tv Varney Company FOX Business May 18, 2023 9:00am-10:00am EDT
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>> i love the wedding day, so exciting. my wedding day was so beautiful as well and i think the enormous beauty to see -- there's my dad and me and my wedding. >> you look so gorgeous. >> thank you. >> did you at least take a few minutes after you got married to have a moment just the two of you? that's what i did my wedding d day. >> absolutely. we were at the d.c. memorial and got a little bit of time after we did photographs where it was like before i put you on my health insurance, it was a moment -- and then i will go -- all the romantic thing we had a wonderful moment like torrential downpour all weekend except for three hours of our wedding outside, we got 73 and sunny. >> have a great day, we will see you tomorrow. thanks for the fantastic companies. stuart: good morning. there with me, if this is a serious problem about money in
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politics i'm starting with this. the duke and duchess of hazard, as a new yorker and an american, i take issue with the antics of the reddish prince harry reid he claims to have been involved in a catastrophic car chase in new york city lasted two hours. he's being ridiculed, as he should be. there's one great burned his boat. serious stuff. on the market, no big selloff after yesterday's strong rally. a bit more optimism, the debt ceiling deal can be reached before the deadline but if there is a deal, how much extra spending will be in it and how big a tax increase? i guess that would be the market next big word. the data of 400 yesterday, don 100 at the opening today. losses for the s&p and nasdaq. s&p of 48 yesterday. walmart came out with what i will call a solid report this morning and since it offered a solid guidance recall, the stock
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is up nearly 2%. interest rates are up, two year treasury way above 4%, you're looking close to four and a quarter%, that will not help but nasdaq. ten year treasury way above three and a half%. i think we are looking at 362 and look at the six month bill powering ahead, 530 well above the five and a quarter% level. two huge political stories seem to be put on the back burner. glossed over. the border? nineteen terror suspects apprehended in april alone and during report dismissed after couple of days, swept under the rug. crews will fix that. he'll join us in a couple of minutes. the ai battle, whose winning? microsoft or google? my guest says google. we will look at the democrats vote buying plants. the latest is reparations for
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slavery, cory bush wants $14 trillion. one more for senator cruz, he wants to investigate bud light. he's concerned about dylan mulvaney's influence on her under 21 tik tok audience. we really do cover it all. thursday may 18, 2023. varney & co. is about to begin. ♪ ♪ stuart: another attempt on a producer to link music to the story. with arms wide open, that's the song and that refers to the border. we're going to get to the border right now. border agents apprehended 16 people on the fbi's terror watch list just in the month of april. the single month total is more than in all four years under
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president trump. senator ted cruz republican from the state of texas joins me now. how come the border is being ignored these days? >> because joe biden and kamala harris and the democrats want an open border. they've made a political decision they look at the 6.6 million illegal immigrants that have come into the country since biden became president and they view everyone of them as a future democrat voter and sadly, they've made a cynical decision they are willing to look the other way to the dead bodies piling up year after year after year, the people who died crossing, the women sexually abused by the human traffickers, the children brutalized by the human traffickers. they're willing to turn a blind eye to 100,000 people who died last year of drug overdoses, two thirds of it from chinese fentanyl across our southern border and as you noted, just in april, 16 individuals on the
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terror watch list, more than all four years of the trump residency in one month and when biden was asked about the border, he laughed and said it's not as bad as you thought. sixteen terrorists coming into the country that we know of in one month, that's a serious problem caused by this pres president. stuart: here's something else that appears to be swept under the rug, a major story but not getting traction. the during report revealed obama and biden were well aware of hillary clinton's plans to implicate donna donald trump. i don't get it. >> you are exactly right, the durham report is stunning. i do every week a podcast verdict with ted cruz, three days a week with the last podcast we did yesterday does a deep dive into the durham re report, it chronicles how there was no evidence of collusion when the investigation began,
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not only that the fbi and department of justice both knew the steel dossier which was a fabrication, fiction, was bought and paid for by hillary clinton and the nc, political opto but it was a smear with no basis. it is heartbreaking as an alumnus of the department of justice to see the og d.o.j. and the fbi having been so politicized and organized first under barack obama, then heart partisan career positions under trump, they waged war against the trump presidency is not under joe biden it's in the open and we have fbi whistleblowers coming forward one after the other describing how today under joe biden, they are treating the fbi as the political enforcement arm of the dnc. stuart: you've dealt with the border, he dealt with the durham report, now i want you to deal
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with bud light. quite a switch i understand but you're pushing for an investigation, what has you worried about bud light? >> that's exactly right. i have to say the last month or so, i don't think i've seen a major company so alienated, a major portion of their customer base so misunderstand the drinks bud light but i also am very concerned so the last few days i joined senator marsha blackburn and sent a letter to the ceo of anheuser-busch is the chairman of the beer institute, the beer institute is the industry regulatory body that regulates beer sales and in particular what are letter focused on is marketing agreement with dylan mulvaney aside from being foolish marketing was also, i believe clearly targeting children and there are strict constraints on the beer industry not to market the children. you remember the show thing.
