tv Varney Company FOX Business July 28, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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>> prices are still rising at 4% and i still think the fed is not done raising rates. i expect at least one more and maybe two. >> tech is probably a little overvalued here. i think tech can continue to go higher here, but at some point there's always been a tech bubble when things turn the other way, it ain't pretty and it's better to be early than late. >> what's going to be clearly revealed it hunter biden was the bag man, joe biden knew exactly what was going on. joe biden was selling access to his office through his son and in my view, that is an impeachable offense. >> it wasn't till joe biden understood and realize that had joe archer was going to testify and tell his story. they're scared of what devin archer was going to say. this deal america is paying attention to.
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>> it is 11:00 a.m. on this east coast. i'm david asmussen in for stuart varney. good day to check in on the markets and a good friday for the dow jones and nasdaq. nasdaq biggest percentage wise up 1 point 67% up $1.67% and up 35 points and s&p doing well. show me the big tech and all in the green as far as we know. great meta up 3.5%, 3% up for amazon, alphabet up almost 3%. they're all doing quite well and microsoft, we don't want to forget stuart's favorite, up 2% and come down a bit. check the 10-year treasury, it is down a bit. trading just below 4% yield. meanwhile congressman jim jordan releasing documents that he says proves facebook changed their content after pressure from the white house. watch this. >> the white house was demanding it and they wanted to keep that i shall cozy relationship with the biden administration.
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they censored first amendment speech. that's what this clearly shows and frankly we got more documents we're reviewing and will show tevin more so. david: steve hilton joining me now. is there ever going to be accountability for meta or this administration for that matter. >> well, they're not the worst, but i think the overall story here is what jim jordan is releasing is giving us now private insight into what was going on there. we knew this public -- they actually said it publicly. do you remember at the time, this is about covid vaccines and the pandemic, jen psaki from the white house podium said we're flagging posts that we don't like to the tech companies. now, this is proving that it happened and by the way, it didn't stop when the pandemic ended. yes, they censored along with other tech companies, youtube and google and all the rest, they censored anything they didn't like about the origin of the pandemic and lockdowns and
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masks and vaccines. by the way, not about whether you should take vaccines but about the vaccine mandates, which were never justify in the first place. didn't start with the pandemic. i was censored by facebook for something i said on the steve hilton show on my podcast about the biden administration wanting to ban gas stoves. they censor it had. david: and you were right. and you were right. >> we pushed back and gave them the evidence and said the biden administration was doing briefs and showed them the evidence -- david: what was their response? >> the white house communications department said they're not planning to. they're literally acting as propaganda arm of the administration. one thing i would say in the e-mails and to -- and messages that jim jordan released, there's one moment of hope in that and that's someone i know well, nick kleg, the president
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of facebook and meta and to be fair, he was pushing back against this inside facebook against this widespread culture within big tech that is totally lock step aligned with the left and government and biden administration. they act as their propaganda arm. that was the culture. david: it was a perfect storm. i mean, the pandemic had given politicians all this perceived new power, much of which was unconstitutional and against several amendments in the constitution and they're tabooing it as far as they could and politicians love more power and thank god the exposure revealed all that and i think they're much less likely to do so again. at least till there's another pandemic. >> i hope so but i mean, the thing is that you've got this -- as i say, it's the culture and silicon valley. it's incredible important.
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david: it's also the culture in the white house. >> yes, but together it's the authoritarianism and you can't be trusted to make your own decision, you can't be trusted to receive information that you may interpret in a way that we don't like. it is this tech no totalitarianism that is so frightening and exposure. david: using a emergency to put us in a vulnerable position at which they take all this extra power. this next upward mobility is very similar -- next one is very similar. we're facing a brutal heat wave in the country and in europe, climate activists are almost giddy saying this is proof for a climate emergency and we'll have to take all the extraordinary efforts. senator steve schumer is lobbying to push the cost of green initiatives onto red states so they're already using this to pursue their political gains. >> here we have total incowherbs of the left's climate -- incoherence of the climate zealot reigns leading exposed and they're saying it's a
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emergency and a crisis that we have to stops to kill fuels. what's their alternative? to make us more reliant on energy sources that are less reliable. it's all about win and solar. wind ask solar. that's all they accept. what do they do? they want giant wind and solar farms but connecting them to the grid so you actually get the power from where it's generated to where it needs to be, twice as expensive for nuclear and they want to phase out and natural gas, which they want to phase out and it's incoherent in california where there's more solar installed than anywhere else. it doesn't come close to meeting our needs. it's all done by the remainder is natural gas and nuclear that they want to phase out. batteries down the coast from where i live, the largest grid connected battery in the world. it's providing practically nothing in terms of energy needs that we have now today let alone in the future when they want to electrify everything including everybody's cars. it doesn't add up.
