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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  July 21, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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>> you now have directest and facts that support the fact that joe biden was paid money in a bribery scheme. it's not just hunter. >> they've had the laptop for a
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year and knew it was accurate and real and they dib rattily said nothing. they -- deliberately said nothing. they could have stop it all. >> it's nothing in bidenomic about creativity and opportunity and growth and go out and make the future what you want. it's all about what i can take from somebody else. that cannot work. that is not what built america. susan: for $10,000 you say you can turn people into a barbie look alike or barbie shape? >> get nails, hair, picked up, to the surgery in a pink corvette and get you as close as we can to the barbie of your dreams. stuart: could you turn me into ken? >> you are a ken in my eyes. stuart: oh, yeah. stuart: what is this? oh a ken doll. we had a plastic surgeon on the show earlier who for $100,000 would make me look like ken as
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in barbie and ken. that's the rendering there. let's get serious, sports fans. it's 11:00 eastern time and friday, july 21st and we'll cover the markets for you. little bit of green left hand side of the screen. dow's up 75, nasdaq up 15, and p up 12, no major gains. check out big tech. earlier this morning, they were all down and now it's a mixed picture, alphabet, amazon, microsoft turning higher and meta is down and 3.38%. markets on a friday morning. now this. what's going on in democrat politics? trying to figure it out makes your head spin. the party's in turmoil whether they admit it or not. first, they've got to deal with the president's physical and mental difficulties. this is urgent. thursday, the president again stumbled through a speech and slurred his words, watch this. >> inflation has slowed every
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single digits month in the last 12 -- obstructi on a yearly base last 12 months. how many times you read that recession is coming? even in wall street today said [inaudible]. it's the lowest point inflation, lowest point in over two years. stuart: look, folks, frankly it is very hard to see this president holding down that big job for another six years. and to support him, to prop him up, the democrats are reduced to shouting down his leading opponent, that is robert f f. kennedy jr.. he appeared before a congressional committee to talk about censorship and the deputies wouldn't let him get a word in otherwise. >> do not censor the witness. >> i'm not censoring the witness. he's still talking. >> it's my time and i've given it to the witness. do not cent correspondent ship. >> i'm not censoring him. >> please ask the witness to stop talking. >> you asked me a question. >> reclaiming my time. >> allow me to answer my
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question. you are slandering me and it's an attempt to censor a censorship hearing. stuart: ironic, censorship in a hearing on censorship. when democrats shout down a kennedy, you know the whole party is in trouble. third hour of varney starts right now. sor stuart: the democrats trying to prop up the president with the shouting down of kennedy. what a mess. >> it's a complete mess and democrats and kennedys go together; right, and to be rorobert f. kennedy jr. and allw republicans alumis him to speak and democrats shut him up. the democrat party is not the party of john f. kennedy jr. or even bill clinton. they've gone so far left and rfk is probably a traditional
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democratic and i don't age with him on a lot of things and more in line with the traditional democrats and these guy haves lost their minds. you mentioned joe biden is we're seeing the slide and the slip is happening much quicker, stuart. i mean, even going back two years -- stuart: his performance and cognitive ability. >> he's now not wearing dress shoes but very softaber shoes with the suits. when he boards air force one. he doesn't walk up the front steps that goes to his office. he's walking up the back steps at the back of the plane because there's 10 steps less to walk up in the back and he has to walk through all the staff and press and by the way, we hate the press and politics, he has to walk through them all to get to his office. that's how bad it's gotten for him. stuart: we've talked about this before, i just can't see joe biden being the candidate in the election next year. somehow or another, i think the democrats have to get him out somehow. >> listen, if that was the case, first of all, i'm shocked that
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they're going to keep him in the poll position and going to be their candidate. i wonder what do democrats know that we don't know, stuart. i'm not going to go there. but if they were going to move him out, there's certain things they'd do. they'd start to run stories, push stories on him that make him unelectable and open the gates for another democrat to step in like gavin newsom, that a lot of democrats would like. they're not doing that . the press isn't doing that and the democratic party isn't doing it and they're all behind him. how can you bring someone else into a race when everyone is supporting joe biden and again, i think you and i as average americans look at his performance and go this is a disasser and how do you run this guy and think you win? stuart: how do the republicans take advantage of turmoil and are they taking advantage and doing the right thing? >> you have to run on ideas. you can't run on that guy is bad
