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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  September 14, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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>> i personally don't think that joe biden is going to let go of this thing he's been pursuing his whole career so easily. if he does, he'll do so at a choice with they have no choice but to run with kamala harris. >> the white house is telling us bidenomics is working and people are dissatisfied with the
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performance of the president on the most important issue and if their issue is continually you're welcome, america, suck it up. that's not going to win a lot of people over. >> way to stop them from coming across the board service connected finish the wall and put national guard at the border to interdict fentanyl and custom border patrol and all the things joe biden didn't do. right now our cities are deteriorating terribly. >> we're not producing the amount of oil we were producing before covid and before he came to office because he's restricted. biden is one of the reasons why inflation is as sticky as it is. stuart: stressed out. rather enjoying the day. it is 11:0 00 on the east coast and thursday, september 14th.
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first, i'll take a look at oil. we're covering the markets for you, of course. this is very important. earlier it touched $90 a barrel. highest i think since november of last year. watch out for gas prices probably going up from from here. dow up 240 points and nasdaq up 100 and rally is powered a bit further in the last 30 minutes. big tech is a unilateral picture and meta, microsoft, alphabet, amazon they're all up. 4.26% right now. now this. since day one of presidency, joe biden downhill in every respect and slide is accelerating and the president is overwhelmed and
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something has to give. mistakes came early and first movers to abolish america's energy independence and inflation picked up. he opened the border and flow of illegals went straight up. the withdraw from afghanistan showed weakness. putin invaded ukraine. biden called the saudi leader a praia. oil prices kept going up and locked down the schools and academic standards plunged and denied talking business with hunter but the evidence says, yeah, he did. now there's an impeachment inquiry and throughout all of this time, his mental and physical abilities have declined and everybody sees it. influential c columbia upist sad don't run in 2024. a majority of democrats say don't run, you're too hold. the media is turning and yesterday's news conference had a hostile tone, kjp was clearly rattled. to steal a phrase from shakespeare, this is the winter of democrats discontent. with a biden harris ticket,
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they'll lose the election. when richard nixon was overwhelmed by water gate, senior republicans went to him saying it's time to go. how long will it be before senior democrats go to president biden and say the same thing? it's time to go? third hour of varney starts right now. stuart: take a listen to president biden ignoring reporter questions on impeachment. watch this. stuart: will cain is here this morning. l that's a measure of what you saw how overwhelmed this
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presidency is. what say you? >> also shows the value of the impeachment inquiry of those liking to stick fingers in their ears and now that reality is there's going to be an impeepment inquiry. but up -- impeachment inquiry. up until this point, stuart, the most hard core have said, there's no evidence and no hard evidence and no direct evidence as though circumstantial evidence, which by the way there's an overwhelming weight of circumstantial evidence. we've convicted defendants, accused to death row with less circumstantial evidence that now exists pointing to this corruption scandal of influence peddling for hunter and joe biden pretending like circumstantial evidence is nothing but rumor and now there's a line. you see this change as you played this and it'll last for awhile and they'll run back to partisan corners quickly and let
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that evidence come forward and let that evidence be undeniable through the process of impeachment and i think your opening monologue points to inevidentability. i don't know how -- they're look like good bets for gavin newsom, stuart. stuart: i don't know anybody that believes joe biden can believe the president of the united states for another 5.5 years. nobody, do you? >> no, the only answer is a rerun of 2020 and paint as simply a rejection of presidential presidency of donald trump. what's different this time is joe biden at least could in theory be a blank slate option compared to donald trump and say, well, 2020 then was all about pro or anti-trump and referendum on trump.
