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tv   The Evening Edit  FOX Business  May 30, 2018 5:00pm-6:00pm EDT

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top officials to discuss prison reform. >> pushing for president trump to pardon a 62-year-old great grandmother named alice marie johnson, serving life sentence without parole for first-time drug offense. not clear if kardashian will meet with president trump. >> very interesting. all right, "the evening edit" starts now. >> great progress. also not only you look at the economy a yr ag look at where the relationship with north korea, wh the rest of the world. iive this president trump a great deal amount of credit. remember it was the democrats who criticized the way he was talking about it that brought him to the table. he was able to shut the door with china. able to bring north korea into south korea, and you know what? he's going to have the meeting, if it's at the right terms. liz: the dow retracing the majority of yesterday's 390-point drop over the crisis in europe. but it ain't over yet. tonight, we're going to show you how the rather reaction to europe's mess is a preview of
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what's to come. to trump maximum pressure campaign on north korea. secretary of state mike pompeo will meet with the right-hand man of kim jong-un, but what will north korea give up? we've got the latest, plus a rare glimpse inside north korea. it is shocking. more fallout from roseanne barr's racist tweet about former obama aide valerie jarrett. we weigh in. politics, money, we have tomorrow's headlines. i'm elizabeth macdonald. "the evening edit" starts right now. . liz: wow. look at this retracement of the dow, jumped more than 320 point, the s&p and the nasdaq recovering all of yesterday's losses as banks rebound, small caps hit record highs. energy giants chevron and exxon
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fueling the dow's rise today, too. oil rebounded 2.2% today. more on that in a moment. first to secretary of state mike pompeo in new york to meet with kim yong chol, high ranking north korean official and a general. they're preparing for a possible summit in the works with president trump and kim jong-un. joining me now brad blakeman, former assistant deputyor george w. bush. this will be the third meeting with the general. is it safe to assume a winnable deal is on the table, they would not risk an embarrassment of a summit with no deal. >> it is only good for both parties. if one person thinks they have the edge on the other, it's honored on the breach. i think donald trump comes to the table in good faith so does secretary of state. remains to be seen whether the north koreans do. if they do, they have the deal of the century. never be able to make a deal with any other president like
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they can with this administration. we're on a history-making course. it's really up to the north koreans, if they come to the table with clean hands, then they're going to be rewarded for good faith by a pathway to normalization. liz: you know, brad, what was your reaction on the news that russian foreign minister sergey lavrov will meet with his counterpart there. here's the story. north and south korea, the peninsula is an important outpost in the region, and russia is half the size of france, it's been in recession, what's the reaction to russia stepping in here. >> it can't be good. russia trying to put a monkey wrench, i'm sure into anything positive using whatever leverage they have. the same as china, second meeting with kim in china, put a reversal on the pathway that seemed to be very positive, and what did our president do? he put the brakes on everything, and it was a
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wake-up call to the north koreans. i don't like the fact russia is meddling, but not unexpected. liz: let's get back to the north korean general. the guy behind the sony cyberattack. the fear is they could get frustrated and hit us with another cyberattack if things go south. your reaction to that? >> i would warn them that playing this president is very, very dangerous, and they do it at their peril. if they think they're going to do something like that to the united states, i think we'll take the same position that israel would take. if you hit us with a stick, we'll shoot you with a gun. it's not going to be light force. i don't mean that literally, what i mean is it's not going to be something that will be taken lightly and it will be overwhelming response. liz: the media criticized in the trump administration last week for cancelling the summit claiming we are on the brink of war, watch. >> it is more likely than not that there's a conflict, possibly a full-blown war. >> we're possibly closer to
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outright war with north korea. >> there's a 20% chance we'll exchange ordnance with north korea at some point in a fairly significant way. >> i think we should be concerned the esclatore rhetoric between the two countries that have nuclear weapons is slipping very quickly. >> have you reason to be scared of a war that could wipe out 500,000 people. liz: are we on the brink of war, brad? >> no, may be on the brink of peace which drives democrats crazy. they should be all foursquare behind the president in make the efforts that he had already that no president in the last few decades has managed to come close to. liz: brad, we have been digging into what is going on behind the scenes in north korea. a rare glimpse today from the state department, a harrowing report about north korean's prison cas. re and shockin glimpse. 120,000 political psoners and others in horrific conditions
