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tv   Varney Company  FOX Business  August 27, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT

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>> what's very interesting over the last few weeks is this rally
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has not been dependent on the very overpriced technology names getting more overpriced. >> they're not going to tell us what her broad based policy positions are till after the election. >> under trump, you had very low inflation and actually even below the federal reserve's 2% target and under biden and harris, you have inflation run up to over 9%. i think it's pretty clear who has the good record on inflation. >> the only thing, stuart, limited nvidia's growth is supply. that's it. the demand is element unlimited for the product. >> selected prosecution. it's terrible in the sense of terrible precedent for the world and tax base. >> almost 25% of gdp is government spending, okay. so if you somehow government spending, you'll slow your gdp down. that's the problem. >> don't worry that kamala harris can't go 90 seconds without thoughts and doesn't have excuse of advanced age. ♪ ♪
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stuart: they're playing it again, the very latest beatles song released in the last couple years and ai i believe now a member. it's a lovely song. you like it, jimmy? >> it works. stuart: it does. >> drive my car, it's not electric. they'll have to sing it differently now. >> who doesn't like the beatles. stuart: going from way back? okay, it is 11:00 eastern time on tuesday, august 27th. we're going to tune around on the market and dow is down a mere 8 points and s&p up 10 and nasdaq up 43. big tech, they turned around and they were all double figures and now we've got nvidia and apple up, no change for alphabet, microsoft and amazon on the downside. look at yield on 10-year treasury inching up now at 3.85%. now this, every day we show you
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the street scene on sixth avenue in manhattan. you see the buses rolling along but what you don't see and probably don't know is half the people obstructing cerumen those buses have -- on those buses have not paid the fare. astonishing 48% of new york city bus riders are fare beaters and bus drivers are not encouraged to intervene. they might be assaulted. what is going on here? bus fare beating along loan cost $315 million in 2022. this city is already pressured by migrants, crime, empty officers and how does it make a come back when the transit system is bleeding money? why is it happening? yes, it's a handover on pandemic when people got used to easy on payments and a lot of people having a hard time paying to get to work, but it's also the result of what might be called a new entitlement mentality. it's like convenient stores that lock things up because people feel entitled to steal.
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it's like the 19 million student loan borrower as of march this year are not making their payments. 19 million! migrants feel entitled to taxpayer money even though they're here illegally and according to the census bureau, 8.1 million house hods are behind on their rent. if you don't pay your mortgage, you lose your house. if you don't pay were car loan, you lose your car. everything else is negotiable. the taxpayers have to cover the losses and people think they're entitled to your money. third hour of varney starts now. stuart: jimmy failla with us. he's a former new york city cab driver. he knows about this kind of stuff. >> how about it. stuart: how do we get rid of entitlement mentality? >> well, to be clear, you got to hold people accountable for things they do wrong like student loan forgiveness is a
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scam because you're passing the burden on to the person that didn't make the commitment. there's no way that's going to engender more responsibility. if we have student loan forgiveness, why not blackjack forgiveness? where is that bill being passed? it's just as absurd or student loan forgiveness. a person made a financial decision that might have had negative consequences and that in itself is supposed to be a teachable moment to measure twice and cut once before making a financial commitment. everything we're doing in the name of forgiveness as you know is not actually absolving the debt but passing onto taxpayer and more importantly it's not addressing what we call now the root cause, which is the soaring cost of tuition. if you send a message to the colleges we're going to bail out the kids that pile up the debt and colleges go great, we'll keep charging more money and that's what they're doing. stuart: exactly what is happened. >> everywhere by muchnick my alma mater, nassau community. we have to give a six back of beer to get in and you're good to go. stuart: in england when i went many, many years ago.
