tv Varney Company FOX Business September 6, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT
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♪ stuart: i always like to sing along. the microphone is closed. good morning, everyone. it is 10:00 eastern. straight to your money. i see some red. the dow was up one hundred 50, the nasdaq down 75 points. the bottom right-hand corner, six winners of 30 dow stocks, the 10 year treasury yield, where is it? it is up a little bit at 4.29%, the nasdaq upset. the price of oil going up a fraction lower today, just hit $87 a barrel. watch out gas prices down the road. bitcoin 25,700 as we speak. latest read on the service sector. what do you have, ash? ashley: 54. 5, the other estimate was 52.5, the service sector has expanded
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now, one dollar and $0.50, 8 months in a row, interestingly the manufacturing side of things has contracted 10 months in a row but a solid result on the service side. check the markets, now this. you could, if you tried really hard make the case that things are not so bad in america. if you look on the bright side the unemployment rate, bring up job openings nearly 9 million. your 401(k) not doing that bad. the vast majority of americans don't see our country or future as bright or positive. why so pessimistic? i turned to the new york times columnist bret stephens to ask why. here's what he wrote. why so many americans are down on biden. he says we are unsettled by what people see and feel.
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inflation suggests inflation is coming down but we are paying higher prices and we know it. public disorder in major democrat cities. we are not blind. public schools, declining academic standards after the teachers union shut them down in the pandemic. biden and the first lady are locked in with randy weingarten, victims, and we know it. the border, you see migrants everywhere. the homeless, biden doesn't see them. we do. the president's age and infirmity. we see that too. in all these instances, what we are told contradicts what we see. hats off to brett stevens. i think he left something out. vice president kamala harris is not mentioned. she should be. everyone knows the vice president is a heartbeat from the oval office and that is profoundly unsettling. second hour of varney just getting started.
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♪ stuart: liz peek joining us this morning. do you agree kamala harris should be mentioned as part of the pessimism? liz: nikki haley has been making that point forcefully. when people go to vote next fall, if president biden is the candidate, they have to be aware voting for president biden is a vote for kamala harris and kamala harris has lower approval favorability than president biden. most people will take that seriously. i would also say in terms of brett stevens he is late to the party. these things have been going on for some time and it isn't like god intervened and opened the border or created inflation. this was stuff on president biden's doorstep that he's
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taken no response charles:. in his first hundred days in office there were 94 executive orders opening the border. dismantling everything donald trump had done as president to support the border. that is on president biden. energy prices ditto. huge number of executive orders to basically stop us oil and gas production and turnover pricing of oil worldwide to saudi arabia and russia. it isn't just that these things happened on his watch. he has caused the problems and i think americans are aware of that. that. stuart: you have a new title, why us consumers may crush biden's reelection hopes. make your case. liz: the us consumer is the engine that could with the entire world. the world has been growing courtesy of the american consumer who now is getting maxed out. we haven't actually had more conversation about this. spending the last month was up
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0. 8%. income up 2.8%. the difference was made by less savings, 3.5% versus 8% and increasing debt on all kinds of things. car loans, credit cards, private label cards, stores and so forth. the upshot of this is everything is fine until consumers get nervous about the job market or their income and then they rein in. that's happening now. consumer sentiment number on the conference board plummeted last month. unexpectedly after rising for several months in a row and the reason according to their economist, people talking about the job market not being so tight which is true. the jolts number actually is down, wages coming down a little bit. jobs market clearly loosening. people are feeling it. the fed may not be aware of it but people are aware of it.
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there spending, at which a point this happy talk about the economy and we got another look at that. stuart: keywords, people are aware. always good, appreciate it. capital physician gave senate minority leader mcconnell a clean bill of health after his recent freeze. senator rand paul is not buying it. rand paul is a doctor. what is he saying? ashley: he says every one has seen the clips of mitch mcconnell and he believes it is not a valid medical diagnosis, that's a result of deflation. really? this. >> i practiced medicine for 25 years and it looks like a no logical event, doesn't mean it's incapacitating, it means somebody out to say this looks like of seizure.
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ashley: brian monahan says after consulting with several neurologists and reviewing the results of macconnell's mri he ruled out the possibility that macconnell experienced a stroke or has parkinson's disease or a seizure disorder, monahan concluded macconnell's repeated freeze ups were user related to a concussion versus earlier in the year or about of dehydration. macconnell says political reporting some republicans privately looking into forcing a special meeting to discuss the future of the gop congressional leadership. ashley: back to the markets, seeing some red, look at the nasdaq down 121 points. i want to talk inflation. is inflation coming back?
