tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business February 11, 2022 12:00pm-2:00pm EST
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same with you? hallmark if says valentine's day is the second biggest day for greeting cards behind christmas. now you know. you sending a valentine, lauren? lauren: yes. stuart: you have to now. [laughter] ashley, are you serving a valentine? ashley: yes. and i'll sign my if name on it. stuart: no question about it. jackie deangelis in for neil. it's your withs, jackie. jackie: i will be waiting waiting for my valentine, stuart. now it's on you. welcome to "coast to coast," i'm jackie deang lis in for neil cavuto. inflation in america and protests in canada, major u.s. automakers now saying the canadian trucker protest is hurting production. we heard from truckers and hear how one automake per is taking to the skies to get parts there. then, inflation running hog wild with farmers, farmers telling fox business that they are paying more for things like
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field and fertilizer and transportation. we are live on a hog farm in illinois with a look at how they are handling these oipped rising costs. and as prices continue to pop, congress getting called out for its inaction. the new warnings over what a lack of action in washington could mean if for our economy. but first, that trucker standoff continuing at our northern border, and the u.s. wants canada to do something to end it. jeff flock is in ottawa, canada, with the details for us. good afternoon, jeff. >> reporter: right in the middle of the truckers' convoy, jackie. we had a number of police just move in a little bit ago, and we were concerned perhaps they were going to take some kind of action. as a it turns out, not only people, but dogs here, and they're all a friendly as are the protesters. we thought that the police were going to take some sort of action, actually, they were just concerned that somebody had a loud speaker, and they said we're going to ticket you. the protesters said, okay, we'll
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take it gea away. they've been very cooperative. the canadian health minister has just announced that next week the canadian government will take some sort of action to change the cross-border vaccination requirement that has kicked off this trucker convoy. that is to say you must be vaccinated if you're a canadian truck driver to go across the border, come back into canada. that has a really got people riled, and the government says they're going to change that in some way. they haven't said exactly how. i do want to show you what it looks like here, we've got a lot of folks surrounding us. part of what has been a very peaceful protest. i want to talk to one of these truckers, if i can, just to get quick reaction to what we got from the canadian health minister. excuse me, sir, sorry. i want to talk to johnny, who i had talked to a bit earlier. johnny, just want to shake your hand, if i can. i wish we could see everybody in the truck.
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>> that's all right. >> reporter: we just got word from the canadian health minister that they are going to change the cross-border rules in some way next week. they haven't said exactly what. you okay there, pete? can you give me some reaction to that? is that going to be enough for you. >> no, nothing about what they just said is specific. we want something written on tape paper with very specific details. >> reporter: what does the convoy want? what do you personally want, what does the convoy want? we've heard from some of the organizers who said, you know, you've got to end these vax mandates. >> well, 39% of us -- 99% of us just want all mandates lifted and also to take the state of emergency off. is that what it's called? to lift the state of emergency. >> reporter: that would be enough, if they did that, for you to back off. >> obviously, that it's on paper so that whenever this next pandemic happens, that hay can't
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do this again, yeah. >> reporter: good luck to you. why did you come out? i mean, you've lost two weeks of work. you've been here for two weeks. >> my winters generally aren't that busy, i did miss out on some work. i only heard about this five days before it happened. i just figured i'm a trucker and i could see that eventually i was going to be one of these guys on the chopping block to lose his job. the truckers are like brothers. it always has been like that, and i just figured there's hundreds or thousands of people coming out, i'm going to stand with them and fight to the end. i don't think what we're doing here is aggressive or anything. if you look around, it's all peace and love and very godly too. >> reporter: that's true. that's what we've seen since we've been here. johnny, thank you very much. thanks, folks. good to talk to you. there you have it, jackie. as he said, this has been a remarkably peaceful protest. it's not the cleanest protest
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i've ever seen. they have people who go around and clean up trash off the street. they've got people cooking meals over here, and this is going well beyond the truckers. even if we get some sort of change in the cross-border mandates in terms of vaccination, i don't know if that would be enough to turn everybody around, because there are a lot of people supporting these truckers who say they want all of the mandates to go away. we'll see, jackie. jackie: people seem fed if up, jeff. but thank you so much for bringing that excellent report to us from the ground there in canada. and this is a trend that might expand across the country here. people are sick of the lockdowns and remember restrictions from covid. meantime, general motors now chartering cargo planes. they're trying to fly parts over the adopt river and into the united states -- the detroit river to keep a critical truck plant going there. fox news correspondent garrett tenney live in detroit with the latest for us. hi, garrett. >> reporter: hey, jackie. the number of auto plants that
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are either canceling shifts or pausing production is growing by the day. this is happening on both sides of the border. ford, gm, stellantis, toyota and honda are all struggling to get the parts they need delivered to keep production lines open. and it's because protesters are blocking commercial traffic on the canadian side of the ambassador bridge which handles a quarter of all trade between the u.s. and canada. if for five days now, demonstrators have forced these 7,000 trucks that normally cross here each day to travel more than an hour north to the blue where water bridge in port huron, and industry experts say the longer these blockades last, the greater the impact will be on businesses, workers and consumers here in the u.s. >> americans are aaffected by the trade at the canadian border for a number of reasons, but one of the biggest is because they're our number two trade thing partner.
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if car manufacturing is disrupted, there's less supply of cars available, and prices end up going up invariably or people can't get the products that they want. >> reporter: governor whit her is demanding canadian officials take immediate action to reopen the bridgings and says the protests are creating an economic crisis for her state. >> it's been hurting us in michigan from day one. every minute this goes on is lost wages, it's damage to our businesses. this is an illegal blockade. and while people have the right to protest, they don't have a right to illegally block the largest land border crossing in north america. >> reporter: the mayor of windsor just across the border is expected to be in court this hour asking a judge for more power and ability to are remove the protesters and get the bridge back open. we'll keep you updated on what happens with that. jackie: all right. spillover effects hurting an
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already struggling economy here. garrett tenney, thank you so much. these auto shortages are set to hurt the middle class and add to inflation as well, but it seems taha politicians -- that politicians are still a little bit more worried about whether the truckers are vaccinated. here now is kaltbaum capital management and fox news contributor gary caught bam and dave -- kaltbaum and gary manninging -- manning. you are paying well over sticker, used car prices are already up 40%, and that's because of of the supply chain issues. now you've got the spillover effect from these protests impacting production as well. we're in a tight spot. our economy should have been open a long time ago. can you even believe that we're here? >> it's murphy's law, and let me just sate the -- state and economy should be like here in florida. we've been open up forever.