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david: we're rooting but hope is not a strategy. you have to provide the evidence that something has to work before you change all of the policy and all ovour energy needs to something that's not working steve we have to leave it at that, great to see you, steve. thank you very much. appreciate it. and checking the market, they're doing quite well right now. we got word that the core inflation rate was down a tick and that's jonathan hoenig with me now. let me start with elon musk because i heard you're shorting elon musk on what and why? >> well, david, because of how he's actingment look, elon musk is famous for tremendous innovation but look how he's acting and acting much more on whim than reason. this transformation of twitter into x has been an unmitigated disaster. look, there's no monopoly in a free market and twitter has a lot of competition now. former president trump's website among many others threads from
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instagram and facebook, so you've got a 13-year-old plus brand that he's throwing away worth $5 to $20 billion and doesn't own the trademark from twit tore x and will affect tesla and etfs and other instruments that can go up when tesla goes down. david: let me push back a bit. first of all, people have gotten poor down selling of the ability of elon musk to make money. he's done so in a lot of enterprises and look at what's happened to threads, the major competitor to twitter is threads, this new -- i say twitter but i mean x i guess. the new zuckerberg miracle supposedly. they've lost about 70% of their viewers in the past couple of weeks. i mean, just by sitting there and doing nothing, he's winning against them right now, now? >> well, look, it's a horse race. they're going to continue seeing all the companies, david, innovate and trying to come up with something new and for
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history, think about how amazon changed from when it first started and simply a book seller into all of the businesses and that's what elon and threads and all the company haves to co. what worries me specifically, david, about elon musk is that we're r where once he was a turn on for investors and consumes. now he's a turn off. bloomburg had a fascinating study and number one reason tesla model 3 owners sold their car was elon musk. it was their disapproval of elon musk's antics so he's become a liability. david: i want to switch to something that's near and dear to both of our hearts. larry summer, bill clinton's treasury secretary, larry summers saying something that's music to both of our ears. "i'm profoundly concerned by the doctored and manufactured centered economic nationalism that's increasingly putting forth as -- put forth as a general principal to guide policy". it does seem that when you have big democrats like larry summers saying that bidenomics, the core of bidenomics, which is
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government-controlled industrial policy doesn't work. >> absolutely, david. you can see with the chip act, which has been a complete disaster, expensive for the american consumer and american economy. what we need is freedom and, david, even look back to history what ended that inflation in 19 1970s was carter's deregulation and elimination of that spending that dominated. we don't need more government central planning and even larry summers gets that. does biden? david: i don't think so. jonathan hoenig, good to see you, my friend. have a good weekend. lauren is still with me watching the movers. start with palantir. lyrics-up 5%. lauren: the breath of the consumers they serve with the data and all of the customers they can taylor with ai what the companies want you to do.
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david: boston beer. lauren: stronger earnings and twisted tea. i remember twisted tea being popular back in the tay and now it's back again and helped offset hard selser and gross margins increased by 230 basis points and stock up 18.5%. jd.com and other china adrs are jumping 6% for jd.com here on hopes that beijing will announce stimulus. david: thanks, lauren. appreciate it. a pilot avoids disaster when a commercial plane nearly collides with a private jet. one passenger never wants to fly again. we've got that story. and more than half the senate is 65 or older. is it time for a generational change or age limits in government? elon musk thinks so. tommy lauren is going to -- tomi lahren is going to take that on. now this, new york city giving migrants 60 days to find a place to live before they're kicked out of shelters.
