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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  September 2, 2022 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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the next very well could be a wartime president and god help us if it is joe biden but this will be won or last economically way before it is militarily. >> and give him a failing grade. it will be a big day for republicans this november. >> we are in a very interesting time when it comes to the economy, we are not in a recession period, we are not in
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2000802002-1, significant legislation will lead to more jobs to the economy, the inflation reduction act, all those bills are about promoting our economy is moving forward. >> history tells us if we have a bear market we can take 30% off the top. that is a bit dramatic but who knows? ♪ built this city ♪ built this city on rock 'n' roll ♪ built this city ♪ ashley: a beautiful friday morning, blue skies, it is 11:00 am on the east coast this friday the second. there's all sorts of green, the dow off 278 points, s&p up one person, same story for the nasdaq.
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take a look at the big tech stocks, up across the board. the biggest gain is amazon up 2%, even down at the bottom, half of one%. look at the 10 year yield, you see that comeback now down for day basis points, 3. 20 one% on the 10 year treasury yield. back to president biden's speech last night, listen to eugene robinson framed that speech. >> sounded like a president delivering a wartime address and indeed president biden sees it as he says a battle for the soul of the country. a battle for the preservation of our democracy. ashley: a war crime address, blood red lighting, two marine
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guards standing, steve hilton, what did you make of it? >> it would be better to have a blood red sky around you. honestly, it is laughable when you see the arguments being made, there is no defense for this speech. eugene robinson engaging on an infantile level, the future of democracy, what are they talking about, take it at face value. this speech was long straw manis a barometer, one strawmen after another, these ultraand aga republican's want to take your children and barbecue them on labor day weekend, that would be terrible, we must fight back, nothing in this was true, it was totally dishonest,
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totally divisive, completely cynical but the good news is actually it is going to be a massive failure politically for them and the really good news i think is i think it will be a turning point for biden himself, this will hasten the day that this angry, ranting all of man is out of the white house which i think it will fail in its own terms because it is so obviously ludicrous. ashley: couldn't have said it better, really fired up on this friday morning. i will get you fired up on this one. the white house is blaming donald trump for school closures. listen to this and i will get your response. >> does the administration shoulder any blame for not pushing schools to reopen the sooner? >> let's step back to where we were not long ago when the president walked into this administration, how mismanaged the response to the pandemic
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was. our schools went from 46% to open to nearly all of them being open full time. that was the work of this president and that was the work of democrats in spite of republicans not voting for the american rescue plan. ashley: wasn't at the democrat led cities that shut down the classrooms, wasn't it the teachers unions who wouldn't come back to the classroom? >> of course it was. and the donors to biden in the democrats, that is why they pushed the school closures, nancy pelosi, the schools have to stay closed, the most dangerous thing is bring kids back to school. they said that and for them to stand there and lie so shamelessly, republican governors like ron desantis who followed the data and the science that said it is clear
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children were barely affected and now because you have such a compliant media, they echo this nonsense but we have the tapes and the quotes, all the democrats in california, newsom saying got to keep schools close to and the disaster that was predicted, children's education happened, democrats are to blame. ashley: one last one that makes me laugh. you are in california where officials push residents to conserve energy. what is going on? >> what they have been doing the last three years, the extremism, zealotry that puts their ideological obsession ahead of anything practical for
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years, making california more reliant on less reliable sources of energy, cutting back on the baseline power you get from gas and coal and nuclear in particular and instead been pushing california towards unreliable solar and wind and the result, the grid can't keep up with their plans to force everyone not just electric cars, they want everyone to be cooking with electric stoves and everything will be electric but we forgot the one crucial part which is providing an electricity grid to power this. a total clown show in california. >> a total clown show, great place to leave it. glad you got all of that off your chest, great stuff this morning, thank you for joining us. take a deep breath, have another cup of tea. we will be watching you on the next revolution sunday night at
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9:00 eastern only on fox. steve hilton fired up today. let's check the markets and bring in jonathan honing, another young man who makes a lot of sense. let's start with the job numbers. does this mean the fed doesn't have to hike 75 basis points or is this the report that has no impact on the fed at all? >> looking at the markets and every day investors, the job number is good but job numbers were not so terrible in 1970s either and what really killed the pool was the inflation. can you imagine getting a 14, 15, 16% mortgage, that is what people were facing in the late 1970s, as early as the 1980s. a semi-good job number doesn't shake my fear about what is cooking for this economy in the market long-term.
