tv The Evening Edit FOX Business September 21, 2018 5:00pm-6:01pm EDT
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washington bureau about that. more in the hours to come right here including a special two-hour addition of lou dobbs tonight, seven-9:00 p.m. and he has a lot to chew over. to get deep into it. >> absolutely. that is a prospect evening edit starts now. >> blockbuster reports that rod sign discussing wearing a wire to record conversations with president trump. in trying to remove present him from office. rosenstein denies it but reportedly memos written by andrew mccabe from the story. the very latest. that kevin is accusing her unless there shall testify about special assault allegations. the judiciary committee hope seven answer by the end of the day on a prospective wednesday hearing. any updates and dow closing at another new record high for a second straight day. rick harrison weighs in on whether mainstreet seen this as well. thank you for watching money,
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politics and we got the debate behind tomorrow's headlight. i'm in for my friend, liz, and "the evening edit" starts now. >> for a second straight day that i was closing at a high. 26733 posting a solid weekly game making it the hundred first record close election day first the new york times reporting deputy attorney general rod rosenstein suggesting last year he secretly recorded president trump in the white house and discussed recruiting cabinet members to invoke the 20th amendment to remove mr. trump from office. this according to several anonymous sources. he vehemently denied it in the justice farm and saying rosenstein officially denies writing the new york times anonymous op-ed published earlier this month. the washington post reported
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memos written by then acting fbi director andrew mccabe confirmed the story. edward lawrence joined the life and easy with the latest. reporter: startling report, the paper saying as he said that mal rod rosenstein trying to garner support among cabinet members to possibly remove the president under the 20th amendment. a source for the paper they rosenstein talks about wearing a wire in order to record the chaos in the white house after the firing of former fbi director james kobe. a source in the room says fox news i remember this meeting and remember the wire coming but the statement was sarcastic and never discussed with any intention of reporting a conversation with the present. the near time sorry for the relying on anonymous sources who were briefed about discussions that had happened and briefed about the memos that the former deputy director of the fbi, educate, though. an attorney for mccabe says he wrote memos to remember very
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important meetings and said those memos were turned over to the special counsel "-right-double-quote, a set of those memos remained at the fbi at the time of his departure in january 2018. you know knowledge of any memb member, how any member of the media obtain those memos. rosenstein released his own statement about this saying the new york times story is inaccurate and factually incorrect and i will not further comment on the story based on anonymous sources who are biased against the department in advancing their own personal agenda. let me be clear, based on my personal dealings with the president there's no basis to invoke the 25th amendment. as we no, his relationship with president trump has been tenuous over the past year the president that need to fire rod rosenstein as well as his boss attorney general jeff sessions. as you said in the beginning officially he's now he did not write the op-ed piece which been
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talked about over the past week or so. again, on friday afternoon interesting times in washington. >> thank you, edward. joining his harvard law professor alan dershowitz and author of the case against impeachment meant for trial. the new york times best-selling author, it's a true honor to have you. >> thank you so much. it's a very serious issue for america today. we have to get rod rosenstein under oath but here we have another he said he said, not unlike in some ways cavanaugh board. here's a man who says no this doesn't happen but but they are dead serious. if it is serious and he's actually wiring the president to invoke the 20th amendment were talking about an unconstitutional coup d'état. the 20th amendment does not apply to a dysfunctional white house that applies only to a
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president who's been shot, who had a stroke, heart attack, iconic attack where he can't, in any way, distinguish reality like james who is the secretary of defense and jumped out of the window. that is the 20th amendment is about. rod rosenstein, harvard law school student, highly regarded, should know better than that in the president is entitled to have loyalty from his cabinet and subcommittee members sure, they're supposed to be objective when it comes to criminal justice but you don't have people around you who are trying to engineer a coup d'état. john: the 25th amendment used in gerald ford with president nixon and you're saying it be unconstitutional. >> absolutely. it's designed for when ronald reagan got shot, if he had gone into a coma, woodrow wilson had a stroke. his wife was governing and that's what the 25th amendment
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was about. go back and read the framing and in discussions about the 20 for the moment all about that. no one suggested that a disorganized, dysfunctional white house and remember who made it dysfunctional? rod rosenstein according to this report. he urged the president to fire mueller and he volunteered according to this report to write a report and then he said no, no, the reputation has been destroyed and my goal is to see me vindicated and that's in quotes, vindicated. what an obvious, and of interest. this man is so conflicted he is himself the subject of an investigation is one who wrote the memo authorizing the firing of james call me and he's conducting the investigation to determine whether the president of structured justice? no, it should not happen that way. john: what are the repercussions of use proven to do this? is a steel time? >> no, it's not jail time but recusal time. you go to the court and make a
