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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  February 17, 2020 12:00pm-2:00pm EST

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on a well-deserved vacation. lauren: rub it in why don't you. i know where that person is going. charles: where? lauren: i can't say. charles: do they serve the vegan 13-dollar milkshakes? neil cavuto, over to you. neil: but they serve alcohol. markets are closed. we're open for business. something that could affect markets gripping much of the world. coronavirus you know the drill. for latest on that, that could influence trading tomorrow, get to jonathan serrie in @atlanta. reporter: two flights that is righterred by the u.s. state department came back to the u.s. they were carrying 300 americans evacuated from the diamond princess that cruise ship under quarantine at a japanese port. during the evacuation process from the ship to the airport in japan u.s. officials received
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notice that positive test results came back for 14 of the passengers. u.s. officials made the decision to allow the infected passengers to return to the u.s. but move them to a special containment area on the evacuation aircraft to keep them separated from the other passengers. the first plane landed at travoise air force base in california. the second at lackland air force base in texas. passengers that test positive and show symptoms will be evaluated and isolated at nearby hospitals. they will remain on the u.s. military bases for a 14-day federal quarantine which began when they boarded plane, regardless how much time they spent on the shape in japan. passengers on other cruise ship that were allowed to desi am bark in cambodia after being turned away from multiple asian ports are undergoing additional health cleaning after 83-year-old american woman tested positive for the covid-19
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virus after leaving the ship going to asia. they caution against drastic action. >> outside hebei this epidemic is affecting a very, tiny, tiny proportion of people. if we're going to disrupt every cruise ship in the world on the off chance there might be potential contact a potential passenger where do we stop? reporter: chough officials say there has been decline in new cases reported but it is still too early to tell whether it is a trend. neil. neil: thank you my friend very, very much. jonathan serrie in atlanta. to put this into perspective companies are inching back into manufacturing waters in china. they include volkswagen and airbus and toyota reopening shuttered plants in the region. not every plant in the region but some of them. it is issues like that have the
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asia markets moving a little bit forward today. it was choppy but a lot of them are surprisingly holding their own of late and some interpret that and the fact we shad a slowdown of number of new cases reported maybe the calm coming. let's get a view on this from real clear markets editor john tamney, and nicole lanho, bank rate chief financial analyst greg mcbride. greg, what do you make of that? it is anecdotal and pieces what we learn about people in that neck of the woods they're dipping their toes back in that woods? what do you make of it? >> so much of the supply chain, neil is rooted in china. one thing to shut it down for a short period of time, but the longer that stretches on you have to worry about disruptions to the supply chain and the the flow of products to other
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countries, countries largely unaffected. as time goes on you're seeing from other companies how does this affect us downstream? neil: nicole, a lot of information is based on what china is reporting and given the fact it doesn't score high in the trust department with the economic data with commitments to republican u.s. presidents or democrat u.s. presidents what we get is what we learn from them. do you trust what you're getting from them? >> it is good to be with you, neil and these are difficult issues. as we work with our clients at the institute trying to diversify their global supply chains this issue really looms large. it is another reminder that you can't have concentration of inputs that you need for your manufacturing process in one country. so we really urge our clients to continue to diversify as we saw with the tariffs. u.s.-china tariffs are still in
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place to some extent. you really need to diversify so these things come and they're inevitable, in some form or fashion, they will affect your business and you need to be prepared. neil: just wonderings, john, you read, at least i do, the english version of chinese state-owned press, and the gist you get from reading the china post and some others i don't know if this is coming, it must be coming from leadership, this is putting them in a corner here. they might not be a to make good on promises they made because of this. is that a legitimate excuse or is it not? >> oh i think it is a legitimate excuse but i think it is somewhat irrelevant. it is not that governments try always to trick us as their access to information isn't usually as good as the market. the fact u.s. companies are starting to get moving again, starting to re-engage with the suppliers over there is a positive signal maybe markets
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are telling us something governments never could. what happened in china is not as big of a long-term threat as we think. i think this is a positive story long term. a reminder of everyone the only closed economy is the world economy. if china gets sick so does the u.s. and vice versa. so let's start engaging with each other rather than pretending we're enemies economically. neil: greg, one of the interesting developments one of the ways to play off a rampant virus, prompting a lot of people to buy our debt, driving interest rates down, bond prices up. it is fostering that view we're enjoying a flight to quality when the world is nervous. do you expect that to continue? >> as long as there is uncertainty, neil, we're going to be the beneficiaries of that. there is $14 trillion of negative yielding debt in the world right now and you look what you get on u.s. treasurys which we think of, wow!, these
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are near record lows. it is almost high yield by comparison. getting 1.6% on a 10-year treasury, compare that with the negative yields you would get in germany, france or japan. britain is below 100 basis points. even greece below 1%. greece, believe it or not, below 1%. our debt is very attractive. as long as uncertainty is in the mix and the u.s. economy is continuing to farewell on a relative basis i do think it will be attract i have. neil: greg, glad you left my italy out for the time-being. maybe for another show. nicole, looking at this, we offered to help the chinese anyway we can through cdc officials, national institute of health officials, you name it and the chinese have been reluctant. there will be a team going later this week toward the end of the week but we don't know where they will be allowed to go. that kind of stuff gets me a
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little bit antsy. about you? >> i think so. we have a global economy. this issue is a global issue. i hope the chinese will accept the help more people around the world are offering to solve this crisis. i think it is very important as we talk about global supply chains, the interconnecttiveness of our economy, we need to stop this virus because it affects us all. neil: looking at it all, john, when trading resumes tomorrow you and i discussed this, we all have varying degrees how we trade off china. the better the prospects for a trade deal, the mark -- markets would run hupp ahead of the trade deal we would sign, the worst of a selloff. it is playing tit-for-tat on the virus news. is that the way it going to be until this is resolved? >> it is going to be, but i think at this point the coronavirus is priced and the market view this won't have any major long term impact on the
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ability of producers around the world to produce alongside each other to exchange with each other that is a beautiful thing. important for the u.s. let's never forget apple sells 1/5 of its iphones in china, boeing a quarter of its planes, mcdonald's second largest market is china, so that of nike. second largest box office for u.s. producers. thank goodness this is going to be contained and because it is going to be contained the u.s. can continue to progress. neil: we hope so. thank you guys very much. thanks for coming in on presidents' day no less. appreciate it. could it happen again, the donald trump wins the electoral vote, loses the popular vote, with a new wrinkle. he wins the electoral vote by even bigger margin. loses the popular vote by a an even bigger margin? after this. ♪. cologuard: colon cancer screening
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♪. neil: let me about the convention, what happens if your husband arrives with the most delegates but not 1991 delegates and he doesn't win on the first ballot? that's where the super delegates come into play and it is assumed they will not be keen on your husband. then what. >> well, let's get there first. people say he is not electable. he won iowa, he won new hampshire. he is leading in nevada. he is leading in california. all the polls, he is leading in texas. all the polls show he is electable. neil: all right, you can't blame jane sanders smarting a little bit at so-called unelectable comments she is hearing from republicans democrats, particularly michael bloomberg. with michael bloomberg reportedly considering hillary
