tv Varney Company FOX Business December 11, 2024 10:00am-11:00am EST
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your call is the best gift of all. your gift will be my favorite christmas present this year. please call the number on your screen or go to loveshriners.org to give whatever you can. and when you become a monthly donor your first gift will be tripled! thank you for giving! stuart: the name of the song is espresso. it's about this time of day,
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10:00 eastern that i get through the rest of the show, the espresso was delivered to me on the set. >> nancy carpenter who sings this is pretty car popular. stuart: is there a relationship between taylor swift -- lauren: yes. stuart: i like espresso too. 10:00 eastern, look at that. the nasdaq is up 250 points. a small loss for the dow at this point and the 10 year treasury yield coming in a bit lower, not much change, the price of oil below $70 a barrel, $69.42, bitcoin last time we checked was 99,000. it's 95-five and change. that's the markets, now this. if you live in new york you may to be tempted to ask what is going on here? even if you don't live here you are asking what on earth is going on in new york. a series of news events but the
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city in the spotlight and we are not looking good. a week ago the assassination of the healthcare executive produced an outpouring of callous celebration. brian thompson was shot in the center of the city come the alleged shooter became a hero to so many across the country. the governor of new york has announced a huge vote buying operation. kathy hochul will give away $3 billion, she says it is to make upper inflation, the city cut services in order to spend billions on migrants, this city is going broke and the governor sends out the checks. trump's election of the migrant problem are changing the city's politics, democrat mayor eric adams moving closer to trump, he wants to meet borders are tom homan to discuss deporting, migrants, there's a switch. talk of adams becoming a republican. then there's the $486 million
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judgment against trump for a bookkeeping offense, letitia james pushed her this and is still pushing for it. her office rejected trump's lawyer's request to dismiss the case. you can't do that. how do you restore legitimacy to the politicized judicial system when the attorney general is just a trump hater. there is one good thing that happened here, daniel penney was found not guilty, he put a chokehold on jordan neely who threatened the subway passenger with a long history, the radical da charged penny with manslaughter. penny is a hero but the reaction of black lives matter leaves a nasty taste in your mouth. outside the courthouse they call him a murderer and put a target on him. it seems like yesterday. new york would like to ignore the election of donald trump, he is a threat to the same old same old foreign policies. ignore him at your peril, voters are ready for change, new yorkers are ready for some sanity. second hour of varney just getting started.
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liz peek with us this morning, our new yorkers ready for change? liz: 44% of new yorkers voted for donald trump, that's an unbelievable number in this deep blue state. i would say yes, we are ready for change in new york city. a recent siena paul showed almost 60% of new yorkers want a different governor than kathy hochul. she's in trouble and that's why you have this scheme of throwing money out the door to low income voters in new york in order to get them to vote. there is good news. daniel penny, the absence of bad news, had he been convicted this city would be even less safe, even more scared than they are right now.