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ashley: and where does this market go? do we retest those june lows or is it just going to be choppy here on out until sometime next year? >> the real true bottom, no one wants stocks, you can't give them away. back to technology stocks in 2,000 one or 2,009, no one wanted them. what i see now is little more hope than fear, some massive rallies and healthy rallies, what worries me isn't so much stocks but bonds, global bonds are in their first bear market in 30 years, we've got this inverted yield curve, always portends week times not just for the market but the economy written large. ashley: and very quickly, you had etf called rising rate, fittingly so. >> now at a time for alternative assets. can't just bet on those old papers so pf i ask is when you
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might want to take a look at. it benefits when rates go up and considering in the early 1980s mortgage rates were 18% they have room to run. ashley: we moved to the united states in the early 80s, 13% puts things in perspective. >> were you 3 years old? ashley: thank you for saying that, you will be back on the show. all right. flattery is the mother's milk. of television. there you go. i think so. television. i got there in the end, short-term memory is terrible. looking at the movers. lauren: reuters reporting focused street is bidding to billion dollars for coal real estate. stock is up 6%.
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they wouldn't own the company, they just own some of the stores we can undisclosed number and then they would give back the real estate. we will see. void gaming, chinese tv maker up 7%, warren buffett's berkshire hathaway sold another one. 7 million shares, berkshire made the investment in 2008, nothing but straight up for the most part and a new meme favorite, bed, bath, and beyond down for the fourth day. awful we, they announced plans to cut their workforce by 20%, closed in hundred 50 stores, trying to figure things out to stay alive. ashley: that is what it is all about, bed, bath, and beyond. now this was the country group florida georgia line just played their final show, going to tell you what broke up the band.
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chicago mayor lori lightfoot blasting the governor of texas for tossing migrants to her city. >> he's a man without any morals, humanity or shame. ashley: she calls the strategy racist, we are on that story. 315,000 jobs were added in august, the employment rate sits at 3.7% but that may not be good news for the federal reserve. edward lawrence will claim why next. ♪ ♪ that's right, robert. and it's never too early to learn you could save with america's number one motorcycle insurer. that's right, jamie. but it's not just about savings. it's about the friends we make along the way. you said it, flo. and don't forget to floss before you brush. your gums will thank you. -that's right, dr. gary. -jamie?
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ashley: the august jobs report
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shows the economy added 315,000 jobs in august and the unemployment rate rose slightly to 3. 7%. edward lawrence at the white house, digging through the data all morning, take us through it. >> the white house has been lowering expectations when it comes to the economy for the past several months but as you mentioned the employment rate did to cut because more people entered the workforce, very strong jobs report, maybe too strong for the federal reserve. i was told last week from voting members of the federal reserve that if they saw a strong jobs report could be the tipping point for voting members to move interest rates another 75 basis points. >> part of this is really about how much momentum we see in the economy and that will determine how much of a move we should be making. i think we should try to get to that terminal rate as quickly as possible but we want to do it in an orderly way. >> in this jobs report average
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hourly wages did not move up much taking in 5.2% year-over-year while cpi inflation, for these pay checks but the labor secretary taking a victory lap when talking about this report. >> we keep saying the an employment rate is pretty stable, we are seeing more people come into the workforce and more jobs added to the economy and we are in a very interesting time when it comes to our economy. >> is where the job gains were with games manufacturing now above pre-pandemic levels by 67,000 jobs. on the other side of that leisure and hospitality, one. 2 million jobs to get back to pre-pandemic levels, down 7.2% even with all those gains. this is not likely to be full enough for the federal reserve so could expect a more, 75 or 3 quarters of one percentage
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point at the next meeting because of the strong report, there's the cpi inflation report the comes between this. ashley: thank you for running us through all those numbers. the governor of florida, ron desantis is responding to new legislation in california that would punish doctors over what they call covid misinformation. >> the opposite of california. not only are we not going to do something where someone gets penalized, we will protect people's right to practice and be able to do an evidenced based medicine and just because woke association is saying one thing that does not mean you are bound by that when you have evidence and data supporting you on the other side. >> lieutenant governor jeanette marie nunez joins me, what are you going to do to protect
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doctors free-speech? >> what we have done all along throughout the pandemic, focused on the science, made sure we looked at the data. we are not going to allow i awoke ideology, radical folks that are going to try to subvert the medical community. that's why our surgeon general has been clear on so many issues and we will stand on the side of science and protecting those that may have a difference of opinion, that is what science is, allowing the medical community to go through the data and understand so we are excited about looking forward to moving in that direction. ashley: i want to change to this subject, democrat candidate for governor charlie crist has picked carla hernandez matt as his running mate for governor, she is president of the largest teachers union in your state and has come under scrutiny for connection to a former teachers union member. do you know what these connections are?
