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tv   Trish Regan Primetime  FOX Business  February 7, 2019 11:00pm-12:01am EST

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with us tomorrow, diamond and silk and mark morgan among our guests tomorrow. good night from new york. trish: breaking news tonight. the very first and only interview with the families of all five american hostages being held captive in a venezuelan prison by brutal socialist dictator, nicolas maduro. it has been 443 days since these americans last saw their father or husbands. now despite mounting threats from maduro's thugs and retribution by maduro and the cuban intelligence community trying to maintain maduro's criminal dictatorship in venezuela, and fear for their
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loved ones very lives, they are coming forward together in a plea for help. live from the heart of texas in the great city of houston, they are on a mission to bring their loved ones home. "trish regan primetime" begins right now. tonight, a very special, very important show for you. i'm live in houston, texas, to sit down with the families of all five americans being held captive in a venezuelan jail by nicolas maduro and his brutal socialist regime. it's 443 days since their loved ones were taken. and tonight they are speaking out. all of them. it was supposed to be a routine business trip to caracas. these five american engineers along with a green cardholder
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traveled to venezuela under orders from their parent company. they traveled there before without issue and they just assumed the trip would be like any other. but it wasn't. instead the men were kidnapped by maduro's thugs and thrown in jail. with the dictator telling the one truth americans were thieves and they deserved the worst jail in all of venezuela. the five americans and the u.s. green cardholder, the father, husband, brothers, grandfather, and every one of their loved ones miss them terribly. tonight the families speak out for the first time. i wanted to stress to you how scary this is for them. we didn't promote this show, we didn't tell anyone other than
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immediate production members involved in preparing this program tonight that the families would be here and they were coming forward, to protect them and protect their loved ones. these family members and the hostages have been threatened, and they have been told not to speak out. maduro does not want them to speak out. but the family, they want to, because they want their loved ones to come home. christina vadell, maria vadell -- let me start by saying you are very brave. carlos, what happens, your dad went on a business trip and never came home. >> first of all, thank you so much for having us. it means the world to us that
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you are carrying this story forward and bringing it up. it was supposed to be a business trip like the ones he had taken before. they flew down november 19 of 2017. november 21, that tuesday morning my mom received a text from my dad saying i am coming home, i'll be home in time for thanksgiving. then we didn't hear from him for another 30 days. now we are 19 months and pleading for help from president trump, about maduro, mr. guaido, down to the jailer holding the keyed to their cell. if you understand human rights or grief, if you believe in justice, you can act and let them come back home. trish: jessica, how did you find out? >> city was at work, trish, preparing for a meeting. i saw a bunch of missed calls from my sister.
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she said our dad just got arrested. i was in complete shock. it's been a blur for our family ever since. this not at moment i don't think about him. trish: christine and veronica you and i talked previously. your statisticker also -- your father also gone now. are you able to talk with him at all? do you have any correspondence? >> he gets to call every now and then. there are weekly calls from most of of the men. but if we are not with our mother we might miss it. we work, so it's very hard. our life has been on hold, not being able to just call your data dad when you need something or just want to talk. it's been difficult. trish: have they given you a reason? your father was ceo of the
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company. citgo being an energy company in the u.s. we have all been to sit go gas stations. they are owned by pdvsa. did they give you ani' explanation? >> we know -- we don't know why we are still in jail. so all we have is hope to releasing him. trish: marie, i know you visited the jail in caracas and took your son, 19-year-old sergio. you said your husband lost so much weight. he lost 47 pounds, and he was already skinny. all his muscles are gone. he tried to carry my son who is only 20 pounds, and he couldn't
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carry him. and we tried to grab my husband because he almost went to the floor with my son. trish: what are the conditions like the jail? >> they are certainly difficult for them down there. it's extremely overcrowd. they are in a basement with very little circulation so they are constantly getting sick. they get about 30 minutes of sunlight a month. the phone calls they get are very quick. and they usually will use the first part of it to say i need you to bring me water, i need allergy medicine and antibiotics. then they will say how are you guys doing? trish: are you able to insure the fly supplies you -- the supplies you send get to your dad? >> it has been a living
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nightmare to figure the logistics of getting something to venezuela. through the sporadic phone calls we get, those are the only assurances we have that they are getting their food and they have enough water. it's unbelievable. trish: what do you tell your dad on the few times you have gotten to speak to him. >> it's hard to schedule to talk to him. it's usually during the day. and my mom is the immediate member. on the chances calls in the late afternoon or early evening. we say oh, my god, i miss you so much. i love you. we try to keep a calm state of mind to not worry him. trish: maris, has anyone there given you any hope that they might be set free? that your husband might be set free?
