tv Cavuto Coast to Coast FOX Business September 14, 2022 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT
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that is highist point in the united states. 20,000 feet. >> that's high. stuart: it is. thanks very much, mark, ashley, great stuff. thank you very much for being with me today. i hope you come to see us again. not much of a bounce on wall street. the dow is up 79 after losing is 200 points. neil, it is yours. neil: you're right, we're not making up much ground we lost yesterday. only 82 points of that made up today. slightly tamer wholesale inflation report if you consider prices moving up on the wholesale front, 8.7% year-over-year. given some of the numbers we've seen of late, that is down, the lowest since we've seen in in this particular case since august last year. the battle goes on back and forth. what are we dealing with here and how bad does this get? edward lawrence from the
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white house. hey, edward. reporter: the president, the stock market had the worst day under the biden administration since i took office. it was the single worst day for the dow since june of to 20. cpi inflation coming in around 40 year highs and there was a celebration at the white house. this is the images that we were looking at as all of this was happening. you had james taylor at the white house singing songs, officially, the the white house spokesperson james taylor donated time use of those songs but the optics were very bad. house speaker nancy pelosi had to applaud the audience. in interview with president biden's advisor gene sperling. he told us the inflation. >> if there is not single silver bullet. we should do everything we can
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to bring down the overall cost and strain on american families, pocketbooks, and we shouldn't skip doing any individual item because it is not going to solve everything or be the silver bullet. every bit helps. reporter: today the producer price index came in 8.7% down from last month, still higher than the consumer price index that means there is still a little bet of pressure for companies to pass on some higher costs. you can see where inflation has gone under this president. that is cpi inflation. republicans like senator mike braun say this chart is telling. >> they ought to bep booted out of office for taking one the best economies we ever had through could have spread, shutting the productive side of the economy down. creating all the again sis for what we're dealing with now and then trying to spin it otherwise. reporter: so the president now touring the detroit auto show. he sat in a couple 61,000-dollar electric vehicles, part of the
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transition he wants americans to make, as americans feel the economic pain in part from some of that transition. neil. neil: i'm curious do they bounce this sort of stuff step back without a peoplely tin ear, celebrating what they're doing yesterday amidst of bad inflation report, market tumult, prior the president of the united states border secure, video clearly indicates otherwise, of course this presidential pitch for electric vehicles, it seems out of sort. who is driving this agenda, i'm just curious? reporter: the president is driving the agenda i did ask about the optics having this celebration so to speak with the, you know, inflation that we are seeing. only thing i can think of personally they believe truly the inflation number would come in less than what it did. also i was told officially from the white house is about progress moving forward and
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getting the president's agenda through so that transition that he wants can actually happen. that is the official word but only thing i can think of they thought the number would be a lot less, therefore they could come out with this celebration. neil: you would see someone upon the release of the number, it is not good. the day ensues, market selling off, boss, we got to rethink this, that did not happen. reporter: they had james taylor booked. neil: i understand. all bets are off at this point. edward, thank you very much. he could have got, you got a friend, that might have been a more appropriate song. grady trimble talking about the other focus of the administration out of detroit, michigan where the president will announce the big vehicle push. what do you have for us? reporter: neil, the president is under the roof of the convention center here right now. he is touring the show floor, a little bit. couple hours in this room where he is expected to give that speech. you can see behind me are
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several union workers. you know loves them. beyond the stage there, you can see some of the electric vehicles that the automakers here in detroit have been working on, that is the cadillac lyric electric vehicle and the f-150 lightning, the electric pickup truck. biden and some of the automakers think half of all cars sold by 2030 will be electric or hybrid. right now that number is just above 5%. so there is a long way to go. one of the biggest roadblocks to widespread adoption of electric vehicles has been the price. as we show you images of the president touring the auto show floor, the price of an electric vehicle on average is about $20,000 more than the average price of a vehicle. you see the president there, shaking hands with general motors ceo mary barra. she and the president are both hoping that the tax credit in
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the so-called inflation reduction act will lower the price of evs, to encourage more people to buy them, but the problem is a lot of evs probably won't qualify for that tax credit because not enough of the raw materials in their batteries come from the u.s. or its trade partners. >> on the road by 2025.
