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tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  September 21, 2023 12:00pm-1:00pm EDT

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stuart: there they are on the math. the little states bunched together gives you the high number. how many states are west of the mississippi? that's the small number. i want to say thanks for joining us. congratulations on your company. >> a great team network, very visionary founder. stuart: time to send your friday feedback. comments, questions, concerns, varneyviewers@fox.com. the yield on the 10-year treasury, this is the cause of much of the trouble of wall street today, it is up 4. 47%. just a few days ago, 4. 3%. when it goes up stocks go down. that's it for "varney and company". coast-to-coast starts now. neil: the united auto workers
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strike is spreading but take heart, the hollywood writers strike, latest news encouraging. you would think investors would be celebrating a possible writers strike deal on news that oracle is sweeping up the software firm in a $28 million deal with nokia. if you are looking for a huge rally, today, so far, nothing. we think we know why. this otto strike is nasty and getting nastier and spreading impact on the entire us economy getting scarier. that's not to say we are headed for a crash. players on both sides sounding like they have one on autopilot. welcome, everybody. happy lunchtime, divesting a lot of news simultaneously on strikes that can be settled and others far from that. first the latest from striking
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autoworkers, likely a lot more striking autoworkers. jeff flock with all of that in wayne, michigan. how are things looking? >> i wish i could tell you know but i don't see any reason to say there will be anything but additional strikes tomorrow. look at the picket lines. the solidarity remains strong. i have other bad news for you as well. canada, the agreement, there's speculation because of the militancy of the folks you see here, south of the border, rank and file will put that down. on the positive side, still lantos has a new offer on the table. apple falling out of this, fairfax in kansas laid off 2000 workers because of a strike,
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2000 gm workers on layoff as opposed to a strike, 600 from ford on layoff and 68 at so lantos and folks in the supplier chain are laid off. solidarity pretty strong out here on the line. everybody, not just current workers but retirees as well. >> none of our retirees have that. only 7 years in but one day i'm going to be a retiree. why wouldn't you look out for legacy work, to help build the company. they want more money, they should be comfortable. one day that will be me. let's take care of everybody. >> reporter: i leave you with dueling op-eds on the part of general motors, mike booth, uaw vice president. they turn it back-and-forth in
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discussion about this, this was the last point, gm making the point that history shows nobody wins in a strike, the uaw's point the truth is almost everything the labor movement has achieved, was because of people standing on picket lines. i will be back here in 24 hour still let you know if there are four people walking picket lines elsewhere around the country. jack: q, jeff flock following all that. this is a sign of the story you are not hearing much discussion about, the price of automobiles going up and maybe up sharply. time is in new jersey, multiple dealerships, joins us from new jersey. what are card shoppers in for? >> if this continues, when the strike first started, it
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doesn't look that way. the uaw is digging in their heels, 5% to 10%, depending how long the strike lasts, consumers taking it on the head, the biggest risk is the production of vehicles is an issue but the bigger risk is the supply-chain. if dealerships can't get the parts and consumers can't fix the cars they are driving today they don't have to purchase a new car or fix the one they are driving but if they can't, the manufacturers on strike and supply-chain is shut down it is going to cause a major transportation issue and it will be a ripple effect in the economy. i have read everything unions are asking for. i read it all. what is missing and what they are asking for is they are concerned about the ev mandate.
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the biden administration with this ev mandate, the consumer has not adapted to but if the uaw and workers concerned about it why aren't they asking for more training? neil: not a bad thought. outside one of your dealerships, how would lexus cars be affected by a strike against an american company? >> there are parts made by the uaw which they control. those going to lexus vehicles. just like the chip shortage which we haven't recovered on yet, if you are missing just one part you can't finish the car, that's a problem. talking about that, shippers, ports, truckers, this is a big issue. neil: if you are not market for a new car, better to find one now than later, the price could
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go up along with the strike going on. >> that is correct. prices are going up already. it is supply and demand as supply shrinks and gets evaporated. they will continue to push prices up, used car prices are moving up but the problem even with used cars, if you can't get them off the road because parts are not available consumers will be crippled and the consumer is getting over being crippled along with the stock market, interest rates, consumer is taking it on the head. neil: thanks for bringing us up to date. that includes foreign carmakers including alexis but affected by the boomerang on prices. in the meantime we told you on the outside of the broadcast how not all strikes are going south. we are getting word the writers strike, writers and producers strike making progress because
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they are talking to each other. union representatives meeting with all the big studio heads including disney ceo bob auger and nbc universal studio chair langley and a host of others. at least they are breaking bread and comparing notes and the talk is they are addressing streaming revenues and sharing 40% high on that. we don't know any details. we have general bullet points the deal could be in the offing. no idea how this would affect what's happening with the actors strike but some since trauma sing that is promising develop. very little time, let's get the read from new york state senator, will mcgurn, wall street and its oriole member of bush 43 speechwriter, ending with you, on the republican side or the democratic side
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this is an upheaval time for both parties to address. we do know donald trump instead of going to the debate next week will be addressing autoworkers, he is seizing on restless trooper members in the united auto workers union, not so much of the union bosses. what do you make of that? >> that was the same. i was just reading a speech by ronald reagan two weeks before the election, pointed out the uaw president had warned her members voted their pocketbooks, as encouraged, they would probably vote for reagan. i think donald trump has a message here. what we are seeing is a conflict between progressive gold, pro union and transition to electric vehicles.
