tv Varney Company FOX Business September 9, 2024 11:00am-12:00pm EDT
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they spent a huge amount of money to get from five to 10% increases in revenue. >> my take on this is look. we don't have a firm plan but if we don't innovate, someone else will. china will. >> she's basically an arsonist whose trying to tell fire insurance. she created this terrible economy. >> the opportunity for this gang to setup camp in this guy's property is not his fault, but in my view the government who has an obligation to protector border. >> what's normal in a presidential election is someone seeking the most powerful job in the world to submit him or herself to radical scrutiny. >> ♪ stuart: at driving too fast." that is new york city. we used to have a wider shot.
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it's a very nice base today. next hour let's get a wider shot. 11:00 eastern time, it's is monday, september 9 to the markets, please. i see green, not as much as we had about a half hour ago but there's plenty of green up 360 on the dow, up a near 60 points on the nasdaq composite. s&p 500 is up .6% it was down 4% last week. big tech mixed picture. amazon, nvidia, microsoft up. alphabet, apple down. the yield on the 10-year treasury please going up a tiny fraction 3.71%. the new york fed just released its survey of consumer expectations. what do they expect on inflation? >> yeah, so the good news is, inflation expected to stay consistent around the 3% level. wages only expected to grow by 2.9%. if you do that math prices up 3, wages up 2.9 that means you're losing ground actually. on top of that 13.6% of people expected to miss minimum debt
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payments within the next year. that's not such good news. stuart: 13.9% that's interesting. >> i guess so. stuart: no impact on the market dow still up 370, nasdaq is up near 60 points. all right, brian thanks very much now this. europe is a nice place to visit but to me, it's like a vast museum. it lacks dynamism. it doesn't have america's drive. well the european union has taken a look at itself and it doesn't like what it sees. a blue ribbon commission filed alength it report this morning. oh, dear. only four of the top 50 technology companies in the world are european. maybe that's why they attack american big tech because they can't innovate themselves. income and consumption taxes mean very high prices, and much less spending money. electricity costs two to three times watt it costs in america thanks to draconian green rules europe is simply not competitive. all right, what are they going to do about it? they want a new industrial
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policy, queue the eye roll, please. they want to spend more on technology. would that be government spending? probably. i doubt these vague proposals will go anywhere. europe is run by a vast bureaucracy based in brussels and that bureaucracy will fight to keep its power. they are basically soft socialists. they don't like business. they hate the rich. and they just love regulating your life. no matter what this blue ribbon commission decides you can't change the european mindset. what worries me is the rise of socialism here in america, heaven forbid they make us like them. third hour of "varney" starts now. brian brenberg, you've seen him before. brian: i'm here again. stuart: all right do you think it's possible that america would follow the european line and get like them?
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i don't. i just don't see it. brian: i don't want us to but have the read kamala harris' policy proposals on her website which she just published? it sounds a lot like this blue ribbon commission, because there's two things that are killing europe. they punish success, as soon as you get successful they want to wack you like a pinata, and they think the government can drive innovation and growth and both will kill an economy and it could kill ours if that's the road we go down. stuart: there's no ingenuity. well that's an over-expression but very little creativity and innovation in european business. brian: relatively speaking you're absolutely right. they just don't come up with the next big thing like we do. they try to take their pound of flesh from the next big thing, and but look at what our governments doing. look at what our doj and ftc are doing? trying to kill all of the innovators. stuart: looking at the market seeing up 380 on the dow jones industrial average what's next? we have something on harris
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here? please, ladies and gentlemen? he asks -- all right next one. it's you, brian, a little pause in the action. brian: i like that. it's suspense full actually. stuart: kamala harris, this morning, kamala harris was asked about the debate tomorrow night. here's what she had to say. >> i mean, he, um, he plays from this really old entire playbook, where there's no floor for him in terms of how low he will go, and we should be prepared for that. we should be prepared for the fact that he is not burdened by telling him the truth and we should be prepared for the fact that he is probably going to speak a lot of untruth but, you know, i expect he's going to, i think he's going to lie. stuart: that's the tactic. brian: burdened by having to tell the truth. she uses that word burden every
