tv Kennedy FOX Business August 29, 2017 12:00am-1:00am EDT
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be dealing with this north korean missile that flew over japan. the stock index futures are pointing sharply lower. tomorrow morning we'll get into it completely. good night from new york. kennedy: tonight america's fourth largest city is unwater. the president expected to survey the damage tomorrow. can he generate some good head lines after weeks of bad ones? berkeley once again descending into violence after a conservative group shows up to protest on campus. hit the lights because it's time to shine. the unfolding harvey disaster is impossible to comprehend just yet with one meteorologist describing it as a once in a 1,000-year event.
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when all is said and done, this storm can dump more than 50 inches of rain. and biblical has become a flimsy and tough. super sized greatness is on display as people kay for their neighbors. don't get me wrong. people need all the help they can get. but the power of self-reliance and empathy in the face of this store speaks to a decency most of people have not lost touch with. it will be months before the economic impact is known. but to the anies pouring into the red cross and social media, the goodness in people overcomes the worst circumstances.
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let's get into all of this. i'm kennedy. an entire year's worth of rain in a single storm and it may not be over for another week. we are told at least five people have died since harvey made landfall over the weekend. 15,000 currently in shelters and many people have lost their homes and cars and any future prosperity in the short term. helicopters and boats and trucks saving people all over coastal texas. in some places the water is rising an inch every 10 minutes. the national guard is mobilized to help. but it may take more than that
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to help. kevin brady, welcome to the show. tell me about some of the lessons we are learning from this devastation in the region of that state where you have been elected. >> we are in the moment right now. it's pretty brutal. we still have catastrophic flooding going on. most our inland creeks and rivers have not crested. we are still trying to deal with the fact that the worst is not here yet. so while today has been a bit of a break in the sense the rain has been cut by half, we have some big challenges the next three or four days. kennedy: you have hundreds of thousands of people in the region without power and you
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have got people stranded in apartment buildings and houses where the water continues to rise. and they don't have cell phone service. how are you dealing with those emergencies? >> it's been -- that of course is always a challenge during hurricanes. and i have been involved in many of them here in texas. the good news is with neighbors, neighbors, friends, colleagues are looking out for each other in a major way. you have seen this in the elderly and fragile being helped by neighbors with volunteers in their boats and the coast guard and local emergency responders. so there is a lot of work being done there. also, it's a result of preparation. a number of these fragile residents have signed up and identified by local officials before the hurricane season began.
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kennedy: is that something you and local officials have learned specifically and directly from hurricane katrina? >> absolutely. katrina, righta, ike. those fragile residents are a huge concern. our local officials have done that outreach. not that they reach everybody. but it's a different preparation for them than it would have been for katrina and rita. kennedy: thursday i was on "outnumbered," and january nice dean was on tv begging people in the region to leave and go to safety and higher ground. she was warning of the massiveness of the storm that was about to hit that part of texas. so why weren't evacuations ordered before the storm? >> i have to side with mayor
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sylvester turner and judge emmett. unlike a hurricane with a major wind event you can predict where that's going to be and move people out of the way. this was a rain event. a different animal than hurricane ike. you can't predict where the water is going to come and where the river is going to crest. so you have to respond to it in a different way. in retrospect, i'm sure there are decisions that could have been made differently. but when you are evacuating.5 million people, that's a dangerous event as well. kennedy: what kind of package do you think you will be seeing going through congress. as you said no one could anticipate the amount of rain to
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hit a city that is essentially concrete. >> it's hard to tell. we are in the middle of evacuation and rescues as we speak. but the delegation in congress is work with me on determining the process to put that package together. that will come in the weeks ahead. but right now we are have much in the moment of rescue, evacuation and keeping people safe. kennedy: we see some of these pictures coming in from the region. it's still have much search and rescue. people in survival mode. many of them will be stranded for days. let's hope they do have the supplies and that preparedness had reached the most of fragile citizens you have spoken about. their neighbors have done some incredible work.
