tv Varney Company FOX Business September 5, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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cuts that start most likely next week. >> there's a lot more to like than fear. >> everybody else of the volume of illegal immigrants that are entering the unit. we believe in the rule of law. >> this is exactly the kind of efficiency we need to bring to government, particularly the federal government. >> the fact that all of a sudden these institutions are hiding behind free speech, that's offensive to jewish people. >> taste a tracks raise and wants the government to have more of your money because she thinks ultimately they can spend it better than we can. stuart: yes, i like this stuff. i just like the rhythm of it. it gets you going, know what i mean? new york city, crystal clear blue skies, bright blue sunshine.
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79 degrees. good morning, 11:00 eastern time and thursday, september 5. thrombocytopenia the market for you. the dow is off now, 221 points and there's three stocks in the dow, which are really on the downside, which account for about half of the loss. nasdaq though holding onto a nice slim lead and was up 50, 60, maybe 100 points and now just up 28. big tech all up, all up except microsoft down at 408. 10-year treasury yield moving up a bit this morning, 3.76%. now this, one man is blocking x in brazil. alexandra demarus and he's a
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justice on the stream court and denying free speech to brazilians and elon musk who owns x, is not happy. he calls it an assault on interpret speech around the world. he's right. here's the story. earlier this year, justice ordered x to block 140 accounts and said those accounts were a threat to democracy. musk simply ignored the order. he fired back threatening the legal representative in brazil and musk fired back and took his entire team out of the country and at that point, he ordered the whole platform shut down. mask used star link system to deliver x, he froze the assets and that's where things stand. brazilians shut out of the platform that offers communication worldwide. something personal going on here. brazil's president says the world is not obliged to put up with musk's far right free for all just because he's rich. oh, that's the problem. he's got a lot of money.
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note to the politics, government coming after musk because they think he's a conservative. far right, free for all. just who is a threat to brazil's democracy? it's not musk. he's the guy that whittled twitter into a free speech operation and he goes out of his way to suppress free expression. he doesn't like the opinions that musk uses and shut it is down. he's taking brazil down the authoritarian road and that's not democracy. you may not like all that musk does, but on democracy in brazil, he's dead right. third hour of vary n starts now -- varney starts now. stuart: change the subject. california former state senate majority leader announced she's leaving the democrat party. she's become a republican and she's backing trump-appointed
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for president. steve hilton, california guy, joins me now. you were at the announcement of this change of party. is this a growing trind in california? tell me it's a growing trend. >> it is. very important one, stuart. i was with her at the event, put the whole thing together because gloria and i have been colleagues for awhile in my california policy organization and going together and we've been talking about this for awhile and we very much work together for the changes that california needs and that's the point. up and down the state. right across the political spectrum, people can see now the scale of the change we need in california. this state is failing on every front after nearly two decades of one party rule for the deputies that have become increasingly extreme. and so you end up with the highest unemployment and the lowest income growth and worst business climate and worst homelessness and highest housing cost and highest gas prices.