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i tweeted this out, i felt confident that if something horrible happened on the subway train, the good people of new york city would respond and had he been convicted and sent to jail that would not be any longer the case, there's a huge vertically just a black lives matter making these threats, they threatened to riot, to have people show up, no one showed up. i think black lives matter is over. stuart: a spent force and that will be a good thing. you can op-ed, trump just outfoxed biden and his corrupt family again. i think biden is going to pardon his family? >> i think you wants to and what donald trump did with the kristin welker interview on meet the press was put that aside because he said i'm not out for retribution. my success will be my retribution which he has said before. he left the door open, truthfully, to pam bondy and cash patel following criminality if they find it,
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that's reasonable but this idea firstly to politico that the white house was going to issue a slew of pardons to anthony fauci, adam schiff, all these people, that was to hide the fact that biden would put halle biden in there and jim biden and other people that we know took money from hunter biden's nefarious activities in ukraine and china et cetera. i think it was a smokescreen and i think donald trump toppled it by saying no, i'm not out for retribution. stuart: the last few days before january 20th -- liz: let's hope we get to january 20th, you look at joe biden and it is scary. he's not in charge. stuart: thanks for joining us, appreciate it. back to the inflation report out this morning, consumer prices up 2.7% in the last 12 months. the market seems to like,
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inflation has ticked up a little bit, the market likes it, what's going on? >> the market knows the fed has a bias to lowering rates. i think it's a mistake for them to be cutting rates because i don't think the economy needs it. small business numbers soared yesterday, that tells us we will probably see acceleration in the economy and when the fed cuts rates, we have an acceleration of economic growth, while inflation is also accelerating when you look at food costs, energy, apparel, those numbers accelerated. all that does is add fuel to the fire so will be very bullish for asset prices right now but i think we are going to look back six months from now, this being a mistake of them cutting in december, ultimately it will cause them to have a major pivot because this is going to cause inflation to get worse next year in our opinion. stuart: why do you like amazon so much? i live in an apartment building. at this time of year the people
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on the front desk are facing piles of amazon boxes delivered just in time for the holidays so why do you like amazon so much? >> we felt we were going to see a lot of this money come off the sideline and cause an acceleration the economy, in consumer spending and consumer discretionary is the best sector and that type of economic environment. when you peel it back amazon is the best-of-breed in that. for those who don't own the etf, they want to be a little more aggressive than the individual name, that's why we love amazon so that is going to continue, the price action continuing to go higher into the new year. stuart: why have you fallen out of love with nvidia? >> we haven't fallen out of love with nvidia. we still love nvidia but are one concern is this recent price action. i would argue that nvidia is going to dictate whether we have a santa claus rally or not.
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it is still one of our largest holdings but it has broken the 50 day. we do think it will ultimately rake back through and get to new highs as we going to january about if nvidia breaks it will take the rest of the market down with it. that's one of the problems when you have a name that is so highly concentrated and highly owned but right now we would be buying this dip in nvidia but a very short leash if it does continue weakness but you can't have nvidia not rally and have a market rally, i don't think that's going to happen. stuart: good to see you again and we will see you again in the near future, thank you. look at macy's please. it is down big, 8% loss, it reported a decline in sales and profits in the third quarter. why aren't people shopping at macy's? lauren: a special during the holiday season, macy's says sales last quarter fell 2.4%. retail analyst george stewart
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says department stores in general look increasingly antiquated in the age of amazon. stuart: most people feel department stores are yesterday's news, they not just macy's but all department stores lost massive market share, the consumer is aging very rapidly, young people are not going to department stores, they are seen as overpriced, add value, always on sale and not clear. lauren: the company lowered their full your profit guidance. there's good news, they are working on a turnaround that includes closing 150 underperforming stores but want more drastic action. the latest activist investor, barrington capital is pushing for major changes, they want to extract value including the iconic location in new york city that is worth more than macy's itself. 5 to $9 billion. listen.
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>> we think real estate should be its own sector. its own segment and the operating company, 350 stores or warehouses should pay rent to the real estate company and we think that will create transparency, properly addressed the cost of the stores. you have to cover the cost of the stores. lauren: the proposal includes spinning out bloomingdale's, separate companies, luxury divisions with positive sales. macy's shares are down 8%. this is a historical chart. a level last seen in the 1890s. it is ugly, during the earnings report, macy's said we completed our investigation into the accounting problem that delayed that report, one employee made a mistake and tried to cover it up.
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that created one hundred 50 one million dollars in false recordkeeping entries. stuart: still ahead. anxiety pills, graffiti, a garage full of luxury cars, the world is getting its first look inside bashar assad's abandoned palace. get ready for this. a regular-season nfl game in 2025 which is american football taking over? i don't think so but we will ask the question. congress working to protect kids online, the bill is picking up support from trump and even elon musk. senator marsha blackburn is a lead sponsor of this bill and she's next. ♪
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stuart: 46 minutes into the trading session the nasdaq is doing very well, 276 points. minor loss for the dow. disappointing third-quarter results and announced the departure of the ceo. donald trump's cabinet nominees meeting with more lawmakers on capitol hill. chad pergram is there. what are we looking at today? >> reporter: it's between pete hegseth and susan collins. she has questions about sexual assault in the military and ukraine. pete hegseth met with lisa murkowski of alaska. >> i had a good exchange and we will see what process affairs. he has got probably at least
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half the senate that he's going to visit with. he has a process that will involve full vetting through the administration. >> reporter: murkowski and collins are key swing vote on controversial nominations. still potholes remain with some nominees that include cash patel for fbi and robert f kennedy junior to become secretary of health and human services. john thune is confident the gop will confirm members of the new cabinet. >> making sure donald trump's nominee's are put in place and ready to roll up their sleeves and go to work and we also are prepared to take care of the people's business in this country and look forward with any -- and agenda.