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we scared our contracts up to that time frame but we're also aggressive working with different companies or partnerships to bring the minerals locally into north america so we can control our destiny further from 25 into 2030 time frame. reporter: president biden is expected to announce a 900 million-dollar plan to expand ev charging across the country. across 35 states. 53,000 miles. present days views on roe v. wade.
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neil: report like, the republicans, robbed of a chance now to show democrats the party that can't shoot straight or has a tin ear, then they rose sure recollect this whole abortion thing. the implications of that could be profound, right? >> yes, this is issue where local candidates, can deal with it. in my section of the country, republicans are generally pro-choice. and so okay, that is what you run on in a local election. instead of this now, candidates will have to run defending or attacking this national approach. leave it to the people. trust the people. to make the sensitive decision. let me ask but the tin year argument against the president.
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promote electric vehicles at a time. everything is very expensive. a day after celebrating the so-called inflation reduction act when it is not reducing. two days after the vice president of the united states says the border is secure. this is building. i can't imagine it is not ating frustration in democratic circles. maybe they feel this is galvanizing the base. even prior democratic presidents wouldn't do that kind of thing. wonger why this president keeps doing it. >> the far left of the party is calling the tune. they believe they can tell people prices are not really going up. things are getting better. electric cars are not that expensive. on and on. neil: people are not stupid, steve. they go to the grocery stores. they realize long delays getting automobile vehicle. paying through the nose when you do.
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it almost insults them. >> it does, that is why the president's trust factor is so low. why i think the democrats are in trouble in november. people see the difference. the state of washington, patty murray. long time senator, is only a couple of points ahead of the republican on the issue of local control of the schools. as you know, seattle school teachers went on strong. they don't like the direction of the country. people believe you spin it, people will actually believe it. that is why they want to run against donald trump. why they want to run on abortion issue. they don't want issues washington can make a real difference on which is inflation, which is, having a economic policy that encourages natural gas production and oil leases instead of new regulations coming out of the interior department which will block the development of these leases. neil: steve, i'm just curious just as republican, conservative thinker, all around very smart guy, are you concerned that the republicans aren't unified on
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this economic message, whether it is the fixation on whether it was fair or not to raid donald trump's home. i understand their passions. i understand the passions of both sides but even know extends to try to resurrect the abortion issue, nationalize a policy, i wonder every second spent on those issues is another vital moment of robbed of explaining the winnable ones for republicans? >> oh, absolutely. people want to go to the future. they want to have issues discussed where washington can make a huge difference. the federal reserve for example, believes only way to conquer inflation by making people poorer. the federal government is raising taxes instead of cutting taxes, hurting the production of oil and gas at a time when europe is going desperately in need of it, this winter going into the future. people want real issues. crime, where is the discussion on that? so stick to issues that matter to people where government can make a real difference.