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everything, literally everything is far in the wrong direction because it's far left. you're seeing democrats now joining. the other week we had a republican -- a sitting senator for the democratic party in the state senate moving to the republican party. now we have gloria. latinos in particular because the large group now in california has 40% of the state latino and working class latinos in particular have been hammered by the climate extremism, by the high taxes, by the regulations on business and waking up and saying we've got to do something different and then that means voting republican for the change we need. stuart: voting republican as in steve hilton and we'll talk more about that later. another one for you. politico reports that a top adviser to britain's prime minister and ons labor party election winning strategy, steve. you'll work on politics in
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britain and how the party operations and one advice for that policy giving to kamala harris. >> it's not going to be very helpful and in the labor party and win the big majority and that's almost entirely viewed for the total collapse of the conservative party after years of mismanagement and the economy of the doldrums and the labor party one of the worst performances in many, many years and it's really accidental victory in many ways and that's not what what is going for america and donald trump is obviously a very, very strong candidate and the candidate of change. so i don't think the situation is come probable so whatever messages she gets or advice they get, it's not going to help kamala harris very well and in particular harming problems and no one has a clue what she's going to do and not at least her
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and kamala harris is a problem for the kamala harris campaign and no forward advice and going to get on the wrong side. stuart: i don't want to get on the wrong side of you, steve so whatever. steve hilton, you're all right. come back and see us real soon, please. check the markets, real movement on the nasdaq and rumored on the dow down 178 points and that's not quite a half percentage point and significant loss and holding onto a 55 point gain for nasdaq. lou basenese with us. why would you rather buy apple every day than put a penny into nvidia? >> every day because it's a proven performer and $2 billion and growing and nvidia is competing to get the big tech of companies by all the chips and you look at it in summary and it's got nothing but tail winds in the favor of nvidia and increasing head winds and look
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at it with apple being the first 1 trillion, 2 trillion, $3 trillion market cap company and it's the winning horse that wins the race and may not have blockbuster growth and one quarter like nvidia and it'll be well and it's consist. stuart: talk politics and campaign of kamala harris and she announced the capital gains tax rate for very healthy people are going for a big jump. what impact? >> big jump and less than president biden wanted and less poison is still poison nonetheless and it's very clear cut and increase taxes and discourage investment and we've seen it happen and california and new york and maryland and increasing personal income taxes over time and what happened? tax revenues come back and people leaving the market and vacating the market and holding on long term and capital gains. stuart: who wants to -- you
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don't sell if you don't have to and simply opposed to 20% rate. >> lower the capital gains tax rate and get more trading volume and lower taxes you get more revenue and sounds re-deck louis but happens to be historically true. thanks, lou. stay with me please for the hour. i want to know what's going on with tesla. there's another nice 5% gain. lauren: full self-driving in europe and china and europe next year and that's the highest level driver assistance software and what will turn the cars into robotaxis. >> flying cars coming before fully autonomous cars. i don't see the regulators approving it. lauren: fsd. but there's a driver behind the wheel. it's not completely autonomous and they're starting that pending regulation next year and it's two huge places to get your technology out there. stuart: you've been down the
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awed bonnes? lauren: yeah, my car was shaking. stuart: going to amazon. lauren: giving more business to india and they're helping exporters sell $5 billion worth of stock alone and stock up 2.5% and that figure is $2 billion more than last year. think more items and more customers. stuart: beyond meat. are they still in business? lauren: yeah, once valued at, what, $14 billion during covid. now $400 million. i might be exaggerating on that $400 million. fake steak is coming. mimics taste and texture of a fillet. you're definitely going to buy the fake steak. it's healthier. i mean, turn around isn't working but apparently today it is. stuart: $6 a share.
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coming up, meta is saying anti-israel rallying cry and that's not hate speech. that's how they reach that conclusion. the administration going to innuance our election. it we're getting russia, russia, russia hoax and donald trump's reportedly going to adopt elon musk's proposal to create a government efficiency commission. i'll find out what congressman byron donalds thinks about that. the think it's great. the congressman is next. ♪
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stuart: today former president trump will deliver a major speech on the chicago. we'll carry it live here on fox business. have you got a preview before it? reporter: hey, stuart. we got a lunch in and working on a big role-playing for the nation's economy and we expect president trump to roll out the plan for what he wants to do to put things back on track and talking on the campaign trail and they all talk about the economy and coming down to the pocketbook and thinking about groceries and gas it's in a sean hannity interview during a fox news town hall and he'll be the wrong thing for the pocketbook is kamala harris.
