tv Varney Company FOX Business January 17, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST
10:00 am
the only tubeless automated insulin delivery system... that integrates with dexcom g6. automatically adjusting your insulin to help protect against highs and lows day or night. don't wait to simplify life with diabetes. get started today with no contract, and no commitment. go to omnipod.com for risk information and instructions for use. consult your healthcare provider before starting on omnipod. simplify diabetes. simplify life. omnipod. i always wanted to know more about my grandfather. he...was a hardworking man who came to new york from puerto rico when he was 17. with ancestry, being able to put the pieces of the puzzle together... ...it's amazing. it's honestly amazing. hi, i'm susan, i've lost 84 pounds on golo and i've kept it off for a year. i had spent so much money on other products that when i saw the commercial for golo, the price was so much cheaper and i thought, "boy, this might not work but why not try it?" it is amazing and it works really well.
10:01 am
stuart: they are playing that for me because i am old. good morning, everyone. it is 10:00 eastern. straight to the money, i see some reading, the dow is down close to 200 points but the nasdaq is a modest rally, up 20. middle-of-the-road fresen p, pretty much flat, the 10 year treasury yield moving 3.5%, big tech all over the place, apple and microsoft up, alphabet down, that's the breakthrough, bitcoin. the last few weeks it is been
10:02 am
bumbling around 16, seventeen, nineteen thousand. you are looking at 20 one thousand dollars a coin coin for bitcoin, got that? now this. it wasn't till the first week of january president biden was on a roll, he made a comeback from his dismal approval ratings. my opinion the comeback is going to end. first off the documents, investigations will drag on for months, nothing positive about the corvette defense, he can't laugh it off. the media won't let him. the border, 250,000 encounters in december, that is a record, you can't hide it. towns and cities having to taken literally millions at vast cost. it didn't have much impact on the midterm but that will change as the bill mounts, the president is all in with wokeism, the countries not to the president dead set against fossil fuels come the country once its energy independence back and then there is the
10:03 am
president's age and fatality. he's 80 and is slowing down. heaven for but he goes off prompter like he did with the corvette. hard to imagine two years from now he will be able to mount a vigorous presidential campaign, the media for the first time of his presidency is asking hard questions and they are not happy with the nonanswers they are getting, democrats see these problems, are getting restless and maneuvering. a serious comeback is unlikely. second hour of varney just getting started. i always like to see this man at the top of the hour because he has always a great smile and forceful analysis, pete hegseth. 's president biden's running 2024 finished? >> i don't think it is
10:04 am
hyperbole. his age has been and continues to be a problem. they will be a book written something about the extent which the campaign and the white house covered that up him in a bubble, told him what to say and perpetually concerned about what he might do as a candidate and as a president and concerned about four more years after that but the timing of these classified documents, so many people might have known they were at the biden center, might have known there were loose protocols in delaware into might have seen it as advantageous to trickle out to media outlets that they exist which creates pressure, they were able to wait until after the election but can't wait forever and if it starts with the documents and then leads to discovery and the money and hunter's renting for 50,000, should only be renting for 5, where's that money coming from? the biden penn center, the
10:05 am
donations, it could lead to a trickle effect where the argument is made on most exclusively on this network or more conservative media start to percolate into a grumpy media that feels they have been misrepresented to and the only thing they care about is their egos and access so if that has been bruised, we are going to do the work we didn't do before because you were kind of our guy, than that could be the beginning of the end. stuart: i want to show you a senior columnist from the daily beast morning a shift of momentum away from the democrats after the document scandal. >> now we have this momentum shift and i think it is very damaging. what happened here with these classified documents erodes and undermines not just the momentum but the brand the democrats have been building of being not only the competent party, but the decent, honest party. they are off to a bad start in 2023.