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not this time. joe biden will have been president for four years and that whole litany that you ran through at the top of the show is there for people to say this is a referendum now on joe biden. no, i do not know anyone who can sign up saying he has another 5.5 years as president of the united states. susan: serious stuff. will cain, thank you for joining us this morning. we appreciate t always. >> thanks, stuart. stuart: back to the markets and bottom right hand corner of the screen and dow industrials up 231 point-blank layupses. i'd call that a rally. pretty good one too. lieu basenese is with me and for the entire hour. waiting for the first trade in l it. the indicated open is $58 a share. i'm asking you, the same question as everybody else. is arm the next nvidia? >> big tech stock going up 200% and i don't own it and regret buying it? yeah that, one. arm has the next potential for
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nvidia and exposure to ai and 10% cloud market share versus # 9% in the mobile market and a tremendous growth opportunity for them and arm i would argue has the best most profitable business model in tech and they basically innovate and license that and collect perpetual royalties on the innovation and licensed to thousands of companies and thousands with every big tech company you know and freaked and do business with or use as some of arm's technology. stuart: they milk it. >> they do and it's a perpetual license and chipper or product is made, they're collecting 2-3% royalty. phenomenal business model, i'll put this stat out there because i love data; right? if arm trades to the same price of sales multiple as knifed i can't recollects the stock would double in price from where it's at. perspective. price r ratio earning on target for nvidia and going to where nvidia hit a peak, arm could be $100+ stock. stuart: arm milking licenses, reminds me of apple milking the
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iphone market. now, this interesting question here, did china actually say back off from buying iphone s? did they say that? >> the band that wasn't a ban now? stuart: i'm getting confused. first said, no, government employees can't have and take to work. then what did they say? >> no, there's no ban. we don't know the ban you're talking about. most likely it's a shadow ban and i've gone to china and they have books for chinese investors and then the official books. we can't trust them at face value what they're saying and what china has recognized they need a apple just as much as ape needs chai that . their economy is sucking wind and saw them drop the reserve requirements this morning and another 25 basis points to stimulate the economy, second time this year. china needs apple right now. stuart: i'm surprised though, no bounce for apple. still at 175. >> yeah, it's hanging in. look, apple these near term buys
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and leading into the holiday season and a buying opportunity in apple. i personally own it and my family own it is and firm does not. stuart: buying anymore? >> i don't know. stuart: pressing hard here. >> i have to free up some cash. any pocket change for me? stuart: i've never owned apple. not in my entire life. >> really? stuart: my children said dad, you've got to buy apple, it was $12 a share. >> are you animal android -- an android loyalist? stuart: no, i have an iphone, the company pays for it. lauren: your kids said buy apple as $12 a share and you didn't? stuart: no. got to run. start with walgreens. lauren: they're up and leading the dow no. 1 at 2.6% and pushing deeper into healthcare and they want to offer more localized, more affordable options for their customers. huge investments in village md and urgent care people and partnership with home care
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services so bring healthcare people to your home. stuart: zoom, i've been using frequently these days. lauren: the ultimate multitasking. how about zooming while you drive. stuart: really? lauren: yeah, your car is literally your office. stuart: you can't do that? lauren: you can. a, i zoom while i drive and keep my camera off and have it on speaker, but this could be official because zoom linked up with google to allow people to zoom meetings from the info tainment system of a vehicle if it's equipped with android auto. stuart: careful what to admit to on television. lauren: it's like a speaker call and you have to be more professional so people on the other side can't hear the horn. >> kids in the back. lauren: kids screaming. stuart: okay, penn entertainment. i know what penn entertainment is. what's the story? lauren: it was named a top pick and it's a catalyst call. they like the deal that they have with disney for to license
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espn bet so they're calling them technically a short term investment idea and the stock goes up, look at this, almost 7% at 22.91. stuart: that was dave portnoy's company. lauren: correct, barstool. stuart: i don't if he's got a piece of that still. i think he sold to penn. lauren: for $1. >> bought it back for $1. lauren: yeah, sorry. got confused. bought his company back. stuart: vivek ramaswamy reversing his stance on tiktok. previously he call it had digital fentanyl. yeah, his words. but apparently jake paul has convinced him to change his mind. what a story. we have it. the white house sent a letter to media organizations and they want them, the media, to ramp up criticism of the republicans impeachment inquiry. tell you exactly what they want. 3,200 migrants arrived in new york city last week. mayor adams telling the white house, hey, stop blaming the city and do some self-reflecting.