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>> ask the trump this country will end upped and i've said this a lot and the country ends up in a depression if she becomes president. reporter: a government can i recollect the seizure disorders commission recommended by elon musk. that means trump will be taking an even more aggressive swipe at regulations than during the first white house turn and says he'll also conduct an audit of the entire federal government and that's something he discussed with the live interview on x the other week. trump outlines the tax plan today and aim to lower the corporate tax rate and meanwhile vice president kamala harris in pennsylvania and she's prepping for next week presidential debate and believe it, it's almost here and harris believes
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big corporations and more taxes offering small businesses tax free. >> this is very important. we'll cut the red tape that can make starting and growing a small business more difficult than it needs to be. more difficult than it needs to be. reporter: people in new york city wait for former president trump to get on the stage and talk about his plan for america's economy and going with the inflation problem and according to with the latest cnn poll and putting all in perspective and we're looking at that this morning and swing state of california and prepping for the debate and campaign. stuart. stuart: thank you, alexis. byron donalds joining me now. i'm egotore talk about this proposal of a government
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efficiency commission and it's elon musk's idea and i don't know if he'll chair it or not. it's a great idea. what say you? >> the federal government is massively bloated and so many federal agencies doing things that are not the core mission and congress initially authorized them and i'll go a step further, much of the agencies not reauthorized in decades and can't implement them through congress and congress hasn't done that with a failure of congress and authorizing these committees and making sure that what they're doing is their core mission creating to do -- not only for the side missions that are bureaucratting love for them to do. and number three -- bureaucrats love for them to do and we've raised millions and millions and reported for decades and nobody does anything for it and it's the bill in congress to do that and it's a great idea and love for elon to be part of it and need you in the private sector to take range of it.
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stuart: very difficult to implement. chopping out any section of the federal brock bureaucracy is al uphill struggle. if anybody can do it, it's elon musk. >> i agree with you. i think it's not that it's impossible. it takes the will in order to do so and in part, the voters have to want that to occur. if people want a lean, focused federal government, you have to elect trump to do that. kamala harris will layer on more regulations on top of existing trillions of dollars worth of regulations that biden harris administration already dropped on the hands of business owners all across america and you need a change and you need donald trump. stuart: let's talk about the debate upcoming soon. trump says harris had a special request for next week's debate. roll tape. >> when her campaign wanted to
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change the rules they'd agreed to, did they ask for notes? >> they wanted notes. >> they wanted to be seated and your mic hot? >> they wanted a desk. i said you have to stand up. >> after agreeing to the other? >> yeah, they wanted a desk from the beginning. know who else wanted a desk? sleepy joe. he wanted a desk. stuart: where why did she -- why did she want notes and not a telepromter? >> zuck because she can't rememr what she's talking about right now and all the things about kamala on the campaign trail and why not sponsor when she was a member of the united states senate and how come she didn't have conversations about joe biden getting them done right now and all the things are coming up because she wants to be president of the united states. not because she believes them and not because they're her core principles for core ideas. you need notes if you're trying to explain something that's really not in your mind for a
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long period of time and things you've thought through and real ideas about and these ideas are brought up by the consultant. that's why she needs notes and listen, america can see it 40, 50 days now and did one interview with tim walz and not good at all quite frankly. she needs notes in order to perform. needs a telepromter in order to perform. i'm glad there's no notes and if you want to be president, kamala harris, let's see what she has. stuart: see you again real soon. lou basenese still with me. what do you think of the government efficiency commission. >> what has a government ever done efficiently? it's in favor of the work and need an audit and government is excessively wasteful and $7.5 billion going to ev chargers and only a handful of them built. congressman donalds said we need
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authority and not just audit but someone with authority to act on the findings of the audit and someone like musk is great and what's done at x and half of the function and he knows how to do things lean and will the president act on the findings of the government. hard to cut the bureaucracy. stuart: putting the fear of god into the democrats. >> sure, it's our hard earned money lining their pockets and special projects without the authority. stuart: you read the book about elon musk, you'll know he's the man to slash a bureaucracy like nobody else. that's a fact. all right, thanks, lou. now this, u.s. accusing russia of interfering with the elections. how are they doing that? lauren: deployed millions louisiana year to fund ken polcari companies and create and distribute disinformation on polarizing information like inflation and job loss for white americans and privileges for people of color and at a news conference yesterday, the tournament general and fbi director and top administration