10:06 am
stuart: i never expected to hear that. i think they want him out. >> i think so too, but here is the $35,000 question on the other end, who do they replace him with? that has been president biden's strongest defense. it will get worse, house republicans hold the government willing to be aggressive, came out of the dust cloud of the speakers fight, stronger, more united and more conservative and aggressive than they would otherwise have been, this is handed in their lap on top of the other issues we talk about and it can't be kamala harris, pete buttigieg has been a disastrous transportation secretary. do we want to make the rest of the country california with gavin newsom, they don't have a binge, the adults in the room turned out to be sleeping on the corner who can't make another run again. don't underestimate the republicans willingness to mess this up. they are quite deft at that.
10:07 am
but leading into the beginning of 23 considering what happened in the midterms this is an opportunity republicans should seize on for the betterment of the republic. we went pete hegseth is a happy guy, bitcoin went to 21,000, thanks for being with us. good luck with that, see you again soon. lauren is back with me, donald trump, what is he saying? lauren: he is rejoicing in the documents found in the biden garage and visitor logs too. here's the former president untruth social, the white house just announced there are no information at the wilmington house and flimsy unsecured but now very famous garage. maybe they are smarter than we think, this is one of the seemingly many places highly classified documents were stored in a big pile on the floor. mar-a-lago is highly secure with security cameras all over the place and watched by our
10:08 am
staff. i have info on everyone meaning he would know who came to his home because of the camera system. will know who came to the biden house? stuart: if the secret service is protecting him -- lauren: i'm almost positive you have to give your name and social security number lose that has to be recorded somewhere. stuart: thank you. has the world economic forum kicks off, 73% of corporate executives and economists say a global recession is likely within a year. scott shelladdy is bracing for global recession. >> there's a good chance we will have one. this is the first time i can remember in a while you've got the 3 biggest economies, china, the european union and the us all slowing at the same time, that doesn't bode well and for
10:09 am
the first time ever, you're going to see china not at least grow as fast as the rest of the world or be it, that won't bode well for the rest of the world that china is one of their biggest customers. it's going to be a struggle. we see how things go this year but it all really relies on how these jobs numbers come out, such a discrepancy about all the jobs that are open versus who is looking but what the household surveys are saying, we need to have a jobs reconciliation, we finally see that and i am afraid to say it will probably be the bad side of jobs reconciliation rather than all of a sudden a bunch of jobs, then i think we will see a big slowing, got to listen to the fed they said they would slow the economy down it if that means people are out of work or go into recession soviet but they want to see 2% inflation. of the one on following this conference, not that i ever want to go but pick up on some of the themes they've got.
10:10 am
i don't think you have ever been and either have i and probably never will but have you ever heard of the oxford firm for famine relief, a huge international charitable operation, they made a presentation calling for huge tax increases to bust the billionaire class, they want to 60% tax on all billionaire income, 60% tax on all your capital gains. what do you think of that? >> that settled tune people could have been playing for a long time. if you look at the tax rates of those that are very wealthy they pay an inordinate amount of taxes and a lot more to support everybody below that 90% threshold so that is an old line. because of the bad economy the uk has been having for a long time they struggled, most are rescued by them renting out those empty locations -- every
10:11 am
small town has a shop on the high street because they are taking up all that space that's now empty but i say this. these billionaires are -- there's such a knock on effect nobody looks at and the jobs they create and the good things they do, they are not all negative and for some reason we keep promoting this, if people make money there's something wrong, doing something bad. why is it that if you do well you are ashamed, i don't understand that mentality. in 1989 when i moved to england people would key the ferraris and i said what are you doing that for? must be a crook, he's got all this money, when i grew up, i want to know what job that guy has got so i can get one too. for some reason that mentality has been permeating society and it is unfortunate but a lot of good people like make a lot of money. stuart: thanks a lot. i know we will see you again soon.