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>> good to be with you. i think inflation is back. we are a long way out of this fight. a couple things to highlight here. core inflation is based on services and wages, we are seeing unions shut down, american airlines, ups, paying more for employees to raise costs for everyone else. inflationary, the us was recently downgraded to fitch and janet yellen announced 2 trillion more dollars we need to come up with to make our economy buoyant by the end of the year but when you look at gdp this thing is out of control right now. we are not doing the hard work of cutting costs, just printing more in treasuries so this equates to 8.
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$5 billion in deficits that we've got to come up with on a daily basis. that means cost to our nation to run is going up and it is going to cost a lot more dollars to do it. that is inflationary. the third parties souders introduced oil prices that have skyrocketed 8% in the last few days as saudi and russians looking to extend the supply cuts. this production cut is anticipated to be 1.5 million barrels a day in 2,023. if we had a high demand, low supply, prices come up but that is inflationary. higher oil prices makes the fed's job harder going forward and we might see cpi rise on these things. we just saw pce take up. stuart: i want your response to china banning government
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officials from using apple devices. what's the impact on the technical and economic relationship between china and india? >> no question there's a decoupling between china and the united states. we have been re-shoring our industries. they've taken a stance against apple. largest organization in the world saying government officials won't use iphones. what they are trying to do is suppress the value of apple stock or expansion into the chinese market which has been a big part of the iphone expansion, contracting and one of the things apple has done is we have privacy standards. we are not just allowing this stuff to be out there but if there's a legitimate inquiry into this from a legal
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department they will share things. china is pushing back, trying to pick their favorites. the back office to india. stuart: it is hurting the stock on the left-hand side of the screen. thanks for joining us, see you again soon. in the report shows china launching a new state fund to boost its chip industry. ashley: the new state backed investment fund helps raise $40 billion for its semiconductor sector. reports claim one main area of investment will be for equipment that makes the chips. president xi pushes to make china self-sufficient in semiconductors. it comes after the us imposed a series of export control measures citing fears that beijing could use advanced chips to boost its military capabilities.
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last october the us rolled out sweeping sanctions package the cut china's access to advanced chipmaking equipment. us allies, japan and the netherlands followed suit. china's chip industry has struggled to play a leading role in the global supply-chain especially advanced chips. they are trying to remedy that by spending a ton of money. $40 million. stuart: now this. more states want to ban the sale of gas powered cars. experts pushed car prices even higher. kelly o'grady has the story coming up. the white house is trying to downplay saudi arabia's extension of its oil production cuts. is this a failure of president biden's energy policies? mike pence blames eric adams for calling out biden on the border crisis. looks like the border is going to be a key issue in 2024. mark green on that next.
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they provide the potential for regular income... are federally tax-free... and have historically low risk. call today to request your free bond guide. 1-800-217-3217. that's 1-800-217-3217. stuart: the price of oil moving up, now above $87 a barrel. saudi arabia extended oil production cuts to the end of the year. that is why oil is going up. any idea how high gas prices will go because of this? >> reporter: unfortunately not but we are at the highest level we have seen at this point in the season. the prices start to take down oil production cuts that you mentioned, we could buck the
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trend this year. rather than combat those challenges with us energy production the biden administration is pushing evs. nine states plan to side ban the sale of new gas cars by 2035. these are not the consumer friendly option. the average cost is $5000 more, not everyone can afford $50,000 vehicle, lower cost options don't stack up to the driving range of gas alternative. a cigarette outplayed to install chargers in your home and i can attest they are very high in california. if you come to one of these charging stations, it costs time to charge your car. on top of that charging stations across the country are lacking in many areas. >> infrastructure isn't ready.