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clinton as a potential running mate, what does that do to the quest for new york, california delegates could be a further pain in the neck for bernie sanders and his quest for those? 1991 delegates you need to secure the party's nomination. "the hill" correspondent reed wilson. what do you think, the first notion he might get to the convention, that is bernie sanders, with the most delegates which often happens with the eventual nominee, barack obama, all the way back to john kennedy but you don't necessarily have the majority but no way in heck, this is coming from jane sanders who fears it, would her husband be rewarded like those guys have in the past what do you make of that? >> yeah. the superdelegates are made up of party leaders and democratic national committee members. they tend toby more established. they tend to be older. they've been involved in party politics for many years and they're holdovers from the clinton years or the obama years and they're probably not
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predisposed to backing bernie sanders. remember hillary clinton got a majority of the superdelegates back in the 2016 convention. she had enough pledged majority to win no matter what but she got the super delegates as well. neil: sorry to jump on you there, would she get them again as potential running mate for michael bloomberg, why he is toying with the idea putting her on his ticket? >> no, i should offer to eat a bug on live tv or something if she would get the nomination but i'm backing off on that. i find it highly unlikely hillary clinton would be a vice-presidential nominee. first of all democrats tend to win when they pick somebody new and different. think barack obama, bill clinton, jimmy carter, outsiders who represented some kind of a generational change. when they pick the safe candidate, what they tried before, al gore, john kerry, hillary clinton, they tend to lose the general election. neil: but you would have mike
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bloomberg in that role of the more safe candidate or outside the box candidate. i'm not saying he is the guy. by trying to assure the party, i have one of your standard-bearers teaming up with me, would that put him in better stead what do you think? >> i don't think it would. neil: okay. >> also let's not forget it is unconstitutional too. you can't have two candidates -- neil: the other idea, he might go to one of his homes, declare residency in florida or colorado is the other state. >> dick cheney registered in wyoming so george bush could pick him that happened before. neil: along the way, how likely is the whole thing? >> not likely at all. i just don't think bloomberg would pick somebody like hillary clinton. somebody who polarizing in her own right. if bloomberg will be a unity candidate bring america together, why pick somebody that 60 million people voted against. neil: switch to other polls say history could repeat itself that
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we could have another case where one candidate wins the electoral vote, another wins the popular vote, in this case, donald trump repeating his electoral vote win, picking up a bigger electoral vote majority but smaller popular vote percentage he had before? the rules are it is the electoral vote decides it unless the country does a 180 on this, changes its mind. i get that. what do you they have the likelihood of that? >> it is possible. it happened twice in the last four presidential contests. neil: right. >> last five, rather. 2016 and 2,000 it happened before and could happen again. neil: doesn't usually repeat back-to-back epelections. >> no. it never has in american history. what we're looking at the general election a wider battlefield than we've seen in a lot of recent elections. democratic states like minnesota and new hampshire are potentially in play. you have republican states like arizona and georgia and north carolina and texas possibly in play.
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so both parties will be playing on a much wider battlefield. ultimately i think that the electoral college winner will be the same as the popular vote winner. neil: we'll see. the math tend to favor that to your point it hasn't always worked out that way. my friend, appreciate it. >> thanks a lot, neil. neil: the woman behind recline-gate, calling it recline-gate. she is speaking out and presses charges. >> at which point he started full-on punching my seat to where i was falling forward, flying forward. invested at a great rate. that's why fidelity leads the industry in value while our competition continues to talk. ♪ talk, talk while our competition continues to talk. there's a company that's talked than me: jd power.people 448,134 to be exact.
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you travel in the country. so go ahead, spend winter somewhere warm. if you're turning 65 soon or over 65 and planning to retire, find out more about the plans that live up to their name. thumbs up to that! remember, the time to prepare is before you go on medicare! don't wait. get started today. call unitedhealthcare and ask for your free decision guide. learn more about aarp medicare supplement plan options and rates to fit your needs oh, and happy birthday... or retirement... in advance. neil: all right. remember this. you want to recline your seat you might get sued. an american airlines passenger whose video shows a man punching her reclined seat is looking to take some action. fox news correspondent matt finn has the latest details this is getting bigger, matt?
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reporter: it is, neil. wendy williams, the woman in the viral video was returning from a teachers conference on a flight from new orb liens to charlotte. reclined the seat. he asked her to put the seat back up while he was eating. she agreed. about ten minutes and reclined her seat. she says the passenger behind her started violently punching her seat. williams started videoing the man. she insists the flight attendant did not help her and asked her to delete the video. >> i'm going to cult with my attorney about exactly how to proceed. i'm not sure. i think that guy, the, guy definitely needs to be prosecuted. i feel like it is kind of david and goliath story with american airlines because they're this big company. i'm just a teacher. reporter: american airlines writes in a statement, we are aware of a customer dispute that transpired on american eagle
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flight 4392, operated by republic airways on january 31st. the safety and comfort of our customers around team members is our top priority and our team is looking into the issue. this morninger american airlines tells fox business this might have started over a drink spilled accidentally. the male passenger became more agitated by williams recording him. he actually might have stopped hitting her seat if she stopped the video. american air talked to williams before this video went viral and claims she was already seeking compensation. this was an american eagle flight operated by republic air. republic air tells fox business it is looking into the situation. this man so far has not been publicly identified but, wendy williams is asking for him to come out of the woodwork. neil? neil: we're trying to track him down ourselves. matt, thank you very, very much. meanwhile, it is presidents' day. a lot of car dealerships push incentives for the big day. i always wonder about past presidents if they think about that in my honor. they will have car sales. anyway, they are. lots of them.
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are they affecting us? grady trimble has the latest on that. hey, grady. reporter: we're at a toyota dealership. don't know what kind of car washington drove but probably wasn't a toyota. cars are more expensive than ever. dealers offer more incentives than ever. take a look why they might be doing that. sales have been down the past five years. sales are off 2 1/2%. the biggest sales months, starting with december and then the summer months, february, doesn't even crack the top five. one of the reasons for that is, probably because people don't want to be outside in the wintertime but they are still food deals here at this toyota dealership and others. "consumer reports" says a chevy deal can get up to 24% off of that. toyota, avalon and corolla made the difference. difference between people that buy a car this time of year and other time of year, you don't get tire kickers, people looking to shop around. if they come in february, they
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have their mind set on something. listen. >> we need to sell cars. february is very tough month here in, car industry. so it is a grind for us here you know what i mean? but once customers come in they need to buy a car. they need a car. reporter: another car that made a list of top cars to get in february, ram 1500. back here at the toyota dealership they say you don't necessarily need to make a purchase on presidents' day to get the deal. they have the sales going on all month. if you happen to have the day off, enjoy it, watch lincoln or whatever people do on presidents' day, then come in later in the month. neil: i wonder if lincoln would have driven a lincoln continental? we'll never know. we'll never know. thank you, my friend. good job. japan, that economy shrinking faster than what we're seeing in china, how could that be? what if i told you it might have started with a hike in the sales tax? stay with us.
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neil: it is a quick and easy way to raise revenues, just hike taxes sales taxes the money should come in, right?