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so vote for me. what are my ideas to make the economy better and board border stronger. how do we have more prestige on a global stage and fight china. come out with your own ideas and the story that we saw with the irs whistle blowers and the money that was made from foreign entities, not just hunter biden, that is really a nonstory. he committed crimes but did that go to joe biden? that'll only get hotter and that's the one issue that i think democrats will not be able to ignore and if it comes out he took money, the $5 million from burisma, i believe that will sink his chances in 2024. stuart: if that can be proven and chuck grassley is right and he can prove it, that's a real problem. >> they're not there yet. stuart: not quite there. that's for sure. sean, we'll be watching you on the bottom line tonight 6:00 p.m. eastern. don't go anywhere. you're here for a few hours. >> i should have played the lottery and i would have won that billion dollars. i'm lucky to be your company for
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one hour. my luck has changed, stuart. stuart: what a guy. you still own bitcoin. jonathan hoenig with us this morning. before we get to finance, you're pretty fired up about what's going on in your hometown of chicago. tell us more. >> well, stuart, i'm frustrated. look, we've talked about crime in chicago and the degradation of the public schools, but it's really a quality of life thing and you know the ideas that move a culture and ideas that move a city or a location. it's those leftist ideas, those liberal ideas that have plagued chicago that are plaguing everyone's quality of life. it's not just a school, stuart. just this week it was announce that had one of chicago's favorite italian restaurants is decamping for the suburbs after 30+ years and the new mayor is doubling down. higher taxes on businesses, more leftist union leereds in the school board. you're going to continue to see not just these scenes of terrible crime but an exodus from the city, not just the citizens but of course either more importantly the businesses that bring the city revenue and make the city work.
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stuart: go to finance. russia pulled out of grain deal with ukraine blocking ukraine ports, stuffing the export of millions of tons of grain. you run a hedge fund. how are you playing that development? >> it's terrible for the ukrainian citizens and the world global food situation, stuart, russia is a brutal praia state and sending grain prices soaring and etf and exchange traded fund and dba, i enfor my clients at capitalist pig.com and it's corn, soybeans and wheat and goes up as food goes up. consult with a financial adviser but one way to diversify your portfolio and perhaps benefit from some of the higher grain prices worldwide. stuart: i'm writing in saying grain price haves been on the rise this week. significantly so, is that accurate? >> yeah, this news sent them soaring and, stuart, there's a long way to go despite the fact we're hearing about dis-inflection fellation. a lot of indicators or grain
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prices that inflation isn't dead and waiting around to rear it is ugly head. we own dba. stuart: do you dabble in things like the dow industrial average and you're an exotic kind of guy and on track for 10-day winning streak. taking notice of that? >> can't fight the tape and not just tebrese day winning streak, stuart, but a five month winning streak. stocks are due for a breather but as we say don't fight the tape, and ironically is to bees can be a pretty good hedge against inflation. a lot of companies consumer oriented names can raise on the consumer and stocks in a terrible bet and you want to diversify and the agricultural commodities is a good place to be. ashley, what's happening with amazon? ashley: oh, the praise.
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thank you, stu. amazon is investing in florida's space coast. they're going to spend $120 million to build a new satellite processing facility of the kennedy space center. it will take up about 100,000 area feet and create around 50,000 new jobs and the space coast continues to boom. now to amsterdam, interestingly, they're banning cruise ships all in the name of reducing pollution. the city council voted to restrict cruise lines from docking there. no time line on when this all may take place or effect. twitter looking to become your new job hunting site and elon musk social media testing the plan to allow verified organizations to post active job listings with the twitter profiles and could be related to musk's plans to develop twitter into x, which has been described as an everything app.
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why not. musk is up to something every day. stu. stuart: and always gives us a headline and i could use an everything app. ashley: he does. stuart: thanks, ash. if you're planning on renting a car, be prepared. it might be electric. even if you didn't ask for it. hertz is overloaded with evs and pushing them to unsuspecting customers. we have a report on that for you. remember the stanford law school dean that scolded a c conservate judge. roll tape. >> again, i ask what this leaves. [inaudible] system of articulation stuart: that lady is making really big career moves. yes, we'll explain. the president thinks he's creating millions of jobs with his green energy agenda and union allies are skeptical. we'll see what steve hilton thinks about it. steve is next.
