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tv   After the Bell  FOX Business  September 15, 2017 4:00pm-5:00pm EDT

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helped make this visit possible. every child who serves in the military should be proud because your mom or dad is a true american hero. in the wake of two devastating hurricanes, the world has witnessed your courage and compassion and you have made every american proud. americans in the united states air force because we know you will never quit, you will never yield and you will never fail. we are free because you are brave. i know i speak on behalf of myself and my husband when i tell you we are grateful for your service and i want to take a moment to recognize the families of those who serve,
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their time apart, to move when new orders come in. and phase the uncertainties it came in the time of need. this kind of lifestyle requires its own encourage and your sacrifices do not go unnoticed or unappreciated. thank you. please note our gratitude is boundless and goes out to each and every one of you with unconditional appreciation. the administration will always stand with the men and women of the united states air force, and it is my great pleasure to introduce my husband, the president of the united states, donald trump.
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[applause] >> at ease, please sit down. thank you, melania, for the wonderful introduction and being such an incredible emissary for the american people. very, very popular, thank you. secretary wilson, general jacobson, i am honored to join you on this historic location, the 70th anniversary of the united states air force. the greatest air force on the face of this earth by far. [applause]
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>> before we begin, i want to say our hearts and prayers go out to the people of london who suffered a vicious terrorist attack today. i spoke with a wonderful woman, british prime minister teresa may this morning and relayed america's deepest sympathy as well as our absolute commitment to eradicating the terrorists from our planet, radical islamic terrorism. it will be eradicated, believe me. [applause] >> america and our allies will never be intimidated. we will defend our people, our nations and our civilization from all who dared to threaten our way of life.
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this includes the regime of north korea which has once again shown its utter contempt for its neighbors and for the entire world community. after seeing your capabilities and commitment here today i am more confident than ever that our options in addressing this threat are both effective and overwhelming. our thoughts also remain with those recovering in the wake of hurricanes irma and harvey. i visited florida yesterday where the american people once again have shown the world how resilient, strong and through the united we are. we are going to help our fellow americans put their lives, their homes and their communities back together because when americans are in need, americans pull together. we know we can always count on the courageous members of our
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nation's military to be there every step of the way just like more than 400 air force medical personnel who have deployed to florida to help care for the sick and the injured, to the men and women who proudly wear the air force uniform, who keep our country safe and fill our hearts with pride, thank you for your service and devotion to america. thank you. [applause] >> i am truly thrilled to join you today at this incredible milestone. 70 years since the founding of the united states air force. congratulations. [applause]
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>> we are celebrating 70 years of history, 70 years of heroes, 70 years of victory. i also want to thank the amazing family members and loved ones whose sacrifices make your service possible. we love you, we appreciate you and everything you do, thank you. [applause] >> for seven decade the united states air force has pushed the boundaries of science and technology, helped restore peace and security to troubled lands and kept americans safe from those who threaten our very way of life. nothing inspires more confident
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in our friends or strikes more fear in the hearts of our enemies than the site of american warplanes on the horizon. you patrol the sky, protect the homeland and deliver american justice to anyone who dares to threaten our people. from the earliest wooden biplanes to the high tech uavs to the awesome power and stunning beauty of the f 35, being 2, f-22, i saw a lot of them today, the f-15, f-16, f-18, i don't know which one i liked the most. but our aviators have given america total dominance of the air and space no matter where we fly. now, when our enemies hear the f 35 engines, when they are roaring overhead their souls will tremble and they will know the day of reckoning has
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arrived. that is the way it has been since 1947 when the air force was born during a time of monumental change and uncertainty in the world. unconditional victory in world war ii had come at a terrible price, millions of lives had been lost. empires had collapsed and much of europe lay in ruin. the threat of global communism emerged from the void left by defeated foes and the free nations of the world once again looked to the united states to secure the peace. it was at this crucial moment that america established the air force as a separate military service and a truly great military service and from that moment, america has dominated both air and space like no other