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we need to pay attention to what consumers want. if we force the industry to build things they don't want, we will lose jobs wholesale and end up more reliant, not less, on other countries. >> reporter: that was a sentiment echoed by bmw. a ban coming up on gas powered vehicles and support imminent risk to car manufacturers if they can't win the price war against china. stuart: thanks a lot. jake sullivan tried to play down saudi arabia's oil production. >> it was announced today, continuation of existing policy, not a new set, just continuation of those cuts for three months as opposed to one month. most important thing the
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president is focused on is just trying to do everything he can't get lower can to get lower prices for consumers at the gas pump in the united states. stuart: he was playing down this production cut and we show you the results of the production cut. $86.90 a barrel. that, looking good like we are going to get higher gas prices almost immediately. ohio senator jd vance changing the subject for a second, senator from ohio, republican jd vance fighting the return of mask mandate. what is he doing? ashley: he introduced the freedom to breathe act that would prevent president biden and federal agencies from implanting facemask requirements for public transit passengers through the end of next year. it would also block commercial airline carriers from refusing
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service to anyone who declines to wear a mask, republican senator from ohio says mask mandate's were tried in this country and failed to control the spread of respiratory viruses and violated basic freedom. democrats say we are not going to bring back mask mandate's, but hold them to their word. stuart: thanks very much. i want to get to saudi arabia, cutting oil production to the end of the year. congressman mark green joined me now. is this a failure of biden's foreign and energy policies. >> the assault on american oil and gas has driven dependence on other countries like venezuela, saudi arabia has been faced with an aggressive build up in iran, partnerships
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with china and the biden administration ignoring them for military assistance. for the longest time saudi was our military partner, the third-largest f-15 fleet. biden, because of the horrible act of jamal khashoggi stiff armed -- they are getting frustrated, they are making, toying with bricks, toying with buying chinese drones. all of this stuff is a statement to the president, let's work together. some good things happening in negotiations behind the scenes but nothing comes of it yet so saudi is going to move to protect its interests and may be, hopefully not partnering with china and keeping oil at a high price. stuart: if we get back to $4 gas, there will be a high
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political price. gas prices are important in this country. took me a long time to learn that but i have learned that lesson. mike pence, former vice president praising mayor eric adams for calling out biden on the border crisis. watch this. >> got to do a hat trip to the mayor of new york to call out president biden and his administration for their failure to secure the southern border. new york is not alone. every city in the country is busting at the seams with this avalanche of millions of people coming into the country. stuart: var former vice president is right. there are millions flooding into the country. are migrants going to be a key issue next year along with the economy and inflation? >> let me disagree with the vice president on one issue. i don't praise adams or the massachusetts governor.
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the solutions they demand from the biden administration will continue to create incentive for people to come. if you get rapid work permits and get them house and clothed with more money from the federal government and taxpayers across the country, that will worsen the demand or incentive for people to come. i disagree with those guys on that, sanctuary cities asked for this and they got to deal with it. in terms of will it be a political issue? i think this is going to be one of the major issues. the economy is always number one but clearly americans are paying a massive human price and a financial price for these open-door policies and our committee, i sit as chairman of homeland security, we are in this five days, investigation into this open border, showing the american people the human cost and financial cost. it will be an election issue. stuart: many thanks for joining us. see you again soon.
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the police shortage in one democrat run city is so bad, robbery victims are being asked not to call 911 for help. we will tell you where that's happening. my next guest says the crime and drug crises no longer just a big-city issue, now pouring into smaller cities like vista, california. the mayor of that city will tell us about his growing problem. we will be back.
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policy! find out if you're sitting on a goldmine. call coventry direct today at the number on your screen, or visit coventrydirect.com. stuart: we are heading south, series declines for the dow down 136, the nasdaq down 1%. a lot of reading. ashley is looking at the movers including tesla. watch tesla. ashley: a long-awaited cyber truck we've been talking about for years is supposed to be shipped out at the end of this month. analysts are worried about a fresh round of delays. elon musk has made new demands about the truck's appearance, demands that manufacturers say is impossible to meet in the production cycle.
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additionally, tesla has not scheduled public launch party for the vehicle and that too is not -- is down 4%. southwest airlines, dallas-based carrier falling short of booking expectations for last month. they warned their revenue will come for guidance. they are blaming fuel costs. that stock down 2%. amc plummeting today, announcing plans to sell 40 million additional shares to raise new cash, $10 talk down 20% today. stuart: police in austin, texas, don't call 911. this is the police shortage writ large. ashley: it is indeed. don't call us, we call you. it is down to staffing shortages at a time police are struggling to cope with a sharp increase.
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compared to 2020, a 70% increase in auto theft, 18% increase in aggravated assault, 30% in murders. it is so bad residents are being urged to call 311 has the nonemergency number if they have been robbed. police officials say the austin pd is sure to tackle crime wave and at times detectives have been called for cases to answer 911 calls. i want to mention another crime plagued the city, danielle outlaw resigning her job. the 2022, there were 516 homicides in the city of brotherly love. jim candy says we can gun laws, a new position with the port authority of new york.