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stuart: if you're planning to rent a car in the near future, your next rental could be electric, tevin you didn't ask for it. madison w alworth, why would car rental companies be doing this? reporter: stuart, companies like hertz have invested very heavily in evs and now they need their customers to rent them. the company has built the largest fleet of electric rental vehicles in north america, and they're projecting that for this year there'll be 2 million ev
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rentals for the company. that is five times what they did last year. the problem is some of those rentals and those renters don't want evs. both my producer and i have run into this problem. i regularly get rental cars for this job because you guys sent me everywhere. the last time i went to pick one up, they told me i'd be getting an electric car which i didn't want because i was doing a long drive so i had to pay extra to get a gas car. my producer opted for the cheapest rental, which is this manager special you're taking a look at. you pay a lower price because you don't know what you're going to get and she got an ev. her four hour trip to it system ithicaadded on over an hour bece she had to charge her car twice on the way out. it's coming through hertz and comes at americans from all angles including in the public sector with the biden administration pushing electric and the range capabilities put americans at risk.
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>> the idea there's an electric car for the postal service and in the military and all the widespread places they get deployed to, that is a joke, mr. president. we wish you would quit trying to pull it on the american people. reporter: back to hertz to get more people and customers into the rental evv vehicles and they're offering a special promotion. if you specifically rent an ev, you get a full day free from your rental through labor day. they're really ibram sent vising people to get behind the wheel of electric car. stuart. stuart: they want to get them out there. i can see that. madison, great stuff. thank you indeed. have a great weekend. biden is telling the unions that his clean agenda will create millions of jobs. watch that. >> we also have solutions. lot of my friends and organized labor know when i think climate, i think jobs. i think union jobs, not a joke.
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not a joke. [ applause ]. this law is creating millions of good paying manufacturing jobs including offshore wind. stuart: millions of god paying energy -- good paying energy jobs. steve hilton is smiling, perhaps he's a little skeptical about this. will we really see millions of new jobs created, steve? >> well, look, stuart, anyone can sell you a $20 bill for $15. that's basically what's going on here. these are all subsidized jobs. this is government subsidy taxpayer money being used. that's not real. that's not a sustainable economy. and in fact, in the process of shoveling all this taxpayer cash into the favored industries and companies and specific products with the level of micromanagement, other jobs are being destroyed. we've seen it in ford, in car manufacturing, chrysler, united auto workers estimated 35,000 jobs are going in the short
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term. and so it is not the way to develop the economy of the future. we know that in the private sector, the way the economy works is innovation driven by investment decisions made on market -- on a market basis. yes, that can actually create new jobs while destroying old ones and that's how it works. what's the government doing and what actually happens is the existing jobs that are there and based on market economics destroyed in favor of the government approved jobs. it's exactly the opposite of what we need. stuart: is california getting a little tired of the green push? i mean, you're uber green in california. getting a little tired maybe just a little? >> look, the thing is i'm all for a sensibly managed energy transition and clean green emerenergy and want to protect e environment and can't protect them in california and the energy we need and provide by
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natural gas and the batteries they keep going on about and can't meet demand and more for policy of the california democrats to shut down the exact gas powered stations that are keeping the lights on and air conditioners working. stuart: i sense your exasperation level is working and try this one. we put the graphic on the screen a moment ago and governor newsom just fined a school district $1.5 million. he did it because that school district rejected this textbook that mentioned gay rights activist harvey milk. steve, where did you stand on this? >> he has the nerve to call the school board extremists. these are the -- gavin newsom, the california democrats call those people extremists. remember, these are the people, the california democrats, who think that men can get pregnant, who just voted to block a sex
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trafficking bill for children wanting to legalize public urination and calling them extremist and what's a distraction is a catastrophic failure in the public schools of california. we're 50th out of 50 in the country on literacy. the worst in the country. on math, 70%, 7-0 of california kids don't meet basic standards. when you look at groups that these democrats claim they speak for, latino kids, 79% don't meet basic standards. black kids, 84%. this is an absolute obscenity and instead of dealing with that, they're picking these culture war fights to distract from their own disasters. stuart: when i arrived in california almost exactly 50 years ago, it was the exact opposite. it was true for the golden state. thanks, steve. we'll see you soon. steve hilton, everyone. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: remember this, a dean at