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i got a grant from local authority. >> they posted your actual degree online. i was impressed at the hammer and chisel got that calligraphy font the way they did -- i kid, i love you. you. stuart: we're going to change the subject. >> i'm having so much fun. stuart: you went to time scare in new york city finding out who they think will win the election much watch this. >> who should i put my money on, trump or kamala? owe, the dudes say trump. >> i think it's going to be close, but i would put my money on trump. >> that's tough. >> who's going to win the election, trump or election? >> you're going to win. >> damn right i am, jimmy failla, 2024. stuart: some response saying la, kamala, kamala. >> that last declaration that
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i'm going to win, i'd never even pass the background check. temper your expectations and we interviewed the 50 people in a five minute package and 42-8 trump. 42-8. we had a woman from minnesota holding up a kamala t-shirt in the package and few passer by yelled kamala, but the majority of the people don't have the luxury and i call it i've got mine vote. if you're going in kamala, nothing affects you. inflation, you've got yours and money and not concerned with the border. stuart: this is new york city. >> of course. the people on the ground in new york city but they're very adversely affected by the policies of the admin vagues. how can you look at grocery prices being 30% higher and 4 more years of these folks on the border and the truth is you can't. that convention wasn't even in the room. what we're see asking there's no immediate pull downs because it didn't resinate beyond the walls because what most people watched was what we watched. they promised beyonce and gave
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you freeonce and giving everything away for free and free of poll or plan to make it happen. people are not dumb. that's why the poll went the way it did. stuart: good play on words right there. jimmy, we're watching you on fox news saturday night 10:00 p.m. eastern on fox news. jimmy, thank you. >> you're the best. stuart: see you later. back to the markets, please. i suspect a lot of people on the sidelines waiting for nvidia and could make an enormous difference. mike murphy with us. nvidia reports after the bell tomorrow. is that going to set the tone for the whole tech sector? >> it will, stuart. but a lot of times i come on and have a bullish take on things and today i'm not going to disappoint. here me out, nvidia, if nvidia does not put up a strong quarter and they've put up extremely strong quarter of quarter after quarter if they don't, stock price of nvidia goes lower. i don't think it drags the entire market down with it. however, if they again beat and raise as they've made that a
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habit of doing, it's going to push nvidia up to new all time highs and it's going to take the entire market along with it to new all time highs. stuart: hoping for a good report from nvidia tomorrow. >> we are. the risk reward, if it's not great, impacts nvidia, if it is great, it's going to impact the entire market. stuart: got my attention. next question, the election or federal reserve make a bigger impact on the fourth quarter market performance? >> that's a great question. so the election, the fed is coming first and fed starts to cut and it's 25 or 50 but the whole point is we all mo what direction rates are going in now and the market is reacting to that and we're sitting here at or near all time highs and when the election comes, it's an impact short term and it's going to get there. one candidate is better for the
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market. stuart: if the senates to to the republicans then they're not going to hatch. might be here and stay with us for the hour. looking at netflix, it's moving 2.6%. lauren. lauren: $106 and evercore thinks it's going to $750 and he says netflix is in the best shape it's ever been thanks to live sports and subscriber retention numbers and stock up more than 40% this year. stuart: the owner of pinduoduo is temu. lauren: a other way around. pinpinduoduo owns temu. stuart: why is it down? lauren: down 28, 29% and lost 55 billion in value. one day alone because they came out and said, uh oh, the chinese ecommerce market is in the dumps and chinese consumer is weak and now citi group downgrades to
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neutral and shares continue their slide and down 29% one day and next day, no bounce back from another 3+%. stuart: we don't cover the weakness in china as much as we should. >> look at stock in particular and temu came for amazon and if you shoot for the king, better not miss. they're going after amazon and amazon is, i think, kind of defending themselves now and i think kind of putting them back in their place. stuart: the paramount global situation. lauren: investors want a bidding war and didn't get one and stock down 5.5% after the bid and now paramount will be sold to sky dance. stuart: thank you, lauren. lauren. lowe's is the latest company that rolled back dei. called out by activists and robbie starbuck is leading the charge and how he gets these companies toive up on woke. bitcoin rally making some people extremely wealthy. how many new bitcoin
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billionaires are out there. stay with us. the third hour of varney rolling along for you. ♪ (♪) car, this isn't the way home. that's right james, it isn't. car, where are we going? we're here. (♪) surprise!!! the future isn't scary. not investing in it is. car, were you in on this? nothing gets by you james. nasdaq-100 innovators. one etf. before investing, carefully read and consider fund investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com