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neil: you know, steve, you're so kind to go to respond to the breaking news developments. i want to ask you about the they hadding that propelled yesterday's huge selloff that the federal reserve will aggressively raise rates, longer, higher than we thought. there is betting a third of those investors betting with money on this subject think the fed could raise rates a full percentage point next week, not just 3/4 of a point. where are you on this, in terms of what do you think happens? >> i think we still stick with the 75 basis points. the federal reserve is good letting journalists and others know what direction they're thinking in. if they made a change to 100 basis points they would make quiet behind the scenes signals now. i think they do 75. that gets to the whole question, why are they aggressively raising interest rates. why not let the market raise interest rates already. the 30-year mortgage, what the fed has done is 6 1/2%. that is killing the housing
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sector. neil: good points all. steve, you would be interested, i also think it will be a 75 basis point climb. so this like that, abortion issue, you better run the other way but always good seeing you, steve forbes, following. >> good to see you, thank you, neil. neil: we're up about 63 points on the dow here. some good news concerning ukraine. you know they're winning this war. they have taken back over 2300 square miles of ground and land that had been dominated and virtually owned by the russians. they're not the ones scrambling. vladmir putin is. so so what's next? after this. ♪. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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neil: all right. who would have thought about seven months ago when the ukranian war started it would still be dragging on, worse for vladmir putin that it would be the ukrainians who are winning it? that is how things stand right now as they have recaptured better than 2300 square miles of land that were once under russian control. not anymore. jeff paul in kyiv with the latest. jeff? reporter: yeah, neil, it was one of the first cities captured by russian forces but now it appears, according to ukrainian forces it is back in their
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hands. the city of vok chance two miles away from the russian border northeast in the car kyiv region has been liberated -- kharkiv. this is joining a growing cities and territories liberated by ukrainian forces. one of those cities, city of isium, volodymyr zelenskyy just toward and looked over the damage from the russian troop withdrawal. this led to deaths and power and water outages. president zelenskyy honored memory of those who died in the area calling them true heroes who liberated the land. >> it is shocking, but not shocking for me because we began to see the same pictures from bucha, the occupied territories. the same.
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destroyed buildings, kille. reporter: beyond the presence of ukrainian soldiers there are still a lot of people left in the kharkiv region and in cities like izium who have to try to repair their communities. a constant reminder of the occupation they endured, all left over russian tanks that line the roads and streets. those russian troops are now on the move. some back across the russian border. others according to the kremlin heading first east to the donbas. we're learning from a mayor of meltopv, north of zaporizhzhia, he saw a counter offensive pushing russian troops further south heading towards crimea. neil: jeff paul, thank you for that. reaction from republican senator rob portman, what he makes of this, when you and i were talking before the war started the odds against ukraine were staggering, you didn't think as staggering as kong census view,
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who would have thought seven months into this, senator, the point of russian soldiers on the run which brings up another worry. vladmir putin you know, could up the ante here and get even more violent, more gruesome, what do you think? >> you're absolutely right. i was in kyiv two weeks ago with senator klobuchar a bipartisan delegation, we met with president zelenskyy and his folk and toured around kyiv some areas that were destroyed. this started in the south and has moved over to the northeast. it has bin incredibly successful. what is astounding for me the american taxpayers provided ukraine. particularly the hmars, weapons systems that can shoot artillery a longer distance and very accurately. that has changed the battlefield
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dynamics significantly. remember when we talked the russians were firing on ukrainian positions with impunity because the ukrainians could not reach them that has all changed frankly because of the united states of america, and our willingness to support them with equipment they have been asking for. uk and germany. i'm real pleased to see. one, they're winning and liberating lands that the russians unlawfully took and brutally attacked the citizens of those areas, like around kharkiv. but second, that what we did as a congress and a country, and what the american people have done is making a difference. neil: do you worry though you talked about our aid and messenger h mentioned other nato allies. i believe we account for close to 90% of that aid, that it's a little lop sided? >> yeah. there are 49 other countries that provided military assistance to ukraine. again some of them provided very important equipment like the uk,