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disney world opened up more than a year before disneyland in california. there's no vaccine mandates or having to give vaccine cards into restaurants. i was just in new york city three weeks ago, and i spoke to somebody in a diner. they said normally there'd be a line out the door except people are not showing up because they're having to bring many cards, and they have to turn people away. so the more we can open up, the better. and it's good to see some of these states finally getting it whether political reasons or not, the sooner the better because the economy is, i would call, quite fragile. and what we're seeing with inflation right now, doubly fragile. jackie: dave, they're not seeming to get it when it comes to the vaccines just yet. but some of the blue statements are loosening up their mask policies, and many people are saying that should have been done for a long time. governor kathy hochul has dropped the mask mandate.
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you still see people here because they've been conditioning, they're double masking and they're outside. there's a certain point where this all just has to stop. >> definitely. and and, you know, what's amazing to me -- and, by the way, i'm an american who lives in on tear owe, canada, so if -- ontario, canada, so if you want to see contrast, up here they're like the bluest of blue states in their behavior and in their mandates. i mean, masks are everywhere here. what's amazing to me is that this convoy and this protest that you've been covering is up here, has the government beating a very hasty retreat. i think that, hike the democrats in the u.s., the government hery the federal government -- are all, they can see the polling data. i think they knew that it was kabooky theater for a long time, and i think they're looking for a way out, and this protest actually may be it. jackie: it may be and, of course, we had that headline from canada saying eventually
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they will issue some sort of new guidance even though exactly what they're going to say is murky. you heard the truckers say we want them to just lift all the mandates, that's what we want. it's kind of a bigger fight here. i want to play a sound bite for both of you and get your reaction because president biden has been responding to the issue of inflation, and he's saying this: >> it was back in july you said inflation was going to be temporary. a lot of americans are wondering what your definition of temporary is. >> well, i think you're being a wise guy with me a little bit. i understand that's your job. jackie: wise guy. i don't know, i think at lot of people have the same question. the fed dropped the term transitory, gary, a while ago. and this administration keeps going on and saying if we spend more money, we're going to fix it. give me a break. >> lester holt could not have asked a more appropriate question. it is not a wise guy question, it is a question of the heeder
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of the free world who is -- leader of of the free world who has come out for months and months saying, don't worry, inflation will come down, and all it has done is spiked higher and now we're really seeing it in interest rates which, by the way, cost of capital is going to continue to go higher which will affect the economy also. so not good form by the president on that one. and, look, the bottom line is if the fed doesn't get their act together soon, it's just going to worsen. rates are up again today. jackie: yeah. >> unfortunately, i've been saying this for a very long time, jay powell has been a huge cause of this inflation. economics 101 says when you flush trillions of dollars into the system, you're going to create it, and you're going to create distortions. we're getting it. now we're being told he's going to cure it, and i'm amazing our balance sheet today hit another new high. he's still printing money, still at 0% rates with 7.5% inflation -- jackie: 7.5% year-over-year,
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guys, a 40-year high. it's unbelievable. dave, i just want to get your take on that. he has called fox news reporters stupid, he has cursed at them, now he's calling lester holt a wise guy. whenever he doesn't like the question or he doesn't have a good answer, that's his reaction. real quick. >> yeah. he's like, i mean, become the get off my lawn guy, without question. and with all of the questions that that raises. and i also think it's like, you know, it's like asking a water buffalo to operate a nuclear power plant. the belief that they can just shut the economy down and not have kind of wild distortions as the power comes back up and think that we can control it is just, it is the biggest fallacy of our times. jackie: yeah. >> and we're in for some rough sledding. this country's going to be feeling the reverberations for a while. gary, dave, thank you both so much. >> thanks, jackie.
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jackie: coming up, it's not just football in focus out in los angeles this weekend, cheryl casone has a look at how businesses are looking to capitalize on these crowds. cheryl. >> reporter: all right, jackie, hello from los angeles. why do companies spend billions of dollars on installations like this one right here at the nfl experience? because it has something to do with the local economy. all of these cities, that's when "coast to coast" comes right back on fox business. ♪ at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner with access to financial advice, tools and a personalized plan that helps you build a future for those you love. vanguard. become an owner. new projects means new project managers.
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jackie: welcome back, everybody: major businesses hoping to capitalize on this weekend's super bowl buzz. ford making a major push for its ev technology at this year's super bowl. cheryl casone is live from the nfl fan experience with a look at what ford is feeturing. cheryl. >> reporter: well, jackie, i'm going to get to this beautiful electric ford f-150 in just a moment, but first, let's talk about the economic impact that the companies bring to los angeles. the host committee looking for $250-400 million. we talked with katherine, the ceo of the host committee, she thinks they're actually going to go above those expect takes, at
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least meet them -- expectations, when it comes to super bowl lvi. listen. >> i think the super bowl's our coming-out party. i think people are going to go back to their normal lives where they want to be with people. they've been sequesteredded, they want to get out and enjoy the city, enjoy people, and they want to be in the restaurants and bars, things you don't do at your house. >> reporter: that pent-up energy is certainly true, jackie. let's talk about what's behind me right now. this is the f-150, all-electric vehicle. by the way, this is where you start your tailgate on super bowl sunday, in the front of your ford pickup truck. maybe a little bud light are, another sponsor of the nfl. it really is a beautiful truck, okay? first off a, they've got these limited edition stickers for all of the vehicles here at super bowl lvi, so all these fords you're seeing around town have got the super bowl and come on back and see this, jackie. you're going to love this. i mean, who doesn't love a
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tailgate and a little bit of good? if check out what your tailgate can look like at the back. this is the 2022, the starting price, $39,974, four-door, five seats. it's all wheel drive, it comes with an extra tow technology package if you want to tow things behind it, and real quick, 230 miles off of one charge. now, a lot of our viewers, jackie, probably want to know about the battery life of the truck. i just want to know how much food it can hold for me on super bowl sunday in the back of this bad boy. i love this thing, jackie. jackie: i could live in that thing, cheryl. stocked and all, i love it. thank you so much for that. >> reporter: i'm just going to move in. [laughter] jackie: all right. well, of course, the ads are an issue with the super bowl too. the average cost for a super bowl ad skyrocketing to $6.5 million this year, this as many cryptocurrency firms are looking to get some attention with all
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those eyeballs doing ads. let's bring in john tatum. john, good afternoon to you. let's talk about these dollar prices. people are going to be watching. they are looking to root for a team, the camaraderie of it, just everything that we've been through in the last two years. what should we be expecting? >> well, jackie, i think cheryl said it perfect earlier. this is definitely a coming-out party for everybody. you know, being around the nfl experience, the media center, the parties. i would say it's pretty much like it was in 2020 when the super bowl was in miami. there's still masks and proof of vaccination and things like that, but for the most part, it's as normal as it has been, you know, for the previous 54 super bowls, let's say, last year being the major exception. jackie: if the truckers are any
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indication, a lot of people across the country are fed up, and i'm guessing a lot of people who are going to the super bowl and who are watching and celebrating are too. i think it's really interesting, with all the people watching that crypto might be getting in the game here, trying to reach all kinds of people out there. any thoughts on what we might if hear or who's going to be on the list? >> yeah. no, i would say, you know, a lot of the bud light super bowl concert series is being held at the crypto.com arena at l.a. live, crypto.com and some of the other cryptocurrency companies all have ads in the game. i mean, certainly cryptocurrency, fin-tech, you know, sports betting, those have been the largest categories in terms of new sponsorships, new advertiser. as, as you know, are going for about $6.5 million for a 30-second shot spot.