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third sentence. what is the deal with that? it's a great way, if you don't want to debate your opponent just say ahead of time everything he says is lie so when he says something that's maybe true no, it's a lie. trump in this debate needs to hit her with her record and then come with his and those can all be facts. you can't pass those off as lies and it be a compelling debate. stuart: help she calls him a liar she's trying to get under his skin. brian: that's why they wanted to change that rule. she didn't like that rule. he's got to play it straight down the middle. no letting anybody get under your skin is the way to win this. stuart: brian stay there please. check the market, please. the dow is holding on to a solid gain i'll call it that up 380. the nasdaq losing a little ground up over 100 now it's up 67 points. jason katz with me again this morning. harris wants to raise the capital gains tax rate to 28% from 20% to 28%. for those earning $1 million a year or more. what impact do you think that
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would have if that was enacted? >> it would have a profoundly negative impact. granted, she's trying to cushion the blow from biden's proposal down from 40% to 28%. nonetheless, you're going to kill capital formation. in other words, what's the incentive for ultra high net worth persons to invest in the markets or what about companies coming public? it's a profoundly bad idea. if you add to that raising corporate taxes, taxing unrealized gains, you're looking at a time when we're in a very tenuous situation with respect to the economy. why would you want to kill the golden goose now? terrible idea. stuart: i think we've got a spending problem rather than a tax revenue problem but that's a very political thing to say isn't it? >> yeah, i mean, you'd like to see both sides of the equation addressed and all they are talking about is the taxing but the spending is going up equally if not more. stuart: huge. absolutely huge. now look if there were to be a 28% capital gains tax rate next
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year, and i saw it coming, why don't they sell now to get my 20%? >> you sound exactly like the phone calls i've received over the weekend and i'm going to receive in the forthcoming weeks. this is on everyone's mind whose in that position, and my advice to you and to my clients is very simple. you don't want the proverbial tax tail to wage increases the investment dog number one. number two, there's ample time. you have to see the outcome of the presidential election. you have to see the construct of congress. we would need a blue wave to see that type of increase in capital gains and even if that were to come to pass the legislative process takes a long time so at the end of the day, this is the harris camp, really asking for the world and hoping to settle for a small country. stuart: was it bill clinton who back-dated the tax increase? somebody did. it was mid-way through the year, they back dated it to january 1 so you were trapped. you couldn't get out of the last minute.
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>> it could possibly be retroactive but the likelihood is very low. stuart: do you think? >> i do. stuart: jason katz i think you're all right thanks for joining us appreciate it. ashley you're taking a look at apple. big iphone day today. ashley: it is indeed. that stock as you can see down one and one-third percent ahead of the big new products event. they are going to unveil their brand new line of iphone 16 phones at 1:00 p.m. eastern. they will also announce major changes to the apple watch and air pod earbuds, so they are selling on the news ahead of that right now. we'll see what happens afterwards. next up, pdd holdings the parent of temu down today because bank of america says temu's growth in the market is beginning to slow. the growth fell 45% in july much lower than the 99% growth they saw in the second quarter of last year. the stock down 2.25% and last
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one, moderna manufacturing facility in canada just received its drug establishment license from health canada. the milestone allows the canadian manufacturing site to become fully operational. also helped the company secure enough supply of moderna vaccines in canada. the stock is up 5.5%. stu? stuart: we'll take it thanks, ash. an op-ed in the new york times says the idea of taylor swift giving kamala harris an election-winning endorsement is just a fantasy. well, we'll see what self-proclaimed swiftie dave portnoy has to say about that. he's on the show today. the inspector general's office says i.c.e. is incapable of monitoring all of the unaccompanied migrant children released into america. art del cueto will take that to pieces and the latest jobs report revealed a growing portion of the workforce is made up of foreign-born workers.