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germany, providing these long-range missiles. we have done more than others and been in a leadership position. i don't think it is nearly 90 percent when you add up everything because others provided various other kinds of equipment including ammunition. particularly some soviet-era stuff we don't have but countries in eastern europe have in terms of ammunition and anti-aircraft systems as an example. but we are taking the lead. but to me, that is america's role, you know we have traditionally been taking the lead to liberate people, going back to our history, storied history of world war i, world war ii. we frankly kind of gotten away from that we put a lot of u.s. troops in harm's way in iraq and afghanistan. that is not what we're doing. they're not asking our troops on the ground, nor are we providing them but providing leadership rallying the rest of the free world behind this cause. that is what ukraine feels. that is one reason they think they have the momentum right now. neil: they very well might, but to that point, senator, we're learning right now that vladmir
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putin is responding in sort of the ways that we thought he would, launching eight cruise missiles at the southern ukrainian city of kyiv, since that was targeting water supplies in that area, not to mention their attacks in and around two nuclear facilities that this could get scary now? that vladmir putin has been likened to a wounded animal trapped in a corner and will respond in kind? >> i would just say two things, neil. one it is already scary around zaporizhzhia which is the largest nuclear power plant in europe as you know they have effectively putting a military base. they're using it as a shield. they're imploding infrastructure right next to the plant to take electricity in ukraine because they're trying to steal electricity to take it into crimea and russia. it was already incredibly reckless, risking a catastrophe. but you're right. he is pushing back by firing more missiles which he has been doing. one thing that i think is really important is that we help the
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ukrainian economy get back on its feet. to do that we have to help provide them better anti-aircraft and anti-missile technology. that will bring people back to ukraine. remember there are six or seven million people out of the country, six or seven million internally displaced of the until we get the economy back on sound footing, it is tough for their economy and their budget. why we continue to do what we're doing on military side. provide more air cover, so ukraine can buy, pull itself by its own bootstraps it wants to do to get the economy moving again. neil: senator, while i have you here, i wouldn't be remiss that pass along the news alert, don bolduc, famous 2020 election denier, donald trump backing him, captured the republican nomination for senate in new hampshire. he beat out chuck morris, the state senate president who was backed by the governor sununu. i'm just wondering, the quality
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of the candidates running, it was a real concern of mitch mcconnell. i don't know whether you feel the same way. democrats are celebrating this. maybe prematurely, your thoughts? >> well, maybe prematurely. you don't know. the polling data in new hampshire is interesting because there are a lot of people who feel strongly the country is going in the wrong direction. president biden's approval rating is low. anything can happen but i was supporting chuck morris. i know him personally. i think he would have been a great senator a great candidate but i don't know general bolduc at all. i can't speak to him but i do think candidates matter. but i also think, neil, the overall environment out there still remains one that is difficult for democrats despite their celebration yesterday of having you know, helped 8.3% figure and 13.2% since the start of the year. the fact people who had a dollar in their pocket when president biden was sworn in, that dollar is worth 88 cents.
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we have the highest inflation in 40 years. this is a huge issue affecting everything. i do think the environment will still be pretty good for republicans. neil: we shall see. senator portman, always good seeing you, my friend. >> thanks for having me on. neil: dow up 74 points. interest rates backing up a tad. this notion the federal reserve will be aggressively on top of things, while that might be welcome for some inflation fighters. some fear there is no endgame here. and that is kind of putting a lid on these rebound gains, tepid as they are. stay with us. ♪ another busy day? of course - you're a cio in 2022. but you're ready. because you've got the next generation in global secure networking from comcast business. with fully integrated security solutions all in one place. so you're covered. on-premise and in the cloud. you can run things the way you want - your team, ours or a mix of both. with the nation's largest ip converged network.