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dylan mulvaney on tik tok an instagram has millions of children following and not only that, you look at dylan mulvaney's entire pitch. there's a whole series is done of days of girlhood, another serious were dylan mulvaney sings i'm eloise and i'm six years old. another video has 7.1 million views where he goes shopping for barbie dolls. all of that, those are not targeting adult drinkers, those are targeting teenagers or barbie dolls, even younger, preteens directly contrary to the rules governing the market of beer so we are calling on the beer institute to investigate, the degree to which they make a business decision they want to market to children because they thought could earn profits from doing so. stuart: you've covered it all, congrats and thank you for being with us this morning. see you again soon.
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let's get to this, j.p. morgan chief executive jamie diamond best known anchor in america. he believes our country probably will not default on its debts. >> quoted due to the banking system? >> actual default would be a disaster is consistently over and over repeating it. >> are you optimistic about a deal? >> i'm worried about the. stuart: default doesn't worry me and nothing will happen but what about this extra spending and taxing that we are going to get when the deal is done? >> client hope is mccarthy gets the better end of the deal and we are not going to get that spending or taxation. we should not be worried about default. there's no reason -- because there's plenty of money coming in to the treasury every month to cover interest even if you don't raise the debt ceiling, he's got enough. this is the key, unless joe biden decides to.
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it's his decision, there's no monetary reason we can't pay our debt, it's his decision whether or not to prioritize the payments. stuart: we will watch you on the big money playbook, something different today. america and debt 1:00 p.m. eastern. we been reporting that, credit cards, auto loans and the whole bit strata, is that what you are talking about? >> we want to help people figure out how to get out of that and stay out. we've got extra from the ramsey group microbe with us because the best way to pay debt is to get a job and he'll talk about how to get a recession proof job 1:00 p.m., a great show. live town hall. stuart: all right, thank you very much indeed. check futures, thursday morning. i see some red but after yesterday's big rally, not that bad. on 100 for the dow. david with us for the hour. look at debt ceiling deal, do you care about it? >> i think there will be volatility, a deal falls apart before comes together but comes
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together. up and down, the ways these things go. i'm with brian, we not talking default. it's a technical default, not making a principal payment, that's a decision, not something that had to do, alexander hamilton was right, our country pays our debt. stuart: without spending and taxes when it got a deal? they will not eradicate all of this, they are going to spend. >> it's hard to find a political party who cares about entitlement spending and runaway spending. we cut to republican presidents and two democrat presidents in a row that have added more debt in 20 years by about $20 trillion in the first 200 years as a country. stuart: we keep here there will be debt exploding, i've been hearing this for 20 years. >> you won't hear that for me, we can't time it, we don't know. less than $1 trillion in debt when i graduated high school. 32 trillion now. stuart: you got me.
