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tv   Cavuto Live  FOX News  November 18, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PST

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the row cal protest that continues to put the pressure on israel for a cease-fire, even as the israelis provide proof they say that hamas was using the hospital that was the source of this debate as sort of a weapons center and sort of a military center. having said all of that though, it's not just those outside of israel that are pressuring the government. there's pressure within the government by the opposition leader that wants to get rid of the prime minister for his handling of all of this. we'll be speaking with him shortly. in the meantime, trey yingst with the latest. >> hey, neil, good afternoon. i want to start with a fresh update from northern israel where the israelis say they intercepted a suspicious object in southern lebanon as renewed fire into northern israel is taking place right now. quite the exchange of fire today as the lebanese militant group hezbollah continues to get involved in the fight. on the southern front, the
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israelis forces are striking more hamas targets and positions inside gaza. we're waiting for an update from the israelis when it comes to the report about the u.n. school that was hit in the gabalia area today. in increasing civilian casualties. i want to read you from the military operations inside gaza. they say there are expanding activities inside the gaza strip over the past 24 hours. troops from the 36th division operated in the area and divisions operating in the jabalia area. this indicates they're going from the mediterranean sea further into gaza city trying to capture more territory and hold at that land in gaza as they look to destroy hamas leadership and also try to rescue as many hostages as possible. the focus still for the international community remains al-shifa hospital. the hospital claiming that israelis were pushing to
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evacuate to the south. and israelis say the hospital directors asked for assistance from the international community and organizations like the red cross and the united nations. back to the northern front though that fire coming into northern israel after 25 rockets were fired this morning by hezbollah. the israelis continue their strikes against those positions, trying to hit the source of that rocket fire. when we zoom out from all of this, the concern is that what's happening on the ground here in the south and on the northern front with lebanon could expand across the region. you look at this map here, 61 different attacks against u.s. interests since this war began, 43 days ago. real concerns not just on the ground here in israel, but by israeli's key ally, the united states. the attacks by proxies could increase in the coming days. neil: thank you, trey, be safe. the president is in delaware this weekend, but the pressure is on him right now especially over the continuing attacks on
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u.s. troops. i believe lucas, we're up to 61 now, right? >> that's right, neil. the u.s. military has only replied with air strikes three times. so, about one u.s. air strike for every 20 attacks on u.s. forces and remember the 23 million reaper drone over yemen. and so far they have not struck back inside yemen. here is former secretary of state mike pompeo on these attacks. >> we've had over four dozen attacks on american soldiers in the middle east in just the last five weeks, and the response from this administration has been almost nothing. i'm worried because i'm confident that the ayatollah and the president of iran view this as a weakness for further green light for actions in the middle east, gaza, maybe in israel, but perhaps further actions here inside the united states as well. >> now, last night, pro palestinian protests continued here in the nation's capital at
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union station. there's mounting criticism for the biden administration after government officials from 40 officials demanding a cease-fire and oppose the handling of the war. and this one is not anonymous by former members of the obama and biden administration praising the administration, and in fact 66% of americans support the israelis, 22 support of palestinians, 8% support neither. ahead of thanksgiving, president biden and the first lady will travel to station norfolk, the largest in the world and home to the eisenhower and ford strike groups. she was supposed to be home for holiday, but extended due to the war and ike was supposed to replace here. she's in the persian gulf keeping an eye on iran along with the destroyer, cruisers
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and submarine escorts. now, president biden turns 81 on monday, neil, don't have to go on a limb to say that it won't be well-publicized, but maybe the navy will bake their commander-in-chief a cake. neil: you know, 81 is really like the new 81 when you think about it. i guess not. >> that's right. neil: all right, lucas, you're the best. lucas tomlinson-- >> he's a few years younger than 81. following these attacks and our limited response to them, as you just heard from lucas. >> three responses to now 61 attacks the former u.s.s. cole commander. and one of these proxies, the houthis, behind the attack on you in 2000, they're still active and viable and being advanced by iran. what do you make of it? >> when al-qaeda attacked us, that's slightly different than the houthis.
