u few whiting flays surrender opposed to black flaks would work wonders. chris out of time thanks for joining us. later this hour got two stories for you actually for our libertarian viewers. we have a few. number one, should you be able to purchase a military style firearm? what do libertarians say about that? second story, gary johnson he's a libertarian candidate in the election. could be a spoiler -- by the way, he needs to get at least 15% in the polls in order to join the debate. will he get that? according to the latest fox poll, he's holding a 12%. two stories for libertarians, and led zeppelin stairway top heaven lawsuit gets heated in court. why this matter? that one song has generated a half billion declares in publishing royalties since its release. we're on it. ♪
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>> and something completely different io items from joan riff estate raising money for charity. guess what, cheryl casone is right there and she's going to show us what is for sale. go. >> stuart i have to tell you when her daughter melissa rivers sold that try triplex belongings from the manhattan apartment are now here had and they're for auction. first the furniture that was in joan prisers apartment. these are the 16th french couches, of course, 20*9 century. but these are just the bidding begins 5 to 8,000 and ottoman is
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separate an fashion gnat about couture and jewelry and dresses things like that. but she also thought that her upper east side apartment needed to be a palace. almost like versailles and i want to bring you this way a little bit as you can see this is just one section of the -- auction and opening to the public right now . we've got people kind of mulling around. but every single piece of furniture that really is underpriced stuart. i want to bring you in because they don't trust me -- just this mother of pearl box here starting anywhere from 1500 to 2,000. but again melissa rivers believed it that these are going to go for more because money is going to charity god's love we deliver which she was on the board joan rivers was and guide dporgs the blind, stuart. so it's a lot of beautiful things. it's joan rivers life here today stuart. but again a lot of this money is
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going to go to charity that joan rivers cared about in her life and so talented. who didn't love, talk, fashion police. you never watched those shows. i did. >> i wanted to see the $2,000 dog bowl which i thought was there. we'll see you soon. [laughter] how about this one. led zeppelin stairway top heaven. there's a lawsuit there. it got kind of heated -- >> it certainly did. >> guitarist jimmy paige. >> angry man yesterday he was on the stand for a long time yesterday. day three of this trial bottom line all about acoustic opening to stairway to heaven iconic song put out in 1971 this lawsuit claims they ripped it off from a band called spirit who used to open for them a lot taken from song that the band spirit called tarr rues. now in court all of these years later. by the way this one song as you said earlier generated over half a billion dollars in royalties. so --
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jimmy paige denying this particular section of music was stolen. that -- plaintiffs attorney said look is it true that you can't even estimate the tempo of stair qai to heaven. yeah, that's right in other words he's being sarcastic saying you know that -- i wrote this and did not steal it from anybody. >> sounds like when you played it in the show. two music experts said it is rather similar. rather similar. that institute -- upper lawsuit when you have a half billion at stake. >> i got it johnson the libertarian candidate for the presidency. he could throw a wrerchl into the election, of course, he could because if he's a third party candidate who does he take votes from hillary clinton or donald trump we're on that. gun control debate front and center. we know what the judge think about it. you are gung ho for protecting
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second amendment rights. >> i am, i am, and the argument is that we know from all of these tragedies newton, iowa aurora they ad in all place, a place where the government prohibits handguns. when a moment turns romantic 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 and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, or adempas for pulmonary hypertension, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours.
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>> moving lower in the last few minutes we've moved about 50 points down. so now we're down 85,176 this friday . looks at gas 2.6 not too long ago within a few months it was at a 17-year low it's gone up since then. that, of course, is helping the natural gas producers like chesapeake energy which by the way is best performing stock of
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all the 500 in the sm. s&p how about that. got 70%. how about that since orlando attack lbgt gun rights group called pink pistol says membership is soaring. what's this all about? >> more than doubling gay rightses you know gun group. they have now 3500 members double since orlando attack. they are opening up dozens of new chapters. they have 45 branches and 33 states. this comes as new fbi and data analysis shows that lbgt people or more likely than any other minority to be the victims of hate crimes. more than african-americans and more than people of the jewish faith. smg okay. so pink pistol group. help you get a permit and training. >> all right got it. now i want more on the gun debate, and i want to know what what is libertarians think -- look ho is here.