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so you better bring your best creative if you're going to invest that level. certainly, the anheuser-buschs and the pepsi, free -- frito lay, all of those staple companies and brands are advertising in the big game. and then, jackie, obviously the highest rated part of the entire game is the pepsi super bowl halftime showment i was fortunate to see the dress rehearsal on wednesday night, so i think everybody is going to be very much -- jackie: happily surprised. >> -- surprised. exactly. jackie: very cool. john tatum, great to see you this afternoon. have a good time. >> okay. thanks, jackie. [laughter] jackie: after the break, members of congress sounding the alarm on inflation, but what are they actually doing about it? chad pergram is going to give us a live update from capitol hill. ♪ come as you are, as you were,
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jackie: inflation is exploding. senator joe manchin warning democrats in congress to proceed with caution before adding more fuel to an economy already on fire. fox news congressional correspondent chad pergram is live on capitol hill with the latest. 7.5%, chad. >> reporter: good afternoon, jackie. the skyrocketing cost of goods is dominating talk on capitol hill even if congress is not responding. shipping delays are driving up the cost of everything from apples to the price of hay for farmers. >> hay producers estimate that the freight cost to be three times more expensive by this winter. in addition, freight costs -- ships are returned to asia
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without -- with empty containers and standing, straddling on u.s. ports and docks. >> reporter: senate minority leader mitch mcconnell says wages aren't keeping pace with inflation. >> in other words if, if you haven't personally gotten a pay raise of 8% or more in the last year, then democrats' to policies have given you a pay cut. >> reporter: some democrats are still pushing if for a retooled build back better. this is why the gop can point to democratic spending bills as the reason to oppose the party in the midterms this fall. >> they're all in power right now with huge bills going out, and a lot of those bills with huge price tags. they're willing to make -- it's a simple equation to -- connection to equate democrats with spending right now. >> reporter: the senate banking committee votes on the nomination of jerome powell to lead the fed for a second term next week. raw merricks on both sides
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will -- lawmakers on both sides will watch to see how the fed responds to inflation, especially after paul said inflation was only temporary. jackie? jackie: thank you so much, chad. good to see you. meantime, a new cnn poll finding that 56% of americans approve of nothing or disapprove of all of president biden's work, what he's done so far in office. let's bring in the hill editor-in-chief bob cusack for more on this. these are pretty tough ratings there, bob, and they're coming from cnn. >> yeah, jackie, these are bad numbers for the president. i mean, the president campaigned on getting rid of covid, the pandemic is still going on, obviously, two years in now. and also if you look at his legislative agenda, it's completely stalled. build back better is completely dead right now. there are no talks of revoifing it. and so -- reviving it. so the president is going to be addressing congress in his first state of the union on march 1st, and he's not going to be able to spike the ball that much because
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the biggest legislative accomplishment so far was the covid-19 bill, but covid is struggling. bipartisan infrastructure bill, that definitely was a big win, but it didn't help his numbers, jackie. and these numbers, they are frustrating and exasperating democrats who are up for re-election in november. jackie: i was wondering if this move if, the military move that they made in syria to get the isis operative, if that wasn't sort of a hail mary from this administration to try to get through to the american people in some way and say is, look, at least we did that. you know, do you think that moves the needle at all? because the polls aren't really showing it. >> you know, i don't think so. i mean, certainly that attack and taking out the isis leader was a big foreign policy win for the president. he just hasn't had a lot of victories certainly recently and in the wake of afghanistan. that's not going to make up for those deadly u.s. troops and the
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debacle that that was. so, you know, this white house is going to have to do things differently in 2022, and that's why i think his speech in a couple weeks is going to be so important. jackie: yeah. when it comes to the coronavirus, that was his big thing. he said elect me, i'm going to come, i'm going to fix it, we're going to end the pandemic, and here we are two years later, we're the still fighting about everything. you've got people who want restrictions to be lifted, and the administration and local governments are still, you know, clamping down. at what point does that have a real impact? i mean, i think that it will have a real impact on midterm elections. >> i think so. i mean, usually the party that's more divided is losing, and democrats used to be divided -- used to be united on covid. and now governors are lifting mask mandates and the federal government's saying, hey, not yet, anthony fauci's saying, not yet. republicans are divided on other issues but remember, you know,
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washington is run by democrats, and polls like the one you just mentioned, the cnn poll, people are not happy. and unless things approve, unless we get out of this pandemic in the spring, come summer, it's going to be an ugly fall for democrats. jackie: yeah. i want to talk about this too because hillary clinton is scheduled to speak at a gathering of top new york state officials, and, you know, people are talking about 2024 run for her, that she might seek the white house yet again even after being defeated last time. your thoughts on that. >> i think it's unlikely, but certainly she hasn't ruled it out publicly, and the democrats don't have a deep bench going into 2024 if joe biden does not run. and, obviously, age is an issue there and his poll numbers are an issue there. so it's just another thing for us, jackie, to talk about in the media. but do i think it's likely? no. jackie: well, being, you know, that the president will be 82 years old and he's already many
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question, let's say, his mental capacity, if you will, you know, who do the democrats really have? >> well, harris, the vice president, her numbers are about even with biden's if not a little worse depending on the poll you look at. you look at pete buttigieg, can he win the african-american vote, you know, there's no one -- i don't see a barack obama -- jackie: yeah. >> -- in the wings other than maybe michelle obama, but she doesn't want to run, so i don't think she's a viable option. jackie: yeah, i think kamala was the hopeful, and she just has fallen short in a big way. we'll be watching everything. we'll get your insight. we really appreciate you taking the time today. thank you, bob. >> thanks, jackie. jackie: breaking news on the trucker protest in canada. it is impacting auto production. ford motors says an ohio assembly plant is not producing vehicles today because of a parts shortage stemming from the protest.
