tv Varney Company FOX Business August 11, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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stuart: 10:00 eastern time. i feel good. it is indeed 10:00 eastern and we'll go straight to the money. not much price movement and the nasdaq down and now it's up 14. other than the nas dab, not that much movement. ten year price to the treasury. where's the yield? moving up a little 412 on the 10 year. watch that carefully because gasoline prices going up and oil at $83 a barrel as of this morning. bitcoin priced at 29 grand. we have numbers on consumer sentment released about one minuting a. lauren, what's the number? lauren: slightly better than expected and the number for august, 71.2. inflation expectations, this is big after all the inflation reads that we've gotten this week. inflation expectations, one year
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out went from 3.4% slightly lower and stayed at 3.3% and steady as she goes. current conditions we're feeling good and that number is stronger than expected and consumer expectations are feeling not so good and that number, the market did nothing on this report. stuart: that's the markets, that's whatever we have told you. now this. the president wants to spend an extra $40 billion on what you may ask? well, here's the breakdown, see what you think. $24 billion goes to ukraine. a lot of republicans not happy. they they we're bogged down financing another long war. $12 billion to disaster relief. not much argument after the devastation on maui and then there's $4 billion for border security. wait a minute, 24 billion for
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ukraine and only 4 billion for our border. i don't think that's going to fly. there's a limit to how long this country will tolerate biden's open border, and this pittance for so-called border security is a sick joke. because he keeps the border open, cities and states around the country are ham rajing money. hemorrhaging money. they have to house, feed, educate, and medically treat hundreds of thousands of migrants, probably millions. the bill in new york city will be $12 billion, imagine the cost nationwide. so biden spends an extra $4 billion for border security and runs up a giant bill because there's a total lack of border security. right from the start, our president made sure our border was open. he abandoned the wall and ended the stay in mexico rule and commissioned an app to speed up the flow. millions have come in. he got what he wanted, america did not. second hour of varney just
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getting started. stuart: i think biden wanted an open boa boarder and i think hen the deal. what say you, shannon bream? >> a lot of people in washington feel the same way and they're trusted and have democrats speaking out about what's happening like eric adams in new york city and all over the place, there's been lawsuits in chicago, other big cities saying we can't handle the influx and people living along the border say we've been handling this influx. in july, numbers up 30% illegal crossings and it's a real problem for the administration. one you don't hear them talk about very and have certainly when it comes to the vice president being assigned to handle the root causes of migration, we're still waiting to hear from hear and now this may open the spending fights and congressman chip roy out of
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texas, a republican saying to all of his fellow republicans, do not fund the department of homeland security unless we get concrete structures in place to enforce border security. this could be a big show down in september for those appropriations bills too. stuart: let's turn to the law and very much your area, sha shannon. special council jack smith wants a trial for donald trump and is that fair for all the trials? >> he has a lot of trials and want to start january 2 saying it'll take 4-6 weeks and his team says absolutely not. that falls during the iowa caucuses, new hampshire, south carolina, nevada all the early state where is he's fighting to lock in the nomination. they're going to go to the judge and say, it's not possible to do it. they also say they need to see the evidence first and they argue we can't know when the trial should start and how much prep time and how long it'll take and seeing the evidence and we done want to turn over evidence and iron out the protective order and arguing
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about that in court today and what evidence and material the former president will or will not be allowed to talk about publicly. stuart: whether there's a trial in january or not is -- that really -- it's important but there'll be other trials, which will occur next year before the election and right in the middle of the campaign. so regardless of jack smith and january 2, this is going to be unfair right from the get -- i'm saying it's unfair. will you agree with me on that? >> i would say this, it's going to be a handful for him and his heel team to prep -- legal team to prep any one client for a trial is excessive. for three or f four or five tris is cumbersome and his team tried to argument worship godding on a trial date in mar-a-lago on the case set for may of next year, they'd argued the man is running for president. the judge said people charged with federal crime haves important jobs all the time. you have to show up in court