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stuart: t-mobile being called brazenly woke for funding dei efforts. ashley. does this have something to do with their program for children? ashley: it does. telecom giant being called out for support of the recent time to thrive summit in minneapolis and put an emphasis on mentoring and sex education for lgbtq+
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children and t-mobile is the latest to fake a woke lash from conservative consumers and seeing harley davidson and jack daniels dump dei program and the conservative watch dog group urging t-mobile is use this to put pressure on the company and ceo to stop funding lgbtq programs that target youth and stop pushing what it calls racist dei practices. there's been no comment as of yet from t-mobile. stu. stuart: we'll take it. thanks issue ash. lowe's scrapping diversity, equity and inclusion programs after facing pressure from activists and how did you get lowe's to give up on dei? >> well, stuart, we looked at this from a new vantage point and companies from the american landscape and said which depend on conservative consumer and
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hold them accountable for what their values are and if they're proud of them, they'll stand by them and if not, they'll prove to be what they think they are. need something to push the cars and soon the companies will fall like dominoes. stuart: did you threaten a boycott? >> i did. i reached o tout collectives and said we had an embarrassing set of facts about where the company stood on issues and we were prepare to run a story and we like to be up to date with the stories so we asked if anything had changed or if there was any comment to be aware of before run ago story and with that advanced notice, we sent that last week and woke up we mail in the inbox from anonymous source passing on an e-mail that went out to the company and their employees and letting them know they were dropping a ton of their woke policies that we had issue with and one of my favorite is jumping out of the
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social credit scoring system, which essentially is a far left trojan horse. stuart: my comment would be the boycott hurts everyone in the company and not just the executives that made the decisions on dei. is that justified? >> absolutely. my family survived communism and i can tell the people right now if we don't get it straight, we don't get it right, it's the same sort of communist beast my family had to flee in cuba but there's nowhere to run. my family went to america and now there's nowhere to go to be free. stuart: who are you taking on next? >> next up -- that's always a secret and people following me on x, amazing subscribers there powered the revolution in corporate america to bring back sanity and we'll drop the next one there. stuart: you compared dei programs to communism. that's going a little far, isn't
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it? >> not at all. it's a trojan horse nor left wing policy and if you're looking a the this from that vantage point, it's saying you need to take from others to be able to build up, which is the enemy and if they want to build up those that do not perform as well, and by proxy take from those that perform with the excellence, that's basically the bedrock of communism and beyond that, you don't need poll cigses to come out and adopt communism wholesale to say this is a modern form of some in addition and if you can otitis ideologically control the companies, it's just as good as controlling them in total for the state. politicians can control without the pr hit of coming out and outright saying we're communist. they would much rather do that . stuart: robby starbuck, thank you for joining us this morning. see you later. the bitcoin rally down a bit today. we've had quite a rally and making some people extremely
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wealthy. here's my question, ashley, how many bitcoin billionaires are out there? ashley: at last count, 28 crypto billionaires. the population of crypto millionaires across the world has jumped 95% over the past year to a total of 1 172,300. but cryptosent millionaires those with 100 million or more in crypto holdings and all held by a value of bitcoin jumping 45% this career and it's down today but it also reflects the rapid growth of bitcoin etfs, which now have more than 50 billion in assets since being launched in january and they've increased along the way and the market cap now of cryptoassets increased in 2.3 trillion.
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stuart: what does crypto have to do with lottery. lauren: they were buying luxury watches this and this saw them as alternative asset and a way to even make a little cash on resale watches could triple their prices and one year later, i'm not joking. the peak of luxury watch was march of 2022 and come down since and. stuart: what point would you like to make? >> bitcoin billionaire or sen
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centimillionaire and doing as investment but the two done go hand -- someone investing or trading in bitcoin or wearing luxury watches i see as two different people. stuart: which would you rather invest in, luxury watch or crypto? >> back in time, i'll take the crypto but since we can't, from this point, i'm so happy to hear about for me. i'll going with luxury watch. lauren: a new one for about $15,000 and following year they were selling it for $50,000 in one year. stuart: not bad. best advertiser for rolex was roger fe lauren: i co. stuart: he made his mark with that for years and years and years. moving on. coming up, a mom of four defending her decision not to volunteer at school events. watch this.