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nonetheless, they're making attacks against u.s. forces. they are not taking direct action against us, they shot down a drone and u.s. navy reacted with defensive measures to shoot down weapons by the houthis. a larger consideration, neil, i don't want to give credit where it's certainly not due yet because the response so far by the biden administration has been weak, but perhaps it may be that the u.s. wants to get an overwhelming number of forces into the region before we react in any manner that may go to the source of the problem, which is iran. neil: to go to the source of the problem, that means making a strike against iran itself. do you think we're poised to do that? >> i'm not sure we're poised right now, neil, it's always prudent to be ready to do so if necessary. if attacks by the proxy groups continue, who directs them.
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they don't operate independently. they operate with the benefit, financially, with arms, with planning, with training all coming out of iran. the bottom line is, unfortunately, neil, for 40 years, americans have tolerated the country of iran killing hundreds and now thousands of americans and at some point we're going to have to aim at the right target, not the wrong target because we can't play whack-a-mole forever and we're going to have to figure out how to hold iran responsible. they have not put sanctions in place, they could do, pull back the $10 billion they gave them for humanitarian purposes and the bottom line with that, every dollar that they have to spend for humanitarian stuff, now gets diverted to terrorism. neil: do you think they really care about these sanctions? i mean, they're sitting on a lot of money as it is. they seem to think that we're worried about escalating this war ourselves to attacks
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directly on iran and they seem to act like that, commander. in other words, these attacks through, you know, these various proxy groups continue with abandon. >> well, neil, i think you're absolutely right. one of the problems you have is that our responses at a 20 to one ratio have been proportional. proportional responses do not deter and at some point, we're going to have to strike in a large enough manner with enough forces that eliminate the threat, not just proportional response, not even beyond deterrents. they've had an opportunity where deterrents has failed to this point. we have to look at what is the larger calculation going to be for stability in the region and also to protect our ally israel. neil: when you talk about stability in the region, it's sort of accepted that if it escalated to direct involvement taking on iran, whether they we do it or israel does it, might make things worse, but that it's a game changer.
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russia gets involved. we see china getting involved. do you see that or is that just overly played that that wouldn't happen? >> i don't believe it would. russia is tied up right now, the vast majority of that force is in ukraine. they're getting slaughtered on a daily basis and yet, putin is continue to push people there. china has a strategic objective, first and foremost, they want taiwan and they're not going to do anything to distract and disrupt that. and the last meeting with president xi and president biden, china economically right now is weak. while they may be able to take a greater hit for the long-term goal of being able to engage on behalf of iran, i do not believe they will do so at this point in time. they don't have any forces in the region to do it and i think economically, they do not want to risk their future. >> commander, while i have you, there are reports of dissension within israel now about the handling of the war. we'll be speaking very soon
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with the israeli knesset leader, but that he's the first to say that benjamin netanyahu has to go. in other words, that overwhelming worth that benjamin netanyahu had going into this, much like the overwhelming support george w. bush had going into the war in iraq, might be waning. this is happening though a lot sooner. what do you think? >> i think, neil, to a certain degree there's probably some internal tension and conflict going on within the israeli government right now. while they have come together and formed a unity government in order to pursue the destruction of hamas, i think there are people leaning forward to say, look, we need to begin thinking down range beyond netanyahu. let's face it, he was the president in charge-- prime minister in charge when hamas attacked. clearly there's an intelligence failure in many ways similar to