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there starving, tortured and executed in camps across north korea. brad, why did the state department under secretary of state mike pompeo release that report in advance of meeting with this general? >> putting maximum pressure, exactly what the president said he would do. we're exposing them for who and what they are. we have nothing against the people of north korea, we have everything against the regime and trying to bring them to the 21st century and the normalization what nations should be. this is the same argument we had with nixon in the 70s trying to break through with china. china had horrendous conditions for their people, but we were able to normalize relations, but china is nowhere where they could be in human rights but a heck of a lot better than they were. liz: to your point, reagan walked away from gorbachev in 1986 and four, five years later, the soviet union collapsed. is north korea on the brink of collapse. here's what's going on. its own people face prison
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camps, if they make a remark about its leader or phone people outside the country, and four out of ten people there are malnourished. people are rewarded for spying on each other. i think more reporting needs to be done what's going on in north korea and how it is on the brink of collapse the size of vermont. >> it's in nobody's interest to see it collapse. china's nor ours. liz: my point is the media saying north korea holds all the cards. >> they do not. they are not. is it foolish for the president to have made these kind of inroads to the possibility of meeting? the same thing was said with gorbachev. same thing said with china, and the fact of the matter is we have a president who is transactional more than he is ideological, which is a good thing, but the president understands a deal. he knows when he's being played. that's why he canceled it, and tell the north koreans, a
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hermit nation, they are no match for the united states, and they know that. liz: turn to what's going on in israel. israel is saying that iran is behind yesterday's gaza rocket barrage on southern israel, an estimated 180 rockets and mortar shells fired into israel in a 24-hour period. most serious attack there in four years. that's more than a total fire from the hamas or gaza run strip since 2014. u.s. calling for emergency u.n. security council meeting. nikki haley saying palestinian militants are behind this. wounding at least five. ham as you and islamic jihad claims responsibility as well. brad, the scope of this, this is serious escalation. 180 is big. less than ten rockets and mortars have been fired by hamas into israel all year. and hamas has close ties hezbollah and iran, iran is
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behind this? >> no doubt. that's why president trump canceled the agreement. iran is a terrorist nation and use surrogates to do dirty work. this is what we've seen with hamas, hezbollah and other terrorist groups funded by iran. israel has to do what it has to do, and the united states will support him. liz: will this get worse? israeli authorities are saying iran is ratcheting up attacks to get people to stop putting pressure on iran. your reaction? >> again, i think they act, iran, at their peril. this president is going to stand foursquare with ally israel. israel can defend itself, there's no doubt. and if they have to, they will, and we will support israel. liz: brad blakeman, great to see you, appreciate you coming on. appreciate it. >> good to see you. >> all three indices in the green, the dow ending up 306 points almost retracing yesterday's lost of 390 points.
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regulators look at this, another plan to make life easier for the banks to get credit flowing into the economy. loosening the rules about proprietary trading, saying the banks are well equipped to handle that. again. nicole petallides on the floor of the new york stock exchange with the latest. nicole? reporter: gains across the board a completely different picture than yesterday. dow up 306 led by exxon, chevron, jpmorgan and merck. how about the russell? the russell 2000, another record all-time high. 15th record close for 2018 for the small cap. up about 8% this year. speaking of the banks, jpmorgan, goldman sachs, look how the banks managed to close higher as the 10-year treasury yield moved higher, but is below the crucial 3% mark. and record all-time highs for microsoft and netflix and amazon had a record close as it
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gained today. liz: the wife of an illegal immigrant telling individuals in the media she does support the trump administration's decision to deport her husband. coming up, we've got the sound. also tonight, more roseanne barr fallout. president trump now calling out disney ceo bob iger for apologizing to former obama official valerie jarrett but not picking up the phone to call him about abc's slice against the president. we've got details on that. terror attack in belgium leaving two police officers and a civilian dead. we're bringing in kayleigh mcenany on what we have yet to still learn about this, coming up.
