the chinese mcdonald s and talking about the currency part and debt. once a time when mortgage backed securities were triple-a and they were considered money good. i m not saying the u.s. is where the mortgage backed security market is now, but you know, it doesn t take a rocket scientists to figure out five years from now, maybe the, the currency of choice and the bond of choice is well, adam. here is what i ll a couple of things struck me, one, eating chicken wings after 90 minutes and any of the things i go to new york it, that s been sitting there for days. and stir it up, stirring the pot. neil: but that, in other words, it s a flimsy excuse, a very flimsy excuse to go right back at the united states and say, we can play this game, too, but to what end? well, this calls to mind, the days when the japanese would hold up american cars at the tariff staying and say,
this. when gas prices hit $4 they go after the speculators and oil companies. i would never want to argue with you. you really. i just don t. adam? oil production is up 20 percent. oh, god, adam. we are drilling more and we should drill more and encourage the saudies to drill more. and drilling more part, you know in your heart of hearts is not really going on. it is a reflection of the prior contracts and economic contracts. no, it is not. the figures up a fraction of what we need? you mention fraking. we are anywhere close to fraking . leaving aside your bias to the administration. you know they don t believe it. it is all green and all wind and solar and all of this
president or the vice-president there, always visiting union shops, you don t hear them proudly say, here i am at a right to workshop, here i am at a right to work, state. i mean, if you like, if you like, if you like americans having jobs, you really shouldn t care whether they re union jobs or not. but you only go to the union job plants. except, except when he went to solyndra and got the jumped all over for the i wonder why. free enterprise. that s a private sector jobs and i ll tell you the reason why, adam. here is a short even why, i ve done reporting on this. when they go. i have no problems with unions, my dad was a union guy, i like private sector unions you said this is the short. when they go before business people, they get shutted down. who gets shouted down. the administration, austan goolsbee, valerie garrett.
contaminated games for kids, i digress, this pretty much says it all. and charles payne, adam lasinski, charlie gasperino, i don t know, charles payne, i think we re having a little bit of an at this ti tit for ta what they d done is put 100% tariff on chicken the feet. apparently chicken feet in the beer, nothing better than fried chicken feet, they call them paws there. neil: the free information on basic cable. you ve got it. this is how the trade wars begin. neil: don t you find the timing weird. when we went down to the precious resource stuff that goes into plasma screens and a few days later, the chicken. absolutely, this is what i m saying. we have to understand where we pick our wars, i mean, listen, he we don t have the guts to
adam? well, first of all, to my male colleagues on the panel. i don t think we add to the civil discourse in the country when we talk about looting private companies or when we bring those references to 25-year-old speeches. the flowery language, what s involved adam, adam, you should know that whenever, whenever president obama s economic advisors go to the private industry people in private meetings or public meetings they get shouted down. that happens all the time and there s a reason for that. be that as it may, i and that s why he s at a union rally. i will point out that these union employees, i assume at a united auto workers plants, companies that do work in the people who do work in the private sector. yes, they were bailed out longer story, but they re not working for government. they re not a government agency. adam, i think i ll give you a technical okay on that, but then, why was the