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stuart: an illegal migrant from guatemala is accused of stealing a us citizen's identity to vote in multiple elections. rich edson at the white house. what happened? reporter: well, stuart, there's now apparently a plea agreement in this case according to the department of justice saying that she's going to plead guilty to all of the charges here. this comes out of the us attorney's office in the northern district alabama. according to their statement, they say that
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hadsangelia francisco assumed the identity of a united states citizen around 2011 and used the false identity to get a passport. using that, she also registered to vote in alabama in 2016 and voted in the 2016 and 2020 primary and general elections. former president trump appointed the prosecutor who leads this office. she does serve under the biden doj. democrats argued cases like this are are is o lated. this has shown a small number of non-citizens are registered and even fewer vote. >> a solution looking for a problem. i mean, there is no evidence that undocumented migrants vote. hard enough to get citizens to vote and it's just creating a
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new system and requirements that there doesn't seem to be any necessity. >> now that's in response to house republicans scheduling a vote this week on a bill that would require americans to produce a birth certificate or a passport to register to vote. >> it is a major problem. we do need a solution. considering that the last election was decided by about 80,000 votes, out of well over 100 million cast, there's nothing more in a republic than to make sure you have secure, honest, transparent and open elections. >> still an identity case in northern alabama. the department of justice says the state department investigated it because they say francisco renewed her passport in 2022 even traveled to guatemala with it then. stuart? stuart: rich, thank you very much indeed. now this. an illegal migrant was arrested and accused of rape after being previously released despite a
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violent rap sheet. art del cueto joins me now. okay. i think this is a disgrace. we've lost track of, i believe it's tens of thousands of children in this country, and that's under a democrat administration. when it was a trump administration, the democrats were all over children in cages or , you know, being separated from their families. why was this person not properly inspected at the border? >> well, several reasons. one, this administration has put policies in place to make it that much more difficult. they continue to release people constantly. the proper vetting is not done and when we say the proper vetting is not done, look. they can vet them through our system; however, they don't have access to guatemala, to you know, central america, to different parts of africa, so you can't really vet this. not like you can go to their drivers mvp, motor vehicle division and find out if they committed crimes. you don't even know what their name is.
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all this is being caused by this administration and they failed to want to address the problem and say let's figure out how to fix it. they come up with different plays to say hey we've got this app. we've got this new policy. we're going to stop the flow but what are you doing about the individuals you already allowed in, that happen to come in under your administration and your absolutely right. under the trump administration, we were not just vetting people properly, but we were saying hey, you have to remain outside the country before your case is heard. that's the major difference. under this administration, they said hey, come one, come all, ask for asylum and we'll just release you into the country and we'll get to you when we get to you and unfortunately they have done a horrible job of keeping track. you mentioned the children. under the obama administration we had thousands of unaccompanied children that came in through their administration. by the time trump came into office, those children were already full-grown adults. ask anyone in the credit administration where are
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those people? they don't know. come one, come all and not have access to where they end up is the problem. stuart: and th let them stay. the inspector general says i.c.e. is incapable of monitoring the hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied children released into the united states. that's what we've just been talking about. i think it's a disgrace, and i just don't understand how kamala harris can get away with this. it happened on her watch. they've lost track of tens of thousands of kids. okay, go at it, please, art. >> they getaway with it because they spin the narrative and the american people don't educated themselves. i hate to attack the american public, but they don't educate themselves with these issues. they think because one individual tells them hey, everything is under control, everything is good, the other guy, he's putting bad stuff on twitter. don't listen to him. they think with just that, you know, they baffel a lot of the american people but you're absolutely right. this entire chaos at the border and in the country has been
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caused by this administration. you have been talking about it for years. you've been talking to me about it for years. look when you're seeing constantly criminals in the us and i'm sorry they are criminals that entered illegally, asked for asylum and because of the poor vetting system they have been allowed to stay here we're going to continue to see these illegal aliens commit crimes on us citizens and it just baffels me we're going to give this administration four more years to do nothing and continue to hurt american lives. stuart: just breaks my heart when i thing of all those youngsters abused and trafficked. it's just a disgrace. art thank you very much for being with us very important subject and we appreciate it. thank you, art del cueto. >> thank you as always. stuart: yes, sir. an illegal migrant has been arrested in virginia. he's accused of abducting a teenager. ash, what happened? ashley: yeah, police say the suspect, 23-year-old jesus ramirez, an illegal immigrant from peru is now facing charges of abduction, robbery and
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impersonation of law enforcement. accused of abducting a high school student in virginia as she was walking to school. according to reports, the suspect was driving a red jeep when he allegedly approached the teenager, identified himself as a police officer and forced her into the vehicle. a short time later, thankfully the girl was able to escape and police were contacted. federal sources telling fox news that he is a peruvian illegal immigrant who was captured at the arizona border in december and guess what? just simply released into the united states. he's now being held without bond. insanity. stu? stuart: crazy stuff, thanks ash. we're going to check the pop stocks. i'll tell you why. trump just posted on truth social, "i believe it is time to end need less arrests and incarcerations of adults for small amounts of marijuana, for personal use. we must also implement smart regulations while providing access for adults to safe,