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stanford university shouting down a trump-appointed judge during a speaking event that he was invited to. watch this. >> this event is tearing at the fabric of this community that i care about and i'm here to support. is the juice worth the squeeze? it's uncomfortable to say that for many people here, your work has caused harm. stuart: let's bring ashley into this. i understand the dean is stepping down; is that correct? ashley: yes, kind of. thank you very much, he is. the stan disorder law school -- stanford law school dean for equity, inclusion with no inclusion is leaving for a different opportunity. he was on leave since that verbal attack on judge stuart kyle duncan back in march and he's since apologized saying she recognizes that the impact of her statements were not as she
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had hoped or intended. but duncan's appearance at stanford descended into a shouting match when about 100 students protested his ruling denying a transgender prisoner's request to have pronouns changed. that's what it's all about. steinbach is out and saying there's opportunities for growth and learning all around. i doubt that very much. we'll see, stu. stuart: thanks, ashley. okay, thank you. what do we have here? okay. lionel messi will make his debut with inter- miami tonight and my next guest thinks it'll take american soccer to a whole new level. i have my doubts and we'll get into it, next. ♪
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the great guitarist. >> old school, man. they're playing your tunes. stuart: one day you're be a sol lowist like me -- soloist like me, duffy. it'll be a great weekend. on the markets, a modest gain for stocks this morning. truly modest. dow's up 17, nasdaq up 40, s&p up 15. that's where we are now. no idea where we'll close at 4:00 this afternoon. you're looking now at the artificial intelligence stocks. president biden's meeting with big tech ceos today all about ai. ashley, who's going to be there? ashley: a who's who in the tech world and president of microsoft, president of google, the ceo of an tropic and ceo of inflection ai and the old british politician now president of meta, president of openai and
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ceo of amazon web services. they've agreed by the way, stu, to meet and discuss a set of ai safeguards that have been broken by the biden administration. stu. stuart: i didn't know that nick klegg was the president of meta. he's a british politician. ashley: not anymore. stuart: ftx is suing sam bankman-fried and others ftx executives and hoping to get money back i guess. ashley: they are and the hope is the goal and more than $1 billion was misappropriated to finance luxury condominiums, political contributions, speculative investments and other "pet projects" all while committing one of the largest financial frauds in history. the complaint has been filed by the way in delaware bankruptcy court and names caroline ellison as a defendant and she's led bankman-fried's alameda research
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hedge fund if you remember. the suit claims basically that the alleged fraudulent transfers happened when ftx filed for chapter 11 protection and can be undone or avoided under u.s. bankruptcy code. we'll find out what a judge says. stu. stuart: okay. okay sean duffy is withme and hg next to me. tell me, when the ftx bust happened a few months ago, did you think about selling crypto at the time. time? >> can you undo the transactions and that's hard to dorks a billion dollars and it crushed the market, bitcoin down to roughly $16,000 a coin. i'm a long term holder of bitcoin and i have a bit of ethereum and i think you'll get involved in the crypto game, which i love about you.
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again, i think so many people are concerned about when you have $32 trillion in debt and on the pathway in ten years, you'll be at $50 trillion in debt. the system is going to break at some point and democrats have no desire to fix it and begs the question, are they trying to break it? gold's 1950, 1940 coin. stuart: 2,000 roughly. >> yeah, seeing other assets rise because there's real concern. how it's being becaused and when yabbies systems and currencies, they do break. it happens throughout history. stuart: i gave you a hard time on several occasions about your crypto investments and i am quite prepared to apologize for that on the grounds i did buy some ethereum for one of my grandchildren. it went straight down and now >> for two years you've been
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anti-crypto and diversification. stuart: duffy is so smart. next case is lionel messie he's a soccer player and makes debut with inter miami, that's a soccer club. that's tonight. outkick host dan joining me now. dan, is this going to be a huge shot in the arm for major league soccer because i disagree entirely. what say you? >> well, first of all, rambling man, greg altman, little known fact was married to cher. i made money in the crypto world and i'm in it we their yum and others and -- ethereum and others and people didn't know soccer and they got excited and i was 15 years old. i watched -- here's pelei i watched for 15 minutes and i was board and said i'm out.
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people watch the premier league and wear scarfs every saturday morning and next thing you know they like it. they understand it. and this guy messi has -- think about this, 479 million instagram followers. pelei had none. it's a big deal and i think they'll sell out. will it sustain? that's a bigger question. i kind of think the americans we are looking for a star. we are looking for something that makes soccer great. people love it. i think it's a big deal right now. ask me a year from now, i'm not so sure. stuart: the women's world cup that started going strong in australia and new zealand. u.s. women's cobber team has itt match tonight playing vietnam on fox at 9:00 p.m. eastern. do you think they're going to win a third world championship in a row? >> yeah, i think .s i think they'll cruise tonight.
