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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  February 19, 2020 12:00pm-2:00pm EST

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the beatles. the song this morning was "come together." susan tried to get me to sing along. eventually i did. ashley: look at that. stuart: it won't happen again. neil, it is yours. neil: thank you very much, stuart. ahead of the big debate you've been referring to once or twice. no debate who is getting the most bang for the buck. it is not michael bloomberg. it is actually bernie sanders per vote, per surge in the social media, bernie sanders has taken a lead that has gone national and in the key states. that does not dismiss the 400 million better spending that we've seen out of likes of michael bloomberg, who hopes to score some points tonight, even though he stands to be a big target tonight. susan li with the very latest. susan: michael bloomberg has a lot of money and he is willing to spend it. offering $425 a month to
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buildout a social media army in california. hiring hundreds willing to spread the word about his campaign. california is a big prize up for grab on super tuesday, representing 30% of the delegates up for grabs on march the 3rd. you will hear this over and over hammered on the stage tonight, that mayor bloomberg is looking to buy the democrat nomination. a different stance from his position 10 years ago when he was a republican an mayor of new york, selling financial extensive data to wall street traders. now his wall street plan is more liberal and more left. what about the .1% transaction tax? that would raise $770 billion according to the congressional joint tax committee. for 1000 transaction stock purchase you will 11-dollar tax. less than what bernie sanders is proposing, a half of a percent on stock trades.
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he wants to merge fannie and freddie. lenders carry more reserves and volcker rule and tougher banking regulations. we're looking at his past stances if we can bring it up. before we talked about the punitive actions of the volcker rule. he talked about red lining which was biased practice not giving low income individuals, mostly minorities, mortgages. he also criticized trading on wall street as well. that you can fine trading that hurts middle america and the average person on main street. what about tuition? he says he needs the money, needs the .1% to pay for tuition-free community colleges. this will cost $700 billion. be debt-free for the lowest income student. parents who make less than $30,000. double the value of pell grant, 12,000, cut income-based repayment in half to just around 5%. as i mentioned to you, as you know, neil, tonight on the stage he mass to answer to previous
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stances as well, controversial like "stop-and-frisk for one. something he is in favor of, he recently apologized for. paid sick leave and saying "medicare for all" would bankrupt us for a very long time. different stances tonight now that he is looking for the democratic nomination. neil? neil: you hit the nail on the head. the reversals, particularly on the financial transaction tax, boom, boom, 180 where he was a little more than a few years ago. susan: that's right. neil: something he railed against when he was mayor. what's fair about-faces here. i have a feeling someone will address it. susan: yes. neil: thank you, susan. elizabeth warren is vowing to take mike bloomberg on right now, tweeting tonight's debate a chance to prove on to take on egomaniac billionaire. "real clear politics" cofounder tom bevin with us.
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tom, she also has a vested interest in trying to say, hey, i'm still here. so obviously she targets more-likely a bloomberg than she would a bernie sanders although bernie sanders is in the pole position in so many of these states, looking pretty good for super tuesday. you could make the argument the attacks on bloomberg and sanders could balance out what do you think? >> oh, i don't know about that. i think michael bloomberg will get most of this tonight. he will get it from amy klobuchar and pete buttigieg and joe biden because they're going to attack him from the right. he is trying to take that moderate lane. he will get it as you mentioned from elizabeth warren and bernie sanders, they have been going at it pretty good on social media and at their campaign rallies, listen, this guy is coming in here to try to buy the election. the bad news for bloomberg he will have to defend a lot of stuff as you mentioned. one thing susan didn't mention, charter schools is coming up. neil: that's right. >> but the good news for bloomberg it is all about him.
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he will be center stage. he will take all the attacks. he acquits himself well he could leave the debate in a stronger position. if he doesn't, he could see this boomlet going on lifted him, as you mentioned 400 million plus advertising that he spent, he could see some of that erode, this is the first chance voters will get to see him in the flesh, see him on his feet defending, interacting with his opponents. neil: i talked to a lot of political pros who are saying, tom what candidate, republican or democrat has modified positions? i get that. you go back in time, ronald reagan started out as a democrat, became a republican. jimmy carter was running as a conservative to moderate democrat. became a much more liberal president in office, i get that but it's bloomberg's positions which are so counter to pretty much everything he stood for and was about, not only in his
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business days but when he became a three-term mayor, that's more than just reversing a couple of positions and apologizing. this is about reversing pretty much everyone of your core principles and throwing it out there. >> no, that's right. look, a lot of these comment that have been unearthed, you know, are really offensive to different sections of the democratic base whether african-americans or women or teachers unions or whatever and, as you mentioned, this is not stuff that he said 40 years ago when he was a young man. this is three years ago, five years ago, seven years ago. so he is trying to shoehorn himself into a democratic primary which will be tough for him. he will have to answer the questions. i'm not sure what he has done, what he said has been sufficient for a lot of voters in the democratic primary. they're looking tonight, watching to see how he answers these questions in person because there are a lot of questions, not only his record
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but the way he is articulated it in the past. neil: on that real quickly, is it your sense that bloomberg is going to come out of this saying i've taken a lot of blows here, a lot of body blows, a lot of people, all these tapes have come out, that he is holding his own if not improving in the polls if to say, look, i'm not bulletproof but i'm bullet resistant? >> well it will depends what happens tonight quite frankly. primary debates matter, much more so than the general election where you have the partisan divide. we see how it lifted amy klobuchar. this cycle, how it hurt, rick perry, or marco rubio in 2016 and 2012. it really damaged their candidacy. how bloomberg performs tonight largely determine how things proceed here for him here on out. neil: we'll watch it closely. tom, thank you very, very much.