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>> i don't want to be on pto, pta, room mom, team mom. i don't want to do any of that . if the room mom needs money for everyone to participate, fine, i'll venmo money over. lauren: lauren explains more about the venmo mom. that's coming up. covid cases on the rise and 1078 schools are closing and gone back to remote learning to deliver. is that necessary? are we repeating the mistakes of the pandemic? karol markowicz takes it on next. ♪ introducing new advil targeted relief. the only topical pain reliever with 4 powerful pain-fighting ingredients that start working on contact
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stuart: looking at markets that turned around and not going down far and nasdaq down 5 and s&p up 15. mike murphy has a special stock pick to lead with. it's microsoft. what a guy thank you. >> we talk about big tech leading the market and look at m mississippi, it's sold off from 465 range down here to 410, 412 it's now up 9% for the year.
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the selloff overdone and miss it had and watching it trade around 450, 460 saying what do i do? there's the time to get in. stuart: i should buy more? >> yes. >> stuart: thank you. the next stock pick is netflix. >> yes, lauren did a great job covering it and mark maheny is out and talking about netflix saying it's going to 1,000 and north of # 00 by the end of the year. stuart: by the end of this year? three, four months away? >> yes. so much upside and levers to point and maheny points out live sports and they have pricing power and all the other players are not eating into their user base so lot of upside for netflix to the end f the year. stuart: a lot of stock picks and run with them. most have been good. >> good. stuart: got me worried about netflix. murphy, thank you very much
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indeed. lawmakers pushing to ban cell phones in the classroom. lydia hu joining me. what do pans think about a cell phone ban? reporter: stuart, most parents agree that cell phone with students in the classroom is a problem. they don't all agree that a ban is the right solution and we found one school district in new jersey who's taking a middle of the road approach. watch this. >> phones are a very big distraction. >> students in new jersey, the new school year bring as new phone policy. elementary and middle schoolers must keep phones in backpacks or lockers all day and high school ores must have phones out of site during class. we wanted to help them be in a environment most conducive to learning and mounting evidence shows phones and social media harm youth mental health and impede learning. nearly a dozen states are taking action. some mandate schools enact
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restrictions and others insent s incentivize others and middle school board members adopt their phone restriction with optimism. >> i hope everyone embraces the culture of change. reporter: informal facebook poll conducted by a middle town parent group shows most are receptive and few either want phones kept at home. >> i would say that i'm glad that our kids can still have their phones on them silenced in their pockets. reporter: a frequent solution is the yonder bag. kids into the school and put phone in the pouch and locked away and can't access it inside the pouch during the school day till their locking device becomes activated and unlock it at end of the school day. yonder says it's a great solution and costs school
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district money and one is $30 a bag and since 2016, when they started rolling in out, yonder the company has made about $8.4 million from various school districts around the country and say a sign, it's a sign that it's increased buy in and proof it's working. stuart: the yonder bag? >> yonder bag. stuart: that's it, $30. >> yeah, per bag. phone is on you but locked away. stuart: but it makes sensuous doesn't it? advantage. >> the way kids communicate they need them this the school day. take it in the classroom, lose your phone and between classes, it's fine in my opinion. stuart: lydia, thank you. two schools in alabama and tennessee just closed their doors because of a covid outbreak. some of the students had to go back to remote learning. new york post columnist karol markowicz joins me. is this necessary? why are we reverting to failed
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pandemic policies? >> el with, i would say we don't know if it's necessary. the school haves not released how many people have covid and teachers and students, et cetera. look, we've talked to people in the past and schools completely, did we send kids home? we didn't. this is not all that different. i hate they have the eye on how this remote learning that they can fall back on at any time and the fact it's retrocochlear states is negotiating there and and we've gotten to a place where we should leave these policies behind and idea to close schools and go back to remote learning at any time. it's become a crutch and i think we have to get the schools completely off of it. stuart: i want to raise one point, the alabama school that closed, 15 teachers had covid. if they'd not closed the school, the parents would get the kids out anyway, wouldn't they? >> right. let parents do that.
