tv Varney Company FOX Business June 29, 2016 9:00am-12:01pm EDT
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talking about that she knows she has work to do in terms of how people trust her. i think that the mistrust grows out of a place just like this, her handling of benghazi. maria: sure does. the markets is going to open higher. it seems the brexit hysteria is dying down. we'll see you tomorrow. that does it for us, stuart, over to you. stuart: maria. thank you, indeed. well, well, well, are the investors over it, the british vote, the latest islamic terror attack? could be. good morning, everyone, when the market opens today, it will be up big time. the dow will be up well over 100 points on top of a big gain yesterday. too soon to say everything's fine, but the panic following the british vote appears to be last week's event. 41 dead in istanbul terror attack. officials blame isis. secretary of state john kerry says that isis is losing, they
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are desperate, he says. politics, donald trump is all in with protectionism and reverse 50 years of trade policy and import duties he says for america. and he's catching up with hillary in the polls. the benghazi report says she knew it was a terror attack and publicly blamed it on a video. money, politics, terrorism, and months to a new president. "varney & company" is about to begin. ♪ >> they probably think we're weak, we're stupid, we don't know what we're doing. we have no leadership. you know, you have to fight fire with fire. we have people out there who are so vicious and smart. stuart: donald trump talking tough on terrorism right after
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the attack on the airport in istanbul, turkey. he says it's time to take the fight to them. more on that in just a moment. first, take a look at this. another higher open for stocks this morning, dare i say the markets are kind of slugging off the british exit and the istanbul bombing? we'll be up 128 points in 20 minutes time. how about the s&p indicator? that, too, will be higher, 15 points up there. now about oil? i think we're moving higher there, but still in that $48 a barrel range. how about gold? that's usually down when everything else is up. today it's up as everything else is up. 1324 per ounce on gold. shah gialani is here with us in new york. could we say the worst is over from the british vote? >> i wish i could. the appreciation that the pound has seen and the euro has seen,
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it will be hard for the dollar strength. it's a nice respite, but i'm not sure how long it's going to last. stuart: can you say that the panic is over, that the computer organized selling, is that over? >> yes, that's definitely over. now the remnants of the brexit that will manifest themselves through the entire eu are still out there and that's going to create a lot of indecision for a lot of investors. stuart: in my opinion the bigger threat is not the british desire to leave the european union, it's that if other countries follow suit, denmark, france, for example, that's the bigger threat. that's way down the road. isn't it? >> it may not be. the cat is out of the bag now. other countries are looking at what happened to britain. and with the eu, that's decent in terms of what's going to happen trade-wise and the other countries may say it's not worth it to stay in the union. stuart: and we were looking for a big smile. the panic is over, looking for some bargains. >> i think it's a stretch to say that it's over.
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>> you're welcome on the program, nonetheless. shah galani, welcome very much, indeed. and joining the rally. earlier today it was down as much as 6% and now it's going to open higher. liz, why the turn around? >> deutsche bank and wall street traders were overlooking china. that nike is doing well in china even with pressure from under amour and adidias. and this stock has lost about a fifth of its value since november of last year, but it may be oversold right now so people are coming in and putting a floor a little under nike. stuart: under amour is higher as well liz: under amour is-- >> watch out, nike a little volatile today. stuart: hold on, got more for you. terror in turkey, let's be precise, islamic terror in turkey, say that.
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41 dead, 239 injured. three suicide bombers attack at the airport in istanbul. now, we are going to show you video of one of the terrorists being shot and then detonating his suicide vest. i want to warn you, this is graphic. all right? roll tape. okay. i think you can see the terrorists come around the corner, he's shot,'s on the floor and rolling around and the police officer approaches him. he runs away and the terrorist is about to detonate the suicide vest and bang, he does. wait for it, there is goes. it's indeed graphic video. you saw the terrorist with the gun and saw the police officer and you saw him detonate the suicide vest. graphic stuff indeed. now, secretary of state john kerry is calling it the attack in istanbul, an act much desperation on the part of
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isis. desperation. listen to this. >> you can bomb an airport, you can blow yourself up. that's the tragedy. dasch and others like it know that we have to get it right 24/7 365. they have to get it right for ten minutes or one hour. so it's a very different scale and if you're desperate and if you know you're losing, and you know you want to give up your life, then, obviously, do some harm. stuart: general jack keane is with us. welcome back to the program. do you agree with secretary kerry's assessment there that they're desperate and they're losing? what do you say? >> oh, not at all. i mean, i agree with the director of the cia brennan who two weeks ago said that isis is a resilient formidable cohesive organization capable of conducting worldwide terrorist attacks and that's what we have seen today. and the reality is, isis is
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also expanding. it is about to open two more affiliates, just waiting to sign the paper work, literally sign the paper work in bangladesh and also in the philippines. they've grown to 6 to 7,000 fighters in libya alone. this is hardly an organization that's desperate. yes, they've lost territory in iraq and syria and we should feel good about helping to take that territory back. one thing we have not done and the reason why this killing is continuing we have not destroyed the safe haven. stuart: as a military man you say we can do it and should do it. >> yes. they're holding terrain, that makes them vulnerable. no different than the germans holding terrain or the japanese or koreans. it's a military operation to do
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that and certainly, we could do that in convention with our arab coalition and do that quickly to be frank about it. >> now, i just want to roll a sound bite from the american attorney general, how she would quite terror. agreed, it's a domestic issue as opposed to a foreign military issue. listen to other response how we at home should fight terror, roll tape. >> this department of justice and your country stands with you in the light. we stand with you to say that the good in this world far outweighs the evil, that our common humanity transcends our differences and that our most effective response to terror and to hatred is compassion, unity and is love. stuart: you're a military guy, compassion, unity and love. and you say what, sir? >> well, those are all good words and we all like those words, certainly. i think it has more to do with how we should feel about each other than how we should feel
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about the terrorists. the only way to stop terror, killers from killing other people, is you have to kill them and that's the reality of it. and the problem, we and others have with this administration is they have not stepped up and made the commitment to do this with the amount of resources that are required and to do it as quickly as possible so this killing will stop. they have attacked, listen, stuart, they have attacked eight times, four nato companies, france, belgium, turkey and the united states and nato still has not declared war against isis, which we did after al qaeda attacked the united states on 9/11. where are the leaders of countries in making the plea to all 28 nato countries that we are at war with isis because isis certainly is at war with nato. stuart: general jack keane.
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appreciate it. >> thank you, stu. stuart: crossing wire, general electric, the treasury department says the financing unit is no longer too big to fail. give me some understanding. >> meaning the government says that ge capital is no longer too big to fail. it's no longer a risk to the nation's financial stability, the first company released as no longer too big to fail e so their credit operation, their capitol operation would no longer be subject to regulations and rules. >> that's right. stuart: which other bigger operatesers would. >> less bureaucrat ic operation. reducing debt and basically did away with consumer lending in the united states. stuart: it's at $30 a share. thanks, liz. >> sure. this is out this morning, a quinnipiac poll, the clinton-trump race is too close to call, 42-40. the poll taken june 21st
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through june 27th. that's before, during and after the british vote to leave europe. quinnipiac surveyed more than 1600 registered voters by phone. and lisa is here a republican strategist. you know, trump's winning the trust issue, isn't he? >> he is and certainly having new revelation from the benghazi committee is not going to help hillary on that. and the revelations from the benghazi committee puts hillary's leadership into question. and they met for five out of ten things they discussed were relation to the youtube video as opposed to trying to solve the problem and save americans. stuart: at 7:30 our time on the night of the attack in benghazi they held a meeting. hillary clinton was there. five of the ten action points from that meeting were about blaming the video. they were cooking up a political spin machine as our
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people were under attack and not being rescued. >> and that's important here, too, why did they do that? it's because president obama had previously said that al qaeda was on the run and this was just prior to the election, and so it's really sad when you put the two and two together and the fact that we have hillary clinton and the administration, we know hillary clinton based off of evidence, both from the benghazi report and her report from the benghazi committee, she said one thing to the daughter and the egyptian prime minister and another thing to the american people and blaming the youtube video when she knew full and well, there was a coordinated, orchestrated terror attack. stuart: i'm astonished from the mainstream media. new york times, benghazi panel finds no misdeeds by clinton. that's a legalistic word. >> it's depressing. he think this is why you've seen in recent-- i think a gallup poll, american trust in the news media is about 20%. you see things like this and a coverup from the
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administration. a coverup from hillary clinton, we lost american lives. at base level we should want to figure out what happened to make sure it doesn't happen elsewhere in the world and we have the mainstream media, seems they could care less. stuart: by chance it can you see the networks and all three in agreement with the new york times, no misdeeds, with nothing new liz: and no discussion of the debate over whether our guys should wear uniforms to go into libya. really? when benghazi is burning? really? >> i mean, they knew that it was a terror attack. they knew this. and still sent out susan ricin a hillary clinton and others to say it was a video. i mean, can i ever call that a lie? >> that's what it is, it's a blatant lie. if you don't see the mainstream media or democrats refuse the
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go long. >> and cheer up, we're going to be up today. another 130 point, maybe at the opening bell. we were up 260 yesterday and 130 today. how about that? be not in despair. how about british banks? remember, they dropped 40% right after the british vote. they were up yesterday and up a little bit more today. royal bank of scotland, same story, huge loss after the brexit vote. they'll be virtually flat and stable today. how about u.s. banks in we'll start with bank of america. they'll be up and citigroup, i believe they're also going to
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be up today. no, they're going to be flat to slightly lower. and e-mack come in, please. >> sure. >> the banks took the biggest hit. they've come back a little. >> that's right. can we say that the panic phase for bank stocks is over? >> yes, largely for u.s. banks, this is not 2008 for u.s. banks when they were careening around. goldman sachs is now saying the european banks will be down about 40 billion for the next few years because of brexit. u.k. down less. that's interesting. stuart: we'll take it better than their take. >> in terms of profits. stuart: in terms of profits. that's america. donald trump taking trade and he comes out, flat-out in favor of protectionism. joining us now, governor mike huckabee. governor, welcome back, always good to see you. >> thank you a lot, stuart. great to be back. stuart: here is my blockbuster
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headline such as it is, donald trump would reverse, overturn 50 years of economic policy, and you say? >> well, i think he maybe is being unfairly accused of what a lot of people would call raw protectionism. he is for protecting something, he's for protecting america and american workers who have been taking it in the gut for many, many decades. a lot of people who run companies have done very well because they can make their money globally. if you're an american worker you have to make your money near your home and work and a lot have lost pensions and-- >> got to have fair trade policy. stuart: if you start imposing tariffs, you know, charge them at the border when they bring in a car or a spare tire, whatever it is. you charge tariffs at the border, does that restore well paid jobs to america? do you think it does, sir? >> not singularly, it doesn't. the reason that we've lost a lot of jobs.