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still. there are plenty of folks saying this is designed to keep him off the campaign trail and he'll say i've time i'm indicted and tace a trial, i'll go up in the polls and in the fundraising and so far he's been right. stuart: okay. i'll do the opinion and you stick to the facts. that's what you're good at. i'll mind myself in the future. shannon bream. >> great to see you, stu. stuart: you too. watching 2:00 eastern on fox news sunday with shannon bream. back to the markets. why not. we've got a bit of a turn around here and dow is up 50. not that much. nasdaq down 70, not that much. charles payne is with me. we had this earlier on the show, for years we've been told a debt bomb is coming and we're borrowing too much and deficit too much and we'll have a credit crunch. chief investment officer for gugenheim said it's coming. are you worried in >> i think all the missed projections from
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the experts is underestimating how much $7 trillion in free money -- you can't use traditional models with that kind of cash. it's nuts. i think almost everything predicted has a great probability of happening later. you know, so this first half, whatever malaise we thought all this kind of stuff. it's hard not to. you look at this last new york survey of the loan officers and everyone tightened, everyone's tightening their standards and the thing on the flip side, there's no demand. mortgage demand evaporated and who want buy a half at 7.5% and there's no demand but if you need a loan, you're going to pay out the nose nor it, if you even qualify. a credit crunch. stuart: credit crunch. that's on it -- it's almost upon us, isn't it? >> it's there and just these things are taking a longer time to materialize and work their way through the system. that's just the function of all of this cash. the bad part of this cash thing too though is it keeps inflation elevated and inflation is still
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sort of endom colles and what comes down and i saw a headline, i saw a goldman sacks saying it was soft, number was soft. wasn't soft, it was softer. not soft. 4.7% core inflation. the last time it was that high coming down from a peak was in 1991. many people haven't lived under these types of inflationary periods and it's being seen. stuart: bringing up this. remember last year, charles, when president biden said inflation reduction act would lower inflation. brief sound byte, roll it. >> this is the strongest bill you can pass to lower inflation, cut the deficit, reduce healthcare cost, tackle the climate crisis and promote energy security. stuart: he's admitting that it had lit toll do with inflation. he says -- now he's saying and i'm quoting, "i i wish i hadn't called it that and less to do with inflation and more for providing alternative that generate economic growth". all right, charles, were we sold a bill of goods?
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>> i heard five or six fibs in that sound byte. of course it doesn't. all the government money stoked inflation in the first place and how can you add more care to the fire and say the fire will go down? the problem with the biden administration and everything they do going out to the public and goes and runs by the pr first. the afghanistan withdrawal and how do we frame it so look good and everything about how do we make something look good. never heard that president and admit they won't make anything. coming back and saying they'll talk about growth that . is not growth. this is spending. spending is different than growth. if you're walking down the street and you find a suitcase with $1,000 in it, you're going to spend it but that's not growth. that hasn't changed your life. it hasn't given you any skills. it's probably going to end up putting you in debt because you'll spend a thousand and feel good and put another thousand on your credit card. stuart: it's consumption.
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>> right. and they've conflated this number so much and people know, the general public knows and numbers coming to economy and just won't climb. stuart: check he out making money with charles payne. if i watch will i make money? >> hell yeah. or sometimes you'll lose less. stuart: all right. i like that. charles, you're all right. >> you got it. stuart: thank you, sir. lauren is back with the movers. what's this? cano? lauren: cano health. it's a primary care provider. it's 55-cents but down 63%. stuart: what happened? lauren: well, they said they don't have enough liquidity to cover the cost of doing business and net loss in the quarter widened. yeah, i feel like this has been a theme. stuart: that's a serious subject. lauren: seeing more and more companies teetering on bankruptcy coming out and saying point-blank, we might not be able to get through this. stuart: got it. all right. tapestry. lauren: coach handbag maker -- owner.
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they said they'd buy jimmy chou capri holding in a deal valued at $8.5 million. it's normally the other way around. stuart: capri holdings is jimmy chou shoes? lauren: yes. michael khors too. stuart: are they the red bot bottomed? lauren: no -- wait, you're confusing me. stuart: oh, louie vitton. lauren: wait, you're confusing me. i confirmed, no red bottoms. the flight was sued and class action lawsuit because of that. they've settled undisclosed some and if you took a flight in that time period and you've requested a refund and got a future credit instead, submit a claim and get cash back.