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>> they worry republicans manifold under threat from donald trump. >> low-pressure is overwhelming on most beyond words. a bully, tyrant, someone who needs every political leverage to uphold his own you go and invest it in this potential nomination. >> reporter: secretary of state nominee marco rubio met with chuck schumer yesterday and another meeting with a democrat today talking with christine him --kristi noem. stuart: the new congress is sworn in, the senate has already passed this bill with overwhelming majority. it would limit who kids can talk to, limit infinite
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scrolling and notifications, make it easy for kids to delete data and a whole lot more. senator marsha blackburn, republican of tennessee joins us now. are there enough votes to get this thing passed now? >> yes indeed. in the house we have enough to get it passed. it is a matter of the leader and the speaker actually putting it on the floor and calling the votes. the vote. there have been all these falsehoods about the bill and we have worked to tighten up protections on free speech. we have addressed the duty of care. there is absolutely no reason for this bill not to move forward. when elon musk has signed off on this bill he is truly the free-speech champion. he bought x to make certain
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free speech was protected. the ceo of x tweeted in the support of donald trump junior, has tweeted in support, we need to put protections in place fon the physical space. >> reporter: trump's nominees have been meeting with lawmakers on capitol hill. will the gop senate give a trump all the nominees that he wants? >> you will see these nominees move forward. each of these nominees will be confirmed. they are well-qualified, they are certainly outside the box nominees, not people who are career bureaucrats or worked extensively in these agencies and that's what we need to see, the american people gave donald trump a mandate to make certain
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that we stop, the way the federal government works, wasting taxpayer money, having two tears of justice, two tears of access. what they want to seize equal access, equal treatment, equal justice under the law. they will achieve that goal. stuart: if you are reluctant republican you will primary by the amaga movement, thanks for being with us. now this. the house task force investigating the first trump assassination attempt released a long-awaited report. what did they find? ashley: it was preventable and should never have happened. no single decision led to the near assassination in butler, pennsylvania but it was the result of various failures in
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planning, execution and leadership, among them not recognizing the security risks associated with the building where the shooter fired from. and sufficient monitoring of manpower before and during the event and technology issues that kept law enforcement agencies from communicating with each other. ronald rowe says he's blaming complacency for failing to recognize those risks and asking more funding to upgrade the technology and to hire more agents. stuart: daniel penny spoke to fox, first time he has spoken out since his acquittal. >> the guilt i would have felt if someone did get hurt, if he did do what he was threatening to do, i would never live with myself. stuart: manure leader joe borelli says alvin bragg, who put penny on trial, should
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resign, he is on this show shortly. mister wonderful, kevin o'leary, is working to develop the world's largest ai data center and it is not in america. o'leary is next. ♪ ♪ meet the traveling trio. the thrill seeker. the soul searcher. and - ahoy! it's the explorer! each helping to protect their money with chase. woah, a lost card isn't keeping this thrill seeker down. lost her card, not the vibe. the soul searcher, is finding his identity, and helping to protect it. hey! oh yeah, the explorer! she's looking to dive deeper... all while chase looks out for her. because these friends have chase. alerts that help check. tools that help protect. one bank that puts you in control.
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investment objectives, risks, charges, expenses and more in prospectus at invesco.com stuart: let's look at big tech, all in the green. solid gains of this week, up 40% today. amazon is up 2%. nvidia a small gain, microsoft up $4. apple reaching $229 a share. lahren is looking at the movers starting with nvidia. lauren: nvidia was misrepresenting crypto currency mining, nvidia appealed that, the supreme court said the case should not have been taken up but the practical effect means it can proceed. stuart: that is a little complicated. broad.com is up.