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>> not really. no. it's difficult for me. trish: i understand. it's very difficult for all of you. >> because i need my husband here. it's difficult. i don't understand what happened. why? why they? trish: your dad worked for a lot of years for citgo. he ran engineering, the refinery operations in lake charles, louisiana. and it was pretty normal to go back and forth to venezuela maybe a couple times a year. but you said on this particular trip he was a little bit more reticent. what happened. >> it was right before thanksgiving. it was kind of a sporadic call.
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there were some men randomly saying you need to go down to this meeting. it just didn't feel right. it's been 14 months and we have been on this journey trying to bring him back home. trish: there are a lot of people that work at citgo in the u.s. carlos do you know why they were targeting your families? >> we do not know for sure. that's a question we have been trying to answer for 14 months. but the most of concise hypothesis we can come up with is they were work with their employers and they were forced to cut off contact with some individuals and that made them a target. >> your dad's grandsons 5 and 3. what do you tell them?
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>> this is the hardest thing for me because they are being robbed of creating childhood memories with my dad and 3-year-old. 14 months is a long chunk of my life. i show pictures of my dad. my 5-year-old gets mad because she can't face time with him because he doesn't have a cell phone. i want them to see him again putting them over his shoulders. trish: you all deserve that. it's not right. it's not right and there is a lot going on politically right now in that country which might be helpful, but alexandria, you told me there was a riot in your dad's prison the other day, and that has you increasingly concerned about his safety.
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>> yes, trish. we are speaking out loudly and fiercely because on saturday there were 120 people in this basement that's only manhattan to have 20. trish: no windows. >> and this prison canceled visits and a lot of the people hadn't seen their family in week. our family members didn't. but a lot of them rioted. my dad called my mom that night. he said he feared for his life. that's what he said. trish: i am sure they all fear right now. i know how much fear you all have as well. i commend you for bravely speaking out. we'll talk more about this and get to know each of your fathers. and we'll hear from secretary of state mike pompeo who weighs in on this. the family members very bravely speak out and coming forward and showing us pictures of their
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family members for the first time ever. the secretary of state for the united states of america saying that the u.s. is doing all it can. you will hear from him and more from the families right after this. carl, i as my broker...invite here. what am i paying you to manage my money? it's racquetball time. ♪ carl, does your firm offer a satisfaction guarantee? like schwab does. guarantee? ♪ carl, can you remind me what you've invested my money in. it's complicated. are you asking enough questions about how your wealth is being managed? if not, talk to schwab.
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trish: what are you doing to help them, to get them out. america can't and for that. we can't allow a dictator to lock up our people. >> i can't talk' about any individual case. i can tell the american people, anywhere there is an american wrongfully detained, in this
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case by the thug maduro, the united states government is incredibly focused on obtaining their release. we have been pretty successful in the first two years of trump's presidency in doing that. we are proud of the work we have done. i can assure the american people that we are working diligently to make sure no american is wrongfully detained by mr. maduro. there is no effort being spared in returning the americans who are wrongfully detained. trish: i'm back with the families of six hostages who are currently being held, wrongfully detained by the regime nicolas maduro and one green cardholder. they went down for what they thought was a routine business meeting. 443 days being held captive in a
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venezuelan jail. the state department says they are working hard. i spoke the man the u.s. recognizes as the president of venezuela. juan guaido. they are going to work hard on this. 443 days. i'm sure in your view it's not hard enough. not until your loved one is back home and you can put your arm around your dad and give him a hug. but do you feel like you are getting enough comes from the state department? >> you know, being in high school, i'm usually left out of the more explicit details of the whole situation. in order to spare me and my sisters emotions. but as of recently the momentum has been occurring has been fostering a lot of support online in our community, and i
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truly feel like change will come. and they will be free soon. trish: secretary pompeo said we are doing everything. and he wants you to be reassured they are trying hard. and that they care. because it's not what our country does. we don't allow people to be left behind and taken by some two-bit dictator which is really what he has become. we learned today that the people of venezuela can't get the much-needed humanitarian supplies the u.s. is sending because he won't alight. when you see this news happening right now, carlos, what's going through your head? >> a little selfish to be fighting for my dad. but every venezuelan going through something is fighting for the same outcome. they all want to be reunited
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with their families. they want to be cared for. and that's what we are here to try to accomplish for our families as well with your help and the help of our leaders. >> sergio, if you could talk to your dad tonight, what would you tell sometime in. >> that i miss him. trish: yeah, you miss him, and you love him? >> yes, so much. trish: i want to point out that i had spoken to both christine and veronica over the last couple weeks as this unfolded. there was a time, i think, when all of you -- you sort of made a pact together to talk through this, and there was some fear about coming forward. explain to me that fear. why was there so much concern to get this story out?
