Skip to main content

tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  October 12, 2023 10:00am-11:00am EDT

10:00 am
10:01 am
>> reporter: the message i bring to israel is this. you may be strong enough on your own to defend your self but as long as america exists, you will never have too. we will always be there, by your side. anyone who wants peace and justice must condemn hamas's rain of terror. israel has the right, indeed the obligation to defend itself and to ensure that this never happens. stuart: antony blinken just spoken tel aviv as the war enters day 6. blinken reformed us support for israel while condemning hamas as you just saw. the gaza strip smoldering as israeli forces prepare for what is expected to be a perilous ground invasion. 25 americans are confirmed dead. israeli death toll topping 1200. those numbers are likely to rise.
10:02 am
to the money this morning, a mixed market as we speak, all the way down now and i will tell you why, treasury yields are moving up and stocks moving down, the 10 year treasury all the way back up to 4. 65%, the 2 years back well above the 5% level, 508 right there. the price of oil this morning not doing that much despite the activity in the middle east, $84 a barrel. that's where markets are thursday morning at now this. it's worth remembering how donald trump dealt with iran in stark contrast with president biden, trump told them a lots if they kill the single american the us would respond with military power. it was a redline, don't cross it. at first, the mullahs stayed within the redline. trump was restrained but than to run miscalculated.
10:03 am
uranian proxies killed an american military contractor, trump promptly attacked has blood targets and drone the iran terror chief, killed him, then warned the irradiance that if they retaliated, quote, iran itself would be hit very hard and very fast. iran backed off and trump then brokered a peace agreement between israel and four arab nations. biden squandered the stability trump had bought in the mideast, tried to reopen a nuclear deal, relaxed sanctions in allowing iran to produce and sell 3 million barrels of oil a day, that he paid for billion dollars apiece for the release of hostages, he showed appeasement and weakness. and now iran is behind the terror attack on israel. americans have been killed, americans have been taken hostage. this is what trump said a few days ago, quote, the horrible attack on israel much like the attack on ukraine would never have happened if i were
10:04 am
president, 0 chance. biden has a point, doesn't he? is biden's weakness to blame for this attack? >> yes it is. the appeasement and weakness, donald trump was right when he was president, the world was a safer place because people believed he would use the military to protect the united states and its interest, peace through strength is what ronald reagan taught us and when put into action, somebody as strong as donald trump to enforce it, the world is a safer place. stuart: would this have happened if trump were still in office? >> i don't think so. we wouldn't be in this untenable situation and you know he would be taking the fight to the enemy, but i don't think it would. stuart: i will move onto another subject of equal importance in domestic politics. steve scully's -- steve kash pramod patel needs 270 votes to formalize his speakership.
10:05 am
at this point doesn't look like he's got the 217 votes he needs? >> no, he doesn't. probably some 20 votes shy. there are people still concerned about his health, they are concerned about his staff. if you are like his health isn't well, they are going to be dealing with staff running the place. i hate the process. i think it should be more open and transparent. i think there should be an open debate, may be a televised debate on fox business for people who want to become the speaker. i believe when they actually vote that if your person loses you should get behind the other person, go to the floor and vote but that's not the way they are doing it. the whole process of the selection of the speaker is very opaque, very much behind closed doors and we know more how to elect the next miss america than the next speaker of the house. stuart: makes the republican party look bad.
10:06 am
you have to think the elections next year, will this come home to chickens coming home to roost next november? >> once the selection of the speakers there, 3 or 4 weeks people most people will forget about it. people in the beltway, you and me and others will remember it but by and large people don't remember these things. it's not about inflation, not about the price of gas, not about safety and security of america, immigration, those are things people care about, not whose the speaker. stuart: are you glad you got out of politics? >> i'm not missing it right now i can tell you that. stuart: why am i not surprised. you are all right, thanks for joining us, see you again soon. we've got a downside move, dollars off 130 points, nasdaq eking out a 10 decade game. adam johnson with us, let's deal with the consumer price index up 3.