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and every person... to come to the table and do more incredible things. ♪ ♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ ♪. neil: you're going to have to spend $66,000 on average if you want to get an electric vehicle. i don't sing at all like that. i mean that is how expensive they are and of this push now to
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get the production booming again and in the wake of federal credits and the rest is trying to force that figure down. volvo leading that push with spreading out its own volvo production and of course ev production. madison alworth following all of that. you don't have to sing it. reporter: i'm so glad we played that song, because i was trying to work it into the script. couldn't figure out a way to do it. neil: popular song. reporter: great song. volvo is hoping to win the electric truck race. the electric version of most important range, volvo fhm and fmx. they can carry 44 tons, they represent 2/3 of the company's sales when it comes to freight trucks. the president roger alm. by 2030, 50% of the trucks they sell should be electric, very bullish on this move. this edition brings volvo to six electric trucks in production. it puts them in direct
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competition with tesla and daimler trucks. speaking of competition, mortgage demand for homebuyers has fallen 29% since last year. experts expect it to get worse interest rates are up to 6% depending which brokerage you go to. inflation coming in hotter than expected yesterday, with the fed dead set rising rates and mortgage rates continue to rise and mortgage applications continue to fall. application volume pupil dropped 1.2% last thing. here is the thing, housing market is still tight. you know what else is falling? listing of homes. new wreak weekly listings are down 17.5% year-over-year. inveryer to is still below demand. the inventory problem is a big heart part of red hot mousing market. there are not a lot of new homes are better. mortgage rates go up, home prices come down.
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we've seen some, not enough. there are still not enough houses coming on to the market. neil: the twin troubles of higher rates, more expensive homes. here we go. madison, thank you, carol roth, former investment banker, small business author. carol, madison kind of laid it out nicely here. you have a double-whammy potentially for the real estate market. people respond to that more than they do the whipsawing market days here. how do you see real estate these days, housing in general? >> i mean it is too bad the fed can print dollars but it can't print houses, neil. that is the where the issue is. we're under supplied by something like four to five million units depending on who you ask. that is the driver of issues in terms of prices. i think there will be some destruction in terms of the pricing, however there are all of these institutional buyers, something that has you know, come online within the last 12 years that are sitting around
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flush with cash, they're waiting like vultures for the market to bottom out. then they will come in sweep in, provide a floor to it. so i don't see it in the same way perhaps we may have seen it like during the great recession, financial crisis because we do have all these buyers. however that takes away economic freedom opportunities from the average american. neil: you know it is still early in the game. we have another 3 1/2 hours to go but we're not doing a good job here making up for the 1200 plus points lost yesterday in the dow. not that we have to make it all up. we're barely making any of it up. i wonder what that is telling you? >> yeah. so you know, i'm from chicago. so we have both the bulls and the bears. i tend to be a chicago bear these days unfortunately. i think the market and investors got a reality check, sort of a no confidence vote in terms of both the fed and the economy. you know you had the secretary,
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treasury secretary janet yellen during the week going around usually spins everything and even she is saying we'll need a lot of skill, some good luck to get a soft landing here. we know neil, from the track record of the fed they don't have a lot of skill. they were very far behind the curve. waited until inflation got to 40 year highs in order to reverse course. on the luck side, biden and congress spending like drunken sailors, no disrespect to drunken sailors as well as europe and china dealing with recessionary pressures that could cause a global recession. so i just don't see where the optimism is long term. i think some of that is starting to get reflect mid-the market but i think they're actually downplaying some of those global concerns. neil: it is not a pretty picture for now. we'll watch it. carol, thank you. good catching up with you. catching up with the border it's a problem right now but growing
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heated up. they are inundated. this video looking at several hundred migrants camping underneath a bridge near the downtown area. the city is hammered with migrant arrivals in recent days, so much so the border patrol facilities are overcapacity. so are local ngos. border patrol started street releases of migrants. this is not a processing center. this is a random bridge near the downtown area where hundreds of migrants are starting to camp out. in a statement cpb confirmed they have started street releases. they're doing it they say humanely. the quote in part, migrants will be provisionally released near community shelters and bus stations throughout the city of el paso. bringing it back to where we are in eagle pass, take a look at this video we shot this morning just after sunrise. a large group of migrants crossing together at once illegally. most of them single adults. mostly single adult men.
