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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  January 25, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EST

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♪ ♪ every little thing that you say or do ♪ stuart: why not play a little madonna. hung up, as we look at fox news
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headquarters. you want to buy microsoft? we are hung up on microsoft. we talk about it extensively. let's go to the market, down 300 points, nasdaq down 250. that is a selloff especially the nasdaq which is down 2%. the yield on the 10 year treasury around 3.5%. below that, 343, as for bitcoin is down this morning but holding around 22,000 level. that's the market. it is wednesday morning. now this. for years congressman adam schiff pushed the russia hoax. he was everywhere on network television promoting the infamous steel dossier. he knew it was a pack of lies but still presented it as fact. he was on the house intelligence committee. for years, congressman eric swalwell hung out with a
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chinese spy, she helped him raise money for his election and place and in turn in his office. even after all this was revealed, he was placed on a house intelligence committee. than there is representative a lot omar, vigorously anti-israel. it borders on anti-semitism. she told cnn she had no regrets comparing america and israel to terrorist groups like the taliban and. she was on the house foreign affairs committee. she was. swalwell and adam schiff were on the intel committee. until this week, when speaker mccarthy kicked off 3 off their committee assignments. they say it is an act of political vengeance. mccarthy says it is a matter of national security and so it is. how can you have anyone on the intel committee, eric swalwell, you associate with chinese spies, and out of the intelligence business. same with adam schiff, a man who lied about the russia hoax has no place on the intel committee.
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omar opposed trump's abraham accords, she was all in with a nuclear deal with iran. mccarthy was right to throw her off the foreign affairs committee. mccarthy has taken bold but welcome action. if the republicans retake the senate, may be the socialist bernie sanders would no longer chair the senate budget committee and another socialist, senator elizabeth warren would no longer chair the economic policy subcommittee. we live in hope. second hour of varney just getting started. ♪ look who's here now. is guy benson joining us this wednesday morning. what do you say a? mccarthy took bold and welcome action. you agree with me? >> nancy pelosi went down this path in the last congress.
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every republican, conservative in congress and the media said if you are going to do this, take the step of stripping certain republicans from committees and circumventing the usual process, taking power out of the hands of the minority party than next time republicans are in charge, that's going to happen to your party, the tales are going to turn, the new president will be used against you and the democrats didn't care. they felt maybe that would never happen or it would still be worth it. this is what has happened and they are squealing like stuffed pigs as if no one warned them this was going to be the case. if you want to get into the specifics, kevin mccarthy haggling with a reporter about this yesterday and got pretty aggressive in his justification for some of these moves. adam schiff not only lied about the russia collusion matter, he kept pushing the collusion lie even after it had been debunked, after it had been disproven by robert muller. this is someone who aggressively used his position on that important committee,
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should be taken seriously, to score political points based on falsehoods and if we start playing the game, when the majority party gets to pick and choose who serves on what committee, for the minority, adam schiff would be an obvious target, the democrats are mad about it, they can talk to nancy pelosi. stuart: white house press secretary karine jean-pierre continues to stonewall on biden attended the classified documents. watch this, roll tape. >> i will refer to the department of justice, on your second question i would refer to the white house counsel's office. i would refer you to the white house counsel's office. i would refer you to the white house counsel. i would refer you to the white house counsel's office. >> president biden went to his house in wilmington. what was he doing there? >> i would refer you to the white house counsel. i would refer you to the white house counsel on this. >> we know the president did it. why did he do it? >> i would refer you to the
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white house counsel's office. stuart: almost painful. have you ever seen anything like this before? >> she's not good at her job. she's even worse now because she has nothing to offer. part of that is her fault because she's not terribly talented and can't deliver answers in a roundabout way that makes it seem like she is saying something but her predecessor was better at that but they are not giving her any real facts to help her. at this point for the daily briefing it might behoove karine jean-pierre to show up, hang a sign on the podium that says i would refer you also and head to her office and crack a beer. we are not learning anything from these appearances. blue one sarcasm is a low form of wit. occasionally it is quite funny. thanks. >> i was barely being sarcastic. stuart: great to have you on the show. come back soon. we have to get back to the markets because we have a lot of selling going on this
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wednesday morning, dow is down 270, nasdaq is down 233, over 2%. i want to talk about what i am calling the microsoft affect. report that was badly received by investors, stock goes down. it seemed to me that has a chilling effect on the market. >> aztec goes so goes the market, tech accounts for 26% of the s&p 500, 20% of profits. microsoft shot up first, cloud computing was doing well, better than amazon but the chilling effect is coming because what it means for amazon, the deceleration, 30 one% growth to 4 or 5 points lower than that. that's damning news, amazon dropped 20% after reporting a slowdown in their cloud computing. the consumer is under stress. blue when i've got microsoft
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down 232 at that level, 232. is that beginning to look attractive? >> my previous guest says it was expensive, it is getting cheaper. if it goes any lower it will be the cheapest it has been in a decade. historical averages, 36 times earnings, so i don't know. i have been looking. stuart: asked what point would you buy it? >> can't make recommendations for anyone else but if amazon disappoints you will see another pulldown. time to step in to purchase stronger reformers. microsoft has been eating amazon's lunch. 55% market share is down from 70 one% 5 years ago, microsoft over the same time 20% to 30%. they are picking up steam. they are the horse in this race. neil: i will repeat the question. what price would you buy it?