10:07 am
7% for% for the last 12 months, seems kind of neutral to me. >> i wish it were neutral. untroubled by it. while it is way down from high because the high is 9% we still have a housing problem. home prices are up 7.2% year-over-year. stuart: is that part of it? >> housing is one third of the cpi. if you have one third of the cpi, housing, housing touches all of us, that is troubling because i don't know how we correct that. if mortgages are corrected, sticky, still a foreign in our side. it is holding the market in check. i am thrilled as a stock investor, a lot of growth stocks depend on going to the market for r high rates,
10:08 am
thrilled that the market is down 100 points but i am also surprised it is down 100 points. stuart: in a matter of days, estimates of what they are going to report our rising. is that a positive sign? >> that the positive sign. the reason i am long stocks. inflation is troubling, higher rates is troubling. we have a powerful employment picture. the most number of people ever, the highest gross adjusted income ever spending the most amount of money ever and because two thirds of gdp, the economy is consumer spending, that ultimate good for corporate america and earnings and that is why after 3 quarters of falling earnings we are going to see a pivot and that might be why markets are hanging in despite higher inflation of his. stuart: will we go up to looking around?
10:09 am
and uptrend? >> i think so. it is not linear. it's not easy managing money is difficult, it is stressful, it is inconsistent but we do have an incredible strong earnings picture. we have an economy that strong, many believe, because of high unemployment and high income we have the wherewithal to deal with the uncomfortably high inflation. stuart: thanks very much indeed, see you shortly. you lucky guy. lauren is looking at the movers. they make fasteners in the construction business. lauren: construction equipment, up 7.3% leading the s&p 500. they say their manufacturing customers are still ordering from them and report better-than-expected earnings and the coo, terry owens, has resigned. stuart: tell me about walgreens. they are down. they got up. >> they reported earnings and
10:10 am
forecasted annual revenue below expectation. we are not getting as many covid shots, not buying as much when we go to the pharmacy but they came out and said we are looking to save one billion dollars in the fiscal year. they will close unprofitable healthcare centers they operate and haven't spoken about this and walk, telling their employees who work from home you got to come back starting this month because we work better and faster together. stuart: forcing them to come back. >> in october and november. stuart: domino's pizza, i suspect it is down, no it's not, it is up. lauren: revenue fell, traffic in the us load, they expect to increase prices by less then one% in the fourth quarter. why is that a big deal? that will drive traffic because customers are looking for cheap food and dominoes has been able to deliver that for the most part. stuart: applebee's. >> the one dollar margarita.
10:11 am
talk about volume. yes. stuart: one dollar margarita? >> that is what you are talking about with dominoes. if you lower prices you bring people in. lauren: you can get a dollar margarita all the time? >> it is limited. it may not be top shelf. stuart: a dollars a drink. stuart: united auto workers union expanded its strike against ford. didn't they really wound ford by closing the biggest plant? lauren: their most profitable plant that makes the big trucks and suvs and pickups. not only is it the biggest plant but is responsible for 1/6 of ford's worldwide revenue, 8700 workers on strike. listen to what wells fargo says. ford is going to lose $150 million a week in costs because of this but this is potentially
10:12 am
the end. is this the pressure cooker where we will really hurt your profits to the tune of $150 million a week that they are going to force a deal. stuart: ford dropped below $12 a share, general motors on the cusp of dropping below $30 a share, "tired of winning" below $20 a share. lauren: ford had the highest offer for pay and benefits. stuart: still rejected. this strike, you implied the strike might be near end. >> i think we are negotiating price, i say that as someone who owns ford, for my subscribers this weekend. i wrote it up at $12 a few months ago. i don't know if our viewers realized, labor only accounts for 10% of the cost of a vehicle. i ran the numbers, even if ford meets the uaw request which they won't do of 40% pay raise over four years it would only
10:13 am
lower earnings by 2% so ford can actually afford, no pun intended, to pay the higher rate. they already have agreed to 20% raises in canada. i think the number will be around 30% and they will be able to afford it. it's a small impact, 2% and the pivot to evs because a higher profitability of evs will enhance profitability and more than offset what they have to pay out. stuart: ford and uaw wants to be in the jobs, unionize that battery plants so that's the sticking point. maybe if they can get that they will come down a bit. stuart: john kirby admitted hamas wouldn't be able to function without support from the iranian regime and says there's no evidence linking iran to the attacks. does that contradict a report from the wall street journal.
10:14 am
florida congressman mike waltz deals with this and white house's response in just a minute. is real targets inside gaza as forces prepare for a ground invasion. mike tobin live in israel with the latest next. ♪ ♪ is it possible to fall in love with your home... ...before you even step inside? ♪ discover the magnolia home james hardie collection.