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stuart: fine, but i bet the lawyers took at least 30% of the takings and full expenses. don't start. meanwhile the faa acknowledging the depths of air traffic control issues. lauren: they are saying airlines can continue to fly less or reduced schedule this summer with no penalty. typically if an airline scales back their travel, they lose a landing spot in new york or dc. this is a huge deal. the faa saying we don't have enough air traffic controllers, it's not your fault. keep through october your reduced schedules, no penalty. stuart: where is pete buttigieg? lauren: asking that a lot. stuart: thanks, lauren. at least 55 people dead after wild fires spread across the island of maui and latest on the service connected and have rescue mission. donald trump has strong words for biden. and trump said biden has iq of first grader. will this kind of rhetoric or words resinate with voters or push them away? we're on it. house oversight chair james
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comer wants to subpoena biden family members. former house speaker newt gingrich said republicans need to go slow with impeachment inquiry. he joins me next. ♪ i have lots of monthly subscriptions. streaming, music, news sites. then i went to experian. now i can see them in one place. and the ones i forgot about? experian can cancel them for me. see all you can do at experian.com/save now. with a majority of my patience with sensitivity, i see irritated gums and weak enamel. sensodyne sensitivity gum & enamel relieves sensitivity, helps restore gum health, and rehardens enamel. i'm a big advocate of recommending things that i know work.
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have the red bot tons and jimmy chou shoes do not. nasdaq up 80 and -- jimmy choo shoes do not. the biden family received $20 million from foreign sources. where did the money go? chad pergram joins me. chad, did president biden receive any of the money directly? >> welshes the short answer is no, but $20 million as you say is how much biden family businesses received overall from interest abroad. republicans are trying to unwind this. >> we've already proven that this family received over $21 million from some of the worst people on the planet from some of the most adversarial countries on the planet. and yet they can't account for what they did to receive this money. >> let's explore the biden family tree. as in the money tree. public records reveal the president's brother jim biden
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scored 360,000 through one company and hall by widen and reman take partner of hunter biden scored 350,000. robinson walker l.l.c., ask associated with hunter biden narrow angled around 30 million. >> banking records speak nor themselves. no one does business like this. >> it's one thing to receive the money and did the bidens properly account for it? >> no records paying taxes on $20 million. if you and i sell $600 worth of stuff on e bay, we get a letter from irs. there's a two pass system in the country. the biden crime family syndicate and the rest of us. and currently the rest of us are getting pretty ticked off.
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>> the white house denies wrong doing and the administration says repeatedly that the president was not tied to his son's business dealings. stuart. stuart: chad pergram, we got it. house oversight chair james comer wants so season biden family members. roll -- subpoena biden family members. roll tape. >> this will always end with the bidens coming in front of the committee and we're going to subpoena the family and we're putting the case together to win in court. obviously with all the opposition and obstruction we're getting from the biden attorneys now. stuart: would these subpoenas be another big step forward towards impeachment inquiry? >> well, it'll be a step, but i think it's important to recognize first that if they can get hunter biden in front of the
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committee and virtually all of the answers will be pleading the fifth amendment. i may educate the country that certainly implies self-incrimination for the fifth amendment is doe signed to protect you from -- designed to protect from being incriminating and his attorney saying on every question take the fifth. the judiciary committee and ways and means committee and more today than two or three monthsing a. one example, there's a phone call from dubai that is listed as to a dc source and a phone paid for by hunter biden's company, which joe biden was using outside of secret service and other white house records.
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going to kyiv and specifically threatening a billion in taxpayer money if the ukrainians did not fire the prosecutor who is looking into burisma, the company that hired hunter biden. that's not building the brand. we need to subpoena the telephone and records of the people that are actually in dubai. we need to subpoena the speech writer's scripts to find out when did they have the attack to the speech in kyiv and when was this part of it, but frankly there's an example where joe biden using power of presidency and using tax money threatening a billion in aid to ukraine is directly helping his son's company. now, that's a potentially straight out bribery, which is one of the constitution's examples of the legitimacy and constitution mentioned bribery. i think that all has to be
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subpoenaed and all has to be reviewed, and we need to get it out in the open. then we need to bring them in when we have absolute evidence and they can't just bob and weave, but they're faced with the reality of their criminal acts. stuart: donald trump's language and he's been out on the trail. he had extremely harsh words and said biden has the iq of a first grader and called him -- he was mad, lunatic and do you think that kind of language at this point? >> i think president trump has enormous strengths but his occasional off the cuff attacks aren't part of those strengths. i think he'd be much better off to elevate the campaign for the american people. this most recent example and
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biden approved giving the iranian dictatorship $6 billion in order to get five americans released. that would be a good legitimate fight because trump got hostages released without ever paying the people holding them hostage. and as a clear contrast, i think trump's much better off to elevate his campaign and not just rely on the kind of off the cuff language that he's used and also one for chris christie and nasty personal att attacks stua: is it a bit premature to say that? >> no, i think, look, when you have the kind of lead he has, you're almost the presumptive nominee. if he gets through new hampshire, iowa, nevada, and south carolina, this race could be over by early march.