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[laughter] i'm speechless. you're with me for the hour, stay there. here's what we have coming up, we told you about prince harry and meghan's claim of a near catastrophic car chase in new york city. it prompted a response from the mayor. >> i would find it hard to believe that there was a two hour high-speed chase. we will find out the exact duration of it but if it's ten minutes, a ten minute chase is extremely changes in new york city we went to hour high-speed chase in new york city, it doesn't happen. one of the people -- one of the people in britain saying about it? president biden's in japan for g7 meaning, it's been cut short because the debt ceiling debate. we have the latest after this. ♪
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president biden arrived in japan this morning g7 limit. edward lawrence is there with him. the president cutting short the trip because of the debt ceiling talks. is he going to ignore the debt ceiling while he's on the other side of the earth? >> no, he's getting regular updates is rumpled. his assigned proxies to negotiate four. this is a city of lockdown right now, a police officer every 10 feet on the major roads, sporting events have moved to away games because of the g7. president biden got to work here, he has had bilateral meeting with the japanese prime
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minister, two theaters talked about with difficult climate crisis emerging technologies like artificial intelligence quantum computing as well as ukraine, president biden acknowledging we are facing a world of complex security is issues. >> as you said in january of the white house, i think the quote is we face one of the most complex environments in recent history, security environments the couldn't agree with you more but i'm proud united states and japan are facing it together. >> at the g7 the president is addressing china's aggression. leaders will come up with a unified voice back against what china is doing so i asked john kirby, what the president himself pushed back against president xi jinping? >> the president has been nothing but clear every time he talks about the prc, the fact that we are in strategic
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competition, competition united states is able to win. >> we had the phone call the balloon incident. >> he wants to keep lines of medication open, there will be another discussion with xi jinping at the appropriate time. >> the president canceling part of this trip going to australia, he's going to meet the leaders of the quad to me in australia and also help the prime minister of new guinea himself to convey the canceling message that he cannot arrive in that country. the president told the prime minister he's doing it to ensure congress passes the debt ceiling increase. stuart: thanks very much. congressman mike turner is chair of the house intelligence committee. good morning. >> you just made public from a closed-door meeting about handling classified documents. what is it show about intelligence chiefs and the
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biden campaign? >> well, transcript from the archives as they testified before our committee make clear mishandling of classified documents goes back to the reagan administration is the problem systemic in the transition of presidential administrations and we need to address this and they make clear which i thought was important in the transcript that no one was pursuing donald trump for classified documents when he left the white house, they were unaware of classified documents that had left until there was a delivery of documents to the archives and they discovered classified documents in it so that perception or the tail donald trump had been pursued for months and years was not accurate as to what they relate to us. stuart: in august 2016, president obama and then vice president biden were briefed about hillary clinton's plans to
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try and link donald trump to russia. my interpretation is they were in on the hoax. will they ever be held accountable? >> that remains to be seen, certainly voters need to hold people accountable what was known as you are aware, the house intelligence committee pursued this and made public that this was a russia hoax and absolutely the clinton campaign on the allegation against donald trump. devin nunes was then chair made public that there is nothing to the allegations. we have additional reports coming out substantiating this was a campaign opposition research coming from the cli clinton. when you look at people like adam schiff running for senate, people know conclusively adam schiff continue to lie to the american public and not running for the senate. i hope people take into consideration looking for somewhat they should not look for someone who doesn't stand in
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front of the camera and lies to them. stuart: we appreciate you being with us. congress and turner, battlefield promotion in some ways. thanks for being with us. republican lawmaker has a resolution to remove adam schiff from congress. who's trying to remove him and what grounds? >> the republican congresswoman from florida and she says the durham report shows adam schiff misused his office with dishonest pushing the lie a trump polluted with russia in 2016 and she introduced legislation to remove him from office for knowingly using your position on house intel to push a life that ripped apart our country, cost taxpayers millions and authorized spying on president and then proceeding to double down on the line. she wants the investigation, she wants him out he's running for diane feinstein senate seat in
