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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  July 8, 2016 4:00pm-5:01pm EDT

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4, 3, 2 seconds away from the closing bell. we are near all-time highs for the s&p. the number to watch, 2130.82.
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there is conflicting information whether the shooter worked alone. the latest report he was lone gunman. on "after the bell," this hour, ken paxton, the texas attorney general, dr. alveda king, the niece of martin luther king. and bret baier and forbes media chairman steve forbes is there to break down this month's jobs report. liz: we have a rally on wall street. major after rouges cover losses of uk vote to leave the european union, remember that. the s&p 500 hitting a new 2016 high. we're working towards that. 2182 is number to watch there, phil flynn a price futures, fox business contribute --
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contributor. he is watching oil and gold from cme. we have lori rothman from the floor of new york stock exchange. tell us about the action. reporter: lizzie, the jobs report was a gift. it came in perfect. goldilocks number. not too hot, not too cold. not strong enough that it will encourage fed to raise rates sooner than we thought but not too weak to push rates off indefinitely. we saw bond market get action. interesting rates came in on expectations of continued lower interest rates while stocks soared. the story of the stock market was s&p 500. let's zero in on the broad market average, closing one-half of one point below its all-time closing high. he said it, the "brexit" fears, 900 point selloff that is history. we made up for that. remember in the jobs report this morning we saw 414,000 people jumping back into the workforce. these companies are likely going
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to have a little more work ahead of them. true blue up nearly 5%. a significant gap higher for all of those. that sums it up. looks like major averages will post 1% gain for this week we're wrapping up here. i send it back to you guys. david: lori, from the nyse. i will ending the week down more than 7%. this is the largest weekly decline since february but, phil flynn, i want to start with gold. why was gold up when so much money is going into stocks? >> i think because the market is still very concerned where we go next. let's face it, dave, this was a blockbuster report, but really if you look at last week's terrible report, put them all together, we're still at pathetic job growth we're seeing all along. it is very slow and very pathetic. there is still a lot of concern about currency risk going into the weekend. bond yields are still near at historic lows. if you look at concerns what is
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happening with europe, whether concerns about italian banks. whether a concern what will happen in the eurozone, those concernses kepting people in the gold market. you saw volatility. we saw gold tank, silver tank, reverse, come back up. a lot of volatility but gold is not dead yet. david: fascinating moment, phil. appreciate it. emac. liz: don't you love his passion? david: he has it. liz: strong june jobs report soaring past wall street expectations after very weak numbers in may. so what does it mean for the u.s. economy? we have peter barnes standing by in washington, d.c. to break down numbers for us. peter? reporter: liz, i'm passionate about these numbers too. 287,000 new jobs in june was a big upside surprise as phil was saying. way above economist expectation. a shocker given the ugly may jobs report which was even worse than we thought. given that, this is probably one
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of those times when we should listen to the economist when they say not just to look at one report and one number but to look at trends over several months when we do that, a three-month average for april, may and june, it comes in at 147,000 new jobs per month. and the pace of, job creation pace has definitely slowed. comes in just over 200,000 jobs a month. initial jobs report for may was bad enough. it had come in 38,000 new jobs as you recall but labor department revised that down today, saying economy added just 11,000 new jobs in may. in other words job creation was basically dead that month. so what happened in may? some economists speculate that it was statistical fluke of some kind over at bureau of labor statistics. the labor department itself which doesn't comment on those kinds of things will make one more revision to may in the next
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jobs report. we'll see where it all settles out. for june job creation was widespread across many sectors. education and health adding 59,000. leisure and hospitality adding 59,000 new positions. retail strong, manufacturing up 14,000. but construction companies added no new jobs last month. liz. liz: a good point, peter, 251,000 jobs in after in four 2014 down to 229,000. you show great numbers there. peter barnes, the trend is not so great. reporter: you bet. david: let's bring in market panel. jack hough and new oak president james frischling. jack is the economy on the right track now? >> the news is definitely good. i disagree "brexit" faded in memory. i think it played a very important point in this rally. the economy -- jobs numbers show
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the economy is not moving into the toilet which is good. "brexit" gives fed something to worry about which suggests they will not take away easy money right away. investors are piling into shares. david: james, isn't the perfect time to raise rates? we're always looking for that moment. i understand about "brexit" but now the jobs numbers are an much better footing. we have some other good numbers coming in. isn't now the time to raise rates? >> i agree with you. now would be a great time to raise rates but to jack's point they're not going to do it. they're looking for reasons not to as oppose what you highlighted, jobs numbers is a reason to do it. they can look through the 287 number and focus on lack of wage growth. although it is starting to move in the right direction. they can use "brexit," as jack said as an excuse. i think low rates are causing more havoc for savers and pushing investors into dodge did i credit because they're looking for credit. they are looking for yield because the fed won't do it.