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what we experienced on 9/11. those can be worked out long-term, but right now, i believe the government of israel needs to remain unified with u.s. backing, despite the pressure being put on it by nations around the world and especially the arab nations, because hamas must be destroyed. and at the end, that will send the strongest signal that we are no longer going to tolerate terrorists to operate with a freehand throughout the middle east like we have, and that we, in fact, are not going to let our national security interests be jeopardized by those proxy groups and by iran. neil: commander, thank you. hope you have a safe thanksgiving. always good having you on. >> thank you, neil. a happy thanksgiving to you and your family as well. neil: commander kirk lippold, and everything out of control crazy. in the meantime, out of control crazy with the migrant surge that so many big cities are seeing right now, but in new york it's so bad it's going to cost billions of dollars to fix and it's going to mean from the
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>> migrants surge, costs cut. that's the story in scores of american cities, nothing like what's happening in the big apple where to address the hundreds that have arrived and hundreds more, we're told, possibly coming, the city is taking some pretty draconian measures. griff jenkins has more. >> draconian is kind. good morning, neil. and what mayor adams says this may be the beginning. we're talking $4 billion in cuts, freezing new cop hires, dropping the force below 30,000 and slashing in all of this the education budget by a billion. this should concern every new yorker, but don't take it from me, neil. the n.y.p.d. police union calls
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it a disaster, takes a police force already stretched to a breaking point to levels not seen since the crim epidemic of the '80s and '90s, looking to spend $12 billion on migrants over the next couple of years. and speaking to this yesterday had this reaction. >> the mayor brought this upon himself by insisting that these individuals who are flowing over our southern border were entitled to free hotel rooms, to free attorneys, to also sorts of different services. and now, we're seeing that he wants to cut from the hard working tax paying citizens. it's very concerning that he would cut our police force down. it's already down, by the way, about 6,000 officers than where we were on september 11th, 2001. griff: new york is not the only blue city in crisis. this is the scene outside of a police precinct in chicago where it's so crowded that
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officers had to construct a makeshift staircase out of milk cartons, that's what you're looking at there just to get inside. the worst part of it, the stench of urine in the area. and now it will limit migrants to 60-day stays in shelters and brand new numbers from the southwest border, cvp tell us since the new fiscal year october 1st, encountered more than 6500 chinese nationals, 700 afghans, 150 plus syrians and 80 plus iranians, and those are just the ones we know about, neil, for the month of october, just over 1,000 known got-aways every single da i day that evaded border patrol. just got the numbers, migrants across the border over 8100,
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the crisis continues, back to you. neil: and even christopher wray, the fbi director is concerned the nefarious elements could have and likely did get into this country, so they're there. >> they are, indeed. it's worth noting about every single chance christopher wray gets when he testifies on capitol hill in front of a microphone he's making the point we simply don't know. a decade ago, 20 years ago we weren't having people from 100, 150 countries coming across our borders, now they're coming from all over and the ones that got away, we just don't know where they're from or why they're here. neil: yeah, that itself is scary. griff, look forward to seeing you, and today, right at noon eastern time. thank you, griff again. griff: thank you, sir. neil: all right, well, if you're worried about all the crime and the problems that come with it in some of the cities and it's no longer a matter of just dealing with it at stores. it's been happening on your
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drizly. all right. 60 seconds to draw the perfect gift. what's it gonna be? a bottle of don julio, 1942, delivered. delivered with drizly. gifting without the guessing. drizly. >> all right. 'tis the season. actually for the taking. it's rampant. grady trimble on a wave of robberies that kind of, well, makes it all look a little weird this season. >> we use today talk about porch pirates, crooks swiping packages from your front door, now the thieves are going straight to the source, delivery trucks full of your packages. in memphis last saturday, police say a group of cars blocked a fed ex delivery