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in if you need to close them, close them. don't pretend there's online learning and that's not a thing. during the covid pandemic is that the kindergartener online learning abcs at home, it's not really working. so close the schools, treat it like a snow day or day off. don't pretend they're going to be learning online and move on. stuart: then, a colorado school district refusing to allow students to opt out on lgbtq subjects regardless of parent's wishes. what do you make of that, karol? >> i would tell parents across the country this is why local school board elections are so important. if you want to have control over what your kids are learning, get involved in your local school board elections and there's situations like this where the schools believe that they can indoctrinate kids and parents don't have say in the matter. we have 20 get to a place where we remember the schools are for learning math, science, history,
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t not for indoctrination and we have to push back on schools that believe otherwise. stuart: you moved from new york city to florida, i believe it was because of the covid lockdowns and thed ad education. are you happy with your move? >> you know i am, stu. you know i am. you're welcome to join us at any time. i love florida, i love how sane it is here. i'm just the biggest ambassador for this state. i think that weariness doing something totally differently here and it feels great. stuart: karol markowicz, good to have you feeling great. see you soon. thank you. one parent getting a lot of attention for calling herself the venmo mom. lauren? lauren: don't ask me to help in the classroom or sports and judge me for not helping. i'm happy to sit it out ask pay. >> i do not want to be involved at all. i will make sure my kids do their homework and get to school on type, i done want to be on pto, pta, room mom, team mom.
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i don't want to do any of that . if the room mom needs money for everyone to participate, fine, i'll venmo money right over. i do not want to be -- i don't want to sign up for it. i told one of the coaches today that i'm a venmo mom. lauren: she's got four kids and you're taking one of yours to the practice and it's two hours and the other moms sit and watch. she's got stuff to co. she's going to drop off and go. pay and go. nothing wrong with it. she's saying it up front. stuart: two quick stories before make murphy that's not a fen mo dad. when i was a kid, there was never a single volunteer that appeared in high school or kindergartener or elementary school ever. when we played sports at school, not a single parent ever showed up. either opposing team or my team. ever. parents rwere not all over the kids the way they are now.
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cost for the times. get out and play. are you a venmo dad? >> you know, yes, i can be. i support that woman because not everyone is great at being a team mom or being on pta. if that's your skill set. do it if you have time and if not, someone else will probably do a better job. i love coaching my kids when i can and i have football, basketball, it's great and sometimes people can do it better. i'm happy to pay whatever is necessary so everyone can be involved. stuart: honest answer. lauren: i was class mom the past three school years. should i be class mom this year or be a venmo mom and sit it out? stuart: you've got a job to do here. >> we have three young daughters and my wife was pregnant and i signed her up to be class mom. that didn't go well. one time. stuart: not smart. don't do that again. stuart: send us friday feedback, are you venmo parents? varicose veinsmyviewers at --
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varneyviewers@foxnews.com. there's concerns that gang members could pose as delivery drivers to get access to people owes homes. we'll bring you the full story. homelessness is hitting record levels in america. new research shows that a growing number of homeless people actually have jobs. getting housing is just too expensive. we've got a report on that from california, next. ♪ (husband) we just want to have enough money for retirement. (wife) and travel to visit our grandchildren. (fisher investments) i understand. that's why at fisher investments we start by getting to know each other. so i can learn about your family, lifestyle, goals and needs, allowing us to tailor your portfolio.
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(wife) what about commission-based products? (fisher investments) we don't sell those. we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in your best interest. (husband) so how do your management fees work? (fisher investments) we have a transparent fee, structured so we do better when you do better. at fisher investments, we're clearly different. when you're in the military you're really close with your brothers and your sisters that are in the military with you. and when you get out of the military, you kind of lose that until you find a new family. we can talk about our struggles and the things that we did overseas and not everybody can do that. adam! how's it going, brother? we live pretty close to each other. so he's always coming over. when i go to jack's house, we watch a lot of football, hang out. we go outside the friendship has kind of grown into a family i was overseas on a deployment. i got separated from my marines and i got hit in the neck, and it broke my neck and paralyzed me. 14 years ago, i was on a training mission.