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>> thanks, neil. neil: a lot of democratic donors are holding on tight to their wallets. that is not unusual in this period between iowa and new hampshire, waiting to see gnawed and see how things sort out in south carolina obviously two weeks on tuesday. fund-raiser dan potter says bernie sanders small donors are much more important here than billions you're looking at potentially for michael bloomberg. he spells it all like about you, dan, it is about passion, i'm making a leap, small denominations and support pretty rabid for him. something with mike bloomberg for all his billions has not been able to buy. how does that sort out? >> as someone who raised money for presidential campaigns and advised them i wanted to talk about the role of money in campaigns because mostly it is covered as if the spend is the
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sole most important factor but it's really not. i think loyalty comes when somebody writes a check for 20 bucks to a candidate is actually far more important. it is a measure of support. it is a measure of loyalty. it is almost a blood oath. where somebody spends their own money is indicia of ardor for the office, their ambition. it doesn't reflect on voter. elections are not politicians. politicians make that mistake. it is about voters. voter behavior writing a check is far more significant than bloomberg writing his own respect. self-funded candidates don't get elected. neil: bloomberg did it in new york three times. that is different in a local race versus a national race but the one thing i do see is that early on you could tell where a candidate is going by how much
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money he or she is raising among smaller donors and die mom "nations." that was a very early early sign of senator barack obama's appeal. so many were giving to him online at the time which was a little unusual then. and in small amounts, later of course with bernie sanders. it is a reflection of appeal, isn't it? >> yeah, very definitely but if you're relying on large donors this late in the project you're really behind the curve. the purpose of large donors is to get in early, to help build the small donor network. that is what we did with the cruz campaign in 2016. it sustains you. if you have a bad day, large donors dip up the pockets, don't want to take phone calls, renege on pledges. it is extremely difficult. i can imagine it is absolute hell for biden to get people to write checks. candidates that rely on large checks like buttigieg and biden are weaker at this point. candidates like bernie sanders
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and donald trump who have extensive small donor networks are extremely resilient. what we're seeing a this time a little different a self-funded candidate with seemingly limitless resources. what is shaping up like a two-candidate title bought. they're both capable of going 15 round but the problem that is emerging there is a schism in the democrat party on ideas. yes they're unified removing donald trump but beyond that there is no consensus. you have a communist, and you have a capitalist billionaire there is not a lot of overlap there. there is not enough to actually win, build a coalition. both fighters are going to be standing at the end of 15 round but a split decision likely in milwaukee and hard to put it together. neil: you never know. someone could attract capital and interest if he or she performs well in an upcoming contest and maybe the money is shaken loose. way too early to find out how that will go. thank you, dan. good seeing you. >> thank you. neil: nba hall-of-famer
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dominique wilkins, you know him as one of the greatest basketball stars ever, you probably didn't know he was a big backer of andrew yang. you probably know that andrew yang stepped out of the race. got me thinking, where is dominique going now? ♪ i like liberty mutual. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ tit's great actually, i've been listening to audible. it's audiobooks, news, meditations... gotta go! ♪ ♪ hey!
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chun chow. good morning my friend. confidence there, mainly those in the millions, 60 plus million quarantined still or locked down still in these cities, how are they putting up with all of this? >> one month since they decided to lock down wuhan. seems likely going -- [inaudible]. because by today they over 2,000 people -- outbreak. and over 17,000 people are impacted by the virus. but fortunately i would say most of the cases are contained in
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wuhan and outside the hebei province. there are not that many cases outside of hebei province. [inaudible]. with government data and local people whether that has the full picture, whether that is 100% accurate, but hopefully i think -- [inaudible]. neil: do you get when you talk to those, talk to the main land and outside you know, when you're quarantined that long or sort of split off from the rest of the world for that long, this is pretty unprecedented stuff. they talk about not only just the health effects of that alone but the economic effect. people can't all return to work and do what they want to do and shop the way they want to shop. they can't travel.
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that has got to have an economic impact. >> oh, desk. the impact is huge. this something is that never happened -- [inaudible]. population equivalent to the whole of france. neil: wow. >> and over the country, basically it is just finish up chinese new year. so a lot of the migrant workers are supposed to return to their factories, to their work place. what it reported out of 300 million migrant workers only 1/3 of them returned to their factories and their jobs. that means we're missing work population that is almost the same size as entire american working population. so, you can imagine the kind of impact on the economy. not to mention that china right now is rely increasingly more
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and more on -- [inaudible]. if there is virus outbreak, people are not going out shopping. they're not going to the stores. they're not going to the -- [inaudible] a lot of them industries, they are in really, really bad shape. neil: to put it mildly. chung chow thank you very much. to his point we don't know how many are returning to work or briefly in factories that had been shuttered and reopened. one of the reasons you saw the asian markets particularly in china was this commitment on the part of china to continue to support businesses that might be adversely affected. we'll have more after this. m hia reached out before he could even inspect the damage. that's how you do it right. usaa insurance is made just the way martin's family needs it -
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neil: all right. interesting study that shows there is wisdom and happiness as you get older because those closer to retirement are decidedly less stressed than
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millenials. lauren simonetti has been digging into that. lauren? reporter: right, neil. we're all stressed. last year 94% of american workers reported experiencing stress at work. do you bother to do a study when 94% of people say they're stressed? that is according to a work management company. i guess it makes sense when the stress goes away, that happens when the work actually goes away? take this. a british travel company finds older adults, 55 and up, they're happier than the younger counterparts because millenials devoted entirely to their jobs, getting ahead as the 55 plus crowd sees the light at the end of the 9:00 to 5:00 tunnel, right? when they're near retirement or in it, this report finds they pursue hobbies. they work out. they see friends. they go on vacations. but can you really argue the key to being happy is not working? you can. this is what greg writes, because i am retired after 44
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years in the same profession i escaped the rat race. judy roth says this, being retired, having no debt is like being a teenager all over again. okay. but, back to reality. most of us do work. so how do you find stress relief while you are actually working? number one, take a vacation, neil. 768 million americans leave vacation days unused every single year. alsoen up, neil you have to talk to your boss. 35% of workers say the main source of work stress is actually the boss. have the conversation, get it? neil: really. >> one more i don't want to scare you, neil, but i might. the consequences of being stressed at work are pretty dire. work-related stress causes 120,000 deaths a year. that comes from the center for work place mental health. neil: lauren, are you a chipper news relayer there. how do we know this light a lot of older workers are seeing isn't just like that of an
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approaching train or the end? we don't know, do we? >> we don't. i personally like working. i know you do too. you leave a lot of vacation days on the table. neil: i like working. i really like working. >> did you get my boss comment in there? did you get where i was going with that? noted. neil: yeah. duly noted. all right. great job, lauren. >> maybe i will see you tomorrow. neil: they're all in the same field. i don't know if they're stressful or not. health care, these jobs might pay big but the education required for them, well that doesn't come cheap. deirdre bolton to break it all down. hey, deirdre. reporter: neil, tell your kids to go to medical school. if that is one takeaway, there it is. the top 10 paying jobs are all in medicine. here is the list. we'll show you the highest ranking to the lowest. anesthesiologist tops it. call out that particular one. you see the average salary, 267,000 per year. if you scroll through to the second slide that we made you,
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basically even jobs five through 10, you still need to go to medical school. so you mentioned that. the cost of medical school and that is really a big piece of the puzzle because four years of med school at a public institution costs $250,000 for four years and we'll remind everybody, that is on top of whatever you paid for your bachelor's dee dee agree. four years of med school cost on after many $230,000. and a bachelor's degree. many doctors spend a decade paying off costs. interesting point, median american annual salary $49,000 a year. a point of comparison worth making. neil: it that is amazing. thank you very much. rod blagojevich is speaking in chicago right now. the first opportunity to address reporters since the president commuted his sentence. let's listen in.
