tv Varney Company FOX Business July 12, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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stuart: sharp dressed man. is that a backhanded compliment from our producers? this is a new time for fitness. you like it? lauren: a brand-new tie. it looks just like it already. stuart: good morning. 10:00 eastern straight to the money. you will like this. stocks in your portfolio, the dallas 268, the nasdaq one hundred 70. in percentage terms the nasdaq is up one. 4%, the nasdaq up 3 quarters of one%. that a rally. the 10 year treasury yield is coming down below 4%, 391. price of oil going up, now at 7583. as for bitcoin not much change today, $30,600 a coin. that's the market and now this. the only big thing this administration likes is big
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government, big tech, when biden nominated a hard left lawyer fresh out of yale to run the federal trade commission the writing was on the wall. lena car took aim at big tech. she wanted to rein them in and to beat them up using antitrust law. she launched a massive -- she had to convince the courts that big tech's expansion hurt consumers. in a landmark case, she lost. giant microsoft ones to take over the giant videogame developer activision, a federal court said get out of the way. jacqueline scott calling has ended the attack on big tech because big is bad for consumers, you lose. the judge says the government must make a specific merger is supposed to be anti-competitive. i wish the court could have pointed out the benefits big tech brings to us but that's
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not their job. it would be nice to see our government show appreciation for the brilliance of america's technology companies. they lead the world and the biden team tries to rein them in. as the wall street journal says, a ceo with her record of failure would be out of a job. second hour of varney getting warmed up. lose peak is with me, she is smiling. i think she liked my editorial. what do you think about the judge's ruling? >> no one thought this was a good case, no direct competition will be reduced by this combination. it is typical of her, she has overreached on so many cases, she loses time and again,
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hasn't dimmed her enthusiasm, or wrongheaded attacks on tech have caused staff to quit, the only gop representative on the ftc also quit in february and wrote a scathing editorial about her saying she doesn't adhere to the rule of law. it's very light, what the epa is up to under this administration, they don't care about the rule of law or what they are supposed to be doing, they are activists for a particular reason. in this case, looks like big is bad and by nature anticompetitive and it is not true. stuart: another story that won't go away, the president's temper, his demeanor. my question is why does it matter, wise important, why do we care if the president has a bad temper? >> "my take" is it is another
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sign possibly of dementia. older people are known to lash out without any provocation and president biden has done that to reporters, staff and others. the second thing is you and i have talked about president biden basically being in my word a fraud. everything about this man is fraudulent, one of his signature brands is the genial grandfatherly person, stood up on day 2 in the oval office, maybe day one, and said anyone who treats anybody with disrespect will be out, no questions asked, you' re not supposed to behave that way. he behaves that way. americans are finally coming around, maureen dowd the writing over the weekend about how he ignores his seventh grandchild, is that the great-grandfather, family man we have come to expect from president biden, some people expect, maybe not me.
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there are a lot of things he has done, being up a little moderate, talking about how he's the great uniter going to bring the country together. it is all malarkey to use his word and finally it has taken a while but people are getting onto it. stuart: see you next week. we know younger voters were a driving force in biden's victory in 2020. can you tell me that? lauren: tiktok and dejected. harvard professor, the under 30 corralled, more likely to identify is independents. i would've thought progressives. the second reason is they don't see politics as a way to create change, to affect change, don't have confidence in politicians to do that. it is unfortunate when you look at them as a voting bloc, they
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hoped barack obama two times, they helped biden and even though biden is selling what they want to hear, climate change, very value driven, reproductive rights, free stuff, all of that is with their values but they are not convinced of that he is there guy. republicans, any republican candidate, remains to be seen. two other things, younger blacks and young hispanics are aligning less with the left. all these votes are not reliably democratic and they are up for grabs. stuart: black folks and hispanic folks moving away from the left. lauren: at the grassroots level is where they are, they will see through anything that isn't organic. stuart: let's talk about the upcoming republican primary debates coming up in august. any clarity on whether donald
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trump will be in or out? ashley: will go without. his advisor says trump is unlikely but still possible to participate in the first two, no contender is polling high enough to make it worth his while. there is also the condition to pledge to support the eventual nominee and we haven't seen him do that or ron desantis. stuart: look at the dow, up 250 points. we had a benign consumer price inflation report. consumer prices up 3% over the last 12 months. do you think inflation will stick around longer than expected? >> i do think inflation is going to be stickier than what many are thinking we will be seeing. if we are looking at different
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ideas like reassuring different parts of our economy, looking at friend shoring with other nations that might be considered more friendly than china those are inflationary ideas. i love that we got this nice print this morning, the slowest in two years, things continue to progress in that direction but i don't think they will stay down that long in a meaningful way. part of the way inflation occurs is we have $10 trillion of printing in four years and committed to $4 trillion with the new debt ceiling deal. we didn't cut spending, we printed more. that inflationary. the course will remain inflationary and it will be sticking around for a while. stuart: what is with the new rise of meme stocks? some investors say that's
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raising a red flag for the s&p where meme stocks are doing. >> they come out as time progress is, to identify they are not great ideas in the long run. it is important the average american looks at their overall portfolios, holdings, that this is not time to become complacent, not a time for big speculations, there's a lot of negative headwinds facing us today, looking at manufacturing which is very negative whether we look at some of the unemployment which is not as hot as we thought it was going to be. quite a number of these things give us big challenges. i don't think meme stocks will pull us out of it but there are a few new ideas.