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not in japan. a hike in the sales tax did little to help the economy. just the opposite. kristina partsinevelos. reporter: hey, neil, economists warning that japan is potentially heading for recession. gross domestic product measures total of goods and services produced in a country came out much lower than expected with a 6.3% annual decline. this is the world's their largest economy but there are two major factors that hurt the final three months of 2019. firstly, japan increased its sales tax to 10%. it used to be 8%. you can see that on the screen on wide array of goods and services. the country launched a massive stimulus pack technology cushion the impact of the tax hike but data suggests the measures did not work. secondly the country is recovering from the aftermath of a typhoon that hit last fall. unfortunately it could get worse as the spread of the coronavirus threatens to hurt chances of a
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recovery in the first quarter of 2020. the country has the most confirmed cases outside of china with more than 400. so if japan's economy shrinks again, neil, in the first quarter of 2020, the country will officially fall into recession which we know is defined as two consecutive quarters of contraction. so right now, japanese airlines have suspended flights as demand plummets and the japan association of travel agents has at least 400,000 travelers from china are expected to cancel their trips through march. so the impact unfortunately has begun, neil. neil: here we go. thank you very, very much, kristina. the trump administration weighing a new move to limit china's access to chip technology. edward lawrence has the details from the white house. hey, edward, what's up here? reporter: neil, the admin administration looking to restrict equipment that has microchips that could be sent to china. "the wall street journal" says this could come down to a trade
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restriction. companies would have to have a special license to use the equipment and sell it to huawei and other chinese companies. the commerce department spokesman says a grand jury indictments of huawei suggests caution of licensing applications. they have major concerns about huawei. this is part of the push from the administration to stop china from stealing vital technology and using it for military purposes. we first reported last summer the commerce department coming up with new rules to limit sensitive technology going to china. now the other big story, the white house is following now, growing call for attorney general william barr to resign. a letter with 1100 former doj employees and others signed sent to barr saying he and president trump interfered with a proper prosecution. for his part barr says in the case against roger stone he thought the sentence recommendation was excessive. democrats jumped on this as the next investigation that must happen.
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republican senator martha mcsally says, can't we all just get along? >> we need to work together to lower the cost of prescription drugs. president trump called on us us at the state of the union address to put legislation on his desk. there is bipartisan bill. i cosponsored. chuck grassley is leading it. i have other initiatives to people on this topic. this is what matters to people in arizona. reporter: fox news confirmed interim u.s. attorney charged with the roger stone case believed the sentence recommendation was too stiff himself. the other attorneys threatened to resign. when the filing was made, career doj officials, not a political appointee wrote to rescind that, fix it, let the judge decide what the sentence should be there. there are two sides to every story, neil. we're starting to get some of that other side. back to you. neil: thank you, my friend, very, very much. not being said whether whether
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they were fixing jail times at the justice department because they didn't like the suggested jail times being suggested for roger stone but hardly anyone is saying a certain jury foreperson a woman we're talking about here, who had a long history of anti-trump diatribes and even nasty comments about mr. stone himself. former justice department official james trusty on all of that. when i started reading about this juror 1261, tamika heart, she had a long history of not being a big fan of the president and saying some stuff that even popped up on social media that illustrated the point. how did that go unnoticed? >> hard to know at this point. the jury selection process is not, the transcript of it is not open to the public at this point but the question comes down to what questions the judge asked had to do with bias and whether or not this person was forthcoming. then the next layer of question
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or maybe a more fundamental question, if you're representing mr. stone, you heard any of this information and that is an open question, why would you let her on? that should be one of the strikes you want to use. a lot of jurors can say things about politics but if they answer a bottom line they can put that aside, be fair, to assess the evidence they will not be judged by the judge for cause but the parties have a number of strikes to use to get rid of somebody like that. neil: they never did. now the question becomes whether you throw out the case or drop it from scratch or drop it whatever. forget about the recommended jail times, the source of the controversy, and get back to the core of the case whether it should be thrown out? >> there is a status conference with the judge. to at least ask the parties what they're thinking when it comes to the juror situation. it is a little bit up hill. that is the surprise, if they didn't strike the juror and knew a lot of her information it comes back on the defense attorneys they will not have a
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whole lot to play with. if the juror disobeyed instructions, lied to get on the jury or literally disobeyed instructions to get off social media, that is different kettle of fish, that could lead to potential of a new trial. there is lot of issues, how strong the case was and it was pretty strong for any juror to consider. neil: we were told she briefed both sides of her democratic party background. the fact she was a memphis city teachers union president and that both sides were okay when she disclosed that, when she promised she could have balanced view of things. when she was asked her political history and whether it would prevent her from being fair, she reportedly, this is in the hill, reportedly assured her it would not. what happens in that case? >> you know, look, there is, this is kind of an ongoing bigger problem which is celebrity juror situation. you have a lot of jurors, potential jurors that will say an awful lot of things or hide a
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lot of things because they want to be a part of some big high-profile case. they want to make a statement. they want to go on tv. whatever the motivations. that is note good for the system. xi may have sugarcoated the extent of bias where she could get into the position, quote, do justice. that is a problem not limited to this particular case but certainly some the judge might take briefs on and decide to open it back up. neil: these were not just somewhat critical comments. she likened trump and her supporters to white sue very much sift racists -- supremacist racists and questioned the president's intelligence and their backers. you have crossed the line from a free political point of view, a agenda you would not be best serving on the jury, let alone in a foreperson role, right? >> i don't think anybody in their right mind would say she sounds like impartial good juror for the trial. i mean that from either
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perspective. it is not good from the prosecution perspective broughting that behavior. overturning the verdict in sacred light by the court they have to show she was fundamentally dishonest. it affected the deliberations in some way or she violated some rules and that could bring her into the court's cross-hairs. she could have potential contempt if she disobeyed instructions from judge berman jackson. neil: the allegations could put him in prison for nine years. we understand you need a unanimous jury read to pursue what they did. what do they do if they want to hold a trial again? >> well, look, if it is a nullity, that is a nullity. they start from scratch to start the case over again. you have the oversight with the u.s. attorney looking at this case independently. i think thinks a lot of room for
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mischief here in terms whether we see a sentencing this week, what will happen at the status conference tomorrow. the prosecutors, are new prosecutors, could jump in to litigate this case. for all of the smoke and whistles not a particularly complicated case. so they could try it again but i don't think you will see them elevate their endgame talking about seven or eight or nine years again. i think that ship basically sailed with the revised memo. neil: thank you very much. james trusty. former justice department official. it is weird and getting weirder. we'll keep you posted. what is also weird that the daytona 500 was called 20 laps on account of rain. they will retry at 4:00 p.m. eastern time. president made history by showing up at a nascar event and even featuring around the track performance by the beast himself, the presidential motorcade. more after this. ♪. when we started our business