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big believer in the constitution, second amendment. hate government you hate them. so what rules would you impose on the sale of guns? >> fewer in florida. there's a rule that says you can't have concealed carry in bars which had might have changed the outcome. so if you have conceal carry you should be able to conceal most any place. >> apart from the point of principle do you really want that? you want guys packing 45 right here when they're drunk as dismungs a bar. you want that? you sound like my friends in new york. i work u through a whole metamorphosis about this. i said what would lift be like if it were legal to carry a concealed gun? he had no idea that's law in most -- was in most of the states at the time. he said there would be blood on the streets like you're saying that and there are drunks who
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don't shoot each other up. sometimes they shoot bad guys no more crime or carnage? states that allow conceal carry. >> do you think that country is with you on that? >> that's what they vote for in most of the country. >> legal in the state. gun in schools. we've heard a lot about this since shooting in school give a gun to the teacher and they can defend kids? >> in much dangers in the mall and supermarket. rare gun shooting so not in schools. >> it should be up to the school. it's legal. we have a right to bear arms. i find that the laws against machine guns and baazuka and tanks a special license about that. military style automatic rifle that can fire 100 rounds how many seconds it takes. that's semi-automatic where you squeeze trigger an you spray that's a machine gun. illegal. >> is that illegal in all states? >> i think so. so you're okay with that.
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>> yeah. imposition of a rule you're okay with. >> pretty much. a general rule. can you generallyize this and say i'm happy with gun ownership in this area like this. not expressing myself very well. do it for me. >> it's in the constitution. we have a right to bear arms exactly where you draw the line. i'm not sure. it's good we have 50 states to experiment. >> so you want to debate on this. where do we draw the the line? >> i think that law as it stands now is good. we're allowed to carry a gun. i tried to get a permit in new york city, and they would not let me have it. they have a horribly process and didn't show a need . constitution doesn't say a special need and now learned they were taking bribes that was the special -- yeah. >> i didn't know that. new york city licensing debate. the cops were -- with the money.
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or if you know someone -- a reputation. what special need -- i don't want to know? people threatened my life that was a special need. but they eight months later they don't explain. >> good lord. i think we sorted it out generally. a tough one. >> it is a tough one. as long as i know that you're not for the free sale of machine guns to 11 year olds and tank that can walk down -- or drive down -- as long as i know that you're in favor of some rules somewhere. and i also think that gary johnson will take from hillary as much -- as trump. >> you had to get that in because you know who our next guest is? >> yes. let's get on with it shall we. before we go do not miss an all new titled bad rule it is that runs tonight, 9:00 here on the fox business network great show. john thank you very much indeed. let's get to -- this story about gary johnson. he's the libertarian candidate.
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he needs 15% in the polls if he's going to be included in the upcoming debate. right now he's getting about 12% that was in the latest fox news poll. let's bring in kristin tate john's former intern known as the libertarian chic welcome to the show. >> thank you for having me. >> that is your website libertarianchic.com. fnlings are you comfortable with that title? libertarian chic? >> very comfortable with it. i love gary johnson if i would wave wand i would put him in office but voting for trump in this election. >> good. because you believe that gary johnson well going to be on the ticket uh-uh you think that he will take votes away from -- >> hillary clinton. absolutely. for conservatives not fully on the trump train. republicans have got to stop
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being such purists loring if a perfect candidate. they will give this election to hillary clinton. democrats are very good about uniting . hillary clinton voters said that even if she's indicted three votes would still vote for her. democrats are very is loyal and coming together and if republicans not unite, hillary clinton is going to win this thing, and unfortunately gary johnson might siphon votes from republicans this time around. >> now i understand. gary johnson is on the ticket and he's on the ticket and takes trump votes away from trump. and supports hillary clinton's candidacy. therefore, in this election you will vote for trump. >> i will. and not superexcited about it but i will do everything to keep hillary clinton out of offings. she will be a nightmare on 95% of the issues, maybe trump will be a nightmare on 50% but i'm pragmatic i have to attack that over hillary clinton. >> i don't to pay anymore money
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in taxes regardless i don't want anymore taxation and you're with me on that. >> absolutely with you and i don't hill l rei putting young activist justice in the supreme court either. >> still got a camera on john? have you learned anything from this young lady? >> proudly -- vote for trump to keep hillary out. shows that johnson polls equally from hillary and from trump. a bunch of democrats who are not so excited about going to war everywhere. as hillary are would. that's you chucked in last minute. >> not getting interviewed -- what time is the show on again? [inaudible] [laughter] >> learn something to the libertarian chic thank you so much and for joining us. good stuff. right now this serious stuff actually. all serious -- >> of course, very serious. china, halting the sales of the
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iphone 6 and the 6 plus in beijing. there are patent infringement claim. nicole i have to believe that hurt apple stock today. >> sure this is all about intellectual property and they think it competing with a pat went of a chinese company. stocks up 2% and biggest one day drop in a month that degrees on all of the major averages, and don't forget, china is their biggest fastst selling market. they need china. so they're polling all of these and not able to make these sales. that's detrimental and all theful suppliers of apple those are under pressure saying sky work done 1% and touch screen company, that's down about 10%. >> that's a big drop. by the way, apple is the biggest drag on the dow. one of the dow 30 which we're down 70 points. nicole thank you very much indeed good stuff. brish exit vote, less than a week away and murder of a member of parliament could have
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took a one way flight from washington to istanbul and it is a major transit point for people coming from the west who want to go to syria and fight along side isis well you shouldn't be blocked from buying a gun because you take a one-way flight to suspected -- even if they're okay even if it's wise for them to add scrutiny to somebody who makes that kind of trip you can't deprive them of their constitutional rights. there are two billion people who don't have access to basic banking, but that is changing. at temenos, with the microsoft cloud, we can enable a banker to travel to the most remote locations with nothing but a phone and a tablet. everywhere where there's a phone, you have a bank. now a person is able to start a business, and employ somebody for the first time. the microsoft cloud helped us to bring banking to ten million people in just two years.