10:12 am
lauren is back looking at movers on wall street, 4.5%. >> the winter storms, pre-warning, they report next week that those storms are going to cost $360 million after-tax. stuart: that is a dow stock that is down it helping to push the dow lower, goldman is taking one hundred points off the dow so without goldman and travelers, coca-cola up one person. lauren: j.p. morgan and credit suisse and pepsico are saying despite these high prices demand is resilient. i haven't bought soda in a long time, the small sixpack, the cans are so much smaller, you want to be healthier but it is really expensive. stuart: but they say coca-cola has pricing power. lauren: sodas pepsi.
10:13 am
stuart: chinese electric carmaker. lauren: they are down big, worried about demand slowing down for competition so they announced price cuts to juice demand, price cuts are in china, that works their bottom line in the end. stuart: coming up a church in iowa brings in anti-woke policies that has progressives in an uproar, what rules the left are having a meltdown about. washington post congressman george santos's ties to a russian oligarch. president biden bashes republicans while touting his economic record. watch this. >> president biden: talk about big spending democrat again, guess what. i reduced the deficit last year. these guys are the fiscally demented. stuart: fiscally demented. and the ogles will react to the president's comments next.
10:14 am
♪ ally hated it. with dexcom g6, i don't have to prick my fingers anymore. this little wearable sends my glucose numbers straight to my phone. you can see your number and where it's heading. it's so much easier to make adjustments, and i can get alerts before i go too high or too low. the first time i saw my glucose on my phone, i cried. yeah. it's life changing. it really is life changing. the dexcom g6 has helped me lower my a1c. now i feel like i got this.
10:18 am
10:19 am
president biden blasted house republicans tax agenda during his mark luther king day speech just days before the debt ceiling is expected to hit. watch this. >> president biden: they want to raise tax on the middle class by taxing thousands of everyday americans why working-class folks are paying another 10%, 20%, and reduce taxes for the superwealthy, raising taxes on working families, making inflation worse. let me be clear, if any of these bills reach my desk i will veto them. stuart: congressman andy ogles, republican from the great state of tennessee joins me now. i'm going to refer to one item that has been put forward by republicans in the house, congressman buddy carter, republican from georgia, he wants to abolish the irs, he wants no income tax and only a national sales tax to raise
10:20 am
revenue. that's radical stuff and what the president is referring to with fiscally demented republicans. would you vote for buddy carter's bill? >> with any piece of legislation like that the devil is in the details, clearly the irs code is overcomplicated and needs an overhaul. i worked with doctor laffer, that was one of his goals so as we go forward this is the beginning of a complicated conversation. i support cutting the irs and overhauling the tax code. haven't seen any particulars but quite frankly i favor more of the flat tax over the fair tax or consumption tax. stuart: it is likely the government will be shut down if there is no agreement, are you prepared to push a government shutdown to get cutting government spending? >> this is where we have to take a bipartisan approach, we know we are spending too much money. we have to make cuts as we go forward.
10:21 am
by prioritizing payments we have the resources to get us to june as we look at our obligations. let's work together, republicans and democrats to make the cuts we know we have to make, the one. $7 trillion omnibus bill that was rammed down our throats, the american people had enough so for the biden to resort to name-calling isn't productive. let's face the fact that we have a porous border that is burdening local communities, the fentanyl crisis is burning local law enforcement, those costs are being passed on to the taxpayer so we've got to get to the fundamentals of running the government, part of which is cutting taxes. stuart: washington post reports details hong kong is when george santos and his ties to russian oligarchs. a cousin of a sanctioned russian oligarch donated thousands in 2020, do you think george santos should remain in congress?