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it is causing these problems. i don't think a strike will settle them. they are fundamentally at odds. there won't be as many workers needed for the evs and subsidies are all going to underwrite the competition that now exists. neil: sorting out the day, one of the issues that is come up, president biden's fault, don't want to play that game but i want your sense how this factors out. talking to car dealers, it's going to mean higher prices. inflation seems to be a sticking point. it has this residual effect. what do you make of it? >> we have to pay true cost and true cost factored into driving these automobiles is american labor and making sure they have
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quality-of-life that we want to have and donald trump traveling to the picket lines, i commend him for standing with striking workers but it will remind people how his record on labor has been disastrous for middle income, for union households. packing the labor relations board, anti-labor, packing courts with the judges that made anti-labor decisions and a political stunt. and in america, what president biden has been talking about. neil: the government forcing the hand of the rollout sooner rather than later. >> not forcing people to purchase and ev.
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evs that are made in the united states. neil: california, new jersey, they don't want more. >> some states are being more aggressive but talking about the biden administration. he's not done that. what he has focused on is how do we make sure these jobs stay in america? neil: maybe that pans out, striking workers want more money and understandably no one can begrudge them that. the prophets they want to tap into, the result of gas power revenues. nothing to do on the ev side. therein lies the rub. >> president biden, the billions he is spending on the
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transition, a lot of the investment isn't going to write to work states. the question is not really american jobs. the uaw's strongest, those cars depend on fossil fuels. the war on fossil fuels is hurting workers, hurting citizens, the cost of evs, the only reason they can the seller dollars a huge subsidy, they don't want is them and afraid of the performance. neil: i think they have a future. don't know if it is immediate. and they administrate the anger on the part of union members here. a lot of them do not want the
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head of the union, the it ministration having representatives, the leadership is running to donald trump but there is very little love lost there. >> they appreciate people with their -- they want to negotiate directly with auto manufacturers. they need politicians. lauren: 1 what you wanted administration with you and your interests, putting thumb on the scale here. and that tells you something. >> and president biden has prioritized union labor.
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that's reminding us, they are pulling favorably higher than they've done in decades. that will continue to grow for good paying jobs in the country. and and at this time, not seeing real progress but certainly sean fain said substantial progress. they widened this out. more after this. ♪ ♪ every day, businesses everywhere are asking: is it possible?
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>> i was born in venezuela but had to wait 12 years to become an american citizen. i lived my early childhood in brazil and we moved because of the rise of socialism in the united states and we were naturalized as american citizens in 2019. giving out visas to all the venezuelans who seek asylum is not the way to go. neil: it took him 12 years to become an american citizen. ultimately working visa, to be in this country, become a citizen of this country.
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70,000 migrants, more like 12 minutes, and they are calling it work permits, john work doesn't draw the distinction. it' s a benefit provided to a group of people who came here illegally. john is the blue line owner and not much more. whatever you want, it's a green light and a quick pass over a procedure that served this country very well with over a million becoming citizens each year, every year. under democratic republican presidents alike. this is short-circuiting that. >> absolutely is. look at new york, begging for mercy. telling everyone please no more. this is going to create a magnet.
