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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  November 23, 2015 4:00pm-5:01pm EST

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david: and as liz was just saying, e. coli still haunting chipotle but investors are hoping all the bad news is actually cooked in the stock. rocketing up today. will investors regret this risky bet? but first let's take a look at stocks. trading a little lower for the day as closing bells sound on wall street. it looks like we're all down on the markets. everything is red, including gold and oil, by the way,. melissa: yeah. david: and as markets wait for tomorrow, here's everything you need to know. brussels remains on lock down just as the economy was hoping for a boost from holiday sales, one of the world's most wanted men still on the lose leaving stores closed and troops and tanks on the streets for the third straight date. fox business ashley webster is in paris with all the latest details. ashley. >> yes. good afternoon to you, david. well, somewhat of a major development in the search for one of the main
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attackers, the only one that got away from this devastating attacks on november the 13th that claimed 130 lives. later this afternoon an explosive belt without the detonator was found. it was discovered by a neighbor who looked inside a trashcan and found it. he called the local counsel and there you go. authorities discovered it. now they're trying to see if there's any connection between that belt and the attacks of november the 13th. but interestingly, cell phone records show that the suspect was actually in the area of a montrouge on the night of the attacks. there's a theory now that this particular suspect actually decided not to carry out an attack that he was supposed to. that he drove from the north of paris through the city center dumped his belt, and then called two friends from brussels who came and eventually picked him up. frustratingly, though, he was
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stopped just short of the belgium border. police failed to recognize him, and he got away. the theory goes that he may have been targeting the area in northern paris suburbs, very popular nightclub area which would have been a very delaware stating soft target. so there we have it. the bad news of course he's still on the run. and as we've seen brussels on shut down and here in paris, always a sense of some nervousness if you like with the two months we've seen recent days in mali, belgium and the discovery of this explosive belt certainly keeping people on edge, david. but the elusive has been very hard to track down, they believed he could be headed to germany but at this point they don't know. david: well, let's hope the trail doesn't grow cold. ashley webster, appreciate it. melissa. melissa: isis the head of an
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important meeting, obama is hosting french president tomorrow. they're going to reach a consensus what to do against isis. >> that's right. president of france is also going to be meeting after he meets with president obama later this week with russian president vladimir putin as they try to push the two leaders together in a new beefed up stronger coalition to fight isis in the wake of the paris attack. ahead of the meeting tomorrow, the president's deputy said again today that won't happen as long as putin keeps backing the assad regime and deputies continue to push back as critics say the president needs a major overhaul of u.s. strategy and the fight against isis, possibly including combat troops on the ground in the region saying other steps the president has announced will be more effective. >> i don't think anybody believes it's happening fast enough, and we are escalating our steps, the president even
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in the last weeks before paris took place made major decisions to put additional people on the ground, special forces, and took additional steps -- >> i would say 100% chance that the enemy wants to attack us and the idea for us is to stay on defense. >> a new fox news poll shows that terrorism has jumped to the top concern among voters in both parties, leapfrogging the economy compared to august. and the new poll also shows the president's job approval generating dropping 5 percentage points since the beginning of november, melissa. down near the 38% low for his job approval that was released last september, september 2004. back to you. melissa: yeah, all of these events having a big impact. peter, thank you so much for that. >> you bet.
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melissa: american fighter jets destroyed 283 of isis's oil tanker trucks along the syrian rocky border today. the planes dropped on the air warning drivers to run away immediately or be killed. pilots then dropped 24 guided bombs on the target. david: all right. and back to politics if we may. can donald trump say anything that will get him in trouble with the polls? well, not yet. the gop frontrunner is widening his lead for the nomination according to a fox news poll he released yesterday, trump now gets a record 28% support from republican primary voters, up from 26% in the last poll before the terror attacks. for all the very latest blake berman joining us now. blake. >> the lead is growing for the moment for donald trump according to the latest fox news poll. trump received support from 28% of republicans. that puts him 10 clear of dr. ben carson who has seen a
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five point drop since the beginning of the month. despite that large and expanding cushion, trump, who signed a republican party loyalty pledge in september, opened the door yet again to a potential third party run should the race not break his way. >> i'm going to have to see what happens. i will see what happens. i have to be treated fairly. you know when i did this, i said i have to be treated fairly. if i'm treated fairly, i'm fine. all i want to do is a level playing field. >> on the democratic side hillary clinton enjoys a comfortable 23-point lead over bernie sanders with support from 55% of democrats. however, when pitted in hypothetical election, marco rubio fairs best against clinton with an 8 point advantage and trump would top clinton by 5 points. back to you in new york. david: very interesting stuff. blake, thank you melissa. melissa: for more on that fox
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news poll, showing contenders beating clinton, we are joined by anne. thank you so much for joining us. first of all, i want to break down what this means because for a lot of people watching it seems unbelievable that all of those candidates would beat hillary clinton head-to-head. how did they gather this information? >> well, the on poll is solid from an art perspective, there's nothing leading about the questions. they basically said from whom would you vote if it's hillary clinton and fill in any republican here. they're cell phone calls, registered votes which tend to be a little bit more democratic than some of the presidential turn out figures than in 2016 when the republicans seem energized. certainly about their respective frontrunners. what's striking about this poll is that hillary clinton was kept at an average of 41% .