10:15 am
available now in siding colors, styles and textures. curated by joanna gaines. hi. i'd like to tell you about a cashew farmer from mozambique named carlos. carlos used to struggle to provide enough food and education for his family. but then everything changed. technoserve helps farmers like carlos lift themselves out of poverty by building skills, connections and confidence. today, carlos and his family are thriving. and so are his cashews. go to technoserve.org and donate today.
10:16 am
it's a different way to make a difference.
10:17 am
10:18 am
stuart: day 6 of the war and on the left-hand side of your screens you will see gaza becoming a smoking ruin. mike tobin is on the ground with the latest. >> reporter: and israeli general by the name of gail hirsch has been brought out of
10:19 am
retirement to coordinate this massive unprecedented effort to secure the release of one hundred 50 people believed to be held hostage by hamas and isis in the gaza strip. he met today with us special presidential envoy for hostage affairs, stephen guillen who is here in israel. they updated each other on the situation and obviously very intense and secretive talks about what is being done to secure the release of those hostages. meantime the israeli defense force is outlining the project and targeted in the gaza strip, ss nations, mohamed abu sharma who they describe as a naval operative for hamas in the gaza strip, he was killed and from his residence commandos were able to take naval equipment or naval weaponry, equipment used in the underground tunnels, there is the underground tunnels hamas a spent years building in the gaza strip. up and down the gaza strip
10:20 am
hamas and islamic jihad operatives have been killed and there is an increasing effort both by the idf and the government here in israel to connect hamas to isis. there is a hashtag trending, hashtag hamas is isis. as prime minister benjamin nadia dorsey made his mark today, he said hamas should be treated the same as isis. >> should be spit out from the community of nations. no leader should be, no country should harbor them. those that do should be sanctioned. >> reporter: as far as the mask of troops along the gaza border it continues every day, you see the fuel trucks operating behind me, they are supplying this massive effort, 360,000 reservists as the ground invasion appears imminent.
10:21 am
also what is constant now is the siege of gaza that grows more desperate inside the gaza strip by day. 's relapse energy minister said no light switch will be turned on, no hydrant will be open and no fuel truck will enter the gaza strip until the hostages are released, the red cross has issued a desperate plea on a humanitarian basis saying hospitals in gaza are turning into morgues but israel has refused that saying the siege of gaza will remain absolute until the hostages are released. stuart: got it. mike tobin and the beloved. this is what john kirby says about linking iran to hamas's attack on israel. roll tape. >> irani and destabilizing behavior. what you're trying to get at is this particular set of attacks, what jake said still holds. we recognize there is broad complicity by the uranian's because of long-standing support for hamas. hamas wouldn't have been able to function at all had a not
10:22 am
been for propping up by the uranian regime but we haven't seen any specific evidence that tells us they were involved in the planning or involved in the resourcing and training that went into these attacks. blue when complicity but no direct link. congressman mike waltz joins me now. the you believe iran is behind the attacks? >> john kirby is full of it and this is the worst kind of spin and he knows and he knows better. you can't say that hamas would not be able to operate, wouldn't be funded, wouldn't be supplied, wouldn't have the training without iran, but then say there was no uranian involvement because we don't have some kind of tape of the ayatollah personally leading the squads as they go to assassinate children. everybody knows what this
10:23 am
really is is a cover, spin for the administration to not reverse course on iran, go back to maximum pressure, cut off low oil money, cut off the international money, refreeze the aid but the other thing we could be doing and what i hope blinken should be talking about right now is shutting off the land routes of all the missiles, arms, and supplies from iran all the way to lebanon, shutting off the air routes and using our navy to shut off the sea routes through the red sea and the mediterranean. we can be helping israel isolate hamas and has bola right now if we chose to, but instead you've got this big fictitious fairytale spin going on and it is just beyond frustrating and they know it is wrong. stuart: if we did do that as your proposal is, that would involve american military power directly in a fight with iran.