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brian yennis outside of the roosevelt hotel in new york with the latest, next. ♪ teeth sensitivity is so common. it immediately feels like somebody's poking directly on the nerve. i recommend sensodyne. sensodyne toothpaste goes inside the tooth and calms the nerve down. and my patents say: “you know doc, it really works."
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stuart: we have new numbers on the southern border. which countries did most of the migrants come from? where did they go once they were in the united states? can you answer those questions, ashley? ashley: i will do my best, stu. data shows there was a late pandemic surge of new arrivals from india, venezuela, and
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china. more than 900,000 new migrants entered the u.s. between 2021 and 2022 and when you break it down, 130,000 came from india and that's a 5% increase year over year and about 122,000 came from venezuela, that's a 22% increase and about 86,000 migrants came from china, a 4% increase. so the question is where did they go? florida received the most migrant grants, 208,000 followed by georgia, texas, maryland and north carolina as you can see on the map. imgrans from india and china are much more likely to use legal visas while those from central and south america were more likely to cross the southern border and climb asylum that we've seen a lot of, stu. stuart: got it. i got some video for you. it shows migrants waiting to be processed inside a shutdown bar next to the roosevelt hotel in midtown manhattan, new york.
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brian yennis there. what are you seeing? reporter: stuart, good morning. we're seeing migrant families walk out of roosevelt hotel to bring children to school. the city said there's some 21,000 non-english speaking migrant children enrolled in the city's public schools and it's not just that this hotel is housing families and the roosevelt hotel serves as arrival center for 10,000 migrants arriving in this city everybody month and this video what we saw yesterday and some of the migrants are inside of that closed bar and next to the roosevelt hotel. the city's working on helping them apply for asylum so that they can be eligible for work permits, 180 days later. there's lines that form outside the roosevelt periodically and mayor's office says some 60,000 migrants are being held in shelters city wide and every time someone leave as shirt, they're seemingly replaced with new arriving asylum seekers,
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3200 last week alone and mayor eric adams says the biden adminadministration is not sendg must've money or doing enough for the work permitting process to be expedited and the white house says only congress can do that. the department of homeland security is reportedly pointing the finger at the city's response to the crisis calling it "not operationally sound and has no exit strategy". yesterday i asked the mayor about the fact the biden administration is seemingly blaming new york. >> if anyone is going to point fingers at this city that's done more than any single municipality, they need to do a self-reflection on what the national government has done. reporter: progressives are also criticizing mayor adams, stuart, representative alexandria ocasio-cortez and the entire new york democratic congressional delegation is coming here to the roosevelt hotel tomorrow to see the crisis firsthand. stuart.
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stuart: okay, it's about time aoc showed up. thank you, brian. we'll check that out tomorrow. all right. the governor of florida, ron desantis says he supports using deadly force at the border. watch this. >> would you send missiles into mexico? >> we would use all available -- the tactics i think are -- can be debated. the reality is they are overrunning our border, there's sex trafficking, there's human trafficking and bringing in massive quantities of drugs. our country is being invaded and hurt by what they're doing and the question is do we throw up our hands and say there's nothing we can do about it or does the leader take action? stuart: florida congressman carlos gimenez joining me now. you're a trump-appointed guy but do you agree with desantis on using the military on the board instruct her >> i do. i absolutely do. the mexican multi-ty national cartels are killing millions of americans every year mostly
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through fentanyl and involved in horrific acts of human trafficking, especially with children, and i think it's part of our duty in government is to protect the people and obviously we're not protecting the people. we're allowing these moment national cartels to operation freely so, yeah, they need to have force to stop them and if needs to be deadly force, so be it. stuart: we had a report about migrants in new york city being processed so they can work. do you app approve of having thm work? >> if they're going to be here they're gonna be producing or going to be recipients of aid of taxpayer money and i'd rather they produce if there are jobs available for them and appears there are jobs available for them. i just find it very interesting and kind of ironic that the democrat mayor of new york and it was thrust upon the city of