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nation in history. our air superiority is on questions, not merely because we have the best equipment but because we have the best people, by far. [applause] >> from the berlin airlift through the gauntlet of mccalley to the skies above the jungles of southeast asia, the deserts of the middle east, american airmen have proven that they have no equal. encourage, capability or commitment. you are the ones who owned the sky. you are our greatest weapon of all. in the last 64 years american ground forces have not lost a single life to an enemy airstrike. pretty amazing. that is truly a testament to the
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strategy, skill of american airmen and the essential role you play in our national defense. as commander in chief, i am committed to keeping the united states military the best trained, best equipped and most technologically advanced fighting force on the planet. one of my first acts as president was to redirect the building of our armed forces and rebuilding we are. [applause] >> congress took an important step this year by heating my call for a $20 billion increase in defense spending and we will be doing much more than that but service men and women who defend our nation with their lives
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deserve the predictable and consistent funding that will help them win quickly and decisively. [applause] >> i will tell you the new equipment we are ordering by the billions, absolute billions and billions, equipment like you have never even thought of before. there is nobody in the world that will be close to us and what we are doing and that is my great honor. i said it early on and i will say it again, there is nobody even close. [applause] >> our armed forces have endured continuous combat for the past 26 years yet despite this, the number of airmen on active duty has dropped by one third since the 1990s and we have cut more
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than half of our fighter squadrons. terrible. that is why i am calling on congress to end the defense sequester once and for all and give our militaries the tools, training, equipment and resources that our brave men and women in uniform so richly deserve and that is happening. [applause] >> each of you is fulfilling your duty to america and government must fulfill its duty to you and to you, right? [applause] >> we will stop delaying needed investments in our readiness and renew our commitment to the
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patriots who keep america safe. in doing so we will continue the proud legacy of service each of you has inherited. a legacy built over the generations by legends like jagr, waggoner, boyd, grissom and shreve are. the heroes who broke barrier after barrier, they really did, they broke so many different barriers, they went farther, faster and always went on to victory. like them, each of you is a living, breathing symbol of our great country, the united states of america. the you characteristics that define the air force aviator, power and grace, action and instinct are woven deep into the american spirit and defined our people since our nation was founded.
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the legendary air force general robin goals immortalize this attribute when he said fighter pilot is an attitude. its aggressiveness, self cockiness if you know that, it is confidence, a streak of rebellion, is that true? [applause] >> i just met people who are better looking than tom cruise and we know they can fight better and we know they can fly better, they better be able to. >> great people. they are truly truly competitive but there is something else. there is a spark, there is a desire to be good, to do well in
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the eyes of their peers. that desire to do good, to soar past every challenge, overcome every obstacle and to win for your fellow citizens and the land that we love use the same desires it beats in the blood of every red-blooded american patriot. we are and forever will be a nation of pioneers and patriots, risktakers and renegades, aviators and astronauts. we crave adventure, exploration and enlightenment. we carved out a home in the new world, gave birth to the modern world and we will shape tomorrow's world with the strength and skill of american hands because for america the sky is never the limit.
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[applause] >> that is why the united states air force will remain the most inspiring fighting force ever known to man. like every part of our military, the air force is born from the will of our people, to search, to explore, to reach new heights. it is the people's will that you reflect, that you project power to every single corner of the globe. earlier this year i had the honor of speaking with a great army air corps and air force legends, lieutenant colonel dick cole, the last surviving doolittle raider and a true american hero. like those who serve today, dick cole was a common american who answered the call of duty with
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uncommon devotion. his place in the pages of history might have seemed unlikely prior to that fateful mission. he had never seen the ocean before boarding a ship that would take him halfway around the world. neither he nor anyone else had ever flown to be 2 into combat from the deck of an aircraft carrier, nor had we ever seen anybody to use a parachute before bailing out thousands of feet above the chinese mainland. but he knew what his country needed and what his duty required and there was no barrier that could stop colonel cole and his fellow raters from accomplishing their mission. it is that spirit of daring, devotion and duty and love of
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our country that defined the air force files for the past 70 years and will lift each of you to new heights every day from this day forward. there is no distance too far, no speed too fast, no challenge too great and no height too high that will keep the united states air force or the american people from total victory. the american people are eternally grateful. we will stand with you always and never forget i am always on your wing. happy 70th birthday to the united states air force, happy birthday to everybody, we are so proud of you. congratulations to each and every one of you and thank you for keeping america proud,