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melissa: right and almost everybody. if we put those numbers back up on the screen to just remind people. she basically came you the anywhere from 39 to 42% of the vote. >> that's right. melissa: no matter who it was. that inconsistency. what does that tell you on her side? >> it tells me it's big trouble to hillary clinton. that's what i got out of this poll because these have are five different republicans, donald trump, ted cruz, marco rubio, ben carson, and then stuck with hillary who's getting 55% only of democratic primary voters. what in the world do the other 45% need to know about her? she's a 110% name id, all the money, the last name of clinton behind her and yet there are doubts of her carrying on third term of obama clinton. melissa: so even though this could mean great things for republicans, it doesn't necessarily mean any of them would win. why? >> i looked at this and said gee any of the republicans could win but it doesn't mean any will win. this is a long road.
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they're going to to show some durability, some strength in this context, this is a nationwide poll. the question is who is leading in the statewide poll? these first four contests, very different procedures, allusion which republican candidates are least afraid of hillary clinton? and all the clinton machine would be the war on women, being called the sexist, racist, ageist, everythingist, that takes -- you have to have the fire in your belly and also fire in your throat. it's going to be a long haul but i think the president's id to be democrat puts marathon bad spot. melissa: marco rubio was the one that beat her by the biggest percentage. does that mean in your mind he's the most likely candidate to beat her in a general? >> no. not gaul he's up by 8 and the lowest one is ted cruz at 4. so only four points separate, that changes on a dime if you know. i do know that it shows the
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republican side this time. it's always been the democrats who have elected people like jfk, barack obama, jimmy carter, young men in their 40s and 50s and republicans get stuck with the senior folks if you will. so i think cruz and rubio, lots of people think they will be the two last standing. that's a good bet. melissa: kelly, thanks. we appreciate your insight. david: and fire in the belly and in the throat. i love that. drug giants pfizer and allergen are merging for the $155 billion deal that could create the largest drug seller. and this to take advantage of lower tax rates abroad. we've seen a lot of this. pfizer expects to see its tax rate from 25 pest to 17 or 18%. investors worrying about the cost of all of this hitting the stock of both companies down today. melissa: we have some breaking news for you. new orleans police have arrested the suspect in a shooting of a medical student this weekend. peter gold was shot in the
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stomach after he tried to help a woman. the man was dragged down the street, the gunman tried to shoot him again but the gun jammed. gold is in guarded condition at a local hospital right now. david: wow. also an update of the high school student, you might remember arrested for bringing his homemade clock to school, everybody thought he was a bomb, now suing the city of irving texas for $15 million. we had an idea that this was coming. also demanding a apology, has since moved overseas. melissa: interesting. david: yeah,. melissa: the terror threat in new york city. emergency responders simulating an active shooter drill in the subway just days before the macy's thanksgiving day parade. david: also president obama scrambling to restore confidence in the white house's isis strategy. but the top senate democrats says the president's policies aren't sufficient against the terrorist group. melissa: plus another day,
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another controversy for donald trump in hot water -- sort of. well, for him. but at this point will anything hurt him? jeb bush: we do not have to be the world's policeman. we have to be the world's leader. who's going to take care of the christians that are being eliminated in the middle east? who's going to take care of israel and support them - our greatest ally in the middle east? the united states has the capability of doing this, and it's in our economic and national security interest that we do it. i will be that kind of president and i hope you want that kind of president for our country going forward. announcer: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message.