10:22 am
>> i've been in touch with leadership on this issue. i don't have all the facts. they are taking a very careful look at this which i will hold judgment until i have all the facts, into the ethics committee and or leadership reports back to us. we have to be careful, whether it is the documents trump had with the documents biden had, their destinies are intertwined. if you give biden a pass to give trump a pass, same thing with santos. he made mistakes. my commitment is to represent tennessee, the constituents of my district and i'm on financial services now, we have a lot of work ahead of us, part of that is focusing on our financial future. stuart: you need george santos's vote with such a slim majority with republicans in congress, hard to see him go. we appreciate you being with us. the republicans in the house just launched an investigation into president biden and his family members, trying to get
10:23 am
around this visitor log book at the biden delaware home. aishah hasnie in washington, the latest please. >> reporter: house republicans are very anxious to hit the ground running when congress returns. they sent out records, preservation notices and are interested in speaking with president biden's family matters to get around the lack of visitor logs. >> does he get through testimony with family matters are those who have been at the residence? this important information. >> reporter: whether that means subpoenas or who they might want to talk to, representative mike johnson said he did not know that yet but it is clear how eager republicans aren't getting answers, so much so, speaker kevin mccarthy summoned his top house republicans while congress is on break so they
10:24 am
could finish signing those committees. the second meeting happening right now, just getting underway. all eyes on the oversight committee and the new judiciary subcommittee on the weaponization of government. that has subpoena power over federal agencies. democrats say republicans are politicizing this thing. republicans say we are trying to expose longtime double standards here. >> why did the fbi go through every room including baron's room and milania's closet? why did the fbi take surveillance cameras from mar-a-lago but they haven't set foot to our knowledge on the premises of the biden center for diplomacy or the biden residence? >> reporter: as far as the timeline for any future hearings, you might be interested in that, republicans tell fox they will take their time, gather the information, investigate this first, do this the right way before announcing any public hearings.
10:25 am
stuart: negative headlines for a long time to come. a lot of coverage. the new york post reports new information on the hunter biden laptop scandal. lauren: the 50 one intel chiefs who are presented four previous presidents, they signed on to this letter calling is that laptop the post discovered about hunter biden, that is russian disinformation to sway the election. one of those 50 one intel chiefs was douglas wise. he told an australian outlet that he knew the laptop had to be real but he signed on to this letter anyway and doesn't regret it is essentially because they had this mission, don't hurt president biden. he thought of it like a cautionary letter and the laptop which was very real as many news outlets have said had stuff planted on it because rudy giuliani went to ukraine a few months before to get dirt on the bidens. if you look at the custody, transfer of custody of that
10:26 am
laptop, people could have planted stuff on it. stuart: that is why he signed. >> he doesn't regret it. stuart: is more blue states ban gas powered cars in the future, one state doubling down to support the oil industry. we will tell you how wyoming helping to drive gas car sales and job growth. recession fears, my next guest predicts a roaring bull market, the founder of fisher investments, ken fisher, very important guy, going to explain his bold markets. ♪ ♪ ♪ so it's decided, we'll park even deeper into parking spaces
10:27 am
so people think they're open. surprise. [ laughs ] [ horn honks, muffled talking ] -can't hear you, jerry. -sorry. uh, yeah, can we get a system where when someone's bike is in the shop, then we could borrow someone else's? -no! -no! or you can get a quote with america's number-one motorcycle insurer and maybe save some money while you're at it. all in favor of that. [ horn honking ] there's a lot of buttons and knobs in here. my asthma felt anything but normal. a blood test helped show my asthma is driven by eosinophils, which nucala helps reduce. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your asthma specialist about a nunormal with nucala.
10:30 am
10:31 am
chinese customers got really mad that tesla lowered the prices on vehicles, it worked. from one week, january 9th-15, sales in china because of the price caps went up 76% to nearly 13,000 vehicles sold. stuart: no wonder the stock is up 6%. robhello x. lauren: daily active users went up. hours engaged went up, estimated bookings went up, that's good news for the company. stuart: we keep having dating services, got another one, it is match and it is up 1%. lauren: bloomberg is reporting match owns hinge and hinge is rolling out a dating service that would cost $60 a month to tap into jen see, the most active segment, they are motivated, they think it will be worth $60 a month. blue one $60 a month? okay.