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i could make story exactly why they could do it, market could stand higher rates. david: guys, thank you very much. >> wall street one year mark you wouldn't know it way the dow is performing, we're near one year mark of an earnings recession. next week we have alcoa, jpmorgan chase. they will kick off the sick earnings season. jack, here is the thing, low-wage jobs being created, that is majority of them. not high wage jobs of manufacturing and construction. we're seeing tail off in that. surprising how the dow is reacting. what do you think, jack? >> i'm surprised in the context of lousy earnings growth. as we enter earnings season, we're talking about a year of consecutive quarters of negative earnings growth. everybody can say well, that is energy. oil is down. if it wasn't for the energy sector. okay. we're down 5% year-over-year on earnings. pull out the energy sector, we're down 2%. it is not great. why are we paying all-time high share prices with not just no
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earnings growth but negative growth right now? easy money from the fed chasing people into risky assets. liz: james, jack makes a good point. what you're hatching seeing the s&p 500 trending slightly higher in valuation. what is happening there is, people are seeing that the dividend yields and in the markets are a lot better than 10-year treasury yield. what do you think, james? maybe that is why valuations are going up? >> to your point about dividends, getting current cash and jack's point about low interest rate environment, reason why there is disconnect between actual earnings, yes, we are in five quarters in a row of lackluster earnings is because the low interest rates, buybacks, increases in dividends, kind of financial say, i won't say manipulation, engineering one can do to drive stock prices is actually why you continue to see money pour into the stock market. because you're not getting any returns putting money in cd. the fact compilation of things actually masking the fact we are in pretty poor earnings
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environment. i do think that is going to change. oil will i think make a little spike. i think dollar will cool off a little bit. that is my expectations of the on back of that, we start seeing better earnings performance going forward, but i don't expect good quarters this number again. liz: thank you, jack and james. david: otherwise peaceful protest brutally interrupted by gunfire. >> watch out! [shouting] liz: city of dallas, texas, in shock what is deadliest day for police officers since september 11th. david: next we have texas attorney general ken paxton reacting to the mass cure and how the state is responding now. >> we are heartbroken. there are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred to our city. ve asthma... ...one of many pieces in my life. so when my asthma symptoms kept coming back
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xfinity. the future of awesome. see the secret life of pets, in theaters july 8th. liz: shooting those who protect us. [shouting] [sirens] [gunfire] liz: that was the scene in dallas last night as officers raced toward the gunfire in order to protect those they served. now here's what we know. 12 officers shot. five dead. it's a deadliest single incident for police since september 11th. civilians also shot as well. suspect identified as micah xavier johnson. a 25-year-old former army reserve officer. officials say johnson told them he wanted to kill white people, especially white police officers. among the victims, pat zamaripa,
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five-year dallas police department veteran, brent thompson of the dallas area rapid transit police. michael kroll officer, with dal also pd since 2007. he died have a long-standing standoff with police. he was killed by a explosion from a robotic device. david: into the morning, all day, the entire city in mourning following tragic shooting of police officers, witnesses describing as a war zone. >> i thought shots were coming from inside after garage. they were coming down the street. i walked in front of the line of fire. then i made it across the street into the parking lot. that's when i saw a downed officer. >> it has just been very crazy tonight. it feels like a war zone. >> at least 50 cop cars flying by. i worked downtown six years and i have never seen anything like that before. i knew it was something serious. after all the cop cars went by there were hundreds of people running in opposite direction of
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the cop cars. i knew it was really bad. >> we had cops with riots shields and cops with guns going if the front. people were crying. david: attorney general ken paxton of texas. our deep, deep sympathies to you, general. thanks for coming on. it is now reported that this guy was the lone gunman but some people would think, good lord, five police officers killed, other police officers shot, how could one gunman do so much damage? >> i'll tell you what, real shock, sad day in texas. i used to work a block away from where this happened for years. it is just shocking when something like this happens, in your own backyard. you just don't expect it. david: but again, how could one guy at a demonstration or in the vicinity of a demonstration carry in a long gun, and get off so many round, at well-armed police officers? >> well, obviously well-organized, well-trained.