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to make sure that their fellow human beings are taken care of. thank you so as much for your time. fema reporting they expect 450,000 people to time for federal disaster relief. but right now the agency is focusing on making sure texans have the basics, shelter, water and food. former fema director and undersecretary homeland security michael brown, welcome to you. i haven't spoken to you in quite some time. this is an interesting perspective you have provide in an op-ed in politico, basically telling the president, don't screw this up. >> my concern is this administration lags linds in getting political appointees in
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place. when rob long -- >> he's the head of fema. it was not politico, it was "the hill." >> right. so my concern was this. with the lack of political appointees in place not within dhs or fema. there is a natural reluctance of the career civil service to lean forward and step outside the box. they have rules and regulations and policy and they kinds of stick to them. what i want to do is he called the cabinet members together and he said to them, you give rockwell whatever he wants when he wants it, you don't ask questions, you just do it. that's what you need. during katrina that was one of the problems i encountered. asking for something, i'm on the ground in new orleans or baton rouge and back in d.c. they are
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arguing about brown is arguing for x and we think he needs y. now is not time to have the arguments. when the guy on the ground says he needs x, you give him x and i think they are doing that. kennedy: how has the federal government internalized some of those lessons from katrina so the big chequebook you have reaches people in crisis. that was obviously what created the human dwrairn issue with the disconnect between the stuff and the people dying. >> this could become a problem in houston but i haven't seen sit yet. in katrina we had prepositioned equipment, supplies and everything to go into new orleans just to no pun intbleds to flood new orleans with supplies and equipment.
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but as they started to move in, bridges were washed out and they couldn't get those things in. so we had to airlift things in. that may occur down the road. we are seeing a hurricane that turns into a tropical storm. it's worse than tropical storm alison? 2001. and we are continuing to see the watters rise. even though all these supplies are coming in, but once they get into the area of operation, then you hit the crux of how do we get that one last mile. how do we get it to the center where people are staying. that may turn out to be a problem. they are anticipating that now and working around it. >> let's talk about the political ramifications. you bore the brunts of that. it damaged george w. bush's
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presidency. hurricane katrina. how does the president avoid that and will he get credit for handling this disaster appropriately? >> let me tell you what i really think. i don't think it makes any difference what this president does. i think there are tooment in media that want him to fail and different organizations that want to make him fail. i think's damned if he done as damned if he doesn't. he needs to make sure the fema director has everything he needs. he needs to stay out of harris ask the. having been on ma screen one. i can tell you, when you fly into a disaster zone on ma screen one, no matter how many times you tell the secret
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service not to shut things down, they still shut things dunn. he should go to corpus christi and rockport and talk about houston, but he shouldn't go there, and he shouldn't make the mistake of flying over on air force one and look out a window. kennedy: you said one of your regrets is you did not express the enormity of the crisis of katrina until monday or tuesday nirlt was too late. do you think they have done a good job even show we have seen slate evacuations for houston? >> i'm not there so i'm hesitant to second guess. my ears perkd you have when the national hurricane center and weather service used the term catastrophic rainfall and flooding. that's something we don't use in emergency management unless it's really bad.
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they were predicting 35-60 inches of rain and catastrophic flooding. i think what the mayor should have done. just say to everybody. we are not going to force an evacuation. but here is what the experts are telling us. so if you have the ability to take a weekends trip to dallas, fort worth, austin, san antonio, someplace, and get out of this area, we suggest you do it. it's easier to be sitting in dallas rather than a home with four feet of water in it. kennedy: along with gators and snakes. >> all sort of toxins and everything else. i wish this. 4 million people all in a compact area. last time they evacuated it was a disaster. but i think the message just waking people up.