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>> we going to do this, he needs you all to step back just a little bit. a little bit. just two steps. right there. right there. two steps. [many people talking] >> there you go. >> okay. >> right out here. i'm coming. thank you. >> bet back, everybody.
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>> get back a little bit. step back, guys. >> give him some room, guys. >> there we go. there you go. >> perfect. >> sorry. >> been a long, long journey. i'm bruised, i'm battered, i'm bloody. a long time since i shaved with a normal razor. takes a little practice. sorry about that, i have to keep dabbing the blood. >> like to apologize for his tardiness. he couldn't find where i put his socks this morning. >> a lot changed in nearly eight years i've been there. let me say a couple things first of all. the obvious i speak for patty, amy, annie, obviously for me. we want to express our most profound and everlasting gratitude for president trump. how do you thank someone given back freedom stolen from you. he didn't have to do this.
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he is a republican president. i was a democratic governor. doing this does nothing to help his politics. president trump is a man who is tough and outspoken but he also has a kind heart and this is the act of kindness. i also believe beginning of the process to actually turn an injustice to a justice. sorry about this blood. all these years away i never stopped reminding myself of the words from a poem. it is called, the gate of the year. go out into the darkness and put your hand into the hand of god. that shall be to you better than light and safer than a known way. been a long time since i've been home, nearly eight years, nearly 3,000 days. i suppose a better way to measure how long it's been, is our daughters amy and annie.
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when i left home, it was so long ago, amy, our old daughter was a sophomore in high school and it will be two years this spring since she graduated from college and now just recently amy earned a master's degree. we're very proud of you sweetheart. >> thank you. >> annie our younger daughter was 8 years old when i left. she was about this high. now she is 16. now has her driver's license. she is doing good in school. she plays the piano. we're very proud of her too. look at you sweetheart. look at you. my baby is growing up so fast. again on behalf of my family, we want to express our profoundest gratitude to president trump. it has been a long, unhappy journey. it has been hard years for our children. they have been hard years for patty and for me. i spent my first2 month in prison nearly -- 32 months in prison behind what inmates call the razor wire.
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barbed wire fence. you can't go near the fence. if you do, there are prison guards with machine guns with the discretion to shoot you. i didn't go near that fence. the buildings behind the fence where inmates live and sleep are squalid and like tombs. there were 900 inmates there. drug dealers. cartel members, gang-bangers, bank robbers. there were men there who committed murder, con artists a lot of sex offenders. about 2% of the population in so-called white-collar category. for most of my time there my home was a six foot by 12-foot -- six foot, by eight foot prison cell. four cement walls, with a heavy iron door that shuts you in. a small window with bars on it and a bunk bed. i slept on the top bunk. often late at night i would look through the window and pass those bars out into the night
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sky and i would think of home. i would think of my children. i think of patty. sometimes -- sometimes i could almost feel her near me. i was -- >> just ignore him. >> i would say to myself, one day, one day i will make it back to you. and hold your hand, sweetheart. i remember what a gracious thing it has been to walk through life with you. thank you for waiting. what's that. she sure is something. anyway. so again on behalf of patty, aim any, annie, and me we want to express our deepest gratitude to president trump. republican president, democratic governor he didn't have to do this. but president trump is not a typical politician. >> that's right. >> he is tough, he is outspoken. he is gets things done. he is a problem solver in a
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business where too many politicians don't want to solve problems. all they want to do is play politics, and get nothing done for the people. i'm a trump-ocrat. if i had the ability to vote i would vote for him. i don't know they will allow me to vote but i will get into that in a minute. let me just say -- our president is, he is tough and outspoken, he has courage to challenge the old way. >> that's right. >> he is the one who is actually fighting to bring real change. that is why he gets so much pushback. now we're standing being tough also a man with kind heart. he sees wrong, tries to right it just like in the case of alice marie johnson. you know who she is, the grandmother of alabama who served 21 years in prison on a life sentence as first time, non-violent drug offender. a life sentence as a first-time non-violent drug offender. >> first step.