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they had a date of july 30th or the 20 third. anything before that. those people in venezuela don't understand that. they are giving work visas out to venezuelans. everyone will be from venezuela. i was on the border in brownsville, texas. collected 21,240 pounds of garbage from the southern border, half a mile stretch, people screaming at us on the other side of the rio to make sure we clean up their trash. it's a sad state of affairs on the southern border, we have to get under control. there is a thousand on the other side of the rio grande in brownsville. those people are waiting to cross. that could happen anytime. you see what's going on in eagle pass, just a disaster. neil: with the best of intentions you are cleaning the path for them. >> i do but can't have the attitude as americans, have to
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stand up for what is right and have to take action. cleaning up 10.6 tons of garbage, in a few months, covered in garbage again and make sure i will have to go back and clean up again. i'm not going to stop doing that because american citizens and border towns are forgotten. neil: i guess what i am wondering to this gentleman after point going into the show, he did everything by the book. a million here. i want to stress that. we've become american citizens. no other country on earth brings in immigrants, legal immigrants the way this country does year in and year out. yet that is being stomped on quite literally. you are dealing with the stomping part and i would imagine, when people's intrinsic good feelings and goodwill will encourage more of that. >> is brutal if people do it the right way, that's the american way to do it, by the
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book, follow the laws that are there, do the paperwork, get an attorney if you have to but figure out a way to get here legally. you see in eagle pass a juxtaposition with people legally crossing on port of entry and thousands of illegals crossing right beneath them across the rio grande and getting into the country faster and healthcare and benefits as soon as they cross. it's disheartening for all the people doing it the right way and this is not what america is about. here we do things the right way. neil: you never know, what is happening right now, thank you very much, keep me posted on these developments. i always wonder what the lieutenant governor of virginia thinks of this when you think of the bestseller she dedicated and explained how her family and what they did, sacrifice to succeed here and an iconic player on both sides. what she makes of this, how
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neil: talking about people trying to cut in line to get into this country, 400,000 venezuelan migrants could be getting more visas, work permits to get a permit in place. the virginia lieutenant governor has a very inspiring bestseller, defending the american dream which he talks about this stuff and what they learned and what she has learned in the background to make it happen. good to have you.
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in your background, the push to circumvent that. >> that is what it is. it is a circumvention of the us laws. you can break the law before you get here. you have to stay in line, we have to know who's coming into the country. our borders have to be secure because we have to have an idea who is coming into the country, what are their intentions and the citizens of not just the texas border. we've become border states. the entire usb safe. can't be the president has security around him. what about the rest of us, don't begrudge the president security, he deserves that but there are the rest of us and we deserve to be secure. neil: what speaks to your book and what you have been emphasizing is the notion, lost sight of that. we blur immigrants with illegal
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immigrants, and work permits where visas almost guarantee a permanent place, i encourage others to do the same. what do you think of it? >> it is an absolute that it will encourage others to do the same. if the president of the united states as we saw recently, the governor of texas saying the biden administration personnel have cut the wires so immigrants can come across, that an issue. that means the president is working at cross purposes of what the people of the united states want which is to be secure in our own houses. if the immigrants know that they can come, get a phone and
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get work permits, schooling for their children and additional benefits, food benefits etc. . why would they come? we lay out the welcome mat and the president, whoever is working with him, are being disingenuous. they know how to make sure borders are secure but they are not doing it. this is why elections are important. you've got to have security and you've got to be safe. neil: there are a lot of developments in virginia going on of late including the governor, who is not going to jump into the presidential waters. do you know that for a fact? >> what all of us are focused on for 2023. we've got to win the senate back, the president of the senate, i would love to see
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more republican faces smiling back up at me. we got to keep the house. otherwise none of this means anything and it will mean the governor of virginia only has four years, it will mean if he we don't when the senate he will have spent all four years of his term in a hostile senate and you can kiss every good common sense idea we have goodbye because they will be emboldened to. we got to win. can't have gavin newsom dictating our electrical policy or any policy for that matter. we've got to make sure that our children are safe at our schools and that they are learning something. imagines that. neil: in an effort to get all the levers of government under republican control is a focus, i've heard you comment on this, susanna gibson, the online 6 video, running for the house of delegates here, she's not quitting the race. he has a good chance of winning the race.