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he would then be able to spend the rest of the year and the rest of the biden administration and the more he does that on policy grounds and on the quality of life for the american people and the less he does it with these kind of personal attacks and stronger he'll be. stuart: newt gingrich, i knew you'd probably like to comment on red shoes from christian louboutin shoes. >> there's a store you'd walk past and see the red shoes. only reason i know anything about this. stuart: doesn't the pope wear red shoes as well, newt? >> he does, but not on the bottom. louboutin's are on the bottom. stuart: you offer such clarity.
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superb stuff. fund of knowledge. see you again soon. i hope. next case, the oregoner of arizona accused of trying to censor her critics on twitter. we'll show you the tweet that drew intense backlash towards the governor. a federal judge says the biden administration acted like the mob when communicating with social media companies. now the white house is trying to reverse a court order that limits their communication with big tech. attorney general of missouri wants that order to stay in place. he joins me next. ♪
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the turn around is in tact. it's a summer friday for the most part coming to trading activity also chinese stocks were down 2% overnight. stuart: pinduoduo. lauren: another chinese stock. pinduoduo is an e retailer in china and have hyperaggressive culture. we're talking about work from home here, hybrid schedules, they have a 9, 9, 6 in china. 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. six day as week and that's expected at pinduoduo and they're getting backlash from workers because of it. stuart: okay. the workers don't like it? lauren: no, would you like that? all though you probably do that now. in your case, it's not 9-9 but probably like 2-6, 2:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.. j i don't do anything like that. lauren: yes, you do. stuart: not in studio and office and in the bidding. i'm in at 4:00 in the morning and leave at 12:00, go out back for a nap, get up and start looking at the wires and relating to our producers and then i go to bed.
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lauren: it's close to a 9-9-6 stuart: you got your point. the democrat governor of arizona, katie hobbs has been accused of trying to censor her critics. lauren: this was in 2018 and she was an arizona state senator and described trump's base on twitter as neo-natzis and she was criticized heavily and now in 2020 she's campaigning to run for governor of arizona and won that election and e-mailed twitter saying can you censor this criticism i've received and twitter said do you have more information. she couldn't provide it. why are we talking about this? it's another example of democrats burying evidence or feeling emboldened to ask big tech to help them and come to their side, to censor. stuart: staying on big tech. there's a court order that's in place that stops president biden
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from colluding with big tech. the attorney general of the state of missouri andrew bailey wants to keep that order in place and attorney general joins me now. first of all, mr. attorney general, what have they been doing and the collusion that's been stopped? >> well, this is all about building a wall of separation between tech and state and we see numerous examples of where the federal government or other state officials as in the case of arizona applied coercive and collusive pressure and silencing american voices and violation of the first amendment right of free speech. the three problems here, number one the speech they're targeting is core political speech protected by the first amendment and it's illegal to silence it and secondly, all the speech they targeted in the lawsuit that evidence that we've uncovered thus far was truthful and information they needed to make individual healthcare decisions and third, it's all viewpoint discrimination and targeted exclusively conservative speech. they're going to keep fighting
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to build a wall of separation between state and protecting our right to free speech. stuart: you want to keep that order, that court order in place. the administration wants to lift that and what are you doing to keep it in place? >> well, yesterday we were at fifth circuit court of appeals in front of three judge panel and department of justice doubled down and recommitted itself to future violations of the first amendment. two points that stood out. number one the judges were skeptical about the department of justice's position and the department of juice tis agreed with the court they had the authority to silence truthful speech. think about that for a second. there's huge ideological f philosophical choices and secondly the department of justice said any kind of national emergency justifies censorship and uses covid as the excuse. what's the excuse next time. covid is the trojan horse that got the enemy behind the gate and we know the whole purpose of