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>> all of this talk about gun control put gun stocks straight up this is a gun stocks smith & wesson up 7% big sales and forecast of more sales stock is up. stern ruga a gun stock benefiting from smith & wesson move up 3% there. now, just days before britain votes on whether to lead the european union or stay in it. we learned of the shocking murder of british parliament member joe cox shot stabbed repeatedly on the street in northern england . she was meeting with local constituents. joining us no from london daily mail columnist katy hopkins that murder steams to us over here
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encourages the stay movement. encourages people to vote to stay because they recoil from what happened to a member of parliament who is for staying. what do you say? >> absolutely. it's a really curious time here in the city because -- politicians have said okay, no more campaigning for today certainly, no more campaigning for sort of 24 hour it is while everyone recoils from that kind of shock of an mp being shot and stabbed in her constituency. there's a feeling that there's a attack on democracy so no campaigning for a day, and yet david cameron has just been out saying that this is a attack on democracy. this is a hate crime, a crime of hate and this is what happens if you have deviciveness, if you seek to devise societies, if you don't look for unity.
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so you can hear that while there's no campaigning for a day, it is another opportunity sadly for david cameron to make the case that united as europe is better than divide sod this is definitely seeing as a moment in time for the remain campaign. >> seems a little like the debate here in america easer after the orlando outrage where presidents an hillary clinton shifted debate away from terror and more towards division, influence of hate and gun control. and a similar shift in britain for the one we've seen here. you're nodding saying yes. >> absolutely . almost like a parallel what is going on in the u.k. and you guys over there in the states. certainly, there's a feeling because joe cox mp stood up up for unity. because she fought to have syrian children brought here to the u.k. because she talked about in her constituency,
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though, they are a multicultural group of people, there's more that unite them than divides them. it's almost this speaking from the grave to say if we do anything, let's stay united. so this is definitely a day for the remain camp and definitely a time when leave was surging ahead but i think this will knock relieve campaign back, and curious thing people are saying maybe this is a start of a newer kinder politickings but actually in reality, they are using the death of a woman my age with two tiny children to their advantage. and that doesn't seem very kind to me at all. >> hold on katy i have literally 20 seconds the shooter linked in any way to the leave campaign. >> not linked to the leave campaign certainly had a history of mental illness. and certainly was supposed to construct a hand made weapon from a site of white supremacist but had had a history of mental illness.
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but they are people that are trying to say this was a crime of hate and about deviciveness. i think it's a mental issue. >> got it. katy hopkins thanks so much for joining us as always see you again soon. >> thank you. >> we have special coverage of the exit vote thursday night going into friday morning. 11 p.m. eastern thursday night. we're on that. the wife of the terrorist who killed 49 in orlando. what was her precise role in planning or moving up to the attack? is she culpable? we'll ask. also the left making the orlando attack all it be hate and guns. that appears to be an effective strategy. it has put donald trump on defense. you both have a
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>> the question all this week has been had how come the orlando killer could buy guns? well listen to what former fbi assistant director james told megyn kelly about investigating muslims. roll tape. rules of engagement what they've been told they can do and can't do. they can't sniff around anything to do with muslims they can't go around to a mosque. they can't do things that they would normally do. i'm not talking things off the
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charts. but i'm talking about things that normally would be done orders come down from the white house. backoff of muslims and then there's this. florida gun store owner said he tried to flag the fbi after omar mateen shooter tried to buy body armor and arsenal of ammunition two months before orlando shooting. tammy bruce is here. this kind of -- political correctness is killing us. >> it is, and this is what makes the gun argument and hate crime argument so dangerous. those are important issues, of course, and matter to so many americans. but what we're not doing is having this conversation. is the fact that you've got structural problems that are moving this forward that are literally making -- it would be like sending troops baflghts bulge and ignore germans but if you see souid then you can go for it. we have a dangerous situation thaifer they're causing us so not address at all it is the real problem, and --
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this is our issue. >> must discuss. because we must discuss how we can go after full tilt people that we suspect of being with dangerous guns. >> someone comes out of the blue and discussed with joe cox, a man with mental problems. who was known to have mental problems who she intervened in something happening out about her. this is a man that we knew about, fbi knew about that you have your gun store guests saying you know -- in the news alerted fbi they have multiple alerts, and yet with the orders with they're saying now, we know directly that there ared or terse to ignore these issues. >> that is absolutely extraordinary. well drumple will meet with the nra getting together on no fly, no buy suggestion but democrats already out in front of the issue with about and the british exit vote on mofember
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stuart: 11:00 on the east coast, 8:00 in the morning in california. stock market is down 80 points. there is speculation we are down because the people who want -- the brits who want to leave europe are coming back a little on the polls. this is purely speculative but it does explain why the dow dropped so much in the last half hour. the s&p 500, broad-based selloff, we are now down 10 points on the s&p. gold down 6 bucks, firmly below $1300 an ounce. oil way up there, a buck and a half higher, 4770 on oil. maybe this is the stock of the day, apple down $95 a share. china has hold of the sale of
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iphone 6 and 6 plus phones. in beijing a copyright infringement, we think the chinese are poking apple. gun stocks doing very well but smith & wesson, sales are up and had a nice forecast for the future, up 7%. and ammunitionmaker ever so slightly lower after a big rally earlier this week. ed rollins, the man on the far left of your screen, not politically but graphically. liz is also with us. mister trump is on the big defense on the issue of guns after orlando. he is playing defense. >> he needs to get on the