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if something, like this scary storm, takes it offline. so i can rest easy. what. you don't have a desk bed? don't be left in the dark. get proactive alerts 24/7. comcast business. built for business. melissa: new york city preparing for the worst just days before the macy's thanksgiving day parade. emergency workers on sunday took part in a drill preparing for the nightmarish scenario of an active shooter in the subways. fox news laura angle joins me now with the latest. laura, so you must be ramping up the city in light of what happened in europe; right? >> absolutely and, you know, the events that typically see the crowd of more than 3 million people and this is the macy's thanksgiving day parade. i want to mention that that is also in anticipation of getting ready for thursday. that event usually we see about 3 million people.
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those spectators will have even more company this year over 1,000 counterterrorism officers will be watching their backs in the parade. the nypd reports it will have an unprecedented number of officers this year, including 1,300 counterterrorism officers and for the first time ever, the nypd will have more than 100 new critical response command undercover police officers action. that is in addition to the heavily armed strategic response group. now, yesterday as you mentioned hundreds of emergency responders took part if an active shooter drill simulating a subway terror attack here in new york. the department of homeland security, nypd and fdny were all involved. one of the main goals was to test technologies, including the gopro-like cameras and acoustic gunshot detection systems designed to give police and firefighters information to coordinate their responses. now, while the drill is being called a success by city leaders, some emts have spoken
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out to the new york post saying they don't have adequate means of communicating underground. but fdny spokesperson saying they have been working for years to improve underground communications and 75% of the way there adding their several ways to connect with dispatch currently. melissa. melissa: also new york governor announcing new counterterrorism efforts today as well; right? >> yeah. we're on the heels of the holiday season; right? so he announced two new efforts just a short while ago today. the first one involves our state's transit hub. he says the metropolitan tin transit authority will hire 46 new police officers for grand central terminal, grand central station and throughout the railroad, long island railroad and stanton island railway system and also the see something send something smartphone app for your phone. that allows users to use a photo -- take a photo or send a written note directly to law enforcement along with your
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location. so instead of trying to call in a crowd, you can actually send something right to law enforcement with this new app . melissa: and download this app ahead of time. a real sign of the times. thanks. >> thanks, melissa. david: and a few other stories on our radar today. 16 people, 16 were shot at a crowd in new orleans park sunday where hundreds were gathered for a block party. police are investigating what sparked the violence. and ronald pel peloton is scheduled to be released from jail, sentenced to three life terms plus 10 in prison for selling secrets to the soviet union. this release coming a week after convicted spy jonathan pollard was released from prison and prince charles telling sky news that the root cause of war and terrorism and europe's refugee crisis is? here we go again. climate change. melissa: of course it is. david: an interview recorded before the paris attacks, the french always warns far
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greater problems lay ahead unless climate change is addressed immediately. sounds bachelor's degrees. melissa: but still sipping wine, of course in touch with the regular man there as he says that. coming up if you're traveling this holiday season why you may be sitting on the tarmac longer than ever. i'm sorry. and as millions of americans get ready to hit the roads and rails and airports what you need to know in this time of heightened security to get where you need to go as safely and seamlessly as possible. that's next
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the country but in the wake of terrorism abroad ask threats in the home, how will travel plans be disrupted? joining me now for trips this week is chris. chris, thanks for coming in. now, there have to be new security measures at least in the lines going into the gates; right? at the airports? >> well, there are standard security measures. i just flew actually from new york to san francisco the day before yesterday and was expected to see a lot more security but there really was not that much more happening. david: interesting. >> at the attes tsa security checkpoint. david: did the lines seem longer? >> i was surprised that they did not seem that long. in thanksgiving week now, the weekend before thanksgiving has turned out to be one of the busiest weekends of the year. i flew back on saturday, and it was relatively slow. so there are a lot more people watching. i did notice a lot more police presence at airports. there was a military presence,