10:24 am
>> we already cut off uranian shipments to the houthis. we can cut them off to hamas. we still have special operations troops in syria that are being attacked on a regular basis by iraqi proxies of iran, they are already being attacked, we can defend ourselves and intercept those shipments, we are already there. so this is not a major escalation, but we have 2 not just rhetorically support israel, we can shift on iran at a minimum, even if you don't want to talk those options, at a minimum we can start enforcing our own sanctions and cut off $30 billion a year from china that's going in and buying uranian oil. stuart: secretary of state blinken held a press conference with benjamin at yahoo. watch this, roll it. >> we will reaffirm the warning president biden issued
10:25 am
yesterday to any adversary, state or nonstate thinking of taking advantage of the current crisis to attack israel. don't. there is no justification for these atrocities. this must be a moment for moral clarity. failure to and ambiguously condemned terrorism puts at risk not only people in israel but people everywhere. stuart: he spoke of a moment of moral clarity. our response response to that? >> i would love to see the same strong language from the president to the squad, which i call the hamas caucus having moral clarity there and number 2, i just hope they stick with it because when things get bloodied and ugly and gaza, which sadly and tragically it will, we can't have the administration getting week need, so time will test this administration's resolve over the coming weeks and months. stuart: thanks for being with us again today, always
10:26 am
appreciate it, hope to see you again soon. 25 americans have been killed in israel. what's the president going to do about it? peter doocy from the white house with a report shortly. house foreign affairs committee chair mike mccall says the attack was a failure of intelligence. roll tape. >> there seems to have been a failure of intelligence, we know egypt warned israeli 3 days prior an event like this could happen, this had been planned as long as a year ago. stuart: bret baer on the intelligence failure next. (sfx: stone wheel crafting) ♪
10:27 am
the biggest ideas inspire new ones. 30 years ago, state street created an etf that inspired the world to invest differently. it still does. what can you do with spy? ♪
10:28 am
10:29 am
unlock gold's potential with west red lake gold mines with 3 million ounces of resources, $350 million invested, and strong leadership. their eyes are set on production within two years. west red lake gold mines.
10:30 am
stuart: on the market this morning a downside move for the dow up one hundred points, the nasdaq up 22 as treasury yields arise. adam is with us with stock picks, what do you like about so file, the online banking operation? >> it was the first ever bank created exclusively to be an online bank. incredibly well run. the ceo has been buying stock almost every month for the past
10:31 am
year and a half, seventeenth largest shareholder, that's a big deal. 1.2 times book, this is a stock before interest rates start going up, trading $25 or $30. stuart: 8 bucks a share now i did a couple but -- 20 to 30. >> i'm good with that. stuart: alexandria real estate equities. >> contrarian play, nobody likes commercial real estate. i actually do and i will tell you why. this company build to suit exclusively for life-sciences clients. in other words you are a biotech company, pfizer, johnson & johnson, you need specific real estate, laboratories, they have to be vended for toxic fumes, build these gorgeous facilities next to campuses for institutions of higher learning.
10:32 am
once people have those custom properties built for them they never leave. the occupancy is 90% and alexandria raising rents at 6% this year, stock is trading cheaper than ever as in history. stuart: it is $98. where is it going? >> it could actually double. >> that's what i try to do, find companies for my clients that will double or triple. not next quarter but 2 to 3 years, that is the value. stuart: thanks for much. secretary of state blinken has confirmed 25 americans have been killed during attacks by hamas, 17 others unaccounted for. i am sure the president has a plan but can't talk about it publicly. >> exactly right. as we understand it officials in the west wing and situation room are actively trying to figure out what tools the
10:33 am
united states as they could give the israelis as part of a future mission to free these american hostages that are trapped somewhere and gaza. >> at this point we are not contemplating us boots on the ground involved in that mission. what we've done is sent experts to the region to consult and advise with israeli counterparts to make sure they find the best way to get these people home. >> political differences between the biden and netanyahu teams have been set aside for the time being. that is on display with the nation's top to permit appearing in israel this morning. >> reaffirm the crystal clear warning president biden issued yesterday to any adversary, state or nonstate, thinking of taking advantage of the current crisis to attack israel. don't. there is no justification for these atrocities. this must be a moment for moral clarity. the failure to and ambiguously
10:34 am
condemned terrorism puts at risk not only people in israel but people everywhere. >> president biden has given two sets a formal remarks about the attack on israel, each drawing upon his personal experiences. >> president biden: i've been doing this a long time. i never really thought i would see and have confirmed pictures of terrorists beheading children. i never thought i would ever -- >> reporter: to clarify what he said. he apparently has not personally seen photos, confirmed photos of terrorists beheading children, he was different to official statements by israeli government spokespeople and widespread media reports from the war zone. stuart: thanks very much. john kirby was pressed about who bears responsibility for this intelligence failure.