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stuart: i will tell you i am going to finish this show, go up sixth avenue to purchase some stock, quite a lot of stock. i think inflation is coming down, the end of the interest rate cycle. i want to be in the market sharply in the next cycle next year. am i doing something? >> it's important to be cautious right now. stuart: we are out of time. i am going to plunge in. thanks for joining us. it is moving again. that's the wrong one. in video. lauren: recursion pharmaceuticals is up 72%. nvidia is making a $50 million
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investment in recursion. a biotech stock at 72%, they will use artificial intelligence to purchase nvidia trips for drug discovery. there is that. 439 a share, up 3.5%. stuart: have they been talking to lena con for heaven's say? draft kings. lauren: bank of america upgraded the online gambling company, they say this monitor rally sucks up 150% and can continue sports gambling, markets are mature and have less money and they have investment money on marketing and fuel promotion so draft kings is up 5%. stuart: take it. the turmoil in the market, show me lucid please. lauren: they just gave their second quarter production and delivery numbers and were down
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in the second quarter from the first order. that's discouraging news. stuart: a new poll shows president biden edging out ahead of donald trump and governor desantis in the 24 matchup. we are on it. biden met with zelenskyy in lithuania as tensions run high after ukraine's bid to join nato is denied. us defense officials say the titan arrived, florida senator mike watts take this. the mayor of new york city says it does not work. >> nothing is more anti-american that you can't have a job when you come to america. there's nothing more anti-american. stuart: what are we going to do with millions of migrants already in our country. congresswoman nicole malliotokis has that. ♪
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stuart: plenty of green up 280, nasdaq up one hundred 90, s&p up 50. that the rally. mayor of new york eric adams announced two more migrant shelters. are these hotels going to be used? stuart: two new large-scale ones being added including the crown plasma jfk airport hotel in queens. new york mayor says -- eric
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adams says 2500 migrants pouring into the city every week, total number of arrivals tops 87,200. 186 emergency shelters are opened and the mayor says bottom line the city needs help. >> our shelter system has doubled in size and although it's no longer on the front pages of daily tabloids we are still dealing with an asylum crisis. numbers are increasing and continue to be a heavy lift for the city. the storm of migrant asylum-seekers have hit us for over a year now. ashley: the mayor pleaded for albany's help saying they had the state's back when it comes
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to disasters including this past weekend's flooding. it costs $385 a night, or 140,535 per year to put up a migrant family in one of the city shelters. based on those numbers the crisis is setting taxpayers back $7.9 million every day. stuart: every day? just astonishing. thanks very much. if we don't let migrants work we are being anti-american. that is what the mayor of new york claims. role it. >> unbelievable what is happening to the people of new york that are going through this. nothing is more anti-american then you can't have a job when you come to america. there is nothing more anti-american. every one of us came from somewhere, the guiding light of this country is to be able to
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come here and work. we have a population of 84,000 people, saying you can't work is anti-american. stuart: congresswoman nicole malliotokis joins us, what are we going to do with 5 million migrants that come to this country since president biden was the president, don't we have to let them work? >> i believe immigrants should be working like my father worked, sometimes three jobs, the issue is president biden created such a mess, millions of individuals have come to our country and la porte system is inundated. he encouraged individuals to cross the border instead of applying the proper way. that is the root cause of this issue. congress put forward funding for more judges and the administration dragged its feet. stuart: i must interrupt. i asked these questions many times. i want to know what you are
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going to do with 5 million illegals who are here now. if they don't work, what do you do with them? you are not going to send them back. they've got to work. >> they can't work because the way the system has been set up. early one change the system. >> this is the issue, we need immigration judges, congress approved over $1 billion to add immigration judges so these cases can be heard quickly. we need to determine legitimate asylum-seekers from those who aren't, those who are not need to be deported, need to apply the proper way. those who are legitimate which 1/3 is approved in court. and apply for -- stuart: i find that unrealistic in the extreme. those who come to this country claiming asylum, 90% don't get asylum. they are not valid asylum claims. are you telling me those two