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>> well, trish, i think when you are in a situation where things are out of your control and you don't understand the why, and you are searching for answers. it's difficult to pinpoint. it's hard to feel like you can just tell anyone about it and be public about it. because we don't know what's been happening. so for us. as much -- from day one we have been working all that we can with our leaders, and anyone that has been open to helping us, and at this point, we just have gotten to a point where we have to tell people about it. we need help from anyone, not just our leaders. but the leaders in venezuela. and also even the people that have the keys, you know. they can just open the doors and let these guys go and let them,
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their families. trish: maris have you been able to see your husband at all? >> yes. trish: were you concerned you might not come back to the united states? >> i worked all the last year to make sure my dad was okay. >> you looked after him in prison? >> yes. >> you were able to go in and see him? >> yes. >> what was it like in the prison. >> it's always tension moments. like you say, they obviously can cancel the last minute. trish: the conditions themselves, what are they like? alexander was saying they are in a basement with no sunlight. and they are barely -- i know christina and veronica, you said
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your father was suffering to death. >> 600 calories is what they were heating for approximately 10 months. >> we don't know if it's day or night. >> bright lights 24 hours. they are not allowed to have letters from their family. pictures from the family. trish: no pictures allowed? >> nothing. no letters. trish: sometimes books? they will take them away? if you could say one thing to the u.s. government tonight, what would it be, carlos? >> the came message that would go to anyone who is willing and able to help. please if you understand grief and if you understand human rights, it's been 19 months in
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agonizing conditions. trish: they have never had a hearing. >> no, not even to determine if there is testified to go to a trial. no. trish: people can learn more about your families and stories with the hashtag free sick 06. i hope they come home. we are going to talk some more about this with a former state department official. more "trish regan primetime" after this. your daily dashboard from fidelity. a visual snapshot of your investments. key portfolio events. all in one place. because when it's decision time... you need decision tech.
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♪ one plus one equals too little too late ♪ ♪ a sock-a-bam-boom ♪ who's in the room? ♪ love is dangerous ♪ but driving safe means you pay less ♪ ♪ switch and save ♪ yes, ma'am excuse me, miss. ♪ does this heart belong to you? ♪ ♪ would you like it anyway? [ scatting ] trish: an emotional night. you just saw five american
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families as well as one family that had their father here on a green card. all of their families are being held, their fathers or husbands as hostaged in venezuela. meanwhile the country is certainly struggling with all kinds of turmoil. as lawlessness increases in the region. we learned the navy admiral in charge of u.s. southern command says the united states military is prepared to protect americans in venezuela if necessary. joining me right now to react to all of this, we have former state department official senior advisor to president trump, christian whiton. your reaction to what you saw. they made a decision that they needed to go public. that time was running out. what are your thoughts?
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>> it's very moving. it's very concerning. i'm glad they took the time to share this very valuable information with the public. it's hard to do. but when you raise the profile and tell the truth about what this regime is doing to members of your family, you raise the cost to the regime of harming them and make them disappear. i think what the families are doing, it's very important to put in perspective how evil this regime is. saddam hussein was holding hostages and he was going to bring out a child and engage the child and the child was supposed to looks happy, and instead he looked horrific. it picks on people who are vulnerable. if they think this will cause the united states to back down, they are sorely mistaken.
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i don't think donald trump will see this and take kindly to what's going on down there to our citizens. >> i'm sure he won't. it's not who we are. but is neil cavuto using them as a kind of political tip? why go out and take americans like that? why hold them hostage and why string them up saying that they are thieves and they have stolen and you wants them going to the worst possible prison and throwing them into prison and never even giving them a hearing. just letting them stay there. >> i think maduro is grasping for straws. and i think he's taking advice from some of the most of horrific people in our hemisphere. it isn't just maduro at work. but also the cuban regime and the chinese members of hezbollah
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who have linked to this thug regime. the advice he's getting is the wrong advice. he's desperate. he sees the end in sight. he sees his countrymen in the streets rooting for hits downfall. -- his downfall. with the exception of nicaragua, he sees the latin american countries you tbhietd with the united states and he's panicking. trish: how can this end as peacefully as possible so the american hostages come home so people have a shot at economic opportunity there, and there is no bloodshed. because that's an important component to all of this. >> maduro needs to realize the door is closing and he needs to get on a plane to nicaragua rsh or russia or china. especially as more attention is
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drawn to him in the united states. trish: he could -- i know there are a lot of venezuelans who would like to see it end badly for him. there are places that he could live as john bolton said happily everhappily -- everafter in a v. how does this play out. how do we make sure those people have a shot at democracy instead of a dictatorship. >> marcos from the mill means got to live out his life in hawaii. others like mussolini had it pretty hard. or mor -- or nor noriega.