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>> absolutely. she is a union boss with a radical agenda that publicly defended and stood alongside a child sexual predator, someone who was a middle school teacher who preyed on young girls in middle school, forcibly raped and she defended that. that is something she needs to answer 4. we cannot put our children in danger and her agenda placed concerned parents, it is par for the course of what biden, crist and carla, she's known as carla marx because of her castro sympathizing views they need to answer more and sent a message loud and clear. ashley: another name for you. gavin newsom who is governor across the other side of the country, he has been waiting into florida calling ron desantis a bully and how great charlie crist is. how is that being taken by the people of florida?
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>> the people of florida some of which are prior california residents have come to florida because they appreciate governor desantis, his leadership, we've seen so many californians leave the draconian lockdown state. what we will see in november is allowed message sent to the dnc and local democratic party that florida voters are fed up with radical agenda and going to assure ron desantis and i are reelected. ashley: all of those californians are not turning the state purple, are they? >> no, as a matter of fact what we have seen in florida is florida republicans have a net advantage over democrat voters to the tune of 250,000 registered voters, the first time in the history of the state. that didn't happen by accident. that happens because of our leadership and freedom first policies.
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ashley: a lot of people beating a path to florida. thank you so much for talking with us this morning, we appreciate it. florida georgia line played there last show, what is going on with the breakup? >> reporter: rumors are it is politics, the drama started after a biden supported him brian kelly, a trump supporter, they had differing views that caused them and/or their wives to unfollow each other on social media, they say we remain friends and bandmates until wednesday night when they performed their last show is a duo, they will pursue individual careers, they say it is not about politics. ashley: it is dividing country music, that is something.
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a new -- backed by billionaire pete lateal. >> reporter: it's called the right stuff, it was funded by peter teal but founded by former officials and the trump administration who had a hard time finding like-minded people on the existing dating apps that made them feel unwelcome. why do you have to talk about politics? just leave it out and find out if you like someone and take it from there and then i realized this. if you are on an existing dating apps there is a habit for climate change but not for the second amendment and then you have a tab for black lives matter but not for being pro-life so they are coming in with a new apps looking to change that or at least provide a forum where conservatives are not treated -- the right stuff. ashley: the right stuff, a good name, thank you very much.
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back to the markets if we can. you can't make this stuff up. back to the markets, the dow up 330 points which a relief rally. the jobs report strong but not over strong, the nasdaq 1%, the s&p up 1% in the believe the fed will not be forced to do anything more aggressive than it already is doing. a scientist at harvard thinks alien technology could be sitting on the ocean floor. we have that report. crime in chicago up 40% from this time last year. one bakery owner is so fed up she is considering leaving the state and she will be on the show next. ♪
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neil: ashley: you are looking at midtown manhattan, it is 74 °. what a pleasant morning in
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manhattan. let's look at the markets. we are getting nice upward momentum. the dow is up 300 points and the s&p up more than 1%. let's bring in susan, you've got some movers for us, the chipmakers. >> they tried to buy qualcomm before it was rejected saying we are not interested in a hostile takeover, also raising revenue forecast for the summer and demand across all of its markets that will continue for the rest of this year. nvidia is getting kathy wood endorsements, she's buying $50 million while selling $41 million in tesla and micron doubling down on idaho investing $50 billion to build new manufacturing there and that is after congress passed the $52 billion chips act.
