tv FOX and Friends FOX News November 14, 2011 3:00am-6:00am PST
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cold hearted killers and he's using his position to get the word out. we'll discuss it only on "fox & friends" because it starts now. >> hello, this is yoyo ma and you're watching "fox & friends." just remember, every day is a goat rodeo. >> i believe he was on the weekend show recently. >> can you explain that? >> goat rodeo. that's a good way to describe "fox & friends", right? >> exactly, you never know what you're going to get. that's the name of his new album "goat rodeo." >> i thought he was actually describing this show. >> that's accurate also. it works both ways. >> clayton is in for steve today. good to see you guys. let's kick off your headlines. explosive news in the penn state sex abuse case. according to a new report, the judge that released jerry sandusky on $100,000 bail was a volunteer for his charity, the second mile. judge leslie dutchkott denied prosecutors' request for $500,000 bail and electronic
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bracelets for the ex-assistant coach and there's also a report that sandusky is getting substantial pension payments from penn state. he's charged with sexually abusing at least eight young boys over a 15-year period. he denies any wrongdoing. protesters in portland, oregon, forced to regroup after police in riot gear kicked them out of the two parks there. police arrested more than 50 protesters for defying the mayor's order to get out. the tent cities have become unhealthy and unsafe attracting drug users and thieves. here in new york city, business owners are planning a counter protest and are fed up with the occupy wall street movement saying it's costing them millions of dollars in lost business. overnight, a russian spacecraft carrying three astronauts lifted off from snow covered kazakhstan.
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well, that's an amazing picture. the one american and two russians are headed towards the international space station. they're going to replace the three crew members currently on board. the launch was delayed for two months after an unmanned cargo ship crashed in august. usually when world leaders get together for the group photo, they wear something befitting of the host city. the president joked he was going to make them wear hawaiian shirts for this year's photo. when it came down to it, he had everybody stick with the business attire. >> good news. >> former president clinton started the costume tradition in 1993. >> bad move. >> interesting commentary from my gallery. meantime, the president with some tough words for iran and its suspected nuclear program. president obama now saying all options are on the table including military action, kelly wright is live in washington with details. i don't think they actually said a military strike, did he, kelly? >> here's exactly what he said.
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we'll play the soundbite for you so you can actually hear it. the president as you just saw there with apec and hawaii. during his time in hawaii he met with reporters to discuss a number of issues including iran, gretchen. the president was asked if he received any commitments from russia or china when strengthening sanctions on iran. president was asked if the world is running out of options including military intervention to prevent iran from building a nuclear weapon. >> i have said repeatedly and i will say today, we are not taking any options off the table because it's my firm belief that an iran with a nuclear weapon would pose a security threat not only to the region but also to the united states. >> of course, that would include the military option but over the weekend, the republican candidates debated on foreign policy on the topic of iran, governor rick perry and former massachusetts governor mitt romney said they would use the
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military option to deter iran's nuclear ambition. romney even made this prediction. >> look, one thing you can know and that is if we re-elect president obama, iran will is a nuclear weapon. if you elect me as president, they will not have a nuclear weapon. >> the president said he'll talk to china and russia to look at other options available to him. he said sanctions have an enormous bite and scope and going through diplomatic avenues is preferred but that military option has not been removed from the table at all. gretchen? >> very interesting and thank you very much, kelly wright live for us in d.c. let's talk about a big interview coming your way tonight on greta van susteren. she's sat down with the family of herman cain and to get perspective of what he's going through in the last two weeks. this will be the interesting
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moment. herman cain has not paid the price in the polls as you think he would with all the negative publicity and this was thought by many to be an opportunity to change things around. >> gloria cain, you haven't heard from. you hear from first ladies to be on the campaign trail, it's an odd moment for a candidate. we've literally never seen her speak publicly so greta's interview with her is going to be remarkable. one of the things she does in this interview is defend the accusations against her husband and she says basically my husband would have to have a mental disorder and a split personality if he were to do these things. take a listen. >> such graphic allegations and know that that would have been something that was totally disrespectful of her as a woman and i know that's not the person he is. he totally respects women. i looked at especially this last lady and the things that she
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said and i'm thinking he would have to have a split personality to do the things that she said. >> very interesting, make sure to make that must see tv tonight, 10:00 p.m. eastern time with greta van susteren. greta got some thoughts from the cain children who we also have seen on stage but not really heard that much from and one of the things that a lot of people love about herman cain is he kind of tells it like it is. seems to have this wonderful effervescent personality. does it mean he talks too much, too? >> your mother said that your father talks too much. >> all right. personal comments. >> we're immune to it. that's what it is. >> the only -- this is overdue to many and this reminds me of clayton, howard dean emerges out