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truck, a swarm of people then broke into the truck, stealing $100,000 worth of other people's deliveries. when memphis police got there, they say they saw multiple vehicles leaving the area at high rates of speed and driving recklessly, and multiple boxes all over the area, with various items thrown all over the road. a similar incident in atlanta last sunday, thieves stole packages from an amazon delivery truck and in d.c. this week, a man pulled a gun on and carjacked an amazon delivery driver. didn't seem like he was going for the packages though. police say he'd already carjacked another vehicle and was trying to get away from the cops when he drove off in that amazon van. he led them on an intense chase before they eventually surrounded and arrested him. meantime, the biden administration is citing new data this week showing crime is
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falling and the administration is taking credit for that drop. >> the biden-harris administration's investment including $150 million from the american rescue plan that cities use today improve public safety is working. >> despite what the administration says, americans don't feel safer. a new gallup poll say 63% say the crime problem in the u.s. is extremely or very serious. that's up from 54% when last measured back in 2021. nearly one in three of those surveyed say they or someone in their household have been the victim of a crime recently, some pretty staggering statistics there, neil. neil: absolutely. grady, thank you. great reporting as always. in the meantime, you heard that the president is back after spending almost a week in san francisco, the first four days or last four days of the week for the apec summit including the powwow with the chinese
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premier. for a lot of san francisco, they said they did not recognize it. and it was all cleaned up and-- it takes a pow wow for global leaders to get it spruced up. you're worried how long it's going to last. >> it's clear they're capable of cleaning up, but choose not to. is anybody surprised. newsom made it clear many times over the year, he does not care about his constituents, and is willing to cause them harm to push his own political agendas. we shunting surprised. we all know this story. neil: he had said that part of the cleanup, getting ready for, you know, not only the president, but leaders of these 13 other countries, is you do this anyway, no matter who you
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are, much like average folks they have company coming over, they get the dishes off the counter and clutter off the counter and shove stuff into a room and whatever you do. he says this is nothing more than that. >> sure, you power wash the streets, you do touchup painting, but you don't conceal the reality on the streets. the reality, there is enormous squaller, safety is down, and lawlessness, it's not a light touchup, clean up, brush a few things under the rug. it's a complete farce. he does it under the national spotlight, but doesn't do it for his constituents. i hope people realize this. he doesn't try to hide the fact that he's doing it for optics and not for the well-being of the people who live here. it's abundantly clear. >> how is your business-- i'm sorry, danielle, how has
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your business been and how have you held up through this activity? >> it's no secret that the conditions here have significantly deteriorated and now with the rise of work from home policies people don't have to stay. so, they can work from anywhere in the country and really, anywhere in the world. i have people who want to spend the winter in park city being ski bums or go to lisbon to a month to work from portugal. they don't have to stay here and they're pursuing higher quality of life at lower cost of living because it's caused tremendous harm to small businesses who don't have the luxury to work remotely and can't move easily and start over. neil: you know, the crime is one thing, the mess is another thing, those two might be more linked than we know, but i'm wondering what it does to otherwise successful businesses like yours? do you think twice about continuing to be there? do you want to move? >> i think about it all the time. people ask me this question, why don't you move?
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i watch people move all the time. i do have family here. i have a business here, my job is here. it's just not that easy and i'm probably pretty unrealistic hopeful that things will change. newsom travels to florida and texas in an attempt to lambaste their state leaders, i would he would go to collaborate and figure out why are people moving there and gaining congressional seats when california lost one for the first time in its statehood. it's remarkable, but i'm unrealistically hopeful. small business owners don't have the luxury to up and move the way that remote workers can. neil: danielle, thank you very much. we'll see how long the spruced up conditions last. danielle runs a very successful gym in san francisco. see if they still keep rushing to that. in the meantime, don't forget, we have the opposition leader in israel who is calling for benjamin netanyahu to step down. that's not a widely held view.