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lauren: the information reports they are working with apple, broad.com is up 4. 5%, apple is higher. stuart: have we got a stock buyback? lauren: the board announced a $9 billion share buyback starting in january, stock is over 3% pushing it down 6% on reports they are exploring buying. putting them together because it is still out there. stuart: trump has picked current fdc commissioner andrew ferguson to replace lena con as ftc chair. grady, big question. is ferguson going to go after big tech censorship? >> reporter: that is what donald trump expects andrew ferguson to do as ftc chair and it is what ferguson said he is going to do, writing a post on
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x, big tech's a vendetta against competition and free-speech will make sure america is the world's technological leader and best place for innovators to bring new ideas to life. dan ives agrees ferguson is pro-innovation. he says with lena con out as ftc chair the nightmare for the tech world is over and christmas came early. he also writes that doesn't mean antitrust enforcement will go away and entirely. he says we expect ferguson to continue to have a keen eye on the anti-tech world but he will clearly rollback head scratching anti-tech agenda including efforts to regulate ai and abandoning a brutal standard for any merger of any size in the tech world. trump announced his selection just as news broke that a federal judge sided with con's
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ftc and blocking the merger between kroger and albertson's, that deal has fallen apart but any potential appeal of that decision will play out during ferguson's tenure as chair. analysts don't expect him to rule with such a heavy hand. stuart: thanks very much. kevin o'leary known as mister wonderful is working to develop the world's largest ai data center in alberta, canada. kevin o'leary joins me now. why canada? and where are you going to get the electricity for this big data center? >> this started with daniel smith on your show in the last couple weeks. she has permits, she has power, she has the right climate and i
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flew up there to meet with her and she said i can get you the permits on 5000 acres of land, you can buy the land and my answer was yes mamma, that is exactly what i did because the demand for ai data centers, this will be the largest, 7 gigs of data center, the world needs 30 gigs and we are building four stateside. this is about purpose and power and i'm ready to go to work. stuart: i would have thought the only way to supply massive amounts of power to massive data centers on a short-term basis is to go nuclear. is that the way to do it? >> you said short-term. westinghouse is investing in a solution, 12 to 15 years but pricing right now, 58 to 60 one billion per gigawatt. you can light up a million homes with that but that is with the smallest data requirement.
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what smith has, she's got 200 trillion cubic square feet of natural gas, we could put turbines there and convert it into electricity and that's the interim solution so we have other opportunities with natural gas. one is in west virginia and the other in north dakota but i would need permits. when i heard trump talking about $1 billion, give me the permits. stuart: that's my next question. trump promised to hand out expedited permits, bringing a billion into america, get expedited permits. obviously you approve of that, good way to attract capital. >> doing it right now as we speak. if he can deliver that and hesburgham as energies are in west virginia has lots of gas,
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this is what i'm talking about. policy changes economic behavior. you are getting money in politics, 8 money and policy. this is the kind of thing that will bring capital back to the united states. they figure that in canada, got that done quickly, the same thing will happen and i like the daniel smith thing, she will be part of the pipeline initiatives. getting that thing fired up. everything is coming together on policy and capital. this is what we deed. you can still hate trump but got to love his policies because that will bring jobs to these states. stuart: i think the data center explosion is one of the most important stories and underreported stories in america today. thanks for joining us, see you again soon. bipartisan group of lawmakers going after biden's energy standards for household
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appliances. are they going to leave us alone? lauren: wherever you put your washing machine the house voted 215-200 to pass the liberty in laundry act to prevent the department of energy from new energy standards on washing machines that will make them more energy efficient, less efficient at cleaning your clothes and would have made a lot of them more expensive to purchase. this is the latest in a half-dozen house bills designed to get the biden administration out of your kitchen, bedroom, laundry room. leave us alone. stuart: still ahead, if israel had listen to the progressives, hezbollah would be thriving, hamas would be a force, iran would be fomenting chair and bashar assad would be in his palace. that's "my take," top of the are. how close are we to a gaza hostage deal? we will talk to the man making inroads, incoming hostage affairs envoy adam boller is
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stuart: market showing mixed picture, serious gain for the nasdaq composite, minor loss for the dow, up 16 points. a language learning company, bank of america says they are downgrading it, it appears to be trading at peak valuation already and beating expectations as a high bar. it goes 10%. president biden racing for a hostage deal in gaza. donald trump says there will be hell to pay for hamas. adam boller is incoming hostage affairs envoy and joins us now.