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i heard of people laughing about how it's hitting corpus christi and no big deal here. look at this. all the predictions showed the rain and water, maybe not the hurricane. but the rain and water was coming to houston and harris county. knowing the example of tropical storm alison? 2001 which was one of the fifth largest disasters in american history. kennedy: it could have been more forceful language. we were hearing that from meteorologists when we should have been hearing from politicians. when we have the look back on the storm, that's one of the areas where there will need to be thorough examination. tomorrow on the show, texas congressman john culberson will be joining me. oil and gas facilities along the
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texas coast have been shut down because of harvey. we know that will cause gas prices to go up eventually. but how sphch worsen the economic impact be for the potsch: you each drive a ford pickup, right? (in unison) russ, leland, gary: yes. gary: i have a ford f-150. michael: i've always been a ford guy. potsch: then i have a real treat for you today. michael: awesome. potsch: i'm going to show you a next generation pickup. michael: let's do this. potsch: this new truck now has a cornerstep built right into the bumper. gary: super cool. potsch: the bed is made of high-strength steel, which is less susceptible to punctures than aluminum. jim: aluminum is great for a lot of things, but maybe not the bed of a truck. potsch: and best of all, this new truck is actually- gary: (all laughing) oh my... potsch: the current chevy silverado. gary: i'm speechless. gary: this puts my ford truck to shame. james: i'll tell you, i might be a chevy guy now. (laughing)
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kennedy: we are back with more on the aftermath of hurricane harvey and the floods. the storm is also affecting the nation's energy supply. one-third of the gas we use is refined in the gulf. how bad will harvey hurt the economy, and what can lawmakers do to ease that damage a little bit. joining me now the king's college economics professor, brian brenberg. explain the importance of the houston area to the u.s. economy. >> it's very big. people don't appreciate how much houston matters. the port in houston is a very, very big deal. it accounts for $250 billion
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plus of economic activity across the state of texas and beyond every year. texas itself is a big deal. almost 10% of u.s. economic output is coming from texas. when houston goats out, that's a big deal across the country. kennedy: there is so much energy that is concentrated right there. and not to mention the houston shipping channel. >> you have so much coming in terms of crude oil imports. but you also have exports. 50% of that goes out of that port. chemical exports going out of there. even if the refineries are okay, that could stall things both in the u.s. and around the world will other countries are looking for exports from the u.s. kennedy: when you talk about
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chemicals and gas and oil -- >> we don't have reports to suggest hah badly that might be happening. but you can talking about stuff that could damage environment right next to the gulf of mexico. these places know that and they are putting in place things to protect against that. the flood is lingering so much, it will take a lot of time to sort through what is actually going to happen. kennedy: we have a greater supply of oil and gas than we did after hurricane katrina. if we still have that inventory, why are we being hit 5 cents a gallon at the end of the week. >> it depend on what we expect in the future. these prices are dictated based
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on future expectations. it will drop a little bit after labor day. but if we think it refineries will take a month, to months to get up to full capacity. the markets will start baking that in, the people running the pumps will adjust. so the hope is, these refineries look at what's happening. it will take two weeks to get back up and we won't see that price spike. prices are going to rise because they are baking in the future. kennedy: how bad is it on the brian-omics scale? >> houston has become so big, so fast. if things go down as badly as we think they will. the disruption can be much bigger than new orleans and louisiana and that means a big impact on the u.s. economy.
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president trump getting a lot of criticism from the left for his pardoning of sheriff joe arpaio. and a monster storm came barreling towards texas. after a dvt blood clot... i sure had a lot on my mind. my 30-year marriage... ...my 3-month old business... plus...what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i made a point to talk to my doctor. he told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. eliquis had both... ...and that turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding.
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kennedy: president trump's controversial pardon of sheriff joe arpaio drew criticism from lawmakers in both parties. john mccain and jeff flake suggested the president has a lack of respect for law and order. senate minority leader tweeted joe arpaio ignored the courts of law to systematically target latinos. definition of racism and bigotry. kennedy: earlier today arpaio revealed he's considering the possibility of challenging jeff flake for his senate seat. one thing that's clear. a story the president was hoping to bury in a friday news dump isn't going away anytime soon.
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kat timpf is back in the house along with "the hill" reporter joe concha, and ben kissel. let's talk about joe arpaio. why is this so problematic? why does this pardon create so much tension in both parties. >> you have a constituency within the trump base, the overpolicing is a massive problem all across our country. joe arpaio is the definition of the prison planet and the reason why individuals like alex jones have a career. i think this is a total slap in the face to that base and those constituents. i see this as red meat. perhaps he feels he needs to get those people he disparaged.
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perhaps a little red meat for them to get back in their good graces. kennedy: it's red meat for the base. when we heard flirtations of that pardon, i thought president will wait a few years. it's rare to have a first year, first term big-name pardon, but then we are talking about president obama who loves throwing political grenades. >> i agree with everything that's said. but in terms of reporting we need some precedent here. every president pardons bad people. right? you can even go back to this year to find president obama pardoned oscar lopez who was the head of the most of dangerous violent extremist group flan in the country. this guy even tried to escape
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from prison. when i looked back on january 17. i can't find any cable news segments, any outrage over that whatsoever. i think the trump supporters see the a pay oh pardon and say this is selective outrage. kennedy: joe arpaio is different because we are in such a highly and 8 and politicized. >> normally pardons come from we should have mercy. president trump said the reason he was convicted is he was just doing this job. violating the 4th amendment you are not degree your job. he was proud of the fact he was flouting it. people say he did this because he has a commitment to law and order.