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[ gunshots ] . liz: that was raw smartphone footage of yesterday's terrifying terror attack in belgium. left two police officers and a civilian dead. police saying the suspect may have been radicalized in prison. he was an inmate let out on one day release from prison. he walked up behind two female police officers. he stabbed them repeatedly,
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stole guns and shot them in the back, he shot and killed a man sitting in a nearby car. he took a woman hostage, he shouted "allahu akbar," before the attack. he was on a security list, released out of prison. do the watch lists even work? >> apparently not, in this characters you have the minister of justice saying i had pangs in my conscience about letting this guy out and feels responsible for this. why was the individual let out on the street? despite the fact he had contacted radicals in 2015 and 2016. you have 450 radicalized inmates in belgian prisons. not good. liz: good point. 4,000 estimated people left europe to fight for al qaeda and estimated 23 terrorists committed attacks in europe since around 2014, 2015.
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belgium is known for crazy bureaucracy. security forces don't talk to the cops. this is still a problem even after the paris bataclan attacks, what's going on here? >> they're calling the prisons jihadist incubators. you have people going, in even people who are not islamic radicals coming out as such and committing atrocious acts like what you're displaying on the scene. it's terrifying, scary and europe needs to get act together because this can't keep happening. liz: disney chief reportedly called former obama official valerie jarrett. critics blasting president trump for not immediately denouncing roseanne but instead tweeting out bob iger of abc called valerie jarrett to let her know that abc does not tolerate comments like those made by roseanne barr.
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gee, he never called president donald j. trump for horrible statements made about me on abc. maybe i did just not get the call. the stock is down 7%. kayleigh, first let's get to what white house press secretary sarah sanders said about what the media is reporting. let's watch. >> the president's pointing to the hypocrisy in the media saying the most horrible things about this president, and nobody addresses it. where was bob iger's apology calling jammel hill or anyone associated with him. for christians, calling christianity a mental illness. kathy griffin going on a profane rant on the view after it showed her holding president trump's decapitated head. and where was the apology for
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bob iger after hiring keith olbermann attacking the president as a nazi and expanding his role against the president's family. this is a double standard that the president is speaking about. no one is defending her comments. they are inappropriate. that's the point he was making. liz: take on two things, the critics saying president trump should have denounced roseanne barr first and check out what the press secretary just said. and joy reed did not lose job over homophobic bigotry attacks and blog posts. he didn't denounce roseanne barr first? >> the president says he denounces all racism. we all denounce racism, that would include the president. she's spot on. we need to have one clear standard in this country. denounce hate where we see, it whether it's on the right or the left. and the fact that free passes
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are given to people who are anti-trump, they get free passes, no one should get a free pass when it comes to hate. liz: the reaction watch some in the media saying don't bring up joy reed or keith olbermann, stay on roseanne barr and denounce that. go ahead. this is the time to bring it up. media ignores almost entirely individuals like keith oberman, when is the last time have you seen one of his tweets plastered up on the screen. we can only highlight it here. roseanne's tweet and all of those that were mentioned by sarah sanders as well. liz: should president trump have denounced roseanne barr's tweet specifically? >> i don't think the president has to go around calling out every single citizen making denunciations. he's denounced racism
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categorically. liz: what do you think of roseanne barr blaming ambien and sanofi saying none of our drugs cause racism. what do you think about the droll tweet? >> for them to make that statement is completely fair game especially when she put it out there last night. liz: we love having you on. >> thank you, liz. liz: cnn looked surprise when the wife of an illegal immigrant says she does support the trump administration's decision to deport her husband. >> our laws come first. our laws are just broken and need to be fixed, but i can't be mad at trump for doing his job. liz: coming up, we have the full sound and president trump doubling down last night calling ms-13 gang members vicious animals. next, her son was murdered by an illegal immigrant.
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she is here after this.