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california so i guess you could say is being elevated. stuart: david is a californian and we were talking the brakes saying there's no way adam schiff will lose his senate r race. you're not with me back i think he could lose, she's well-funded, both of them are terrible candidates but i also think it's the way and adam schiff should be removed and not in this legislation but i vo voters. stuart: you don't think he's going to be the candidate. >> i think there's going to be to democrats running against each other in the general election in california and you will end up losing a tight race to katie porter and scott will win the congressional race in orange county that katie porter is leaving. stuart: felt a good wrap, nicely done. check those futures, please. seven minutes ago until the opening bell. looks like the dow will be done in a fractional gain for the nasdaq. we'll take you when the opening
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stocks. ray wrong is our technical guide with us this morning. in the contest, ai contest between microsoft and google, why do you think google is waiting? >> a lot of reasons. the way google is looking at the data centers, the way they built our applications and more importantly, they are able to do in terms of algorithms, they are ahead because they have more data so you can do -- language models can listen in and out english versus upper british or american it is english and you need a lot of data to make it work if you want it to be precise. stuart: of the way out in front of microsoft? >> no, head-to-head race but the challenges microsoft is facing data center constraints, some are getting e-mails out. on google they had an explosion that caught on fire fire is not
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an easy race and had to battle but google is slightly ahead in terms of how they have approached us and treat applications and data ethics and ai ethics. stuart: when it comes to chips in the ai business, leaving the chips race? >> nvidia is created the winner for price-performance but as remove to tens of performance, that's being used in ai, chips designed for ai and that's where google has the lead because mark more and less the gp. stuart: what's so special about these chips for ai? tpu? >> tensor processing units, specially designed to have a i data sets that operate devoutly. they were designed to handle graphics, these were designed to middle data at scale. stuart: what about open ai? >> it's great, we are seeing that in the public areas but what we are seeing is a move
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toward enterprise ai, information inside, you don't necessarily want the public so run organizations and we saw an interesting announcement between service now as well with nvidia to do that. stuart: in your business, are you actively using ai right now? >> we are, we are doing research reports and investment analysis and sometimes press releases. stuart: you just feed information into the chat box. >> open ai, you've got to do a lot of corrections, it's not necessarily accurate so if you want it 99%, you still need a human spirit is it getting better? >> much, much better. stuart: good stuff, thanks indeed. the market is now open. 9:30 a.m. eastern time. we got the dow opening slightly lower, 70 points on the dow
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downside, less than a quarter 1%. the board shows all 30 dow stocks, more losers than win winners. s&p 500 slightly lower get a couple points, that's it. nasdaq composite slightly higher, up .10%. we show you big tech at this time and the we've got. amazon, apple, microsoft are up. meta is down 45 cents. looking at individual stocks, susan is with us and we are looking at walmart. they have a bright outlook. >> and great quarter to start the year. better sales and profits, now they are raising guidance for the rest of the year, foot traffic growing 7%. that's less than last quarter, so better than wall street forecasts. high inflation means budget conscious, down for discount
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retailers like walmart and tjx in the set targets and home depot's we talked about with disappointing sales. 60% at walmart sales come from groceries which are americans continuing to spend to fill the fridge and shopping less at home improvement, home depot but i'm concerned about cheaper labels, private labels and walmart so instead of buying the labels that are more expensive, they're going the cheaper route. a lot of talk about shrinkage, we talked about this. fact. target yesterday said it will cost them 500 million this year. analysis i read from walmart is a lose 3 billion a year end shoplifting and theft. last year they want it's getting worse, that is on the rise that could lease lead to closures and that hasn't hurt on the bottom line but i think it will be a major theme throughout the year. stuart: a bigger story than the financial world. a couple of earnings reports before the bell this morning including cisco, way down.
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>> what's old is still old apparently. we looking at -- i say cisco outperformed the last six months or so but they are saying 22% drop in orders took place to start this year, that's not a good metric when people have already outfitted third networking equipment. stuart: i remember john chambers. >> that was the biggest talk in the world, 25 years ago. stuart: look at it now. [laughter] tell me about take two interactive. >> videogame maker, gaming is bigger than music and entertainment and movies combined so they posted better-than-expected sales to start this year but shared the week outlook signaling a strong teacher gaming slate for them that could mean more gaming and sales for the rest of 2023. stuart: allie bala came out, did they include mention of ai? >> they launched --