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neil: there is a backstory to this famous video of astronaut kristina cook returning home and very delighted dog happy to see her after her boss was in space for the better part of almost a year. apparently the dog was trying to convey, hey, we get fbn now! now you know the rest of the story. somewhere paul harvey is happy i said that anyway, welcome back, everyone. wouldn't that be something if that were true? oh, now we know. president trump, the first u.s. president to take a lap in the beast at the daytona 500. the race is set to resume later today, i think because of the rain yesterday could only do 20
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laps. they hope to finish it today at 4:00 p.m. eastern time. a little more than two hours, actually almost three hours from now. rick reichmuth is there in daytona with the latest. hey, rick. reporter: neil, so much excitement yesterday with the president visiting here, coming to the event. the flyover in air force one got everybody excited. laps around the track in front of the drivers. there was a rain delay. they eventually got things going. then they had a second bigger delay. tell you what, people were excited. we got to talk to a number of people how they felt having the president here. take a listen what they had to say? >> it was exhilarating to have him so close. i love trump. he is awesome. he is like my hero. it was incredible to have him so close. >> i love it. i think it is great he is out here. reporter: what could you tell about the energy in the crowd when the president was announced and introduced? >> phenomenal. it started when air force one
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flew by and everybody saw the jet. it started. the crowd energy picked up. i got chills. reporter: what did you think about having the president here? >> it was awesome. >> it was magnificent. my god, what a great jet. it was awesome. everybody sat up. we all cheered. this is huge. huge. i never seen a president come to nascar in all the years we've been watching this is awesome. reporter: times of excitement and then the rain happened. now the rain today, look at this, neil, came out for you. this is the spotter's platform. this is where all the spotters are watching, communicating to the drivers. this is the best seat in the entire track here. take a look what you can see all the way down here. we have 101,000 seats right here for fans. the famous grass right there. we have pit row. then the infield where the drivers stay and where people come to camp for a week getting
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ready for the race. some of them hopefully being able to stay, to take advantage and see this race today. neil? neil: the weather looks certainly better than yesterday. they will get this done, right? >> they should get it done. there will be showers in the area this afternoon but doesn't look like as much rain that went yesterday. so it should get done today. neil: got you, my friend. thank you very much. rick reichmuth in the middle of all of that. meanwhile the winner of this rest could handily afford a 18-dollar vegan milkshake. a burger joint is betting on that. jackie deangelis with more. $18? reporter: you saw the size of that thing. it is gigantic. i tried it. this is quite tasty. this is about black tap saying we're inclusive. we are a burger place. we have vegan burgers and a vegan shake. you can have the entire
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experience. this is part of a bigger trend. $4 billion the plant-based foods market. it is expected to grow to 26 billion by 2026. that is not a lot of time. people ask is the trend here to say sore is this here today gone tomorrow type of things? stocks are holding on to pretty substantial gains like beyond meat. this is interesting. i tasted it. no dairy or butter or milk. it was vegan based shake. the whipped cream was made from rice. the cake had apple sauce in it. it was pretty delicious if you ask me. neil: i am told you have a package to spell it out? reporter: yes. neil: let's take a look at that. reporter: consumer tastes are changing. the old days of meat and potatoes might be over. planned-based meat, vegan options is peopling business. black tap is the latest to tap into the trend. you've seen the shakes on social media. they are not just food. they are art. this is the black and white cake
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shake. it starts with a chocolate vegan shake. it has vegan vanilla frosting. the cake has apple sauced base. you have rice whipped cream to garnish on top. this shake sells for 1dollars and it is a crowd pleaser. according to black tap owner chris, viewing again growth is 600% from 2014 to 2017. consumers and corporations believe the trend is here to say. >> we're seeing veganism as a movement that is not going to stop. reporter: using alternative ingredients to make traditional foods can be challenging. getting vegan food to taste free great is not always easy. courtney designs all the shakes. >> they have been asking about dairy-free or. this is two years in the making. reporter: the model is in the numbers. overall market for plant-based foods has grown 11% over the last year. it is $4.5 billion according to
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the plant-based food association. they expect it to grow to 24.3 million by 2026. reporter: as far as assignments go here at fox business, there are assignments and there are assignments this was a good one. it was delicious. i thought it was great. i've become a healthier eater. i am not viewing vegan. i try to make healthy choices. eating a vegan shake was good for me. neil: you and i discussing healthy thing. thank you very much, jack kim. by the way i knew this was going to happen. somebody writing on the christina koch story with the dog greeting her. this had nothing to do with the dog or the senate getting fbn. always happens. i want you to prove it. more after this.
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neil: well the fight over sanctuary cities is ramping up as the u.s. border patrol is sending in what they call armed tactical forces to cities. former acting i.c.e. director under president trump tom homan says sanctuary cities are simply un-american and this is a way to address thereby passing something called the constitution. anyway, very good to have you back with us, tom. how are you doing? >> good to see you, neil. thanks for having me. neil: let's talk about this. they are saying that in their role of policing the border they have extended it to policing american cities and it is a slippery slope. you say? >> i don't think it is a slippery slope at all. they're border patrol agents. this tactical unit has extra training on how to enter dwellings and how to arrest people inside situations. it is not like the regular border patrol agents that only operate on the border.
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these guys have special training that more closely matches the training i.c.e. officers have interior of the united states. it makes sense. it is a good idea. neil: tom, elizabeth warren has spoken about this, she has great concerns what she calls s.w.a.t. teams in sanctuary cities. what are they doing exactly to allay her fears these are s.w.a.t. teams on the hunt. >> just because there are s.w.a.t. team members, every police department has s.w.a.t. teams but they're police officers. 99.9% of the time they're acting as police officer. they're only a s.w.a.t. team, acting as s.w.a.t. team members when it is a swat operation which this is not. look this is a great idea, neil. back when i was i.c.e. director i did the same thing when california passed sanctuary law. i sent a lot more agents to california because when you lose efficiencies of the jail, it takes more people to find these people in the public once they get released. now, i had to rob peter to pay paul back then. now the border patrol willing to step up this is a good idea. because it will not take agents from one city to move them to
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another city. the numbers on the border are down 75% from the high. this makes sense. it is a good operational decision by this president. neil: where does your obligation begin, where does their obligation? that is in the cities and states and sanctuary havens, i'm told by lawyers, it only goes so far as we won't tell you where they are but if it is precipitated by an event, you stop someone with a speeding ticket that is different. but extended to the point where they give a head as up to some illegals? that would be seeming to be against the law? >> it is against the law and dangerous for the men and women of i.c.e. i had this issue with the mayor of oakland when she announced i.c.e. was doing operations. she didn't realize, didn't realize nine out of 10 of the tear gets were criminals. you don't give criminals a aheads up police will look for them. that gives them time to escape to reoffend. gives them time to sit on officers to ambush them. it is dangerous precedent.
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i saw mayor lightfoot in chicago will not allow people to bully her city, stay out of the way. ask i.c.e. officers be i.c.e. officers. we're not asking pd to be immigration officers. stand aside, let the men and women of i.c.e. do their duly-elected authority, enforce the laws they took an oath to enforce. the laws enacted by congress. this is the right thing to do. much keeps our communities safer. neil: we'll watch it closely. whatever came of that meeting, that the president had with andrew cuomo to sort of dial things down. we still don't know. we should know soon. tom homan, thank you. >> thanks for having me. neil: new tapes are out featuring one michael bloomberg that could ding his presidential quest, after this. ♪. with sofi, get your credit cards right by consolidating your credit card debt into one monthly payment. and get your interest rate right so you can save big.