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general motors has also been affected. the company now chartering cargo planes to fly parts over the detroit river and into the united states to keep a critical truck plant going. all right. quick market alert before we go, the dow is paring its earlier gains, rising bond yields are triggering inflation fears. we're going to have more "cavuto coast to coast" when we return. ♪ might as well be walking on the sun ♪♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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information took and why it wasn't flaggedded sooner. it was back in december in st. petersburg, russia, when olympic figure skater camilla valyera tested positive for a performance-enhancing drug. she was told she would not be able to compete in the olympics. that decision, however, was overturned on wednesday after an appeal. but the international olympic committee didn't hear about any of this until a lab in sweden released the results this week. the ioc is now challenging the lifting of the suspension, and it's up to the court of arbitration for sport to decide if the teen can continue her olympic events in beijing. her next e competition is on tuesday, the 15th. the substance in the athlete's system is often prescribed to treat accelerate duo or chest pain. now -- vertigo. the drug helps increase the blood flow and boosts endurance which is why it's banned.
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russia has faced doping scandals before. members of the russian olympic committee, not as representatives of russia. just days ago she won gold in a team event, the u.s. took silver and ya a pa pan claimed bond. no one has -- bronze. if the russian team is disqualified, it would bump up the u.s. to the top spot. now, again, she's 15 years old, she is a minor, and the international olympic committee is asking for patience because of the protection of some of these medical records and what this might mean. but, of course, so many eyes on this, she is an olympic front-runner, and just at these olympics she made history by doing the very first quad jump as a female. all eyes will be on this to see what this means not only for her olympic career, but the other athletes competing against her. jack jack absolutely. it's very tense, and we'll see how it plays out, but it also raises questions about team
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russia's ethics. so we will see. and, of course, a lot of the other stories that are coming out about the olympics are surrounding china. the u.n. labor agency now citing human rights concerns about china's shin january region, but u.s. corporations are continuing to turn a blind eye while they're also returning a big profit. republican congresswoman from california michelle steel joins us now. congresswoman, it's wonderful to see you, and i think that story's really interesting because, as i said, it make you think about russia's ethics. why are we not talking about china's ethics? we've got human rights abuses, the issues with hong kong and taiwan and sovereignty, we've got intellectual property theft, they won't help us with the9 covid investigation. many are questioning why we're even having this event there. >> that's the reason, senator ted cruz and i sent a letter out last march to change the venue, and we got the answer from the international olympic committee that they said they're not going
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to change it. now that olympics are happening, the genocide and organ harvesting is the greatest crime in the 21st century in china. and it's really interesting though because, you know, u.s.-based corporations pay millions to social justice last year in u.s. and and pay billions of dollars to genocide to china and never mention about china's human rights abuses. the standard has -- [inaudible] jack a jack yeah. you're talking about all the corporate sponsors, and isled -- i would even lump into that category nbc who is broadcasting the olympics, eventually putting profits over people. >> isn't it amazing? my colleagues and i wrote to all u.s.-based corporations canning them -- asking them just little bit of china's genocide and $1 billion organ harvesting industry in china against
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uighurs, christians, muslims and we never got any responses, you know, from any corporations. i think they're hypocritical. they should cosomething. why u.s. corporation is not interested in welfare of million of innocent people. jackie: it's really interesting to me. i mean, the one thing they could do would be to boycott the event and, obviously, they're not going to do that. now they're over there, and not only the corporations and the representatives and our own athletes have been warned to watch their ps and qs, how they act, what they say. there is no freedom of speech in china which is another reason this -- that it's just mind-boggling that the ioc would allow this event to proceed. people bringing burner phones, i mean, it's outrageous. >> exactly. this is really outrageous. and we cannot really, you know, we really cannot make china walk
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all over us. we have to be calling out ccp, and they have to do the right thing, but they are not doing it. we really have to watch out that our athletes we are sending best of the best in the whole world athletes to china, they are there right now and competing. their safety is the most important issue. so we really have to watch it e closely. but i hope these corporations, that they are spending billions of dollars in china advertising and hopefully they can participate just a little bit. let them know and, you know, let whole world know that exactly what's going on in china. jackie: part of it is spreading the word, and consumers have a lot of power too. somebody recently mentioned to me, they said they were not supportive of what was happening at the olympics, and coca-cola's a sponsor, and they won't purchase the products anymore. maybe that will get them to wake up, we'll see. congresswoman, thank you. >> thank you.
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jackie: coming up, apple air tags are getting a safety upgrade. how the company is trying to prevent more stalking cases. ♪ -- i want your revenge -- ♪ you and me could write a bad romance. ♪ i want your love and all your lover's revenge -- ♪ you and me could write a bad romance ♪♪ every year we try to exercise more, to be more social, to just relax. and eating healthy every single meal? if only it was this easy for us. your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you lost.
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♪ jackie: apple's air tag as under scrutiny after criminals were reportedly using them to track unsuspect ising victims. they would follow them. kelly to grady has this story. kelly, if it's not one thing, it's something else. this is terrifying. >> reporter: i know, it really is. i want to contextualize exactly how small it is. it's about that big. so it's easy for someone, like you said, to slip one in your car, in your purse at a bar. criminals are using them to track you to a location that's easier to attack you. >> this is just the latest technology that crooks are using to follow people to take them down to rob them. and you can go down the street ask around the block, you're not going to see them, but they'll be following you on a device. >> reporter: now, to combat this, apple will now warn users that tracking people without consent is a crime in many regions, and thails also a
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introduce what's called precision finding. an unknowning air a tag is nearby if, and this tool will help you find and get rid of that tracker by giving you sound and distance cues. additionally, serial number and apple id info have actually already led to a number of criminals be apprehended for theft and stocking. -- stalking. this is a rare move for them, but this increase in unwanted tracking has been a pr nightmare especially when the tech giant positions itself as such a consumer privacy-focused company. but even with these updates, the risk isn't going to be eradicated. if you have an android, you can also detect an unwanted air tag by using the tracker app that apple released. so, jackie, while big tech has emerged in case as an unlikely partner in combating the surge in crime, it may take policy changes.