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>> alice marie johnson case is one of the better illustrations show how the federal criminal justice system disproportionately discriminates against african-americans and people of color. how the 1994 crime bill led to oversentencing and creation of what author michelle alexander the new jim crow in america. >> that's right. >> y'all know what i'm talking about. >> clinton. >> 1994 crime bill passed by my fellow democrats before i got to congress. fortunately as soon as president trump learned against the injustice against alice marie he immediately put a stop to it. he sent her home to her family. fortunately because the president gets things done through organizations like cut 50, president trump was able to build necessary bipartisan support to pass first step act. a new law begins process of reforming a broken criminal justice system. putting an end to racist and injustice caused by that racist
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1994 crime bill. as for me, obviously i got 10,000 reasons to be thankful to president trump. i'm obviously thankful to be home, have my freedom back. just to be able to hold my wife's hand. most of all, i'm thankful to you, mr. president, giving my daughters their father back. my daughters are growing up. the day is not too far off when they will go off into the world own their own. i wish i could slow down time. no matter where their life's journey will be, they will always take with them the realization the kindest gift they ever received in their lives came from you. thank you, mr. president, what you have done for me. better, far, far better, thank you for what you have done for them. i would like to thank a few people real quick. i would like to thank my old friend the reverend jesse jackson. neil: eight years rod blagojevich was in prison trying to buy a senate seat when barack obama went on to become
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president of the united states. he was governor, the democratic governor of illinois at the time. long story short he was looking at 12 to 14 year prison sentence. the president cut it to time served yesterday. quickly out, thanking the president. saying he is now a trump-ocrat the president was busy with pardons and clemencies. awarded to edward debartolo, former owner of the san francisco 49ers. add michael milken, bernie kerik. among others. charlie gasparino was the first to break the story. no matter where you are in the political stripes of things something like this is, just a good feeling. >> i have to admit it was moving, listening to him with the kids and everything there today. i have mean, really touched me. i don't know, listen he is a trained politician. you know is still good. blago was always a good
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politician. people forget he became a punch line for a little bit but he was always a good politician. he still knows how to -- neil: you wonder the sentence for the crime. he was getting into this a lot. republicans and democrats, whether that really -- >> i stumble, i kind of stumbled on the blago story and kerik. i'm a financial reporter. how do i do this? i covered white-collar crime. i have sources in that area. one thing i will tell you in terms of white collar crimes. he made statements about the '94 crime bill which i think are very pertinent. that bill disproportionately affects african-americans mainly because of the drug offenses and heightened sentencing for non-violent drug offenses. so if you have a segment of the population, not just african -- mainly poor people, segment of the population that are poor you will send them to jail more. you see this with white
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underclass people getting nailed on non-violent drug offenses. neil: the backdrop, the time was the drug scourge. my parents said, it is getting crazy. >> but you're putting people away for non-violent crimes. he makes a great point. it custodies proportionately. minorities are disproportionately poor, affect the minority community. white people are waking up to this with the opioid crisis a lot of white people are getting dragged into this for northern violent crime. trump has a way to attack democratic opponents, clinton, biden who supported that. the second on the white-collar thing. there is a knee-jerk reaction particularly in the press, throw them in jail, put them in jail forever what they have done. they deserve it. all about class warfare but i would say this, if you're rational, go back, peel back exactly what michael milken did wrong. peel back what blago did wrong
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and peel back what kerik did wrong. bernie kerik, they put him in jail for maybe misstating on a mortgage application on a mortgage he paid off. this was picayune stuff. blago, it seems like they were, they had him on tape bragging about something that basically every politician does. you don't think people use senate seats to get campaign contributions? neil: stepping back from this, criminal justice reform which the president got working with democrats, this is all part and parcel after bigger, larger story on redressing these grievances. i'm wondering a lot of people at home, yeah that governor, i don't feel any sympathy. i don't feel that is home run for the average man. what do you tell them? >> wait until they pick on you or our kid, put your kid in jail eight years having a gram of coke in his pocket. neil: michael milken stuff, is he free to practice in the business? >> no.
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we did a story on this. he is out there, his through his press people he does not want to get back to wall street, okay, yet. they won't rule it out totally. we should point out that michael milken has operated on the periphery of wall street for years. sometimes it got him in trouble. remember, he had to pay, in my story of foxbusiness.com, had to pay $47 million for working as a broker in 1998 i think it was. got in trouble with guggenheim. an issue between him and guggenheim got guggenheim in trouble. he was never charged we should point out. he has to eapply. neil: the sec has to write off on it. >> the sec could hold it against him. neil: do you think the sec chairman boss donald trump would do that? >> that is what i addressed. i quoted the john coffey at great law school professor at columbia, he has to be sweating bullets over this. you want to know that milken wants to come back to the
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business. like telling steve cohen, great hedge fund trader, you can't trade anymore. like telling neil cavuto -- neil: you can't eat anymore. >> i was going to say you can't be an anchor anymore. think about that he is one of the great -- neil: he was the guy who created the junk bond market. >> more than that. neil: he is something akin to that today. >> he was the joe dimaggio of finance. he was that great. what he did with junk bonds. there were excesses. clearly there were some issues that drexel the company he was involved in, which kind of corp.erred the market in junk bonds. neil: created companies. >> created companies but created leveraged buyouts that didn't work out. neil: absolutely. >> feds threw everything they could at him. neil: served two years, right? >> was sentenced to 10. he served two. there is a legal debate whether they created laws or used the right law.
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ironically rudy giuliani who started the ball rolling against him. i believe it was his successor benito romano who -- neil: ivan boesky -- >> ivan boesky was guy they turned evidence on. at the center of, fascinating bringing back all these names. ivan boesky's lawyer that cut the deal with the feds to basically rat out milken was none other than harvey pitt who became the sec chairman. neil: right. >> it is kind of an interesting circular, three degrees of separation thing here. neil: he is the first of the major individuals who were pardoned or sentences were commuted yesterday. there will likely be others. but for -- >> roger stone? neil: we'll see. he is just happy to be home, looking at his daughters well, they are eight years older than when he left them. more after this.
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president trump warned the drug companies. it's unacceptable that americans pay vastly more than people in other countries, for the exact same drugs. but they aren't listening. they've just raised the prices of over five hundred drugs. president trump supports a bipartisan plan, that would force drug companies to lower prices. but the senate won't act. tell senate leaders to stop drug company price gouging and lower drug prices now.