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new york by the democrat president and now the congressional delegation of new york is going to go over and tell the democrat mayor of new york what a bad job he's doing. it's really ironic and, you know, when mayor adams called somebody a madman for creating the situation, he had the madman right. it's president biden who's the madman for allowing what's happening at the southern border to continue and inundate not only new york city but cities across the united states with this flood of illegal immigration that frankly it's entirely falls obstructing cerumen his feet. stuart: congressman, the white house calling the impeachment inquiry into the president baseless. watch this, please. sorry, i don't have that tape available but, congressman, the new york times says trump called freedom caucus members and encouraged them to impeach biden. i don't if you're in the freedom caucus or not but did trump call you? >> no, he did not. all i have to learn -- i'm going
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to decode the biden administration for you, whatever they're saying, it's completely the opposite. there's a ton of evidence that we need to pursue on this inquiry, we owe it to the american people to follow, you know, the trail wherever it leads and if it leads to high crimes and misdemeanors then, yeah, we'll impeach the president of the united states. we're not there yet and we'll do it methodically and exactly the right way. when the white house is yelling and screaming about baseless -- how baseless it is, count on it. it's -- there's plenty of evidence there. just like when they tell you anything. we have the border under control. no, no, you don't. bidenomics is working. no, no, it really isn't. so in this case, yeah, we have plenty of evidence to follow up, and we will follow up and follow our constitutional duty. stuart: carlos gimenez, thank you for joining us, sir. >> always a pleasure. stuart: that you can't. tomorrow is friday, yes, of course it is. don't forget to send in your friday feedback and e-mail
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comments, questions and concerns, varneyviewers@fox.com. palm beach county, florida, wants to make it easier for first time home buyers. they're handing out up to $100,000 if income eligible applicants. an associate broker there will tell us all about this after this. ♪ ♪ shelves. shelves that know what taste buds want. shelves smart enough to see, sense, react, restock. ♪
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or moments that matter, but you can invest in them. at t. rowe price our strategic investing approach can help you build the future you imagine. t. rowe price, invest with confidence. stuart: back to the markets and look at dow go, up 220 points and nasdaq up 111 and s&p up 30 and that's a good rally. lou basenese with us for the hour and has stock picks and brings them along saying these will do well. lou specializes on focusing on early-stage technology companies. fist one is madrigal. what's that? >> i have to disclose i can't tell you what to buy but take a look at where these opportunities are. madrigal is a bio-tech company are a phase 3 drug first approved to treat fatty liver disease that impacted 1.4 billion globally. this is a drug that should be
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approved before march 14th of this coming year. fda between now and then could prove this drug could be a blockbuster and last time madrigal put out data was december of 2022 on this drug and the stock rose over 400% this. has pulled back and they'd dominate this market and probably about 30 other clinical stage trials for nash drugs and fatty liver drugs. this is closest and will be the first of its kind if they get approved. stuart: if they get approval. >> yennis, definitely specula ration. stuart: n-d-r-a life sciences. >> yeah, this fits into the madrigal story. when you have fatty liver disease and only way to know is liver biopsy. only the thought sounds painful. or mri. painful or expensive. ndra comes along and can detect what stage of fatty liver disease you're in. it's in for fda approval in the next six months and catalyst in the small cap and micro-cap side of the market, that have been beaten down and trading at 22-year lows relative to large
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cap. they have a catalyst coming shaking them out of the dull drums. sign me up for that. stuart: heart became. >> heart became, this is a common we banked back in february. heart attacks impact americans one every 40 seconds and this is fda approval and allows you to detect cardiac events in real tame and know when to go to the hospital. most widow makers happen because they don't go to the hospital within three hours of having an seventh a lot of people die unnecessarily. we used to have seven out of ten people with a heart attack would die and now three out of ten if you get to the hospital within three hours and this is a device letting people know when it's time and serious. stuart: i like your thinking, basenese. let's get a look at amazon because they sound like a really good employer and they're looking to create affordable housing. tell me about this, ashley. ashley: yeah, it's a good story. the company's putting up
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$40 million through nonprofit partners to indeed create affordable housing and the home ownership program will back projects near the company's two headquarter's sites in steel l and arlington, virginia, and in nashville serving adds a hub for amazon's logistics group and the national housing trust, a nonprofit is going to use amazon's cash to require or build affordable homes with partnership and local organizations and amazon committed back in 2021 to invest in $2 billion in below market loans and grants to support affordable apartment units and now the company says it wants more people to be able to attain the american dream of home ownership. god for them. that's what i say. stuart: yeah, lou, didn't they help with student loans for their employer s? >> they did and had a $2 billion real estate initiative and 40 million, nice gesture and drop in the bucket. it'll buy the average home price $146,000 and buys 41.7 million