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amazon, billion dollar prequel the rings of power debuting last night, cordova billion dollars spent on the rights all loan. across the entire streaming sector with hbo max on the game of thrones prequel, streaming was getting high costs and losses which is why comcast cut $1 billion across nbc universal, and apple might be paying $2 billion, to drive apple tv plus subscribers from wall street, that's a question as we head into the apple event next week, new research says apple is the dominant smart phone in america with 50% market share over android so there are more iphones than all other phones combined, expect more next weekend. ashley: some market dominance. thank you very much. mayor lori lightfoot slamming the governor of texas greg
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abbott for sending buses of migrants to her city. >> chicago got 60 migrants, not a big number. it is a sanctuary city and mayor lori lightfoot had these choice words for the texas governor. >> governor abbott confirmed what many of us already know. that he is a man without any morals, humanity or shame. >> she called him a racist, xenophobe and unpatriotic and he gave her another century cities, new york, a taste of what open borders policy feels like when it comes to overwhelming local resources so texas has spent more than $12 million busing migrants out and sending them to these big cities who should be welcoming them. ashley: sanctuary cities,
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that's what they asked for. talking -- i know. let's move on. talking of chicago, crime there is up 40% for the same time last year. my next guest is a small business owner in chicago who says the crime has become a daily problem for her. teresa, the owner of sugar blues in chicago, she joined me now. let's talk about the crime. how has it affected your business. >> i've been in chicago about 15 years. just seeing the crime escalate and every week a couple instances and it is not great. last friday we had a man come in and destroy stuff on the counter, attempted to steal a purse until we snatched it back and try to salt someone, took 40 minutes for the police to come and as of a week from now, no response from the mayor. ashley: so who do you blame for
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this, city officials to blame? >> year, definitely coming up for leadership. i blame the mayor, no priority of crime. this is a great city and you need to figure out the crime. i blame the state attorney kim foxx who passed the no cash bail which as we know in new york happened a couple years ago and crime has escalated and that happened in chicago as well and starting january 1st, if you trespass you get arrested and now it is just a ticket and no one is -- you have all these laws in place making it harder for police to do their job. ashley: because of all of this, could you may be forced to move, shutdown the business and move somewhere else? >> i had my store for 15 years,
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we survived recession, covid, coming out of covid and i don't want to shut my business down, we've got numerous phone calls, emails since last monday, but i want the city to take responsibility for this and leadership and if they don't do a quick enough i am going to look at moving my business, the new cookies we recently launched, i will take my business to a city or state that has a well-funded police, the crime rate is not as crazy as chicago. ashley: and nobody would blame you for doing that. i want to change subjects and talk about inflation hitting this country. have you been forced to raise your prices and what has that done to business? >> definitely inflation, supply
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chain, we increase prices earlier this year and prices have not come down so i don't think prices, the supply chain is fixed, we had to change different ingredients, brands so it is a tough market for small businesses. ashley: part of that is finding enough workers. do you have enough staff? >> that another challenge, we are providing more staff but later, inflation, supply-chain, labor shortage, it is tough having a small business in general and we work superhard running day today and last thing we need to do is figure out the next crime coming into the store? ashley: last quick question.
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are people prepared to pay more to support your business? >> i do. they are seeing it across the board at the grocery stores, the gap, everyone is aware there's higher price for everything. i haven't had many customers say anything with that because that is across the board with everything. ashley: thank you so much for taking time to chat with us and wish you the best for the future and hopefully the city will get a handle on this crime. it is awful. thank you for talking to us. thank you. now this. nasa's artemis rocket is set to blast off tomorrow, one step closer to putting man back on the moon. that is next. before the break, don't forget to follow us on spotify, scan the qr code on your screen and
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"america's weather weekend" taking a look at the artemis rocket at port canaveral in florida, some angry black crowds are on the launchpad this morning but nasa will once again tried to launch this rocket tomorrow. engine troubles delayed the original liftoff earlier this week. let's bring in andy allen, former astronaut joining you now, great to have you. what is so important about going to the moon again. why's this important?
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>> good morning. going to the moon, what nasa does is about leadership, technology development and it is about a return on investment so from a leadership perspective, we are the country that makes the impossible possible, the ones that turn fiction into reality, the ones that advanced civilization through science and technology improvements and coming out of the pandemic it is neat it is need to have something to be very proud of. and accomplishment. space is like the human body. the more you think you know about it the more you realize you don't know about it. ashley: is this the steppingstone to start looking further on, maybe establish a base on the moon so that that will be a stopping point onto mars perhaps? >> absolutely. we take baby steps and that is what this is if you look at
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what is going to happen, what may happen from what happened years ago, this will be a pretty significant, we are single species on a single planet to the time will come that we move on. ashley: are we alone in the grand universe? i don't think we can be but what say you? >> in spite of what some news publications road about me having contact with aliens on or what i didn't. i don't believe -- i don't believe they are picking people up in kansas and doing experiments but the statistics, the james webb telescope we just saw a while ago, think of the statistics, how can we be alone? ashley: i agree. i want to ask this quickly,
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nasa just announced an extension to space x that will allow 5 additional astronaut missions. how do you feel about private space companies in this context? >> good question and i think it is great, just like back when we did develop and on airplanes coming into the airline business, it is good to turn things over to the commercial side, to the private side of the private-sector. eventually low earth orbit will be run by hotel chains and space labs and a lot of other things. ashley: do you miss space? would you go back if you had the opportunity? >> one thing i wish i could have done more than anything else is take a few steps on the moon. ashley: it is going to happen again soon maybe by 2024 if this artemis project goes the way they wanted to.