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motion in front of a judge to recuse them showing a classic conflict of interest and get professor this and that from harvard and nyu and legal experts to write opinions saying this is a clear concept of interest and he can't be conducting an investigation while he's worried about himself being medicated and investigated and himself being a conspirator to instruct justice. the president obstructed justice and he did not do it but by firing kobe that rod rosenstein is a conspirator because he worked with him to fire james comey and he's more guilty than the president - why? the president has the order to go to power to fire james call me. rod rosenstein does not have that same article to power. john: speaking of more craziness in the white house in washington dc but not talking to the veracity of doctor ford's allegations but the way the structure is going forward she put forward that she wanted to
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happen in dc and she would have judge kavanaugh testify first, no cross-examination from lawyers and this seems highly unorthodox to. >> very unorthodox. during the inquisition that way it was done. in the inquisition they would bring someone and not tell them the charges, have him defend himself and only then say a half but you said this and someone said that. it's so un-american to have the accuser testify after the accused and i have an op-ed coming out where six rules that have to govern these hearings in the first rule is the accuser must go first and subject to cross the termination. then the accused has to go and be subject to cross-examination. he should have the right to call witnesses and she should have the right to call young mr. judge as a witness and there should be an fbi background check but in the end, she has to go first.
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she has to make her case and the burden of proof is on her. there's still a presumption of innocence in this country and she has to satisfy a standard before she can ruin and destroy a man's life who may well be innocent. he may well be good to blessing the evidence. no one should say he's clearly guilty and she's really guilty. that is gender bias. there's no such gene among women or men for lying or telling the truth. women lie, men lie, men tell the truth, women tell the truth but we have to hear the evidence. john: presumption seems to be happening from everybody. kirsten still ran saying they should not appear - this is what she had to say. >> there giving her an option. the option is show up monday or don't show up at all. i consider that to be pulling and consider that to be disregarding and consider that to be something set up for failure. they would like a he said, she said scenario. you know what happens in those scenarios? men are typically believed.
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>> she always plays the gender card. that's her identity politics but she has to go back to school and learn about civil liberties. that is when an accuser makes an accusation that accuser has the burden of proving the accusation. if she makes it in public she can be sued for defamation and it's not sexist to challenge someone's account if you been a victim of that account. it's due process and civil liberties. every civil libertarian should be on my side on this. where is the aclu? where are the civil libertarians. this was a liberal democrat who is being treated this way having been nominated by a liberal democrat president we see civil liberties up in arms. of course the accuser has to go first and due process and of course you have to have cross examination. with good for the goose is good for the gander. you can have one test. john: allen, world-class attorney and seems to me that this is not to be found out as a treat. he said, she said and everyone
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is drying sides based upon their political partisanship or gender partisanship. how do you find out the truth and can you find out the truth in what you think happens? >> i think we find out more truth than we now have. we the american public get to look both of them in the eye and get to make an assessment of their credibility. if possible they both could be tolerated. she may believe what happened and it may have happened to her and he may or he wasn't the one he doesn't remember or he didn't do it the way she remembers and there can be a lot of variatio variations. we'll learn a lot more after hearings but will we ever come to a complete certainty, no. then we have to say what you do with the charge which has not been completely proved or disproved that is 36 years old about a man who's lived a credible and very good life for 36 years but that's a moral judgment call but we ought to make that with full information, not based on whether we believe women or the men. that is such sexism to say we
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believe one gender more than another one do you believe judge kevin gets confirmed? >> i don't know. i think we have to see - [inaudible conversations] >> when you put witness in the criminal trial, they look the defendant in the eye and say, do i believe him or don't i believe him. that's why cavanaugh is going to be on trial and so we'll see. the american public has the right to make that judgment because this man will be on the supreme court for 30 years. john: big deal. >> but so is the rod rosenstein thing. we have to make sure he testified under oath and the american public have to see whether he is telling the truth when he said he did not try to invoke the 20th amendment and did not want to wire the present. that's a big deal to. john: honor to have you on. thank you for your time. take you to the markets. our own connell mcshane is on the floor of the stock exchange.