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three things that driven many away. excess taxation, litigation, that drives the cost um. if you do something america. and china doesn't care about the air being clean or putting people in virtual slave labor. sure the products come back a lot cheaper. the question is, is that fair trade? if it isn't an equal deal, it isn't free trade. what we're doing, we're exploiting the best holes we can find. the result is, you have people who are losing jobs and we're not manufacturing and that's a dangerous thing. >> and in one moment, let me give an example of an american company looking at capitalism the right way. delta airlines gave their employees, a little over a year ago, a 14 1/2% salary boost across the board. 14 1/2%. stuart, that's unheard of.
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most people aren't getting any bonuses, any increases. maybe a 1.6% cost of living, but the-- why did they get that? because they had record profits. what did the company do? did they give it all to the shareholders? they did not. they gave the shareholders tomorrshareholders-- and that continues to do well. stuart: the elites in business and media and government are uniformly opposed to what i'm calling protectionism. levying tariffs at the border. the elites are opposed to this. you don't think that trump loses-- that's the wrong word to use, but has he touched a real nerve here? >> i was in the u.k. last week when the brexit vote went down, stuart. the elites didn't see that coming and it was a round house to the left jaw that they were
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unprepared for. what has happened in this election, donald trump has touched the nerves of people that the elates are out of trust. the medial, the political center are totally disconnected from reality when it comes to how people are struggling. the result is, donald trump is winning and i believe he will win in november and the elites will tear their garments and they will be sitting on the edge of ledges of high buildings, but it's just at some point going to have a see a change. stuart: i think the biblical expression is gnashing of teeth, is that it? >> there will be a lot of gnashing of teeth for the dennis. thank you. >> good to be with you, stuart. stuart: the and higher this morning, 120 points up at the
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dow jones opening in a couple of minutes. a couple of big names we're watching closely. look like green arrows for nike at least at the opening bell is going to be up. prior to this, it was going to be down about 6%. what a turn around. how about general mills, the cereal people we call them. higher profits, that's a winner, up today at opening bell. next story, take a look at this. it's a new op-ed in "the washington post" and it states, here is the quote. young women don't care about bill clinton's sexual misdeeds. lisa remains with us and she's going to take this one on. >> still here. stuart: and "the washington post" article said young women don't care. it happened all of those years ago, they don't care about that, and you say? >> they do, but i think it's important to frame the narrative directly and i think that donald trump needs to be careful about not overreaching. the way he should frame this for political reasons.
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focus on the fact that is in the broader trust with hillary clinton and the hypocrisy, that every victim of sexual assaults deserves to be heard. and we know for a fact that she dragged names, monica lewinsky threw the mud and that's the narrative. >> i've got read the article, but our producer tell me that the post, "the washington post" only interviewed two young women to conclude that women don't care about bill clinton's sexual escapades. >> that's a scientific poll, two people and it's probably his relatives. stuart: i've never seen a quality newspaper like "the washington post" go so far in opposing a specific candidate for the president liz: you don't believe what goes on in news rooms to get
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the story out there. >> statistically impossible to come up with any conclusion on two people. that's ridiculous. stuart: that's true. >> and the paper bragged about hiring 20 opposition researchers for donald trump in the election cycle. they've shown their cards, what kind of narrative and headlines that would drive liz: this is a basis to put 20 on donald trump. >> jeff bezos owns, and i think that amazon is quite a company, but i don't-- >> we'll leave it at that. i've got questions for our market watchers, is the panic after the british vote to leave the eu finally over? look at that, green arrows, a trivia question, who is the highest paid bank ceo in
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average. a lot of people coming into the market and saying is the panic over? remember, the british vote was last thursday and reaction to it was last friday. we were down 600 points and down another couple hundred points for monday and a rebound, if i could call it that. up to 60 and today we'll be up 100, 120 at the opening bell. bang! it's 9:30 eastern time. we're up and running and it's wednesday morning. will you look at that? they're all green. left-hand side of the screen, those are the dow 30 stocks and every single one of them is in the green. that means they're all up. and within the first 18 seconds of business, we are up 102 points. i'm going to say that the panic stage of the british vote is over. and it may be, but i'm saying it. how about general electric, a lot of people own ge without knowing it, it's in mutual
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funds. it's rallying today after they said the financial arm is not too big a fail and so it doesn't have the regulations. and taking nike with it, this stock a couple of hours ago, pre-market was down 6%. it reported slower north american sales. up it goes. those a turn around because it's doing well in china. under amour, they're an athletic gear maker, just like nike. they're cutting into nike sales. that stock is up 3% this morning. check the broader market indicator like the s&p 500. that's upside to the tune of almost 1%. in percentage terms, it's doing better than the dow. it's up 44 points, about 1%. how about gold? it's still higher, everything is up including gold. that's unusual. $3 higher for gold and oil
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still there. at $48 a barrel. i've been away for a couple of days. twas at $48 when i went away and $48 when i come back. the word of the day, stability. you're looking at british banks, they're a mixed picture today. barclays is up 1%, royal bank of scotland is down 1%. hsbc holdings, the banking corporation, we should note these stocks are nowhere near where they closed on thursday before the bri they're way down and stabilizing at the low levels. this group has rebounded. talking health stocks and glaxo and astrazeneca. they're above where they closed before the british vote. that's a complete recovery and a rebound, too. big tech stocks, we name them and follow them every single day. amazon, apple, google, facebook, netflix, they're off their highs, but they're all
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off a bit today. is it time to start buying? there's a question for everybody. here is who we're going to pose that question to. dan stench ich to you first. >> it's not going to take much to put the market in a tailspin. what's going on in britain, how fragile the economy-- excuse me fragile the markets are and anything that might hit it again. i wouldn't feel comfortable buying yet. stuart: dan is saying what you said earlier, shah. don't get too comfortable. >> i agree with dan, fingers are off the panic button and seem to have passed that stage. the markets have a lot to digest, but nobody has any idea what is going to happen with the british exit, what the stipulations are going to be
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between them and the rest of the union and who might tee up-- we might not know for two years. , ma-- they hate that decision and in the face of the unknown. stuart: you can't trade stocks or anything else on the basis of what's going to happen two years from now. >> i think that's what's happening. they can't figure out that's going to happen and they go to the sidelines and figure out where to park your money safely. stuart: i'm going to throw a surprise question at liz liz: love that. stuart: and the big selloff after the patricia vote was triggered by computers, programmed selling. i'm prepared to say that that stage of the panic selling is over liz: it became a once in a lifetime buying, and is the panic over? move with caution, the new safe haven are also--
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>> nicole go. nicole: the other thing we know, we're positive for 2016 with two days of gains. i know we haven't lost what we lost prior to metropolitan, things are looking better today overall. stuart: can i say this? well said, nicole, you're absolutely right there. europe is suffering a great deal more than we are financially, that is liz: that's true. stuart: they're suffering more because there's an unanswered question about europe, are they going to break up. that's the problem there liz: and we have the answers for who we think could be next to leave. that's coming up in two seconds. stuart: we are going to wait for that. look at this, the high of the day and we're up 125 points and we're fave half minutes wednesday morning. a couple of individual stocks. 90, sales flat in north america, what's that? that worried me for a second. [laughter] whoa!
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well, nike was down 6% before the market opened and now it's up about .7, but it's up. $53 a share, does shah galani buy it at 53? >> i'm looking for a place to buy it. in terms of their foreign exchanges, they're going to have to deal with that in the future. their basketball sales were up, michael jordan brand. and the rest were flat liz: going into the olympic gears. >> you'd think they'd be doing a lot better. >> do you think that the problems with the olympics that-- >> we haven't started yet. and let's get to the banks. they took it on the chin after that british vote. look at u.s. banks, citi, morgan, goldman, b of a, and
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bank of america is up 2%. look at the airlines, delta, united. american, jetblue, southwest, none of them responding to the terror attack in istanbul airport. all are up as of this morning. we like to check the gun makers, the gone stocks, turm ruger and smith & wesson, they're up and look at tesla. they've been hit with a lemon law lawsuits. two of three as of now for tesla. general mills, yeah, they make cheerios and a whole lot of other things, better profits, the stock is up 66 as of right now. and this tesora, they've got a cancer drug.
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>> 93 1/2 move, tsro is the ticker symbol. the market cap, 1.7 billion. they have a drug now for long, and roughly three to ten months, so you're in late stage trial. they've done have well with the findings and the stock is reflecting that. stuart: show me the big board again, please, everyone because now we're up 126 points. we were up 150 and now 125. i just don't want anybody to think that everything's fine again and coming up roses. n there and-- let's not say that, let's not get carried away. dan, i want you to repeat your point that the panic section abe over, but there's still a lot of problems out there and you could get whip-sawed. please tell our viewers again. if you see what's happening in the fourth quarter.