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kennedy: when you are targeting certain groups for selective punishment that is not equal protectened the law. and that's what it means to swear to uphold and defend the constitution of the united states of america. speaking of the constitution and the first amendment rights. peacefully protests. but that' not what happened. there were peaceful protests that erupted into violence at berkeley. a right wing rally were met about a group of black-clad protesters antifa showed up. they claim they are fighting fascism by any means necessary, including through fascist violence. here is a look at them this weekend.
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maybe that is not free speech. what should we make of these far left protesters who think it's okay to fight speech they disagree with with violence. cat kat i will start with you. kat: they are using fascist techniques. i don't know how they have such an identity crisis of who they are has a right to be a group at all. kennedythey are assaulting peopy disagree with, trying to silence political discourse they don't like. that's what fascism is.
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>> reuters called antifa anti-trust peace activists last week. they had to correct. if you are going to keep asking republican lawmakers like paul ryan what do you think of the joe arpaio pardon. i want to see maxine waters ask that question. kennedy: and nancy pelosi. there are republicans and democrats, they were right to denounce the white supremacists and the neo-nazis, and the a-hole who ran his car into a group of protesters trying to kill dozens of people. we also have to denounce this. >> one of the few biblical verses i do believe in is violence begets violence.
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they are having violent clash in our communities. this is saul alinsky tactic. now they are taking that violence and hurting people. kennedy: it's a great rationalization that violates several constitutional amendments. i also think they go to berkeley is because the cops don't do much. >> they are paying to go there to be activists. why when we see this, why don't people say yes he has a point, there is violence on both side. kennedy: there is a clear difference between neo-nazis and black lives matter.
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when you hurt someone there should be consequences. kat: white supremacists murdered a girl saturday. that's why that should have been the focus. if somebody i loved got murdered. >> if i was the president giving the speech in berkeley i would not say there was violence on both sides. kennedy: my worry is it will end up with more loss of life. that's not okay or hah you change people's mind and it's not acceptable in the land of freedom. thank you so much. ben, joe and kat. president trump is scheduled the travel to texas tomorrow. will the president's response to his first national disaster come under scrutiny by those waiting
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disaster scene. last night he tweeted, floods are unprecedented and more rain coming. spirit of the people is incredible. thanks. there will be a lot of eyes on how the president handles his first natural disaster while in office. how has the administration handed this so far -- handled this so far? joining me is host of "mediabuzz," howard kurtz. you say so far no major missteps. lou: the white house sent out photos of him having teleconferences with the national security teams. going to texas. smart to avoid the blunder of george w. bush who admitted he made a mistake when he flew over
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new orleans. much of the media is convinced the president is going to fail this test and we don't know that yet. kennedy: i think this is a comfortable lane for him. one aide said he's have much into it. he's god at delegating and appreciates the evident being made by the texas governor abbott who has given the president an a plus. lou: and he has the chief of staff, john kelly. most of his tweets since the hurricane struck have been about the rescue efforts and trying to sympathize with the polite of the victims. -- the blight of the victims. -- the plight of the victims. but if the president deviates to
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politic he gets whacked. kennedy: do you think the media will give him any credit if in the days and weeks to come the president appropriately imagines the crisis? lou loucrisis?howard will >> in the week and months ahead he has to deal with the republicans. tens of thousands of people have been displaced in their homes and lost businesses. that's a hard thing to do. but that's really where the president can be effective. this will take years for the folks in texas to dig their way out of. kennedy: there is no way of
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assessing the total price tag for a disaster like this. if it comes close to the amount of money it took after hurricane katrina. howie: when one region of the country is hurting. i right as a national emergency and i think congress has to find a way. i think it's fair for the press to grade the president on that. kennedy: the announcement of the joe arpaio pardon as the storm was hitting. how was that problematic? howie: it's a friday night and the entire world is focused on hurricane harvey hitting the gulf coast. there i think he invited some criticism. he could have done it next week. so at the same time the press is
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almost craving some other political battle or misstep with which they can beat up on the president. because you have got to have something beside shots people being rescue offed from rooftops in houston. but in that case i think the president opened himself up to criticism by the timing of the a pay oh par -- the arpaio pardon. kennedy: coming up. no storm in the world stop the people of texas from being their awesome selves. we have video proof so we need tablets installed... with the menu app ready to roll. in 12 weeks. yeah. ♪ ♪
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this is why we love texas so much. because no matter what happens in life, we just crack open a cold one and deal with it. kids, we have an historic flood coming, make sure we have lots of ice for the cooler and blow up the giant rubber ducky. this is what texans do. singers sing, painters paints, texans drink and fish. here is another great texan who lives by the saying, when life gives you lemons, just squeeze the fish you caught in your house. this guy deserves his own fishing show on espn. that is skill. take that, paul ryan.