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did a military freefall, and i had some faulty equipment. i hit the ground. going, 30 to 40 knots and was instantly paralyzed. i met jack fanning when he invited us to park city, utah, through his foundation. i was able to actually get on the mountain and ski with my family, i can't put into words what that meant. i got paid in the military to do crazy fun stuff. and after my accident, i'm still that same guy. and when i was able to jump out of a perfectly good, helicopter, at 10,000 feet, i did it. i was talking to some vets last week amazing how we have these houses where they can come over because they■re in chairs too. carpet and wheelchairs don't mix very well. tunnel to towers, they got rid of all that. they redid my whole bathroom. that's probably the favorite part of my house. i thought they were just going to do the upgrades. but the surprise to me was they paid off the entire mortgage.
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stuart: big texas a&m commerce and that's where the money is and mixed picture today and nvidia up $1.22, almost 1% and report after the bell tomorrow and apple up $228 is the price and alba bet, amazon, microsoft is is down. hundreds of venezuelan migrants are working illegally for food delivery drivers for uber and door dash.
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lauren: they're using false accounts under door dash and uber eat after finding real accounts on sale on facebook and other sites. they buy them for $150 a week or $900 outright. migrants in texas told the daily mail it's the fastest way to make money after illegally cross the border. then they deliver food to your front door. there's some personal information. the company is responding and here's ubers delivering with uber are required to hold a valid right to work in the u.s.. pass a criminal background check and be over the age of 18. community guidelines explicitly prohibit act sharing and it's something -- account sharing and we take it seriously. door dash, sharing a dasher account is never allowed. door dash has zero tolerance for anyone violating our rules by engaging in unauthorized account access. they cannot police the entire internet. this is happening. we're speaking specifically about venezuela.
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1 million venezuelans are here under president biden. thousands of them in texas. a lot of this is happening there. guess what's right across the border from texas in ciudad juarez. the gang is there. the most violent gang and moved headquarters to mexico. stuart: this this is enough to clean up their act if they keep this. i don't think people are that scared of venezuelan delivery drivers are they? >> not till something happens and the people we're focusing on right mow aren't the people that came here to work hard and make a life for themselves and it's these gangs. there'll be push back on the delivery companies but all goes back to the president. all goes back to letting them in in the first place. no that they're here, we've asked this question live on the air for a long time and what happens to them now that they're here.
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stuart: a lawsuit imposing liability on door dash. that would change it. >> yes. stuart: numbers say over 650,000 people are homeless all across the country. max gordon joins me now. is this accurate, max? some of the homeless people are employed but can't afford to get off the streets? >> yeah, absolutely, stu. university of chicago found around two in five people are homeless and working full or part-time and they simply can't afford rent and wages haven't risen as quickly and one of them is deborah bower and we spoke to her yesterday and lives in san ramon, california, and lives in her suv and works as a dog groomer. bills and medical treatment wiped out around $80,000 in savings and income is around $3,000 to $3500 per month and unable to avoid rent in the bay area and football games having a savings for deposit and first
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month's rent and bounces between sleeping in cheap motels and drains savings and sleeping in parking lot with her dog bean. deborah says she's not alone. >> i was surprised how many people show up around here around 9:00. how many cars show up and stay all night and leave at like 7, 8:0 00 in the morning. most people are working. reporter: homelessness in the u.s. hit all time high in 2023 and shelters and advocacy groups are seeing more people working while unhoused after a rapid rise in rents over the past few years and wages that haven't kept up. population of people homeless working that are often unseen in low profile and hiding in employers and worrying about the stigma and deborah is one of those people and feels lucky. >> i have friends, i have a job,
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i'm not sleeping in a blanket outside. you know, i feel like it could be worse. reporter: there's good news for deborah, she recently won an affordable housing lottery and homeless advocate and the big solution is increasing affordable housing stock. stu. stuart: max gordon, thank you very much indeed. gerry baker is warning that democrats are doing a good job of drawing up enthusiasm around kamala harris and deceiving the american public. gerry is next. ♪