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neil: nevada early voting is underway for saturday's caucuses, although the past saturday was when it could start, record number of 18000 turned out for the first opportunity to weigh in on this presidential contest. it is much like iowa but without the smart app which was the problem, the great concern and criticism and iowa. michael bloomberg is out with two new ads today, the former mayor is fighting back against the 2016 tape that he says has not been fully shown to the mark in public. we heard him on that and wanted to play the full tape for you to put it in the context he says it deserves. michael bloomberg talking about farmers a few years back take a look. >> the thing about agriculture and lasted 3000 years, and we can teach processes, i teach anybody even people in this
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room, no offense intended, to be a farmer, it's a process he, you dig a hole, you put a seed in, added, water it, and outcomes according. >> you have to have a different skill set and a lot of gray matter. >> i don't think that helped or to his critics or bernie sanders point, it seemed very condescending, very arrogant, or dismissive of farmers, but the bloomberg campaign is saying he was not talking about modern farmers and trying to counter that the tape with the policies that he is consistent on the subject that times change in information processing world we live in today, that has changed as well. let's get the panels read on this, chief investment strategist, and we have company founder and best-selling author and independent women's forum senior policy analyst. patrice we will begin with you. the more extended version of those comments delay anyone of
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the view that michael bloomberg would be very dismissive? >> i don't think it did, unfortunately this follows along a series of former gaps or tapes in the past the bloomberg has made comments that are upsetting different constituencies, i don't think it will help. suggesting about past agrarian societies compared today, it may seem to those who make a living through farming that he has no clue what he is talking about. i don't get help him. neil: it is interesting when these tapes come out day by day almost like a tape dispenser released, the more serious his campaign looks, what we see more of this? >> we will see more of this. i think this is a crazy media thing. i live on a farm, i am from the midwest, what he said -- i do not believe that's gotta be
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insulting to farmers, it's insulting to the elites in new york -- >> it's the simplest view and what everyone knows -- >> is sounding condescending. >> you're a farmer dan, i'm just curious, we could pick words that he said and this shows he's a serious candidate if they keep pulling the stuff out. but it's there. >> he is only a serious candidate because he's got $60 billion, he is not charismatic, those comments that he made right there goes to the heart of what everyone is going to say about him. he is not a man of the people, he's an elitist, he so far removed from everyday life, he really does not know what it's like for the average american and i just don't think he can buy his way through that.
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>> that's the wrap he gets a lot, but i'm just wondering, we were talking about during the break, it's all about the math and to get to 1199 delegates and given the unfortunate voting that goes on, you get 50% of the vote and share the delegates, there's a good case to be made that no one is going to have enough to close the deal on a first battle, i raised that with james sanders who positioned it to say if i entered the convention with most delegates, that should be enough. but that is not how do you secure the deal. >> you are going to have to figure out how to bring together coalition individuals who butted for your opponent. unfortunately mike bloomberg from what i can see has not been reaching across the aisle to any of the other candidates. i think the other candidates in fact are positioning him as the wrong choice entirely and burning potential bridges. it will be difficult for him, will bringing hillary clinton on the ticket help them?
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i think absolutely not. i think those are rumors. i don't think that she has the star power, the credibility, she certainly has denigrated her own standing with a lot of democratic voters, not to mention the general electorate over the past three years after her loss. i don't think it's going to be a blockbuster ticket, i think it will be a busted ticket frankly with the two of them. neil: hang onto that. meanwhile elizabeth warren will be holding a separate rally which could be a chance for her joe biden to make a subtraction and a much more diverse state. but will the boat count, troubles in their especially if they're in the same caucus issues as iowa. alice and barbara nevada with the very latest. >> elizabeth warren will be here having a rally to convince her supporters to get out and vote early like we have seen, another
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of other candidates did this last weekend, it's day three of early voting and nevada and caucus state is saturday. bernie sanders is leading in the polls by a fairly large margin in the state, candidates spent a whole lot of time on the ground in nevada throughout the weekend talking to voters rallying support for early voting and encouraging staff volunteers to go out and keep knocking on doors and get more voters and friends out to the polls. over 18000 people voted on the first day of early voting and there are four days in all, nevada is an important phase is the first in the west caucus and the indication of how candidates will do among minority voters. iowa and new hampshire are 90 plus% white and nevada is a whole lot more diverse, hispanic population, it looks more like america and it's also a big deal because nevada has caucuses and after the mess and iowa everyone is watching to see how the state will do. a couple of weeks ago nevada
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democrats use the same reporting app that it caused and i when they say they will have paper record in the electronic calculator they are using its off-the-shelf technology developed and monitored and reviewed in recent days and weeks by google. neil: thank you very much. they had six electoral votes so it's considered a purple state. 2020 betting on a casting a win for the president if he wins the electoral vote but he loses the popular vote. in other words gives more electoral votes this go around, fewer popular votes is go around in percentage terms. our system and our republic calls it the winner based on the electoral vote. that's the way you win or lose these things. right now with the odds improving and just based on betting pools, what do you think of that? >> i think what you are saying is right, i think we will see a
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contested convention, i think bloomberg could well win, the dmc is broke and bloomberg is the only person who can find an election to go dollar for dolla- >> if bloomberg change the map maybe not a popular vote. >> this is why everyone is looking at this thing wrong. you are basically -- if bloomberg wins you will have two republicans running in the selection, everyone believes he is a conservative, reagan, republican on economics and business in the stock market would probably go up if you one. neil: have you seen his taxes? >> still, that does not bother people on wall street. neil: it might. >> still, i believe the stock market will go up and also he will win florida, the key state
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and he's going to get the support of a lot of moderate republicans who are more liberal on social issues. neil: it could happen. >> this would be a unique election. >> but republicans are a bit of a stretch. he is going to take the democratic vote no matter what. they hate trump, they will vote for him. neil: unless bernie sanders. there is a notion that he does have some views, he might be the least of the tax hikers in the bunch of the democrats. if he kicks off bernie sanders voters against the nomination of bernie sanders, they just say home. >> i think that's what will happen. i don't think mike bloomberg is a republican in my view in any way shape or form. what i think happens here is bernie sanders assures that donald trump gets reelected, why? because if he ends up being the nominee for the democratic party he will not beat donald trump
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because the nation is not ready for socialist just yet. >> what about someone like bloomberg. >> they could be but i think bernie sanders supporters stay home. >> you're connected to a lot of these folks, would they feel if bernie sanders at the end of the convention with most delegates is not nearly enough to clear the majority and lose on the first battle? his chances and right there. >> for bernie sanders it is either first and wore nothing. >> i cannot demand and imagine a bloomberg sanders ticket and i don't think the sanders supporters after 2016 in particular when they were burned so badly by the establishment of the hillary clean campaign would be so willing to put all bad feelings aside and support michael bloomberg. and frankly let's look at the electorate themselves on different issues, the democratic
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electorate has swung so far to the left there embracing a lot of policies that michael bloomberg has two defend against in the past record in recent days. they are not going to fully embrace him. i think about communities of color and i think about socialist candidates when you talk about policing and his record there. they will not turn a blind eye to that just to say let's beat donald trump i think they would stay home. neil: and maybe too early to gauge but we will see. they will be back with us momentarily. meantime americans back in the u.s. with the quarantines cruise ship, but there is a problem, a lot of others are missing. they cannot find them. they might've gotten off the vote too soon. not just that vote after this. ♪ body is truly powerful. i have the power to lower body is truly powerful. my blood sugar and a1c. because i can still make my own insulin. and trulicity activates my body to release it like it's supposed to. trulicity is for people with type 2 diabetes.