10:32 am
moving on, treasury secretary janet yellen going to meet china's finance minister in switzerland tomorrow. what can we expect? how significant is this meeting? what can we expect? >> we can expect more talking, this is like a rewind to 2018 when president biden, donald trump's emissaries met with leo ha via the vice premier of the chinese, he signed the phase i trade deal with the chinese and donald trump when he was in office, the chinese largely ignored when president biden went into office, the phase one trade deal, this meeting almost 3 years to the day of the signing of the phase one trade deal, the former president had to believe the chinese into an agreement with tariffs many of which have been waived now that president biden is in office. >> china wants to take our
10:33 am
place, they want to present a more pleasing image overlooking human rights violations, the economic partners and slowly gradually while we don't have much awareness of it just assume our position all over the world so that they are the world leader and we are not. >> reporter: janet yellen's first meeting of several african countries, the trip is about countering what the chinese have been doing for a decade in africa. president biden agreed to spend $15 billion in two way trade and investment commitments, deals and partnerships with african countries, in november the president told chinese president xi jinping that he wanted to work together on climate change, economic stability, to maintain communication and deepen efforts on those issues. secretary yellen's meeting is tomorrow in february, secretary
10:34 am
blinken is going to china, more talking, where we were in 2018. stuart: edward lawrence at the white house. back to the markets. a very powerful and important guy on wall street. his name is ken fisher. forgive me for digressing but i remember you as the guy who did a tv commercial saying i would rather have needles stuck in my i than sell you an annuity. you did say that. i do remember. >> i don't remember because i'm mostly blind anyway but i said a lot of things about a lot of things. stuart: you have been saying you are seeing a roaring bull market this year. make your case. >> first, to see it, you have to see the 2022, almost anything you say about it, could be set almost perfectly
10:35 am
the same way about 1966 or just slightly differ the, rate hike, explosive inflation out of nowhere, regional war, the most divisive air in us politics, you could go to recession expectations, anticipation of capitulation and a bear market that was the same magnitude, starting the same day in january, almost the same day in october the fourth quarter rally almost the same size, strong start to 1967 and in reality from all that, 1967 is the year when inflation peaks and falls, interest rates plateau, we don't get the recession, likely anticipated recessions by mitigation and
10:36 am
anticipation, it is a parallel period in modern history. stuart: is inflation dead? >> i believe inflation is dead. the doornail doesn't know it. the fact is inflation is a process. input costs lead to producer prices which lead to consumer prices. if you look at input costs or whatever, whether you look at processing costs or freight costs, all these on average are down where they were a year ago or lower. the input costs and process costs falling, and you and i remember when milton friedman was still kicking around and he proved when we were young a long time ago, that labor prices follow inflation, they don't lead it.
10:37 am
but it is falling like a rock. the big part of cpi, inflation is deader than a doornail but doesn't know it. stuart: this is a wonderful way to start the program after a 3-day weekend, forecasting a roaring will market. don't be a stranger, come back and see us soon. see you later. elon musk is no fan of the world economic forum in davo's. what did he say? lauren: the s in esg stance for satanic. not the first time he references the devil, he was invited, he declined last month. at the time he said i didn't decline because i think they are engaged in diabolical scheming, but i think it is really boring. the world economic forum, managed by an internal committee and they incorporate environmental social good into
10:38 am
their management philosophy. musk doesn't like that. he says it is satanic. stuart: i am with you. peyton manning loses it after the cowboys kick 3 straight extra points kicks, against the buccaneers, got to watch this. >> in the end zone, got to be kidding me. never seen anything like it. why are we kicking it? stuart: i don't necessarily understand that but i see that peyton is not happy and brian kilmeade is fired up, he has something to say and he will say it shortly. look at this. transforming vintage vinyl records into new products. how is business? the owner, jeff davis, will tell us after this. ♪
10:41 am
(woman) what would the ideal weight loss program look like? no hunger, no cravings, no isolation, more energy, lasting results, and easy. is that possible? it is with golo. these people changed their lives with golo without starvation dieting. whether you have 100 pounds to lose or want to shed those final 20, try golo for 60 days and never diet again. (uplifting music)
10:42 am
when you automate sales tax with avalara, you don't have to worry about things like changing tax rates or filing returns. avalarahhh ahhh at adp, we understand business today looks nothing like it did yesterday. while it's more unpredictable, its possibilities are endless. from paying your people from anywhere to supporting your talent everywhere, we use data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all size work smarter today. so, they can have more success tomorrow.