10:35 am
>> we know that a number of those americans being held hostage by hamas, we don't know where they are, if they 've broken into several groups are being moved. >> this was a massive intelligence failure, who bears responsibly? >> there will come a time when it is appropriate for us to take a look back retrospectively and see what the until pictures showed us or didn't show us, whether denier any gaps that need to be close, now is not that time. stuart: the chair of the house foreign affairs committee says these attacks it been planned a year ago. bret baer with us this morning. when the judgment comes down on this intelligence failure, it's going to be quite harsh, now's not the time to do it, got to wait a while, don't want to disrupt operations. >> it will be harsh for both israelis and the us, we missed
10:36 am
it as well but more importantly the israelis on the ground, they say we need to fight now, investigate later it is important what it looks like on the ground in gaza if they are going in. that requires a lot of intelligence so kind of have to figure out how they missed all of this at the beginning. stuart: a difficult subject. may i shift the attention to capitol hill, speakers vote today. scalise has the votes to win the nomination but does he have the votes to make the speakership for real? >> no, not yet. that's white hasn't come to the floor. it is 212 right now, needs 217. it's highly unlikely democrats come over to get to 217. it's possible with the situation in the middle east that maybe that could happen but very unlikely, you are starting to see word that republicans are going to try to strengthen the speaker pro tem,
10:37 am
patrick mchenry to enable him to pass legislation to get through government shutdown, in case they can't get a speaker and look like they might not. stuart: what will republicans do with matt gaetz? >> i think matt gaetz is not a problem. he is siding with scalise. some people are siding with jordan, some trying to resurrect kevin mccarthy. stuart: that on your show tonight. i've got to talk about what is in front of me, to rescue the constitution there's a subtitle to it. >> george washington, the fragile american. stuart: the fragile american experiment. was a touch and go? >> it was. he almost collapsed many times. this is a part of history we have overlooked, after the revolutionary work with britt are defeated, the country is searching for a way, the articles of confederation are not working, states are fighting each other and some are saying forget it, go back
10:38 am
to british rule, that is summer of 1787 when the constitutional convention starts, they tap george washington to lead it and he goes through all the dissent to find common ground, to make this document that essentially ratified and he becomes the first american president. without him arguably we would never have made it. stuart: could have come back to the motherland. >> it was close. they fell apart many times. stuart: a lot of americans thought let's go back to england. >> even after all that, all the fighting, because it was so chaotic, a time in history you don't hear about. that's what i like to do with these books, see the narrative, put people there so they can feel it and when it comes to the start of the country, that affects everything we do and who we are today. stuart: i intend to read it. a quick programming note. thank you very much for joining us of course. he will be interviewing the
10:39 am
former speaker of the house kevin mccarthy on your show tonight. watch the special report at 6:00 pm eastern. senator bernie sanders says israel is committing war crimes by targeting civilians and cutting off supplies to gaza. socialists want to chip away at support for israel. my next guest, for 11 hours when hamas attacked the village, she will tell us the story right after this. ♪ welcome to ameriprise. i'm sam morrison. my brother max recommended you. so my best friend sophie says you've been a huge help. at ameriprise financial, more than 9 out of 10 of our clients are likely to recommend us.
10:40 am
our neighbors, the garcias, love working with you. because the advice we give is personalized, hey, john reese, jr. how's your father doing? to help reach your goals with confidence. my sister has told me so much about you. that's why it's more than advice worth listening to. it's advice worth talking about. ameriprise financial. - [narrator] this house is a generac house and you're just the person to keep it running because a proud homeowner has a protective instinct
10:41 am
and frankly, the brains to know the grid is gonna let you down sometimes. that's why when the rest of the block is lighting candles and looking for flashlights, you're ready to rock and roll. it's not just a generator. it's a power move. request a free quote today. at humana, we believe your healthcare should evolve with you, and part of that evolution means choosing the right medicare plan for you. humana can help. hi, my name is sam davis and i'm going to tell you about medicare advantage prescription drug plans that can provide more coverage than original medicare, including prescription drug coverage, all wrapped up into one convenient plan. with original medicare you're covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits, but you have to meet a deductible for each. and then you're still responsible for 20% of the cost. next, let's look at medicare supplement plans.