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stuart: my next guest says the crime and drug crises no longer big-city issues. john franklin is the republican mayor of vista, california. you are north of san diego in california. what big-city problems are coming to your smaller city? >> primarily homelessness, drug crimes and shoplifting, served 1/3 of the population, 300,000 people in vista. of heard of residents don't have a grocery store in their neighborhood. these problems created by state law and state lawmakers are coming home to the suburbs. stuart: is that who you blame? laws in your state? >> absolutely. we had a be one hundred 9, the prison realignment act, letting 30,000 people out of state prisons and a lot of those people wound up in our jails
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meaning the so-called lesser criminals are not in jail at all. we also had a cleverly worded ballot initiative, safe schools and better communities act, many of your viewers are familiar with proposition 47 which increased felony limit from $450-$950, shoplifting has become rampant. we have all seen on the news videos of people stealing when i go to the drugstore, the customer in front of me walks out the door with all the merchandise. i have seen this myself. astonishment. you realize when you step up to the cash register you are the one paying. if you are not paying the premium, that store will not continue to serve the community. blue when isn't it also a moral problem. people don't believe taking stuff that they think are necessities, that's not stealing. that is a moral problem. does california have a moral crisis?
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>> we absolutely do. the moral crisis is low income residents no longer have a place to purchase their essentials. that's a moral problem. we have to look at the balance. i have colleagues that talk about shoplifting as if it is okay because people are in need. there are plenty of places, a wonderful facility, beautiful grocery store like setting, you can walk in, self certify that you are in need and they, diapers, baby formula, fresh produce, beautiful things, you can walk out with a full basket and come back next week. we have great resources, i spent a lot of my time visiting those who serve, those in need. the options are there. no one needs to steal for basic necessities. stuart: well said. thanks very much for being with us. quite a situation you face. now this.
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would you take a flight without a pilot? playmakers now designing cockpits for just one pilot and have plans to build planes with no pilots. that story coming up in our next our. rising mortgage rates, driving real estate investors away. could be good news for homebuyers who are unable to compete with corporate buyers. madison alworth has that story next. ♪
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dow is off one hundred 40, nasdaq down one hundred 18. next case. rising mortgage rates and higher prices driving investors away from real estate. madison alworth with me. what about big corporate investors. what are they doing? >> reporter: they are pulling out as well. they are seeing a retraction in the real estate market. investor purposes across the board down 45% from last year. that is the biggest decline since 2008 and also outpaces the 31% drop in home sales. the number of investors has dropped to below pre-pandemic levels. it is above it is about 7% causing mortgage demand to fall to a 27 year low according to the board association. that has an impact on real estate investors with cash offers which other factors that play into this our high home prices, lack of inventory and
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economic uncertainty, that leaves investors shaky and nervous. this is keeping home sales low especially for investors for the real estate market to make money. realtors tell us they notice the pool back and it could mean more opportunities for families. >> 18 months ago, 24 months ago it was not uncommon to have 15 offers on a home and have 3 to 5 of those investor offers. now, if i even get one investor offer in a home it is not likely the author my client wants to take. >> investors are pulling back a little bit it should make things a little easier for first-time homebuyers. >> these are the cities with the biggest pool back from real estate investments, we see decreases of 65% compared to last year. this could be signaling a shift many are hoping for in the real
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estate market but even with less competition you have to have homes available to purchase and inventory is very tight. stuart: thanks very much. an interesting question. how much does climate risk play into people's home purchases? ashley: more than you think. according to theill is about how, 80% factoring climate risks when they shop for a new house. those risks include floods, extreme temperatures, wildfires, hurricanes or droughts. young buyers want to know their home is safe from rising temperatures and wildfires but survey shows concern over climate risk is nationwide, it is strongest among homebuyers in the west. wildfires are the big fear. ashley: that is interesting.