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you know, you can see guns every now and then, which is surprising. but i did not see that much change at the tsa checkpoint. david: very interesting. i usually leave -- when i'm taking a domestic light flight, a leave an hour and a half from the time i leave the airport to the time my plane's supposed to leave. does that sound about right? >> yeah. david: or should you add in more time? >> i think that sounds about right. what you need to keep an eye on during the holiday travel season is the weather. that's the wild card. the airlines and travelers pretty much have the, you know, the holiday travel season down. everyone what knows to do, the airlines know what to do. so if there's good weather, we usually don't have too many problems but if a storm blows in. david: yeah. >> it can cause major problems. so keep an eye on the weather. but what you said about arriving on time is very important because at this time of year and now that we know every single airline is full to the gills to almost oversold if you missed your flight for any reason, the
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likelihood of you being reaccommodated on another flight that day is pretty much slim to none. david: sure. >> so you could miss out on the turkey and you might as well not even go home. david: well, that leads to my final question. if my flight is canceled because of weather and there's some bad weather out there. >> yeah. david: and they try to put me on a another flight that's really inconvenient and i want to cash in my chips and go home, can i do that? am i required somehow to take what they offer me? >> well, they'd like you to take what they offer but the reality is that if the airline cancels your flight, you are entitled to a full reasoned. so if you got out there wednesday and you knew you wanted to get home by thursday and you were coming back friday or saturday and you got delayed and couldn't take the flight until late thursday night, you must ask for a refund. they're going to try to reaccommodate you but if you ask for a full refund, they have to give it to you. this only applies if they cancel your flight. if you are in a delay situation, it doesn't -- it doesn't apply. david: okay. good to know.
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chris, thank you very much, chris. good to have you here. appreciate it. >> okay. thanks for having having me on. melissa: sticks and stones may break bones but donald trump's words don't hurt him. the latest comments from the gop frontrunner coming up. david: also for the holiday shopper, one company's cyber sunday push. that's coming next surprise!!!!! we heard you got a job as a developer! its official, i work for ge!! what? wow... yeah! okay... guys, i'll be writing a new language for machines so planes, trains, even hospitals can work better. oh! sorry, i was trying to put it away... got it on the cake. so you're going to work on a train? not on a train...on "trains"! you're not gonna develop stuff anymore? no i am... do you know what ge is?
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melissa: another day, another
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provocative comment from donald trump, the plan to double down on terrorism and standing by his recent comments about 9/11. take a listen. >> i think water boarding is peanuts compared to what they do to us. what they did to james foley when they chopped off his head, that's a whole different level, and i would absolutely bring back interrogation and strong interrogation. the other side of new jersey where you have large arab operations, they were cheering as the world trade center came down. i know it may not be politically correct for you to talk about it. but there were people cheering as people came down, as those buildings came down. melissa: joining me now guy benson, town haul editor and fox news contributor, shown senior strategist and brad blake man senior advisor to george w bush, thank you, all of you for joining us. i would say that the comment it strikes me as more the one
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about people cheering when the towers matter for opinion people are back ups terror may think that's appropriate. but in terms of factually saying cheering, there were lots of news organizations that said -- nothing seems to impact him. why do you think that is, guy? >> well, first of all, i would say that i agree with him on water bothering. i think it should be used as an occasional -- melissa: we don't want to get into that, though. >> i'm just saying. i often disagree with donald trump, so i want to give him some credit here and say i agree with him on water boarding -- that was one of his quotes and also claimed that he watched thousands of people in new jersey on television cheering on 9/11. there's no evidence whatsoever on that and he keeps doubling down. melissa: but it has no impact why. >> well, i think because he has a very hard-core committed base of people who have decided they don't really care what he says or what he does.
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melissa: jessica, why do you think it has no impact? >> i think it has no impact because increasingly we're seeing ben carson as not a viably outsider in this race, about foreign policy has made him seem totally inadequate about the challenges we face and still 60% of americans say they want an outsider in political office. carly fiorina does as well wly in the debates and then she disappears; right? we only hear about her in those evenings the day after. she hasn't. melissa: you're just saying a contender that would come in and it doesn't matter. >> right. an outsider who showed up who wasn't a liar, all of these that things donald trump appears to be. melissa: a lot of people on those screen that aren't liars. >> they have a lot of problems. i want to make that clear. melissa: i want to say that marco rubio is somebody that a lot of people have looked to as a more moderate candidate somewhere along the way but it doesn't seem anything trump says hurts him. >> well, we have to police our own.