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jackie: this is so interesting, because as apple continues to innovate, problems that you couldn't even imagine result from some of that innovation. kelly o'grady, thank you for that are. meantime, zoom rooms, quarantine rooms, dual fridges, a new phenomenon certainly is underway in reality right now. garmin homes founder and ceo ilena garmin is leading the charge. it's great to be with you, good afternoon. >> so nice to be here. thank you for having me. jackie: i want to start with a question, because we had a guest on the other day that was saying building of homes and the customization with materials being so expensive right now, it's slowed down, but you say it's, you know, it's on track to continue. so i just want to get a sense around what is happening in the market. >> it's a tough market right now. we have demand at an all-time high and supply chain prices really slowing down production. if there's always a -- [inaudible] in home building, but that's why
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we're here. we want to make it great. jackie: and so when it comes to this customization, listen, we've all gotten used to spending a lot more time at home, so some people made improvements themselves but now there are certain things that people are actually looking for that have come out of this pandemic. they want that in their home because presumably we may be spending more time there for the next year or so or who knows. >> it's true. it's true. we want two working spaces from home that aren't in bedrooms, we want places where we can escape and pay attention to our emotional health and wellness. we want family entries to reflect what we want want when we need it. refrigerators, washes and dryers or right there so you can disinfect if you feel safer doing that, but we also want spaces that are open and welcoming that also keep us safe. jackie: and it's interesting, when the buyers are going out searching for homes, how is it
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that they're parsing through these different issues, their wants and needs and trying to figure out what the right property is for them? >> i think it starts with the builder talking about a conversation about how they use space and really empowering the buyer. i think builders have been pretty prescriptive in the past about -- [inaudible] it's really getting to know the buyer and understanding how they use are space and recommending a floor plan that reflects that optimum use of space for them. jackie: yeah. and i think that comes to the point of evenyou're not customizing your home, some people would rather get a space that is old ask and is run down and fix it up myself versus going in with my taos brush because it may not -- booth brush because it may not -- toothbrush because it may not be exactly what i'm looking for. >> home scarcity is a real thing right now, so if you're building new, you really get it to reflect what you seed. jackie: interesting. great to see you, thank you. >> thank you very much. jackie: after the break, some
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new data showing that millennials and latinos are now the hardest hit by rising inflation. we're going to discuss what this could mean for latino voters that are thinking about getting away from the gop. ♪ ♪ i feel so close to you right now. ♪ ♪ .. a strategic and sustainable asset... the path is gilded with the potential for rich returns.
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i'm ben affleck and i want to thank you for joining me and supporting paralyzed veterans of america. i joined the navy to serve my country as a navy seal. i wanted to protect the people i love and the country i love. being a seal gave me so many things, but i gave something too. while parachuting with my platoon, my parachute didn't open. i broke my neck. it left me paralyzed. i realized that everything i had planned for was now gone. paralyzed veterans of america was by my side from that moment on. since 1946, paralyzed veterans of america has kept a promise to our wounded veterans. we will never leave a fallen comrade behind. our vets need you. join me with your support. please call or go online now to pva hero.org. your gift of only $19 a month - just 63 cents a day, will provide the life-saving help our paralyzed heroes
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need now. with your monthly support, you're honoring the sacrifice our wounded veterans have made to defend our freedom. show them their sacrifice has not been in vain. your monthly support will help paralyzed veterans receive specialized medical care, support research and treatments, and fight for the accessibility they deserve. pva fights to help veterans like me from the moment of injury and for the rest of our lives. call or go online right now with your gift of just $19 a month. use your credit card and receive this pva team t-shirt to show that you are fighting for our paralyzed veterans. i just don't think my family would be as happy as they are without the support that i received from paralyzed veterans of america. our veterans fought for us. let's fight for them. call or donate online at pvahero.org today. our veterans need you.
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susan: welcome back to the second hour of huchul. we have supply chain and inflation worries, we have coverage on all the angles. the flock has the freedom convoy of truckers fighting mandate would lead to concerns about auto-parts getting to the us. we are here with hog farmers who say everyday prices of skyrocketed. what does that mean for consumers? edward lawrence is covering how the administration is handling record inflation by pushing
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bills back better. we start with jeff flock and the freedom convoy. >> reporter: since we last talked, you see a podium set up for folks, snow coming down here in ottawa. a lovely time of year to be in ottawa but as difficult as it has been nobody is going anywhere. as we reported in the last hour the health ministry here has said they are going to move on some of the demands of these truckers, folks that had to cross the border on getting vaccines. i was talking to a cross-border trucker. there he is. mind if i step up? i tell you. that will we happen on live
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television. you are one of the cross-border truckers. you have to get a vaccine to go across the border. >> yes, sir. >> did you get the vaccine? are you going to get a vaccine? >> never. >> reporter: they say the health ministry is talking about relaxing that. will that be enough to move your truck from this position? >> it won't be. >> reporter: with uni? >> freedom. no more mandates. scrap every mandate. you know what our national anthem says? god keep our land glorious and free. we don't have that right now. >> reporter: you have been driving a long time. >> i have. i am 71. >> reporter: you seem like a reasonable guy. people try to paint these protests as fringe groups and vaccine deniers and folks who
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say there was no pandemic. you consider yourself one of those guys? >> partly. i believe it is follow the money if you know what i mean. the rich guys are trying to take over, evil people like doctor fauci, bill gates. you know what i mean? i don't know to what extent but that is what i hear. the normal working man, it's not us doing it, it's the big boys. i am not alone. >> reporter: i appreciate it. >> tucker carlson when you came up. i love you guys, you talk fast to the normal people. >> reporter: try to talk to all folks. >> reporter: keep up the good work. >> reporter: i will try not to
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fall down again. sorry about the fall but a lot of sentiment, they talk about towing trucks out of here and get rid of them. 400 trucks is what they say. if they are going to tell them out it will take a while. jackie: he's not the only one who thinks people are profiting from the vaccine mandates which is why they are in place and the lengths you will go to 4-story, thank you. good to see you. america's farmers are continuing inflation. grady trimble sees how farmers are handling rising costs. >> reporter: they call them input costs, fertilizer and feed for the hogs.