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officials said they're fighting back and they took down 32 internet domains used by putin to slay opinions here and those websites used to trick people into thinking they're reading or viewing accurate u.s. news. accurate content but it was all disinformation by russia and putin. stuart: thanks, lauren. dow industrials extending their losses today. look at this. they're down bot toll right hand corner -- bottom rights hand corner down 300 points. united health, home depot, visa, caterpillar, they're all dow stocks and all down. together they're shaving 140 points off the dow industrials. coming up, kamala harris still hasn't laid out a clear vision for where she stands on electric vehicles. is she in favor of forcing auto makers to go all electric? trying to figure it out. jewish students in new york city trying to get lunch in a kosher deli and pro hamas demonstrators blocked the entrance. free speech advocate sharese
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in the paints and nasdaq downturning all red in just the last few minutes. down 324 on the dow. lou basenese with me and he brought his stock pick with him and it's rx site. >> this is booming bet on aging population whether we like it or not. we're in our 40s and might start losing our vision and cataracts is a surgery many require. 4 million americans are required and going worldwide and this is a company that develops a lens and going after the surgery to make sure the vision is perfect as it can be and that adjustment happens presurgery and this technology and innovation loss has happened after surgery and better outcomes and booming growth for the company and revenue up about 60% in the last quarter. just getting started on this. small cap and compelling valuation. stuart: they put in a different lens. >> after the fact you can adjust it with the ophthalmologist.
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that's the vision. stuart: that's different. thank you, lou. jews moving out of the college campus and pro hamas crowd intimidated customers at koenen sure -- kosher deli and insults at people. showing trump is joining me now. that's not free speech, that's intimidation, isn't it? reporter: yeah, a lot of what we're seeing on cap puss especially in the new york area actually appointments and goes beyond free speech and appointments to not protective speech and actually would be real crimes so like a lot of times there's destruction of public and private property and also assault, harassment and creating hostile environments and they're violating their policies and going for their policies and then the universities to this day rarely hold the students accountable and protesters in new york you saw are harassing kuni students and they're one of the most
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anti-semitic campuses in the country and it's 3% jewish in the middle of the city. stuart: something's happened here. we've seen anti-semitism on college campuses, and now they're harassing jews off campus if they go to a kosher deli for example. this is a really dangerous development here. i don't want to see communal fighting or any other and they appear quite close to them. reporter: the fact that universities are not holding students or those protesters and they're not being held accountable and they're not students and they're just on campus and means they're trespassing in a lot of situations and however in many cases whenever students get arrested for committing real crimes and they're released and the universities are still keeping students and agree to give them degrees and again, it's a real accountability here and you see this across the country and the complaint earlier this year and seeing chapel hill and specifically
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they're students are violating state law by shutting down berry wise and took them six months to put that group on provagues and if there's -- probation and suspended on investigation and they held a rally last week and the rally was huge and had a lot of people going around saying horrible things and support by university campus and that rally is a suspended group and we should see no accountability here for the university groups. stuart: i don't get it back people being persecuted or muslim people, all hell breaks loose. if it's jews, that's another case. i'm not asking you to explain this but i want to pound the table because it's just not right. >> for me it goes all the way back to the universities because they teach students to behave this way and teach them to become activists, specifically when it comes to anti- semitism and dei and far left and the faculty and administrators are
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encouraging students to do this and we see this kind of bleeding out off the campuses. stuart: sharese, thank you for joining us this morning. appreciate it. on a related note, meta's independent oversight board rule that had pro palestinian slogan from the river to the sea is not considered hate speech. tell me more, lauren. lauren: from the jordan river to the mediterranean sea is israel. and the phrase is a call for destruction of israel and it's okay to use it if the content in the post does not call for israel or jews. that's sort of contradictory and meta's oversight board says a blanket ban would violate free speech. if you're using that phrase to express support for palestine, that's okay. if there's violence in that post, that's not okay. stuart: your comment, lou? >> it's hate speech. a blanket ban would be banning hate speech and inherently genocide dallas cowboys and anti-semitic. you don't use that phrase apart