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it is unfortunate but the guy was very prepared and well-organized and obviously trained in the military to do what he did. david: was the shooter attached to any particular organization that you've discovered? >> so far. not that we know of. the dallas police department is investigating that right now. we have people helping along the way. so far we don't know of any connection. that doesn't mean we won't find something in the future. david: there was this organization called black power political organization, bppo, as they claimed on internet there are more assassinations coming. do you know anything about this group or able to link the shooter with this group. >> so far we have not. i wasn't familiar with the group until they started talking about them today. no, we haven't linked them. as we said this investigation is less than 24 hours. it is continuing as we speak. david: let's talk about some of the issues that the demonstrators were talking about and that of course has been the talk of the nation for a couple
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of years now. right before the shooting president obama came on to talk about a couple of police shootings in different parts of the country, suggesting that racism, has played a role in some of these shootings. what do you make of this? >> you know, i'm hoping that this incident today, or yesterday will bring us together and we'll start thinking constructively about how to resolve these issues. we have an organization in dallas called, phrase blue shield. operation blue shield. they try to connect law enforcement with communities to progress on issue as opposed to things like happened yesterday happen again. david: as you well know, groups like "black lives matter" have really held back a lot of proactive policing that has taken place in this nation over the past 30 years. they have saved thousands of lives according to some experts. are you concerned if there is too much focus how police are involved in racist attack on black people that this proactive
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policing which has been effective bringing down crime over the past few decades, will cease? >> i am concerned about it but i do think we need a top-down approach where leaders come out and encourage and applaud what law enforcement is doing. look what these guys did. they went out and protecting these protesters who were out exercising their first amendment rights and they were exercising their rights in way negative towards the police department. yet they were still willing to go protect them and still willing to risk their lives. there is still good story, despite catastrophic effect there was a good story about what the police department was willing to do for their freedom. david: attorney general ken paxton. our prayers go to you and your community. of course to the officers and their families. thank you very much, sir. >> really appreciate it. thank you very much. david: emac. liz: here are the words used, vicious, despicable, calculating. our country standing with dallas today as five police officers
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are murdered in cold blood. fox news's bret baier responds how our nation's capitol is responding to the massacre in dallas. >> i know to be a cop's wife or cop's husband is to prepare for the worse but who could fathom such horror as this?
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david: the nation reeling from the incident in dallas. blake burman in d.c. a lot of politicians reacting blake. reporter: yes indeed. white house says president obama's overseas schedule will stay the same in light of dallas shootings. he spoke about the attack from poland this morning. he is grieving grieving with the tight-knit police community and offer ad brief critique on gun laws.