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tested products, as a flor floridian." i will be voting yes on amendment 3 this november. trump said if elected he would unlock the use of medical marijuana to a schedule 3 drug and work with congress to pass common sense marijuana laws. interesting new development from trump. coming up a silicon valley investor says elon musk should be prosecuted for comments he's made on x. >> you have somebody who runs really strategic defense and aerospace projects for the federal government whose actively undermining the government which is paying him. stuart: we've got the full story for you and it is coming up on this programmed to. senator bernie sanders says kamala harris is only trying to sound more moderate to win the election. she's really a progressive at heart, he says. steve forbes here to take that one. steve's next. ♪
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so you can connect with them fast. visit indeed.com/hire we're doing a live trading event in aventura, florida. at this incredible event, my team and i will be demonstrating the smart money trading strategies that have made us famous. if you're serious about trading, you don't want to miss this unique opportunity to trade shoulder to shoulder with the pros. it's limited to just 100 people, so make sure you grab your tickets now. call 888-809-8058 to reserve your seat. that's 888-809-8058. stuart: google faces another blockbuster anti-trust case going to trial today. grady trimble with me.
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okay, what are they being accused of this time around? reporter: stu, unlike the last trial, which had to do with google search and which google lost, this time around, it has to do with google's control over banner or display ads, the ones you see when you visit a website, for example, and the department of justice is arguing that google has an illegal monopoly because it controls the tools both ad sellers so publishers with websites and ad buyers, advertisers looking to post ads use as well as the exchange to buy and sell them. the doj says the company, google, controls between 50 and 90% of the multi-billion dollar ad tech market. the complaint, which the doj has reiterated in its opening statements today says google's pervasive power over the entire ad tech ins has been questioned by its own digital advertising executives, at least one of whom begged the question. is there a deeper issue with us
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owning the platform, the exchange, and a huge network. the analogy be if google or city bank owned the new york stock exchange. that's an analogy that the plaintiff, the department of justice, reiterated in their opening statements today. google, of course denies the allegations for its part it says there's plenty of competition that the doj's case is out of touch with reality in the digital advertising space, and that customers choose google's tools because they're superior. google says media companies like comcast and disney, retailers like walmart and target and specialized ad tech companies all invest in building their online ad services, couple lodge logistical facts, it's a bench trial so the judge will make the final decision, not a jury and we're already getting a taste of some of the witnesses we might see on the stand in the courtroom behind me right now is an executive from ganette, which owns usa today, talking about how they
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essentially solicit from buyers to post their ads, as on to their web site, so, it's going to get more technical but this is part of it that we can all understand today, with an executive from who owns usa today on the stand. stuart: what i don't understand is breaking up big tech because they're big and nasty. i don't get that at all. leave that to the europeans. grady thank you very much indeed. the latest jobs report revealed that last year foreign-born workers gained millions of jobs, native-born workers lost a lot of ground. edward lawrence is at the white house. what's behind this , edward? reporter: yeah, and really two issues here. the first, the jobs are being created under bidenomics. one part-time jobs and the full-time jobs being taken by those foreign-born workers. it shows they increased the amount of jobs increased 635,000 in july over august. now, while native-born workers lost 1.3 million jobs from july
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to august. this number includes many people working here legally. still the administration is trying to expand work permits for people claiming asylum so more of the folks coming across the border can work and the latest jobs report shows the economy added 527,000 part-time jobs while the number of full-time jobs decreased by 438,000. now the defense for all of this is basically a job-to-job. >> is the economy creating the right type of jobs then? >> so that's something we look at as well, and we saw growth this last month in construction. we saw it in healthcare. we saw growth in leisure and hospitality too and so we want the growth to be broad-based but we don't want them to be in just certain industries. reporter: but not specifying the jobs should be full time or part time or who gets them so because of the weakness shown in the economy and jobs report and other data some economists are openly talking about recession. >> so manufacturing is clearly down. that sector is clearly
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in recession itself, whether you look at the purchasing manager indexes or you look at the surveys from the different regional federal reserve banks. that sector has been declining literally for two years now. in terms of the broader economy though, i think there's a very strong likelihood we're eventually going to back-data recession to right around this time. reporter: now what is clear is that the job market is softening jobs as well as the border will likely come up in that debate tomorrow night. back to you. stuart: edward thank you very much indeed. steve forbes joining me in new york city. there are 8 million migrants here in america. what do you do with them? once t they're here do you suppt them or let them work? >> supporting them means give them credit cards and the like so what you do is you hire more personnel to get these applications adjudicated quickly, and the thing they also have to do is security. aurora should not have happened. trump is right.