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>> records continue with the dow jones industrial average at eight of nine sessions for the upside today. strength in the economy as a theme of writing concerns about a trade war people might have. the s&p 500 did share weaknesses into the close today but in terms of where we found the strength there were a number of places and will highlight the high crime stocks. talking first about the american airlines. they became latest to raise baggage fees which consumers might not like it but it's good for the bottom line. delta, united and jetblue going in that direction. then there's the marijuana stocks, hot socks at the beginning so much attention whether the server not this week. the reason they have been this canadian company which is up 40% one day alone but the stocks have bounced all over the place. some investors say it's way too much and others say it's an
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example of something you can make money going forward and let you be the judge of that. big picture, another record for the dow in a week we look forward to the bed expected interest rates. john: thank you. march markets closing at another all-time high but a main street - popstar rick harrison is here to talk about. espn has become too political and we have his comments. first, was eternal getting a hold of internal e-mails showing workers discussing such functions to counter travel ban. our own hillary vaughn has the details, next. (guard) i've seen things i shouldn't have.
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employees. how to use the search function to counter his travel ban. hillary vaughn has the details. >> these e-mails show people in management level positions at google were floating ways they could change google search in favor of their own personal political opinions. google says they aren't taking action because no changes were made, even though these ideas being were in breach of company policy and people on the chain included meryl stone who is the head of consumer partnerships and climate wealth is a global public policy manager in this chain you had search product marketing manager at mckenzie thomas floating the idea that they should quote, actively counter short terms that include the word like mexico, hispanic, latino saying those words are prejudiced and islam are phobic. they were writing to employees saying this would require a full on sprint to make happen but this is the imperative
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information that we need. google products manager timing and in response to this saying we are absolutely in and everything you need an excellent initiative. these proposed changes never happened but on the same thread google's global public policy manager asking this question to the group - google gave the statement in response - google says these employees were spent falling and no one involved has been reprimanded and the committee says they're not taking action and no company memo went out explaining the brainstorming sessions like this are in breach of company policy because google says nothing happened and there's nothing to see here. john. john: thank you.
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remember recently, google execs lamenting president trump video. >> most people here are pretty upset and pretty sad because of the election. >> it was the first moment i felt like we would lose. it was a massive like kick in the gut that we would lose. it was really painful neck will be strong and vocal and not just from a press or pr standpoint but working hard behind the scenes to stand up for what is right. >> is there anything positive you see from the election? [laughter] that is a tough one right now. john: someone call a ambulance? good grief. grow up. google ending the day in the right. joining me from the media research center, dan.
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it's not a newsflash that silicon valley has a liberal bias is a possible that this is not affecting their work? >> well, it's theoretically possible but no one believes it or should. you've seen a litany of problems come out in the last week and we had the memo that came out were apparently top google executive and this a shared and other top executives we are working to get out a vote campaign that they have actively spun to try to help billy clinton. you couple that with the fact that google did not send anyone to specify the congressional hearing recently and yeah, there's a lot of reason to be concerned. you have the new movie, the creepy line, coming out and that's one reason. john: don't people refer the political candidate and i understand google's bias may be liberal and jack dorsey admitted his company's bias was legal but
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he said it did not affect how they handle the work or do you think it's a serious issue that deserves looking into, say from the government? >> well, absolutely. we need the government to look into this. google is a massive corporation and doesn't mean the regulation is the answer but who can look into it - it's a black box with these algorithms in the change them every year so how are we supposed to know what happening? john: due to some to look into anything? >> are the only ones we can trust - that's the problem. i still remember the reagan line that i'm the government and i'm here to help you that's a scary bit but when you think like this and people coming from and they seem to be trying to come and work in concert to fix election and we know they have the power to do it if they decide to be one dan, thank you. were getting more information from the new york times story accusing rod a sign of the
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goodly taping the resident president. ceo admitting that espn is becoming too political. comments after this. all money managers might seem the same, but some give their clients cookie cutter portfolios. fisher investments tailors portfolios to your goals and needs. some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions 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.