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. >> this vicious gang has transformed once peaceful, beautiful communities that i know so well! i know them all! into blood-stained killing fields. this is why we call the blood-thirsty ms-13 gang members exactly the name i used last week. what was the name? >> animals! >> animals. liz: president trump doubling down on reference to ms-13 gang members as, quote, vicious animals at the rally in nashville and announced to democrats who have criticized them for using the term. president repeating campaign promise that mexico will pay for the construction of a border wall. mexico saying we're not going to do that, and information that's crossing into the studio. they're not going to pay for it. this story hits home for our
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next guest. her 18-year-old son josh was brutally murdered by an illegal immigrant. joining me now we welcome laura wilkerson. laura, great to see you again. >> thank you. liz: it's hard for me to ask this of you. this is for the viewers. you can please, if you can and if you want to, can you please explain what happened to your son? >> sure i can. josh was 18, a senior in high school, and he gave a kid a ride home who happened to be an illegal immigrant who wanted to kill him for money for his truck, and he beat him in the head with a closet rod. he strangled him over and over. he kneed him so hard in the stomach it spliced his spleen in two and strangled him over and over again. tied him up, set him in a field and set him on fire. liz: laura, what happened to the criminal illegal immigrant? >> convicted of first-degree murder and life in texas which means 30 years before parole.
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he'll be out in another 22, 23. liz: unspeakable horror what you and your family have been enduring. what is your take on the president's comments? >> about the animal? liz: yes. >> you know, i heard nancy pelosi, and you have to split hairs for her, i think she doesn't understand that donald trump doesn't know these are actual human beings but they are acting like animals with an instinct of they'll kill if you you get in the way. you are wanting something and you're in the way, they're going to kill. not going to think about somebody's mother who's sad, they're going to kill you, acting exactly like animals. nancy pelosi, you have to break it down in littlityy bits and you wonder if she gets it. liz: she's saying calling people animals is not a good thing. i think your point is that, you know, these individuals dehumanize themselves with what they do and also not just murder, they torture as well, right? >> exactly, yes, it's a type of
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death, it's not just accidentally killing somebody, which is horrid in itself. but it's torture. josh's was torture. liz: it is unspeakable horror. the wife of an illegal immigrant won't cnn to say she does support the trump administration's administration to deport her husband back to mexico. let's watch. >> i am not upset at our government due to the fact that i am a u.s. citizen, and that our laws come first. our laws are just broken and need to be fixed, i can't be mad at trump to do his job. that is the job, to protect u.s. citizens from criminals. liz: what's your reaction here? >> how admirable of this mom to say that. because you know, she made a bad decision or made a conscious decision to marry somebody who wasn't a legal resident of america.
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she made a decision to have children with the man, knowing what the consequences are and suffering the consequences now because of a decision she made and one time his parents made. i think it's great she can tell the truth. she understands the difference between being an american and not being an american. and married somebody who wasn't knowing full well he may suffer the consequences. right now her, her children and him are suffering the consequences. liz: yes, cindy garcia said -- >> she can tell the truth. liz: good point. she said her husband was not a criminal. this is about splitting up families and the controversy of illegal immigrant children being separated from families as well. what's your reaction to this part of the story. >> well, separating families is when you have to go to the cemetery and view a headstone of your kid. you can't go to another country, i can't skype josh, he'll never grow up, he'll never see his nieces and nephews, absolutely not separating families.