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send in the national guard. guard these hotels, but get these applications processed. stop the incoming number of workers, and if you want to get a job, you have to register, go to like a parole officer each week, what you're doing, why you're doing it, and so your case can be quickly adjudicated but 8 million people will take two to three-year toss get through it but no other way to get through it but it can be done if you are willing to do it. stuart: let's be rational, steve. if you go to a construction site, especially in florida, or texas, people are getting paid under the table. landscaping, paid for cash. what do you do? >> sure. this is where the whole thing on immigration reform has floundered for years. we've known since the 1970s that we have this situation and they do nothing about it. what you do is you have a certain number of people that you let in and we used to have a farm program where you could bring in seasonal labor to meet seasonal needs. do the same thing in construction and other jobs where you come in on a permanent
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or semi-permanent basis. people are willing to come legally if they know they can come back when they go home after the season or the job is done. that reform was done back in the late 1940s. we can do it again but the key thing is make sure the people who come here legally have the legal means to do it and don't have to wait five years to get a permit which is what happens now. stuart: next one, steve. bernie sanders responded harris' flip-flopping on key issues. hold on a second. watch this. >> i don't think she's abandoning her ideals. i think she's trying to be pragmatic in doing what the she thinks is right in order to win the election. she is not where i am but i think, for example, when she talks about making the tr childx credit permanent and we did that in the american rescue plan so yes, her views are not mine, but i do consider her progressive. stuart: so, wait a minute. [laughter] how do you believe these
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reversals? what will she do if she gets elected go back to the left? >> well absolutely. i wonder what truth serum he gave him before he went on that program. >> [laughter] >> by saying, hey this is just smoking mirrors for the election. you know, she's going to do what she always does. there's a saying a snake rattles before it bites you? that's what she is. she's been on the record for years with her true beliefs are and her whistle, dog whistle they love that word, for what she really stands for when she says her values are the same. that's the signal of the progressives she's going to go far left and she's also going to have the regulatory state with her, so even if the republicans say capture the senate there's a lot of bad stuff happening anyway and the whole foreign policy thing for another time and disaster. stuart: brian, is harris pretending to go to the center? brian: yeah, i mean the guy with the power, bernie sanders, just said, the reason he said it is because he knows what's going to happen if she gets elected.