10:42 am
if a service is covered under original medicare, then a medicare supplement plan pays for some or all of your medicare deductibles and the 20% coinsurance. but they may have higher monthly premiums and no prescription drug coverage. humana medicare advantage prescription drug plans include medical coverage, plus prescription drug coverage. as well as dental coverage that includes two free cleanings a year, plus a yearly exam. vision coverage includes vision exams and a yearly allowance toward eyewear such as lenses or contacts. and hearing benefits include routine hearing exams and coverage toward hearing aids. you're covered for preventive services like annual mammograms and prostate exams. there's a zero-dollar copay for routine vaccines and telehealth visits. and you get worldwide coverage for emergencies when you travel. you get all of
10:43 am
this in one convenient plan. plus, there's a cap on your out-of-pocket costs! so, call or go online today to see if there's a humana plan in your area, to find out if your doctor is in one of our networks, and to get our free decision guide. there's no obligation, just good information. humana - a more human way to healthcare. >> you can hear the artillery raining down on gaza but as we speak. >> the israeli air force. >> hamas fighters have gone underground. >> gloomy developing situation. >> they would fox business for continuing coverage. stuart: talks are underway to allow us citizens to get out of gaza safely. what more do we know about this? ashley: the us government is in discussions with partner countries including egypt and
10:44 am
israel about safe passage for americans and other civilians out of gaza before any land invasion by israeli forces. one idea being discussed would allow all us citizens to pass through the corridor between gaza and egypt while the movement of other palestinian civilians, amounting to 2,000 people a day. according to when us official, egypt would rather use a humanitarian core door to send food and medical supplies into gaza but doesn't want to open the border in the other direction to accept civilians who are fleeing. it is complicated of course and time is running out for safe passage. stuart: my next guest hid in a village that was being attacked for 11 hours. thank you for coming on the program. i want you to take us through what happened from the moment you started the attack started to the moment you got out.
10:45 am
>> okay. thank you for having me. i want to tell my story because it is horrific. i think it is hard to believe a human person would go through such a horror. 6:30 a.m. we had the red alerts saying the bombing, bombs are going to fall on smoky boots which is a small village and my neighbor texted us a message saying there are armed hamas people, lock yourself in. we locked the safe room that had been secured from bombs but i quickly realized it doesn't lock the door so it could easily open, i started texting how do you do that? nobody knew how to lock the
10:46 am
door. i finally text my family asking them does anybody know how to lock the door? in that moment, my neighbor texted us, endless endless shooting and grenades, automatic weapons everywhere, everywhere, i heard the sound and i knew the messaging system, they go from house to house, door to door, shooting everybody. this fear of just arriving, didn't want to talk, my daughter and me and the dogs are inside, so that they wouldn't hear us, they wouldn't know that we are inside. my brother sent me this picture of how he locked his door from broomsticks, 5 km from me in a small village too.
10:47 am
it was pitch dark. i was afraid to turn on the light so this is my work room. why would i have a stick here. i had a stick for my child, i took that, either needed another stick to secure it to the door handle and i remember i had a dyson vacuum cleaner, pulled it apart, those two things, tied it to the door handle and quickly my daughter grabbed a piece of string, for the first moment if they break in now and something will hold and slowly slowly i had a leather string, find it stronger and stronger and stronger, thought it would be
10:48 am
okay, maybe maybe all this in pitch dark, heart is beating like hell, every move, every time i touch a metal door i go crazy because if they hear us they will break in and kill us. i piled books between the door and ourselves and we had under the table thinking in case they break in, they would shoot us but maybe the books will slow down the bullets, so we are hiding on this table and waiting, hoping they would not come in but soon enough we heard them approaching us, broke everything, shut the house from the outside and reached the door, loud shouting of 8 men in arabic trying hard to open the door, shouting, banging and shouting. stuart: i have to interrupt. i'm almost out of time but what
10:49 am
we wanted was for you to portray a picture of the horror you went through and you gave us that picture rent that was a powerful message. thank you very much for being with us. i'm sorry i cut it short but that was a horrific story and appreciate you being here. >> thank you. stuart: more varney after this. e and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. between the high interest, the fees... i felt trapped. so i broke up with my credit card debt and consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. i finally feel like a grown-up. break up with bad credit card debt. get a personal loan with low fixed rates. borrow up to $100k. and no fees required. go to sofi.com to view your rate. sofi. get your money right. hi. i'd like to tell you about a cashew farmer from mozambique named carlos. carlos used to struggle to provide enough food and education for his family. but then everything changed. technoserve helps farmers like carlos lift themselves
10:50 am
out of poverty by building skills, connections and confidence. today, carlos and his family are thriving. and so are his cashews. go to technoserve.org and donate today. it's a different way to make a difference.