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what's to say we're not going to. it will happen again. the market is uncertainty. >> and what mr. gross said about the dollar. he was on countdown. >> and this will hurt the u.s. companies and we've learned from carnival, for example, that could put it into recession a 30 to 50% chance of u.s. recession. that may be aggressive, but we may hear companies. stuart: everybody's nodding on that one. can i point out a positive for america, what happened to britain and the financial markets thereafter. the policies for me are mortgage rates. the yield on the 10-year
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treasure yield based for 30 year fixed rate 6789 i can see the day when we would have 3% 30-year fixed rate mortgages. i've never seen that before and i think that's a plus for everybody. >> it's definitely a plus unless you're looking for the other side, sometimes what i do sitting in the bare chairment growth is-- that would take the mortgage rates. stuart: that said, much lower interest rates are not good for everybody. but in you're in the market for a home. >> we've got pending home sales at 10:00, the best in ten years last month. stuart: nicole, you want to come in. nicole: yesterday they were good. pricing remained strong in certain areas liz: up average 5%.
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>> for the eighth month in a row. you can have a 30-year fixed rate and 3%. i'll do it, i'll do. >> now, this, a new harris poll and the top burger chains in america, based on familiarity, customer service. five guys, culver's and in and out, i've got the wrong order, but three top spots are privately held companies. wendy's number four, sonic number five and mcdonald didn't make the top seven. >> shake shack. >> hold on a second. >> i'm interesting how they ran the poll. i think that mcdopdz has the best name recognition in the burg he --
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berger joints liz: mcdonald's has a million more than wendy's or-- >> mcdonald's number 14. >> didn't break the top five. stuart: noncess, i can walk into my mcdonald's get a senior's take away coffee, 53 cents in aboabout there and-- >> they're not thinking of it as a hamburger joint. >> 53 sent? >> black coffee, seniors, i am a seniors, don't forget, to go black coffee liz: what a time to be alive. >> and to stay alive. i want to go around the block here. who is the highest paid bank ceo? what do you say? >> i would have to say jamie dimon, j.p. morgan seems to be doing the right things at the right time and he gets paid
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accordingly for it. stuart: one vote for jamie dimon. >> he stole my vote, but john at wells fargo. stuart: e-mack. >> i know the answer. stuart: and here is the answer from market watch, an article about an s&p study. >> the answer is kevin cummings. stuart: thank you. the prompter is not showing me. >> the ceo of bank corps and meanwhile, j.p. morgan has 2 trillion plus in assets. this guy is getting 20 million in salary ap bonus, more than a amy -- jamie dimon and-- >> this is television and you look at the prompter and say who is the highest paid banker in america and you go around the table and then you expect the prompter to have it, but it's not there.
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i had to go to liz liz: liz: 20 million is salary, more than j.p. morgan and citi. stuart: stop laughing at me nicole, the prompter did have it. thanks so much. dow industrials are up 128 points, up 260 yesterday. 128 today and follows a decline in the previous sessions. i'm saying that the panic is over. more at drug maker-- >> monsanto. stuart: yes, that's not a drug maker. nicole, what's the story? >> well, they are potentially having a meeting. it's a seed maker, monsanto on earnings per share that
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quadrupled. they pulled out and rejected that $62 billion offer from germany's bayer last month. they did have a fall in quarterly sales, earnings were the pick and the stock is somehow moving to the upside today. >> got it, nicole. >> straightening me out on what monsanto does. i bought their seed so i know what it is. check the big board, up 130 points and now we're up 142, not padment how about wal-mart, it will sign up for a three-day. it looks like it's going head to head with amazon prime and i want to bring in doug, overseas more than $100 billion ffrjts bob, welcome back to the program, good to see you.
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>> good morning, stuart. stuart: i'm saying the panic phase after the british vote, the panic phase is over. it's too late, but i'm saying panic over, and you say? >> i wouldn't disagree with that, in part bus rather everybody expected brexit to fail. and you had the huge rally especially the pound in london. and it didn't give back the and the panic was, oh, my goodness, it went the wrong way. we're preparing now and we're having a bounce. the truth is somewhere in between. we're not going to know for some time with brexit really looks like and what it means. we're going to speculate over and over, but it's going to take months before we really know and we may not know quite then. >> in my opinion, the biggest
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threat is not so much the british leaving the european union. i think the biggest threat to the global economy and the global financial system is the breakup of the european union. if i hear, for example, the dutch are going to hold a referendum of their own and then get out or the french might hold a referendum and then they get out. that would be a much bigger negative for our market here than anything to do with the british vote. >> i agree with that. now, remember, the government has to take the referendum to the people. the british government it getting some criticism. why do they bother to take it to the citizenry in the first place, did they know what they were doing? they thought they had it in the bag. i think that other governments would be reluctant to move it to a referendum, stuart. stuart: it seems to me a lot of the money that's going back into the market now is going back not just to the banks, but especially into the big name technology companies.
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the theory being, i guess, they will be less effected by any . >> many companies do some business in europe and many do not as well. they have a lot of free cash flow. many investors are saying, slow growth, uncertain world and what is going to make the stocks work? if i have free cash flow i can hire the worker, buy back my stock, a dividend. if i don't and of the ten sectors in the market. tech is into um one and nobody is second to free cash flow. that's part of the reason they're doing well. and i would say the u.s. consumer you've been reporting is doing pretty well, also, and is somewhat insulated from the noise across the pond.
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>> i read your stuff, after all you manage 100 billion. i read it. you say that hillary would be better for the market than trump. you've got 10 seconds to make your case. [laughter] >> yes, the reason is with hillary we know what we're getting and with donald trump it seems like we'll get trade wars. he's got four months to clarify what he really wants to do and we could change our mind, but at the moment, that's the case. >> bob, thank you. i think this is the high of the day and those green squares represent one dow stock and all are in the green. that means every single one of them up today. here is what's next. the republicans report on the benghazi attack turns out hillary clinton knew it was terrorism, but blamed it on a video anyway.
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destinations in about 30 countries. there's an investment firm, apollo global nearing a deal to buy diamond. that's why the stock is up 23%. now this, the new york times claims the house benghazi report finds no wrongdoing on the part of the hillary clinton. let me read you the headline "house benghazi report finds no new evidence of wrongdoing by hillary clinton", look who is here, judge andrew napolitano is back. >> i am smiling because our humorous and charming colleague steve doocy when he read live on air, he tweeted i'm hillary clinton and i approve of this message. it's almost like a campaign message it's so preposterous. stuart: it seems that the new york times and the broadcast networks were sticking with the legalistic view, no wrongdoing. >> there are two areas of unlawful behavior, but before we get to that, what we learned from the benghazi report that
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is now not disputed was, she knew the real source, the real source of the attack, she told her daughter. she lied to the state department. then she sent and tells the foreign minister of egypt. then she lies to the families of the dead in the presence of their bodies, as they're being removed from a plane at andrews air force base, then she dispatches susan rice to perpetuate the lie. we learned, this is new, that there was a meeting in the white house that she presided over, the president wasn't there, while the attack was going on. half the time that that meeting was spent on the pr. not saving lives or property. stuart: she was cooking up the story the video and not a terrorist attack. >> it's now absolutely documented and undisputed that she acknowledged in private that it was an organized heavy military sophisticated al qaeda attack, but perpetuated the
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myth, the lie in public that it was a spontaneous reaction to the internet video. here is the unlawful part and the committee did not dwell onto this to my satisfaction, two members of the committee wanted to, the majority did not want to. the unlawful aspect was this was not a declared war. she suggested the war. the president went along with the war. 12 members of congress, both houses, both parties approved it. how did they cause the war to happen? the secretary of state has the authority under the statutes to grant exemptions to embargoes, there was an arms embargo on u.s., u.s., u.n., nato. secretary of state grants exemptions to arms dealers all over the world. where are they going to, militia groups. the cia warns her they're not militia groups, they're terrorist organizations. you don't want arms in their hands. she brushed them off. where did the weapons come from
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that skilled ambassador stevens-- >> that's not known. i'm harshly critical of the committee to fail to cover it. why did they fail to cover it? some members of copingress, som friends and leagues of the committee signed off on this. stuart: thank you, sir. now, check the big board. close to the high of the day. we're up 150, almost 150 points. up two days in a row as of now. in our next hour, a secret service agent's tell-all from inside bill clinton's white house. and why he says hillary clinton is not fit for the presidency. you will not see this in the mainstream media two minutes away. ♪
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>> coming up right up on 10:00 on the east coast, it's 7:00 in the morning in california and we have a second straight triple digit rally to report for you of the green arrows across the board. all 30 of the dow stocks are up. some individual stocks that we're following, look at wal-mart, launching a free 30-day trial of the two-day shipping program to all in america. going after amazon. amazon is called prime. wal-mart is shopping pass. what effect is it having on amazon, none. news the financial arm is not a risk to the financial system, therefore, it's not so tightly regulated as the big banks, ge struggling back. and nike turned around because
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it's doing well in china. nike is now up nearly 2% at 54. here is another very, very big winner, tesaro, a big cancer drug. that means it's up 100%. we're covering the rally, of course and covering terror. hours after the attack on the istanbul airport, john kerry says isis is desperate, isis is losing. and the headlines read no wrongdoing for hillary clinton. hillary herself said it's time to move on. what does the man who co-wrote the report actually have to say about that? we also have the former secret service agent to wrote the tell-all book about his time in the clinton white house. he will tell us why he thinks that hillary does not have the temperament to be the president
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of the united states. we have to warn you on this. you're about to see a graphic item of video. it's a terrorist attack in turkey. know all about it. you can see the terrorist run through the airport and he's shot and then blows himself up. 41 people reported dead in that attack. that was graphic video indeed. i hope you heeded the warning. that's the terrorist, he's been shot and is on the ground. and he comes to look at him. he runs away because he sees the suicide vest and banning, it happened. here it goes, wait for it. you already so it, i'm not going to show it to you again. listen to secretary of state john kerry, he says this shows isis is getting desperate. roll that tape. >> you can bomb an airport, you can blow yourself up, that's the tragedy. dasch and others like it know that we have to get it right
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24/7, 365. >> they have to get it right for ten minutes or one hour. so it's a very different scale. if you're desperate and if you know you're losing and you know you want to give up your life, then, obviously, you could do some harm. stuart: james walter is with us. ambassador, welcome back, good to see you, sir. >> good to be with you, stuart. stuart: i'm sure you heard secretary kerry says that isis is desperate and know they're going to lose. what's your assessment. >> sounds a bit like the junior varsity line from some months back. i think that it may be accurate with respect to the fighting in syria and iraq against isis. the turks, for example, may come in with a more strongly than they have in the past as a result of the terrible incident in istanbul airport.