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netherlands in group e, pretty good. england was supposed to challenge but they've been banged up with the injury bug. spain probably the second best team. united states are the best team and, you know, i kind of -- i don't know. i kind of like what megan rapino did and said i'm retiring and getting out of the way and this is kind of a lance dance for the particular group. now, whether anybody's watching, i don't know. the fifa president said do the right thing and buy tickets because tickets aren't selling in new zealand but, yeah, i think they win the world cup and got aided by injuries to england. stuart: dan, my colleague sean duffy has a question for you. >> i'm not a soccer fan, dan, and maybe to you, stuart, are people really tuning in to america to watch soccer? do they really care? yes, baseball, yes football, but soccer? stuart: it's on fox. of course they're going to tune in. >> maybe just because it's fox
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but do people really care about soccer in america? stuart: yes, have you seen the ratings for premier league soccer? >> no, that's my ask. stuart: it's carried on peacock, which is nbc operation and raised monthly fees significantly because premier league soccer starts in a couple of weeks and it's going to be huge. what am i missing out on, dan? >> well, there's a little more to it with peacock. notre dame football on nbc had games on peacock and nbc just took over from espn both big 10 basketball and big 10 college football so peacock raising its rates is a little more involved but to your point about soccer, i'm telling you, you go around major ci cities and there are bs that are just absolutely packed watching the premier league. as i said earlier, the scarves and the whole deal. is it as big as football? no, but that's unfair. nothing is as big in america as american football. stuart: it'll get there. >> i've been listening to this since i was born, and everybody said soccer is going to take
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over for football. i ain't buying it but it's more popular. >> i think of soccer like stuart thinks of crypto. stuart: okay. >> so you're ready to buy, is that what you're telling me? stuart: okay, 9:00 eastern time tonight, fox sports, america plays vietnam. we will be watching. thanks, everybody. all good stuff. what have we got coming up? i'll tell you. someone tell beyonce her hit song is out of date, roll it. stuart: not sure i get this story, but apparently a lot of young people are not interested in getting that engagement ring and think marriage is an antiquated tradition. sean duffy and i will take that on. look at this headline. i grew up under jim crow and this is a game changes solution
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to close america's racest education gap. congressman burgess wrote that and i'll explain, next. ♪ 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: i grew up under jim crow and this is a game changing solution to close america's racist education gap. congressman burgess owens wrote that and republican from the great state of utah. he joins me now. what's the game changing solution? >> good seeing you, my friend. it cops down to this, understand that what america is all about is a level playing field. that's all we ask for and all we asked for growing up and today and that you can succeed and
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that's what this is all about and this reaction and not intellectually competing and nothing coming down to sports and physical prowess and convince black americans we cannot come to the plate, compete and win un-resto we're handicap and that is the worst sense of racism i have ever seen. the other side is this, they have terrible school systems and don't teach our kids how to think, how to read and write. they then lower the bar, put them in colleges where they cannot compete. they then leave with all kind of debt and no kind of education, any kind of hope and angry about the system that they've been told is not working for them but against them. it's the worst thing happening to our country and back to bottom line meritocracy. stuart: no affirmative action. a meritocracy. compete, win, succeed, show you can do it. that's what it takes; reich?
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>> think about it. where else do we not use meritocracy? everything else we do whether it be at a football feel, weather in a corporate world if you're winning and bringing in value, you'll succeed and move forward. only when it comes to black americans do you want to be as smart as the rest of us. come on if you're black enough, come to the plate and we'll give you a opportunity and that to me is the worst thing we can do to think that it's based on skin color than content of character, whit or grit. stuart: the content of slavery movement is taking off in america today. how do you feel about it? >> well, it's the results of 60 years of affirmative action. when you have people literally thinking they're entitled to something because of their skin color, what's the next step? these folks have no shame and they're not taught how to compete, how to risk, what success is all about and they think just because of their sign co-larra, they deserve to have a
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payout. it's like lotto. lottery never works for those who receive it. it's a demeaning process and our culture will not accept it and we're not going to get there and it's getting push back. stuart: we're not discussing the principle of whether or not reparations should be paid. we're at the point of deciding how much can be paid. have you accepted the principle? yes, it must be paid. that's where we are no. gooen in the blue states and liberal cities and the biggest problem with the black americans in the past was not kkk and white racism. system of articulation it can happen and at some point people get fed up of getting their
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dollars away to other people of skin co colors and the bridge to far for sure. stuart: bridge too far. burgess owens from the great state of utah. thank you for being with us. >> thank you, buddy. appreciate it. stuart: let's change gears and switch subjects. a new poll shows many adults view marriage as unnecessary. give me the story, ash. ashley: two in five believe marriage is an outdated frank siller diggs and 83% of participants would like to get marmarry at some point all thouh 85% don't feel marriage is needed. more than one in six don't plan on getting married with subpoena% of millennials and 17% of gen z feeling in way and the report found that the cost and current academy appears to be a big -- current economy appears to be a big barrier and 73% felt
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it was simply too expensive to get married. you could elope to vegas. whatever. stu. stuart: you could. i have sean duffy sitting next to me and he's a married man with nine children. what do you think about marriage, duffy. >> i think your bank account when you're married will grow. you work harder, you have two minds thinking together on your career paths, very important. but i think the message sent to young people today is focus on your career. focus on your bank account, and for young women oftentimes we've emasculated men so there's not good men for them to marry. thinking about the things that last in life. talk to people near the end of life. it's about marriage and love and kids. the things that last that are meaningful in life are the marriage and the family and the kids. not the bank account or the career. and the culture is setting kids up, young people up to not live fulfilled happy lives.