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the government has indicated we have a plane coming to get you out of there and you are not keen on it why not? >> i tweeted days ago that i wanted the u.s. government to stay out of it, the offer is we are going to put you on buses with other people who have not completed the quarantine and have not been tested for the virus, we will then put you on a plane with all of these people and take you back to the united states and because of the risk you still pose due to the situation we will stick you in another quarantines. neil: he was skype you me from his sweet on that boat indicating he was not going to follow strong suggestion from the state department that he would take a cargo jet back to the united states. this we know he did not and opted not to do that, this is the university of nebraska
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medical center reaping a schedule for 2:00 p.m. eastern time with an update on the 300 americans u evacuated from the diamond princess cruise ship. asian markets were getting a little bit of a boost, mainly on the idea that the worst is behind, we forgot before and the number of cases reported seems to show slowing momentum. but it changes by the day. our markets closed for the presidents' day holiday. back with our panel, paul dietrich, and dan geltrude and patrice. looking at the situation and the americans on the ship who were quarantines and getting off the ship and have to be re-quarantines in the united states, i can understand and this guy's case with his life, they were not keen on doing that. so they are stuck in limbo, a lot of people are and i am wondering how're government addresses that. >> it's a good question.
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i think that the priority for the u.s. government should be to ensure those who could be exposed are not going to be a health risk to the larger population whether that means quarantining them that's understandable course of action, they challenge with the coronavirus there's a lot of information that is unknown example how long is the incubation period, is it one week or three weeks. i understand it could be that long. they're expecting that with rising temperatures that the virus will die out because it's traveled to cold temperatures. but were in february in the east coast, does that mean that will be true in two or three months from now, frankly, i don't trust all the information coming from the chinese government and chinese new sources. because they have an incentive not to drive panic and their financial markets as well as the larger populace by underreporting. the american government has to take steps to protect the american citizen. >> you should probably go change your mind because i agree with
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you. i'm very suspicious of the economic data that we get out of china. we will remind you john lovett's character, were at 10%. and they are not. so when they give you assurance is how they're handling this, they might be very well handled it fine but i get worried. having said that, we are seeing signs of companies dipping their toes back into the manufacturing waters, both wagon, airbus, toyota, they are reopening shutter factories and not for full-time hours but they are beginning to do that, what do you think? >> this is a positive economic but i agree with what you said before, this is going to be a day by day and what this is showing us, how important china is in the supply chain, if this really has a major impact on china and going in that direction, what will happen to product around the world, it
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seemed like the whole world has their eggs in one basket, china and that will need to change and maybe there will be a lesson here. neil: in the market, their markets are bumpy but ours have held up just fine. interest rates are going as a lot of money goes to debt. >> so far i think there has been 2200 deaths from this worldwide, that is terrible. but to put something in context in september of last year over 8000 people in the united states died of the flu. so everyone, i think wall street has believed that although there will be some disruption in the supply chain, that in general this is something that is manageable and will have a very minimal impact in the long term with the u.s. economy. >> i want to thank you all and we hope you are right on that. the whole bloomberg thing, i don't know but the other stuff i
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think you're right. >> in the meantime and mississippi residents are dealing with historic flooding, steve is there. reporter: it has been raining heavily for the past several weeks, that means a programmer has overtopped, the results for jackson mississippi, you have entire neighborhoods dealing with one or 2 feet of floodwater. right now the situation is about a crest but when we talk to people here of what they're doing in the evacuated neighborhoods, some people packing up their stuff and they say they're afraid of what could be ahead. ♪
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neil: mississippi governor warning it could be days before floodwaters near the pearl river recede and that's being optimistic, i talked to correspondent steve harrigan and all the middle of that in
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jackson mississippi. how does it look there? >> it is eerily quiet and some of the neighborhoods along the pearl river which is overtop the banks in jackson mississippi, you don't see anybody around, we've seen some families, last-minute packers trying to get out of this neighborhood which is been under mandatory evacuation, or stacking up their furniture, trying to keep her off the ground, pulling up electronics, when you talk to them what can be ahead they are afraid. >> the thought of losing -- of having to move in losing everything, just losing our home, that's a scary part about it, knowing we won't have a home to come back to you. reporter: the river is cresting today at around 37 feet, it is right now receiving slightly and we've seen over the course of the day, this could affect 3000 homes this flooding, there was a state of emergency declared by the governor this weekend and we've seen as many as 16 emergency
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water rescues but no fatalities and no casualties so far, the real trouble will be property damage, with more rain ahead this week that will only get worse. neil: great reporting. steve harrigan and all the middle of that. jeff bezos has come a long way from founding amazon, selling books in his garage, now he bought a place that has 20 of them. that is after this.
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their medicare options...ere people go to learn about before they're on medicare. come on in. you're turning 65 soon? yep. and you're retiring at 67? that's the plan! well, you've come to the right place. it's also a great time to learn about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. here's why... medicare part b doesn't pay for everything. only about 80% of your medical costs. this part is up to you... yeah, everyone's a little surprised to learn that one. a medicare supplement plan helps pay for some of what medicare doesn't. that could help cut down on those out-of-your-pocket medical costs. call unitedhealthcare insurance company today... to request this free, and very helpful, decision guide. and learn about the only medicare supplement plans endorsed by aarp. selected for meeting their high standards of quality and service. this type of plan lets you say "yes" to any doctor or hospital
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that accepts medicare patients. there are no networks or referrals to worry about. do you accept medicare patients? i sure do! see? you're able to stick with him. like to travel? this kind of plan goes with you anywhere you travel in the country. so go ahead, spend winter somewhere warm. if you're turning 65 soon or over 65 and planning to retire, find out more about the plans that live up to their name. thumbs up to that! remember, the time to prepare is before you go on medicare! don't wait. get started today. call unitedhealthcare and ask for your free decision guide. learn more about aarp medicare supplement plan options and rates to fit your needs oh, and happy birthday... or retirement... in advance.