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neil: all right. you didn't hear this from me but there's a big debate tonight and with a whittled down field the question becomes who rises in a field now has a billionaire joining the firing squad or becoming a victim of the firing squad? anyone's best. we know it is whittled down as i said. one of the latest to step down, caused a little bit of ruffled feathers, andrew yang. he is a contributor at another network. that didn't take long. the atlanta hawks vice president, talking about nba hall-of-famer dominique wilkins supported andrew yang's candidacy before he dropped out. i don't know what dominique wants to do right now. that goes a long way. i'm happy to say he joins us out of atlanta. very good to have you. >> thank you. nice to be on your show. neil: on the yang thing, i have so much i want to talk to you about but who do you gravitate toward now? the reasons you liked him, a reason lot of people liked him
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he had innovative idea, income guaranteed for everybody. it could spur the economy. you were intrigued by that. what do you do now? >> the thing i'm most intrigued about health care. we became very good friends talking about health care. that was the biggest reason for our interaction is to, how do we do different things to change some health care, being a parent and father, to five, six kids, you know, it gives you, it gave me the ability to kind of reach out and really get on board how we make changes in this country as far as health care. that was the biggest thing for me. you know, i continue to do things with health care. i'm involved in several different charities. one charity that is very near and dear to my heart is culture city that deals with autism. neil: i'm really intrigued by that and when i read the backstory on it, dominique, it really goes back, you had a son who was dealing with this and the problem for parents who deal
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with this, people who don't understand autism or sudden spurts ever anger, all of that, you just said there has to be a better way to deal with this, obviously this grew out of it. how is it going on that front? a couple of cruise lines are interested what you're doing implementing it on the ships like carnival. go ahead. >> it is great what we're doing. we are on every carnal ship with sensory inclusive rooms to give people quiet times or not in balance or not in front of lights or noises that quiet rooms they can go to balance out. to do this on a national level really gives people a chance, other options where they can go, still be interactive and be in the public. one other thing is too, andrew yang's wife, evelyn also serves on our board. so we have a very diverse board across the board. it is all about giving families, people healthy options to deal
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with autism and also continue to educate people about it. neil: we were so focused on health care, providing for diseases we know that are demonstrable, you can see effects they have. autism, that is a touchy one even today, isn't it? >> it is. i have two kids with special needs. so i know the importance of really finding healthy options for the kids and give them the best quality of life. for me it was pretty much automatic to be part of something as great as this organization. neil: you know, you spoke very eloquently recently about the tragic death of kobe bryant. they will have the big public service for him i believe next week. i'm stunned, the ongoing reaction of a sense ever loss, not only for those who loved basketball but many, many more. he touched quite a few lives, didn't he? >> yes, he did. there is still very tough, tough thing for us who have known him. i've known kobe over 20 years and i have got to say he is one
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of those guys after we retired, one of those guys that really showed ultimate, ultimate show of respect. we always had great conversations. i was with him 2 1/2 weeks before his passing. i'm still in disbelief he is gone. you think he will emerge at a game or have a conversation. it was surreal moment for all of us. we lost a king in our industry and he is going to be missed. neil: i'm not meaning to blow smoke at you, dominique, i like wonderful stories, how you interact with people, can't do anything for you they want a autograph, picture, not one do you turn down, even causing delays getting to an event. that is something i think truly great in any business kind of have in common, just a simple decency. >> i think it goes hand in hand. i always believe the people who
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made us who we are. i always, you know, looked forward to giving them back their time because, you know, i take the time with a lot of people, mainly kids. i don't think we're that busy where we can't take the time and talk to a young one or family, just give them a sense ever peace in their life. that is what i'm all about, giving back where i can, however i can. neil: my son knew i would talk to you today. he wanted an autograph, if you can electronically send, we'll work on that another time. dominique, good to catch up with you. >> thanks for having me. neil: we'll have more after this about vehicle quality. and when they were done, chevy earned more j.d. power quality awards across cars, trucks and suvs than any other brand over the last four years. so on behalf of chevrolet, i want to say
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to de- clutter stores. the new york stock exchange, de- clutter stores. what does that mean? >> it means redesigning the store, it's one of the chief consent complaints they have, they think there's too much stuff in there. they're going to redesign stor stores. make the aisles water, put signage, so people know where they can sign things. it may or may not work. he did do this for targets. "wall street" has the expectation that they'll be able to do it, they just think it will take a little longer than originally thought but this has been beaten up about 30% year to date. they own a christmas tree shop
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if you're familiar with us. aren't you turn to boeing today because there's more news on the 737 max and it's not about what it's going to be up in the air, it's another problem. the company not ordering inspections of the entire fleet because the fuel tanks and some of the planes, it's not going to keep it from doing backup of air quickly but it will take three days to vaporize those gas tanks and be able to get inside. >> thank you very much. we've got the dow 158 points. not yet a record the s&p and nasdaq are at record territories right now. thus president is tweeting about the earlier today. a broker convention for the democrats means that it's against them. and gain new perspectives. that's why we go beyond the numbers. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. a more secure diaper closure. there were babies involved... and they weren't saying much.
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you know about the big debate tonight, the irony is that michael bloomberg will be on the stage even though he won't be on the nevada ballot. there is that little detail but this goes a long way to marking ground for donors down the road. mr. bloomberg certainly doesn't need them. for the other candidates hope to with him. the fundraiser with the founder, larry, that's among thousands of workers. hillary is in california with more. >> the president is on his way from las vegas here, the fundraiser is scheduled to start about 30 minutes from now. we've seen attendees go up this drive toward the private golf resort. this is a show of support for the president. he's making his first contribution by hosting a high dollar fundraiser here at his exclusive resort to attend, tickets start at $100,000 for two people. that's a picture for the president and also kiosk with
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trumps $250,000 to get you time with the president and our round table a month later this afternoon. this isn't the first time a sitting president has been to this exclusive offer results. president obama visited while he was president. this is the first time that a visit like this has triggered his own employees, they are protesting this fundraiser, asking their fellow colleagues to sign a petition online to try to stop the fundraiser from happening. so far, over 5000 employees signed on to make a stand against this. we are expecting two different anti- trump groups to caroline here and protest the president's visit. we talked to a local resident who has a different take on the president arriving today. mary jane, married to actor michael dante, she's looking forward to president trump coming up her neighborhood drive
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as well because her opinion is that the country is doing great and she's thrilled to see him here today. >> a little face time there. for those of you who want to know what i require, olive garden and desert. but that's all. michael bloomberg making a massive social media event, his campaign is hiring workers for 2500 bucks a month. just to promote the former mayor and followers. spread the word. trump 2020 new york post chairman democratic strategist, kristin and bessie zero,. >> what we start? bloomberg issue is more surprising, they are pretty common.
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protests and that. he certainly is. some of the technology sector, rancho mirage, i have a house there, it's a very from the area. it's a nice little golf there. >> they changed their mind because you live nearby. [laughter] >> the idea of bloomberg trying to get social media that way and pay for the influencing and so forth, it speaks to the unlimited resources he has and he doesn't have any proportionality of what it might be, he doesn't have to. >> if you think about it, i don't know how many of these polls are coming, the embarrassing comments he said several years ago but he's holding up pretty well. i'm wondering how that is.