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offense on this issue. this is about terrorists. at the end of the day every time democrats, we have these terrible tragedies, have to be empathetic toward them but it is not about guns. this guy, a terrorist, would have killed these people whether it was fire or whatever. stuart: but trump is not coming forward. the left has seized this. >> and they have run with it. the nra is not going to back away. not for any terrorist having guns but they overrepeated the issue the why should people get put on this list? a lot of mistakes on it, why lose their second amendment right without judicial process? they are not going to back away and he has to be careful. stuart: i should have gone to you with numbers on gun sales, smith & wesson. >> this is before the terrorist massacre in orlando, up 22% annualized year over year gun sales driving half of smith &
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wesson, gun sales have tripled since president obama took office, the tao and the s&p, their shares this week. stuart: gun sales have tripled. how does -- i keep going back to this, you raise money for donald trump, he had a bad week. >> had a bad couple weeks. mrs. clinton wrapping things up and moving forward, benefiting her right now back and forth but the key thing with an issue like this is you have to be clear on your thought process. these are your positions. stuart: i will interrupt everything with breaking news and this is really important. don't know if you want to comment on this or not but i got this from the new york times. russia's track and field team has been banned from the real olympics because of widespread
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state-sponsored -- track and field team will not be at the rio olympics. >> otherwise the integrity of the whole thing. the bottom line, in 1984, the great olympics, american public, those are and extent to great olympics. stuart: it damages the image of the olympics. the corruption, the past corruption, drugs, the whole bit, don't make it pure as you can. stuart: you are defending the olympic ideal. i take your point. and in brazil, particularly difficult moment for them. the elliptic are all about track and field, that is where i am coming from. track and field is everything.
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value judgment, ice-skating -- who is running faster. >> other athletes around the world giving world-class performances, the russians dominated element, at one point they did but they don't today. i predict, the television audience will be as big, world records will be set. stuart: you are pretty good, we brought you to talk about donald trump. i switched gears totally and we talk about doping of russian athletes, doesn't skip a beat. >> i follow sports very closely. we won the basis of the limbic this track and field, who runs faster, the heart and soul. glad -- >> if your jamaican for some reason you have trouble but the russians do that. they have been warned. the critical thing is they have been warned. stuart: you start off -- >> on the side instead of over there and talk a little more and
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put on makeup. stuart: you volunteered. i am going to move on rapidly. since the orlando terror attack, 441 syrian migrants have been allowed into the us. that is 441 syrian migrants have come to america since saturday and the orlando outrage. that doesn't have gone to florida. >> of those 441, are sunni muslims, 49 of the 441 being relocated in florida, 10 in the orlando area. governor rick scott is opposed to the resettlement of the syrian refugees, concerned about the vetting process and has not given details who these people are. the gunmen says they have
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privacy rights. in response, we have security rights as well. liz: a texas accord dismissed attempts to block refugees. texas is saying we don't have enough information who these people are. the white house is not giving them the information they need. ashley: president obama wants 10,000 refugees in the fiscal year. stuart: let's get some political comments not from ed rollins but congressman lee seldon from upstate new york. have i got that right? 441 syrian migrants, only 5 of whom are christians coming to this country after orlando. what do you make of that? >> it is a huge problem because the federal government goes to different agencies, not able to tell us with certainty that these individuals are not a terrorist threat. we have not reached the point where we can go through the list and they person abc do not pose
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a risk so even -- stuart: why the rush? they want to get 10,000 and before october of this year at a cost of $644 million over a five your period. >> instead of speeding up the process we should be slowing down the process and if we want to deliver a humanitarian victory, it should be over in the middle east, wiping radical islam off of the map. if you eliminate the threat currently in syria, in iraq, if the middle east was more stable than it is, people who are fleeing their home would be able these people reach their breaking point and are leaving. we need them to stay there because if you replace bashar al-assad, these people need to run the country after him. stuart: you say slow it down. right now slow it down. >> i would stop it. if you cannot say with certainty an individual does not pose a terrorist threat, bring 441
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people and only two will try to carry out a terrorist attack you can't bring in 441. stuart: that is where you stand on that. how about where you stand on another issue which was raised on this program, the guy who shot usama bin laden, rob o'neill, sat there, in his opinion, go get them, attack, don't retreat, attack. where do you stand on that? >> i completely agree. you need jihadists on their heels in the middle east as opposed to offense within our own borders. stuart: more aggressive than we have seen in the past. >> we have troops on the ground. the president is misleading the american public when he says we won't have boots on the ground. we have boots on the ground in syria, iraq and the middle east. the white house fundamentally dishonest, and when we place the special ops forces in syria the president says they are not on a combat mission. in the middle of the hottest
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spot in the entire globe and going to tie their hands behind their back, the american public that they are not there on a combat mission, divorced from reality. of the one good to have you with us in new york, come again soon. we have a lot more coming up this hour. first try this, how come the orlando killer could buy a gun despite several warnings? the former assistant director of the fbi says agents i told to back off if muslims are involved. president obama says we are making progress against isis. the cia chief says something different. disney, did they ignore complaints from employees that could have prevented this tragedy? back in a moment.