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he's going to dictate policy just like elizabeth warren, just like the whole left part of the party. i mean, god bless the guy he's telling the truth. thank you, bernie sanders. >> he did it with biden and he's doing it with harris. stuart: but at least he told the truth that time and came right out with it. steve forbes you're all right coming up, tomorrow the highly-anticipated debate, kamala harris and trump. what does barstool sports by dave portnoy want to hear from these candidates? he's on the show shortly to tell us what he thinks. ♪ ♪
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business, we've got the dow up 522 points, and the nasdaq has recovered better than 100 points higher and that be .76% but the dow doing very well 1.29% higher. in a new op-ed, former new york governor andrew cuomo tried to dodge blame for the covid nursing home deaths during the pandemic. he blames trump. president did recklessly politicized covid from the very beginning. his main tactic was avoidance. to down play the severity of the virus. deny any and all responsibility and then to blame the democratic governors for mismanagement. it was a complete failure of trump's leadership. dr. marc siegel joins us now. doctor, you heard that. what do you make of it? >> well, i like the terms bait and switch. how about that? bait and switch. let's write an op-ed in the new york daily news where he may be running for mayor and start to point fingers at president trump who when i went on tv and said why don't you bring the united
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navy ship comfort up to new york harbor he did. now i don't know if it was anything to do with me, stuart but he brought it up here and they didn't do anything with it. it sat in new york harbor and they didn't do anything about it but there was a law, stuart, that the governor passed which allowed them to reassured mit covid patients to nursing homes here in new york when they weren't fully recovered and nursing homes were like kindle for covid because people were so close together and because there was staff that was getting sick, and a lot of people died because of this and he passed this and he knows full well he passed it and janice dean has been all over this for the last couple years. it's a disgrace he's trying to point fingers at trump. trump had nothing to do with this whatsoever. it was a state law. stuart: thanks for making that clear, doctor, because of a time he could lose the clarity of the situation. i've got one for you. a new study shows that night owls are more likely to develop
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diabetes. okay, what's the link between staying up late and diabetes? i don't think i've got a problem because i'm a super early morning guy but what is the link? >> well, stuart you don't have a problem at all. half of the purpose of having me on this show is to do these virtual check-ups where i tell you, you have no problem at all. that study was done in the netherlands and you might imagine what this is about. when people stay up at night you know what they do? they eat. they drink. they smoke. they don't have the healthiest lifestyle. early to bed, early to rise keeps a man healthy, wealthy and wise. truth to that and if you gain a lot of weight at night, guess what happens? you get diabetes. you're much more likely to get diabetes. that's what that study is showing. stuart: i think that i'm pretty safe. getting up at 2:45 every morning and going to bed about 6:30. captain "no fun." doctor, thanks very much for being with us and taking care of me all these years you're all right, we'll see you again soon. >> good to see you.
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stuart: the princess of wales, kate, just announced on social media, that she has completed her chemotherapy treatment and she says her focus is on a path to healing but she's looking forward to getting back to work and taking on more public engagements that's good news indeed. now the dow 30, get a sense of the market he says it everyday. the sense is, the markets going up. lots of buying. i've got 26 winners and four losers out of the dow 30 . the dow itself is up 540 points. boeing, the big winner, of the top left hand corner right there. the dow is up 1.3%. wow barstool sports guy dave portnoy thinks caitlin clark and indiana fever are going to win it all. portnoy is next. (cheerful music) (phone ringing)
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word, most impactful genre to date and i'll be there to remind the world why. the super bowl will be held in new orleans and you can expect the game, watch the game on fox. now an op-ed in the new york times is breaking down what it calls the taylor swift endorsement fantasy. the piece says evening swift publicly backs harris, it won't be an election winning endorsement. well look whose here, dave portnoy, you're a self-proclaimed swiftie. should she get involved in politics? >> no, i don't see the upside for her, but i mean, to each their own. if you feel like you have to get involved whatever the reason may be then i'll never criticize somebody who're talking about politics, but she's never really gotten in that forum so i'd be surprised if she did it but that's up to her. it's a personal decision. stuart: okay, what about, we'll stay on politics. tomorrow the debate between trump and harris. are you watching and what do you want to hear from both candidates? >> yeah, of course i'll be
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watching. you know, i'm curious to see how it goes. we really haven't heard anything from harris so i'm just curious to see how she speaks, how she responds, but the truth of the matter is i don't think this debate is going to change how really anybody votes. the problem with this country, evidence has already made up their mind. they are so entrenched this election just comes down to who can get their people to get out more but nobody i don't think is flip-flopping based on what's going to happen. it'll be a sound bite fest. stuart: but it comes down to who looks presidential. who looks like they can handle the oval office either again for trump or first time for harris. that is perception is demeanor, that's really important isn't it? >> yeah, it's super-important, but again i'd go back to, i don't know that it matters like the people who are going to vote democratic will vote democratic no matter what could probably wield out joe biden and have lettuce coming out of his head and they would still vote.