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homes. >> stuart: it's good pr for amazon. >> great pr. stuart: next case. ashley, this is for you. ashley: yes. stuart: lionel messi getting comfortable in florida. he bought a massive water front estate in fort lauder tell. tell us how much he paid. paid. ashley: just a mere 10.8 million and probably a week's salary. the soccer star bought that compound in ft. lauderdale part of a private naked known as bay calny and sits on a cul-de-sac with 170 feet of water frontage and 10,400 square feet and 8 bedrooms, not enough for a whole team, a fitness room, spa, entertainment lawn,ous space, two docks for water craft of any kind and a heated pool and water facing patio. you know what, it's good to be king. stu. stuart: ain't it just. thanks, ash. palm beach county says it will provide up to $100,000 for
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eligible first time home buyeer. nile lungren is an associate broke fertilizer that area. do they need people to live in palm beach county? >> absolutely. palm beach is getting priced out for work force housing folks and incretory is 25% below what it was last year and the median housing prices in this area are up 10% so any inseventh, 100,000 for first time home buyer is going to be tremendous for that market, specifically because they need work force. they can't all be luxury housing in palm beach and they need people to work there. stuart: could it go bad in the sense that you're putting people into homes which they might not be able to afford without your $100,000 for the taxpayer. >> it could go downhill but only 50 folks that can qualify and out of the 50, i hope they pick the right ones. stuart: what do you mean the right one s?
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>> i don't know what the qualifications are specifically, but $100,000 will help out the right people to make palm beach affordable for everybody. stuart: you want to talk about palm beach. if anything goes on sale, does it sell immediately? >> yes, it does. like i said earlier, there's no inventory and another incentive to help folks who are able to go in and then purchase it. if it sells, if it puts on the market, it'll sell quickly. stuart: your problem as a real estate broker is there's nothing to sell. >> i know, no inventory and rates are high so make it is a bit more problematic. stuart: is there virtually nothing for sale in palm beach? >> there are things for sale, absolutely, but they're very pricey and this $100,000 incentive is a game changer. stuart: have you ever sold a $100 million property in palm beach county? >> i have not. biggest one in south florida i sold was $34 million. close. stuart: not bad. no wonder you brought an group
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with you. >> exactly. thatthank you, stu. stuart: now this, we are not alone. that's what one ufo expert told a congressional hearing in mexico. they claim they uncovered alien corpses, see them on the screen? looks like et for me. we have the full story guaranteed. aaron rodgers is heart broken and propses to rise -- promises to rise g yet again. he's 39 and has been seriously injured. will he make a comeback? i'll ask clay travis, he's next. ♪
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at pnc bank, you can find us in big cities and small towns across the us, where our focus is to always support the people who live and work there. because you call these communities home, and we do too. pnc bank. stuart: on the markets, we still see plenty of green. look at that. the dow is at 34,800 with a gain of 200 points. nasdaq just shy of 100 point
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gain and s&p up 27. it's been that way for most of the session, thoroughly in the green. now this, vivek ramaswamy reversing himself. he is going to join tiktok. he says boxer jake paul changed his mind, but he still believes children under 16 should not be on the platform. clay travis with me now. clay, this is a huge reversal and think this flip-flop hurts him politically? >> first of all, i think one of the big problems we have in politics today is the idea that once you give an opinion, you have to stay to that opinion forever no matter what might change or what evolution in your thought process might occur. i always have found the idea that we're going to be able to ban tiktok to be very difficult to contemplate. i think the idea that is more compelling to me is we shouldn't allow a chinese-based corporation to have free reign
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over the hearts and may understand of america's young people and give you an easy example. people sometimes forget this, you can't get ongoing until china; right? on google in china. you can't use twitter. can't use the website they run and fox owns outkick. they don't like some of the things we say there. if china won't allow many of the big tech companies in america to compete for their markets, why should we allow their big tech companies to compete for ours? i think the solution for tiktok is to remove the chinese communist party involvement in the company and in any way and becomes an easier perspective to say that i don't have any problem at all with its wide contribution across the united states. stuart: that's an interesting compromise, clay. all right. aaron rodgers breaking silence on season-ending injury. he's saying i'm completely heart broken moving through all the emotions and deeply touched and humbled by the support and love.