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that's really the answer to this when trump makes an outrageous statement. i was in the white house, i was a member of president bush's senior staff on 9/11. also lost a nephew who was a first responder at the world trade center. i didn't see anybody cheering when those buildings came down. i saw quite the opposite. i saw our nation come together, i saw the world come together just as we're doing for the people of paris. so what we need to do is have the mainstream republicans stand up against on such outrageous conduct and not give trump a pass on it and not rely on the media to correct donald trump. we need to correct donald trump. melissa: but, guy, i think a lot of people are standing up specifically in this case factual why at least the second statement for sure is factually incorrect but it doesn't have any impact. the people who love him -- and this is part of his stick; right? or what am i missing? >> you're not missing anything, melissa, the only thing that i would argue some of his supporters might be missing is while he maintains
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this lead in the republican primary with about one quarter of the republican electorate these kinds of facts and doubling down on inaccuracies, those things will matter. because the general electorates appetite for donald trump in these sorts of histrionics is much lower than his hard-core supporters is. melissa: all right. stick around, guys. go ahead, david. david: well, donald trump once again reducing to rule out an independent presidential run despite multiple so that i can loyalty pledge that says he would support the eventual gop nominee. guy, jessica, brad, still with us. guy, this is in direct response, by the way. this is trump hitting back not coming out of nowhere. direct response to this three pronged attack. one john kasich's pack, two jeb bush started a whole new series of personal attacks and then the club for growth, which is going after him for a lot of different reasons. there's in sign, guy, that
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these attacks are coordinated? >> well, you mentioned those three. there's also a new group that's going to try to use gorilla warfare is the term, gorilla campaign warfare against donald trump. when you want to run with the big dogs, you're going to be subject to a tax from people within your property who want to win the nomination. that's a reality of american politics and donald trump signed a pledge a few months ago. david: i understand. >> it was not ambiguous. it said i will endorse. david: but he also said time and time and time again that if he's hit, he will not stop hitting back. >> that's fine. david: and the ultimate hit might be running as an independent but the suspicion that there was a coordination of this attack on trump comes from the fact that the establishment hates him. every time i see a member of the republican establishment, i know who they are, you know who they are, when i see them around here at fox, i say what happens if donald trump becomes the nominee. they say, oh, it will never happen. they refuse to answer -- isn't
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it time the establishment recognize maybe there's a chance he'll be the nominee? and maybe we should start negotiating with him. >> no, i don't think you negotiate with him. david: you deal with him. you recognize that -- the club for growth, for example. if they're not satisfied with what he's doing, what his plans are, maybe they should talk to him instead of attacking him. >> look, the club for growth in these third parties are not the republican party, the voter, the republican voter who goes into the ballot box and chooses our nominee. it's not any of these outside groups who seek to influence. i said at a time when donald trump signed that pledge, it wasn't worth the paper it's written on. donald trump will do what's in donald trump's best interest. david: sure. >> and we're not going to negotiate against ourselves and we're going to be the school yard bullies guy who gives him our lunch money. david: but he knows how to strike back. jessica, finally, i'm sure you would love it if donald trump ran as a third party candidate.
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because that gives hillary the presidency, doesn't it? >> absolutely. also i think donald trump it's hillary wasn't so strong would have run as a democrat in the first place. i think he was forced over to the right because it looked like that was going to be a scatter shot field. i mean at the end of the day donald trump never told the truth unless something is legally binding and -- charles: wait a minute. did you say he never tells the truth? come on. >> about politics? very rare that we hear a truthism from the donald. david: i don't think it's very rare, do you, brad? >> look, donald trump mixes truth with his own version of the truth. that is for sure. david: by the way, brad, what happens if he's the nominee? >> if he's the nominee, then guess what? we're going to have to support the nominee or we're going to have to surrender to the nominee to hillary clinton or whoever but at the end of the day as republicans we have to stick together. charles: great to see you all. appreciate it. melissa: and as black friday promotions come and earlier earlier every year, will cyber monday become cyber sunday?