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he'll explain the reasons for that and we'll have the heated nature of the attacks globally, not for israel, just the opposite. after this. hi, my name is damion clark. and if you have both medicare and medicaid, i have some really encouraging news that you'll definitely want to hear. depending on the plans available in your area, you may be eligible to get extra benefits with a humana medicare advantage dual-eligible special needs plan. all of these plans include a healthy
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>> all right. well, the war rages on in israel and so do the protests. a couple of the very involved ones that could have got tn pretty nasty. they did spread out and they did affect commuters and the same thing happening in washington d.c. more are increasingly of the pro palestinian variety. cb cotton in new york with how it's going down. hey, cb. >> yeah, the momentum is continuing behind the pro-palestinian rally, several are planned across the country today. some are organized by student groups, others by far left social justice coalitions. the group students for justice
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and palestine, standing in front of new york governor kathy hochul's office demanding she and other elected leaders call for a cease-fire as they move offense beyond northern gaza. one demonstrators speaking against hochul's support for israel and her efforts to investigate complaints of anti-semitism on college campuses, listen. >> instead of protecting palestinian students and all those in protest with us in solidarity, calling for a cease-fire to end the bloodshed and slaughter in gaza at the hands of israel, with the pockets of the u.s. government and our taxes, governor kathy hochul is facilitating and perpetuating an environment of violence against us in our classrooms, painting us to be terrorists, monsters. >> and we saw this massive crowd in new york city part of a call for organizers to shut it down for palestine, a cars moving at a snail's pace for hours while officers work to
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keep things going. protesters chanting things like thi this. >> palestine will never die! free, free palestine. >> and neil, last thing i'll mention, friday morning protesters shouting shame as people made their way inside this new york city bank, the bank one of 16 businesses or news organizations being blasted by pro-palestinian group within our lifetime. the group accusing these places of committing genocide against palestinians and neil, again, we're closely monitoring the pro-palestinian demonstrations planned across the country, back to you. neil: thank you for that, cb. cb cotton in new york on this. a big one in london coming up later today the sixth week in a row we've seen that internationally as well. i wonder how israelis feel about this when they see this since the overwhelming majority, not all, the overwhelming majority are of the pro-palestinian bent.
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let's ask yair lipid. >> thank you for having me. neil: how do you feel, sir, regardless of the politics we'll get into your thoughts on benjamin netanyahu, whether he should go. but on the protests that increasingly are of the pro-palestinian bent, not pro-israeli. now, there are many pro-israeli measures, not meaning to say that your country isn't represented here, overwhelmingly it's against israel, does that bother you? >> yes, of course it does, i mean, hundreds of thousands of our people were slaughtered, babies were beheaded, people burned alive. we have 239 people who are abducted, including a girl three years old and a 10-month-old. and they're going out there and shouting what, that they want more people to die? all of those people marching
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and saying free palestine, i have a suggestion for them, it's an old one, if the palestinians will lay down their weapons and stop killing jews, then we'll have a state. if we will lay down our weapons, we will be killed until the last one of us, and this is why we're protecting ourselves. and it's not like they don't understand it. they're just ignore it because shouting genocide sounds to them like something progressive and interesting. neil: so why in the middle of that, mr. lipid, would you be advocating the leader of the country stepping down? you don't think that prime minister benjamin netanyahu's done a good job, i guess, but maybe you can explain. >> well, it's not exactly what i've said, i'm not going to get into an israeli politics on international media. we're in this together, it's a war the entire people of israel is fighting together. we have our arguments how to deal with it, how to run it, but i'm not going to sit on
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american television, if you excuse me, and discuss the question who should run the country these days. neil: but you did, though. you did say that he should be removed at the time has come. you want to form a new governing coalition still led by someone from the likud party, mr. netanyahu's party, why? >> right now i'm trying to do what every other israeli is trying to do, is to make sure our people are being brought back home. i marched today in jerusalem with tens of thousands of family members and supporters of the people who were abducted and what we're trying to do is to win a war against a terrible terrorist group. so we can have our differences about who should run the war and who should be leading the country at a time like this, but there are no differences in the goals of this war and what is it that we're trying to do for our country.