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and things were going not too badly in iraq and syria on behalf of those who are fighting against isis. so, i think that secretary kerry's comment could be accurate there. i think it's very premature to say that we're ahead of things here in the united states or in western europe. i think there will be more terrorist attacks and we're not doing what we ought to in order to deal with that. stuart: what ought we to do? >> we need to get essentially an understanding among citizens who are interested in civil liberties and that's most of us, and the government, and the parts of the government that are here to protect us, and get them working together in kind of a public-private partnership. we are at war and the damage that the president does by not saying that and make it clear that the jihadis are coming for us, and we have to quite, and by not making it clear, the president is making it much
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harder for secretary kerry and the rest of the administration to be focused on what we have to do, which is use publicly available data from various websites, that are publicly available, we have to use that in order to help track terrorists and we're not doing it very well now. stuart: james, i have to tell you, i'm tired of being called a bigot if i want to do something about muslims coming into america. i'm getting a little tired of being told i'm a racist if i want to identify terror as islamic terror. i get a little tired of this. i think a lot of people are getting tired of it, too, how about you? >> i think so, too. certainly you are not-- you were not opposed to christianity if you opposed the spanish inquisition. you're not opposed to being a
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righteous individual in colonial america, if some portion of your cult was killing witches. not everyone is part of a religious association, and somebody does something horrible, not everybody is tarred with that and we have to stop acting like that. stuart: james, i'm sorry i cut you off, a busy news day and i've got to move on. thank you for being with us, we appreciate it. thank you. another big story, breaking overnight and today, the select committee on benghazi released its final report in libya finding hillary clinton misled the public. four people died, but hillary says it's time to move on. roll that tape. >> no one has thought more about or lost more sleep over the lives that we lost, the four americans. after more than two years and $7 million spent by the
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benghazi committee out of taxpayer funds, it had to today report it found nothing, nothing. i'm leave it to others to characterize this report, but i think it's pretty clear it's time to move on. stuart: okay. congressman mike pompeo is here and he co-wrote the report that hillary is talking about that. >> good to be here, stuart. stuart: your response to hillary's comments. we know when she said months and months ago what difference does it make. we now know what a difference it makes. the difference is she put her political legacy ahead of the four men killed in benghazi the at every time she chose politics. we had a debate, if we could have saved them, they never tried. that's a travesty. stuart: the report shows that they held a meeting with hillary clinton involved at the
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meeting on the night the attack was progressing and that a lot of the time was spent on how to figure out how to spin this attack not as a terror attack, but as a video, the result of a video. now, that's an extraordinary statement because she went out and said, it's a video, knowing in fact that it was an attack, a terror attack. did your report clearly show that? >> oh, yes, sir. it's unambiguous. thee told a story about a video-- a terror attack, told her daughter, egyptians and for days and days she told us a video. that night, while mortars are falling and men who are mounting machine guns, trying to keep themselves alive, in washington d.c., secretary clinton is in a meeting trying to decide whether it's appropriate for u.s. soldiers to go into libya in uniform or not. we took the soldiers in and out of uniform three times the delays in washington d.c. stuart: the new york times says, here is the headline, i'll read it to "benghazi
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panel finds no misdeeds by clinton" that's a legal ifk term, but that's what they say, no misdeeds. do you find misdeeds? >> absolutely. stuart: what were the misdeeds? >> they start with with the fact there were 600 security requests and a memo in august of 2012, less than a month before the attack. stuart: that's judgment, you're questioning her judgment as opposed to breaking the law. >> i expect leaders to do the right thing. i expect them to exercise good judgment. she was america's most senior diplomate. she had a duty to protect those men and women and in the aftermath, secretary clinton wouldn't even go on the sunday talk shows, they sent susan rice out essentially as an uninformed person who was briefed by two political people, ben rhodes and david plouffe. they had a political narrative ahead of the americans' safety on the ground. that's reprehensible. >> thank you, sir. check the big board, not quite
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the high of the day. we'll bring a triple digit rally of 133 as we speak. the latest polls by the way show that donald trump is it in a dead heat. virtual dead heat with hillary clinton. trump says he's going to rebuild america, bring jobs back to our inner cities, okay? and a first on fox business interview, the secret service officer who watched over the clintons. he's out with a tell-all book, why he says hillary is dangerous and that she cannot be the president. >> she exhibits very dangerous behaviors as i would dcribe it. she gets angry at things and she screams and yells at people.
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everything is up today, including gold. mining stocks, they are up nicely, barrick, newmont, all of them up. look at silver miners, we don't quote them often, they're up, in percentage terms that's a rally. our next guest has a tell-all book, about his time as an agent in the clinton white house. from what he saw hillary clinton doesn't have the temperament to be president. "crisis of character". >> thanks for having me. stuart: give me a example what you saw that makes you say that she doesn't have the tempel-tuttle perment. >> i worked in the tour section and one day i had to go
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upstairs and have a meeting with some of other staff in the social office. three women i need today meet with were in the upstairs hallway they were agitated angry and afraid and i said something wrong, what's wrong? i thought maybe there was something wrong and somebody was sick. they said no, there was a mistake made, somebody let an intern order some stationary and it was-- we're talking large amounts of stationary for the white house events and cost a lot of money and there was a mistake made they couldn't use it and what they were afraid of. they weren't upset about the money wasted, they were afraid of who was going to have to tell the first lady. stuart: did you ever see the relationship with the staff, intimidating-- >> over the experience of eight years, that's one of the best examples. stuart: did you ever actually see an incidence of violence? >> violence? anger, no, i never saw her hit anybody, no. stuart: we always hear the stories about lamps being
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thrown. >> sure, actually, it was a vase. i came into work, my post at the oval office and stopped by to see a friend of mine and told there had been an argument the night before. i realize it sounds like we're school girls listening to a couple fight, but you have to pout it in contest, we're the secret service, we're in the white house and the old building and elevator shafts and fighting so loudly, it was spreading all over the mansionment and there was a crash, a broken vase, not a lamp. i saw the later on and it was in a cardboard box, mostly blue with some white on it. stuart: okay, now your critics and other television networks, they will not put you on the air. >> right. stuart: and many sol some print media outlets won't use quotes
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from your book. they say you're exaggerating. >> i'm not, this is my life and how it happened. if that's not true, why was i subpoenaed six times. i was the first uniformed to testify against the president in a criminal case and i was ordered to testify by supreme court justice rehnquist. stuart: you were ordered to testify in a case against president clinton? >> over the monica lewinsky scandal and they tried to deny their relationship and signed affidavits and starr had dna proof they had a connection. >> what was your role in the investigation. >> i was posted outside the oval office all those time and i could put them together and they compelled me to testify and then the secret service, basically took a bunch of young officers like myself and propelled us forward to protect themselves. the senior people in the secret service at the time knew what this investigation wanted, but
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they didn't want to be involved so they pushed us forward and officers like myself, a few injury agents and one senior guy that wasn't even an agent that wasn't on the detail at the time. so it was kind of manipulated and you certainly see this in hindsight. stuart: one of the issues which has been brought to the fore in this election cycle how hillary clinton treated the women that had been involved with bill clinton. >> right. stuart: did you see any of that. >> i didn't see it personally, but i saw the same thing that everybody saw on the news and it's certainly their m-o. they referred to it as slut-shaming and as soon as somebody comes out. just like me now, i'm coming out and telling the truth about them. and the clinton machine goes right up to speed and, you know, right away i'm not to be believed. i didn't have access. you can't say i didn't have the access, why was i subpoenaed? . i've got to ask a question, two reasons for writing this book,
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you want to make a lot of money or you feel that the truth must come out. >> i do, i do. stuart: a lot of people say it's the first. you want to make some money. >> they're wrong. there are people that want to talk about the checking account as soon as they put their checking account on the table ill he a talk about mine. it's about truth and honesty and i'm telling the truth. stuart: gary byrne, we appreciate it. look at the markets, why not? it's a nice day. mostly green arrows across the board and 29 of the dow 30 stocks are up. only holm home depot is a little bit down. could you call this stability after the brexit plunge? maybe. president obama deeply critical of the brits who want to leave europe. he calls them xenophobes and suggests that trump supporters are just the same. stay there, we're coming back. if you have medicare
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>> we don't quote european stocks very often, we're american centric. this is the ftse, over the past five sessions. that's a rollercoaster. we're showing it to you because the ftse is almost back to where it was before the vote. how about that? some european health care stocks, british health care stocks, actually, drug makers, they are back above where they were before the vote. glaxo, astrazeneca, both of them higher now than they were on the thursday before the vote. maybe that's because the british pound has plunged and their products are a lot cheaper around the world. maybe that's the reason. european union leaders, they continued their conference today. prime minister cameron says
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he's not there. ashley webster though is with us, he's live from london and these leaders, they're concerned about another nation leaving the eu. who might be the next? any ideas? >> who could be next? well, i think that denmark by all accounts, stu, is one that could very much, perhaps, be the next country. so put the question to a referendum. recent polls suggested both in denmark and holland, by the way, i think denmark more so because they've talked about this for a while, that the polls show that perhaps more than not, would like to get out of the united-- or the european union. so, it's there. the question is there and i think, and i'm sure you agree, if that's the case and they vote and they vote to get out, then the whole house of cards starts to tumble because there are other countries out there that would like to do the same thing and it could be certainly the beginning of the end. stuart: yes, sweden is actually another one considering having some kind of referendum.