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strong, safe and free, thank you, may god bless the armed forces and may god bless the united states of america. thank you, congratulations. >> donald trump in front of a beaming group of pilots some who he likened to tom cruise except they can fly better, stronger than tom cruise in his portrayal of the flyers. the 70th anniversary of the air force, at andrews air force base, i am david asman. melissa: i am melissa francis, a beautiful speech. he said i'm always on your wing, showing his admiration and support for all our armed forces but in particular this time for aviators and talking about how no one is better or tougher
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anywhere in the world and giving them a glowing review. dave: he has used the air force more than a lot of people thought he would knew he would particularly when it comes to combat missions in the middle east. he has used various military assets from the air force to accomplish our goals, he has genuine respect, he wasn't in the military but he was in military school and that had a big impression on him. melissa: i am melissa francis. this is "after the bell". let's get to blake berman at the white house with more on this. >> reporter: remarkable chest pounding from the commander in chief especially given the events of the day all around the globe. it started this morning in london with another terrorist attack and a public transportation system and before the sun even rose in london it
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was north korea who fired another missile come a test fire that ended up flying at one point over japan. those events the president used to mark the 70th anniversary of the air force to say radical islamic terrorism will be eradicated. believe me, he said. on the issue of north korea some pretty tough talk from the president as he essentially said i am here at joint base andrews, i walked around, i have seen these big jets. north korea, i like what i see. >> after seeing your capabilities and commitment here today i am more confident than ever that our options in addressing this threat are both effective and overwhelming. >> reporter: this is an administration and a president that has always put the military option on the table as it relates to north korea. we saw that earlier today at the
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white house as during the press briefing the you and ambassador nikki haley spoke with us and said sanctions we put on north korea worked. we feel they worked but there is a realization that they can only go so far especially considering the rogue nation continues to fire off missiles. >> we have strangled their economic situation. there is not a lot the security council can do from here when you cut 90% of the trade and 30% of the oil. i have no problem kicking it to general matus because he has plenty of options. >> 20 of options being potential military option. the president heads to new york city new jersey area next week, the united nations general assembly and nikki haley said the issues that will be front and center will be north korea. melissa: let's bring hadley manning and david sears, a
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retired navy seal. let me start with you. what message did you hear from the president vis-à-vis north korea? >> i think he is going about this abnormal, telling north korea we have the capabilities, we have the military options, they are here but he turns and makes this thing about a celebration of the 70th birthday. melissa: was did you think of that? nikki haley saying we were strangling them the best we can from the un and it is time for something else? >> i agree with nikki haley. we see deals meant to sanction north korea, punish north korea, isolate north korea but they continue to work to proliferate. the bottom line is what we have been trying hasn't been working and the longer we sit in this bad situation with north korea the worse outcome we face but
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donald trump's remarks underscore the need for a strong america, a peaceful world when our allies trust us and enemies fear us. melissa: sometimes it feels we keep saying over and over again all options are on the table, doesn't seem like we are using any of them. is that a way to look at it or is that wrong? >> it is a way to look at it. we haven't proven we are going to use them. we have eight years, 12 years, 20 years of almost appeasement to north korea, we kicked the can down the road. when we say all options on the table our credibility is limited. north korea, the korean peninsula. maria: do you agree with that? >> from changing from the previous administration to the current ministries and americans are hopeful to see a different approach to foreign policy and national security striving to put america first, that is what donald trump is trying to do and members of the military
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community strongly supporting the president than the general population at large. the major legislative change was the accountability reform package. we will see strong support from donald trump for the military and vice versa. melissa: appreciate your time. dave: japan waking up to another missile scare from north korea. the road regime proving it is capable of launching a missile that can hit guam. the un holding a special emergency security council meeting right now. we will take you there live after a break. plan. at baird, we approach your wealth management strategy the same way to create a financial plan built to last from generation to generation. we'll listen. we'll talk. we'll plan. baird. and life's beautiful moments.ns get between you flonase outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. it helps block 6 key inflammatory substances that cause symptoms.