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i think this mother today said she had spoken to her husband and enjoyed two months in mexico with him? good for her. that's great. i can't do that. liz: laura, i've asked you this before, to date, to date, has any democrat official asked you about what you and your family endured? anybody talked to you from the democrat side. i know republicans have. go ahead. absolutely not. this is the saddest part of it. everybody should be smart enough to realize this is not a partisan issue, that it's an american issue and that it's a safety issue, but no, no, they haven't spoke to me and i'm not waiting on the call really, but at least this lady could tell the truth what she did. she made a decision and she's suffering the consequences. it is admirable to say that and to feel that way. liz: you know, laura, you are admirable, you're doing your part in service to the country, telling your truth of what happened and telling your story in a brave and courageous way
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with integrity. laura wilkerson, we would love to have you on, if you can. >> love to. liz: great to see you. media personality suggesting president trump is the one to blame for roseanne's racist tweet. we've got that sound coming up. and starbucks ceo howard schultz is saying trump is to blame. look who's here to take it on. crtv.com host deneen borelli is going to take all of it on after this. as a control enthusiast,
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. >> we know what donald trump things. we know what roseanne barr thinks. it's time for us to stop playing around with soft words by saying, oh, well, they're saying insensitive things. no, it's racist! they're exhibiting racist behavior, and far too many of our fellow american citizens agree with them and feel emboldened to stay out loud things they wouldn't have dared to say in public just a few years ago. liz: cnn's don lemon suggesting president trump is to blame for roseanne's racist tweet about former obama aide valerie jarrett. fox news howard kurtz firing back at lemon and other media
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outlets saying there is no correlation. >> i was just waiting. counting down, cnn's don lemon, okay. roseanne and president trump. >> they're putting it on paper. >> valerie jarrett was taking the high road but took a swipe at the president. he called roseanne after this and said this has nothing do with donald trump. mainstream media have to turn every negative controversy into a trump story. >> the question is, is donald trump a racist and to blame for roseanne barr's tweet? let's bring in deneen borelli, what do you think? >> hey, liz, listen what's not president trump's fault when it comes to the left? he's blamed for any and everything whether he responds or not, i heard your interview with kayleigh mcenany. the man can't win. clearly what roseanne barr did, what she put on social media is clearly inexcusable and she is paying the consequences of doing so. but when it come to the left,
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the only standard they know is the double standard because roseanne barr is out and there is a list of other liberals who say all kinds of things on television, social media, who still have their jobs, and i'm talking about disney, abc people as well. liz: "washington post" max booth had a column saying trump's response normalizes racism. what do you say about that? >> absolutely outrageous. people throwing around this rhetoric, it's dangerous, and you got to look at the fact that you have the liberal left, the media, liberal politicians, all they want to do is discredit and demonize president trump. left is going to play the race card. we have the midterm elections fast approaching and need to hold onto black voter support which i think is being chipped away because americans are seeing the positive results
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from the trump administration. roll back in taxes, roll back in regulations, people are getting higher, higher wages. they're getting bonuses and more benefits, so all americans are seeing results from the trump administration, but i think they are especially seeing it among black voters and they will be taking a second look because democrats have been selling out the black vote for many, many years and have done nothing for black americans. all they have do is looking at the urban cities. liz: starbucks chairman howard schultz saying president trump contributed to the problem of racism in america. let's listen. >> has president trump's rhetoric personally on race exacerbated racism in america? >> i would say on a personal level, it probably has given license to people to feel as if they can emulate and copy the kind of behavior and language that comes out of this administration. liz: the company starbucks stock ended the day in the
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green. to president trump and howard schultz, what he's now saying. howard schultz did say that racial tensions in this country have been around for quite some time. we know there are riots under president obama. we know there was problems for decades, problems with racism. criticism about trump is he claimed a judge is bias against him because he was, quote, mexican. that was the trump university judge, and linked the muslim travel ban. what is your response to that? >> oh, my gosh, crazy talk, liz. howard schultz is a progressive, he despises and hates president trump, no matter what he says and does. listen, you got to look at the rhetoric from the left, even bob iger, abc-disney ceo, fired, had roseanne barr fired for her comments but keeping joy behar for the comments she made that were discrediting to
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christians and vice president pence, and also howard, the guy at espn, keith olbermann, back on the scene, he's been hired again for like the sixth time, and they are owned by disney as well. he has awful, vile comments about president trump over the years. it's outrageous the double standard that we're seeing coming from the progressives and the liberals when it comes to someone who happens to be a trump supporter like roseanne versus the other liberals who are walking in lock step, that can do and say anything and not be held accountable. liz: deneen borelli, thank you very much for coming on the show. appreciate it. >> thanks, liz any, time. liz: another tesla crash. the tesla car was in autopilot mode before it plowed into a parked police car. no one was seriously hurt here, but we have this stunning disclosures and warnings tesla is making about the cars.