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the first amendment is invite dissent and free, fair, and open marketplace of ideas and people can come to consensus and the idea is behind the first amendment to protect us from the government and the purpose of the government is to protect our rights and yet here is another example of the department of justice being weaponnized against conservatives and we're not going to let joe biden destroy free speech in america. stuart: mr. attorney general, thank you very much and keep fighting. andrew bailey, attorney general of the great state of missouri. thank you, sir. thank you for being on the show. >> thank you. stuart: listen to this one, millions of sensitive tax records are missing. do you know what happened? lauren: well, we know they're missing but don't know what happened. the irs is required to keep backups of business tax records and individual ones. they're kept for decades on microfilm cartridges. several batches are missing. that's millions of taxpayer information. so the inspector general for the
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irs says seven boxes filled with these cartridges are empty in a utah facility, and then they also said many more are missing when they were transferring from a california location to a missouri location. so -- right. we don't know if someone stole this information, that cobbe potential tax fraud. identity fraud. this is a huge deal. stuart: blackmail. lauren: yeah. and the other question is we do know that the irs works with outdated software. i mean -- stuart: yeah, they do. lauren: outdated technology. this is a perfect example, microfilm court ridge. cartridge. stuart: we have to get elon musk in the show many times. a tweet from elon musk and the fight with mark zuckerberg in an epic location. the speculation is they'll fight in the coliseum in rome. lauren: in rome? stuart: only one and it's in rome. musk spoke to the prime minister of italy.
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lauren: oh, boy. stuart: it's a great story and weave got it, of course. treating yourself can be a form of self-care. roll tape. >> once a year, donna and i spend a day treating ourselves. what do we treat ourselves to? clothes. >> treat yo self. >> massages. >> treat yo self. >> fine leather goods. >> treat yo self. stuart: that's a clip from a movie about treating yourself? no? if you're until the market for luxury watch like a r rolex, cod take years to get off a waiting list. how shopper cans avoid long wait times. she has the report from the diamond kris right after the break -- kris district right afr the break. ♪
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stuart: how are people getting off a long wait list in the diamond district? reporter: stuart, they're not. they're coming to places like secondhand watch mashes to immediately get a watch opportunistic your wrist, and it's a huge segment of the market. 30% of luxury watch sales are secondhand. to get your hands on upward mobility of these, you have to pay more than retail. this is a watch on my wrist and it's an oyster perpetual. it's expensive at rolex around $6,000. here, it's selling for $11,500 and nearly double. people pay. i want to bring in a guest. you guys have this. why would they come in and pay that much more for a rolex watch from you guys?
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>> it's very desirable epees. you come in here and we have it at location and put it on, one, two, three, get it on your wrist and you could go home. reporter: if i went to rolex and wanted to buy this, could i get it? how long would it take? >> it's very hard. it's like two to three year wait but at our location, come in and we have it. any model available at the store. reporter: so come in and find anything. you sell across the u.s. and social media helped you do that. not just for your store but the gray market of wat watches and t exploded because of online videos and things like that . what are you hearing from your customers about this asset class? not just looking for a watch but looking to build wealth? >> correct, the last three years the luxury watches has appreciated like crazy and it blew up the whole market and social media where you could buy a watch and make money and it's like an investment piece for them and they're looking at
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growing their collection more and more every single day. reporter: rolex is getting a piece of the action and they launched in 2022 their own resale market to keep up with guys like this because if you can't beat them, you've got to join them. you understand when you sell a watch for double the price and people are buying. stuart. stuart: interesting stuff. madison, thank you very much indeed. don't expect that christmas present, okay. let's get an understanding here. moving on, amazon workers, they were warned that they may need to return to the office and i bet they were furious. lauren: yeah, of course. so as of may, if you're corporate amazon, tough go to the office three days a week. many haven't done that . i know some that haven't. they sent a warning to employees working from home saying you're in violation of the corporate policy and they're absolutely tour yous. why the warning? are they about tafanely change the mandate to be five days a week or will they use this for a
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bonus, being potential layoffs in the future? people are mad. we told you to come in three days a week in may and you're not so you're in violation. >> so easy. >> we're hearing there's a chance of elon musk fighting mark zuckerberg at the coliseum in rome. apparently he's spoken to the italian prime minister. lauren: he did and the minister of culture and italy and all think the idea is grand and it'll be epic. stuart is revealing he spent three hours in an mri machine on monday and that his c5, c6 fusion is solid so not an -- we're actually talking about his health in a potential fight. there's a problem with his right shoulder blade rubbing against his r ribs and requires minor surgery and recovery will only take a few monarchies. in is all about the headline. it's not going to happen.