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the french are even looking at it. the first word that somebody's going to vote on this in europe in the future at that very moment, that's when you get another attack on the financial markets. that's my opinion. so your vacation is almost over, it's time to come back, okay? come home, webster. ashley: i am so tired of not working, stu, i have to come back to do some work. stuart: you need some cold beer. we have it over here. ashley webster will be returning. ashley: i'm ready. stuart: now this, president obama, he says that xenophobia, what's that the fear of foreigners or dislike of foreigners, xenophobia, that's to blame for britain leaving the european union. roll tape. >> there is a xenophobia and anti-immigrant sentiment that's flashing up, not just in great britain, but throughout europe that has some parallels with what mr. trump has been trying to stir up here. stuart: okay. david webb is here.
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what are your thoughts on what you just heard from president obama. >> you know, when president obama doesn't have a point that supports what he believes, he starts to paint everyone as someone to run away from, so you get 17 million plus voting to leave the eu, you're saying a million plus brits. that means there's 17 million plus xenophobes. when it comes to trump, you've got millions who voted for trump, they're all xenophobes, are all of those people xenophobes or the economy and-- or the ridiculous nature. stuart: why can't we control our border? liz: this is what the president fails to acknowledge. member countries of the eu, you cited sweden. the eu was deciding without fiat settling immigrants.
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when they say we don't like what they're dictating to rest of us. we don't feel safe the president steps in. m to be safe. >> it's not just migration, the brits and other countries are getting rules imposed on them, at that,s imposed on them that they have to pay for. their citizens have no say in the sovereign governance of their nations and that's not how it works in a democratic society. stuart: don't label me a bigot or xenophobe or hatred of foreigners if i want-- simply want to control who comes in the country. >> you have a right to sovereignty, you have a vote in the british empire. you have an ability it say what your government does and the boys in brussels say no, you don't. stuart: i don't understand why in the week after the orlando terror attack, that's what it was. the week after that, 441
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migrants were let into our country from south africa, without-- background checks for guns, but they don't have good background checks for the migrants from countries where there's pervasive amounts of terrorism and we're supposed to accept both? come on, folks, common sense. stuart: the 441 people who came into our country as refugees or migrants, call them what you will, right after orlando. only five were christians. that's it. christians are the people who are being butchered for heaven's sake. >> genocide is the world liz: you don't see the christians doing the attacks. 580 terror attacks and plots since 9/11. 580 attacks. 380 were foreign-born, 40 of them came from people who were refugees. stuart: 380 of the foreign born-- this is america, since 9/11 in america, 40 of them were
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refugees? that's the important word, refugees, border crossers, and-- is there a solution? >> there is a solution in your paint about the christians and that's the loutenburg amendment much 1990, and prioritize those with genocide against them. and it's a democrat new jersey that it's named after. stuart: if we do that we're imposing a religious test. >> no, we're not. stuart: i agree with you, david. >> we're passionate about this, the americans in the free world want to help the people who are targeted. stuart: am i a bigot if i want to let persecuted christians down the line, since when am i
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a bigot letting them in as opposed to those doing the butchering. in 12 seconds' time we'll get the supply of oil or how much oil we have in storage. right now, it's coming up right on 10:30 we'll have the number in a moment. we may see the number changed. what you're seeing on your screen is the price of a barrel of oil liz: here we go liz: it's down 4 million. stuart: we've got 4 million barrels less in storage than we had last week liz: six straight weeks of drawdown. oil in the reacting that. . stuart: it's holding at 48, 49 a barrel liz: we still have a lot of oil in supply. stuart: that's helping the energy stocks? >> it's the leading sector on
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the markets today according to the s&p 500. stuart: the dow is almost at the high for the today, up at 170 points and it's all falling together here. we have an extra use of oil, maybe we're driving more. >> the summer season, i was in l.a. and the roads were full night and day. stuart: they're always full. >> it's who is on the road, not just commerce, people driving, july 4th is coming up and i would say that the energy industry is looking at this and saying we are going to have stability in usage at least in that sector. stuart: let me just summarize this, we've got less oil in storage because we're using more. the price of oil is up and stocks are really moving up now. we're up 170 before the oil numbers came out and now we're up 185, 186, we are moving up. almost everything it higher, whether it's gold, oil, stocks, you name it we are up today.
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we are not going to say the panic is over, but everything is up today liz: look what's popping, 186. stuart: we'll keep that on the screen for our viewers, we'll follow it. this is what's happening to your money after that british vote last thursday and after the terror attack yesterday in issen sta -- istanbul. we're up. >> and america is the best hope. that's why the doomsayers are wrong. stuart: we're a gigantic safe haven. get that clear, shall we? i want more on the attack in turkey, the terror attack. we have a number now, 41 dead in the latest attack and fahmy bruce is with us now. >> hillary now calls it radical jihadism. president obama still refuses to call it radical islam. i don't know why you're
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smiling. hillary clinton and barack obama are consistent in that the policies they've created in middle east, full 20% of people use today live in syria now live in turkey. the border controls are clearly about national security, it's not about xenophobia or anything like that. the turks are seeing that. hillary clinton is doubling down on the political correctness and refusing what's occurring here. it's funny, everybody after the turkey attack, immediately we knew it was terrorism. when terrorism happens here, it's gun violence, or it's a hate crime. this is what is so strange, with the american people are rejecting. stuart: but voters can see this that hillary and-- kind of in a corner, they've painted themselves into a linguistic corner here and i think that voters can see it. >> they can, and you know, we've taken back-- iraq has taken back fallujah and we're headed towards mosul
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and we occasionally bomb a truck or a leader, or take a city. it's clear it's larger, it's global and we have to deal with raqqa in syria and engage the enemy. obama has managing it disinformation interestingly enough and this is what the voters recognize. stuart: it seems to me the incidents are speeding up. the frequency, almost constant. >> what we see right now in europe is the next level of this, turkey, certainly, is a growing guerilla war. we're not dealing with-- the obama administration to your point is pushing a narrative of political corre correctness, guerilla war means you're acting by any means necessary.
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we speak is. now this, donald trump explaining his plan for economic turnaround. he says he plans his plan relies on bringing back manufacturing jobs like steel working to america. roll that tape. >> it will be seal that sends our skyscrapers, soaring, soaring into the sky. or more beautiful with american seals. it will be american steel that rebuilds our inner cities. it will be american hands that remake this country. >> well, if you listen carefully, steve moore is getting ready rought there. listen very carefully, donald trump is trying to reverse 50 years of economic policy on trade. a total reversal he talked flat out protectionism. steve moore, i don't think you support that.
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first of all stuart who told you on friday that the markets were going to rebound and that there were great buying opportunities out there and thank you for mentioning that. [laughter] >> you remember, i said that. didn't i stuart, on your show i knew there was overreaction to the market. now, on trade i'm a free traird you're a free trader, but i don't completely l disagree with donald trump. by the way, it speaks a lot for donald trump that he would you know have someone like me as ab economic advisor and i've told them i don't always agree with them on trade i said that's fine. you don't see that any kind of disagreement you can't cross the line with her in any way. i'm a free traird butted i do believe we have to renegotiate some of these deals i think donald trump is right about that. i think it is a lot of deals have not represented american manufactures and workers and we know china is cheating on these deals. we know japan cheats on deals. we know that china steal ising a lot of her technology.
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why not stuart have somebody at the negotiating table like a donald trump, that's going to negotiate on the behalf of american workers. >> is that how you see it steve? associating position we're going to get tough and take action watch out. just negotiating position. doesn't really mean we're going to impose tariff does it mean that? >> primarily saying i'm going to get really tough with these countries and by the way we have a president we know for 7 and a half years now and timing that negotiate climate change and foreign poles deals he always puts america last because he feels it is gment about the way we've acted in the world. donald trump is not going tods that. now, look he may hand out sword of tariff to say look if you don't start opening your markets we're going to hold this hammer over your head. but i think it is mostly a
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negotiating tactic. >> we hear you steve moe and you were indeed right on friday and i should give you cue that you deserve. [laughter] >> that's a lot stuart just a little love. [laughter] >> good deal steve moore thank you very much indeed, sir. nike talk about a 24 hour, yes facings tough competition from underarmor also from adidas but this morning and nicole is it holding its gains? >> it's pretty good here. you know, it's in afterhours after numbers came out with a mison their nurls we saw them sell off 4%. today it's been higher holding 1% gain here. 1.3% so your note is exactly right. adidas selling market share. getting more market shelve space according to analysts they brought back what was old is new again and it's fantastic the smith, the clam shell, those are doing really well for adidas deals an underarmour and all in
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competition with nike, kevin durant lebron and jordans still doing very well for them. so future sales are a little short but they also have the euro soccer championship, they have the olympics coming up so those are some of the things this i do love adidas, in fact, some of the old diez but good diez some of my favorites. >> adidas charts different from the nike chart exact opposite of each other. but there you are. nicole thank you very much indeed. here's another stock that just went public last week actually. trulio up 9% yesterday. today it's up another 13%. now there's a winner for you. how about that? how about go pro they make cameras. they call it a one trick pony. remember when it was the hot u new tech stock $65 a share last year. now it is $10 a share. >> wow. next -- terror in turkey four to one
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people murdered by islamic extremist we're under attack. ralph peters is next here in the studio with fuss no less. [laughter] [b yeah i was looking for it. sure,music's why we do this,but it's still our business. we spend days booking gigs, then we've gotta put in the miles to get there. but it's not without its perks. like seeing our album sales go through the roof enough to finally start paying meg's little brother- i mean,our new tour manager-with real,actual money. we run on quickbooks.that's how we own it.