10:43 am
♪ one thing leads to another ♪ stuart: i'm seeing red across the board, especially the dow industrials which are up 329 points. nasdaq's turnaround, s&p's turnaround on the side of the screen. let's change the subject. our next guest owns a company that transforms vintage vinyl records into new up cycle products, all made in america. jeff davis is the founder and joins me now. first of all, where do you get your vinyl from? do you have to pay for it? how do you get it? >> good morning. i get my vinyl from a
10:44 am
combination of private individuals and distributors, collectors, record store owners who sell vintage vinyl, primarily the records we use are no longer playable or have any real commercial value so we can collect close to 200,000 records every year to make for our products and we pay for them because there's a lot of labor involved in moving the final, collecting and removing them. stuart: what do you turn the final records into? >> some of the products are coasters, magnets, we make clocks, bottle openers, journals, shot glass tray that spins, kind of celebrating, spins around on a turntable a miniature record coasters, keychains, all variety of
10:45 am
things. stuart: are you profitable? >> we are profitable. this is my 20th year in business and the company turned a profit from week one. very fortunate when i started out, still in school, still in graduate school studying product design and startup costs were relatively low and bought a few records and started selling them. stuart: what do you do with that album covers? >> the record jackets are recycled. we used to make sketchbooks using the album covers but because our records are anywhere from 50 years old, some of them not not sold but the covers can get quite damaged over time and can be moldy or damaged, so we put those out for city recycling.
10:46 am
stuart: jeff davis, interesting company, all american-made. we love that. come and see us again, appreciate it. popular cars from the 1990s are once again soaring in value. which cars and how much extra value are we talking about? lauren: are lot of extra value. not family cars, not station wagons but the cool car, maybe the one a millennial wanted as a teenager but couldn't afford and now can afford. you say how much? over the past three years, increase of 78%. i always wanted the me anna. that goes to $1,400. ford broncos in the 90s, in the 30s. video with 1990s cars, they might have felt like you were driving, less computery, but still had amenities like power steering and air-conditioning. not like buying an old classic
10:47 am
car, but a cool car you wanted. stuart: $30,000 for afford bronco. if it is in reasonable condition, $30,000 in the 1990s. lauren: not interested. people think 90s cars are cool. stuart: san francisco reparation this committee wants to give millions of dollars to every longtime black resident of the city, critics say it is unconstitutional and racist, we have the story. the liberal media turning on president biden over his handling of classified documents scandal, roll it. >> president biden: >> it is very big, not legally, but politically it is very big. >> tumbling and bubbling around by not getting the time i write. amateur hour is over. stuart: when the democrats are piling on now? brian kilmeade deals with it next. ♪
10:50 am
as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network. with no line activation fees or term contracts. saving you up to 60% a year. and it's only available to comcast business internet customers. so boost your bottom line by switching today. comcast business. powering possibilities. it's official, america. xfinity mobile is the fastest mobile service. and gives you unmatched savings with the best price for two lines of unlimited. only $30 a line per month. that means you could save hundreds a year over t-mobile, at&t and verizon. the fastest mobile service and major savings? can't argue with the facts. no wonder xfinity mobile is one of the fastest growing mobile services,
10:51 am
10:52 am
goldman is down 6%, travelers is down 5%, that's taking 211 points off the dow industrials. it is 10:51, time for kilmeade. seems like the media is turning on president biden over the classified document scandal. watch this please. >> it is very big, not legally but politically it is very very big. i don't sitting there, hunkered down now, acting like it's not out there is a good strategy. >> what happened here with these classified documents really erodes and undermines not just the momentum but the brand democrats had been building of being not only the competent party, but the decent, honest party. >> by stumbling and bumbling around, by not getting their timeline right, amateur hour is over. stuart: amateur hour is over, stumbling and bumbling around. i don't see how biden can run
10:53 am
in 2024 when democrats are going after him now. >> they are going after him in this instance but i don't think they are running from him at all. i don't. i am refreshed by the fact that elana omar said there should be an investigation and other people saying i'm disappointed. senator stab a no -- stabinnow is embarrassed. if we didn't have mar-a-lago, they would be explaining and trying to bury this. they did two things. mar-a-lago, worst thing they have ever seen in their life, having this in a resource, locking up, negotiating to give it back, trump never should have taken it, sign this out, he wasn't sneaking around, we saw those interns on the tarmac before marine one took off and he flew away. that is not how you steal stuff but it end up in mar-a-lago. 6 months later they would like it back, they get some back.