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reassessing the risk that the brits will leave the european union. there has been speculation after the shooting of a pro-stay politician yesterday that the stay vote would win. that has been reversed. speculation as we are tilting toward leaving, down goes the dow industrials. how about dish network, it has dropped the nfl network but the stock is up. ashley: includes the nfl redstone which is popular on sundays. the contract expired, they couldn't come to an agreement on distribution rights so on the dish network the nfl network, they are black right now. that will take you to the nfl website says you could go to many other networks, verizon files, time warner, comcast, this could be a negotiating tactic. stuart: all football fans want to watch any game anywhere anytime. that is what they want.
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charles: what a time to be alive. stuart: the orlando shooter omar mateen was texting his wife during the attack on the nightclub. she a company to him when he was casing very targets. judge, welcome back. here is how i think i understand the legality of this. if she helped omar mateen in any concrete way, drove him to the attack, by the ammunition, if she helped him she could be charged, she is culpable. if all she did was know about the attack but didn't tell anyone, that is not culpable. >> that is accurate. stuart: it sticks and everybody's throat. >> doesn't have to be concrete. if you encourage somebody, you are considered a principal and you are is responsible for their actions as he is, but obviously
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they have information we are getting secondhand that she drove him to case out the place, drove him to buy the ammunition. or that she went with him. if they have more that shows she didn't just accompany him but was encouraging, assisting, with the knowledge he was going to do it, she doesn't have to know he was going to do it that day, she doesn't have to be on board with the whole plan, she is a co-conspirator. when it becomes a reality she is a principal just like he is. stuart: i suspect the fbi want to throw the book at her to make an example of her, to say to other people who may be associated with terror you can't escape this net. >> not just to make an example of her. if she knew and assisted she is is responsible, not just the poster child for family members who turn a blind eye but yes, there is no legal obligation if i know you will commit a crime, no legal obligation in my reporting. it sticks and everybody's story.
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stuart: had she said something, maybe 49 people -- >> the only way to get convicted of the felony of not disclosing that you know it is committed is if you do an affirmative act and concealment, like you try to wipe off his emails to hide the fact that he is doing it. stuart: the question of the week has been how come the orlando killer could buy guns? listen to what former fbi assistant director james carlson told megan kelly about investigating muslims. >> the rules of engagement, with the bureau is told, what they can do and what they can't do. they can't go sniffing around anything to do with muslims. they can do things they would normally do. things that nominally are done but they came down from the white house. stuart: muslims, back off and
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there is this. a florida gun store owner said he tried to flag the fbi after omar mateen tried to buy body armor and an arsenal of ammunition two months before the orlando shooting. it looks to us, looks to me like political correctness is killing us. >> absolutely is. a radio host, friend of mine wrote a book called muzzles, all about how american lives are being cost as a result of political correctness. this was quite a while ago. it hasn't changed, it has gotten worse. stuart: it comes down from the white house, back off, don't go after muslims, don't bring them in. that is extraordinary. stuart: >> it is not surprising. there were two members of the black panthers on the doorstep of a boating precinct intimidating white voters,
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videos came out of this, they made a blanket decision, i can't work with this administration. and political correctness is costing so much across the country. stuart: you are a mild-mannered guy and you have just not indicted the president but made a serious damning charge, that he has in fact tilted. >> i call it the way i see it. maybe that is a fault of mine. kind of seeing it that way. stuart: appreciate being with us. there is a selloff, not huge but it is a selloff. there is speculation that -- ashley: reassessment. where the vote will go in the uk. stuart: a reassessment.