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what are you doing to release the hostages before the inauguration? >> i don't personally have to do that much. it's pretty easy for donald trump to send a tweet like that. when he says there will be hell to pay by january 20th, the difference between him and the prior administration is he takes action. he did it, the number 2 person in iran, hamas does not want to experience donald trump after january 20th. stuart: they believe trump is a tough guy who will do what he says he's going to do. >> he is the toughest, the toughest person in the world and that makes a big difference and i saw when he went to france. he's now seniormost diplomat everyone comes to in the world. stuart: how about in syria, austin tice, an american, has been missing there for 12
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years. do you have anything to do with trying to locate him? >> i have everything to do with supporting the current administration. that means letting people know whether it is turkey, israel, our allies, that this is very important to the united states, very important. he was in our military, a journalist, we left that long, he needs to come home and every other american hostage in syria, we won't tolerate it anymore. stuart: we've been getting video from inside bashar al-assad's palace. he has fled, he is in russia but we've seen what he's like inside that palace. we are getting a view of how this guy lived and the luxury he was living in and the level
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of abuse he delivered to his citizens. have you seen this stuff? >> i have seen it. it makes me think of saddam hussein and his sons and it makes me think you have people that are tired of this. i understand it and quite frankly let's talk about iran for a moment. the irani and people are great people and i am sure they are tired of what their government is doing to them. the trump administration will put maximum pressure, not against the irani and people but the irani and people have to act. stuart: are we at a turning point? a pivotal point in history of the middle east. are we turning the corner? >> i've gotten to know charlie kirk the last few weeks. i thought it was a weird name
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but it is reflective of where we are and this administration is not the first trump administration. it's a second version and it is going to be a huge turning point internationally, they know from the first that donald trump is the toughest, he's not going to accept this kind of crap anymore. stuart: we like the way you talk, wish you the best of luck in your endeavor. come and see us anytime you like him. virtually no change for the dow, dead flat, 44,215, dow winners, salesforce up $10, amazon, nike, boeing, microsoft, microsoft is close to 450, close to its all-time high. the s&p, where are the winners, top 5 broad.com.
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and salesforce on the list. nasdaq composite, alphabet, alphabet, etc. . daniel penny went through. he will do it again. >> would you do it again. stuart: more from the exclusive interview. or drones flying in neighborhoods, the government has no answers. >> we don't know what these drones are in new jersey. stuart: how come we don't know who is operating of those drones? joe borelli will take on that question next. ♪
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stuart: the nasdaq still up 250, 260 points. it is a videogame retailer with unexpected profit in the latest quarter, game stop. new jersey residents, nate foy is in ewing, what is this about 12 drones. following congressman chris smith. >> reporter: congressman chris smith, in ocean county, follow the coast guard vessel, in new jersey and across the country are demanding answers from state and federal officials. the fbi has received 3,000 tips. they are analyzing images right now but still no answers and that was a key topic of
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discussion during a hearing on capitol hill with us lawmakers addressing or asking questions about limitation to drone technology and new york congressman anthony d esposito said it's ridiculous that we haven't figured out who is flying these drones. >> the american people are looking at us and think we are lying to them because they think how could you possibly not have answers to drones flying over the most critical airspace. >> reporter: new jersey governor phil murphy hosting two briefings with new jersey and legislatures and mayors. or if he claims drones go dark when you got close to them. one of the state senators invited to today's briefing a 4-color are about how difficult it is to track on fox and friends. >> make contact with them, become evasive and elusive.