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it will at walmart. the retailing giant announcing it's kicking off its cyber sales early this year. on sunday evening is nothing sacred? for more details, diedre bolton joins me now. >> yeah. it seems like you can run to that computer and start shopping right away. so you're right. cyber monday now becoming cyber sunday at least as far as walmart goes. they are going to be on offering 2,000 items promoted discounted, meant to get you to click on their site. and just for comparison point, melissa, that is up from 500 special deals from last year. it just highlights the importance. maybe not so much for walmart or amazon but most retailers, they get about 60% of their revenue from the entire year from these 30 days. of course starting now until the end of the year. so a huge season and then as far as what all of us spend collectively, consumer
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spending is two-thirds of u.s. gdp. so we can't emphasize it enough how generous you and i feel, how few things we make at home, that said there are trends, i've been looking at pinterest, people seem to be into homemade gifts. so it might not be the best thing in the world. melissa: i'm going to get out there and do my best to the economy. thank you so much. we'll see you at the top of the hour for risk and award. david: i'm already on cyber monday, the monday before thanksgiving. melissa: there you go. a new survey finds that americans have trust issues with the government. might be a good thing for some presidential hopefuls. and president obama says he won't let isis win but what will he actually do to wipe out the terrorist group? we're going to look at that next feel a cold coming on?
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to not elevate them. to somehow buy into their fantasy that they're doing something important. david: president obama going back to fdr rhetoric to calm fears over terrorism but is this an excuse for his own miss calculations about the group? here to weigh in matthew graham, fox news military expert and former federal air marshal joined by guy benson and jessica. now, the president seems to be saying that the threat of isis is just a fantasy. am i getting that wrong? >> it sounds like what he's saying the problem with that is 82% of the american people believe the threat is likely. so regardless of body politic and what side of the aisle you're on, 82% of the people believe an attack is likely. so saying we understand their existence, we're doing
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everything we can to eradicate it and in that, let's be supportive. david: jessica, i'm wondering how much longer the president can continue with this rhetoric that isis downplaying the threat or importance of isis when the public ask even democrats, by the way, disagree with that. let's listen to two of them. >> i don't think the approach is sufficient to the job. i'm concerned that we don't have the time and we don't have years. we need to be aggressive now. >> first and foremost, i think the u.s. has to lead in this effort because what we've learned a long time ago is that the united states does not lead, nobody else will. david: so that was former defense secretary leon and senator feinstein who disagreed wholeheartedly when the president. who do you think is right? >> i think it's in between. i think it's the noble cause the president is taking to try
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to calm people down but the way he's conveying it is not right to the public. 66% of americans think we're at war with isis over, you know, his job approval sunk down 5 percentage points in a week. so obviously something isn't going right here. we're doing a lot of nitpicking and whether we call it radical islam or call it violent extremism. david: well, it's not whether it's a genuine threat, that's serious stuff. >> no. i'm talking about what we call it. and after the military strategy when you listen to hillary clinton last week and the plan she laid out, what conservatives are getting behind -- david: well. david brooks -- it's hard to call david brooks a conservative; right? i used to work with david brooks. guy, i've got to tell you, though, that hillary clinton seems to be losing a lot with her association. not only with the president but with her association with the president secretary of state. she formulated some of these policies and we see her dropping in the polls.
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>> yeah, she is the architect of the failed obama foreign policy. she is all over the place when it comes to isis. she was against any boots on the ground and then obama put some boots on the ground so then she was in favor of those boots on the ground but then saying no more and then asked what if there's a terror attack on she said, well, maybe it would be a mistake, she has to pull this one a little bit more. david: hold on a second. i want to get a last word from matthew. have you studied -- have you looked at hillary's policy? because frankly i don't see a there, do you? >> i don't. and regardless of what that policy is until somebody steps forward and says our policy is a targeted killing policy. if you want to know what emboldens isis, it's every morning they wake up. every day they continue to exist, they become more brazen, become stronger. so we need to stand in the gap and put them in the ground.