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neil: all right he has gone hollywood, the richest man on earth closing up to the biggest names in hollywood, amazon ceo jeff bezos not that long ago was starting something out of his garage, now has a place with 20 of them. paying a record-breaking $165 million on a beverly hills home. near-term changnear trump chang. >> record-setting pocket change for you, $165 million in beverly hills. >> one at that be cool if he financed it, can i get this for 3.5%. >> that would be something, but
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yes it's record-setting, it's not like he does not have homes in beverly hills, los angeles already but you see a lot of jeff bezos recently, the super bowl after party, you seem at the oscars with his gigantic new estate, given that is worth $130 billion, yes he can afford it and if you compared to the average folk, that's like spending $75000 to somebody to make $60000 a year. neil: beverly hillbillies estate. >> that is mr. murdoch. >> what i'm saying, that was a record part of this is what i'm saying. >> that was. >> is worth a lot of money. >> he also bought up a lot of land. you know what he plans to do that? >> eerily owns 11000 square feet near the beverly hills area with his ex-wife, and his brother properties elsewhere across los
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angeles as well. it becomes so flashy and so different from what we know him as, i was watching an interview from ten years ago and back then he was worth $10 billion and drive an old honda accord, that's not the case anymore, we see him today in 2020, there's a different feeling with the richest man in the world and how he spending it. he actually got a deal because the hundred 55 million-dollar mansion, i think david bought it for $47 million, the old warner estate back in 1990. there's been appreciation and someone would say the land, you cannot find anything like it, no real estate agents involved in the cash, a straight transaction from david to another rich guy. no commission. neil: mark zuckerberg another rich guy, he is calling for
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something that can make him less rich. >> you apply for more regulation in the financial times and he says people need to feel the global technology platform and regulation should hold companies accountable when they make mistakes like facebook and companies like mine need better oversight when they make decisions which is why recreating an independent oversight board so people can appeal to the content and decisions. saying there needs to be more from the government to give us guidelines on what regulation look-alikes. >> for specific categories, state ability, privacy, basically what exactly is the political ad because it needs to be defined at this point and regulation but also its imperfect and he says regulation means smaller players when you have to build up so much in terms of pain and adhering to government rules, that favors the bigger company like facebook who is built in most around the google and apple but in amazon for the smaller ones can't
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afford to meet the regulation they can squeeze that out. >> he and all these other guys more than held their own in the market. >> that's the point, the big will get bigger in the small will get squeezed out because they cannot afford to adhere to it and they give up and say let's sell herself to the big players anyway to meet the regulations. neil: finally, he's a guy who could afford $400 speaker, the deal with the new nike's shoes, they tied themselves. >> the adaptive 2.0. are they hot, they were at the market last night just in time for the all-star game and i would think the second generation, the self lacing shoe, the first one to hit the market. neil: how do you self laced them? >> you put them on and apparently they tie themselves.
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i don't know if you watched. neil: what if you like them super supertight, can you put it the way you like them. >> there called the adapt 2.0. [laughter] >> also an app, i will teach you how to use the app. neil: you are young, this is intriguing to me. [laughter] >> soil yourself, that's an interesting term. neil: what makes them worth $400. >> new technology you don't have to bend down, hurt your knees, it's brand-new, their hot and if you saw the nba players last night on the nba all-star game which is more intense than i had expected, but also i should point out the nba stands to lose hundreds of millions of dollars because the controversy in china and the coronavirus is a threat to nike sales. just to bring it back to reality, they look great, can you sell them for $400, high margins, but there's risk to nike sales forecast and the mba as well as the profit going
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forward. neil: are buyers interested in wearing the shoes? >> absolutely. it's not just the regulars who are intrigued. >> obviously it's something new, something hot, something modern, don't you want to be one of the first ones. neil: do they have these with wingtips. [laughter] neil: thank you very much. >> i see jordan read for you. >> great job my friend. in the meantime west virginia sticking by its plan to have high-tech voting, much like we saw in iowa, not identical but a lot like it, the headlines 24 anchor brett takes a closer look. >> after the iowa debacle, nevada is ditching plans to use the app for this saturday's caucus, but one state is embracing apps in elections, west virginia is now allowing thmobile voting for citizens who
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have a problem getting to the pool. >> think of somebody who does not have use of their arms or hands or is disabled and can't get to a precinct to vote or the mailbox to pick up mail, those people have just as much right to participate in the democratic process. >> secretary of state is a former army lieutenant colonel and he sees the technology as the answer for soldiers abroad. the problem is, only about 13% of active-duty military get their votes counted and this is due to a number of hurdles placed in not knowing about the election, forgetting or being deployed. if you're in a ranger school or one of the military training sessions these could go on for two months or more at a time or effort you're on a military to point, that can be six-month or a year. >> secretary warner does not see this as a solution for every voter in the state. >> this is a limited population that is disabled to the point that they cannot get to the mailbox or to a precinct and they should be able to go to a
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secret one. that's a central component of this. >> west virginia is expanding the app uses and issues election would help to keep the disabled and members of the military part of the democratic process and helping other states will follow the lead. in new york fox business. neil: thank you brett, in the meantime what do you think is weighing on millennial's right now, not the election you're not the student loans, what if i told you it's childcare and the cost is so out of whack they are stressing out. right after this. ♪ managing lipids like very high triglycerides, can be tough. you diet. exercise. but if you're also taking fish oil supplements... you should know... they are not fda approved... they may have saturated fat and may even raise bad cholesterol. to treat very high triglycerides, discover the science of prescription vascepa.
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neil: a fast-food fight, arby's is launching a new ad campaign targeting mcdonald's over who has the best fish sandwich,
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apparently it's a big deal ahead of lent. meanwhile joe rogan is getting tested for what he is calling the carnivore diet that works. listen to this. >> when you have no carbohydrate, one thing that's most amazing, no crashing. you would eat and don't feel any different after eight other than the fact you don't go hungry. you don't crash. there is no ups and downs in peaks and valleys, my energy levels are amazing. i have extra energy. >> two weeks in i noticed i felt amazing. neil: the flipside, that's two weeks of cannolis anyway, you are saying there's something to
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what he says. >> it's really nothing new, you and i would call it the atkins diet, if you remember from back in the day, i actually have done this, he's 100% correct, when you start eating meat and taking in carbohydrates, you get a very balanced energy level, the other thing, you start to shed weight because you get rid of the bloke, you don't have sweet, sugar or sodium filling you up and that's why people are able to drop the amount of weight so quickly. the one thing it will do is structure organs to process all the beef and he says in one of the articles written that he got sick in the beginning as a result. and the other thing, it's not that sustainable after a while, you get sick of eating that stuff. so we've been talking about the plant-based food trend as well is actually healthier, it is questionable because you look at the sodium and the sugar and you wonder if it's great to be taking that much sodium and sugar, look at the beyond burger, 390 milligrams of sodium and 4 ounces, yet you take a look at the stock and is trading well over 100 right now. some people do believe in the food trend but it's up to you if
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you'd be willing to sacrifice like that. neil: variations of all or mostly protein diet it's what you can tolerate, it would be very hard to do forever. >> it is hard. neil: what happens to those who do it for months or lose a significant amount of weight, how long does it last. >> it does not last long once you switch back, you put the weight on quickly, i say your one meal away from getting right back where you were. but some of the folks have found that the diet in between is more sustainable. for example i read that president clinton lost all that weight for chelsea's wedding by doing the south beach diet, proteins, and better cargo under carbohydrates, vegetables, not that kind of thing mixed into it, it's finding what works for you but what he says about energy, sugar will spike you up and you will continue on the roller coaster and it's really uncomfortable. >> it does have results but i wonder what the long-term sustainability is. i guess to get back to eat in
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moderation. >> and apple is a carbohydrate but no one ever got fat eating an apple. so choosing common sense and sensibility in eating your fruits and vegetables. >> unless it was pie. [laughter] neil: thank you. in the meantime, american airlines passengers looking to punch back after having her seat punched, joe wants to settle this once and for all. he sort of like henry kinzinger with the law ♪ ♪ sometimes your small screen is your big screen.