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neil: i think even benjamin netanyahu's key advisor agreed with what you probably just said and that the battle that you're waging is the important one, but he did question the timing of you calling fournette to step down. this is from him just earlier in this show, sir. >> we have a parliamentary democracy like in english and germany, we don't have a presidential system like in us. the goal is to bring down the government his constitutional responsibility in our system. but what is important to remember, what is important to remember is since this terrible october 7th massacre of our people, you've seen a sense of common purpose and unity in israel like never before and the truth is, not mr. lipid himself, but other major party opposition have joined the government in the emergency war-time coalition, there's a sense, the first thing we've
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got to do is we've got to defeat hamas. neil: you know, mr. lipid, a lot of people can understand the growing frustration that israel faces dealing with hamas and the fact that hamas even seems to be winning the pr war, you know, and that just blows people's minds away, but is this part of that, that there's frustration here, that you're feeling frustration? >> well, i will follow up on what mark was saying. this is a reminder to the fact that israel is a vibrant and vital democracy and the only democracy in the middle east and this is what we do in democracies. we discuss things, we have our inner fights, but in the end of the road, what we are doing now, we're doing together, which is fighting hamas, this terrible terror isis-like terror organization and trying to get our babies back home. this is the only thing that we really care about.
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neil: how are you holding up? how are your colleagues holding up? this has been one of the most remarkable six weeks, forget about in just israeli history, in western history. this is beyond the pale for a lot of folks looking at it from afar. >> well, this is so nice of you to ask. not great. it's -- i don't remember myself as sad as this in my entire life, now? i'm the son of a holocaust survivor and for the first time since he died 15 years ago, i was happy he's not here to see this because these are holocaust-like visual and i mean, today even i had to run twice to the shelter because we had sirens, so these are difficult times to be here, but we are strong and we appreciate the friendship that we feel from the united states. it's amazing, this wave.
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you show the protesters, but we are also seeing the size and the amount and the magnitude of the support that iz israel is getting these days and this is helpful emotionally and practically. neil: mr. lipid, thank you for taking the time. these are very hard times, we appreciate you sharing how you're feeling through this. >> thank you, thank you. neil: all right. we have a lot more coming up, including this latest development where a number of people around the world are getting enthralled with the writing of osama bin laden after the 9/11 attacks,
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osama bin laden content, a letter that he wrote soon after the 9/11 attacks that justified attacks on americans. it's got a lot of people confused to put it mildly. hillary vaughan with the fallout. >> hi, neil. republicans and democrats on capitol hill have a common enemy. tik tok bipartisan calls to ban the app or force the sale of the company are growing louder as tik tok is caught up in controversy, being accused of using its algorithm to push anti-israel. >> the communist party of china, that they would be using it to promote not just on the middle east. >> tik tok says it's driven by using. tik tok does not promote one side of an issue or another,
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our recommendation algorithm does not take size. but tik tok is in more trouble after a disturbing trend, tik tokkers are praising osama bin laden the mastermind of the terror attacks on 9/11. >> he has good points as we're seeing. >> they have brain washed us to think we're the best country on the planet. >> and tik tok says praising osama bin laden clearly violates their rules on supporting terrorism and says the content is not unique to tik tok, but popped up on other platforms. lawmakers say it's proof it's time to act before it's too late. for someone on tik tok to somehow suggest that this is america's fault or that bin laden, who killed thousands of innocent americans was right, is absolutely disgusting and further evidence that we need to ban tik tok or force a sale. >> but any congressional action on tik tok may have to wait until after the holidays and after the new year, but that's not stopping tik tok's parent
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company, bite bytedance spending on lobbying efforts, they've spent more this year than any other year before on lobbying, neil. neil: thank you for that. you know, if i were to tell you at the beginning of this war, six weeks ago, that the markets would be higher by now than they were then, you would probably think i was crazy. once again, the market is chalking up a good week just like the weeks before. why is that? after this. (♪) (♪) (♪)
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all right, sheila, are you throwing a dress like a dad party, a birthday brunch, or a vow renewal for your dogs? yes! the right drinks delivered for any party. drizly. all right, sheila, are you throwing a dress like a dad party, a birthday brunch, or a vow renewal for your dogs? yes! the right drinks delivered for any party. drizly. all right, sheila,
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are you throwing a dress like a dad party, a birthday brunch, or a vow renewal for your dogs? yes! the right drinks delivered for any party. drizly. all right, tandy, what's it gonna be, the drink made from whatever was laying around, or the one made with your drizzly haul? drizly! stock up today, sip well, tomorrow. drizly. >> all right. we talk often times about the dichotomy of the markets, versus the real world. which is real? the numbers i'm showing you are real. those are the advances in the markets since this war began.