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. melissa: markets shrugging off the terror incident in london and north korea missile launch over japan, all three of the major averages ending the day and the week higher. the dow having the best week of the year to. nicole petallides on the floor of the new york stock exchange, nicole what's driving the markets? >> reporter: great news to
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deliver records again to our viewers. 401(k)s, iras, love it. four straight record closes, it's ultimately good new, energy helped to lead the way. financials up four and five sessions, also a winner, and taking a look not only at the dow jones industrial average record close, s&p 500 record close. the nasdaq couldn't squeeze it out but as you noted a great week for the dow and across the board gains for all of them. take a look at some of the best performers of the week. intel and boeing really had wonderful performance, intel up 5%, boeing 4%, new record high for boeing. not only did they secure a contract to design the next air force one. two of those planes that will be ready in trump's last year of office, and eight years if he's elected a second term. apple, we have the launch and that had a winning week as well. back to you. melissa: nicole, thank you.
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david: north korea defined. undeterred by international sanctions launching yet another missile over japan. sparking emergency meeting at the united nations over the second launch over american ally in the past month. here with more from the u.n. is fox news' david lee miller. david? reporter: david, this urgent meeting of the security council was called for by the united states, south korea as well as japan. the meeting lasted about an hour, it is now over, and the outcome of this meeting is expected to be a statement to the press regarding the firing of this missile just a few hours ago by north korea. the ambassador to the u.n. from france spoke to reporters saying our firmness is the best way to avoid war, the japanese u.n. ambassador also spoke out and called for the sanctions that are already in place to be fully implemented. joining the chorus of those critical of north korea's
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action, the secretary-general for the united nations. he sent out a tweet saying and i quote, i condemn the latest north korean missile launch and call for the dprk, democratic people's republic of korea to begin dialogue immediately. so far, david, the council adopted nine resolutions to halt north korea's nuclear weapons program, the two most recent are the most punishing on the north korean economy. the u.n. ambassador for the u.s. nikki haley in washington today told reporters that north korea continues to be provocative and reckless and said the u.s. defense secretary has many options at his disposal in order to deal with north korea if it becomes necessary. she said the latest sanctions are massive. listen. >> they've already started to feel it, but they're getting ready to feel 90% of their exports going away. 30% of their oil. imagine what that would do to
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the united states if it was there. and if you look at what -- i was looking at what north korea was saying, it was a full-scale economic blockade suffocating its state and people. this is dramatic. reporter: now, the u.s. had sought a complete oil embargo, very likely, that was never presented to the council because the u.s. feared that it would be vetoed by north korea's two strongest allies, china and russia. today the u.s. secretary of state rex tillerson urged china to cut off all the oil supplies to china, china meanwhile has pushed back saying that sanctions here are not the only answer. china saying that talks are also necessary and they must accompany any sanctions in order for this process to be successful. but david, when it comes to talk, you have to be mindful that north korea issued a statement in the last 24 hours. ratcheting up the fiery rhetoric. it said that japan will be, and
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i quote, sunken into the sea, and the u.s. will be reduced to ashes and darkness by its nuclear program, there by raising the question just how helpful direct talks might be. david: that's what the talk is. david lee miller, thank you very much. melissa: now you're looking at after delivering remarks, the president and his family at joint base andrews. he is now heading to morristown, new jersey, aboard air force one, and then to the estate at bedminster where he will use the weekend to prepare for his big speech to the u.n. general assembly and meetings with world leaders in new york next week. david: all right, we woke up to news of terror right in the heart of london. president trump condemning a cowardly attack. why he says it is time to get tough? zuhdi jasser, sounding off coming next. liberty mutual stood with me