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what price would it be a compelling purchase? >> i don't have a chart in front of me. i will take it 10% lower. if it breaks below 200, it gets really compelling on a historical basis. stuart: i am scared to death because i own it. whatever you say. thanks for being here in new york. lauren is looking at the movers and we have some run, they are down 10%. >> reporter: residential solar power, barclays cut son run, t state of california where y rooftop soar incentive was withdrawn. it is down 10%, solar edge is down, so the sector is getting hit. we were in california will remove some incentives to get solar power on the move, removing those incentives. goodyear tire and rubber.
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lauren: the wall street journal's reportable justice department is investigating how they handled a recall of tire situation linked to 8 deaths. stuart: goodyear tire & rubber was the first sock i ever bought. i was in hong kong. i accumulated a tiny bit of money, walk into a merrill lynch office and said i want to purchase some stock, the guy said how about goodyear tire & rubber, i am in. referring to the white house counsel's office. lauren: i expected an answer like i like sports cars, someone told you to. in hong kong. stuart: 50 years ago. intuitive surgical down. lauren: investors were hoping we did this story for the launch this year of this robotic system, that's not going to happen so wall street is disappointed, resurgence of
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covid in china, delaying things. stuart: it is down 6%. the tech industry may be facing massive layoffs but one area remains strong. lauren: cybersecurity, palo alto is down today. 57,000 folks were laid off in big tech this month alone but none of the big tech companies are touching their cyber devices, cybersecurity demand is growing. there was a shortage of workers, to meet that demand it is estimated that 530,000 jobs need to be filled. i would say cyber acuity -- cybersecurity is recession resistance. stuart: dan i've, cybersecurity stock, may be down today but performed remarkably well. thanks. goldman sachs says four cities in america will suffer a crash in home values like in 2,008. we will tell you where they are
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predicting the housing crash, congress looking to crack down on crypto. house republicans need a subcommittee to figure out the best way to regulate digital currencies. chad program will have the full story from capitol hill. senator josh valley introduced a bill to ban member's of congress and their spouses from trading stock. indiana senator mike braun is on the show. i will ask what he thinks of this after these commercial messages. ♪ kids are so expensive, dad. now katie needs braces. maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds. i don't know, dad. ♪ maybe try switching your car insurance to progressive. you could save hundreds. that's a great idea, tv dad. but i said the exact same thing.
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dow is down 300, nasdaq is down 2%, 250 points down. house republicans are putting together a subcommittee to figure out how to regulate cryptos. chad program on capitol hill. what's the likelihood we actually do get real regulation out of this. >> crypto currency is largely unregulated, that's why a new house subcommittee will explore crypto and try to protect people who invest in crypto. and he's not a thin tech evangelist. >> like any new business, individual numbers of congress have to approach it with caution and skepticism, at the same time we need to have commonsense approaches to the regulatory framework, we want to have hearings, we will invite the industry to testify before us as to the course of action.
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>> there is no interest in crypto currency following the spectacular collapse of ftx plus the arrest of sam bankman-fried. he was scheduled to appear before a house committee last year but the fed cuffed bankman-fried the night before, some are skeptical of crypto. >> crypto currency literally means if we shine the bright light, and anti-money-laundering statutes, onto the entire crypto ecosphere crypto will disappear. >> there is concern about crypto industry advocates believe this presents an opportunity to educate lawmakers. >> what we have to do is go back to basics with many new policymakers looking at this space for the first time. let them know there's an underlying technology that is very good and assistant all just about fraud and
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speculation, like you may believe. >> in the senate, the chairman of the banking committee, sharon brown characterized crypto currency as funny money. he called crypto shady. and and block chain innovation is not going away. >> thanks very much. senator josh hawley reese reintroduced a bill that would ban member of congress and spouses from trading stocks, he named at the pelosi act taking a jab at the former speaker nancy pelosi. senator mike braun, republican from indiana, joins me now. you can own stock but can't trade it and the stock has to be in a blind trust. is that okay with you? >> no one should come here and enrich himself or herself by being a politician, that happens a little too often.