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a lot of shelters are fancy hotels. some of them now setting up tent cities right in the streets of manhattan. local businesses are furious and madison alworth has the report, next. ♪ this is american infrastructure, a prime target for cyberattacks. but the same ai-powered security that protects all of google also defends these services for everyone who lives here. ♪ we're traveling all across america
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madison, what's the reaction to migrants being forced out on to the city streets? reporter: hey, david, the reaction is they don't know where to go or how to fill their day. we have this influx of migrants that are coming through this city. on average 4,000 new migrants arrive here each and every day. that is why city hall imposed that 60-day limit and now people are being kicked out at the same time and we already have 56,000 migrants currently in the care of new york city in those shelters. but during the day, they're not sitting in the hotel rooms, they're on the street setting up camps, congregating and just honestly enjoying the day. but for pedestrians, it means slogged sidewalks and for businesses, it means some issues with their store fronts. as i was preparing for the story, i met a group of three migrants openly smoking marijuana, a large blunt, which is allowed in new york city and i asked them about their experience and they said they're trying to get into the roosevelt hotel but there's no space and
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they're moving elsewhere and not sure. didn't seem to be too bothered just smoking and enjoying the street. when it comes to the people that live in new york city and elected officials, they say we need help. that is why 54 democrat elected officials banded together to demand president biden do certain things to help with the crisis. they're asking for the president to declare a state of emergency, expedite work visas and lead an urgent response at the border. we had the author of letter assemblywoman jennifer kumar and i asked her of all the things, what is the number one thing you need from the federal government right now? here's what she said. >> we want the president to expedite work authorization. this is a common sense bipartisan fix. in giving the asylum seekers the ability to work, they'll be able to stand on their own two feet and support themselves and the city won't have to support them w. they can work, they'll become taxpayers. and they're going to make money for our city.
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reporter: a big part of that; right, she said is the financial aspect and they're also asking for more financial help. so far fema has given over $104 million to the city, which sounds great but if you do the math, that comes out to 13 days of covering the migrant crisis here in new york city and the mayor's office doing everything they can to try and correct this problem or prevent it from getting worse. i have flies here that the mayer's office is distributing at the border and this will go to migrants crossing over into the u.s. and what you see here is they talk about human migrants have come to new york city since april of last year. 90,000 and it says there's no guarantee we will be able to provide shelter and services to new arrivals. it says housing in new york city is very expensive. they're doing everything they can to stop more people from coming but at this point, 4,000 arrive each and every week. now after 60 days, some of those folks will be kicked out on to the streets making that camping and loitering problem worse. can't win, david. david: that's a good point.
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it's in english. do they have one in spanish as well? oh, okay. all right, in both. reporter: yes, they do. they've got both, yes. david: madison thank you very much. great report. i appreciate it. related to that, new york city opening a new migrant shelter in the parking lot of psychoi can't tell ick hospital that'll have -- psychiatric hospital and it'll have 1,000 beds and vice president art del queto joining me now. a lot of people on the border have been dealing with this for years. may must be laughing around their hand at new yorkers and people from los angeles and chicago pulling their hair out trying to deal with migrants. i mean, it's something that you guys have been dealing with for years, but maybe this will be the thing that makes for real change because now that it's affected city's all over america, nobody can avoid it. >> i tell you what, it's frustrated and i don't have much hair to pull out but this is
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extremely frustrating with you start seeing what's happening because we talked about it, we've been warning people, lack of political will has caused this. look at what's happening. all these people in the streets, smoking weed in the middle of the streets and i don't care if it's legal or illegal. at this point, you've got individuals that are coming to the country, they're saying they're asking for asylum. what needs to be done is gather all these individuals there and see who has the real asylum claim and those that don't have a real asylum claim, you need to send them back to their country. david: texas has been dealing with the brunt of all this, and they are now sending buses full of migrants to los angeles, six of them have arrived since mid june. now, these are sanctuary cities. of course, new york is also a sanctuary city and they claim before they started receiving all these migrants how they'd welcome them with open arms, et cetera. we saw what happened in martha's vineyard as well and how quickly
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that turns around when faced with a reality of trying to deal with this. >> i they asked for this and that's the point. texas has done a good job of deterring the traffic and the smugglers have gotten smart and others are coming through different areas. tucson sector alone is catching well over 1,000 individuals a day from aural over the world. those individuals are getting released. then the politicians that go and speak to some leadership and instead of the leadership saying, this is the problem. this is where we need help. they turn around and show them all this new technology and say look how great we are at looking who's coming across. it's great you know who's coming across now, but you need to send them back. david: let's finally talk about the real innocence in all that . the unaccompanied children. 85,000 of whom have just disappeared. they come over the border, we don't know if they're with their own family. they may be being used, but we also know about the horrible sex trade that's happening all over