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we are surrounded by big pens and another camera from our photographer patrick who is in the thick of it. brian duncan's hard. your costs have gone way up compared to normal times and that's why we are seeing inflation all the way to the grocery store aisle. >> reporter: agriculture is not immune from what people are experiencing. there's been increase in cost up and down the supply chain do to labor, transportation, packaging. >> reporter: if you look at numbers from the cpi survey pork has gone up 14% from a year ago and you say the further meet goes down the processing line the more expensive it gets because that's another layer to this, the meat processing plants don't have the same manpower because of the workers.
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>> coronavirus place into that. bacon is a value at twice the price. never forget that. pork, you can get fresh cut that doesn't require the processing and better value there. the more it is processed and more hands touch of the mortise impacted by inflation. >> reporter: what's the solution? you think there are solutions to the labor shortage. >> common sense immigration reform for all of us in the supply chain, identify workers who want to work in supply chain jobs and there are reforms in transportation regulations to allow more efficient use. >> reporter: a lot of them are sitting there waiting to be processed. >> that is counting the service time. that limits the amount of actual driving they can do. >> reporter: that is what we are hearing, the first step in
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america's food chain. the meat processes are dealing with higher costs and that leads to higher costs for you and me. jackie: the administration says as it is the processes and distributors who are price gouging. that's not what is happening. as americans are struggling with rising prices the administration struggles with pushing through its bills back better plan. it is amazing to me they are sticking to this story. it is at 7.5%. >> this is the white house behind us. the president has no public events, in a few hours, this is americans dealing with 40-year
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high in inflation. the date this report came out the president was doing an event. if you read the sign behind the president it says lowering costs for families. in that event he pushed the social spending package. the question everybody wants the president to answer. >> back in july you said inflation is temporary. americans wonder how your definition of temporary is. >> president biden: you're being a wise guy with me. the reason for the inflation, the supply chains were cut off, automobiles, lack of computer chips so they can function. they need those computer chips.
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>> reporter: senior administration official thinks supply chain issues will be worked out. families are paying $276 because of inflation. consumer sentiment, to a 10 year low. it is because president biden's policies which started with attacking the energy industry, the swing vote in the senate, senator joe manchin says we have to get serious and inflation is a tax suspending might not be going anywhere. jackie: it wasn't a monthly child tax credit or other spending on climate change initiatives.
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we will leave it there. understudy shows record inflation costs $276 a month with millennial's, latinos and middle-class people feeling the pinch the most. what does this mean for latino voters who are moving away from democrats. let's get reaction from the us president abraham and rico. it is part of the vote and people are feeling the pinch of this. there is a tipping point, they will pull back. >> we understand, policies mean everything and our communities
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are mostly working-class. this inflation has absolutely crushed most family budgets ended negatively affects young latinos with a fighting chance investing in entrepreneurship they would like to come to mainstream media and sell this live at all we care about is open border policies. time and again data shows and proves the number one issue we care about is jobs and the economy. when inflation hits a 40 year high, latinos realize this administration has far less the hispanic community. jackie: you might have seen the soundbite before where president biden called lester holt a wise guy because people were having trouble with it. people are paying more for food, 20% more for bacon, and
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it feels like it has gotten out of control. the midterms are the time, different types of voters to speak their minds but speak that the voting booth. >> something latinos understand is consistency and the republican party has uplifted the community but the democratic party, banks on the idea of police reform but now you see them both saying we didn't actually mean defund the police, saying masks might not be that efficient. robert francis o'rourke said he
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didn't really mean about taking guns away. inconsistencies the trend of the democrat party and latinos are realizing being consistent in free-market capitalism is the party of the republican embracing party. jackie: i want to bring in ronnie, not sure if you listened to the conversation, how the feelings of latino voters are changing, talk about how the gop can capitalize on that. the philosophies are not what the group stands for. >> an important thing to realize is the party has to and the culture and the way the hispanic community raises family and children. we are vested in the future of children and grandchildren and that is affecting us in a major
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way with inflation. we invest in education and financial future, at the gas pumps and so forth. we have to push the message on the hispanic community and get them to realize the policies of the democrats held us for many years but we have the wrong message that we need to change the message and understand what we are trying to do and our heritage and culture is conservative in nature. jackie: i want you to elaborate on this. so many people have the misconception that hispanic and latino voters only care about open border policies. that's not true. many of the voters immigrated here legally are not happy about the policies at the
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border and these are family-oriented hard-working economically savvy voters. talk to me more about those misconceptions about immigration. >> don't use latin x when it comes to the hispanic community. that something they reject in a major way. when you talk about policies. you talk about open border. the majority of hispanics came legally or are natural born citizens. they have gone the way they need to to succeed and live the american dream and others come in freely through the border and grant access because of the american citizens was the hispanic community does reject that. we reject larger government. we are connected to our families, we love god, we love babies. the policies of the republican
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party align more with the hispanic community so we are seeing a shift with the way people are starting to vote in the way parties differentiate between republican's and democrats. jackie: we have to see if voters get out and have their voices heard during the midterms as a result of what they've been experiencing. we will follow up but great to see you this afternoon. the world watching russia's next move but who is keep an eye on north korea and iran? we will discuss that when we come back. ♪♪
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jackie: welcome back. the world has been focused on a possible russia invasion ukraine. iran and north korea have been testing new weapons. let's get reaction from the heritage foundation's senior research fellow, peter brooks. when it comes to this administration and its foreign policy. there are no wins but there's a
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breakdown, the inroads in the last administration. looking at the situation with russia, we have massive problems with china. north korea and iran are big problem but lower on the totem pole with respect to how immediate they are. i want your point of view on us, where are we? >> the perception is the united states is weak and vulnerable and distracted and unable to compete or lead. states that oppose us, china, russia, iran, north korea, bad actors will try to take advantage of us because they see us as we can vulnerable and distracted. they will impinge upon our national interests. no negotiations going on on
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their nuclear program. they are planning to launch and icbm, test another nuclear weapon we haven't seen since 2017. iran. they continue to enrich uranium. they are playing hardball at the negotiating table over the joint comprehensive plan of action known as the iran nuclear deal and these talks may fail because they are unwilling to come around to the wishes of the united states and the international community. there is a huge number of problems for the united states and our friends and allies. jackie: let's home in on iran. president obama put us in the deal, donald trump got us out of it because it was a bad deal and his raining and solution is to impose harsh economic sanctions that have had a
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crippling effect and send them the message without saying it that we will not allow what they are doing over there especially if they sponsor terrorism. you have this administration saying we want to talk to you, talk about what. >> a country like iran and the regime like iran, the most active state sponsor of terrorism in the world, hamas, hezbollah and others, with nuclear weapons. the obama deal was more of a speedbump to the iranian nuclear program. donald trump was right to get out of that agreement. didn't prevent iran -- a lot of the restrictions on the iranian
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enrichment, come off in 2025. that sunset provisions everyone is concerned about didn't capture their ballistic missile program. they let off a new test come a test of a new missile just this week. iran is destabilizing the middle east. they wish to have hegemony over its neighbors and its ally, israel. they are a huge problem. they feel they can make outrageous demands like russia is doing. the united states will cave. jackie: the situations are different but you've got a president saying once you invade i might impose a comic sanctions. people are saying it is supposed to be the other way around. will super bowl sunday be the biggest sports betting event of all time? we will speak to the ceo of fan cool after the break.