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i'm going to be okay with that, you should add on the side of that not occurring, there have been too many instances of it. and and any type of information that would give you a leg up. i will look at that legislation and would probably be for it. >> odds are it will pass because it does have some bipartisan support. >> in this case we would have to get 60 senators, hard to do on anything but i think it will have enough meat to it that it has a chance to do so. >> reporter: forgive me for asking but you made quite a lot of money before you went into congress and i presume some of it is in stock. will you now have to put that stock into a blind trust? >> you and i have invested in
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things like timber ground, assets like farm ground, a lot of my investment was in the business itself so i've got a 401(k), retirement funds, i'm happy, hands off on that, don't tempt fate, i steer clear of it. and i did it the old-fashioned way. i had little business for 15 years, grew it over 37 into a national company with competition and all the rigor that goes along with that. >> we need more business people in congress and that is a fact. every days this week, i said publicly there is no way america will default on its debt. i know there will be a huge fight over the debt ceiling coming up. i know there's going to be a fight but would you say publicly with me there is no way we default on america's debt. >> no way we default on our debt and there is no reason to
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shut the government down in the process. i've been here four years, we don't do budgets anymore. to give everybody the magnitude of what we are dealing with, say you have a business that's doing $1 million in revenue, this place, borrowing it from kids and grandkids and that interest with rates going up recently is going to be crowding out what we spend domestically or on defense in 6 or 7 years, paying as much interest on two ovum combined. we need to get some political will, start doing things again, haven't done one again in 20 years, run this like any other place and including holding the military accountable. i don't know if you saw where they did an audit of their assets, 3.5 trillion, they could only locate 89% of them.
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there is waste across the government, getting out of hand and no one here seems to think it is a big deal. >> always a pleasure having you on the show, come back and see us again soon. here's something for realtors to take note of for homeowners, goldman sachs is predicting a crash in home prices in four cities. which cities? >> they are san jose, california, san diego, austin, texas, phoenix, arizona, goldman says they will see home declines of 25%, that would be comparable to the 2,008 crash where prices nationally fell 27% so this isn't that scary to me because it is localized, the pandemic boot hounds will see a bust, nationally not too bad, goldman's forecasting home prices to decline 6%, mortgage rate's new numbers, 6.
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2%, goldman says they are going 6.5%. stuart: they shot up during the pandemic so the air is coming out of the bubble. they did predict miami had prices that go up a bit this year. by the way the yield on the 10 year treasury, 343, that suggests maybe mortgage rate comes down on the bit. consumers are cutting back purchases of high-priced items everyday items, that's what we hear from a new report but what are they buying instead. >> luxury, sort of makes sense. i loved the opening paragraph of the wall street journal, shopping for staples at the dollar store, i do this, at staples and toilet paper cheap, so you can splurge on the nice things.
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and and over the past year plus. stuart: does everybody else? lauren: a lot of people splurge, and people buy used luxury, they add 20%. and -- stuart: used clothing. a designer bag, they had the gucci level. and we have an enormous response to that. congress banned tiktok on all government devices. now senator how we wants to take a step further and ban the chinese owned apps nationwide. we have details on that.
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florida governor desantis wants schools to take phones away during class. watch this. >> why are kids on their phone during class time. the school district is in their rights to say leave your phone in some cubby or something, go sit in class, learn. stuart: but one analyst called the desantis proposal dangerous. rachel campos duffy, mother of 9, i will ask what she thinks next. you'll always remember buying your first car. but the things that last a lifetime like happiness, love and confidence... you can't buy those. but you can invest in them. at t. rowe price, our strategic investing approach can help you build the future you imagine.
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stuart: plenty of red on the left-hand side of the screen, dow was down 336, nasdaq down 230, this is the microsoft affect. of the report was badly received by investors and the negativity is throughout the market especially big tech. we a
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person dies. when they weren't a drug user, they were just expanding and social media helped them do that. of the one that you killed him. next move, shopping, the stock is up significantly. >> reporter: increasing different pricing plans by 30%, the businesses used to help them grow their e-commerce, they had increased in 12 years so this is good for their bottom line. investors. stuart: general dynamics, defense contractor. lauren: big business and ukraine, big business in china, they reported their highest sales and earnings in the last quarter. why is the stock down 5%. %.