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the world but it's happening now in the united states as well. that film sound of freedom talks about it and what about at children being terribly becaused right now -- abused right now. >> those organizations find relative or parent in the united states. what needs to be done and as horrible as it sounds, we need to detain these minors, find out who their actual parents are and guardian and detain till you can find out who they are, then make those parents -- honestly, you have to make them responsible because they turn their kids over many times to these smuggling organizations. a lot of unaccompanied children coming into the u.s., their parent haves been living here in the u.s. for quite some time and left their children in their own country and now they're take the time to come across and get reunited. that's why sometimes you don't know where these kids end up is because there's no way to keep
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track of them. david: art del cueto, thank you for the work you're doing and for joining us. >> thank you, god bless. david: now this, tsa workers got a major pay raise, how much, lauren? lauren: 63,000tsa sergeants getting a 30% pay increase and they're getting more job applicants because of this. the agents that scan you going through the airport security lines and worked over 20 years being paid less than their department of homeland security counter parts because they're not law enforcement so now they're leveling the playing field and playing catchup if you l. the bottom line is if this hes with recruitment, there's more people and fewer i did lays at the airport. david: let's hope it helps the way we're treated by tsa individuals. sometimes not too well. lauren, thank you. a family made millions recycling bottles and cans in california. now they could be thrown in jail for fraud. we'll explain. and if you thought this summer's travel flight mare was
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david: check the mashes and it's a good day. dow up 253 points and nasdaq up 265. that's almost a 2% gain in one day for the nasdaq. now this, an alliant airlines flight was forced to take evasive actions to avoid hit ago private jet at 23,000 feet. what happened, lauren? lauren: can you imagine? first time fly jerrica thacker describes the 60,000-foot climb as going down the highest roller coaster ever. she was flying back home and it was her second flight ever. the pilot, who is very experienced had to maneuver
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quickly to avoid hitting a private jet head on. the flight attendants, because this was so sudden, were serving drinks at the time and fell to the floor. one got injured so the flight went back to fort lauderdale and jerrica said she drove back home to kentucky. david: wonder if she'll get back on a plane again. lauren: no, she won't. she said they were giving out $2-$300 vouchers and she said no thanks. david: some an life-threatenings say it could be year -- analysts say it could be years before things get back to normal. casey, there's no relief in sight? >> there really isn't, david, and doesn't seem like there will be for the immediate future and talk to industry analysts and according to flight aware, so far this month for june -- or july rather, 27% of the scheduled domestic flights have experienced some kind of delay
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for, again, the month of july. you compare that to 17% in 2019 of course before the pandemic began so that's a 10% jump but get this, there were more than 219,000 fewer flights this year compared to 201. now, the cancellations remain about the same, around 2%, but staffing shortages across the board, pilots, mechanics, air traffic controllers are largely to blame here as carriers have significantly cut their operations. >> wee see the airlines using bigger equipment but the downside of that is there's less flights so if you have a delay and you have that turn into a cancellation or your delay causes you to miss a connecting flight, part of the issue is there's less flights for you to then get a seat on later. >> the u.s. department of
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transportation is scheduling un-relatively constantisting flights and selling tickets for flights despite a high probably they could end up canceled or delayed and pilots say that leaves very little wiggle room should something go wrong. >> bottom line, if one thing is off, it causes a ripple effect and that effect is a small ripple becomes a wave, a tidal wave and tsunami throughout the system and spreads out. >> many of us caught up in the so-called tsunami before and the industry looks to hire additional pilots fast a wave of upcoming retirement has many in the industry worried. one consulting group predicts by the year 2032, the nation could face a shortage of up to 30,000 pilots if they don't start moving quickly but, again, experts tell us it takes time to hire and more importantly train and certify the pilots so it's
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safe for them to get in a cockpit. really a big mess here and it doesn't seem to be slowing. david. david: yeah, i don't want to rush their certification, you know, might be better to have fewer than ill trained pilots up in the air. casey, thank you very much. tomi lahren janing me now. tomi, you've had a lot of personal experience? >> yeah, i've had a lot of experience. i was supposed to get in at 6:00 and got in at 1:00 a.m.. it's not unique to me, obviously, but when you hear about the shortages, i can't help but remember one of the dumbest times in american history, the covid era, when we were firing pilots and other employees for a vaccine mandate or having exceptions that were really stringent to get that exception for that vaccine mandate and now we have a pilot shortage. but not just that, also air traffic control, i fly a lot of places but it's always new york i have an issue, la guardia, newark, jfk. air traffic control shortage so