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this is a huge rocket, the world's biggest rocket. it will make quite a noise when it finally takes off. >> yes it is. right now in this first stage it is 30, 40 feet smaller than the apollo rocket but a lot more powerful, spend a lot more days in orbit and has much more capability of taking a lot more to the moon than we did in apollo instead of making short trips. it is a great achievement. the 5 ever go to these launches? there are so many in the course of a week after canaveral? do you ever go by and watch these take off? >> i do. i will be out at the launch site tomorrow. i was out there monday. we have space x launch, atlas launches, i can watch it from my house. ashley: that's very handy indeed. we are out of time. thank you so much for taking time. i was looking forward to
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pictures of aliens but we have to wait until next time but thank you so much. >> thank you. ashley: thank you. by the way andy just mentioned the james webb space telescope, just got its first image of the alien world, the photo shows a planet orbiting a distant star, proving its potential to revolutionize xo planet research, fascinating stuff. this comes as one astronomer things alien technology could be on the ocean floor, that he's going to retrieve fragments from a meteor that entered the earth's atmosphere just twee 8 years ago. fascinating stuff. let's take a look at 30 stocks for a sense of where we are, the dow has been nicely higher. we have one stock, 3m sticking out like a sore thumb moving lower but the other 29 stocks in the down moving higher, the index itself is up 329 points.
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♪ ashley: looking at new york city, fox square, the mothership as we call it in midtown manhattan, it is 73 ° in new york city. very pleasant indeed. don't know if this will be pleasant or not, time for friday feedback, come on in, lahren and susan. the first is from john. john says will stuart be making another guest appearance on ashley and company next week? the sarcasm. he needs to make his time off as we all do. it is well-deserved. i joke with him that he left europe behind except it's vacation schedule. >> very happy in cape cod or
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naples, florida. i don't think he would mind making a guest appearance. ashley: i don't think he would either. next one from richard to. this one is interesting and i will get your thoughts, richard says would you take the show on the road when stu is away? we talk about this for years and i say it is a great idea and we thought we could take the show, let's go to a place like berkeley and set up in front of the campus and see what happens. could be interesting. >> they have no idea who any of us are. ashley: what do you say? >> i would love to watch an episode of "varney and company" on the villages. so much fanfare.
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ashley: yes, stu would be mobbed. this is from beth who says i have been thinking about this student loan business. it would make sense if they forgive the interest and had everyone pay the original balance of the loan. it would be some help but wouldn't have so many people angry. that is pretty good. don't think it is enough for those people that are buried in debt. let's start with you. susan: for the tuition forgiveness why not funnel the money toward stem, science, technology, where we need the jobs, the education and keep the lead when it comes to technology. ashley: what do you think? lauren: i don't like to have the government pick winners and losers, make a deal, say we will forgive end amount of debt if you stay in this field for a
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number of years and you create a generation of people, heck with what i/o, someone will forgive it anyway. ashley: it is not. this one from george. george, maybe king george, england, united kingdom, british, british empire, why do they have so many name titles and when should a particular title be used? good question. england is just england, the country of england. the united kingdom is a political term for england, wales, scotland, and northern ireland and great britain is a geographical term. as for the rich empire, that disappeared a long time ago. susan: how do you think england will do in the world cup? ashley: i don't like being a pessimist but questions about the manager and the team, hope they will surprise me
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pleasantly but we will have to see. the produces saying shut up and get onto trivia but thanks% a year feedback. look at the question, which state was the first to declare labor day a holiday? new york? pennsylvania? nevada? oregon? think about it. the answer is right after this.
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ashley: before the break we asked which state was the first to declay a labor day a holiday. lauren are, you guess. lauren: new york. they had the first parade -- ashley: susan? susan: pennsylvania. ashley: you know what? i was going to go with new york. we're all wrong, it's oregon. they passed a law declaring a state holiday in 1887. i'm on a losing streak on these trivia questions. ladies, thank you -- lauren: have a good lay labor day. neil: appreciate that, my friend. have a great weekend. we are in and out of session highs, the dow advancing about 351 points largely on this notion that we got a goldilocks employment report for the latest month of august, not too, too strong, not a too, too weak, maybe just what the doctor order ed. but, but, but not necessarily altering the path dramatically. again, we started week, indeed, if you go back to last friday, a week ago at this time, on fear

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