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disturbing pictures from outside a trump rally, the mexican flag, protesters were waving that flag outside the trump rally and shouting obscenities. we are on that. the disney gator story. and reports that disney employed the michigan or employees complaints that guests were feeding the alligators. you pay your car insurance
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stuart: we are holding a 100 point loss, britain's exit that put uncertainty in the market, the vote is 6 days from today. maybe the campaign is gaining a little strength. that is putting the market down. look at disney. we have an update, employees complained that guests were feeding the alligators and their complaints were ignored. liz: media reports out now. these were at the bungalow suites across from where the toddler was snatched and killed, the thinking is they didn't want to reprimand the guests who were feeding the alligators. another report that a custodial employee at his grand floridian said to management put up a fence. the alligators are getting too close. stuart: i don't think the alligator story has hurt the stock.
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don't mean to be crass here. $5 billion and stock is up. check the big board, we are down 99 points. a couple news items. i want to get out there. reports that marco rubio will run for the senate again in florida. he dropped out when he ran for the presidency according to david jolly, he is back in. the president says we are making progress against isis. the director of the cia says not so. which one is it? >> isil has lost half of the populist territory it once controlled in iraq and it will lose more. isil continues to lose ground in syria as well. our coalition continues to be on offense. isil is on defense. or smack years ago, i was starring in a one-woman show
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immigration and feel the country is being changed rapidly and they're not being asked what they think about it. they want to control their own borders, don't we all? the british have grown tired of europe's unsustainable welfare system. nobody rains it in. reform has met with roits. the brits are fed up with that. those are my reasons for wanting out. i don't know which way the vote is going to go specially after the murder of joe cox, a member of parliament, the elites have mounted a huge campaign encouraging a stay vote. in that sense, britain's vote mirrors the election here. the elites are under fire on both sides of the atlantic. i do understand the risks, if britain leaves the entire european union can unravel, but i think it's worth it. somebody has to stop the rot, stand against decline has to be
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taken. a british exit will be a good place to start. well, that's what i think and leslie marshall is with us. all right, leslie, i know you heard that. i'm saying the brits should leave the european union on the grounds that you cannot reform liberal democracy, socialism in europe and i think we are going in the same direction in america and i want out of that as well. i'm sure you're going to disagree with me. go for your life. >> you have a good cristal ball there. a few things you touched upon about destabilization, but also if you look at not just short-term gratification or long-term, over half of the exports that great britain has go to the rest of europe. also will this attract the international financial investors that great britain
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would hope for and additionally part of them being part of eu, this is a essentialist country that has extremely taxation to pay for education, medical care, always with opening their arms to immigration and as you know better than i because you lived there and are from there, stuart, you can go into london and get yourself a nice flat, also don't forget that you have to pay for the queen and the royal family. the idea that great britain is going not to be a socialist country because they break away from the eu is preposterous. >> it is not a socialist country. since the crash of '08, the brits have cut taxes and cut spending and they intend to be more capitalist like margaret made them a generation ago. talk about principle, you have a country organizing its own rules, own laws for itself
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instead of having foreigners make laws for them? surely you have no objection to that, do you? >> well, i don't have an objection to sovereignty, but the problem is britain will be a part of europe even if it's not a part of -- stuart: not part of the european union. it does not have to take the rule of bureaucrats in brussels. i think that's a very big deal. how about this one? control your borders. surely we should be allowed to control our own society just like america wants to control its own borders. what's wrong with that? >> a lot of the research that i have done for today shows me that prior to being part of the eu, these were not decisions necessarily that were coming down from the parliament in great britain with regard to some of those very issues that you're touching upon, immigration as well. stuart: i think it was. >> no. >> stuart: soon after that, the european decided that you could have free movement within the
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european union. that was the -- that was the result of legislation in europe, not the result of legislation in britain. i would like to get back to self-control, how about that? last word to you. >> but prior to them being part of the eu, there was a lot of immigration and growing concerns. stuart: wait a minute. the immigration laws which the british passed were passed by the british house of parliament, by the british law makers, it was to control britain. now it is not and i want to get back to the point where brits control britain just like i want americans to control america. i don't have a problem with that. i have 20 seconds for you, though. >> well, the polls show that people are leaning in your favor but i agree after this terrible tragedy that could change things so people don't think that, hey, we are going to give in to somebody who uses violence to get their point across with
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regard to the eu and immigration. stuart: all right, leslie, that was a good debate. you will come after the vote, i'm sure. >> thank you. stuart: cia director says isis is as dangerous as ever. that, however, does not match what the president had to say, just listen to this exchange. >> this continues to be a difficult fight but we are making significant progress. >> despite all of our progress against isil on the battlefield and financial realm, our efforts have not reduce it had group easter risk capability and global reach. >> isil's ranks are shrinking as well. their morale is sinking. >> the number of isil fighters exceed at its height. >> these are not religious warriors, they are thugs and thieves. it continues to lose the money that it's life blood. >> yet, isil is adapting to the
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coalition's effort and continues to generates at least tens of millions of dollars in revenue per month. >> also isil is losing ground in libya. >> the branch is probably the most developed and most dangerous. stuart: that's embarrassing. how can this be? the president spoke on tuesday and john brenon spoke on wednesday. they're miles apart. >> the disparity is stark and incredible and john brenon is the voice of an adult who is not trying to spin us and the president is exactly the opposite and he's minimized this threat literally from the very beginning, he talked about isis being contained right prior to the paris attack and he's at the same game now. stuart: we don't have a policy, do we? if brenon says this and the president says that, i don't think anybody knows what the real policy is against isis.