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congressman king joins me now. what do you really think, congressman? >> well, you know, i put it all in the tweet, i think, when you hear something like that and an ap story came out right after the dinner engagement at white house with chuck and nancy as the president refers to them and the report was that they may have reached a deal on daca and implied the president accepted daca and there wouldn't be a wall. david: hold on a second. of course, he's committed himself to the wall in comments after that, but what is your biggest fear? what do you think is going to happen in his discussions with democrats? what do you think he's going to be tricked into? the guy's not dumb. >> at first i think that nancy and chuck hijacked the message out of the white house dinner and probably not going to get invitation like that again. what i think is going on here is the president has served up
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daca, even though he had a campaign froms end it. we thought that would happen january 20th and disappointment to us to find out -- david: i hate to interrupt you, but i went back and looked at the record, usually the word he used was revoke daca, and he has promised to revoke daca, daca was unconstitutional or called that by several courts. by legal scholars and everything, and then to put it in the hands of you guys, giving it to congress to come up with a solution instead of the presidential proclamation made by president obama. he's on the road to revoking daca. go ahead. but david, were the voters -- did they really see through that and find that loophole in that word? i'll revoke it, but i'm going to throw it to congress? what he's done is i say it's solomonesque, you fight over it six months and if you don't
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come back with a satisfactory solution, i might do something different. david: there were ten attorneys generals suing the government because of daca, texas and a bunch of other states. they ended the lawsuit because the primary concern was getting rid of the presidential edict on daca which this president has committed himself to revoking. so he has followed through on the revoking principle. he's going to leave it up to you guys, and it is your responsibility as congress, to decide issues like this, is it not? >> i don't think that they withdrawn the lawsuit. i think they didn't file it september 5th. david: i talked to two of the attorneys generals and they said they were withdrawing the law. i talked to two of them. >> does withdraw mean revoke meant during the campaign? they might refile it if they're not satisfied with the results, that's all a possibility. david: you had a president making edicts that he didn't have the constitutional authority to make. >> okay, i'm not going to agree with your definitions of either
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one of these david in the application they're using. i'm saying this, the president has thrown this in the middle of congress now. now we have a six month fight, leads with amnesty again. ronald reagan signed amnesty in '86, it was a mistake by his word and ed meeses, george bush led with amnesty in 2005, 6 and 7, that was a mistake and the gang of 8 and obama led with amnesty in 2013, passed a bill with 68 votes in the senate, we're not taking it up. david: your biggest concern is he may go for overall amnesty the same way ronald reagan did in the 80s? >> i think that president trump wants to get the best deal that he can get to get the maximum out of enforcement in exchange for some version of amnesty by legalizing people that are here illegally. if that happens, the rule of law, the reconstruction of the restoration of the respect for the rule of law is going to be destroyed for our lifetime. yours and mine and probably
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your children's life. david: he could only succeed if the majority of people in congress vote for amnesty, and frankly, i don't know if the votes are there for that, do you? >> well, nobody knows that the point, and what it did is it started people thinking i'd rather be at the table than on the menu. and what they don't remember, if they haven't been through the wars. i've been through a couple big ones on immigration, you can be at the table and on the menu. [laughter] >> well, that's what's going to happen if we don't hold onto this rule of law, and so i'm making the case here we cannot be rewarding law breakers and restore the respect for the rule of law. those two things are incompatible with each other and though i've got compassion for some of the dreamers and one they said i'd adopt this individual if i could make sure that that was what was the legal and right thing to do. david: you may get a chance to.
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>> respect the rule of law. david: in the hands of congress or that's what the president says. we'll see what happens. congressman, we appreciate your iowan stubbornness, if it wasn't for stubborn people like you, we wouldn't hold the line on anything. appreciate you being here. >> i'm going to step that definition on the way out here, david, and look forward for another conversation next time. david: we love having you on, steve. thank you very much. melissa: thank you, president trump making remarks on the attack in london. before that he posted a series of tweets urging the u.s. to be more proactive and nasty when it comes to combating terrorism. terror expert zuhdi jasser will tell us what needs to be done right now. so what else is new? how's your mother? umm..she's doing good. she needs more care though. she wants to stay in her house. i don't know even where to start with that. first, let's take a look at your financial plan and see what we can do. ok, so we've got... we'll listen. we'll talk. we'll plan. baird.