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>> if i were on his team, you've seen how they been putting this together and a lot of people said that, he's got a very talented group of people so looking at these, anybody who doesn't underestimate him as at their own peril. i think there's some element of him actually taking it directly to trump. he propped them coming after each other. people are really liking him doing that. but also, the resources here from the campaign operative, you have to make decisions about what state you go in and you don't have to. i was just in l.a. for the debate in the last year. you should have seen them on the ground forrg it's a whole different bloomberg ballgame. >> all the enough in the city, he wasn't that well-known. back then, of course but he
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obviously came together and got elected. what you think happened? >> you can't rewrite history, something happened between when michael bloomberg was potentially losing his first race and once election they actually happened, that was 9/11. that really reinvigorated people to not take a risk on some of far left candidates at the time. >> the support was crucial. >> it was critical change everything about new york city. >> why do you get the sense that trump is most worried about it? >> i don't think he is. >> a little bit. >> i know those who think you shouldn't take anything for granted. >> sanders, i think bernie sanders would be the most fundamentally easy to beat. you see today, the hotel workers in nevada putting out fires, talking help bernie sanders will take away their union
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healthcare. the issues are ones that don't help bernie sanders in swing states like ohio and pennsylvania so i think it's much easier against bernie sanders. michael bloomberg can be the chameleon that he wants to be. >> that will be tested tonight. >> i think both of them have strengths as candidates, bernie excites his waist. bloomberg has unlimited resources. i do think an awful lot of bloomberg supporters, they would end up voting for bernie. i do not think they will go vote for bloomberg. >> i like the back and forth. you see the bernie campaign but one of the talking points, bernie supporters did go out and vote for hillary. they are purists. it's my way or the highway.
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>> so small in the swing states where you know how the enthusiasm and you have that. >> paying people to generate social media because in theory, he doesn't have actual -- >> pursues the president of social media and it is experiencing the candidates because one shows momentum, of donald trump tweets out the sky is purple, thousands upon thousands of people will see it was the bloomberg campaign, they are basically paying every consultant that's available to be paid off and they are paying people to retweet things. that shows -- >> tonight, they are going to try to bring in a new one.
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will he survive it? >> i will have a strong opinion after the debate about his opinions because i feel like you learn about their ability to take a punch and he has to know what they're going to say. i'm going to be the one to go after bloomberg and how intelligent the responses are will say a lot about his ability. >> he's looking down from acute fracture boxes line. if we are in real danger of losing those independents voters that we needed. it's always difficult in the primary but i think there are a lot of people out there like me and others who look at somebody like bloomberg. >> there are 10000 people in pennsylvania to support bernie who would not vote for bloomberg. there are 7000 people in michigan who will not vote for him.
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>> it's a test for mike bloomberg because there's a wide spectrum of what can happen. he's only debated three democrats in his entire life and he was debating as republican from tonight you're going to be asked questions, you are proposing a $5 trillion tax increase. that's the dumbest thing you could possibly think of. >> that's the cheaper alternative. >> is still a tremendously large difference from what we have under president trump and for prosperity we are seeing. >> "wall street" won't like it. >> if you get in that situation, limburg versus trump, you'll have risk, extreme chris taken off the table from bernie or warren. however, they would prefer trump to bloomberg. no question. >> only in american can billionaires run for president
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and have a shot. >> the billion president we have now and yes, he is a good chance of being elected. >> cleveland lost the electoral vote. >> and then to terms one. he had to go through that. >> the company stockpiled billions vote on instagram and facebook. on the defense right now. it's this technology that's overage. we'll see a close-up, that's next. ♪
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unveiling new regulation for artificial intelligence and against pretty much at silicon valley. back home from a clear view a is the target of a new lawsuit over fascinating facial recognition technology packets into the privacy issue, clearview a ceo joins us right now. you've been in the press a lot. a lot of it praising you and what you are doing and a lot of it condemning you saying what he's doing. are you invading people's privacy? >> we are a law enforcement tool that helps law enforcement solve crimes. the only searches publicly available so none of the imaging that we are searching of private images, that's one of the misconceptions. >> you are able with your software to look at all the social media sites.
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and be able to get images that you then can view with law enforcement if they are looking for something? >> typically, someone in law enforcement might have a photo from a bank or crime scene where a bank robbery hapten or a murderer and your stock. they upload the image into the web browser and we provide links to possible fleets. >> what say there's a robbery, you are able to upload that same image and draw down and put together a profile or series of other profiles? >> it's the beginning of an investigation. crimes against children, catching pedophiles and murderers, a lot of bad guys caught. >> how accurate is it?
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you uploaded my picture and i have nothing to do with us. i might look a lot like doctor robert but i'm not. >> ritual has to be used in a controlled condition, every law enforcement officer knows they have to get extra evidence. >> they just have a picture, there's a guy going around new york telling people are going to put patients aside and get them. >> what happens is less people are wrongly apprehended. we've had no cases of wrongful apprehension with this technology. >> how would this wor you have an image of him in a picture of him? the new look on sites or immediately try to be aware of where the image appeared.
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>> by the way, they are used strictly. this is a money maker right here. [laughter] >> you have a beautiful face. >> take a picture, i'll show you on the telephone cap. i can zoom in, i've never done this before so we'll see. what sites do you look up? it's all over the place. eighty-one photos. >> be careful what you are scrolling through. >> would you like to take a look and tell me what you see. there was an investigation in this terrible crime. >> you took his picture and within seconds, you had 81 photos from sites. >> it's just the beginning strictly for law enforcement to
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do the investigation. this is all me. it's a good amount. my hair is blonde and one of these. >> what's the goat? [laughter] that's really wild. so what's to stop let's say the family and they realize hey, we just had the police knock on our door and they want to know where you've been. what else are they doing to avoid wrongly getting him for something he's not done? >> you have to have probable cause. if you committed a crime -- [laughter] it's used for worse crimes like murder.
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>> you take that and spend within seconds, you find anywhere else that person image appears. >> only and publicly available sources. the way we set up our system is on the web, the open web. anything that's public. the social media platforms and any think you can find in the search engine. it doesn't search street cameras. this is an investigative tool, not a 24 hour surveillance to a. we charge law enforcement agencies so if you have ten officers who want to use it for investigation -- >> what if they come back and say i'll pay you double to remove the picture? >> we don't do that. it strictly for law enforcement. >> law enforcement likes it? >> they love it. we welcome the debate around privacy and facial recognition and we engage with government a lot and we want to make sure
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it's used responsibly. >> they could be in the wrong hands. >> that's why it's strictly for law enforcement. good intentions sometimes don't always -- that's why we have so many controls in place. >> i've seen spider-man and batman. i'm kidding. this is really neat technology. >> pictures just like that. from years ago. all popping up. [laughter] >> nasa, this technology it is now offering you a chance to get into the program. you could be the next person to walk on the moon.