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>> it wasn't a great start in 2023. amazon missed sales and profit to start the year end that despite the first full quarter they got, they factored in the fact that china has reopened to cover the lockdowns and this is after historic unit split. the stock is interesting, it's been volatile in the premarket so it gift, spiked after they said they are spinning out. they will ipo there large unit in the next 12 months or so and make sense, the cart division is one of the top five cloud providers, i think we forget that sometimes and it's evaluation has been weighed down from its more mature slower retail business. they've launched their check gpt competitors no one will get done in this i a race. this could be the internet of 2023 from the 1990s. >> are you convinced it's the
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next big thing? >> one 100%. no doubt. it shows how it will play out. stuart: there was a time when you mentioned the cloud, the stock would go up. now ai, stock goes up. chipmakers. this is interesting, prompter says or more countries invested in developing chips? countries. >> here's an interesting deal because boise, idaho micron technologies, a chipmaker that makes pc emory chips that go into your laptops and computers, there getting one and a half billion dollar investment from japan to make more advanced the ramp competitors should so it's a memory based chip but to provide a smart way alternative access to chips in u.s. china taiwan tensions and microsoft outperformed, they cut thousands of jobs, a terrible start to the year but the floor is in. he talked about nvidia, the
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absolute king when it comes to artificial intelligence chips. one of the most famous traders and wall street says they have a pure monopoly on the ai business and that's why he and delina david tepper took a sizable stake nvidia, it's a double. it's up almost one 100% in five months and it makes it ceo founder, the richest on the planet, he has doubled his network. $29 billion or so. stuart: still going strong. >> it's also interesting everybody is trying to make these ai chips. even amazon, chips from google just now but don't forget amazon also is investing heavily into their own train chips as they are called and apple has their own ai production so everybody knows you had to build the infrastructure to win the ai race. stuart: fascinating. one of these days i want to get a chat bot thing and write a
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script or have a script written for me. >> you can do it on your phone. check gpt four. i have it, i can ask it later to see what it thinks of you. [laughter] stuart: very much. see you in a couple of hours. david is still with us. a dividend guy starting with cisco. what did they pay. >> 3.3% yield and growing 8% a year. doubled the snp and dividend on what you purchased it at ten years ago was 8% a year so it's about the growth of dividend for people who want more income year-over-year. we talk about this. cisco's product sales down 22% last year, description businesses 18%, software sa sales -- 18, suspicion of 13. until they pay their dividend. stuart: truest financial, what
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do you think? >> 7%. you are still working, you don't need these high dividends yet. stuart: how much longer? >> it's a lot of air, people worried about banks, you think people are getting it wrong. truest is more a big bank that small bank and we think the dividend is sustainable at 7%. stuart: all right, more for you later. coming up, artificial intelligence coming for your job? the ceo of open ai says it is. he's calling for government regulation to protect jobs. watch this. >> there will be an impact on jobs. we tried to be very clear about that and i think it will require partnership between the industry and government but mostly government. stuart: we will try to tell you which jobs are under threat from ai. new york city nearing its breaking. the ongoing migrant basis, there's no more room. we are absolutely full says the
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stuart: this is extraordinary. mayor of new york city says nearly half of all hotel rooms in new york city are filled with migrants. extraordinary. nate boy outside the hotel. it's arrival center and shelter for migrants, is overcrowded? >> not exactly get. to provide clarification we asked the mayor about that statistic he throughout that half of all hotels are full, it turns out 40 to 50% of hotels that can will house migrants are full staggering number but you mentioned the roosevelt hotel behind me was 850 family will have a place to stay here, 175
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rooms for families available this week. another big development is migrants are no longer in school gymnasiums in new york city. this comes after back to back days of protests where we were yesterday, ps 172 in brooklyn, midway through the day crews came in and removed costs and supplies set up for migrants and also we are learning of ps 188 also in brooklyn, migrants were moved out of the school. the only active schools were they were, parents feel their voices are being heard of the mayor's office said change has something to do with the potus. >> the schools was always going to be what we called arrested site, short-term and the reason we had to was because of the influx we've gotten. >> the mayor's office blames the need to use soldiers on the end of title 42. since may 11, they are taking
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six to 700 migrants every single day. the city set up 150 emergency shelters and crossing taxpayers a lot of money. >> it's a problem costing $8 million a day, more than the entire fdny, our fire department. the money could be going for homeless veterans, school lunches, it could be going for health care for the sick, if you going for a bunch of services the city provides. >> already this morning migrant bus has arrived with 38 migrants on board and we are expecting busy days ahead. yesterday the mayor said to expect 13 to 15 migrant buses the next few days. stuart: got it. thanks very much. the deputy mayor says there's absolutely no more room to house migrants in the city. nicole malliotakis joins me now.