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john: pernicious negative stereotypes of marginalized people that offend even some among them should be changed. it's not that hard. colin cabinet also did not go looking for a protest but it came to him. he was asked to stand for the national anthem. you do not have to stand for the national anthem and even if it was a role you did, is that colin cabinet injecting politics into the nfl? no, that the nfl and interjecting politics by playing the national anthem and putting pressure on you to stand for it in the first place.
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>> is a thoughtless statement dressed up as a thoughtful statement. it holds into contempt the intelligence of the people who hear it or a stupid thing to s say. respect the office so that converts respect to the occupant. is that what you're saying? if so, that's a stupid comment. john: ceo admitting that espn is becoming too political, - espn president felt the pendulum had swung too far from the field and i happen to believe he was right. they been at odds and the president demanding an apology from eiger earlier this year from negative news. joining me now our mortgage panel and cofounder and editor jonas. i want to start with you that i love max and i think is a great
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reporter and i love watching the show and i'm not sure politics should be involved and i think it sounds like bob iger agrees that, what are your thoughts and politics and espn? >> i tell you what, it's very left leaning and i think politics has become involved but it's like our nike discussion yesterday. if they had not lost 30 million subscribers over the last six years but had gained 18 million you would hear none of this, none of the programming would change. i think, quite honestly, they're addressing a symptom and not the cause and the reason is because i don't think it's been political or not political but because of cord cutting. to a portion of those 30 million left because of too political? maybe but at the end of the day espn has a monopoly out there. you want to watch golf or the football or baseball but you got to tune in so maybe it's not addressing the main reason people are leaving.
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john: jonas, it's a fantastic and hit 1 million scrubbers to the streaming service launched in april and are they making up for the court orders with this? >> as you look at the growth it's one of the most successful apps but it's $8 to watch for the cable companies to buy it so they get people to switch to a 5-dollar a month after it might not be good for the bottom line. it's something they had no choice in doing because at the end of the day it's a declining model, slow and steady but declining although they've charged so much to counter so when you look at the numbers they are going numbers because they're charging more for every user. they need to appeal to different audiences and someone politics and some don't political pundits are cheaper than athletes. it's expensive to buy these sport contracts to put on shows and that raises the cost into a dwindling so they're in a tough situation to find the balance.
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john: let's go back to you, gary. jonah said to the self proclaimed eric clapton a business television but i don't know what that means but i thought - [laughter] >> well, i had mentioned the other day that when the three of us were getting together it was like a cream reunion, i was - i was the slow hand of the group and it was slightly out of context. john: let's ask for their modesty, iger says there will be a "star wars" slow down. they went for the whale one too many times. black panther is a billion-dollar franchise and an incredible story and their best in the world but had they just gone too far and that horse too long with "star wars"? >> i think they did.
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they were about so many movies in such a short timeframe the last one, i think it was the last one, solow, was a bus. they cannot afford to screw this up because remember it's a two-pronged strategy. one, yet the movies but to, here in florida if you been to orlando and disney world there's a whole new theme park going to be opening up dedicated to "star wars". disney does a great job of tying everything together and they cannot afford to blow this. i think iger recognizes this and they will not screw this up. john: they might - [inaudible conversations] larry, moe and curly sometimes. thank you. the browns winning for the first time since 2016. the philly godfather is here on how you could have made money. first, getting more information in the new york times accusing rod listing of wanting to take the president and invoke the 25th amendment. details next. stole the lockbox from the wells fargo stagecoach,
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but allstate helps you. with drivewise. feedback that helps you drive safer. and that can lower your cost now that you know the truth... are you in good hands? john: new reports that deputy attorney rod rosenstein wore a wire to record conversations with president trump trying to remove the president from office. rosenstein denies this purportedly memos written by andrew mccabe from the story. edward lawrence jointly live in dc with the latest. >> this was a bombshell two hours ago or so. they talked about a meeting that happened in june 2017 is what is
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this is referring to. you mentioned that rod rosenstein use the 20th amendment to the president from office also wearing a wire. anonymous source of the room told foxnews quote, said this, i remember this meeting and remember the wire comment and the statement was sarcastic and never discussed with any intention of recording the conversation with the present. the new york times relied on anonymous sources were briefed on the meeting and memos the former deputy director andrew mccabe wrote during that period an attorney for mugabe said he wrote those memos in order to remember important conversations and not to say they turn it over to the special counsel. lisa page, former fbi attorney who was mccabe's government at the time was also in the meeting and also documented it in memos and in her memos and she writes about the 20th amendment but is not talk about adding a wire
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to tape the president. for his part, rod rosenstein, released a statement saying quote, - as we no, the relationship between rosenstein and the president has been tenuous. they're floating the idea about firing rosenstein and jeff sessions. late friday afternoon story is very interesting what happened in washington cutting discussion at the moment. john: thank you, edward. joining me is my political power panel. washington times contributing editor eric. kurt, i would ask you because alan dershowitz was up in arms about this. are you? >> i don't buy it. i don't buy it because i don't trust the new york times. the characterization is some serious attempt to bug the president like a cosa nostra