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i know the men and women in this room are going to play a decisive role, we returned american astronauts to the moon. make sure the next man and the first woman on the moon are americans. >> alright so space want to trade their looking to hire a new mission of astronauts. nasa astronaut among the early inductees, congratulations for that. good to have you. >> are to be here. thank you so much. >> i know we have x significant delay, i apologize. we can go ahead to the moon and mars but we can't get a remote
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feet. in all seriousness, what made you want to do this? i was so happy to hear that we are back viewing this and anyway troy form. >> i've looked up to the space program since i was a kid but it wasn't until college that i wanted to apply to the astrona astronaut. i was very fortunate i got to do research in places like antarctica and i grew to love that operational research. so when my application opened in winter 2015, it felt like the right fit in here we are. >> by the way, i apologize, i was looking at my future part, i just did that. i'll never make it to mars but this strategy, how soon do they want to get going?
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i've heard when it was first looked at, this year now maybe next year, where do things stand? >> the latest timeline is, will be landing on the moon in 2024. right now, my job is training full-time as an astronaut and astronaut corporate i started in 2017 and just finished my basic training about a month ago. >> when you were a little girl, is this what you wanted? when i was a kid, significantly older than you, i can remember the excitement of mercury gemini, apollo astronauts, this is a select group. i know you discovered as a marine biology, was this something you are looking forward to?
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>> i wasn't one of those kids who always grew up wanting to be an astronaut. i wanted to be everything from a novelist to marine scientists and microbiology which ultimately led me before this application to this dream job of mine but it feels like an incredible fit and i love being part of this research program that so much bigger than anything i can do myself. >> talking about a big opportunity for tourists and pay a substantial fee, you get to go up. what you think about this? one for all? >> i think it's really incredibly exciting time to be part of the space program in any way. my graduating class doesn't know which vehicle they could to fly on and that to me is so exciti exciting, you could fly up on any of the commercial vehicles or spacex, they could be flying to the moon, it's incredibly
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diverse and an exciting time to be in space. >> congratulations. nasa astronaut, be looking out for her. i have a feeling she'll be making history soon. 's
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there's a lot of broker conventions this year but no space we did not one year. you could ride and not have someone on the first.
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>> i think it's highly unlikely in this day and age that it gets to that. it could but i think we are likely -- i hope so. >> my latest theory on this money, it keeps more in the race longer than people would have expected otherwise. thereby increasing the likelihood of a brokered convention. you could look at iowa as a metaphor, what that convention could be like. >> it's going to be a brokered convention from between michael bloomberg and bernie sanders. that's what's going to happen down the road. >> all bets are up. my friend. >> david with how the convention is looking to come together here and whether they can avoid that. that could get messy. >> it really could get messy. every four here's the term brokered convention or contested convention makes its way right
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about this time during election here as we get closer to the convention in milwaukee. this year, people are watching closely as the democratic field has the most candidates in history. bernie sanders is rising, joe biden is falling michael bloomberg is making quite a name for himself. 2016, there was talk of a record convention on the republican side as well, they dropped out paving the way for donald trump. it was no from the competition on the democratic side either. bernie sanders held on until the last possible moment when at the convention in philadelphia he pledged delegates for hillary clinton. strategist say they are prepared for a brokered convention but it's too early to start worrying. >> i think what we've seen in the polls and in new hampshire is that people are really enthusiastic about getting rid of trump so i do think we could survive a brokered convention. i sure don't want one. >> a spokesman for the democratic national committee
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said there's often chatter about when there's a primary and we have yet to see it happen in modern political history. right now, about 2% of the delegates have been allocated democrats understand how high the stakes are in this election and are overwhelmingly unified around the importance of defeating donald trump. there is president before primary convention, they are quite prominent in the early 1900s. the longest example of the convention, 1924, the convention lasted 16 days before agreeing on a candidate. 103rd ballot there. i don't think we will see that out but it's quite possible. it is in the cards. >> all right, thank you very much. great stuff. meanwhile, a honeyman nightmare. rachel and tyler now under quarantine in texas after being trapped on the diamond princess off japan because of the coronavirus.
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good to have both of you. thanks for taking the time. how are you holding up? >> we are doing pretty good. doing a lot better now now that we are in texas. >> at least on plant i guess. how long will you be there? >> we don't know yet. hopefully 14 days. we're not sure yet. we hope to be able to do it voluntarily. >> that's one heck of a honeyman. you will have stories to tell years and years, stories. we heard from different folks depending on the types of room you had, movement was tough. getting around was very tough. true? >> i would say so. we were confined to our room we had a balcony so we just go
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outside and get fresh air but for those with interior rooms, they were losing track of time, doesn't know if it was night or day. it is tougher for them. 200 square feet, we would get maybe an hour of outside time every other day. >> they were able to get that which was huge. >> what about food? how was i handled? how they handled now where you are? >> so for food, passengers quarantine, they didn't have the governmental support of the time to deliver meals from the equivalent of the red cross or something so the staff was working shoulder to shoulder, just cooking meals and
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delivering three times a day to over 1000 rooms. so it wasn't really all that great because it was they had to. here though, from what we understand, they contracted out to somebody and it's pretty good. we are happy campers here. >> you're getting some of the at least. >> plenty of meat and yet. >> you both have a great attitude about it. words of advice for others who might be in your situation, remember there others who are on on ships oscar and they might be facing what you are facing. i talked to one couple over the weekend, not keen on getting off the boat because i didn't want to be quarantined all over again. any words of advice? >> so for those still out there, what helped me and what helped us get through this was finding
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a way to stay productive. for me, gaming, i've been able to find things, one person on the california airbase, from prison here and working trying to find out the packages, we don't need the care packages, they do. we sent those to them. >> that's very impressive. i wish you well. i can sense a book coming here. stories for your kids in the future but hang in there. beat well, be strong. if you don't get foxbusiness where you are, that's another story for later. in the meantime, parting public beaches in california. here's a preview. hey, robert. >> that's right.