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there's nothing further from the truth than this is a time to reason with someone. melissa: yeah. >> we are at a point where we know what they're going to do, we know what the cost is. so far the cost has been one young lady from california and a mother from maryland. so at what point does the cost become too much? david: well, that's a cost to americans. the cost to other people around the world. >> absolutely. david: thank you to our panel. appreciate you being here. melissa: a new survey out today finds americans flust government near an all-time low just one year away from the 2016 presidential elections. the pew research survey finds only 19% of americans trust the federal government all or most of the time. which may explain much of the appeal of those outsider candidates this election season. in the meantime season two of strange inheritance is back with two brand-new episodes tonight, including the story -- wait for this one. a female who inheritance a 19th century shipwreck filled
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with treasury worth hundreds of millions of dollars. host of strange inheritance jamie colby joins me with what we can expect from tonight's episode. this one is phenomenal. i understand you brought a inculpate i. set it up. >> well, i understand you canceled your plans so you can stay home and watch. melissa: of course. >> a small business owner of a dive shop wanted to be treasure hunting and, boy, was he but took him 12 years to find the spanish galleon. it was loaded with jewels and scatter all sorts of coins, and he found it all. and he want all the way to the supreme court in order to arrest the wreck and own everything on there and he won. and now the kids have herniated the ship and the wreck and everything on it& there's possibly 4- $500 million more treasure for them yet to find and they're out there every day. wait until you see it, we went
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with them on the boat treasure hunting. melissa: okay. let's take a look. >> they not only herniated but the rights to anything else from the wreck site. >> how much is left down there? >> 250 million. >> what? >> dollars' worth of treasure. >> seriously? >> $250 million worth of treasure. >> makes you want to move to key west. melissa: right? [laughter] although i bet they're guarding the site because there's so much treasury down there. pull it up. >> they likely own it but you want to contribute to their museum and go down and we saw somebody and working found an emerald that if authenticated, they will get to keep. melissa: wow. >> so that's one of the two episodes. and then the other one is two teachers who herniated from a -- their father the husband's father who is a lawyer took his payment, this ancient chinese screen from a famous emperor, i sound like a
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it authority now because i learn so much and you will too, a screen they were told was worth 2,000 then 8,000, well, they got enough money to send their tanzanian born adopted son to college, $250,000. melissa: such a cool show, such a great series, look forward to it tonight. >> great to see you. david: well, e. coli is apparently no problem. fox business taking it to the streets why customers and investors kind of slugging off health mccartney chipotle no matter how fast the markets change, at t. rowe price, our disciplined investment approach remains. we ask questions here. look for risks there. and search for opportunity everywhere. global markets may be uncertain. but you can feel confident in our investment experience... ... around the world. call a t. rowe price investment specialist, or your advisor...
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the hunger games franchise. but i want to see it anyway. melissa: i saw it. i like it. melissa: chipotle's e. coli contamination has spread to six states, 16 people hospitalized. customers don't seem to care, though. and neither apparently do not investors. the stock up more than 4% today. take a look at that. fox business reporter gerri willis is standing outside a chipotle restaurant in midtown manhattan with the latest. do people care, gerri? >> nothing like being here at chipotle, let me tell you. we find that people still love this chain. still love the food. let me give you details about the outbreak. the c.d.c. says that 45 people have been infected as you said in six states. most infected in washington and oregon a combine 39 folks in trouble. but new york, minnesota, you name it, california, and ohio, now we're not sure which what
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did ingredient, the c.d.c. doesn't know yet. but what i can tell you, melissa, millennials love this company, they say it's fresh, it's fact, and they love the food. listen to this. >> i like it's a healthy alternative to your taco bell, something like that. and it's nice and keep. >> i've had chipotle for years and i'm not i'm going to stop now. >> i come here four time a week. >> four times a week, you see people are totally loyal to this train and even wall street are happy to have chipotle continue, the company not being penalized here but i have to tell you talked to a few people, a little worried but still buying the food. melissa: a little worried but not enough to not eat there. thank you, gerri so much. david: i bet it's the onions. that's my guess. the onions. celebrities always telling you they're just like us. well, unless it's at the airport.
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david: a new high net, adele's album, is set had break the record in u.s., to sell 2.5 million copies in its first week. melissa: that voice, i love it. david: a great voice. melissa: the rich and famous don't have to worry about going through security with the unkept masses, lax, will get to its very own celebrity and vip terminal,. david: airport commission approving plans to convert a cargo office to a small terminal allowing passengers access to their own personal en trend could the cost is
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$1500, to $1800 per trip. melissa: they say it's good for the regular folks too, we don't want to be slowed down while they are taking pictures of beyonce. "risk & reward" right now. deirdre: belgium is charging one unnamed suspect in connection with the paris attacks as brussels stays on lockdown, this is "risk & reward," i am deirdre bolton in the global fight against terrorism, bul bull -- belgium prosecutors hole three people custody after raid. salah abdeslam is still at large, ashley webster is with me on the latest in paris. what is the latest on what police have found in the overnight raids? >> reporter: it has been interesting, 4 people arrested in belgium, connected, we

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