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investigation and invoke the 20th amendment it sounds ridiculous and silly. i don't like the media generally because the way they have behaved. in this case even though it supports my general feeling that rod rosenstein should be fired, i just don't buy. plenty of reasons to fire the sky. john: eric, should rod rosenstein, i keep saying around, should he be fired? >> well, again, as kurt mentioned we don't know if it's true. we have no idea. if it is true, it certainly suggests this is a man that is not emotionally stable during times of pressure and stress and that would react in a way that is lacking in the conduct you have in that position. and that he would expose himself in front of people with those
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comments. it seems inconsistent with the way he is presented his image today himself but we don't know whether it's true or not. if it's true, it's a serious problem because you're talking about someone who clearly had an agenda to put a stake through the heart of the president of the united states and set him up in a judicial way to essentially take them out. that's highly unusual. were talking about the president of the united states, were not talking about a mafia boss. john: eric and kurt, thank you very much. more breaking news. markets closing today at another all-time high but is main street america is feeling the wealth? the browns winning for the first time since 2016. [inaudible] knows how you could have the money and that is next. so a tree falls on your brand new car and totals it.
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♪ breathe better. sleep better. breathe right. john: brown's win. they beat the new york jets 21-17 and almost two years. finally, they unlocked their but light victory beers for been celebrating as if they won the super bowl. ♪ we are the champions ♪. john: cleveland police tweeting we won, oh eight, the free beer thing. go browns. sports betting expert also known as the philly god post is here
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with me now and steve, you have a long history of predicting stuff. last year you were 14-two in the polls and 17-three in the nfl playoffs and you called 4021 long shot with the eagles winning the super bowl and called on the president winning in the last two matchups of the world series before the series started and cut off from offshore bets and cut off from [inaudible] because you one too much. did you bet on cleveland last night? >> yeah, we got lucky with the full game wager. we also put them in the first half with loft and we were lucky baker mayfield came to the game and change the dynamic and through over 220 yards. he outscored the jets 21-three and came full game. john: you been doing this for 30 plus years and cut off from offshore books and limited and limited on how much you can bet
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so why do you win so much? >> i do extensive research. everyone looks at the expense metrics but we look for more qualitative acts in a productive manner when we look at the game and information that may not be factored in the line that the biggest books do not have. we manager the injury report and process information and put it together. john: when you talk about the ball you talk about staff but with baseball you talk about weather. what's most important thing look at what you're looking at a ballgame? the mac matchups, injuries are big and a football game. if a star quarterback is out back in about seven points or ten points and certain key players in the centers and middle linebackers on defense and guys that run the offense and defense is huge and footba football. you're looking for efficiency numbers and a team that keep outperforming the market to put a small amount of money on them because bookmakers cannot put
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their finger on how good the team actually is so teams that outperform the market get to the playoffs and get to the super bowl. john: your huge boxing fan and trained fighters in your in the next creed will be coming up. galatians on that. i grew up loving mohammed ali and not this generations mohammed ali appears to be connor mcgregor. he's fighting a beast on octobe. he's not had a fault in two years so can you pull off this miracle? >> [inaudible] he was the originator of the ufc lines. we talked about the fight and the legendary striker in connor mcgregor and his speed and agility and reach will be a major problem and then if he gets mcgregor on the ground, mcgregor might not get up. their styles are polar opposite. we look at the spread the them high probability is that habib will win. but to me, anytime a bookmaker
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is begging you to take aside you have to be weary and pause and reflect and handicap the sport. they know last time mcgregor fought mayweather and everyone bet on mcgregor. this time were offering you plus 30, plus 130 on mcgregor, a guy who they do not know but undefeated and in tip top shape and mcgregor has a pot in over two years but made all that money, $100 million and now spending it, and now has to get back in shape to fight this kid. john: i saw you talking to the future of sports betting and you are sitting to talking to danny, what are you talking about when you look at the future of sports betting? howlett change live sports? >> the landscape will be different in five-seven years. some estimates that maybe 25 states will have some form of legal sports betting but i think it will be more. five-seven years ago walked into a stadium and there will be a sports book in-house next to the concession stand and go up
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there, place a wager when the game starts there will be mobile apps you can bet in life wager in any propositional but you want. it will be amazing. john: is alabama the best college football? connect very well could be. their offense is unbelievable and [inaudible] i don't like because i like wisconsin but they may catch them in the end. specially when they play the better defense. john: if the philly godfather, to learn more, go to billy godfather .com where you chronicle everything thing. your track record has continued. steve, thank you. markets closing today at another all-time high. what are mean streets of millions feeling about? pawn stars is here to talkem abt it next.