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the migrants keep arriving so what's going to happen to them if there's no more room? do not those three solutions to this problem in the mayor needs to start moving in the direction of been saying for the past year which is he needs to challenge the right to shelter law, misinterpreting it from 1979 intended for homeless new yorkers, not citizens of other countries. thus the immediate step the mayor should take, that's one solution. the second is put pressure on the president to finally secure the border. democrats start telling the president it's unsustainable and has to stop but perhaps it could be a movement there but the president has been dragging heels to rescind executive orders he put in place that created this so the third solution is the senate needs to work with the house passed legislation we passed border security bill last week. the senate has not taken any
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action, not even their own. they should pass their own bill, let's reconcile the two but they need to do something and speaking with democrat senators, it seems they are at their break now and they realize something is to get them to stop this problem we want if we are absolutely full, no more room and you got buses arriving every day and we've got our cameras on every day, why don't we station police on i-95 and say you're not coming to new york? >> racing other municipalities take action. stuart: well why don't we? >> we should be doing something like that for the city of new york but the american go to court like you see other counties in new york doing right now, the state of florida is doing it so the mayor is considering to the problem and if you put people in hotel rooms, of course they will continue to come to new york city. the hotel you are looking at my $225 million contract which comes down to about 70000 a year
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for one room, that's more than the average salary of new yorkers yet new yorkers have to pay for this. it's coming to billions. their solution is send more money. that's all mayor and governor keep talking about, they want more money from the federal government continue opening up shelters and transport hotels in schools and shelters and i will not support that. stuart: it's not just the migrants to shelters and hotels, there being watched in schools and not just launched in schools but the children are going to schools nativeborn children. what is that doing to academic standards? >> these kids suffered enough for two years not having socialization and physical activity to take away their jim now and we have an issue with obesity and kids back physical
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activity for that time with covid. the mayor needs to stop it and he could today and that's the most frustrating for you, me and yours, it could be done today if the mayor had the will and the president did the right thing and acknowledge his executive orders were a complete disaster chuck schumer could be helpful working with the house, too. stuart: thank you for bring with us, important day. got a question on this issue of new york city, is the mayor going to put some of these migrants into what used to be a prison, records island? >> the new york post is reporting they are considering it. two really bad options -- a prison where you would mix immigrants who are civilians with inmates, a security risk or a school. they are looking at 20 schools, happen in one and 40% of the school didn't show up in protest earlier this week. too bad options. >> to very bad options.
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coming up, don't forget to send in the friday feedback. i want to hear it all. good, bad and ugly. send your e-mail to attorney viewers. remember the encounter, this is not an airport. >> put it on speaker like this. it's crazy. taken off speaker and put it in your phone. human decency. stuart: does not allow phone conversations on speaker anyway is not alone when people lost their manners. that will be next. ♪
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the airport and it's a viol violation. stuart: a violation, he said it twice. on the street ordinary people what they think, to the people say it violation and they do agree it seems to be a shift in how we are treating fellow citizens, this idea it would be more selfish and less considerate of others. we saw the were ready to sound off. watch. >> the conversation, i think the whole world is to know what you think. >> keep conversations private. >> i do find it rude when others talk. >> it is rude to do. >> people feel entitled like they've got devices and can't
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control, it's like in addition. >> i do think is that rude if you handle your business but if you have an argument -- >> i feel they are entitled to do what they want since the pandemic, i personally feel that. >> we wanted to stick to the airport because is a space where humanity is constantly on display. or you're looking at passengers you can see we've lost social nice at least at the airport. flying can be difficult but look at the explosion of investigations open by the faa. the only have data published through april this year but for 2021 or april 2022 but towards 21 had more incidents than the three years combined. 2020 not off-line but 2019, 18 and we've been talking about this, you see it everywhere, i took the subway and this morning and there was a man playing music out loud like we all got to listen to his personal playlist. stuart: matters. thank you very much for being with us. appreciate it. still ahead, honk dissenters donors to miami.
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does this mean an announcement is imminent? royal correspondent neil sean will join us and my question will be, has harry finally spoke? biden as opposed to making people people who work 20 hours a week. 10:00 our is next. ♪ .. to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your personal moving and storage team.
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and i remember kind of thinking like, "oh my gosh, i think we could be sisters." because i think we looked... yes. right. yeah. and i don't think at that time- i think you're the one to tell me that we had the same birthday. yes. it's really unbelievable when you think about it, because it's been, like, really over 20 years that you were my mother and father's banker, you became my banker and now fran is in her third year of college and you're her banker. it's so unbelievable because i'm just 20 years old. [laughing]
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