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and with the xfinity stream app, which is free with your service, you can take a spin through on demand shows, or stream live tv. download your dvr'd shows and movies on the fly. even record from right where you are.
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whether you're travelling around the country or around the house, keep what you watch with you. download the xfinity stream app and watch all the shows you love. that's it. i'm calling kohler about their walk-in bath. [ sigh ] not gonna happen. my name is ken. how may i help you? hi, i'm calling about kohler's walk-in bath. excellent! happy to help. huh? hold one moment please... [ finger snaps ] hmm. the kohler walk-in bath features an extra-wide opening and a low step-in at three inches, which is 25 to 60% lower than some leading competitors. the bath fills and drains quickly, while the heated seat soothes your back, neck and shoulders. kohler is an expert in bathing, so you can count on a deep soaking experience. are you seeing this? the kohler walk-in bath comes with fully adjustable hydrotherapy jets and our exclusive bubblemassag. everything is installed in as little as a day by a kohler-certified installe. and it's made by kohler- america's leading plumbing brand.
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we need this bath. yes. yes you do. a kohler walk-in bath provides independence with peace of mind. neil: the rising cost of
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childcare is raising pre-charles payne knows what they speak. what do you think of this, i'm surprised it's getting away of them just being happy and doing other things in life. >> there is a major book coming out and everyone is talking about this thing that the nuclear family and itself, the great american family with a mom, dad and kids and white picket fence that it's a catastrophe and that it's created all kinds of problems and we should avoid it and maybe go back to the good old days when we had mom, dad, kids, cousins, uncles, aunts, cousins, grandmothers, friends, all living under the same roof that that's a better economic system and that we had a brief period in america where the nuclear family really was not the way to go for the future. >> i can remember, it's still alive and well in italy, there are a whole generation of families that live that way abroad and certainly in china and italy.
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it is more of an alien concept here than it is elsewhere. >> although i tell you, my grandparents in alabama on the farm and they had 12 kids and as their kids got older, other members of the family had houses on the same land. so it was the same set up, you had a support system and it was a lot of folks are saying, that support system is gone, there's something catastrophic happening. i'm bringing one of my favorite and i think she's forming a family soon, i want to get her opinion, one is always put up the new american dream in our hearing maybe it's not, maybe it's a stumbling block to the american dream. >> maybe will tell you you're doomed. [laughter] neil: where you get grass fed elk. [laughter] i'm looking at the screen, any elk? grass fed. there's plenty of out. we will see you in ten minutes. you're the best.
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there's a story on the american airlines passenger is building, wendy williams told fox business she's not satisfied with how the airline has responded to her seat being punched in january. >> i feel like it's a day-to-day story with american airlines, because their big company and i'm just a teacher. and for them to put that statement out there that they are concerned for the comfort of their customers is just rubbish. neil: the definitive stance on this component, what do you think which is saying? she is going to sue and now it's a record. >> what is she going to sue for, what is she possibly going to sue for, how could this possibly be in this country. if you are with her and then she goes back and the guy starts hitting, then your i tell you
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comes out. neil: with the hitting on the seat, 0. >> we are not advising that. >> he did ask her nicely, not while i'm eating, she waited in. to finish and then set her seatbelt, but obviously he did not like that. and we only know what we see on the tape. >> but can people just relax, my gosh we were just talking. neil: who is at fault? >> i think that the guy said, and tell me now, the guy said who do not put it down i'm a little cramped, he made the request for so now she kept going, she just put it back like that, i think everybody's gotta settle down. like you said henry kinzinger. neil: he's in the very back wing so he cannot put his seat back, she put hers all the way back.
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>> is it worth the hassle? neil: you don't seem very sympathetic. neil: all your years of flying private. [laughter] >> you're not connected to the common man. >> if i fly for a charity and you have to have the first class seat, no, i go first. i have been in coach. neil: are you in the front of the plane? >> that's joe negotiating. >> there was a lady on a plane and she started complaining about everything and people are like that, and i don't think the guy should've hit like that, that was wrong but really. neil: who was taping it. >> she did she held it in the guy still didn't even knowing the camper was there. and with she complain to the fight attendant and then fight
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attendant was very nice to him but not nice to her, we all know it's her story,. >> she should just move on, this is ridiculous. neil: it's like the whiners,. [laughter] >> you cannot relate to her. >> i cannot. i don't complain. [laughter] with age comes wisdom. >> i have had that seat right in my face, i don't say anything. someone is right next to you and with elbow, if you want the armrest, take the armrest. [laughter] take it. >> you mind, your see is all the way back in use but the different.
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>> that's the nice way. >> in politics, on planes, although i got to tell you, i don't support bernie sanders, but when he complained, the corporate agree -- but bernie is going about corporations, 3 inches they give us on these things, how about taking a few seats out and choking on that a little bit and give us a little more room on the airplane. neil: it's tough to find these days. >> thank you for having me on your private jet. >> you are incredible. [laughter] let me ask about this, there's nobody who doesn't worry about the last seat on the plane, but she has a new album coming out this fall. i did not even know that. >> i have been waiting. >> she's lost a lot of weight, not that she had to, i don't
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want anything to damage that beautiful voice but isn't that nice to hear. >> but i'm a taylor swift person. neil: why am i not surprised,. >> when i saw taylor against paul mccartney, there's my friend taylor. do you have a picture. >> not together but yeah. [laughter] you know my favorite thing with adele, she knew this uncomfortable thing. >> it's a lot creepy, you could be my dad. [laughter] we asked for comment -- that's the news from a dell, no comment. but these two are battling it out i think. >> taylor is immensely talented. neil: that's a big, big big one. >> i asked you not to and you
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did. neil: i probably ruined it for you. i saw that later and i thought i'm not helping him. >> probably. neil: you should've came in in disguise. [laughter] forgone when taylor. neil: you are on fire. i have to say thanks, since i been on your show, you know how long we've been doing this, every morning is a great show. neil: it's simple. he's nice to everybody and everybody loves him. and he pays them. >> we have frank and it's a great team, but it started right here, people coming on the show. neil: everyone loves to have you on. if you want to fly and commercial in the backseat. >> just combat, calm down. like the president buzzing at the daytona.
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neil: everybody calm and be nice and have fun. verizon keeps busiy for what's next. (man) we weave security into their business... (second man) virtualize their operations... (third man) and could even build ai into their customer experiences. we also keep them ready for the next big opportunity. like 5g. (woman) where machines could talk to each other and expertise could go anywhere. (woman) when it comes to digital transformation, verizon keeps business ready. ♪ . .
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neil: you know, charles payne, i love you like a brother but we have disturbing video of you banging on a commercial jet seat. i hope it's not but anyway. to you. charles: the seats are just too small, neil, what can i tell you. neil: all the seats are too small for me. anyway, to you. charles: that is why you bought a private jet. neil: come on. we rent it. charles: good afternoon, everyone, i'm charles payne this, is making money so you get your own private jet. you won't get it today because the markets are closed. we are open for business and you could be too as we'll break down the trump administration proposal, more americans, already considered the most democratized money making machine ever created. we're talking about the stock market. plus the nuclear family is under attack, will the new way of thinking pave the way to a new american dream? i will ask a

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