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he should leave power now while he still can. trish: some good advice for him. christian. thank you. it's good to have your perspective on all these families coming forward. i agree with you. i would not have had them here tonight if i did not think it would help their cause. far-left rising star alexandria ocasio-cortez announcing today a big step towards her socialist dream. a green new deal that critics say puts trees over people. steve hilton is going to react to all of that. what we have heard here tonight and what is happening in the streets of venezuela. perhaps the most of horrific example in modern history for what socialism can mean. this is not a bed.
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trish: new tonight, progressive rising star alexandria ocasio-cortez unveiling her much-anticipated green new deal today. what? >> we are going to transition this country into the future and we are not going to be dragged behind by our past. days also the day that we choose to assert ourselves as a global leader in transitioning to 100 percent renewable energy. i think it is a green dream it is, it is. trish: we got a whole lot of what we expected. a whole lot big government. a whole lot new costs. far reaching. unreasonable proposals with a giant price tag to match of tens of trillions of dollars. i am not quite sure what the
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appeal is or how any of this would work or some realization that someone would have to pay for it all. but i will have the former advisor to the prime minister of the u.k., mr. steve hilton. he's the host of "the next revolution" on fox news and deirdre bolton. why are people so excited. alexandria ocasio-cortez. steve: she is a charismatic figure. but we have been talking about this for a while. the idea of the green new deal has been out there. it involves getting rid of the entire fossil fuel industry and the gas industry because they have a timetable of 12 years. when i heard this was being published today i wondered, well, are they going to walk some of this back? this is serious. she this congress. she has a senator back her up.
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are they going to tone it down? no. they are talking about getting to 100% renewable energy in 10 years. how centralizing this me sure is. they want decisions made about where you live, how you get around, what kinds of job you have, all made not by your local government or state legislature but by the federal government in washington, d.c. it wouldn't be the united states of america. it would all be centralized. it's really frightening. trish: deirdre, we have seen this movie before. it never ends well. and we are watching it play out in real-time. you just heard from some of the families of american hostages being held in venezuela tonight. that's perhaps the best example
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in modern history how socialism can deteriorate an economy where 90% of the people are living in poverty when it once enjoyed the highest standard of living in all of latin america? dierdre: that's a legitimate question. money flows to opportunity. the reason why people want to be in the u.s. if they come here, they build a business. their intellectual property is protected. we wouldn't have silicon val imor silicon alley if you couldn't build a business and benefit from that. trish: this is truly what made this economy of so great. and really, in admiration for the whole world. steve hilton, the american dream as much as people want to
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poo-poo it, it's alive and well. someone who did live the american dream himself, this news just crossing. jeff bezos who runs amazon web's accusinged the "national enquirer" of extortion because they revealed some emails sent to him by the publication threatening to release inappropriate photos of him. there is a big american entrepreneur who certainly lived the american dream. he couldn't have done that in venezuela. what's your reaction to that, sir? steve: i read the blog post jeff bezos put up folks plain this. what he's doing is pretty admirable. i know many people watching may not be his biggest fan and certainly not "the washington post" which he owns. but he's standing up to pretty sordid and sleazy tactics by the
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"national enquirer," threatening to publish explicit, embarrassing photos. they are literally described. bezos publishes the email he received that could be embarrassing to him. he's standing up to that. as he puts it in his blog post, if he can't stand up to this, then who can? i think he played it well this time. trish: it many an important part of who we are at americans. you can't just run around and point fingers and say someone is guilty of this or guilty of that. that's what nicolas maduro did to the americans being held hostage. he accused them of thievery, he locked them up and never gave them a trial. it's one thing for the administration to do something like that another thing for the publications to use stuff like that in such a threatening way which i think does undermine who
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we are. dierdre: your conversation with those families was incredibly compelling, and they are lucky to have you representing what they are going through and reaching out to them. that's my first point. the second point about jeff bezos is as steve said, in an admirable way. i can't stand up to what somebody is trying to do, then who can. i feel like the was brave of him to go ahead and publish these. he said it would be embarrassing. and he does have theling to the photos which are apparently quite racy. he's worth $140 billion. but day it's clearly not his best day. i think from a legal perspective. jeff bezos has accused the "national enquirer" of extortion. so i think there will be a lot of lawyers arcing over this for a long time, what exactly is extortion and what rights does
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each side have. trish: we don't allow it here. that's a basic american value. no extortion, no blackmail. that's what happens in banana republics. venezuela pleading with socialist dec dictator nicolas maduro to stop blocking the vital humanitarian aid that the people need so desperately. what kind of person does that? you have people suffering in the streets and he won't allow them the food. the spark for revolution. we have scene update from the as someone in witness protection, i can't tell you anything about myself. but believe me... i'm not your average consumer. that's why i switched to liberty mutual. they customized my car insurance, so i only pay for what i need. and as a man... uh... or a woman... with very specific needs that i can't tell you about- say cheese. mr. landry? oh no. hi mr. landry!