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trump's economic plan. >> what has happened in this election is that donald trump has tumpled the nerve of people who know that the elites are out of touch and that three major sectors of this country the financial sector, the media sector, and political sector are toilings disconnected from reality when it comes to how people are struggling. and the result is donald trump is winning, and ubl he will win in november, and the elites will tear their garments and they will you know be sitting on the edge of ledges at high buildings. ♪
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>> let's bring in jeff flock live in downtown chicago there holding protest they want i think gun control. jeff, who's there? >> multiple members of congress. democratic member was congress you see jan speaking right now. straight that democrat riff also here today they say a national day of protest against gun violence now conducting a sit-in here on the federal plaza and you know chicago is kind of a interesting location in that certainly no place is more home to gun violence than chicago, of course, it is also home to some of the strictest gun laws in the
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country. so weapons banned. waiting periods, background checks, restrictions on where gun shops can be opened. now we're going to hear from some poiks who are victims of gun violence that's the robyn kelly by the way in the orange who is democratic congressman as well. clearly more than one view point about what to do with gun violence. even president reagan was opposed to assault weapons. that's the story from here. >> okay jeff we hear you thank you very much indeed. david webb throwing up his hands in the air. go. >> it is an assault weapon. i'm so sick eve these damn democrats in this crap that they're spouting why wrnght they in the neighborhoods in chicago where a girl gets shot sitting on her stoop these are not assault weapons. they're nine millimeter close quarter can do just as much damage at a higher rate of fun
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than a long gun inside the orlando nightclub and there was a side arms carried by military police. >> they are changing the subject from the terror attack in orlando to -- gun violence. >> dishonest an misleading the american people and people believe the group stew are likely kim kardashian crowd. she tweeted out terrorist on the fbi wanted list can buy guns legally. 46 million followers, this is the problem. okay don't buy that. >> upset david webb calm down right there with us. now the same emotional story, that is the terror attack in istanbul yesterday 41 people are dead. we're going to show you this again. it's graphic video be warned please. roll that tape. what you'll see is that terrorist walking along his gun skid across the floor and he's been shot. a policeman comes towards him and then runs away because the policeman sees he's got a suicide belt. he blows himself up, and that's the video tape be careful when
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you watch that. lieutenant colonel ralph peters is here. we are under attack there's no question about about it. if we want to go after them, take the fight to them, we are the only country in the world that can actually do it. is that accurate? >> no. it's not. because we don't have the guts to do what it takes -- our enemies will do anything to win. stuart, the terrorists greatest advantage is their strength of will. their commitment. these are are people regard death as a promotion. we are you know, we consult lawyers before we can hilt a target. we're worried about world opinion. oh, my god what will world court think and europeans think and media say about us? you can't live like that. people forget we've forgotten so quickly in world war ii we bond flat kill hundreds of civilians drop adam bombs on two japanese cities and a they are allies. >> diewpght to do that again? because that's what would entail
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if we want to retake mosul or cities captured large civilian you're gong to kill hundreds of civilians do you want to do that? >> do i want to of course not. >> only way to win. >> well -- you don't have to flatten mosul but when, you know, where terrorists are you have to be willing to bomb neighborhoods we have different tools but you have to accept the fact there's no clean way to make war. you can't apologize for what you do. you do the best you can to minimize but you do what it takes -- if you use words like exterminate terrorists. you are going to lose because the strength, the strength of will of even of character in their own per verted way allowed them to spread around the globe. we're focused on taking back one or two towns in iraq or syria. there's san bernardino, orlando, they're in paris. >> you are reversing the whole
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way we look at military conflict in the modern world. because you're saying go do it. kill them. win, and the regs of the world for the the last two or three generations have said okay, but be careful of civilians, be careful of collateral damage. reversing that. >> no what i'm saying is -- greatests immortality isn't collateral damage. greatest immorality for civilization to lose bar i can and that's happening our civilization is worth. it is between bash. >> i have read your book. i've read previous book it's about american's civil war. i don't think there's any book i've ever read that take me to the battle field and describes accurately the horror of
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day-to-day combat. this is a great book. >> technically a novel it is very accurate history as you know we've taken history out of the schools even universities i want americans to know what it cost to build this country and by the way, stuart for a business audience, this i've never sign up for examples of ten steps to perfect leadership but i want human examples and civil war and this book particularly has examples of people ceos who are sick and exhausted jnses who hang on too long. don't know when to quit. technology, innovate or tore versus traditional arist and rivalry. >> the damned the petersburg and not so much news and bring you back more description of damned of petersburg. dow is up 170 and we will be back. ♪
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six straight week and get a moment now and look at ottawa, canada. president obama just moments ago meeting with his counterparts from canada and mexico to talk trade and talk nasa coming up there. trump will come up too, and turkey will will come up as well. a terrorist attack in the airport there. we're going to listen when it happens and bring you any news. and here's what we have next it hour. hacked e-mails show hillary clinton wanted volunteers to spy on reporters who got too close to the campaign. napolitano on that and turkey attack and how do we stop them?
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the dow 30 stocks are up. only home depot is down a fraction. three dow stocks are making news. start with wal-mart offering a free 30-day trial of two-day delivery service is going right after amazon with that one. ge no longer too big to fail. nike, good numbers out of china, all of them up. the dow stocks all of them up with the overall market. how about the price of oil? we were drawing down 4 million-barrels from storage, that means we are using a lot more of it, that news came a half hour ago. oil has gone from $48 a barrel to forty-ninth dollars a barrel. chipotle, remember them? back over $400 a share. they're really push to go get customers back to their stores. they've got a new loyalty program, pronunciation, chorizo burrito. there you go.
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[laughter] stuart: 403. if you follow us on facebook, get ready for another change to your news feed. facebook will make sure you see posts from actual people more often. but if you follow pages like varney&company you need to interact with it to see more. facebook up this morning. the word of the day for the markets, i suspect, is stability. look at the british banks, barkleys, amongst others, bank of america, they're all stabilizing. galazo are british drug companies, they're all up. the last two are higher now than they were before the british vote. here with me is national review, elizabeth mcdonald and jud ji miller. liz, let's start with the markets, stability, dare i use that word? liz: i think you can.
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who steps in for david cameroon. that's not so great. the feeling of people not knowing who is in charge, that doesn't lend to investor's sentiments. there's stability and stability in the banking sector in the u.s. oil coming in -- stuart: i think you're being timid ms. mcdonald. liz: you're saying what? stuart: the first word the dutch or the french or swedens are going to hold a referendum where they too will want to get out of europe and volatility goes up. liz: we heard from wall street. no you're not. thank you for the clarity. stuart: you're welcome. have a nice day now. [laughter] stuart: serious subject. 41 dead in istanbul attack.
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video rolls right now. one of the terrorist running away. he's shot, a police officer comes out to him and runs away because he sees the suicide vest that the terrorist is wearing. seconds later, there he goes. i asked this at the very start of the show, how do we beat the isis terrorist. >> stuart, persistence and something that we have seen today in turkey that people aren't paying enough attention to, resilience. the terrorist lose when they know that they may have a headline for 24 hours but they're not going to go what they do in belgium, they're not going to shut down an airport for a week, turkey is a major between east and west, they had to be up in business, back in business and they were the next day, by the time npr reporter arrived on the ground.
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id had been cleaned and turkish airport was back in business. stuart: that's a plus for the turks and how they handled this. >> absolutely. they are also responsible for playing footsie. liz: they want to be in the eu. stuart: years to come. i can't see it happen. >> the issue is will they be able to send turks to europe without visas because that's what they want in controlling immigration. stuart: i don't think it's going to happen. it's almost impossible at europe at the moment. >> i agree. stuart: it seems to me that hillary clinton and the president have painted themselves in a corner here. their response to the terror attacks is to change the subject. it's gun control and absolutely not to say it is islamic terror. i think they're in a corner. >> i think they put themselves in a corner. i actually heard somebody say
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it's a survey among some people that say it's as a result of guns and also republican hate even though the man who -- the people in orlando was democratic, apparently. i think they need to be much more serious than they have. this is radical islamic terrorism. stuart: they won't say it. if i say it, i'm a bigot. i don't get this. >> i think we need to be able to make the distinction between peaceful moderate muslims and radical. the same way what rudy giuliani said it. that's the same kind of approach we have to take. stuart: okay, listen to this for a second. this is from america's attorney general speaking about how we treat muslims and respond to terror threats within our borders. roll tape. >> this department of justice and your country stands with you in the light.
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we stand with you to say that the good in this world far outweighs the evil. that our common humanity transcends our differences and our most effective response to terror and hatred is compassion, unity and it's love. stuart: judy, i don't want to look down on the response but i'm having a hard time saying we love our neighbor? >> i don't think kumbaya is a response. it's inappropriate talk from the attorney general of the united states. part of the problems with democrats is nobody believes that they really want to fight terror. when you get statements like that, it reinforces the impression. stuart: i don't think they want to admit it. we have a terror threat here. >> we didn't see reagan say we love this wall. it's a totally different approach. she's not just the secretary or maybe arts and culture, this is
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a woman who is in charge of the fbi and it's terrifying to hear someone who says that. liz: witch trials didn't paint a broad brush against christianity. can you imagine back then if we didn't say that these were issues -- perverted version of religion? that's what the issue is. stuart: okay, i bring you a new poll. a national poll. it's looking at the clinton-trump race. essentially that's a statistical dead heat. we should note this poll was taken before, during and after the british vote to leave europe . i see that as donald trump catching up with hillary clinton. what do you say? >> yeah, it goes show that there's a competitive race. we have seen other polls last week or so showing a 5-point advantage for hillary clinton even 12. now narrowed again. it's a competitive race.