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we are all praying for you texans. but perhaps we should be praying for the storm because it's no match for your fighting spirit. my friends are oklahoma are very upset right now. while texas was handling the storm of the century, las vegas was enjoying the fight of the millennium. and nobody had a better time than a connor mcgregor fan who claims he snuck into a ringside seat claiming to be part of the security guard. he says he was on the upper deck when saw mayweather's team heading to the ring. he followed them count aisle and security never checked his ticket. he was able to get photos with
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several celeb its. and he got to sit next to mike tyson. the man says his friends were stunned that he posed as a security guard, but there was no better tribute to his hero mcgregor. he plans to release his own brand of notorious whiskey. it's good for the first two rounds, then it loses its punch. topic number 3. bill and hillary clinton are vacationinged in the hamptons to close out the summer. some folks were upset with the added security burned that comes with having the former first couple. according to the sources the
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price tag for their summer rental. $100,000 american dollars. last year hillary spent $1.2 billion trying to rent a house in washington, d.c. and sheer in got to move in. what happened? topic number 4. netflix opened a pop-up americana dispensary to promote their new show "disjointed." i think i speak for everyone when i say finally a way to get pot in west hollywood. up until now it took 30 seconds to find a guy selling weed on santa monica boulevard. you can walk into their store as long as you have a qualifying medical card. early reviews were not great, but that was before critics
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smoked the weed. topic number 5. final this past weekend it was the wolf stock festival in roblgd, california. annual festival bills itself as woodstock for dogs. picture the original woodstock? the event raises money for canine rescue it includes a day a. doggy races and ice cream sandwiches. then they all drop acid and drive around in a votes what again bus. organizers are hoping to raise $10,000. it's optimistic to think there is going to be a 2018.
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you never know when disaster is going to strike, that's why you potsch: you each drive a ford pickup, right? (in unison) russ, leland, gary: yes. gary: i have a ford f-150. michael: i've always been a ford guy. potsch: then i have a real treat for you today. michael: awesome. potsch: i'm going to show you a next generation pickup. michael: let's do this. potsch: this new truck now has a cornerstep built right into the bumper. gary: super cool. potsch: the bed is made of high-strength steel, which is less susceptible to punctures than aluminum. jim: aluminum is great for a lot of things, but maybe not the bed of a truck. potsch: and best of all, this new truck is actually- gary: (all laughing) oh my... potsch: the current chevy silverado. gary: i'm speechless. gary: this puts my ford truck to shame. james: i'll tell you, i might be a chevy guy now. (laughing) with the new sleep number 360 smart bed. it senses and automatically adjusts on both sides. the new 360 smart bed is part of our biggest sale of the year where all beds are on sale. and right now save 50% on the labor day limited edition bed. if you could book a flight, then add a hotel, or car, or activity in one place and save, where would you go?
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tornadoes, earthquakes or another superstorm. if you were without power, and had a dead cell phone would you survive in whether it's always having comfortable shiewfs and a knife. thinking of those trapped month means of escape or help. you have to be ready. have a plan. talk to your kids. be ready to evacuate if you have to run. or fight your way through it with you can't. we should out all be anticipating one disaster or another. dust off your tools of self reliance if god forbid something catastrophic happens to you. thank you for watching tonight. email kennedyfbn@foxbusiness.com. tomorrow night on the show we'll
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