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you want to hear what tesla is saying. democrat socialist bernie sanders is considering another run for presidency in 2020. but are we seeing a preview what he wants for this country with what is going on in europe and the economic crises there? we're bringing in karl rove to react, after this.. >> we're going to make public colleges and universities tuition free, tuition free, tuition free, tuition free. [cheers and applause] (indistinguishable muttering) that was awful. why are you so good at this? had a coach in high school. really helped me up my game. i had a coach. math. ooh. so, why don't traders have coaches? who says they don't? coach mcadoo! you know, at td ameritrade, we offer free access to coaches and a full education curriculum- just to help you improve your skills. boom! mad skills.
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. >> tuition free. >> three months, paid family and medical leave. >> a living wage, 15 bucks an hour. >> health care is a right of all people, not a privilege. [cheers] >> it all sounds great, but what democrat socialist senator bernie sanders doesn't tell you is policies could cost $20
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trillion or more. one of his officials revealing sanders is considering a 2020 run if president trump is going to run again, which looks like that's going to happen. watch. >> will voters get another chance to vote for bernie sanders in 2020? >> voters in vermont will in november. nationally, he is considering another run for the presidency. liz: take it up with karl rove, former bush 43 deputy chief of staff. good to see you, karl. >> good afternoon. liz: so these seem like the same policies that are ruining europe. what can bernie sanders offer voters. president trump is saying let's turn to the markets, i'm going rework our policies to help the markets deliver to you. tax cuts, dodd-frank overhaul. what's bernie sanders got to offer? >> free everything. free tuition. free health care. free family leave. it's all free. doesn't cost a dime. it's going to be available for you and for me and it's going
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to be wonderful that it's all free. he's already having a big effect. you take a look at democratic candidates stepping up for the house and senate, and virtually every one of them is in favor of medicare for all, which is basically free health care, i mean, remember, medicare has gone broke. average working couple puts in $118,000 in benefits and takes out $320,000 -- put in $118,000 in taxes over the course of their career, they take out $320,000 in benefits and pass a $200,000 difference to kids and grandkids and he wants to take that system which today is supposed to help seniors and going broke and extend it to everybody which means it will go broke quicker. and he's going to do that on everything else. he is a socialist. liz: other countries have similar systems that sanders is talking about and they're broke. he wants -- he's talked about guaranteed jobs, guaranteed
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income. the same ideas you see that is driving european countries to the brink of collapse. go ahead. it's not only driving european countries. they're a bunch of ideas adopted by the europeans that were part and parcel of the experiment in the soviet union and pre-mao and mao china. look, socialism failed every place it's been attempted. sanders believes in some way, shape, or form we can have socialism in america and can succeed here, you fundamentally can't do it when you take away markets and responsibility, and everything becomes free, there is nothing more expensive in our system than something that is free because there's no constraint on the cost and everybody gets it. whether they need it or not and whether they deserve it or not, everybody gets it and get it free, and that is a recipe for disaster. human history has shown it time and time again. only people who don't get that
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are the people who take honeymoon in the former soviet union as bernie sanders did. he is impervious to the reality of the failure of socialist. liz: you remember he said food lines are a good thing, rationing, they're a good thing? that's happening in socialist venezuela. bernie sanders championed chavez and nicolas maduro, we're watching this breaking story unfold. a new story coming out of venezuela. truck drivers are accosted and assaulted because people are starving in venezuela, especially the delivery truck and hav over 80 protests over food shortages to date so far this year. what's your reaction to bernie sanders not commenting on venezuela? >> yeah, look, he hasn't commented on chavez and castro. this is a man who has blinders on this. is the socialist dilemma. inflation this year in
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venezuela will hit 13,000%. a country which was the breadbasket for south america desperate desperately hungry. it is routine to see on the streets of venezuela people prowling through garbage cans to see if there is a scrap they can eat. i read a story about a heart rending reporter in venezuela for five years born in russia and solve the decline of the soviet union and aftermath and said it is worse today in venezuela than it was in soviet russia. and told this heart rending story of seeing a working man on a battered up bicycle, riding along the street, and seeing a young teenager in a garbage can trying to find something to eat and the worker gave his plastic container of rice and a few pieces of bread to the young man and told him don't do that again, and probably the only thing the work her to eat all day.