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actually, that's from the day before, friday, october 6th. the attack on israel by hamas is the next day. and some are saying maybe this could be the repeat of the yom kippur war 50 years earlier. that's not the case and why that is. >> kenny, good to have you. why have the markets not been moved to the same panic, to any panic they experienced 50 years ago? >> remember, the markets did come under some pressure in the days and the week right after the event happened, right? we did see the markets come under pressure. they've since stabilized because as you and i know over the long-term, markets don't react to geopolitical tension in the long-term. they create in the short-term, but as things settle down and does not appear to be ungulfing
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the way they thought it would engulf arab nations, the u.s., other areas around the world into the fight when the markets came under pressure. that doesn't appear to be happening now and the markets put the geopolitical concerns aside. still kind of simmering on the back burner, but they're once again focused on fundamentals, what's happening in the economy because that's what prices stocks in the long-term is going to be the u.s. economy, the global economy, what companies are saying about the future. >> but you know, we talk about the inflation worry that some thought would be, you know, exacerbated by the developments. quite the opposite. oil prices are lower than they were then. interest rates are a lot lower than they were then. what do you make of that? >> so, i think there's a couple of things that you have to think about there. agreed that those are acting in the opposite direction though i think the oil story, you know, part of that is-- part of that is this notion that they're creating this global slowdown and waning demand in china one day and
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waning demand around the world. yet on the other day, the next day, you've got saudis coming out telling you that global demand is coming out and eia, and it's going to surge and the u.s. producing oil at the same rate it was producing during the trump administration when we were producing record amounts of oil so that's all playing into this narrative. i think it's only going to be a matter of time before the saudis say oil is not trading at the price we want it to trade at and they're going to announce further reduction cuts into the new year and carry over the cuts that they've enlisted through the end of this year into next year to try to stabilize oil. bonds on the other hand, they're going lower because what appears to be the u.s. economy is coming in for a soft landing, by all accounts, that's the narrative they're pushing, but look, that's a double edged sword. when bond prices, it's stimulative to the economy
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which could have the possibility that reinflating. and i'm on the side that that's what it's going to do. the fact that the fed has to remain vigilant. the idea that they're going to cut rates anytime soon is ridiculous. neil: can i switch gears? i like to talk about developments with big players, elon musk, of course, in a world of hurt since these charges of anti-semitism and retweets or whatever we call that now with x. but a lot of advertisers are bolting, disney, apple, many more to follow. he really stepped in it there. what do you think? >> i think he did and the companies have a right to pull back until there's clarity on what happened. i'm trying to dig through it all and figure out what happened. clearly he made a mistake or at least the world or the list of companies think he clearly made a mistake. it sounds like he certainly did. he's ready and headlines show
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he's ready to start suing everybody on monday because they misinterpreted what he said. to me it sounds clear what he said, we're soon to found out. i don't deny that these companies have to be cautious where they're going to be, so pulling back on advertising does make some sense for them. neil: got it. kenny, always good, you know, keeping up with you. not just because you're an italian-american-- all right, because you are italian-american. >> thank you for having me, happy thanksgiving. neil: the markets do have resilience and gives hope that cooler, calmer heads prevail and doesn't always happen. forget it on wall street, more often on main street and we hope for the best, sooner rather than later. fox continues. ♪ when better money habits®
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