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jackie: millions of americans are getting ready to watch the game. some say the super bowl will be the biggest sports betting event in the country's history. it certainly is exciting and everyone is revved up for the big game sunday. tell me about what you are seeing. >> reporter: the single biggest sports betting event, we expect
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7 million on the platform. exponentially from last year. 50% of those are player problems, not just that game but you can bet on everything. 550 different player markets, for the super bowl this year. everyone can have skin in the game. it's a record year. jackie: has sports betting become more ubiquitous? people are more excited about this game? some combination of both? >> from the regulatory perspectives. last year we had 10 in arizona and connecticut. a huge expansion of geographics but it has become a mainstream
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part of the sporting event experience. this is really elevating the way sports fans engage with the particulars of the super bowl. jackie: people are not big sports people who think the only but possible is to choose a team, what are the stranger things that you can bet on? >> some of these very by markets. in some markets you can bet on the life of the national anthem. the color of the gatorade splash. they predicted it would be 34, 31. the cincinnati bengals end up with 34 points and the rams have 31.
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the money is going. jackie: are you going to the game? >> i'm going to the game bringing all 3 of my boys. jackie: cheryl casone gave a preview and said it was beautiful and sunny and so many looking for covid restrictions and enjoying themselves. is that sentiment that encourages people to place a little wager. >> the buzz has been fantastic, we are getting back to a bit of normalcy. my own kids have fantasy sports teams. this is an important part of how consumers engage. you are seeing that convergence
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between sports media, elevating the game itself in the game narrative. jackie: it is great to see you, we will be watching and some of us will be betting too. let's get back to that trucker standoff. jeff flock live in ottawa talking to trekkers. i'm impressed by the people you've spoken to. what is next? >> reporter: a lot of people support the truckers, even day care. a lot of people bringing kids to -- tell me again, niagara falls? >> niagara falls. on the canadian side.
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>> reporter: your wife or young lady presuming to be your wife, what possesses somebody to provide moral support? >> we are here to support the truckers because we don't agree with mandates put on us. we are getting firm. >> reporter: we hear this a lot. have you ever seen anything like this in canada? >> never seen anything like this. it's awesome to be here. people defending our freedom together. it is a great day to be a canadian. it is all over the world. i'm here to defend the right to buy my groceries. i'm afraid i won't be able to buy groceries or watch my grandkids way hockey. i don't understand this.
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>> reporter: what do you see happening? some of the provinces may loosen, canadian health ministry says we may change cross-border requirements. >> i pray to god it will. that is our hope and prayer. >> reporter: thanks. appreciate you taking the time. it is a love fest. this is like a love fest. largely, jackie, a protest. i've been to a lot of protests, a lot of angry people at protest. i don't see people angry here. i see people with a great sense of resolution, they feel this has gone too far and they will do what it takes to make their feelings known. leave you with a picture of a tent where they are handing out food and god knows what else. jackie: from folks you have
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been talking to, this is more than truckers. this is about a lot of people and how they feel about the mandates and feeling oppressed and controlled. >> reporter: canada, i don't want to stereotype the canadians are tough. it is cold up here. they are used to being self-sufficient. this is a free country in a lot of ways they see across the border in america is not so but feels like people had enough and they are ready to have what they see as unfair mandates lifted and we have shown you many scenes, these people do not appear. when you set up daycare, hay bales and god knows what else, they are not going anywhere soon.
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jackie: feels like a movement if you will. thank you for that. coming up the fda is set to weigh whether to advise covid shots to children under 5. we have the details when we come back. at fidelity, your dedicated advisor will help you create a comprehensive wealth plan for your full financial picture. with the right balance of risk and reward. so you can enjoy more of...this. this is the planning effect. so you can enjoy more of...this. today, things can be pretty unexpected. but your customers, they still expect things to be simple. and they want it all personalized. with ibm, you can do both. businesses like insurers can automate
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i'm ben affleck and i want to thank you for joining me and supporting paralyzed veterans of america. i joined the navy to serve my country as a navy seal. i wanted to protect the people i love and the country i love. being a seal gave me so many things, but i gave something too. while parachuting with my platoon, my parachute didn't open. i broke my neck. it left me paralyzed. i realized that everything i had planned for was now gone. paralyzed veterans of america was by my side from that moment on. since 1946, paralyzed veterans of america has kept a promise to our wounded veterans. we will never leave a fallen comrade behind. our vets need you. join me with your support.
1:39 pm
please call or go online now to pva hero.org. your gift of only $19 a month - just 63 cents a day, will provide the life-saving help our paralyzed heroes need now. with your monthly support, you're honoring the sacrifice our wounded veterans have made to defend our freedom. show them their sacrifice has not been in vain. your monthly support will help paralyzed veterans receive specialized medical care, support research and treatments, and fight for the accessibility they deserve. pva fights to help veterans like me from the moment of injury and for the rest of our lives. call or go online right now with your gift of just $19 a month. use your credit card and receive this pva team t-shirt to show that you are fighting for our paralyzed veterans. i just don't think my family would be as happy as they are without the support that i received from paralyzed veterans of america.