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from palestine going to be free and they want eradication of israel. hamas has the slogan in their charter. it's not about solidarity. the natzis use hate speech and it's wrong and these last two decades down as a tragic time in history and social media destroyed youth and anti-semitism and instead of being established and flourished and i'm with you, it's tragic. stuart: now that the harris campaign is walking back it is plans for ev mandate, did they finally realize that voters are just not buying it. we'll break it all down for you. tiktok with misinformation there ahead of the election and movers are drawing scrutiny and hillary vaughn with the latest from capitol hill. that's next. ♪
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stuart: look at market and now looking at sports betting stock and couple of them are up, mgm and cesars are down. nfl season kicks off today. fans expected to place $35 billion worth of wagers this season. that would be a record high. write in for friday feedback who will win the super bowl this year. kamala harris dodging her support of electric mandate. lauren: would the real kamala harris please stand up. in 2019 as senator, harris cosponsored the zero emissions app and all new cars, electric or hydrogen by 2035. okay, now says as president, she won't mandate that and no
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details or explanation for the reversal. asking me, it seems like she's reading the room politically. she knows what she needs to say in order to win the white house and can figure it out. it's one of the consequences when you come into a race so late, you saw what worked and what didn't work. her policies push donald trump and, you know, if you want to win michigan, pennsylvania, and sun belt where the auto workers are and she continues to invent the policies on the fly. stuart: isn't it only a matter of time before they do these manmandates >> volkswagen volkswagen, ford and a political move to her and a fundamental reality and going to stress it up for them and going for that and it's affordable and
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beneficial to go 107% and supposed to do whatever we want and cut them for zero and going to ruin the rest of the movement. stuart: just the idea and fossil fuels by 2040 or 2035 or whatever it is. you cannot ban fossil fuels like that and you can't do that. lauren: fossil fuels are increasing in demand by the year 2050. that's what your administration and your agency is saying. why not come out and we've got to adjust this. stuart: coverage of the presidential election and they're face ago possible ban at some point in the future on
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capitol hill. why is tiktok ramping up coverage of the election? >> stuart, there's an election and tiktok is one of the main new sources for many americans so it's part of their job to try to figure out how to increase access and awareness about the election but ultimately this could be the last u.s. election for tiktok and comes in january and a lot after stake for a new source of many americans and they are launching election in integrity they con summited with a range of experts and going for policies and influence and attempts and this misleading after their smart device alexa
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had different answers on why to vote for trump or harris. senator lindsay graham writing to amazon ceo "the shocking interaction of users and alexa on why to vote for president trump versus why to vote for vice president harris is an issue and radically different responses suggest that amazon technology is interfering in the election in favor of one political candidate and it's not just tiktok or amazon and meta and google and going to be under a microscope and mark zuckerberg openly admitted they were wrong to censor the hunter biden laptop story and election and news comes out over the next few months in the liedup to the election, how these platforms handle it is going to be under scrutiny. stuart. stuart: certainly is. hillary vaughn on capitol hill. thanks, hillary. it's that time, a look at dow 30 and sense of the market and there's a sense of selling right this. i've got 26 of the dow 30 down, four are up and dow is
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down 362 points. president biden trying to block the u.s. steel merger and that could result in a loss of thousands of jobs and problem is both kamala harris and donald trump are in favor-over killing that deal. what does trump's former economic adviser have to say about it? i'll ask him, he's next. ♪
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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: this just coming to us. big news, hunter biden planning to change his plea to guilty in his federal tax trial. right now jury selection is underway at los angeles courthouse and two questions here: what will his sentence now be and will president biden pardon or commute his sentence? president biden reportedly looking to block the proposed $14 billion hermaner with u.s. steel. lydia hu is with us. what is the steel worker union thinking about this? >> stu, we had a chance to speak to the union boss, the president yesterday. he said he heard those reports also that biden will block the