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what i think we also need to be doing here, is talking about education and needing more pilots and training people to want to enter these jobs and incentivize them to interest rate jobs because we desperately need people to fill these jobs. those are a large part of vocational skills. that's okay, have more vocational training and get them the skills they need to fill the jobs, make them high paying jobs, worthwhile jobs and we can help solve this crisis. david: questions of diversity and trying to lure in certain types of people and other people rather than just based on quality of work. >> yeah, absolutely. we need to get quality pilots and workers, incentivize them to come to work and remember that also during that stymed covid era, we de-incentivized people from coming to work and we're wonderful placing why people don't want to come to work and see it's a hot or rainy day and want to stay home. i wonder why? they were trained to do that for about three years in some places so now we're left with the
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aftermath ove of laziness. david: elon musk is commenting on what happened to senator mitch mcconnell after freezing solid during a news conference. husbanding says "we need a constitutional amendment". first of all, what kind of constitutional amendment. some people are even older than president biden, who has a lot of problems or nobody is older than senator feinstein in the senate but she's the oldest, but the question is whether you're qualified or competent to dot job. i can't see how that could be made into a constitutional amendment. do you? >> no, i don't and i don't think that's the way to government a lot love the idea of term limits. i'm not against them, but we have a great way of competency test and term limit and it's called voter education. maybe we need to spend more energy and attention into training voters not to vote for
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people who can't serve them in any capacity because of age or mental capab capabilities and wl for these people of course and we shouldn't be electing them to represent us and that's the biggest part of the equation and why are voters voting for people in their 80s and unable to do the task or voting for people that have health complications. david: if you're the incumbent, you can get a lot of stuff out for free. we do have term limits for the president. why not for the senate and house? >> i think it's a discussion to be had, but, again, i think the bigger part of this is they have more money, more resource ifs you're the incumbent, but american voters should be able to look at some of these people and shouldn't matter how much money is in the bank but general common sense. i believe in the american people. i believe if we work on voter education, we can solve this in a way that doesn't require an age limit or a competency test or a constitutional amendment. i do believe that voter cans get this in line. we just need to make sure that they understand the implications of their vote.
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david: and a generational shift. we're already beginning to see that despite the advantage of the incumbency, you're seeing new generation get in there, quickly. >> and we need to stop telling candidates to wait their turn; right. we don't have turns in this country. david: bingo, tomi lahren, great to see you. thank you for being here. a group setting out to stop self-driving cars in san francisco and using traffic cones as weapons of choice. catholic schools are telling students to use their names, pronouns and bathrooms that match their gender at birth. what an idea. bib rale haves a big problem and want catholic teachings to evolve with the times and that phrase, dan springer has that report, next. ♪
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♪ david: it's 56 degrees right now. they say the coldest winter is the summer in san francisco. a group set out to put an end to self-driving cars. come in, lauren. how are they stopping these robotaxis? lauren: the group is safe street rebel and putting the orange traffic cones on the hoods of autonomous vehicles. so the cone obstructs the roof's censors and shuts down the car completely. you can't just restart it. this is low tech trips up high-tech and august tenth
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there's a vote in >> they're accused of recycling 178 tons of plastic and aluminum from arizona to cross state lines and take advantage of a taxpayer funded program in california between a nick and will dime per item recycled and made 7.6 million over the course of eight months bringing in plastic bottles and cans from arizona. david: part of me says good for them but it was against the law. >> will they do jail time it is california. portland's arch bishop
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instructed catholic schools that the students should use the pronouns that correspondent with gender at birth. dan springer joining me now. what's been the reaction to this, dan? >> well, david, in portland, we tend to think of this suicide an issue in public schools but catholic schools in western oregon are in turmoil and the napes cpi biological sex identity than gender identity and put out a 17 page catholic response and said this is the right approach medically, spiritually and theologically. many catholics applaud him and a backlash from some in the portland area and non-catholic withs kids in the schools.
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1,000 people signed a statement supporting transgender students and two principals have quit. some teachers say they won't return in the fall and some parents didn't re-enroll and they closed so he has more control along with the priest in the parishes and a non-catholic who says among her three children in the catholic schools, one identifies as nonbinary. >> if all of a sudden there's a line in the sand and no longer can my kid be referred to as their identity, then we'll have to leave. synergy home you don't have to go to our schools. parents select to go to the school sos we have the right to teach what we believe and to do so courageously, even if it's not popular.