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with so much entertainment out there wouldn't it be great... ...if you could find what you want, all in one place? show me paris. xfinity internet customers can enjoy the ultimate entertainment experience and save on some of the biggest names in streaming, all for just $15 a month. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. stuart: all right. this is just coming at us. donald trump will name rfk jr. and tulsi g abbard honorary cochairs for the second trump administration. gerry baker is here from "the wall street journal". is this a big plus for trump? >> it's a transition move apparently and they're going to be tasked with putting people into place. look, i think what it reflects is that once again the uniqueness of trump is the
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republican party and reaching out to people who have not been traditionally republicans. they both fall into that category obviously and wouldn't be a trump line without a transition of the d dick cheyney tasked with picking gorge bush as vice president and picked himself and coming up with rkf jr. and tulsi getting important jobs in the administration and outreach to untraditional republican voters. stuart: gerry, democrat deception may win the presidential election again. you wrote that in "the wall street journal". lay it out for us. what's the deception? they come up with it all the time and come up with an image that presents themselves as being very much in the mainstream. bank of america did it in -- obama did it in 200 and will very much his great message was i'm going to bring the country together and heal the country and went back to speech from
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early and talking about red america and blue america and there's one america and governed from the left and radical progressive agenda. joe biden was elected in 2020 and same thing. the heal of a country going to come together and it was through a tough time and trump was polarizing and bring this country together and not doing anything crazy and implement the radical left wing program we've seen and going with kamala harris left wing and america and people chanting usa, usa, usa ask tough on time and tough on the border and national security, surprise, surprise, they'll do it again and another 4 year ifs she gets elected of yet another significant movement of the left and it's a deception and what i call campaigning in poetry and governing in pros and this is the kind of campaign they do ask campaign with robert frost and governor in robert. stuart: if she sat down for serious interview and couldn't
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deceive and come out if it was a real serious interview and literally everything she's ever said and latest today and she's now thinking building the wall to keep owl illegal immigrants is a good idea. she's done that on everything and that's the play book. stuart: did she come out and say build the wall? >> the terminology i can't remember and the hop ragainitive to the policy of trumps and what she said back in 2016, 2017 no longer applies so that's the play the approach. giving interviews and saying i no longer believe that, i no longer believe that, i no longer believe that . that's the model but we've had to ask ourself dos we believe that? do we believe her, what she stood for six, seven, eight years ago and what she's been part of the for last three and a half years or believe the sudden transportation all taken place in the space of a month. stuart: she could win too.
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gerry baker, thank you for joining us. >> thank you. stuart: trump campaign spent $50,000 on a new ad buy. ashley, that's not a lot of money. so why is he get sos much attention? ashley: it's because that mod e.g. ad buy is for west palm beach media market and donald trump and he pre-soups safe led area and des are jumping on the ad buy and trump's team is nervous about florida where a pair of new polls show a title race more than expected and florida democratic party executive phillip posting on x saying donald trump is scared of losing florida. trump spokesman byron hughes responded saying "florida is deep red. trump country but we'll never take any state for granted". i'm sure they won't. stu. stuart: thanks, ash. time for the tuesday trivia question. what's the average budget for major studio movie?
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70, 80, 90 or $100 million? we'll be back with the correct answer. ♪ daughter: hey, dad. dad: hey, sweetheart. daughter: what are you doing? dad: i'm gonna clean the fence. daughter: it's a lot of fence. dad: you wanna help me? dad: aim at the wall, but get closer. daughter: (gasps) what the?! daughter: alright. dad: side to side. .. you can do this. ...you're unstoppable. (♪) wow... are you kidding me? you can do this. at truist, we believe the same is true for banking.
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♪ did you know that 96% of customers recommend the hartford? boy that's higher than most movie ratings. and those who switched to the aarp auto insurance program from the hartford? they saved hundreds. for the savings, benefits and best in class claims experience you deserve. make the switch today. to get your free quote call or click today. the buck's got your back. stuart: you could look this up but it is a good question.
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with the adjuvant -- average budget for a major studio movie, 70, 80, 90, $100 million? what is your guess? ashley: go big or go home, number 4. 100 million. stuart: what is your -- lauren: going with number 2, 80 million. stuart: he lives in the world of money. >> the big blockbusters excuse everything higher, one hundred million. stuart: i'm going to win that, $100 million. yes. the highest grossing movie of all time is avatar, and cost $200 billion to make. there you have it. $100 million. we are out of time. neil is waiting is in three seconds. here he is

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