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we will see things going up and down. trump has been using teleprompter and delivering speeches and he needs to do more of that. stuart: it is the new trump. >> 2.0. stuart: judy miller, wait a minute, you're shaking your head. hillary has a trust issue. >> yes, we have two very unpopular candidates. let's remember that. right now i don't think you can read anything into the polls at the moment. we are going to wait and see. look at the difference. you know, romney was four points ahead of where donald trump is now at this point. stuart: i'm looking at the trend. and if donald trump is catching up with hillary clinton and he is on a national basis, i'm looking at the trend and saying, yeah, there's a trend right there and he's catching up and you're still shaking your head. [laughter] stuart: donald trump has been talking about trade. he's really came flat out with it. he's a protectionist and in my
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opinion that is up-rooting and reversing 50 years of american policies. judy to you first. >> republican policy, by the way, that believes in free trade. i wrote a piece with doug saying that most security trade issue donald trump was to the left of hillary clinton and here we see it on trade policy. liz: here is a problem, missing in argument that china and méxico have slapped u.s. goods with tariff every time we tried to do what donald trump is suggesting. that's the danger for u.s. manufacturers and all sorts of services and for consumers, prices can go up. stuart: you're a conservative-kind-of guy. i take it you don't like what donald trump has to say about protectionists. >> foreign goods don't come into this good on a matter -- they come in because people want to buy them and demand goods from
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overseas. what do you do, cut the corporate tax 35 down to 25, 20 or 15. we need to push energy prices down. we ought to be fracking and drilling and do something about regulation and litigation. stuart: we hear you. all right, thanks very much. let's go back to the markets because moments ago we are at the high of the day up 200 points, now we are up about 188. okay, we will still take that. 175, almost 17.6. 29 of them are up. look at this. brazilian police greet tourists with a welcome to hell sign at rio airport. the sign reads police and firefighters don't get paid, whoever comes to rio do janeiro will not be safe.
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rio having problems ahead of the olympics. elizabeth warren will speak and yet again go right after business. remember when hillary -- i'm sorry, remember when elizabeth warren said this. >> there's nobody in this country who got rich on his own. nobody. you built a factory up there, good for you, but i want to be clear, you moved your goods to markets on the roads the rest of us paid for
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stuart: we have a winner, look at it. that is a drug company. they have very positive results from a trial of ovarian cancer drug. the stocks more than doubled. obviously 78 is a new high, what a stock, what a performance today. wal-mart, they have free shipping for 30 day ifs you sign up for 30-day trial.
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they're going head to head with amazon. elizabeth warren scheduled to speak at the top of the hour, she has said, you didn't build that, it's going right after corporate america. business can do nothing right. joining us now is host larry elder. larry. i'm shocked. i am really surprised that -- no, no hold on a second. i'm surprise that had in this year 2016 which has somebody which is essentially a socialist playing a prominent role among democrats in the fore coming presidential election. i'm shocked that someone so far left could play such a prominent role. now you're in california, i take it that you're not shocked? >> no, i'm not, and there was a cover, i believe newsweek, some years ago that said we are all socialist now and there was a poll and found out 52% of
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democrats supported socialism. could i say something about what rent said about roads, somebody like that does not realize that the first paveed road in america was done by private sector. a guy that sold headlights for cars and wanted customers to drive at night and paveed the road with his own money. the idea is simply false. the only veto was expansion of road in virginia because it felt it was not the federal government's job to build roads in the states. stuart: i didn't know you were a historian. >> i am. stuart: i want to see growth in the american economy. i think you get growth by stimulating private enterprise, not by squishing and grinding it down. she's going to be speaking 45 minutes from now and talking about the wicked private enterprise, wicked corporations.
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i don't think you get growth like that, period. >> you ought to know and you're from the uk and all the things she wants pay leave, all those things they've got in the uk and in western europe and guess what they have virtually zero private growth. there's a reason that we are outperforming the rest of the world because we have a relatively lighter hand of government in the private sector that produces jobs. stuart: now you have a call-in radio show nationally. what are listeners saying about the benghazi report. i think the report says hillary clinton misled the public about the causes of attacks in benghazi. what are your people say to go you on the radio? >> well, what my people are saying to understand benghazi you have to understand the election. remember benghazi took place on
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9/11, 2012. osama bin add lean is dead and al-qaeda on the run. they had a light defense in benghazi even though there were hundreds of requests for more people there. the answer question -- the question is how do we deal politically to obama's reelection prospects are not damaged and the fact that there weren't assets employed there is outrageous. it was done through obama reelection campaign. stuart: the mainstream media takes a very different view of this. "the new york times" headline and i'm reading it, benghazi panel finds no miss deeds by clinton. that was echoed word for word by the three broadcast networks when they reported on this. the mainstream media sees it completely differently from you larry. >> surprise, surprise. the media is to the left. they hate donald trump. they want democrats to be reelected.
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i would advise people to see the movie 13 hours, it's pretty accurate and shows contractors, not government people and the fact that the government was not doing anything at all to rescue these people. it is absolutely appalling that people's lives were at risk because obama had that mantra that al-qaeda is on the run and the white house was determined not to let anything interfere with the mantra and to send susan rice out there and lie to the american people. hillary lied to the families of benghazi. when they went public and said she said, hillary denied having said it. not only was the benghazi family misled but hillary called them liers. it's shocking and appalling. it's unlikely that this is going to have much of an effect on the election. stuart: i always think of you as a missionary to california. that's the way i feel about you. [laughter] stuart: thank you very much for joining us. the missionary. >> i appreciate it.
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missionary man. [laughter] stuart: you'll take that label. i know you will. dow jones industrial up 200 points or almost 200 points. that's the high of the day. 260 up yesterday, almost 200 today. we have more on the terror attack in turkey. president obama will not call it radical islam or islamic terror, a top senator on the foreign relations committee is going to sound off about this just moments from now. how about this, facebook mark zuckerberg, he's building a 6-foot rockwall around his property in hawaii. didn't he try and shame donald trump for wanting to build a wall? listen to this. >> i hear fearful voices calling for building walls and distancing people they label as others. for blocking free expression, for slowing immigration this man creates software, used by this bank,
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to protect this customer, 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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know what your pets are up to with xfinity home. xfinity. the future of awesome. see the secret life of pets, in theaters july 8th. by switching to xfinity x1. rio olympic games show me gymnastics. x1 lets you search by sport, watch nbc's highlights and catch every live event on your tv with nbc sports live extra. i'm getting ready. are you? x1 will change the way you experience nbcuniversal's coverage of the rio olympic games. call or go online today to switch to x1. stuart: check this out. mark zuckerberg is building or has built a wall around his estate in hawaii to the dismay of his neighbors. remember, please, he was openly against donald trump building a
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wall against the u.s.-méxico border. we are having a little fun with this. with we show the hawaii wall and then the california wall. i don't think there's a connection between. there's the wall. that's hawaii. i don't think there's a connection between the wall and the border and a wall around your estate. we are having some fun. liz: it is rich that mark zuckerberg is talking about sharing and tear down walls, you should tear down walls when he's building wall around property. this is obstructing the view to the ocean that they've enjoyed for years. stuart: now that's the hawaii wall. there you go. that's another wall. whoa, that's not very attractive is it? >> no, it's not, but i'm more concerned about mark zuckerberg's walling off conservative opinion on facebook than i am on his property. stuart: you are so right. judy, you are so right. thank you very much. we did have a little fun there.
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show me market scan. that's a picture of all the 30 dow stocks, all in one screen. we are up 209. that is the high, that's what we are showing you there. look at the market scan thing. i think we have all 30 -- no, 29 of the stocks are up. one of them, bottom-right, now all 30 have gone into the green. next up judge andrew napolitano has news on hillary clinton's e-mail scandal. emails found that she never handed over. a chance passing loretta lynch met bill clinton in the strip. 41 dead in the istanbul terror attack. this is how loretta lynch thinks we should fight terror. >> this department of justice and your country stands with you in the light.
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>> you can blow yourself up. that's the tragedy. daesh and others like it know that we have to get it right 24/7, 365, they have to get it right for ten minutes, or one hour. so it's a very different scale. and if you're desperate and if you know you're losing and you know you want to give up your life, then obviously do harm. stuart: secretary of state john kerry saying isis people are desperate and they know that they're losing. joining us now senator john borraso from wyoming, senator, you heard what secretary kerry had to say. desperate, isis is losing. i'm sure you have a different point of view, but how far would you go? would you say, no, we've got to go after them, we have to attack them, we have to go kill them where they are?
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would you say that, senator? >> well, i would, stuart. this is another horrific act, string of horrific acts that are causing fear across the world. as the united states senator i want to make sure that here at home that we can protect our people by making sure that law enforcement and the intelligence community, the military has everything they need, but the second part of that is going after isis where they are. isis has a safe haven. they are formidable, they are resilient and unless we go to that safe haven and take them out, they're going to continue to direct and inspire the types of attacks that we have seen, stuart, abroad as well as at home. stuart: senator, do you think the american people are to appoint with american troops on the ground going after them door to door overseas, do you think we would accept that?
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>> first, we need a strategy and barack obama has failed with that strategy and bring them to congress. he has underestimated them all the way through. that is the problem. you need the right strategy to go after them because if they have a safe haven which they have now, it's an area to train others, to attract others and when you see what happened yesterday in istanbul, that's something that the terrorists see as success and acts as recruiting tool so i completely disagree with secretary kerry. stuart: would you accept the view of donald trump which is to protect the domestic population we should restrict immigration or entry to america from people coming from war zones, terrorist areas, would you accept that from donald trump? >> in terms of immigration, we are a country of immigrant, but we want to make sure that people that come here are people that
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we can figure out the identity and the intent of and right now in terms of so many of the refugees, we cannot do that. that's why i've support pushing a pause button until we find a way to actually find out the true identities as well as the intent of those who want to come to the united states. stuart: okay, senator john, i'm sorry to cut this so short. it's a very busy news day and we appreciate you being here. >> thank you. stuart: we do have more news on hillary clinton's e-mail scandal. 200 emails found on account talking official business with hillary clinton. hillary never handed over those e-mails. judge napolitano is back. >> aprofound significance. about four months ago in the process of handing emails over. when that process was getting
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bogged down and slow, the federal judge supervising the freedom of information lawsuit that precipitated the handing over of emails expressed impatience. do you have all of mrs. clinton's e-mail? she told us we had all of them. next week, i want a certification from mrs. clinton, here is the code phrase, under penalty of perjury telling me that she surrendered all of her emails. when a judge tells that to a lawyer, the judge disbelieves the truthfullness of that person. she signed such a statement under penalty of perjury. i swear that i have surrendered all governmental emails to the state department. in the past two weeks over 200 have been found that she never surrendered. second significance to that in the past two weeks, 118 items on
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her schedule, which she is required to keep under the freedom and information act have been deleted so the state department cannot tell this who she was with. stuart: serious stuff. it will never be there. it's not there. >> there is a there there, i don't know when the justice department is going to get there, perhaps because of what you're now about to ask me. stuart: no, hold on a second. i've got something for judy and liz. i will be with you in a second. the hacked emails released to the public show hillary clinton's campaign tracks journalists. liz: yes. stuart: what does that mean tracks journalists?