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we owe the american people answers and explanations. if they are not american drones, we owe the american people action. >> reporter: lawmakers on capitol hill referenced other drone threats frast year including drones flying across the southern border in texas and even over langley air force base in virginia. this is a serious problem and the us has some catching up to do. behind me at the state police facility, one briefing is underway with governor murphy and legislators in the state and in 8 minutes or so the mayor's meeting will begin. we will see if any of them have anything to say on the way out. stuart: thanks very much. new york city council minority leader joe or rally joins me now. why don't we know who put these drones in the air? somebody knows and is not saying. >> when i first heard about this i thought our neighbors
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from new jersey decided to make the invasion of new york, turns out they've been plagued with this for a couple weeks now themselves. people need to realize this is not the backyard hobbyist your neighbor might be. these are very large expensive drones, highly coordinated drones and it is underscore the fact that our government doesn't have much idea what is going on or control over how to regulate this behavior. stuart: they do know who is up there and what's going on and maybe it is our government that is putting of them up there. is it that way? >> i would like to think it is. the alternative is more scary, interfering with commercial airports. those are the things we expect our government to be able to take care of. we want planes not to fall out of the sky. i'm less concerned about the aspect of people being disrupted or potential people lurking in someone's backyard and more concerned about commercial aviation. stuart: it was be to know
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what's going on. >> we expect our agencies to deliver that information. stuart: they are not doing it now. daniel penny has been speaking out for the first time since being acquitted. listen to what he said about getting involved on the subway that day. >> the guilt i would have felt if someone did get hurt, if he did do what he was threatening to do, would never be able to live with myself. i will take a million court appearances and people calling me names and people hating me, just to keep one of those people from getting hurt. stuart: he is a good man. i want him on my side. after the ruling, the outgoing squad member jamaal bowman made a lengthy post at white people, some of you are too far gone
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but may be enough of you aren't and will join us in fighting to end white supremacy. >> jamaal bowman never fails to live up to the poor reputation he has an with this tweet we see the overwhelming number of his constituents decided to vote against him and put in a person who's fundamentally more decent. i said this on another show on this network, i did expect the acquittal. all manhattanites, people understood the context in which daniel penny acted. anyone who has been on a subway and felt there innards tests up and get stressed from this. we are all scared of it and with that understanding, that is what the jury is thinking of. stuart: thank you very much, good to see you. what's going on in new york? you don't think it is time for a change? >> things are getting a little better.
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stuart: change is happening. still ahead. victoria coates on the power vacuum in syria. gavin newsom's new spending proposal despite the budget deficit. sheriff thaddeus cleveland on the threat of mexican cartel members seeking revenge on our border patrol agents. senator mike braun on his new role as governor of indiana. the 11:00 hour is next. ♪ ♪ [cheerful music] [phone ringing] not all multimillionaires build their wealth the same way, you have... the fearless investor. the type a cpa. the boot strapper. the boot maker.
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i'll be home for christmas. please have snow and mistletoe and presents under the tree. right now all over the country, kids at shriners hospitals for children™ are able to go home and be with their families for the holidays. and it's only possible because of the monthly support of people just like you. thanks to a generous donor, every dollar you give, will go three times as far to help more kids. with your gift of just $19 a month, only $0.63 a day.
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we'll send you this adorable love to the rescue® blanket as a thank you and a reminder of the care you'll be providing so kids can be with their families. christmas eve will find me where the love light gleams. it only takes a moment to call the number on your screen. or you can visit loveshriners.org right now on your phone or computer. your gift of $19 a month will have three times the impact in the lives of kids like me. because every child just wants to be home for the holidays, and your gift makes that possible. your call is the best gift of all. your gift will be my favorite christmas present this year. please call the number on your screen or go online right now with your monthly gift. and when you become a monthly donor, your first gift will be tripled. thank you for giving.
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>> those eggs have not done down in price. that milk has not gone down in price. and until there's some stabilization of that, you can't claim the miz is good >> feels comfortable we have it mostly under control, not 100% and they can cut the rates and get back for more normalized level. >> netanyahu was focused on objective and not the commander and not going to let anyone stop him and military defending iraq and he left trump's tariffs in place f. they were so
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