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thirds, several million people you're going to deport all of them? >> it's my belief we should be doing that. stuart: you know you will never do it. >> under this administration you won't do it because they have an open border policy that people can come in but what he has done is inundate the whole system so there's a ten year backlog for people to apply for work authorization after the one hundred 50 day wait period. when the mayor says let's shrink that to 30 days it is not going to help. in 10 years, the court date in manhattan, until the president stops the flow at the border, hiring more immigration judges and asylum officers to hear these cases, people don't get their work authorization. you have to wait months to get a us passport. stuart: are you comfortable with millions of people being here, they can't work, we've
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got to pay for it. are you comfortable with that? >> absolutely not. that's what is un-american here, taxpayers, footing the bill, $140,000 a year for family when the average new york salary is $70,000, double the amount of benefits but the president put us in a situation that we can only rectify if we stop the flow at the border, add more judges to hear these cases to get the proper work authorization, if you don't have the judges, they can't work unless they are working legally. they need to go through the process and the president has made it difficult for everyone involved, the city, state, the federal government congress had allocated funds to deal with his, they hired 450 judges since 2021. stuart: i am sure we will ponder this for the future. thanks for joining us. i know we will talk about this again. thanks very much.
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hackers just gained access to e-mails at 20 government organizations. who was behind was behind that? lauren: mycotoxins its china, the hackers are focused on espionage, data theft and prudential access and describes this attack as targeted. they knew what they were going after, they reached 25 organizations and consumers associated with of those accounts, they are and identify. the us government notified microsoft of the hack, that raises serious concerns about safety of microsoft's cloud. hackers were an detected for one month. may 15th to june 16th. stuart: investors don't care, microsoft stock is up 8. now this. the ceo of united airlines say travelers place for delays and cancellations, this time he's not blaming the faa. we will explain who is. we told you how the summer heat is putting strain on the power
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grid. the governor of texas says there's a new threat to energy security and it is china. grady trimble has that story from austin, texas. ♪ ♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. ditch credit card fees and high interest. borrow up to $100k. sofi. get your money right.
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stuart: on the markets. the nasdaq is up 186. at the consumer level, it was up 3%. 3%. inflation is cooling. lauren is looking at the movers and i'm looking at amazon. lauren: how much did we spend on prime day yesterday. $6.4 billion shopping online. hot items for the appliances and toys, biggest discount on electronics for the average discount 16%. stuart: another big mover is booking.com. it is way up. lauren: amazon partnered with
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booking's priceline to offer discounts on travel. amazon is offering discounts on everything, first time a travel company partnered with amazon. the deal is 20% off, there express deals which offer 60% off is nice savings. stuart: i can understand why the stock is a. meta, stock is above 387. lauren: they raise the price target of 350. it is all about threats, the twitter competitor. it debuted with 100 million subscribers, that is prime real estate for advertisers who are skittish about twitter. stuart: we will get to you in a second. 30 year mortgage rates topped 7%, last week, first time we have seen that since last fall. mitch rachelle is with us, specializing in real estate. apart from mortgage rates going up 7%, what's the fundamental
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problem slowing the real estate market? >> i don't think it is slowing. it's not heating up but it is not tumbling. the reason is there is no supply. less then a 3 month supply of existing homes on the market and we see homebuilders getting back into the business after running away from it, the market is so supply constrained. does that cool off of a market? i would have said sure but i'm seeing buyers are still out there because they need to find a home, going to stand in line when it shows up. stuart: there's a shortage of supply coming onto the market. when something comes onto the market, it sells at a higher price, that is what is happening? very few sales. >> when we look at existing home sale numbers that come out next week, could be a million homes off the levels we were at
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last year. prices are holding, there are still buyers out there, 3 million buyers for half a million homes around the market for sale. stuart: i think to myself why what i sell our house right now? if i'm sitting at a house i like, 3.5 or 4% mortgage, why would isl even though i can make a nice profit? more than 7%. >> if you have a mortgage and need a mortgage for the next house, yes but an empty nester who paid off their loan will sell. you see hitting the market is just that. empty nesters, corporate locations, people who have more house than they need, they are the ones selling, those are potential starter homes, that's the challenge, there are no starter homes on the market. a lot of fixer-upper's on the market but some stuff that need a lot more fixing up.