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you were concerned about her behavior to put it mildly. we need leaders who understand that our children are watching. that message did not get through to her campaign or those supposedly still supporting. >> there was a time we celebrated heroes in political office. that's what we need to get back to. we here in virginia are hoping that voters make the right choice. we've got a great client, a great candidate in mr. owen, he will help to secure the majority we need so we can continue to run with a common sense ideas that caused us to win here in virginia not just two years ago. that's why we are pushing seek your your vote virginia.com. we can't go into this election
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which on friday, that's when early voting starts for an election in november. we've got to get our absentee ballots, make sure if you don't believe in that -- neil: they haven't pushed her out of the race. don't need to belabor the point but they haven't pushed her out, she has a good shot of winning thanks to that support within the party. were you surprised? >> democrats have to make a decision on the kind of candidates they are pushing forward. that's their decision. we are making a different choice. we have put forward a man we believe in and that we know understand the economics we are dealing with, that our children need to have a good education so they can have a future that understands we can't drive
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businesses away from virginia and want them to stop here. we need all hands on deck. the commonsense policies will do it. neil: lieutenant governor, good seeing you and your book as well and continued success, how sweet it is defending the american dream, raising concerns here. stick around, a lot more coming up including the battle ukrainian president zelenskyy is facing not with the russians but on capitol hill where a lot of lawmakers are saying no more good money after that. after this. ♪
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>> we have five people that don't want to a vote to allow us to bring the bills up. how did they complain you haven't brought all the bills up? it is frustrating. this is a new concept, they want to burn the place down. that doesn't work. neil: they avoid a shut down, that gets shot down. their efforts to keep the government lights on and get shot down, republican congressman joins us from the beautiful state of montana, sits on the freedom caucus, sits on the committee of natural resources. we go from that. good to have you here. this is looking dicey. it sounds like just keeping republicans to get her, you were losing at least five, maybe seven and they are not changing their minds. where is this going? >> this boils down to proper
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planning or in this case poor planning by leadership. we knew we were going to develop those 12 appropriation bills. speaker mccarthy knew he had to develop those bills, and work with him to accomplish that. it has been put on ice. in order for us to fund government responsibly, to do it transparently and a fashion that we can begin to bend the cost curve down so we are not going $3 trillion in debt each year to add to the national debt. that's what we were going to do. so far speaker mccarthy has been unwilling to help us do that. leadership focused all their attention on trying to push through the resolution. adam: you blame him for this
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right now. >> continuing resolution is nothing more than a continuation of nancy pelosi's spending levels and president biden's policies. they've been very clear, this has been shared with them with many members that we are not going to sign off on a continuing resolution. we want to utilize appropriations process. neil: let me cut to the chase. do you think he should remain speaker? >> that yet to be seen. what we are going to find out is if he goes to the democrats again to generate support for an agenda instead of trying to earn it with republicans than his position is going to be in jeopardy. jack: like he's going to do that. if he doesn't, that could amount to one or more members saying you are out as speaker. >> we all know it would be
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easier to buy votes from democrats than to earn them from republicans. to get more democrats on the vote. as he did with the debt ceiling package. his speakership position would be in jeopardy. neil: i spoke to your colleague, congressman lawler, and he blames you guys, he says you are nuts. respond to this. >> handful of my colleagues refused to take yes for an answer, refused to define a win and they refused to work as a team. i'm not going to allow them to shut down the government at the expense of the american people so they can raise money online in $5 increments acting like they are doing something and sticking it to the administration when all they are doing is screwing their colleagues and the majority.
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>> tensions are high and emotions run high. i don't take offense. people get upset and vent it in different ways. you are a financial expert. you are a financial expert. we collect $5 trillion in revenue this year. they want to spend $7 trillion. that is a $2 trillion bear that we have to fill in not including $1 trillion of the $5 trillion that needs to be utilized to pay the interest on the national debt we currently have. those projections. neil: you are quite right to raise that and we spend a lot more than we taken. is this the way to do it? >> we have to utilize the appropriation bills to develop spending levels to change the trajectory. if my colleagues are not willing to do that, in the next five years you are looking at $50 trillion national debt.
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it will consume 50% of the revenue we generate annually. the discussions we are having now will seem like party talk compared to what will take place and that's not in 20 or 30 years. i'm talking in 5 years, this will make greece and the problems they had look nice. it will be a financial disaster. neil: thanks for stating your case as forcefully as you have. we will see how this all sorts out. charlie gasparino is here. i was flattered. you had president zelenskyy looking for money. a lot of these guys, this issue of funding. charles: that is the government side. last night was the private sector side. on foxbusiness.com, let me see if we can come up with the numbers here, met with 10 people, 8 of them worth a total
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of $180 billion altogether. neil: financial experts. >> michael bloomberg was there, takes up about 80 billion of that. with 34 billion. neil: zelenskyy wants money. >> first he had a meeting with larry fink of black rock. star-studded cast, chef josé andre gives a lot of money to humanitarian aid. amazing group. charles: we have some video of him working, pretty amazing. corruption.