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stuart: you don't think so? lauren: no if he needs surgery. stuart: it'll be delayed. lauren: like the cyber truck. stuart: let's move on. it'll be delayed, put it like that . love to see it. at the coliseum. lauren: i would buy a ticket to that. stuart: you would? lauren: absolutely. actually go for free to cover it. stuart: dream on. suspected myograns are armed ard wiaaarmedwith machetes telling o pay up at the border. bill melugin has the story and he's next. there are currently more than 750,000
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stuart: a group of suspected cartel members armed with ma shellties threatening and ex--- machetes threatening migrants to pay up. tell us more about this, bill. reporter: stuart, good morning to you. here in the rio grand valley sector and cartels have an iron grip in terms of deputiesing who does and does not get to cross the boarder and we'll get into
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it. take a look at images from texas dps drone in brownsville showing cartel members armed with machetes and one had a gun in the waste band and threatening migrants to pay up or not allowed to cross and it'll show you one smacking the guy on the back and a group of migrants running in all directions as the guys approach with the machetes and texas dps talked to migrants after crassing the river saying yeah, the cartel guys had machetes and wouldn't let us cross and once we paid them, they let us cross. those migrants will wear the cartel wristbands indicating they've paid the cartel. here in the rgb, take a look at this video, border patrol arresting an illegal immigrant smuggling live spider monkeys and they were in his backpack and they are endangered animals and border and they were turned
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over to the proper authorities. board herb property stopping a -- border patrol stopping a tractor trailer and 28 people crammed in the cab of the truck. hard to believe. out to nogales, arizona and border patrol stopping an rv at a check point and going inside and finding 16 illegal immigrants being smuggled inside of the rv with all them hiding in different areas. just another typical couple of days down here at southern border, stuart. back to you. stuart: where's the media? we're the only ones there. bill melugin, you're great and doing great reporting. >> thank you. stuart: biden administration asked congress for $4 billion in additional spending. $20 billion for ukraine and only $4 billion for the border. you support spending so much money over seas and have little
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going to the border? >> look, there's been bipartisan support for the ukraine and helping ukraine fight against russia and everything the bind administration wants to send more money and needs to go before congress and look at what it's being spent for and we'll look at it and so, yeah, we still need to fight -- help the ukrainians fight the russians but i believe we need more money to help with our border. look, stuart, the issue at the border really isn't about money. the issue at the border is about policy. till we get a new president with different policies, doesn't matter how much we spend at the border, it's not going to work because the policies are just plain wrong and we're going to continue to see this flood of migrants flowing for the border. stuart: congressman, you're traveling to iowa with president trump tomorrow. i wonder if you approve of some of the language that he's been using recently. he called the president a raving lunatic who had the iq of a first grader.
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trump made personal comments about chris christie as well. do you approve of that in >> that's not my style but it's the presidents and works for him. doesn't work for me. i've been elected here in my community for a listening time, and i have my own personal tile which works for me. that works for the president, i guess. that's what he thinks he needs to co. i still support the president. we need to elect president trump in '24. we cannot have another four years of joe biden. especially in light of all his policies but also especially in light of all the troubles and all of the scandals that are surrounding him and his family criminal enterprise. for me, president trump gives us the best chance of doing that, and i will fully support the president. stuart: the president trump is having a big rally in iowa, is it tomorrow? >> yeah, it's -- no, yes, it's
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saturday. it'll be tomorrow and myself and about eight or nine other florida congress people are going to go with him to iowa. i'm looking forward to. i've never been to iowa and never been to what a caucus is all about. i'm excited to go and support president trump. stuart: iowa is flat. just like florida. congressman, thank you very.. >> florida is flat too. stuart: exactly. thank you, congressman. enjoy the trip. >> thank you. stuart: still ahead, new york stitt senate minority leader robert ohrt is a republican and he'll talk about more democrats calling out biden's border pollties. david avella on trump's rising poll numbers and jonathan morris on arch bishop warning that the catholic church 24 america is under attack. five americans held hostage in iran and price for getting them out, $6 billion. i can't help but think that things will be different if donald trump was still president. that's my take, and it's next.
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