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this is venezuela, the socialist reign. liz: the military runs the economy in social venezuela. that is the story, time and again, socialist economies, the military takes things and runs things, right, karl? final word. >> yeah, and a way the reports we're getting are the rank and file are the military are like the rest of venezuela, hungry, starving, badly fed, badly dressed and in need of a change of government. liz: sounds like north korea, too. breaking news, another step closer to accountability. a grand jury did indict disgraced film producer harvey weinstein on charges of rape in the first and third degrees, also criminal sexual act in the first degree. we're going to stay on the story and bring you any developments. another tesla crash. this time into a parked police car, but we've got the stunning warning from tesla that you're going to want to hear about
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these autopilot cars. you're not going to believe what they're saying. and bringing in cyberexpert and attorney lisa garver. she's worried about this, coming up.
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. >> look at this, billionaire elon musk electric car company tesla in hot water after another crash involving a parked police car in southern california. the driver says the model 3 was in autopilot mode at the time. the autopilot mode coming under scrutiny again. we've had multiple crashes involving this system. the stock closing the day in the green. bring in cybersecurity expert lisa garver, great to see you. >> great to see you, liz. liz: tesla warning, autopilot functioning cannot detect all
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objects, may not brake or decelerate for stationary vehicles or objects especially when traveling over 50 miles an hour, that's a heck of a warning. >> huge warning and a caveat for consumers purchasing this kind of technology. and i'd like to make a distinction between autonomous or a.i. vehicles that can drive around without people operating them versus assisted driving. in reality the assisted driving feature is assisted driving. they recommend people have their hands on the wheel. and this was not the case for the person involved in the accident. liz: tesla is saying the cars make driving safer, right? >> the cars make highway driving safer, in essence, they're mapping out what obstacles are on the road, they're watching the speed limits, watching traffic, there are certain features. liz: is it misrepresentation here? >> there are lawsuits flying around uber and tesla for assisted autonomous driving
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issues. tesla facing a class-action where multiple people came forward and said i had accidents, we've had crashes, what's going on? you promised us a safer driving feature. and tesla settled and we're waiting to see the details in the lawsuit but the liability issue is even though they set aside the caveat for not autonomous driving, you have to pay attention be and attentive but at the same time are they held liable? and this crash is not helping them. liz: this is a heck of a story. will you come back on? >> i'd love to. liz: this is developing story, we're going to need you on this. >> it's an exciting technology, but -- >> so many wrinkles to it. come back soon. we're going to be right back, don't go away. [music playing] (vo) from day one, we always came through for our customers. it's how we earned your trust. until... we lost it. today, we're renewing our commitment to you. fixing what went wrong.
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and ending product sales goals for branch bankers. so we can focus on your satisfaction. it's a new day at wells fargo. but it's a lot like our first day. wells fargo. established 1852. ..
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ronchodilators that work together to significantly improve lung function all day and all night. anoro is not for asthma. it contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. the risk is unknown in copd. anoro won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition, high blood pressure, glaucoma, prostate, bladder, or urinary problems. these may worsen with anoro.
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call your doctor if you have worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain while taking anoro. ask your doctor about anoro. ♪ go your own way get your first prescription free at anoro.com. get your first prescription free money managers are pretty much the same. all but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does. and while some advisers are happy to earn commissions from you whether you do well or not, fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management. liz: be sure to tune in to "mornings with maria." tomorrow.
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she'll be speaking to bill browder, hermitage capital management ceo. charles payne is here now with "making money." charles: the major averages soaring today as spirits faded about everything, the european turmoil. a huge reversal. up 300 points at the close following yesterday's loss. the report card on the overall economy painted an extraordinary picture of our economy. every region has seen good economic performance, manufacturing shifting into high gear, bank loan demand

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