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reporter: pope francis was not asked specific in the guidelines but said in apolar before view "gender ideology today is one of the most ideological columbia lonizations and burrs difference between men and women. the pope said that and the church out in portland said, listen, we're not going to go along with these social changes and so the backlash is obvious in portland and he's sticking to his guns right now, david. david: dan springer. thank you for that . show me the dow 30 stocks and getting a sense of the markets and they're just zooming particularly -- i mean the dow is great. lieu look at nasdaq and getting a look at nasdaq. it is up a full 2% today. 2% rise on the nasdaq. a good day for the markets and don't go anywhere. friday feedback is coming next.
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sleepovers just aren't what they used to be. a house full of screens? basically no hiccups? you guys have no idea how good you've got it. how old are you? like, 80? back in my day, it was scary stories and flashlights. we don't get scared. oh, really? mom can see your search history. that's what i thought. introducing the next generation 10g network. only from xfinity.
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♪ david: we're out in san francisco over in california where the beach boys are from. it's 56 degrees there. guess what, it's 86 here at fire island in new york. much better beach day in new york than san francisco. get to the friday feedback. lauren, get started. all right. this is for greg. where do you like to go vacation in florida. what are your favorite beaches? i'll go to you first. lauren: i like the miami cadillac in northern south beach. it's a good hotel. the last time we went was before covid and we had it booked for march when covid hit, and we were like do we go? what do we do? then they closed the whole town down. that was the last time we government david: rarely.
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we go to florida once every two years and last time we went was the one hotel in south beach. lauren: the one with the rooftop pool. david: but it was very expensive, very pricey. we have a place in cape cod and go up there during the summer. marjory says i'm a parent of someone with a messy student loan that started out at there k with abusive interest rates and now over 80,000. he'll never get it paid off. he's 40 years old and he's not rich and neither am i. i should have been smarter and told him it wasn't worth it. wow. that's tough. that's really touch. i mean, i don't like the biden plan that was kicked down by the supreme court, but god to bear a burden like that into your 40s is really tough. lauren: i appreciate marjory's honesty too. david: i worked it off at increments and it was so much cheaper back then. the inflation service cheaper
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then. lauren: if so ask, is it worth it. david: richard, anyone ever bought a penny stock and how did you do? lauren: i got wiped out. david: what was the stock? lauren: i don't remember the name but it was a foldable shoe company. david: people express and wonderful company and dealt with deregulation of the airlines and watched it go all the way down to zero. that's how i did on that. june says, what do you guys do during the commercial break? lauren: loaded question. david: go ahead. lauren: we talk abouttomics we'e one we'd never talk about on the air. david: sometimes you get emergency calls from home. i'm so worried that you're going to have to get up in the middle of the show and go out and save your kids for something. lauren: eisen look at zip codes and sometimes i say i'll call you back. david: piotyr. did you purchase a ticket at wood stock in 1969?
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what was your favorite band? the answer is, yes, i purchased a ticket and it wasn't necessary because the minute i got there they said it's now a free concert. my favorite band was one person but he had a band behind him. jimmy hendrix and the last show was on monday morning at 8:00 a.m.. most people had left and i walked right up to the bandstand, i was looking up at jimmy hendrix doing the national anthem on the guitar and just fabulous. lauren: do you have pictures? david: we didn't have phones back then and it was too wet to have a camera so, no, i don't have any pictures at all. tom, with being on fox business, do your friends or family ever ask you for investment advice? sure it happens to you. lauren: all the time but i'm not a financial adviser so i can talk about big picture things but i don't give advice. david: some people pressure me -- cryptos. always on crypto.
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lauren: people see me picking up the kids and say, hey, lauren, what about bitcoin today or sometimes there were coins i've never even heard of. david: i must admit i advice my own son law against cryptos at one point and hope he took the advice. i haven't asked him whether he did. this is from jim, still asking for power ball numbers. it's a scam. still asking ai numbers. it's a scam. that is a great, great point. i don't know if you knew that. we got to leave it at that. lauren: what's the scam, ai or power ball? david: i think ai and power ball together doesn't work. now time for friday trivia question. air bus 380, largest commercial plane in the world, how many passengers can it hold? 622, 780, 853, or 914? the answer right after this. ♪
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♪ don't let student loan debt hold you back. refi at sofi.com. you could save thousands and get to your goals faster. sofi. get your money right. dave: airbus a380, largest commercial plane in the world. 6:22, i think it is a:53. the largest number, 8:53. thank you very much. see you next time. coast-to-coast starts now. neil: for republicans it is one of the biggest political events of the year. annual lincoln dinner and
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