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they are citing exchange rates and fluctuations as a head wins, they do a lot of production in europe, that could be one reason. stuart: thank you. we told you about violent crime among young people, soaring across the country. laura, how are parents reacting to this? it is a rise in juvenile crime? lauren: we bring the story of one case and i have to tell you it is more heartbreaking interviews i have ever done in my 20 years at fox and each case of juvenile violence adds to the heartbreaking statistics we will share with you and for each victim there is a family with a story of devastation and take a listen. >> my daughter's life, her wedding was denied, graduation was denied, or having kids was denied, these kids commit these crimes, go to jail for 3 or 5
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years and come out. >> those are the parents of 11-year-old kiara chair was shot and killed as she stood outside a nail salon, they are forever heartbroken and say they weren't surprised to hear the person police say killed their daughter was a 15-year-old boy. >> nowadays those are the killers now, 13-year-olds getting away with murders. stuart: in the last week, 17-year-old zachariah trevino was killed in fort worth, texas, two 17-year-olds, were arrested and charged with murder in the latest data shows us from 2019 to 2020, murders by juveniles acting alone increased 30% while murders involving multiple offenders under the age of 18 increased 66%. for the last few years
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investigators, district attorneys, pinned some of the problem on pandemic disruptions, schools and social services. one policy expert increment of justice says immediate action must be taken. >> these individuals need to do real time and show others that would come up like the myth that there will be consequences. we need a deterrent effect for juveniles. >> reporter: the nypd commissioner wrapped up oppressor where she acknowledged the spike in youth involved shootings and vowed to advocate for violent criminals, no matter their age. stuart: thanks very much. senator josh hawley introduced a bill to ban tiktok nationwide. is this just on government devices? lauren: all phones at hollywood is successful in getting the ban on federal devices so he
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wants introduce legislation, this is what he says, tiktok is china's backdoor into americans lives, tiktok is invasive. they have access to what you type even when not using the apps. it has access to a key ring, that is when they can steal your password and access to your location, gps. stuart: seems draconian to ban the whole thing from all phones in the united states. >> they would be a lot of backlash, it's the most popular apps for young people. there's a lot of good that comes out of tiktok, businesses building themselves up, there's a lot of that too. stuart: thanks very much. governor ron desantis suggested schools take away phones during class.
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>> i think to myself why are kids on their phones during class all the time? i think the school district would be in their rights to say leave your phone in some cubby or something, go sit in class, learn, and if you get it at recess and want to text people, fine, but they should not always be on their phones being distracted from the lessons. stuart: speaks like a normal person, not like your average politician. but we haven't ms nbc -- one analyst said desantis is dangerous in every way, truly enough territory and -- authoritarian personality. rachel campos duffy is laughing. >> that lady from ms nbc was somebody who wanted to force everybody to get shot, supported the government shutting down, businesses closing churches come of those are the authoritarian's. parents have control over kids,
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most parents say they want their kids to not be on the phone at school, they want them to be engaged in the class. he speaks like the rest of us. stuart: i think he is laying out a campaign for the presidency because he's addressing the kind of issues other politicians don't address, education, crime, the anti-police movement. desantis gets right in there and speaks in a way everybody understands. >> he has had policy wise, his pulse so directly on the way most parents think, whether it is curriculums, disney was the safe place that we could have children go to, and be insulated from all the over sexualized culture and then all of a sudden disney went in that direction, genderless, and less governors would have said i don't want to touch disney,
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disney brings tax revenue, he's popular because i don't know if it is him or his team but they had their pulse on all the right issues and this thing with schools and telephones, i remember when phones came out, i let them have them early, the great thing about having a lot of kids is you get do overs. one child doesn't have a phone, isn't going to get one. we are saying no more phones, too late for the older ones. she is upset, she doesn't like it, she says everybody else does but doesn't matter to me. we are now seeing the impact the depression levels. why would i put a phone in the hands of a child, who i know this will make them more depressed, give them access to all kinds of information that isn't age appropriate, the chinese should be following them as well. there is no reason to do it. stuart: you are a tough mom, that is what you are and that
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is a complement. tough mom. where it with pride. some senators are using taylor swift's lyrics to grill live nation about the ticket fiasco. listen to this. >> i had hoped as of a few moments ago to get the gavel back, but once again, she is cheer captain and i'm on the bleachers. stuart: which song was that? >> i don't know that one. stuart: hold on a minute. we are going to tell you shortly who live nation blamed for the bungle. the white house is confronting china after finding out chinese state owned companies are helping russia in the ukraine war. grady trimble breaks it down next.