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stuart: the other end of the scale for the rich, no shortage, no shortage of buyers who are cashing in their stock market gains and paying cash for these houses. i see a lot of that in florida. >> these numbers are astronomical but some of these $20 million houses on the beach, on the west coast, they are not selling because there are people who have gained a lot of wealth in the stock market but if you are not in the handful of names driven up, the s&p 500, they may not be as well off the fact is the high end stuff on the island of manhattan, $20 million, some of that is not moving but the average house for the average
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american prices are going up. stuart: rates up, prices up, inventory low. thanks for being here. governor of texas, greg abbott, sounding the alarm about a threat to the state's energy supply, that threat is china. grady trumbull in austin, texas, tell me the story. >> reporter: governor greg abbott is warning china has an interest in buying up energy infrastructure like power plants in the united states. he says president biden isn't doing enough to prevent it from happening. in in a new fox news our bed governor abbott says texas here's china knocking at our door adding china targets strategic sectors like energy development, petroleum refining and power generation, state owned power china is active in 50 ongoing projects across a
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dozen latin american nations the experts tell us china is already in the united states. >> we have seen china investing a number of power plants across the us the extent to which it is doing so pales in comparison to what we are seeing in other parts of the south. these are things the us has to keep an eye on and judge and review carefully looking ahead. >> that a long-term concern. more immediate concern is whether the texas power grid will be able to withstand high demand this weekend throughout the summer. electricity use at an all-time high this week because of the heat on a we are under an excessive heat warning in austin and the influx of people who have moved to the lone star state but the grid will hold up and state lawmakers have been
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working of the past couple years since that winter storm to strengthen the grid. governor abbott signed legislation to provide billions of dollars in loans and completion bonuses to incentivize companies to build natural gas plants in texas but it will ultimately be up to voters to decide in november if that officially becomes law. >> brace for more flight delays and cancellations. did he give a reason for this? ashley: yes he did. he's blaming climate change, that the flight will be delayed or canceled. scott kirby says more heat in the atmosphere means more thunderstorms. of the july 4th holiday, persistent storms west of
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newark airport crippled the operations, kirby says no airline can withstand six days of storms with prevent flights from departing. analysts say it took longer to recover than other airlines and blamed the scheduling system for those delays and cancellations. frontier airlines, $299. a number of flights, but there's also taxes, at the time of working, additional options like baggage, want to take some clothes with un seat choices, they cost extra. stuart: remember the guy on united who paid $290,000 a few years ago? never stops. blue one best investment he said he ever made. senator schumer wants the fda
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to investigate the new energy drink. he is worried the highly caffeinated drink poses serious risks to young children. lauren will have the story next. jack white lambaste celebrities for just talking to donald trump at the usc event over the weekend, trying to normalize trump. we will have the story for you next. ♪
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which have become top targets for ransomware attacks. but there's never been a reported ransomware attack on a chromebook. which is why thousands of schools like the fairfield-suisun unified school district switched to google tools for education. so they can focus on teaching and 22,000 students can focus on learning, knowing that their data is secure. ( ♪ ) stuart: if you so much as talk to donald trump at the ufc event over the weekend you are a bad guy according to jack white.
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tell me the story. stuart: even being seen donald trump is enough to send you into a tailspin. how dare they speak with the former president. jack white trashed celebrities mel gibson, joe rogan, mark wahlberg, all of them for interacting with donald trump during the ufc event in las vegas over the weekend. he took to his instagram and let rip to express his outrage saying anybody who normalizes or treats this disgusting fascist, racist conman disgusting piece of you know what trump with any level of respect is disgusting in my book. also posted photos of each of the men, speaking in front of the ufc fight. apparently that's a crime to humanity. stuart: mark zuckerberg teamed
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up with the pair of ufc champions to train for a cage fight with elon musk. tell us about it. ashley: zuckerberg has been seen at various events in recent years and approved himself as a no-nonsense -- winning his first brazilian jujitsu tournament, he's not messing about, he's training with israel and ufc featherweight champion alexander, very impressive, zuckerberg and musk have been seen training hard as they prepare for a potential cage fight but we are still waiting for a date, time, and venue for the battle of the egos. blue when i didn't know musk has been training. has he hired a trainer of some sort? ashley: he says he will use
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this move, that was amusing. still no date. stuart: that is a winner. on a similar vein loken paul's prime energy drink has been hit big on social media but senator schumer wants the fda to investigate. lauren: the energy drink contains 200 elegans of caffeine, more than two red bulls, two cups of coffee or 6 cans of coca-cola. it is so popular among kids because it is pushed by youtubeers. it is flashy and you can't find a similar flavors in the store. senator chuck schumer says it's time the fda investigate what is in the drinks making kids so upset. >> one of the summer's hottest status symbols for kids is not an outfit, not a toy, it's a beverage.