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the coastline is a huge attraction for any but the city is now dealing with another side of the attraction. the folks who come here camping out in public spots but they don't leap. we'll have that story for you in just a minute. at wish granted. with four models starting under 37 thousand,
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official in malibu, they are considering moving dozens away from prime real estate for beachgoers. much more on the story. >> we do have miles and miles of beautiful coastlines here in california. the beaches behind me here in malibu, it attracts many people to come and visit but it's also attracting folks who are coming here from a parking in public spots with public access to the beach and not staying for just a few hours but they are staying
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indefinitely for days and weeks at a time. creating many different issues and officials here say it's more than just a beach access issue. >> thirty to 40 from a 50-gallon capacities, they are dumping them onto the rocks or the bea beach, into the public right of way. they are dumping sewage in their right flank. at the health violation and humanitarian violation. me and above everybody else. >> a public, and abuse of public land. open fires for cooking and heating while folks are recovering from the was a fire a little more than a year ago, the former mayor and council member rebuilding his own home care. there are folks here who are not members of the local community and there have been issues with crime here, mostly petty crime but they are trying to combat some of the issues here. they're trying to move people away from here because it's not only public property but it's
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public safety as well. they've changed the sign to get people to move every couple of hours. they are offering factors but wegner tells me some folks want take the doctors mark and then and choosing to stay here park privacy. >> thank you. message right now for harry and meghan, you can't have your royalty and to take it and eat it too. a big move to change that, here's what's going on. sounds like a royal rift. >> i think it is. putting your money on the queen, she has the ultimate say. harry and meghan can no longer use the word royal in their branding, especially the sussex royal trademark that they put on their goods and websites an instagram accounts. i off the ports, it's been told you can't do that.
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you want to get out of royal life, take that royal trademark off your goods as well. that means they will have to rebrand, rethink their strategy but don't to feel too bad for them. yes, it cost them quite a bit of money but they still have a pretty penny. already some are reporting billionaire is misleaders are in our gold rush to sign them up for a variety of things. probably corporate deals and brand ambassadors, let's not forget they were in the jp morgan event recently where they spoke down in miami, it's that kind of gig these two will probably be looking for and the experts say they do the right networking and let's face it, people are coming for them, they could earn a pretty penny, up to 1 billion dollars. they're still not completely out of the woods with regard to the royal family, the headline is actually march 31 and this
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negotiation in this kind of way of disentangling the royal copley from day to day business of the royal family is complicated. a lot of fine details. the queen put her foot down and said no royal trademark for you. so they've still got royal eve event, public engagements to fulfill. we report if they are going back to the uk, they've got six more engagements until thought march 31 comes along. then they are on their own. >> thank you very much. maybe they can speak with mcdonald's, mcdonald's is helping to make more clean with the shamrock shake but there's an additional drink as well.
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mcdonald's is adding to the iris more. hi, grady. same here's the beatles broke up. they would say they were blessed with something else that has blasted but and you've got this one. this is a make flurry with oreos in it and mcdonald's is rolling this one out this year as part of the shamrock shake how st. patrick's day promotion. mcdonald's stores has been declining recently, 1.9% in 2019. these types of promotions are ways to get people to come into the store, maybe find some shamrock shakes and other food as well while they are there.
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not too many people on the streets of chicago lying shamrock shakes today but i'm sure as it warms up in other former places in the country, people will happy to try out the classic. i think you will try them out as well. >> i'm not sharing, this is a classic. this one has an alcohol. thank you. great job. not too much in the luck of the irish, year over year, they are up to 20%. charles payne who won his way into the shamrock shake, that's not happening. >> it is absolutely phenomenal. even though it's a bit, the cayman well above expectations. the 13th year hi, one of my investment teams from way back
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into august and september last year, a housing boom for this year. i think we've got it. i think it's starting to happen, refinancing of your over here. this is the epicenter and prior to the 13th year hi, it's absolutely wonderful. the only thing that can hurt it, there's been a lack of construction workers but i think they will be coming back to work. >> builders need that insurance or confidence and we have these jagged edge sword behavior in the markets. so they hold tight. they don't really go gangbusters. >> homebuilders that will begin reporting later this month, some in march and some in april. we will get a good idea with all the earning estimates with big names going up almost every other week. "wall street" was looking for big news, maybe we'll get a sense that despite what's happening around the world, the
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economy could be carried by household information and manufacturing. >> while side. thank you very much. see you in just a few minutes. the justice department pushing back against reports of the resigning of the president's tweet to form us former u.s. attorney. the real truth on this, he was concerned about the president's tweet make the job more difficult. he says he and the attorney general are getting along just fine. who's right? >> i wouldn't put too much thought into the reports that he's looking to resign. it's just not in his character. he's not a quitter. i do think, truly i do think history has a way of putting the right person in the right spot, maybe at the right time and i think bart is the right guy for
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the job right now. >> the former department types will come back and say we don't think you should be and not job because you've seen the president's lawyer. a generation ago when bobby kennedy, the brother of robert kennedy was serving in that capacity. democratic residents who were very loyal to them but here, it's a special case. what you think about? >> i think it's interesting, you raise a good. >> when you look at it in terms of who this guy is, this attorney general, this isn't his first time around. this guy was here in our previous position as attorney general. by the way, criticized wrongly for no matter what decision you make. then and now but i know the guy,
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he's a man of integrity, a man of honor and certainly he's a man of great experience. >> the sun is setting we will be getting plans to go through with it. even as the whole of the manag manager, the person i should say, nasty comments she made about not only waterstone but the president himself, she was as clear a critic and opponent of the president can be. but somehow, jerry, shouldn't that be the biggest story right now? >> listen having tried a lot of cases, i don't think this a verdict should stand up based on what i've read. if in fact the foreperson was a congressional candidate from the democratic party who has tweeted about the stone case who has
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facebook entries about the stone case and about the president who's clearly got up i hear, i don't think the product should stand up with herbie the foreperson. it's interesting because the judge has said look, we are going to go forward with the sentencing and then we will deal with this whole issue based on a biased jury. >> i'm no lawyer. >> but what you are saying is my experience says the same thing. the judge should bring the jurors back in, she should question them one by one to make sure it's a three unbiased jury and then move. >> i'm not looking at any political views here, what's right is right and what's fair is fair.
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neil: right now, i leave you with the two out of three averages in record territory. the dow getting close. dow, s&p are in record territories. calm returning on asia. to charles payne with more. charles: thank you, neil. good afternoon, everyone, i'm charles payne. this is "making money." the markets are riding momentum wave. i say move over the maga stocks a new crop of tech companies leading the way. nvidia, tesla. by the way, have you seen virgin galactic. my prediction of a 2020 housing boom keeps coming true. we're all over the markets. mike bloomberg under the microscope as he takes the stage for the first time. we'll see his war on wall street of all people and his dire warning for democrats. that and much more on

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