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>> basically manages journalists. cnn or chicago sun times they sit at back bleachers or they put the reporters in the -- roped off areas in the back of campaign events. we know this goes on a lot but this seems to be aggressive behavior where we have campaign volunteers for hick's campaign standing in between camera and candidate to ward off any question from the media. stuart: isn't this standard procedure, judy? >> it is. incompetent, liars, the worst, the worst he calls us. neither one of these candidates is going to have a great relationship with us depending on who wins, liz. it's going to be fighting all the way. you know what, i like that because when you get to be their friends you lose objectivity and
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not tough enough on them. stuart: i want to get that story. i want to judge to comment. i have some news. there was a meeting in phoenix between a guy. i've got two questions. what do you think they talk about? >> we are told by a producer from another network that was there and took photos on her cell phone and told one of our colleagues about this that the meeting was in one of the two private jets, attorney general lynch flies in a general's jet, standard issue for cabinet members, it's a luxurious private jet, seats about ten people, former president clinton flies around in a larger private
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jet, the two jets were by coincidence together and spoke inside the two jets. if i'm the attorney general and i'm investigating your wife and i see you on the striet and there's nothing i could do, i might shake your hand and say, how are you, i'm not going to go behind closed doors with you and nobody knows what the heck we talk about because i possess knowledge and noter of your wife and you as the spouse of the person that we are investigating do not want her indicted. how unseemless is it? stuart: the meeting shouldn't have taken place. >> we fight terrorism with love and by -- by altering and fbi report to create a false impression. that does not wash well with fbi agents. so she did this to suit the
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president's political power. stuart: after the meeting, did she not say we didn't say a word about indictment? didn't she say that? >> she did say that. i don't want to sound like i'm a conspiracy theorist but might she be protecting too much. [laughter] >> conspiracy therapist. >> that's because you don't like this tie. [laughter] >> your producer thinks i'm wearing it for him. stuart: i'm told that he's offering you 50 cents for it. i certainly would. thank you very much, indeed, judge. i was going to get to the market. look at this. this is the high of the day. 219 points. 29 of the 30 dow stocks are up. only one of them home depot is down. 221.
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liz: whatever. hem -- home depot, i meant. stuart: chipotle is adding chorizo. it's back up 14 points. nice pop for netflix, the stock hit $133 in december, 91 this morning. coal producer, console energy, that's a winner. i'm not aware of it yet but up 6 and a half percent. do not forget oil, rallying. marathon oil, for example, the price of crude oil is rallying, the marathon oil and some of the others, energy stocks are leaders in the s&p 500. marathon is up. back to the war on terror. our next guest is a former muslim sniper, we will ask him how he thinks we can beat isis. >> they probably think we are weak, we are stupid, we don't
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know what we are doing, we have no leadership, you know, you have to fight fire with fire. we have people out there who are so vicious and smart ten feel dr? a dry mouth can be a side effect of many medications. but it can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath. that's why there's biotene, available as an oral rinse, toothpaste, spray or gel. biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. remember, while your medication is doing you good, a dry mouth isn't. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth.
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today's move we've made back almost 500, so that tells you that we are making somewhat of a comeback. right now we are seeing the nasdaq s&p all more than 1% each. we are looking at energy. on the move to the upside. exxon hits a 52-week high. and we are also watching how the british exit is affecting certain companies including lions gate. it's been derailed according to new york post. one of the banks has pulled out of that deal. now it's up 115% after ovarian cancer drug your car insurance policy is 22 pages long. did you read every word? no, only lawyers do that. so when you got rear-ended and needed a tow, your insurance company told you to look at page five on your policy.
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stuart: islamic terrorist strikes again, istanbul airport. orlando, brussels, paris, san bernardino, fort hood, it's a long, long list. frankly, they seem to be coming more frequently. you really do get the feeling we are under attack. you start thinking about traveling, or being in large crowds. there is a very high level of public concern. and the response to this, well, it seems the administration is determined to number one, don't call it what it is, number two, change the subject and three,
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tell us we are racists an bigots if we try to control immigration to keep potential terrorists out. when you think about it, this is absurd, the fort hood shooter shouts as he kills americans in uniform in america. and that's workplace violence. the orlando shooter states allegiance to isis and that is gun violence. we suffer paralisis of language. we can't call islamic terrorism. oh no, we will offend somebody. the administration changes the subject. let's talk about guns and not terror, that plays much better in the election campaign and by the way, let's insult voters, shall we, by suggesting that donald trump's call for limiting immigration is bigotry. let's put spin on it as well like john kerry did. let's say isis is losing. just like elites in britain, our leaders here are ignoring the
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gut-feeling of the people. we know that we are under attack, we know that it's our values that are being undermine and it's obvious we are not going to take serious action to secure our country. we are going to go the other way. we speed up influx of migrant. only five of them were christians. who would have thought it would come to this. we will not control our borders, we will not respond to the slaughter of our own people and if we do, we are haters, that's what they say about the british voters that wanted out of europe. we know what happened there, don't we? yes, we do. joining us now the author of the book the mind of terror, the guy who wrote it is former muslim sniper who used to work for yesa. welcome to the program.
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you've got to tell us who you're working for now. >> hi, stuart, i am working for peace and reaching out to young people basically to make a difference in the life of palestinians and jews alike to try to bring peace. stuart: have you renounced -- have you renounced islamic terror? i don't know if you were ever a part of it. >> absolutely. stuart: do you renounce it totally? >> i do, indeed. i've become a christian about 23 years ago and that totally changed my outlook. stuart, when i first came to america, before i came i was -- i hated americans and america and for what it stands for. but when i came to america and -- and i realized the american people were kind and loving people and i was accepted.
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so i began to think, wait a minute, what i learned and what i heard is not correct. stuart: what is the prime motivation of terrorist who is blow themselves up like at istanbul airport? what's the big deal that motivates them? >> you know, the terrorist leaders are using -- using reasons to recruit people, muslim people, you know. a reason could be an anguish of loss, violent loss of a friend or a family member or believe that opponent faith is the wrong faith and corrupted. it could be a sicken and disgusted of our society, the western society.
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you know, so many different reasons that lure down the terrorists to come to act the way they act. stuart: now, in america -- hold on a second. the attorney general in the united states says we fight this kind of terror with love, unity and love. what do you say? >> it is a good way to reach out to other muslims within the community, this is one way to reach but not in a weak way. you know, love can be a point of a strength and not weakness. it depends on how we reach them. but also reaching out to the terrorists themselves where they are is important. stuart: when you say reaching out, argue with them, persuade them, offer them love or kill them? >> well, it all depends on the individual you're dealing with.
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if we are dealing with muslims in the america, for example, and in your neighborhood and you know who they are and you know they are not people of violence, these are the people you reach out to them that you persuade them away from going to become terrorists like this young man who did orlando. stuart: thank you very much for joining us this morning, we appreciate you being with us. thank you, sir. >> thank you for having us. stuart: i have to get back to the markets because we are having a very nice rebound after last week's selloff and monday's selloff. we are now rebounding, we are 200 points up today. we are 260 yesterday. we are at 17.6. it's a two-day rally. dare we say the market is over brexit? not over it. still worried about the break up of europe but that's a nice comeback. 17.6 for the dow. look at the financial times, it
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has recovered or virtually all of its losses that it took over the british exit vote. look at this too, european healthcare stocks were the first to recover. the british vote put them -- actually we've now galaxo, both of them are now higher than they were before the british vote. more after this. v ♪
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season going on now, with our best-buy rated c2 queen mattress now only $699.99. know better sleep. only at a sleep number store. and this is the last thing they just simply should not lose. my contention in the finance committee and i know if my colleagues from ohio's can mention to that that committee should not do anything until we -- senator mcconnell, the republican leaders seems to be the only one that doesn't want to move on this.
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-- politically attuned enough to herself.susan rice and not say stuart: she was in a meeting that the attack was going on. did she speak to the president of libya? liz: that is the surprise bombshell. i think 49:00 p.m. tonight at the attack on hillary clinton called the president to say this is a terrorist attack. no mention of the video whatsoever. also indicated her daughter chelsea and the investor to reject the following day. stuart: i will break impasse because the market has had another new high. we are now up 230 points. if you look at dirty stats to the galligan, 29 are higher. what happened to the armageddon?
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liz: that's exactly right. "new york times," cnn, u.k. press. numerous newspapers and the nearest tv stations that armageddon that there would be a market collapse. this was a once-in-a-lifetime event that peter kiernan noted on set with you the other night when we recover in brexit my been said this is a step in and buy good solid dividend paying stocks. stuart: you are not a market watchers. >> i'm not at all. stuart: join me in saying that armageddon lasted about two hours. >> armageddon is $3 trillion for the loss in today's which is pretty stunning. but it ain't over yet, stuart. stuart: we made the point all day long if another country does or says they are going to vote to leave europe, that's a very serious thing. the european union really does unravel here that seems real
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trouble. holland, france, all of them considering referenda. all them are considering getting now. right now we are up 230 points. 17,600 is where we are. my tennis appeared in appeared in a colleague and friend, charles payne is ready to take care. >> km. i am charles payne filling in for neil cavuto. the deadliest attack ever on an airport. 41 dead year 239 wounded from three suicide bombers in istanbul. times that these terrorists had the internationally known airport in hopes of rival in the global economy. a former naval steel says the united states need to step up and get its act together. carl, another devastated at an international target can internationally significant target among the 41 dead, 13
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