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it's too bad. i feel bad for them. get married, have kids. you will be happier and you'll be richer. duffy's advice. stuart: that will live forever on video tape. >> it's true. i'm going to stick with that one. stuart: we're going to invite you to stick around for friday feedback and one of the rare people that participating in friday feedback without being a regular on the show. >> i knew i should have played the lottery. i can handle it. stuart: don't go anywhere. friday feedback is next. ♪ i was told my small business wouldn't qualify for an erc tax refund. 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. this is american infrastructure, a prime target for cyberattacks.
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♪ stuart: that looks hot, doesn't it. that is las vegas, nevada. looks like a really steaming hot place. i don't know the temperature but it's up there. friday feedback, sean duffy will play and so is ashley. let's get started. first, this was sent to us from anonymous, whoever that may be. they're right. do you have your phone with you at all times? oh, good one. good one. yes, i do have my phone with me at all times and -- thank you.
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right. i made a mistake recently when i put the phone down, on a dark surface, of course i couldn't see it. absolute panic station. i had lost my phone. with you all the time, ashley? ashley: all the time for everything. obviously for news but i'm a big sports guy so i constantly keep up with scores and i feel nervous whistled don't have the phone. stuart: duffy, with nine kids, do you have your phone? >> i do. and you feel naked when you don't have if for an hour or two. it's terrible. stuart: i hate it. ashley: we're a little addicted. stuart: simonetti says this, i think people are becoming early birds because they done to want be out after dark because of crime. what say you? this refers to a wall street journal story saying we're all living our lives earlier by about an hour. ashley: we are. stuart: i'm living an early life
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and i don't know about you, ash. are you? ashley: i am. i don't want to eat a late dinner because it doesn't sit well on the stomach. that's another sign of anyone. >> crime or age? getting up at 6 and having dinner at 4 or getting up at 4 and having dinner at 5? that's what we do when we're older. stuart: duffy, never on the show again and you're mocking me because i'm an aficionado of early bird special in florida. josh says what your go-to movie snack of choice for a three hour long movie like oppenheimer. i don't have a favorite, do you, ash? ashley: no, i can go through a big bucket of popcorn. i'll say that. stuart: duff? >> i'm a popcorn guy. i actually like microwave. rachel does popped popcorn. stuart: i used to as a kid in england and going to the cinema people took oranges and the smell of oranges all through the cinema. ashley: yes. stuart: time for this? i believe you had to take a test
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to gain citizenship to become a american and i propose congress including staff, candidates running for office should take the same test. i believe most would have no clue about the founding fathers. you were in congress. >> duffy agrees and we should have test for anyone coming to the country that doesn't happen. my mother-in-law had the same test and it was tough. stuart: okay. interesting. all right. thanks everyone for sending in your friday feedback stuff and thanks to duffy and ashley for taking part. now the friday trivia question. what is the most common first name of u.s. president? john, james, william, george? the answer after this. ♪ .. this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes.
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each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you.
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stuart: what is the most common first name of us presidents? john, james, william, george. ashley: james. number 2. stuart: duffy. >> john. stuart: i'm with james on this one. the answer is james. six us presidents, james madison, james monroe, paul, buchanan, garfield, jimmy carter. time is up from the and everybody. coast-to-coast starts now. julie: read it and run. another gain of the do

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