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>> i have always believed that the policy is to weigh it out. his take on this is people shouldn't be too worried about it and sure we will suffer an attack here or there but not threat but i believe he just wants to limit our commitment overseas and talked about the ties of war receding. the tide of war has lapped up onto our shores. you would think that would create a nuisance -- newsense of urgency. >> those are the two things that
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they are more comfortable to talk about, gay rights and gun control. stuart: they seem -- no, that's wrong, they appear to be gaining ground on the debate. hillary and the president are on offense and apparently gaining some ground. well, trump, there's polls that show trump with a narrow lead on terror over hillary clinton. it's only 5 points or so and for his purposes that needs to be much bigger. and i think the problem trump has is kind of the -- all the noise he creates around his own campaign and creates a judgment issue and hillary, you know, she may not really get this. she may not be hawkish enough but her play so to make herself a steady hand. stuart: he is emotionally incapable unfit to be the president. i am not promoting her on policies but the deficit in trump's policy. that's what she's doing and i think she's winning on this one at the moment. >> so far. stuart: thank you very much for joining us. i appreciate it, sir.
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president obama has said to the united states and the rest of the world must treat gays and women better. listen to this. >> you can't break up the world into us and them and denigrate and express hatred towards groups because of the color of theieir skin or their faith or their sexual or orientation. we have to challenge the oppression of women wherever it occurs here or overseas. stuart: we hear the president. we ran video tape of the saudi prince of saudi arabia going into the white house for a meeting with president obama which the press has been ban. deidra is with us.
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>> absolutely not. u.s. and saudi arabia are basically in a bad marriage. they don't love each other, they probably don't like each other, it is relationship of convenience and by mm measures necessity. it's canada, and then there's kind of larger issue. they are so mad at us. that was like say to go saudi arabia, you know what, we recognize that you're the most stable in the region. we don't care, we are going to sign this agreement with iran. you recall when the president was over in the spring, they sent a cart as a sign that we are so fed up with this iranian deal. stuart: the president did hurry
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into the white house, swiftly. thanks, everybody. listen to this one, a law maker, tennessee plan to go give away two ar-15 rifles at a fundraiser. now he is receiving death threats, we are on it. sells firearms over the internet. the owner says he has sold between 20 and 25,000 ar-15's who lives here and flies to hong kong, to visit this company that makes smart phones, used by this vice president, this little kid, oops, and this obstetrician, who works across the street from this man, who creates software. they all have insurance crafted personally for them. not just coverage, craftsmanship. not just insured. chubb insured.
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nicole: major averages all low this week. next looking for the footage for british exit as a possibility. we are seeing oil about $45, that's helping energy shares to power the s&p 500. soda stocks getting hit after philadelphia passes soda tax and you have beverage companies fighting back saying it hits
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♪ in new york state, we believe tomorrow starts today. all across the state, the economy is growing, with creative new business incentives, and the lowest taxes in decades, attracting the talent and companies of tomorrow. like in buffalo, where the largest solar gigafactory in the western hemisphere will soon energize the world. and in syracuse, where imagination is in production. let us help grow your company's tomorrow - today - at business.ny.gov stuart: we are down about 100 points. more uncertainty back to the market. down goes the dow. i do want to get back to what people think are disturbing pictures from outside the trump rally, protestors waving mexican
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flags and this time in dallas, texas and were chanting. i don't think you should do that. >> if you want to be here and want to work and want to pay your taxes and proud to be in the u.s., then i am a thousand percent with you. i'm not sure what the point is other than cause trouble and up the anty. stuart: some of those people do not believe that california belongs to america, they think it belongs to méxico. i think la raza supports that particular point of view. >> if we ran around with the union, i would expect people to go you know where back home and i find it very aggressive. it's almost like invasion and it pushes people to donald trump. stuart: i think you are right on that one.