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merger. he did not talk to ad ministration about it, but says he remains grateful to president biden and vice president harris for showing their support for the union he says. this eweon all along and merger between the u.s. steal and new pontosteel is bad for the country and undermining snagsal security and hurting juneon jobs and they worry that nupon will find loopholes in the collective bargaining agreement and they say the exact opposite, stuart. japan is an alley and they promise to work with the union and u.s. steel needs the catch from the sale and without it mills may have to close and jobs will be on the line and just yesterday, u.s. steel held a rally in pittsburgh. workers attended to show support for the merger. watch here. >> everybody that was here supports this deal because they
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know what it means to our leadership and our communities as we move forward. if u.s. steel is not here, all that goes away. >> this merger drew bipartisan criticism and kamala harris and each have voiced opposition to it and biden's reported plan to block the plan in the midst of the battle for pennsylvania voters. back to you. stuart: diana, thank you very much indeed. it's being blocked and i think it's a terrible thing. i think the deal should go through. what does kevin hassett say? >> if you look back at trump administration and every angle of imposing steel tariffs and protecting the u.s. steel industry that it was a national security issue. if you think back to world war ii; right, alleys defeated
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the -- allies defeated the natzi and turned the war with steel and national security expert and trump decided we have the three times steel capacity that it needs and probably wants to have that steel in case of war. i think that president trump is right that we need to have a steel industry because, heck, stu, you remember supply disruptions and the question about whether u.s. steel can survive without nippon steel, if they can come in and take over u.s. steel and they have turned into a super successful business and someone else could do the same thing. there's no reason why not to have a u.s. firm go in and have a cash infusion. pursuing the same strategy as u.s. steel. stuart: we have to agree to disagree. however, the next subject we'll agree heartly and the efficiency
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commission and elon musk is running it and we'll tell you more on this. >> there are about 24 million government employees in the country and state, local and federal and about 25 million employees and we have about as many government employees as small businesses and they're doing that and i'm in washington dc, stu. the federal government workers going to work and it's easy getting in and out of town and going to see people in the building and i think it's absolutely right for reform and who better than elon musk to come in and say, hey, all that stuff with one tenth the people. wouldn't that be a breath of fresh air? stuart: i'm told the workers in washington dc and maybe a
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quarter full. >> i haven't taken an exact cent suspended ands and i live here -- census and live here and work downtown and just don't see that and upward mobility of the wways that you can actually chek it out and going for washington and often get in and go to the cafeteria in the places and they're empty. it's astonishing to me we're paying those guys and many of them aren't doing any work whatsoever. let's get to the bottom of it and get to efficiency experts like elon musk and friends that he thinks should also be on the commission. we'll take a hard look at what they're producing and how many people they use and how we can do that better in order to save the taxpayers money. stuart: he'll audit every agency and wouldn't that be a fine thing. kevin hassett, thanks for being with us today. come back soon. let's get back to the steel deal. what do you make of the government trying to block it? not what i've got to say. >> standing unity with you and nice thought that another u.s.
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company can come in and do it and there's no competing bid and this is become ago political football instead of economic evaluation of what makes sense. stuart: if they don't get the money, they really start slowing down. >> seeing the market react and back down below deal price and the news was announced and i'll continue and it'll have a negative economic impact and carries favor with voters. stuart: i think you're right. move onto the thursday trivia question. here we go. stuart: 5, 10, 15, or 20,000 going to come back.
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stuart: how many breaths does the average person taken a day? 5, 10, 15, 20,000? can i start? we calculated there are 1440 minutes in a day. i am prepared to say i probably take ten breaths a minute which means i think there's 15,000 breaths taken by me or the average person in a day. >> don't know if the average
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person is healthier, 10,000 or 15. lauren: i think you are both wrong. i'm doubling of that. i think it's 20,000. involuntary breathing, intentional breathing, what kind of breaths and who is the average person? very strange question. stuart: we are not average. 7.3 million breaths the year. by the time you are 50. send in your friday feedback. david asman. david: happening now coast to coast donald trump is set to speak to the economic club, markets are closely watching his take on taxes, growth, interest rates and how h
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