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parents beware because it is a serious health concern for the kids it so feverishly targets. lauren: he's talking about this, it is banned in the some schools and has a warning on the back, the label says not recommended for those over the age of 18. this is the prime hydration. it's not caffeinated, very sweet, kids are addicted and it is discouraged in some schools because it can taste like coconut and there are allergies. >> the marketing is similar, the bottles look similar and chuck schumer wants and investigation. now you know. these things will cost -- stuart: figurative $5 deal. this is one thing that is hard to get. 711, $6, put it back.
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stuart: moving on. senator josh hawley not happy with pga executives trying to merge with liv golf. watch this. >> we went to members of congress as we faced a very threat to our existence. >> before you agree to take $1 billion from the same people. stuart: the full exchange coming up. violent crime up 33% in the last year. now washington, the nation's capital, made a change to address the crime spike. an emergency crime bill, details after this. ♪
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you have two separate issues looking at the crime crisis. the good news is a lot of the crime is due to policy. you can walk policy back. the bad news is the other part of the crime surge is the cultural shifts within the common element. when you create a culture of lawlessness you can't just flip a switch and go back to the way things were. for the longest time you had politicians the council chair who a few months ago was telling us it was just a recession problem. not an issue in dc. all of a sudden saying you can get away with murder. for the longest time you ignored the crime crisis, you sent a message to the criminals that you can go ahead and continue to do whatever you want to do that does not change overnight. stuart: your stomping grounds, seattle posted the all-star game last night. did they try to clean the crime, the homelessness, the drugs in the place? >> they tried.
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as far as homelessness is concerned you could have lived here 17 minutes and not recognized downtown seattle. it was beautiful for the first time in a decade and every one is getting a sense of you are telling us we could clean up downtown, you can get rid of the homeless. they are not totally getting rid of them but in other parts of the city, we don't know but if you commit the resources you can get something done. we still have a crime crisis, 3 homicides over the weekend, two of which were in the neighborhood the stadiums are in. i don't want to pretend things are great but they are better. stuart: the homeless people just got back. >> they will likely come back and that's a question of mayor has to answer today or tomorrow. source will start to leave today or tomorrow. will the mayor say we are doing a reset and tackling this and meaningful way, we showed what
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we can do and to be aggressive or step back and say seattle is an amazing place and ignore the crisis. i fear that is going to happen but the polling, folks support the police here. that is not always been the case. i wish the mayor would show political courage and speak up against a small group of activists who want us to go back to the way things were. stuart: all over america, thank you, see you again soon. senator josh hawley called out the ceo of the pga because he's pushing a merger with liv golf. why does the senator object to the merger? ashley: he wants to know why the change of heart? he grilled the chief operating officer about his organization. at one time intense anti-live
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golf activity, which surprised merging with the saudi bank, listen to this. >> we went to members of congress as we faced a very threat to our existence. >> before you agree to take a billion dollars from the same people you were lobbying against. >> we faced a choice, one was to allow professional golf to take over as unrated by public investment fund. the second was to allow the pga tour to continue. in accordance with our mission and our values or the benefit of our players. ashley: that was ron price. pga executives have taken the heat from the live tour and accuse the saudi government of using sports to purchase legitimacy while ignoring human rights abuses. stuart: still had, florida congressman mike waltz on
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ukraine pushing to join nato. the attorney general of florida, ashley moody on her calls from mark zuckerberg to testify on human trafficking. mike braun is demanding answers from the pentagon, $6 billion accounting error. we will be back with more varney after this. you should get a second opinion from innovation refunds at no upfront cost. sometimes you need a second opinion. all these walls gotta go! ah ah ah! i'd love a second opinion. take the first step to see if your small business qualifies. ♪ tourists tourists that turn into scientists. tourist taking photos that are analyzed by ai. so researchers can help life underwater flourish. ♪ ♪ i have type 2 diabetes, ♪ ♪ but i manage it well. ♪ ♪ it's a little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ ♪ i take once-daily jardiance, ♪ ♪ at each day's staaart. ♪ ♪ as time went on it was easy to seee ♪
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♪ i'm lowering my a1c. ♪ jardiance works 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar! and for adults with type 2 diabetes and known heart disease, jardiance can lower the risk of cardiovascular death, too. jardiance may cause serious side effects including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, that can lead to sudden worsening of kidney function, and genital yeast or urinary tract infections. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, and don't take it if you're on dialysis. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. ♪ jardiance is really swell, ♪ ♪ the little pill with a big story to tell. ♪
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