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>> today is a wrenching reminder of the sacrifices that they make for us. we also know when people are armed with powerful weapons, unfortunately tick mass attacks like these -- it makes attacks like these more tragic. reporter: hillary clinton canceled a campaign debut event alongside vice president joe biden. she is expected to address the shootings we believe possibly an hour from now at the african methodist episcopal church convention in philadelphia. donald trump canceled both of his events. with a little more than a week before their convention there will be stepped up security as a result of at dallas shootings. the cleveland police department said it is tightening its security plan for that event because of this, david. david: i would hope so. blake, thank you very much.
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emac? liz: let's bring in fox news's bret baier, anchor of "special report." bret, you know in the wake of this tragedy it seems like donald trump and hillary clinton, even though they're canceling campaign events but we do know both have commented on the tragedy, it is really an issue of tone right now. the victims families, certainly people across the country, don't want to see this tragedy politicized, right? >> right. at least for this day. i don't think that there any doubt it will be brought up as an issue in this campaign and you heard donald trump and hillary clinton on both sides of this issssue. donald trump often talks about law enforcement non-stop, about how people have to respect and honor the service of law enforcement officers. and hillary clinton obviously using the issue of guns and restricting gun access as a powerful tool on the democratic side of the coin.
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i think this issue overall is going to play a big factor in this election. liz: you know the brought up issue of gun control, bret. you're right there in washington, d.c. doing such great analysis and reporting down there. is it too much now to have brought up gun control today as the president did? is that what you're hearing? what are you hearing? >> you know he does that often on pretty much every tragedy that we've seen him comment on whether terrorist-related at the beginning or like we saw in dallas last night. he weest les in -- weaves in his constant them about inaction in congress. preventing deadliest weapons to be in hands of people who under shouldn't have them. he does that frequently and it does enrage people when he brings that in early in a conversation especially something like orlando where
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eventually the focus got to terrorism. liz: wherever you stand on gun control, the day of a tragedy i think you're right. we're hearing from analysts here that, you know, might be too much too soon. we have house speak paul ryan asking for unity. certainly donald trump is calling for unity. what are you hearing? what do you feel like is the right message right now? >> that is a one that a lot of leaders are taking today. there is a problem and it has to be dealt with and leadership needs to step up in the country what you're hearing on capitol hill, on both sides. obviously there was a lot of reaction to louisiana and minnesota, those shootings. and then the reaction to the horrific assassinations in dallas, i think is one that, an acknowledgement there has to be some broad, broad leadership on not just guns. liz: we have the gop convention just a little over a week away.
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even more tightened security there, at the gop convention in cleveland. what are you hearing, bret? >> yeah, they're stepping up security. there is some concern in the cleveland press from cleveland police officers about what they're facing. they have been preparing for this for a long time and they have equipment and a number of things the rnc actually helped with but there is a sense that this could get a bit ugly when you get to the convention. that week, outside cleveland. liz: thank you, bret. fox news chief political anchor. thank you so much for joining us. >> have a good one. david: our nation joining dallas in honoring those police officers killed and wounded. coming up disturbing new details about the ambush and how one man could shoot so many well-armed officers. liz: plus we have emotional words from the dallas police chief. he is making a plea for support from the community. we're also going to be talking to al vida king, the niece of
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dr. martin luther king. >> worst nightmare for any state or any community. when you attack police officer you're attacking entire community, attacking constitution and law and order. you're attacking common sense. you don't attack people that protect us. [beekeeper] from bees to business expenses,
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[sirens] gun gun. [gunfire] >> holy [bleep] david: extraordinary moment last night captured on tape. dallas police ambushed from a sniper attack. five officers dead. seven wounded. deadliest attack on law enforcement since 9/11. authorities are learning more what appears to be a motive. adam shapiro is live in the newsroom with very latest. we should mention there is a six p.m. press conference in dallas we've be covering, adam. >> i will talk about the press conference in a bit. let's get to the man who died last night. he has been identified as micah xavier johnson. you see photographs of him. department of defense confirms that he is from mesquite, texas. he had achieved the rank of private first class. he served in army reserves. enlisted in 2009.