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vivek ramaswamy's anti-sg fund launched a year ago. it crossed a major milestone. what is the milestone? ashley: it cost one billion dollars in assets. thing anti-activism fund the company was co-founded by vivek ramaswamy and it has attracted big time investors including billionaires, it was created in opposition to investment giants like black rock which emphasized environmental, social and governance focused investing. the mission statement encourages companies to focus on excellence, esg mandates and appears to be resonating as investor appetite for esg is drying up a little bit and corporate advocates starting to
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back away from the phrase. ashley: his presidential candidacy is bringing money as well. now this. americans are losing jobs to foreign born workers. if the trend continues it could push some politicians, the trend will continue if politicians push fasttrack work visas. edward lawrence is going to have that later. texas governor abbott doing little to determine migrants crossing the rio grande. why not work it. i will ask texas congressman pat fallon next. ♪ ♪ to duckduckgo on all your devie
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my cravings, they went away. and i was so surprised. you feel that your body is working and functioning the way it should be and you feel energized. golo has improved my life in so many ways. i'm able to stand and actually make dinner. i'm able to clean my house. i'm able to do just simple tasks that a lot of people call simple, but when you're extremely heavy they're not so simple. golo is real and when you take release and follow the plan, it works. stuart: the number of nativeborn americans declining, the number of foreign-born workers increasing. edward lawrence digging into the numbers. can you tell us why the drop in nativeborn workers? >> reporter: mixed into this,
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foreign-born workers who are us citizens but this is the sign of a tight labor market. i should say these numbers look at foreign-born workers or legally working in the united states, 1 million american-born workers who lost their job in the jobs report while we saw 668 additional foreign-born workers get jobs in august. for democrats this is a good thing. it is under 4%. %. >> tight labor force, did you take this type of labor participation? it's only helping the economy with the aging population, baby boomers exiting the workforce. >> reporter: a trend in major cities to push for blanket legalization of the migrants who illegally crossed the border under president biden, talking 5. 9 million people ill legally encountered by border patrol in the last 31 months, well more than the population of los angeles.
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a new york city council member says fast tracking work visas into new york sends the wrong message to people who clearly cut the line. economists agree we need immigration for a healthy workforce with a caveat. >> they have to come and legally. can't have millions of people streaming across the border. the biden policy is reduced public confidence in the immigration system in a way that hurts everybody. >> reporter: adding border patrol agents, they are processing those illegal immigrants faster into the united states. them are deported, the vast majority come in awaiting a court date at some point in the future. stuart: congressman pat fallon from texas joins me now. let me put it to you like this. these migrants are here. don't think they are going back and there are 5 million of them. what do you do with them? do you allow them to work?
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>> we are in this position because of president biden's lack of will to enforce the laws on the books and to fulfill his constitutional duties to protect americans. we don't know who millions of these people are. that should be chilling for anyone. we had 140 people apprehended on the terrorist watch list. that is more than any fiscal year in history. a great question to ask. stuart: there is 5 million people here. we are not going to deport 5 million people. they are here. they've got to work. we end up paying for 5 million people forever. >> we are doing that right now. this discussion has been going on for decades and the fact is republicans are all for immigration reform but it has to include border security moving forward. what happened when president
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reagan gave amnesty, it was great for those folks that got the amnesty but the border was not as secure as it could have been and it has gotten worse under president biden and that is what we need to address. stuart: what do we do with them? sorry to press the point. what are we going to do with them? >> if i working for a day i would say people might say this isn't practical but i would ask them to self deport, you have to pay a fine, secure the border. i don't want to report illegal activity. that's not healthy. stuart: i will move on. the floating border wall governor abbott deployed, doing little to deter migrants crossing the river. why are they not working? >> only a thousand feet long.
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that kind of a barrier, if it were miles and miles in a highly trafficked area, it would really, it is a floating wall and it would somewhat make it more difficult. that's the key. when the federal government is not doing their job, only so much the state of texas can do. stuart: i live and work around the new york city area and we are inundated. the city is chock a block full, today is opening day for schools, 19,000 migrant children in migrant city schools. the migrant thing has exploded across the country and i have to imagine it is a big political issue next year and not good for president biden. what say you? >> i would agree fully. the impact 19,000 having new york city, how about hundreds of thousands in texas? i was in the texas legislature
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8 years and it cost millions of dollars to educate more nationals and that is why there is a price to be paid. a colleague told me there is no such thing as cheap tomatoes because there's a cost when you have unlawful migration, don't know who these folks are. legal migration makes the country stronger but illegal immigration makes it weaker and we have to recognize that and hopefully americans will speak up at the polls because isn't it interesting. when liberals have to contend with this is a say even the mayor of new york, got to solve this border crisis, thank you. we've known that in texas for decades. stuart: thanks for being with us. sorry we gave you such a hard time what to do with 5 million people but inquiring minds want to know. thanks very much. see you later. check the market. i see some red ink down one hundred 70 on the dow, one hundred 30 on the nasdaq, where's the 10 year treasury? i believe the yield is going
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up. that's hurting the nasdaq. 429 under 10 year. price of oil going up 87, $86 a barrel as of today. bitcoin struggling to stay at of 25,000, 25-5 now. still had, martha mccallum at the white house is missing claim stafford street biden like a toddler. jason rantz praising the transgender sorority member, a brave woman. education in crisis. academic standards slide, schools across the country not by declining academic standards but by arguments over bathrooms and gender preferences. no accountability. "my take" next.
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