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>> trish today we tried to deliver humanitarian assistance from the united states and colombia into venezuela. and the venezuela military under the direction of mr. maduro stopped that. not only is he not allowing the economy to flourish. he's actively denying medicine and foodstuffs and hygiene kits for his own people. this is horrific stuff. trish: this video new to us. the highways linking the
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borderer of venezuela to colombia. they are barricaded with giant car go container maduro put there to block much-needed reverses being sent to help the citizens who are suffering so terribly in venezuela. help we are sending and the international community are sending. he send his venezuelan military to put up these barricades. with me now a man working hard to free the five american hostages from maduro's clutches. dr. randy brensen. what do you make of that. he's trying to prevent the people from getting this much-needed aid. will that be a turning point where the military says you are a bad guy. my family needs this and i need to switch sides? >> i think this is a turning
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point, trish. thank you so much for shining the light on this situation in venezuela and the families. it's a tragedy. but the reality is all we need is a couple american made tractors to push the tractors off the highways up to the venezuelan border. i don't see them keeping aid workers from getting across there. i think the united states is probably prepared to challenge his blockade if you will of the border. trish: south com is saying we are there to protect americans from nicolas maduro and we'll protect our diplomatic missions as well. does it go so far as saying okay, this is not how we do business. is that something the colombians
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need to do or others down there? >> there are four phases the way i look at it if i was advising the white hughes what i would do. these are military assets to secure our embassy personnel. to make sure they have freedom of movement and if they want to leave, freedom to leave. access to airport or escape. free movement of our diplomats in venezuela since we recognized the guaido government. in addition our priority should be the hostages we talked about and the wonderful family that came on your show. they need to be protected. whatever it takes to protect them or get them out of the country needs to be a priority. getting humanitarian aid across the border. getting it across the border. when that aid comes across i can guarantee you those military people are not going to stop it. they are hungry just like the rest of them.
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number 3 and very important is that we have to give people across the border working with people on the ground, ngo and faith-based groups working there to make sure it many the right people. that's very important. trish: a lot of great advice. thank you, sir. mo your daily dashboard from fidelity. a visual snapshot of your investments. key portfolio events. all in one place. because when it's decision time... you need decision tech. only from fidelity. you need decision tech. each day justin at work... walk. and after work. he does it all with dr. scholl's. only dr. scholl's has massaging gel insoles that provide all-day comfort. to keep him feeling more energized. dr. scholl's. born to move. to be nobody but yourself in a world which is doing it's best to make you everybody else... ♪ ♪ means to fight the hardest battle,
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unleash your potential in the bedroom, with score!. ♪ trish: you know, there are times in one's when you just have to say i need to do what's right. i need to do what matters, and i need to be able to stand upper for freedom. -- up for freedom and for democracy and all the values that have made our country as great as it is. tonight was one of those nights. and those families needed a voice, and they need your help. and i think that we as americans are ready, willing and able to
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give it. so join me in helping them. remember their hashtag. you can find them on instagram and on twitter, and we're going to have more tomorrow night. kennedy: the plot thickens in virginia where the state's top three democrats are still mired in scandal as pressure grows for governor ralph ralph northam and attorney general mark herring to step down over black face controversies. justin fairfax continues to deny more serious sexual assault allegations, and according to new reports, the accuser, vanessa tyson, told virginia congressman bobby scott about the allegation more than a year ago. scott didn't learn about the full scope of the accusation until she spoke out this week. in a statement today, scott said, quote: allegations of

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