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was there until 2015. he actually served in afghanistan as well from 2013 through july of 2014. and once again he had achieved the rank of private first class. he did that back in 2010. he is the man who police were negotiating with but sent in a robot with an explosive because he would not -- they didn't say exactly why but he posed a dangerous threat to other officers. you see his photo there. some of the men who were killed last night by the sniper are these police officers you see right here. patrick zamarripa a veterans of 10 years in the navy. brent thompson a police officer with the dallas area rapid transit. they call dart. final man, michael kroel, he joined the force back in 2007. mr. thompson. officer thompson gotten married two weeks ago. this tragedy continues to unfold. they are saying only one sniper
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at this point although they have three other people in custody. that sniper, mr. johnson, who they were negotiating with last night told police he intended to kill white people. here is what the police chief, mr. brown, said about that earlier today. >> the suspect said he was up debt about "black lives matter." he said he was upset about the recent police shootings. the suspect said he was upset at white people. the suspect stated he wanted to kill white people, especially white officers. reporter: now the police have been searching that home in mesquite, texas, they believe his residence or address. there is confusion whether he owned house or whether it was his mother's house but the police have been there. david, you mention ad press conference which will come up at 6:00 p.m. eastern time. this is a press conference with texas governor greg abbott and dallas mayor mike rawlings and
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other local and state officials to address the ongoing investigation. david, there are still three people in custody, two men, one woman arrested as part of all that. david: that is true. we think he is the lone gunman but that may change at the press conference. emac, over to you. liz: thank you, david. dallas police chief david brown calling the plan well-thought out, well-planned. we have john after fetterty, ceo of watchguard 24/7. we have michael balboni, former homeland security director for state of new york. sir, thank you so much for joining us. appreciate it. what is the reaction from the police community today? >> i think it's disheartening. i think the officers who signed up to protect these communities now they have turned on them. i think it will make it hard for anybody going forward. liz: manny, hearing the same. >> absolutely. there is fear from the police department. they are out there protecting people. these demonstrators that were demonstrating against them were
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being protected by these police officers that were assassinated by this individual. so they're afraid for their lives. on top of being intimidated by the recent events of anti-policing going on in the country. liz: mr. balboni, are you hearing the same? >> if you think what is in the mind-set of a police officer right now throughout the country. first you had orlando, specter of al qaeda and isis trying to do operations through lone wolves. you have this type of a situation where it is not supposed to happen in america. you're not supposed to have police officers who are protecting protesters who are gunned down from a sniper. liz: so here's the thing. we've got reverend jesse jackson saying this was, quote, he tweeted this out, a well-planned terrorist attack. would you agree it's a terrorist attack? >> at this point i don't know if i would say it is terrorist attack. it is an attack on law enforcement. we have developed society pinned law enforcement as enemy. social media and a lot of
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leaders who failed created this top down. liz: what do you mean as they failed? in what way? >> leaders are supposed to bring people together. speaking about president of the united states i have never seen a country so divided as it has been. liz: manny, do you agree? >> i totally agree. this is a situation unprecedented where people are against police, police against each other and entire government is divided which way we will go on certain issues. liz: do you think it is divided, the division is leading to this sort of climate right now? >> i think it is. i was author of terrorism law in new york state and we defined it as using violence to effect change in government. that is kind of what this individual may or may not be doing. the question though becomes what was the motivation surrounding him? what was the spark? what was his open mind-set? liz: pretty violent move to take to affect change in government? >> anyone who takes it and puts it in context with the other shootings is missing entire
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message. this is an attack on society. that is what this is. this is not a way to redress your grievances. >> here's the thing too. it was a really large "killzone." seems it was planned and coordinated. what do you think, john? >> i definitely think it was coordinated. a lot of lot went through this. this is somebody military trained as well, not as common in attacks gone on of late. unfortunately the police as shots are being fired, they're rushing in thinking they're saving public. not realizing they are the ones being attacked. liz: they ran into the line of fire. >> which they're trained to do. instead they ran into a line of slaughter. this is why this should be taken very seriously. if now we take attacking people going here to protect us we're in a lot of trouble. liz: thank you so much for joining us. wish we had more time. thank you, john, manny, michael. appreciate you joining us. over to you, david. david: great discussion. a bit of good news amidst the tragic. june jobs report blowing away expectations leading to a surge
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in the market. next steve forbes on whether the numbers show the economy turned a corner. if you suffer from a dry mouth, then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? well, there is biotene, specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants... biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy too. biotene, for people who suffer from a dry mouth.