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busy, busy weekend in this sector over the weekend. more than 3300 illegal crossings here as well as 733 known got-aways in this sector. this as vp kamala harris continues to insist the border is secure. a democrat senator said on "special report" yesterday, that is just not true. take a listen. >> it is wrong. she is dead wrong on that. for anybody, vice president, anybody saying our border is secure, that is not accurate. i've been there. it's wrong. reporter: and today the governor of illinois issued a disaster declaration and also activated 75 members of their national guard to help with asylum-seekers showing up from texas, put on buses by texas, arriving in chicago and illinois area. so far illinois has only gotten 500 migrants from the state of texas. see that here in a single group in one hour on some days, neil. i will send it back to you. neil: staggering, bill melugin
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at the border. to daniel stein, americans for immigration reform president. daniel, we always talk about the human crisis at the border. we never get into how costly this is getting at the border for american taxpayers. maybe you can get into that? >> well we took a look at it, we've been studying it longitudinally. we estimate 2.3 million have been aloud in by the biden administration or got-aways. $20 billion taxpayer costs, that could be used for teachers, whole variety of things americans need. on top of that the biden asked 30 million-dollars more for free legal representation for unaccompanied minors. president biden dismantled immigration controls when he took office. he has walked away. not responded. not gone back to the border the vice president says it is secure. anybody who agrees with her basically suspends rational judgment. there is 1.5 billion people around the world would like to
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move to a country like the u.s. what we see at the border is a trickle after dam that is breaking, that is going to break wide open at this point. the border patrol is simply running a processing center. number coming in determined who is showing up, right? the costs will continue to escalate earnings let's talk about those costs. they have been pegged at around $20 billion a year for u.s. taxpayers. what goes into that? >> well, education. that is a big part of that cost. housing, public assistance, school lunch programs for remedial education. some extent transportation. it doesn't include this last round of fema money they're using to bus people in, fly them in at night. it covers most of the other transportation costs, detention, removals as well. a lot is basically public services. the big one is the elephant in the classrooms, schools. a lot have remedial educational needs. they are illiterate in language.
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health care at taxpayers expense is hugely expensive. process of unaccompanied minors who basically disappear, don't have to come forward to make an asylum claim, there are no consequences, cost of no consequences no immigration enforcement. our civilization depends on the rule of law, neil, this will cause a total societal breakdown unless somebody recognize there is no limits to what the biden administration is doing. what the is endgame? what is the gameplan? neil: if you think about it, we allow in 1 1/2 million people, legal, the right way every year. if you're adding two million to that there is only so much a country can absorb. all the problems associated with that, that it can take. i assume we're already at that breaking point? >> well we're well past the breaking point. the schools are suffering from the impact. what we have here is frankly an unwillingness by the government to track or monitor people. dhs despite the smart technology, it doesn't handle stupid border policies because they disappear.
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dhs doesn't know where they are. they can't reunite people. certainly don't track the costs in public schools, education, health care, what have you. except when the states come back demanding reimbursement for money they keep track of. congress doesn't consider a direct appropriation to the cost of illegal immigration. it is all off book because of the division of accountability and responsibility. the biden administration is in denial. they're trying to convince the american people that something is secure that obviously is not secure. and this is the first time in american politics where we see politicians basically apparently believe the american people are so stupid they can't see what is happening. their border is basically out of the control and tear country is being invaded. in the end taxpayers, somebody has to pay all the costs. there is a limit to how many people can be employed, illiterate in language, fifth grade education, postindustrial information economy trying to import massive amounts of labor more appropriate to 1910. neil: it is wild.
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as you say we're well past ha breaking point. thank you very much, daniel stein. >> thank you. neil: as daniel and i were wrapping up here, i want to pass along the news on ongoing railway strike avoidance meetings going on in washington. the labor department saying the railroad unions are negotiating in good faith. they committed to staying at the table today. this is according to the spokesperson, no doubt a labor department spokesperson, secretary walsh handling these negotiations. as things stand now workers are scheduled to go off the job midnight on friday if something isn't carved together. that would disrupt the supply chain, to put it mildly, say nothing of delays in christmas presents and everything else, more expensive as a result. stay with us. we'll have more.