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some only call when they have something to sell. fisher calls regularly so you stay informed. and while some advisors are happy to earn commissions 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.
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john: new unemployment trends at a 49 year low. you know what that means? simple. that means people are working. they are working. you know this, you been hearing analogy and now it's been better. african-american on employment has recently achieved the lowest rates ever recorded. [cheering and applause] john: dow closing today at another all-time high making it the 101st close since election date. job rates are at a low. hiring is also rebounding. employers added $201,00 $201,00n august. 23000 construction jobs added. joining me now is pawn * host, rick harrison. it's a treat to have you. i'm a big fan of your story and i love this pawn where you
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dropped out of high school and your true american story. what i see, a good guy. what are you seen on main street? does this affect coming from the market doesn't have an effect on main street? >> i almost believe main street has an effect on the market. simple economics. from 250 years ago read abbott smith. less taxes, less government, businesses will do better. look, we have apple bringing money in from overseas and corporations bringing money from overseas and they have to spend it somewhere. either they buy back stocks which puts money into the market which puts money in people hands or they invested in capital investment in this country and that is what is happening. jobs are created and good jobs, manufacturing jobs and like i've
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been telling for a while there's no such thing as low-tech manufacturing even if you have a lock company, simple padlocks, they'll still be made by an zillion dollar robots. that's a high-tech job and are coming back. john: yours door returns with a quote - you had such a wonderful relationship that is told on camera about her father and i'm worried for your loss but told me about the tribute show coming up. >> is about my father. but his life and about everything in the show over the years and he was an amazing guy. he joined the navy in 1958 thomas got $75 a month we started the navy. he did career military, 20 years in the navy and started and came to vegas and started the pawn shop together. i had this relationship with my father the most people don't have. most people graduate high school and go off to college or get a
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job and about in their lucky if they get to see their dad every couple of weeks or talk to them on the phone that often but i got to work with my dad five days a week for almost 40 years. john: cool story. another cool story i've heard you tell is about how you got your pawn shop license you tried to get one when you were a young man and no money or backing in vegas will not let you have it until you find this esoteric old law. it's a wonderful story. >> yeah, i was a naïve 22 -year-old and went down to the city business license is that i want a pawn license. they said no and i asked why and they showed me this law from 1955 that the good old boys got together and when the city population got to 200,000 they issued a license. when they made this law, 25000 people live in vegas and i quickly found out that to get a pawn license in vegas here to wait for it, to stale and it was
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like a million dollars. i realized population has to be close to 280,000 so i started calling once every two weeks and in april they said we think it's a quarter of a million. as a naïve 23 old i went to the business license and said it's cordial of a million so i want my life but they told me know but i got a lawyer and six month later the judge said he was the first one there, give it to th them. john: and now you're a tv start with your own pawn shop and a host of other businesses. you been successful. >> yeah, i've been an entrepreneur my whole life. i've been in construction and had tons of different business businesses. yeah, everything from tile saws to building shopping centers two john: rick, we have a hard close enough. thank you for your time. pressure to meet you. be right back.
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maria bartiromo's "wall street" here on the fox business network. charles payne is here with making money. charles: an incredible day on wall street. there is a lot more to this rally. wait until you hear some of the things powering this. we begin with a bombshell. deputy attorney general rod rosenstein slamming a report from the "new york times" that says he discussed wearing a wire to record conversations with donald trump and recruit cabinet members to vote the 25th amendment to remove president trump from office. rod rosenstein said
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