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problem, 335210 to 32 or visit homeserve .com. that market keeps going south. the dow is off 420 points now that, by the way, is one and a quarter percent. the nasdaq is down better than 2% it's been downhill right from the opening bell now before the midterms. remember, president biden said the pandemic is over. what's the white house? i think the white house is saying the exact opposite because it's convenient for them to say it's over when it's over, and not when it's not listen to the white house press secretary, ms pierre covid isn't over. we've been very clear about that. hundreds of americans are dying every day in cases are increasing right now. today that's why we take common sense measures like covid testing ahead of large indoor
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gatherings at the white house was talking about about this big white house reception for the incoming house members. um there was a vaccination requirement and a negative covid test had to be reduced produced before they can attend, and some members were saying this is just ridiculous because you yourself, the president said in september that the covid pandemic was over. so congressman nicola lotta, a republican from new york, biden won his district by four points he didn't attend. neither did, uh, anna polina luna, mike collins or wesley hunt. they all said no. they want the administration's policies to reflect that depend. emmick is over. we've moved on a it. you said it in september, and then we have the governor of new york kathy hochul core. she says that rehiring unvaccinated health care workers is not the right answer the full quote. i don't think the answer is to have someone who comes in who is sick, the exposed to someone who can give them covid-19. i
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don't know if that's the right answer, but i'm pretty sure it's not. i cannot put people into harm's way. here's dr marc siegel joining us this wednesday morning. alright, doctor, why is this not the right answer? well, i've met governor hochul, and she's very pleasant. but one thing she is not is a health expert. i'll tell you that right now. and i also want to tell you something on the show. i've never told you before, which is i had a patient who had a very important position in an emergency room here in new york, where they were not allowing any immunity whatsoever from prior infection , natural immunity and i fought for her job because i believe that that matters and at this point in the pandemic and this is to reflect where lauren was going at. this point in the pandemic. how can a vaccine requirement being placed? i question whether an emergency use authorization should ever have been mandated. but now if you had a vaccine two years ago what do you have 5% protection from that? how is that a
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mandate? and why wouldn't you give people their jobs back that were taken away from them wrongly and now? they don't they want unvaccinated, but the chances are almost 100% stewart that they had a covid infection . and guess what? a covid infection gives you some immunity. doesn't the healthcare system really need those workers to come back? well, of course, that's the most important thing. that's why you're the host, right. the most important thing you just said, because without those healthcare workers, we can't take care of the mental health crisis that's come out of the pandemic. we can't take care of the drug crisis that's come out of the pandemic people that delayed screenings. we need to take care of people with heart attacks. we need to take care of. we need more and more health care workers and they're not being allowed to get their jobs back and they want them. you're very passionate about protecting the health of our overwhelmed cut. customs and border protection agents fired up about this and you've written an op ed on it. what do
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you think needs to be done? you know, it's very similar to what we just talked about. i mean, the cbp agents are on the front lines. there's an increasing number of suicides, among them an increasing number up to 21 that got killed in accidents with vehicles with vehicles because of incoming migrants. we had over 250,000 encounters with illegal migrants last month alone with cbp detention centers are overflowing. there's risks of infectious diseases. yes, including covid. mean you know, nobody's checking anybody for covid at the border where there's no vaccine requirement at the border, so it's tremendous stress for the cbp agents. and as i wrote in the op ed, the most important thing of all, stewart they're making them take light detector test, so people are retiring. we need replacements, and we they gotta take glide detector tests and over half of them are failing for no good reason whatsoever. by the way, they're eminently qualified. that's crazy. thanks for bringing to our attention,
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doctor. that's a big story. appreciate it. thank you, dr siegel. this is our system e service members who were fired over the covid vaccines are being forced to pay back. signing bonuses. what's going on the military is literally adding insult to injury. the service members were fired for refusing the covid vaccine. and now this listen our family has been through a lot for struggling financially because of this issues up until recently, when i was discharged and how the subsequent $13,000 bill pentagon is now forcing them to pay back their original recruiting bonus. thousands of dollars nearly 8500 service members have been separated from the military since the mandate over 3700 marines about 2000 sailors and more than 1800 soldiers. what are they up to? alright, thanks, lauren. still ahead, martha maccallum, chad wolf and mark tepper plus the school choice movement just took a leap forward. the
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