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keep me in your thoughts and prayers as i begin the healing prayers today. the night is darkest rights before the dawn and i shall rise yet again. all right, clay, he's 39 years old and has been seriously injured. can he ever really make a full comeback in your opinion? >> i think he can. the challenge is he's 39 now and will be 40 next year. what is the overrule recovery process for the achilles tendon and to what extent does it make him vulnerable to injure himself other ways. same area up in new york, he's not on the team anymore, but remember kevin durant tore his achilles tendon and set out for a season with the brooklyn nets. came back and has reemerged as one of the best basketball players in the world coming off of that and basketball obviously requires more cutting and pushoff and everything else, fast twitch muscle fiber than football, particularly at the quarterback position.
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i think aaron rodgers can come back. he doesn't want to go out in this method. whether there's a rise back to mvp caliber level and it'll be a real challenge and was going to be a challenge with a brand new team regardless. stuart: think artificial turf has anything to do with this? >> every player if you talk to them would rather be on grass. i think it certainly does not help if you had the choice of being on grass or artificial turf, i would want every game played on grass if i had the ability to wave a magic wand and make it happen. stuart: one more, it's a real doozie, mexico congress held a hearing on ufos. they claim to have the remains of aliens on your screen right now. do you take this seriously because u you know, we have a official ufo report coming out of washington today. you take that -- looks like et to me. take that seriously? >> well, i don't know how seriously i take it but if you told me the u.s. congress would
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have alien skeletons on the floor and they were not actually elected representatives i would be very happy with that being the choice that we're in. look, this is crazy. what i think in general, what are the odds that aliens would look like what we thought aliens would look like when we made et and made yoda? when i look at these, i think, oh, they kind of look like et and yoda. i'm not an expert on certainly the way that life evolves, but it seems very unlikely to me that pop culture in the 1980s in the united states would somehow nail what future alien life for the purposes are going to look like and people say it looks like et or oh, yeah, he looks like yoda. that's my biggest take away but if you told me right now, hey, they're going to bring alien skeletons on to the united states senate floor or the united states state house of representatives floor, i would say, at least that's more
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entertaining than a lot of what they do on a data day basis. i couldn't stopwatching in video. stuart: clay, cspan's ratings would go through the rough if alien skeletons were on the floor of the house. >> it wouldn't hurt. wouldn't hurt for sure. stuart: clay travis, you're all right, see you again, sir. lou basenese sticking it out for the entire hour. >> can i weigh in on turf versus grass instead? stuart: of course. ufos. os >> clay said we should have our own right to change the opinions. if there's cribbled evidence, i don't believe we're getting it from the mexican government, but i reserving the right to change my mind. stuart: fair answer. okay. all right, let's get to the dow 30. the sense of the market, it's that time. here we go. i sense there's a lot of buying, 27 winners and three losers and the dow is up 72 -- 0.72%, 248 points and looking at 34,000,
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800 on these here dow jones average. msnbc joe scarborough -- joe or chuck? >> joe. stuart: joe scarborough, it's joe, sorry. he's on at the same time as me so i don't listen. joe scarborough revealed what democrats are saying about president biden's age behind closed doors. watch this. >> people say, man, he's too old to run, isn't he? democrats off the air say joe biden is to old, why is he running. on the air, they won't say that. stuart: well, well, well, is the media turning against biden. brent bosel studies these things and he's next. ♪
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stuart: democrats privately think biden is too old to run in 2024. roll tape. >> everybody we talk to, every political discussion all it