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. melissa: london on edge right now, isis claiming responsibility after a homemade bomb partially detonated in a subway during morning rush hour. british prime minister theresa
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may raising the threat level for the uk now. president trump condemning the attack and calling for action. >> it's a terrible thing. just keeps going and going, and we have to be very smart and they have to be very, very tough which perhaps we're not nearly tough enough, but that is just an absolutely terrible thing. in fact, i'm going to call the prime minister right now. melissa: this was after the president's immediate response on twitter -- here now is zuhdi jasser, american islamic forum for democracy founder. what's your reaction to the president's response? >> well, i think he's giving an appropriate response which is that we are at war, and we need to respond with force. they are losers, and there are so many of these that have been on the radar, we know that, even though he may not have
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specific details, scotland yard may have pushed back and said if you have information, share it. there are 500 open cases in the uk with 3,000 individuals and already identified 20,000 at risk individuals with many who traveled back and forth. bottom line is that we're in a state of war. this bomb went off, actually prematurely, didn't go off completely and wasn't a suicide operation which is why there is imminent threat now and why brits need to be alert to see something, say something. melissa: it's amazing it's the fifth terror attack in the uk this year so far. it really seems like the tempo has picked up and almost as if it's become the new normal. >> melissa, if there's one thing i want people to understand, we cannot let this be the new normal. the worst summer since 9/11 for the brits, for the europeans and for america. why? because we aren't treating the disease. we finally have a president taking the war to isis,
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flooding our d.o.d., attacks them in raqaa, in northern iraq and on the verge of extermination but the ideology will not be exterminated until we muslims have a reform movement, shift the countering violent extremism which is a whack-a-mole program to countering violent islamism which is an ideology. that is why we're seeing the sonic boom, as you start to decimate isis, they will act out. isis was quick to take credit only a few hours ago. melissa: how do you take the action that you describeed? . >> the president needs to convene commission on radical islam. engage muslim reformers and marginalize the islamists. we're hearing that the old swamp is still active in washington, the islamist muslim brotherhood hopes are giving attention while us reformers aren't. four recent attacks, i hope they're beginning to engage more of the anti-islamists,
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those who aren't only against terror but against ideology and acknowledge that we need to reform. this is a long process. this is a long war of the whole generation that is going to need the beginning of a journey, that is not one terror attack to the next, but an ideological process of where we are in the house of islam right now. melissa: no, it's so hard, when he wades into the territory, immediately people are shouting racist. very hard to get near there. zuhdi, we heard you loud and clear, and i'm sure you are right. thank you very much for coming on today. keep it up. thank you. >> thanks, melis combashgs time. david: smart guy. new information into the equifax data breach. what it means for and you for your security? large cap equityd has exposure to energy infrastructure mlps? think again. it's time to shake up your lineup. the alerian mlp etf can diversify your equity portfolio and add potential income.
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. david: credit rating agency equifax is having a terrible week. shares down 35% since the company announced data breach impacting 143 million americans now a major investigation is underway. gerri willis is in the newsroom to break it all down for us. gerri, it ain't good. reporter: it ain't good and not just equifax having a hard time, so are american consumers. now an investigation by america's a.g. is gang steam, held by equifax one of the biggest credit scoring operations. now the breach announced last week resulted in the data of nearly 143 million folks getting in the hands of criminals including their social security numbers, driver's license numbers, addresses and some cases credit card numbers. in a letter to equifax since friday, which i'm showing you right here, the a.g.'s state
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this, the incident raises serious questions about the effectiveness of equifax's measures to protect the confidentiality of the private information that it is entrusted with. pennsylvania a.g. josh shapiro leading the multistate investigation, and this is what he had to tell our very own neil cavuto today. >> this is a massive data breach. a lot of questions answered in the course of this investigation. we've got to protect consumers. reporter: now the a.g.s faced a long line in getting questions answered. senator elizabeth warren along with 11 other democratic senators launched their own investigation. the group is introduced a bill to allow consumers to freeze credit for free. david? david: i'm sure liz warren will solve all problems. melissa: so glad she found a job. david: wipe it all clean. gerri willis, take care. melissa: dream come true. how an 11-year-old entrepreneur landed the most powerful client
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>> not even a visit from the commander-in-chief can stop this hard worker an 11 year old boy, look at this. how cute is that? so fulfilling his wish to mow the white house lawn and he kept right on working as the president came out for a visit. how cute is that? >> and then have the president fire him. it was terrible. >> that was a joke. >> the little boy is from falls church, virginia and it's a suburb of d.c. he sent a letter to the president earlier this year offering to cut the grass for free. guess what the president called the boy the future of our country saying maybe one day he
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will be president. boy, he's got a good job reit now look at how careful he's being. >> how cute, and to offer to say he wants to come and do it for free that's just so cute what a great moment. he will remember that always. risk & rewards starts now have a great weekend. >> i just remember the extremes of people. >> suddenly i heard it. people shouting run, run, get out of here. >> this was a detonation of an improvised explosive device. >> just keeps going and going. >> we have to be very very tough >> a cowardly attack. >> it was like every month or so >> we're not nearly tough enough >> i don't feel safe taking the train. >> liz: the terror bomber, hit the london subway system just south of westminster setting off mass panic. isis now claiming responsibility , prime minister th

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