10:54 am
this is 6 years later and doug jones, one of his not just allies who i thought would be attorney general came out yesterday and said the problem was it is not so much what happened, but that you didn't come clean right away. you told us this is it in the closet, then you told us in the garage, then in another room so over the course of 5 times over the next 7 days, they had an additional announcement overtop classified information, in the most irresponsible places. everybody is on the record condemning trump so they are worried about their own backsides of having credibility knowing the president is 82 whether he gets reelected or not, they want to last another 20 years and can't do it when they are on record ripping trump from limb to limb demanding his this makes him ineligible to run for president again, this nullifies this. thing about trump for a second, trump got out of the new york fine, found guilty in a
10:55 am
political trial with his attorney general, he writes $1 million check, for you and i, $1.70, now he's done there. now mar-a-lago is neutralized, you have georgia remaining and trump could have -- be free of a lot of the legal wrangling's that would hold him back should we know he is going to run again, should he get the navigation, it is performance, this is in many ways gets worse every day for president biden. stuart: it looks like it. i want to talk football, the dallas cowboys beat the box 30 one-14, they won despite their kicker missing four extra points. explain why this is so bad. explain what is going on. >> these are cheap shots. the average high school kicker hits extra point to miss in a playoff game to be in america's team and four extra points is almost unheard of. like a second baseman who can't throw to first base but he does
10:56 am
it in the national stage on the playoffs. it didn't hurt them, they are out the bucks, they were totally overmatched, the game plan was awful and cowboys looked well rested and ready to go. tom brady is gone, the bucks are gone, but the after points didn't hurt him. don't know what they will do in the next 5 days. your roster solidified so they will get it down, the next step against the 49ers, no margin for error. stuart: what is the future of tom brady? you want him to retire and join fox sports? >> we have great benefits, a 401(k), why not stop, come and hang out with us, have been do stuart varney, don't bum me but you should have a tom brady segment and why not? after all, he looks like he is 12. he's not aging. stuart: he might enjoy a segment with me, with someone who knows nothing about football, make a nice change
10:57 am
for him. i am out of time, a hard break coming up. see you later. still ahead, charles payne, doctor marty makary, and mike murphy. the michaela community school, one of 403 schools, how about this? merit points handed out, they want success, they want to compete, they want to win and they do. the opposite of america's public schools, "my take" next.
10:59 am
when people ask us who we are, we tell them we're problem solvers, opportunity creators, and change-makers. we are rotary. around the world, our network of 1.4 million neighbors, friends, and leaders volunteer their skills and resources to solve issues and address community needs. take action with us. find out more at rotary.org/action [birds chirping] [drum stomp] [sheep bleating] [rhythmic drum beat] [sheep bleating] [drumming continued]
11:00 am
53 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
FOX Business Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on