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our veterans fought for us. let's fight for them. call or donate online at pvahero.org today. our veterans need you. ♪ feel stuck with credit card debt? ♪ move your high-interest debt to a sofi personal loan. earn $10 just for viewing your rate — and get your money right. ♪ jackie: welcome back. the dow is hovering near session low. it fell 350 points. stocks looking cheaper now. than they did at the start of the pandemic. let's get the read from george c. good to see you. what happened in the last 10 or 15 minutes?
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>> there is a lot of volatility. some areas of the market are cheaper than they were pre-pandemic. and off a lot of other sectors are expensive. the old cliché and the best clichés are true, it's not a stock market. it's a market of stocks. they are attractive at any given time. some stocks are unattractive no matter how that may be. jackie: inflation numbers, 7.5% higher year over year. internalize that if you will and it was reflected in closing markets. we started our trading today. with respect to inflation it means higher interest rates. we know the market doesn't take it well. >> it doesn't.
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i wish the fed and other government officials talking about transitory inflation which was never going to be the case would stop trying to manage the narrative and be true to the american people. if they got in front of inflation and said this is a problem and we will act to counter it we would have had less in the market. make it a bumpy year this year. jackie: yields have moved higher, trending lower today but you could see inv bonds, safety trade and that's how they were looking at the >> if interest rates pick up
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dramatically i don't think two is a bogey or something awful of low interest rate on the 10 year. if we get up to and a half or more than that to have a positive year. people have to be patient, if it goes down significantly further you need the iron will to step up and by. jackie: when we see rates go higher it is high growth stocks and technology names beat up the most. do you think it is more of a selloff across the board? >> with this inflationary pressure and interest rates picking up and other commodity related stocks and reopening trades will be strong this year. they should do very well. technology stocks with little or no earnings contingent on
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what they are and 10 years from now i wouldn't want to own those. jackie: you have to be choosy. maintain long positions that will not, microsoft, apple, home depot the don't sell necessarily. they balance your portfolio for sure. jackie: good to see you, and open intended. after the break we will speak with one business looking to capitalize on the super bowl buzz. stick around. ♪♪
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important for parents. >> we we on a longer timeframe. initially they were set to have a meeting of vaccine advisors on the fifteenth to evaluate expansion of the pfizer vaccine for children under 5. what happened is they decided to postpone the meeting. they try to proceed as a to dose vaccine while still awaiting studies on whether a booster dose would be beneficial for this age group. >> we move ahead now? if a third dose might be needed, that will be part of the discussion. >> reporter: the fda deciding to wait for more research to
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come in, whether it is a 3 dose vaccine. weather was a to dose vaccine and waiting for additional data to come in. younger children are less likely to develop myocarditis, temporary and mild swelling of the heart seen in small but elevated numbers of adolescent and young adult males following vaccination. young kids are at lower risk for complicated and from covid it self. having a safe and effective vaccine for children is a priority in light of the recent omicron surge, lots of his hobbies allies to -- hospitalized with covid even though -- the white house is preparing the child size dose
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to be distributed immediately once they are approved. it looks like this will come later. the fda playing it cautiously and wait for more data on a potential third dose for children under the age of 5. jackie: waiting for a knowledgeable decision could be a good thing. set up with month-long delays for your furniture? there is a surge because of that. lydia has the latest. >> reporter: why wait months for a new furniture purchase when you can leave same day with any of this vintage furniture? david is co-owner of lenovo design.
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it is modern furniture. people can leave same day with a dining room table. >> it has been great. we hear repeatedly that wait times between 6 and 12 months and longer. we have seen huge demand for people who want high-quality vintage furniture so they can leave the same day. >> reporter: you said your business double. >> a huge demand as people expand their homes and don't want to wait 12 to 18 months. >> reporter: you are bringing in directly from denmark shipping costs around $6,600 for container coming across the atlantic. >> we are effectively planning and trying to bring in more volume to compensate -- >> you told me you are not sure lenovo was going to survive,
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had to shutdown for 3 months. figure out a way to thrive. the latest report is the market through 2025 will grow by 38%. back to you. jackie: thank you for that. back to the super bowl, returning to los angeles. a huge victory for local small businesses trying to recover from the pandemic. many harsh restrictions. kendra of ola catering joins us now. what is happening with your business ahead of the super bowl? a lot of people traveling to your state, sales are up. >> reporter: sales are up which is great because we suffered a huge loss with the pandemic.
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being selected as one of the businesses to cater at the super bowl has been awesome for us. >> reporter: what are people looking for? is it food for tailgating or private parties? not everybody can attend the game that they are celebrating all kinds of ways. >> more private requests, a lot of in-home deliveries, not necessarily tailgate but things people can bring to their party. i'm known for my short ribs. jackie: talk about pricing, these prices are up. your input costs are going up and labor costs too. has it been a struggle? >> reporter: a lot of items have been unavailable.
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my short ribs are still there. reads jackie: is there pushback? so far much, running full speed. >> reporter: it hasn't really affected that. one of the busiest days we've seen in a long time and when people like it they are willing to pay. jackie: telling what it was like to operate with such harsh restrictions in california? i imagine it was difficult. >> reporter: incredible he difficult. i didn't think i would still be
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here because we had so many events canceled was every job on the books went away. it wasn't just a decline but it went from attentive businesses 0 business. jackie: you are not alone. thank you for being here, good to see you. take a look at oil prices soaring above $90 a barrel. we have more after the break. ♪♪ ♪♪ i feel it coming in ♪♪ it's easy to customize your insurance at libertymutual.com so you only pay for what you need. isn't that right limu? limu? limu? sorry, one sec. doug blows several different whistles. doug blows several different whistles. [a vulture squawks.]
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before the moment slips away. take advantage now. jackie: tech stocks are down, weighed by rising bond yields, the nasdaq turning negative. the dow is down 450 points. before good afternoon. this is making money. just a moment ago, unconfirmed reports of russia invading ukraine by next weakening markets hard sending oil through the roof. what this means for your portfolio. the canadian trucker protest becoming an economic issue. will the white house get involved. is it time to start buying sports betting stocks?
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