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i've lost over 22 pounds with golo in six months and i've kept it off for over a year. i was skeptical about golo in the beginning because i've tried so many different types of diet products before. i've tried detox, i've tried teas, i've tried all different types of pills, so i was skeptical about anything working because it never did. but look what golo has done. look what it has done. i'm in a size 4 pair of pants. go golo. (soft music) ♪ my body is aching and my time is at hand, i won't make it any other way ♪ neil: now, don't get me wrong, i love james taylor. i would have not chosen that particular heavy downer song. he has a lot more uplifting ones. as he was singing at that point we were down 1200 points on the dow. timing is everything.
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a lot of people saying the president promoting the inflation reduction act which is not exactly working out on the same day we get and inflation report that it is not reducing on top of a market tumult. awkward timing. who knows better than awkward timing jimmy faiilan. he knows about odd juxtapositions, my friend. this is just bizarre. i thought someone during the day, say to mr. president, this might not be the best time. >> the reason is lined up with james taylor singing "fire and rain" is, your 401(k) was on fire. hose was the rain that put out the fire. straight propaganda, man, if you look at numbers that came out, the market, the end of the football game somebody win as super bowl, they dump gatorade on the winning coach. this was the losing coach
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dumping it on himself and saying i'm going to disney world. neil: let me ask you, this is not the first time this is has happened. i try no not to politicize things, but jfk after the bay of pigs crisis he canceled events. he didn't want to look like this is a bad time to do a rose garden ceremony. ronald reagan own day of the 87 stoke market crash, low profile, talking about optimism for the market. leading it at that. this seems so disconnected, this, border secure from the vice president, ev push on a day people are frantic about prices. what is going on? >> don't forget afghanistan, they tried to sell that as a success. they have gone all-in on messaging. between now the midterms we have 55 days -- neil: for whom, messaging? >> selling the public on the fact they're doing well. kamala spoke over the weekend, told chuck todd, the democrats keep delivering, what, pizza? people need a side job?
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what are you delivering now? maybe dominoes? that is what they're trying to do, there was a calculated decision they had to run away from their record, if you remember people were getting asked constantly should biden run, should you support him in 2024? they didn't want the candidates to draw a dance between themselves and the administration. the internal calculation let's say it is working? i don't know. if you look at the indicators it is clearly not working. neil: is it about bringing out the base? you know an audience. you appear before an audience. you can read the room. that room was filled with 1000 people, those close to the president, party loyalists maybe you're winning over that crowd but you have to think beyond that though? >> it looked ridiculous to any objective observer. i think this was rally the base moment. i think what they have just decided is between now and november, they have got to be able to, you know, to count on this concrete support that loves the climate, okay, all in what they did with the insulin prices, again i think is a good thing. neil: right. >> i think there was a little
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chicanery there, that was thing under previous administration. the people who love the climate will show up. neil: what about all the people out there who, 401(k) melting, the price is going out of control, they're pissed. >> they're not watching. they're busy working a second or third job or picking up my taxi. that is the part. i think this was a message to politicos like us looks ridiculous. to the average person they have actually tuned this administration out. neil: good presidents republicans and democrats don't do that? >> that is what they are doing wrong. he is not leading for all americans. here is quick juxtaposition, we celebrate the queen. the queen is beloved not because she is a queen because she was a queen for all people. this is not a president say leading all people. half of you are fascist, fascist requires a lot of energy that my audience doesn't have. neil: puts it into perspective. dow up 99. 99 points than when jimmyan
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i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so... ...glad we did this. [kid plays drums] life is for living. let's partner for all of it. i'm so glad we did this. edward jones there's a different way to treat hiv. it's every-other-month, injectable cabenuva. for adults who are undetectable, cabenuva is the only complete hiv treatment you can get every other month. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by a healthcare provider every other month. it's one less thing to think about while traveling. hiv pills aren't on my mind. a quick change in my plans is no big deal. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions,
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