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talks about is trump and copping to joe biden people say, man, he's too hold to run, isn't he? he's not really going to run. deputies off the air will say joe biden's too old. why is he running? on the air, they won't say that. stuart: that's true. scarborough's not alone by the way. david ignasious in the washington post, russ in the new york times both say biden's too old to run again. brent boselle studies these and he's joining me now. is the media turning against joe biden because they know he can't win? >> first of all, it's been many, many years since i've been able to say joe scarborough was right and he's absolutely right about this one. the cnn to its credit took a poll and found that 73% of americans believe that joe biden is too old. the evidence is there for anyone
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to see. of course, everyone is talking about it. any speech he gives, he stumbles and fumbles and false asleep and speaks incoherently and lies about nothing in particular and turns and doesn't know where he's going and it's pretty pathetic and everybody knows, it's going to get nothing but worse every day from here on out. so, yeah, they're talking about it, but joe scarborough is absolutely right. there hasn't been a single network news story about this yet. stuart: yeah, i saw that. i saw that. but maybe soon they will because it's becoming more and more and more obvious. >> and this is what's happening, this is what's happening, everyone's conversing about this on social media. if you wash a network news story about joe biden doing something else, you see with your own eyes and it's inescapable at this point and now it's entering into conversations and mitt romney says he's retiring and he says both the candidates are too hold and they bring it up at that point. but they still have yet to say a
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story that omg, the leader of the free world, the man with his thumb on the nuclear trigger is -- has dementia. stuart: did you see this, i'm sure you did. the white house sent a letter to media organizations demanding scrutiny of republicans for the impeachment inquiry. that is truly rich, isn't it? >> it's a new one. it's a new one. look, the old play book with the democratic party, bill clinton did it, hillary clinton did it, barack obama did it. any time there was any suggestion that the media might get negative, they jump all over the media and castigated them and the media would back off. this is new, they're not castigating the immediate i can't recollects they're interacting the media. this is a memo as to your staff, you should do this and need to do the other. when people say the media are nothing but an arm of the democratic party, there you government here it is. a momentum mo to the media telling them what to do. stuart: priceless, isn't it,
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brent? priceless. hope you can come back soon, brent. good to see you. thanks a lot. >> thank you, stuart. stuart: look at time, almost 11:55 and that means it's time for the trivia question this week. what was the name of new york city before the english took control? new netherlands, new holland, new rotter dame, or new rotterdame? we'll have the answer for you when we come back?stantly, .. all right here. free. and fast. see all you can do with the free experian app. download it now.
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stuart: what was the name of new york city before the english took control? you were born and raised in england. do you know the answer? ashley: i don't know the answer. new amsterdam. stuart: lu stuck it out for the hour with me. bring him into the game. >> i don't want to be the trump today. i will go with new amsterdam. stuart: that's what i'm going with. yes. new amsterdam. the capital of the french colony new neverland from 1624
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until those english took control in 1664. don't forget to sending your friday feedback, e-mail us your questions, comments and concerns, varneyfewer'sfox.com. the rally holds, dow industrials are 250, nasdaq up 113. arm holdings, not over for trading just yet, indicated prices been moving around. it was 58. now it is 56. let's see what happens when we take it to the market. time is up for me, but as i usually say, coast to coast starts now. neil: comparing first-rate, the president trying to get ahead of the fallout. we get to where folks stand, united auto workers union and the big three automakers, time is wasting

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