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he is coming in and made it. who is going to put money into a country? he was a rock star. he talked the right talk about russia but the prime minister of ukraine, his position, he doesn't run the country. he's almost a figure head. he doesn't have the power to fire people in government, he has done so but apparently it is a division of power. i don't quite understand it. people want to put money into this. ukraine has an amazingly educated population. the western part close to russia is problematic but if you have a war going on you're not getting your hands around corruption and the feeling
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coming out of that. neil: ironically, when zelenskyy fires defense ministers and deputy ministers and tries to rule that cloud, there is more corruption going on. charles: he said the right things, started out saying i want this to be good for you, for us, i get capitalism but you got to deliver. i remember seeing something like this, that many billionaires. neil: do they commit funds or not? good luck trying to become a financial expert. charles: still working my way up. does he have a cpa? neil: now you are tedious. charlie gasparino. i call him a financial expert. getting ready for a big show.
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12 minutes away. >> a special edition of "the big money show," education in america. think about the issues. new standards, a big election issue. republican presidential candidate vivek ramaswamy, senator tim scott and betsy devos and the amazing audience with us but first more coast-to-coast after this. ♪ new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do.
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>> weaker than expected economic news, and bob doll. what do you think is going on and why do you sell it? >> >> the full effects, the soft landing is not our baseline scenario.
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the market is saying we need to take a little pause here in terms of how long the fight against inflation is going to take and how damaging it is going to be. neil: last time we chatted, these teaser rates from money market accounts, just crossed 4%. that's guaranteed money, safe money, dull money but not a bad return. competition for stocks. is that coming into play? >> without question whether you have an all bond portfolio, cash, front end, if you are in equities, 5% in your portfolio. what did we have for returns like this? lots of people saying i will take the five and be a happy camper.
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neil: what about the environment where they had fits and starts, but the fact of the matter is they are boiling up again. those willing to chance the markets, not saying deals are back in town here. some of the buyers for them are. what do you make of that? >> that's a good sign. what we will see, the first 24 hours, how long the new window is open, can you deliver the earnings? what is your valuation, i don't think we are back into the roses. neil: the uaw strike, it is rather remarkable for a union to turn up its nose at a 20%
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pay hike offer. i don't know where this goes but i do know with some of the other deals we've seen with ups, however justified, we always want workers to do better but this will pass along the mainstream. what happens? >> i think that is part of the question. we see those wage settlements. our they had that big that big? that's emboldening the uaw and the ripple effects to other businesses and workers that are not in unions continues and begins to say do we have a wage price or wage spiral that is a higher number of 6 to 12 months ago. neil: excellent read on all things financial.
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♪ i have type 2 diabetes, but i manage it well. ♪ ♪ jardiance ♪ ♪ it's a little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ ♪ i take once-daily jardiance, ♪ ♪ at each day's staaart. ♪ ♪ as time went on it was easy to seee. ♪ ♪ i'm lowering my a1c. ♪ jardiance works 24/7 in your body to flush out some sugar! and for adults with type 2 diabetes and known heart disease, jardiance can lower the risk of cardiovascular death, too. jardiance may cause serious side effects including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, that can lead to sudden worsening of kidney function,
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and genital yeast or urinary tract infections. a rare, life-threatening bacterial infection in the skin of the perineum could occur. stop taking jardiance and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of this infection, ketoacidosis, or an allergic reaction, and don't take it if you're on dialysis. taking jardiance with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. ♪ jardiance is really swell, ♪ ♪ the little pill with a big story to tell. ♪ i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so glad we did this. i'm so... ...glad we did this. [kid plays drums] life is for living. let's partner for all of it. i'm so glad we did this. edward jones
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the first time you connected your godaddy website and your store was also the first time you realized... well, we can do anything. cheesecake cookies? the chookie! manage all your sales from one place with a partner that always puts you first. (we did it) start today at godaddy.com neil: if you are feeling down you still want to eat and some people want to eat a lot more. olive garden, which includes capital grille, doing better than expected but under pressure, the fear that it can't last. big-money now moments away

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