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this one is interesting. our next guest has been planning to give away two ar-15 rifles at a fundraiser and is planning to do that in a couple of days. well, he has been receiving death threats for his idea. andy holt is with us. let me get this straight, you had a fundraiser and you were plan to go give away as part of fundraiser two ar-15's on june the 25th. and that's coming up? >> that's correct. we had the event planned long before the orlando attack. stuart: you received death threat, are you going to retreat and not giving those rifles? >> that would be a negative. we have no intention whatsoever to back down from our plans. we are not going to let the intentions of an islamic terrorist change or divert the plans we have in place. i would encourage all americans not to allow individuals to
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change any plans. it's not going to change my devotion to the second amendment, it's not going to change to all constitutional privileges and the rights and embodiment of those rights. stuart: has it brought in some money for you? i know it's connected to a fundraiser. has it been a success? >> it has. we are going to be given this two rifles away at a barbecue and turkey shooting. it has nothing to do with turkeys, it's a competition. we figured that an ar-15 rifle would help do that in addition to other door prizes. stuart: i think it depends where you are how it would be taken. i know there are parts of new york city where you get a little opposition to that. >> that's why i'm not a representative of new york, thankfully. [laughter]
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stuart: you are being prove -- procotav >> the manner in which he went about targeting the lgbt community with his action, they want to blame state law makers like me and it wasn't anar-15 used in florida but not to splitter hairs, but ultimately we should focus in gun-free zones and and substantive policy changes are going to have to occur or we are going to continue to see things over and over. stuart: you don't like gun-free zones? >> i don't. it's my intention for my next time around to take away as many
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gun-free zones here in the state of tennessee. i actually just had notification for a bill that i passed this past session where the ut system -- excuse me, public colleges and universities across the state of tennessee will now allow for full-time faculty and full-time staff to carry concealed weapons on campus. what we have seen is multiple times, we've seen college campuses be the target. stuart: i understand. you are being provocative and you know it. i take it you're a republican. i know you are. >> i'm a conservative. [laughter] stuart: loud and clear. thanks for being on the show, we appreciate you being here. >> thank you, sir, varney. stuart: google or al baa -- alphabet is taking down the chin. a company for that side,
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comments about citigroup about taking the stock down. amazon down 11 bucks, $705 per share. i don't think there's a specific reason there but it is way down. look at this video for you. rock singer meatloaf collapsed and reports that he's now in stable condition. we wish him well. a gun store owner, he says he has sold more than 20,000ar-15's since the orlando terrorist attack through his website, i might add there are two billion people who don't have access to basic banking, but that is changing. at temenos, with the microsoft cloud, we can enable a banker to travel to the most remote locations with nothing but a phone and a tablet. everywhere where there's a phone, you have a bank. now a person is able to start a business, and employ somebody for the first time.
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stuart: all right, let's get straight at this, on the phone with me is tom angel, he has an extensive online operation. tom told us i think it was just yesterday that he had sold 20,000ar-15's just since the saturday orlando outrage. tom is on the phone. that accurate, 20,000? >> actually, no. right now the website we are approaching the 30,000 mark as of this morning. stuart: whoa, whoa, 30,000 since
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saturday? >> sir? stuart: i think we are talking over each other. let me repeat that, you must have a very large online operation to sell 30,000 guns in a matter of days. >> yes, yes, online available. on our website we have approximately 300 to 400,000 weapons in inventory. stuart: let me ask you this, i'm trying to buy something online through your store at a different state, what kind of background check do i go through to buy -- >> what you have to do is, you would have firearm shipped because every state is different, they would be responsible to the paperwork for you in your home state. every state is different. stuart: okay, now how much at retail is one of these ar-15's that you have been selling?
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>> you're talking anywhere from around $350 up to 3 to 4,000, as high as 8,000 depending on the model. stuart: you're talking millions of dollars worth of business in a week. >> yes. stuart: does this happen frequently, there's a shooting of some sort, some people say we need gun control and this happens, up go gun sales? >> shootings don't push ul gun sales. it's when the government starts talking about banning particular guns that up goes gun sales. they go after them and they want them in. stuart: the ar-15 that's been selling very, very well in particular? >> yes, in particular the ar-15 has been selling very, very well. stuart: tom, thanks for being on the show, we appreciate you being here today. >> my pleasure. stuart: more varney after this
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martha and mildred are good to go. here's your invoice, ladies. a few stops later, and it looks like big ollie is on the mend. it might not seem that glamorous having an old pickup truck for an office... or filling your days looking down the south end of a heifer, but...i wouldn't have it any other way. look at that, i had my best month ever. and earned a shiny new office upgrade. i run on quickbooks. that's how i own it.
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stuart: we are still reeling from moments ago where tom angle a dealer in guns told us he sold 30,000ar-15's in a matter of days. extraordinary number. charles payne, it's your show. charles: have a great weekend, guys. dow add to go major volatility. what if i told you this is nothing compared to the whiplash investors could face next week? uncertainty over so many things. you've got the fed, you've got terror and then, of course, the big eu u vote that rocking stocs this week. fbn:am host, lauren simonetti. lauren: hi. charles: this is a pretty crazy week so far.
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