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>> welcome back. take a look where stocks ended the day. dow and s&p closing near their highest levels since may 2015. stocks surging on strong, on a strong june jobs report. david: part of the reason was the jobs report surprising investors charging up market after june saw 287,000 jobs added after just 11,000 added in may and 144,000 in april. june's numbers are encouraging, that brings three month average,
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147,000 jobs added, that is barely meeting break even break. is this jobs report as good as it would have us believe? we have forbes media chairman steve forbes join us now with their take. steve i have to ask first about the violence in dallas, very quickly, how do we deal with this violence? >> to be blunt, stop the war on cops. something goes wrong apparently what happened in minnesota. you deal with specific cases, don't draw sweeping conclusion, rush to judgment as we tend to do on part of the federal government. recognize effective policing makes us safe. new york is prime example. crime-ridden in '70s and '80s. '90s it worked. david: amazing city turned around. we had 2200 murders a year. we have less than 400. the city exploded in commerce and economic activity. >> times square once an area to go to get in trouble, now it's a tourist mecca. david: what about the economy
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and this jobs report have we turned a corner here in the u.s.? >> i wish we had but if you look closely, no. work week very weak. wage increases not what they should be, if you look at what they call the household survey and ask who is working instead of calling up businesses you find job creation is very small. that is where small business job creation would show up. so, bottom line, we're still stuck in second gear. david: now, tom, far be it from me to disagree with my buddy from steve forbes here, wages were up 2.6% in this report. that is good news, no? >> that is good news. it is a good number. better than having a smaller number, no debate there, but i have to agree with steve it is more of an aberration than a pattern. you also have in june a lot of kids graduating college and entering workforce and entering in lower salaries. steve is right, there is small increase in wages. there is still a huge skills gap. the bigger issue, steve would
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agree won't be now, but 2017, we'll start feeling effects from the legislation been done with in overtime exemption coming in minimum wages. david: we have come out with far too many regulatory changes? we are piling on regulations where it is hard to start a new business? >> there is no doubt about that and hard for existing businesses to add on people where a lot of jobs are created small and medium size of the big issue, people think if we don't see negative ramifications from legislation month one or month two it will never happen. guess what, it happens 12 to 24 months after the legislation occurs. that is when regulations hit. we'll feel that in 2016. david: steve, how do we jump-start the economy? >> if you have federal reserve stop pounding banks that want to make loans to small businesses. big government, reforming the simplifying the tax code and repealing obamacare and getting
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a real social safety net in there instead of massive regulations where you don't know what the cost of labor will be. costs are still going up. massive failure. i think the house at least is on to this. if we get a right president you will get changes next year. david: steve forbes, tom gimbel, appreciate it. liz: breaking news. we're awaiting a news conference in dallas. the texas governor greg abbott and the dallas police department will provide an update on the shooting that left officers dead in dallas. we'll bring you those comments to you live. david: the dallas police chief begging to end the divide between police and citizens. dr. alveda king, the niece of dr. martin luther king, jr., is here next to weigh in on those horrible events from dallas. >> we don't feel much support. most days. let's not make today most days.