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we are so entrenched in who we want already it's hard to change minds. stuart: i've got you down as a trump guy, dave. are you? >> yeah, i'm voting for trump. i don't know that i'd call myself a trump guy. if i thought there was a candidate that the was better i'd be open to having that. like i didn't vote for him in, i would have voted for him in the republican primaries but i'm voting for him now. stuart: you've got a big prediction. you think caitlin clark and the indiana fever will win the wnba championship. how much are you putting on that bet? >> i put a hundred grand on them to win 10 million stuart. if i win this bet there are 100:1 when this happened. they are now 17:1 on draftkings. if i win this bet, i will expect a parade through the streets of new york, ticker tape with everybody saying "there goes dave portnoy, the greatest gambler who has ever lived." because it will be the greatest bet of all-time. stuart: it would actually.
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that must have been months ago right? >> no, stuart that's what makes me different. you know the kids they say he's built different? dave is built different. it was the all-star break a couple weeks ago. i tweeted out, i said, um, listen. she had rest because she left her off the all-star team. this team is coming together for the first time. she's a rookie. she's a triple double machine now and they are playing great so no. it wasn't that long ago. stuart: what a turn-around 100:1 to 17:1 is a huge shift. >> in a matter of weeks. stuart: you may have had some together do with that. >> no. stuart: you're betting on caitlin clark and the fever? >> well if you want to get me if you want to say my brain had something to do with it but i mean, they been absolute terror since the all-star break playing as good as anybody in the league. stuart: okay. >> they started 1 in 9 and they are 19 and 17. stuart: i'll need to get you on a news development.
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miami-dade police officer on administrative leave duties after detaining the miami dolphins wide receiver hill right before the game against the jaguars he had a driving violation and ultimately released and put him on the ground and cuffed him though. hill says he has no idea why he was cuffed to begin with but dave, the guy was a real gentlemen at his press conference, evenly balanced guy. i thought he came across really well. >> yeah, so i mean, in these cases, i always like to wait and get all of the info, but if we're just looking at the way he's acting on the ground, he certainly doesn't look like he's resisting arrest or doing anything that would warrant being face-down on the pavement with a knee on the back, so it's a really tough look, visually, and, you know, it's disturbing and a lot of people saying including him, what would happen if he wasn't tarek hill some the players are stopping and it's a very legitimate thing. he's a famous rich guy getting ready to play football so it's disturbing not a good look based on what we see. stuart: 45 seconds on the big,
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the one bite pizza fest. randalls island this weekend. how much to get in? can i get a ticket? >> yeah, well i'm not going to make you pay, but if you like pizza, it's the best food festival in the history of the world. this is year two, forecast this year 80 and sunny. the morning session sold out. the night session is still available. if you like pizza, you have to go. you owe it to yourself to go. one bite pizza fest. stuart: unfortunately i'll be in london. first time back in 30 year, david. >> good for you. they got pizza over there. stuart: it's not like here, man, let me tell you. >> no but i've got a couple over there i've been changing it over there. i've been helping out. stuart: all right gotta go dave sorry. seal you again real soon. i've got the monday trivia question. how many states border canada? 10, 13, 16, 19 it could not be 19, surely. the answer when we come back.
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cla - cpas, consultants, and wealth advisors. we'll get you there. >> throughout the commercial break we've been vigorously trying to figure out how many states border canada, we will come up with different theories, ashley you cannot be part of the conversation but your first answer, what do you have.
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>> i was wondering the same thing, washington, idaho, montana, i'm going to go with 13, number two. brian. >> given the info we received in the commercial break i'm going to go with 13 although my original theory was 16, i'm going with 13. >> i'm going with 16, 13 maine, new hampshire, vermont, pennsylvania, michigan, minnesota, note the coda, idaho, washington and of course alaska, well done, polishing fingernails thank you for being with us "coast to coast" arson for seconds. >> we can have a nice conversation if you gave me the for seconds. good to see you, happening on "coast to coast" we will break down kamala harris long last policy memos
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