10:51 am
when people come, they say they've tried lots of diets, nothing's worked or they've lost the same 10, 20, 50 pounds over and over again. they need a real solution. i've always fought with 5-10 pounds all the time. eating all these different things and nothing's ever working. i've done the diets, all the diets. before golo, i was barely eating but the weight wasn't going anywhere. the secret to losing weight and keeping it off is managing insulin and glucose. golo takes a systematic approach to eating that focuses on optimizing insulin levels. we tackle the cause of weight gain,
10:52 am
not just the symptom. when you have good metabolic health, weight loss is easy. i always thought it would be so difficult to lose weight, but with golo, it wasn't. the weight just fell off. i have people come up to me all the time and ask me, "does it really work?" and all i have to say is, "here i am. it works." my advice for everyone is to go with golo. it will release your fat and it will release you.
10:53 am
stuart: a former hamas chief is calling for global day of protest in support of palestinians which house the police department responding to that? ashley: according to a memo sent to all nypd members officers must report for duty in uniform and be prepared for deployment. that order will remain in effect until further notice. it does follow a call from former leader of hamas, four muslims to stage global demonstrations in support of palestinians friday, tomorrow the nypd has activated its joint operations center at its manhattan headquarters in anticipation of possible mayhem, security has been beefed up at each of its 77
10:54 am
police precincts to monitor entryways and parking areas at the station houses. stuart: thanks. now this. a club at the university of washington in washington state is honoring the palestinian martyrs, their words. the president of the university won't referred to hamas as terrorists, this club is holding a rally in seattle today. ever imagine this kind of hate in your city? >> we certainly have known folks were very far to the left and have been outspoken on israel. i never thought either here or anywhere in this country, after seeing the images and hearing the stories of what happened last weekend in israel by a terrorist organization that folks would go on to the streets and rally to celebrate, to call attention to hamas not as a terrorist group but as martyrs as if they are doing something they need to be doing, that they should be honored for doing, it's absolutely sickening and i hope
10:55 am
people understand something, people going to the university of washington or anywhere else, these folks are your neighbors, your doctors and lawyers, your kids teachers, these are folks who live in this country who loathe freedom and democracy and jews and i guarantee you american jews as much as anybody else. stuart: do you consider your city, seattle, a ruined city? >> it is on the path to ruin. we've seen the issues here and elsewhere in democrat run cities going down that path. we are not at san francisco, a city i don't think is going to recover. of things don't turn around it has become that. stuart: any voices in that -- in seattle urging that? >> there are some voices, we will see how the upcoming election goes as farce the city council. you've got folks on the far
10:56 am
left and moderate democrats so the question, are the voters going to vote that they are upset with the direction of the city or are they going to make the same mistake over and over again? i'm not going to pretend i'm even cautiously optimistic because i'm not. i would like to be surprised on election day. stuart: it would be good to be surprised, thanks for being with us. will cane on the left trying to characterize israel as the oppressor. bill bennett on the lowest act test scores in years and congressman cory mills in israel working to evacuate americans. the 11:00 hour is next. ♪
10:57 am
10:58 am
10:59 am
municipal bonds don't usually get the media coverage the stock market does. in fact, most people don't find them all that exciting. but, if you're looking for the potential for consistent income that's federally tax-free, now is an excellent time to consider municipal bonds from hennion & walsh. if you have at least 10,000 dollars to invest, call and talk with one of our bond specialists at 1-800-763-2763. we'll send you our exclusive bond guide, free. with details about how bonds can be an important part of your portfolio.
11:00 am
hennion & walsh has specialized in fixed income and growth solutions for 30 years, and offers high-quality municipal bonds from across the country. they provide the potential for regular income... are federally tax-free... and have historically low risk. call today to request your free bond guide. 1-800-763-2763. that's 1-800-763-2763. >> it is incumbent upon the palestinian authority to figure out a solution with israel before it's too late. but when you listen to the israeli leadership talk, it does appear if like it's too late. >> already in gaza they've killed over 20 american citizens, so it's important the u.s. take retaliatory actions against hamas specifically for attacks against americans. >> we're seeing two extremes here in israel. we're seeing extre

50 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on