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see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. liz: welcome back. breaking news, hillary clinton responding to the massacre in dallas. the presumptive democratic nominee saying that the country must do more to support police and innocent americans and that too many african-americans have been killed in encounters with police. clinton also answering questions on the fbi's email investigation. the former secretary of state she greatly appreciates the work of the agency investigation. >> we are heartbroken. there are no words to describe the atrocity that occurred to our city.
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all i know is that this, this must stop. this divisiveness between our police and our citizens. david: here now with her reaction to the dallas shootings is dr. alveda king. dr. kink, your thoughts? >> david, to the views audience i believe this is a time for us to not lose hope. all is not lost. of course leaders emerge in times of crisis. that is what happened in the 20th century with my uncle martin luther king, jr., my dad, his brother, reverend a. d. king. i like what the police king in dallas is doing. as we call for unity, people of faith, people of character, no matter what color your skin is, let's come together. acts 11:26 of one blood god made everybody. time for that american blood to
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rise up and unify to resist violence. pray for those families who experienced this loss of the young men who were shot in the altercations of course. the police officers, there are some grieving families. we have to pray. david: dr. king, so many americans thought that one thing that would bring this nation together, would bring the races together more than anything else was having a black president and in fact things seem to have gotten worse in terms of racial tensions since he has been president. why is that? >> we have been deceived too long in america that skin color is the issue. and so we elected skin color but we've got to now go past that. and we can not fight and divide over the color of our skin. we've got to deal with the content of every character. to god, you know, human life is sacred. god loves everybody. so god's love matters for every human being. every human being. david: you know, the last night's demonstration was
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cosponsored by "black lives matter." of course the very name of the organization itself does single out a particular race. are they helping or are they fanning the flames of violence in this country? >> well, we have to be watchful for people looking for opportunities and the profiteering and so if the effort is to cause violence and anger and hostility, that is not going to help america. and so if you keep stirring up people and causing anger, that is not going to unify. we're looking for those leaders now, who can say, every african-american is valuable, loved and cared about but every human being is. martin luther king, jr. says that we have to value the sacredness of the human personality. and that is what leads us to believe everybody's life is sacred from the womb to the tomb. david: this shooter specified in discussions with police before he was killed he was trying to target white police officers.
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this antipolice sentiment in the black community is in some ways with all the attention of the videos and police shootings is understandable but when you think of how many black lives have been saved by the police and by very proactive policing over the past several decades, thousands of black lives have been saved by police. why isn't that message getting across? >> there is a beautiful ethnic blend across america in our law enforcement and in our providers of people who are sworn to protect and help us. so we have to remember there are african-american police officers and so the shooter in targeting could have hit any police officer. and so we've got to leave that skin color thing. it is time for america to repent, come together as one community and one family. and as we repent and come back to truth i believe that we are going to see a better america. i really do. david: dr. alveda king, god
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bless you, dr. king. great to hear your words as always. we appreciate you coming on. thank you very much. >> thank you. liz: honoring their fallen colleagues, police officers saluting outside of parkland memorial hospital in dallas on what is now the nation's deadliest day for law enforcement since 9/11. you both have a
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>> dallas police officers gunned down. the suspect, 25-year-old micah xavier johnson, a former army reserve soldier. authorities telling fox news they believe johnson acted alone. officials are now telling fox that multiple firearms have been recovered by authorities. one assault rifle-style long gun and one handgun. david: we're going to get the press conference at the top of the hour at 6:00 p.m. eastern time, 5:00 p.m. central time. we should have the governor of texas, greg abbott there. dallas police department will
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provide an update on the shooting. whether or not we're sure, emac, there is a lot of questions about this, how could one gunman against well-armed policeman manage to kill and wound so many. >> police chief and dr. king have the right message. unity. david: indeed. "risk & reward" starts right now >> [gunfire] [sirens] [shouting] [gunfire] >> get back! get back! [gunfire] [sirens] [gunfire] deirdre: five police officers murdered, seven others injured. some critically. it is the deadliest attack on u.s. law enfortsment since

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