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of nowhere. he didn't want to bring his wife out and then we just saw her a little bit as he became a formidable candidate. this is the only thing i'm thinking of, this thing had died down for a week and we know that press conference we were going to have, the alleged women that were alleging these things against him, come out together, want apart. we're starting to go underneath. will this be a bait for the women to come forward? >> bring the story back again. we had the debate saturday night, right, we had perry's big flop on wednesday night during the wednesday night debate. >> you said interesting point, i think fascinating. i mean, if you don't mind me. >> it is absolutely fascinating. you also want to know what else is fascinating? this poll, you talk about some of the poll numbers, we have "the wall street journal"/nbc news poll that shows a little bit of a shift for herman cain. he was out on top before. look at those numbers through november 10th to the 12th, down to 27%. you know what's interesting, too, is his unfavorables have ticked up as a result of this
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scandal. >> look at the two other interesting things to me, rick perry dropping, continuing to drop from an ever low 8% to 4%. what about newt gingrich? a lot of people talking about newt gingrich rising in the polls? why? because maybe herman cain will drop a little bit and newt gingrich always does well in these debates and what i continue to hear over the weekend issed -- is saying he's the adult in the room. you always know what he's talking about. >> increased five points for those who say mitt romney couldn't get over 25, he's up to 32. >> another big story was this "60 minutes" story about congress and whether or not they had used insider information in a legal way, it still is legal. there's no law against it. are they becoming rich off some of these stock trades and things like that because they're dealing with these regulations
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of companies on a daily basis? there's a conservative guy out at the hoover institute, peter switser who is about to release the book on this. two of the people he goes after, john boehner and nancy pelosi. listen to this. >> for example, insider trading on the stock market. if you were a member of congress, those laws are deemed not to apply. the fact is if you sit on health care committee and you know that medicare, for example, is considering not reimbursing for certain drug, that's market moving information. and if you can trade stock off of that information, and do so legally, that's a great profit making opportunity and that sort of behavior goes on. >> and he goes on to say, you know, the salary is $174,000. how is that so many of these men and women leave this office, no matter how small or big, whether they're chairman or not, so much richer than when you started. originally when you left office, you were basically broke. when you were president, now i have to earn money and they
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point to a few of the people that seemed to have entered office broke, spent millions to keep that office and end up extremely rich. >> to gretchen's point earlier, peter switser took on nancy pelosi in answering questions of insider trading at this press conference. had to go to a press conference over the allegations of credit card stock purchases while she was dealing with the credit card companies. take a listen. >> what i'm asking do you think it's all right for a speaker to accept a very preferential, favorable stock deal and you participate in the ipo. >> i have not -- >> and be speaker of the house. you don't think it was a conflict of interest? > >> only has the appearance if you decide you're going to elaborate on a false premise but it's not true and that's that. >> i don't understand what part is not fru.
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>> that i would act upon an investment. >> all right. so this is the statement now from nancy pelosi's spokesperson. leader pelosi has been in the lead advocating for congress to act in the public interest and not the special interest. his claims are an effort to revise history and are completely contradicted by leader pelosi's clear record. it's interesting a lot of people have gone to prison for this type of thing. >> if you're on wall street. >> the hedge fund manager who recently in the last month got 11 years in the tank for doing exactly the same thing. now, here's the catch. it's legal for congress to do this because as steve croft points out later in the piece, no one wants to bring up this bill to make it not legal. >> there's a bill currently floating around that they can't get sponsors for and they don't know where this bill exists to try to stop this. our viewers were furious about this and you wonder why there's a 9% approval rating in congress, because of this sort of thing. >> here is speaker boehner also in the line of fire here. here's how he responded to steve
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croft. >> speaker boehner, you made a number of trades going back to the health care debate. you bought some insurance stock. did you make those trades based on nonpublic information? >> i have not made any decisions on day-to-day trading activities on my account and i haven't for years. i do not do it. haven't done it and wouldn't do it. >> so supposed to be a blind trust. if there's something coming out on health care like something is going to be changing or something is going to be happening with bank feaes, you'e not supposed to know what your financial advisor is manipulating or moving. >> one of the things interesting in this piece, is we verified all the things he's claiming. very interesting. >> the former speaker of the house in the line of fire, too. >> real estate deals, very fascinating. let us know what you think about that, there's the twitter address. let us know. >> this prestigious professor
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wants to stop supporting our troops? he says it's because they're cold hearted killers. is that really what a professor should be teaching? we report, you decide. >> why aren't american companies luring back jobs to america? president obama has a theory. >> we've been a little bit lazy, i think, over the last couple of decades. >> is the president right? stuart varney up next to tackle that one. [ male announcer ] every day, thousands of people are choosing advil. my name is lacey calvert and i'm a yoga instructor. if i have any soreness, i'm not going to be able to do my job. but once i take advil, i'm able to finish out strong. it really works! [ laughs ] [ male announcer ] make the switch. take action. take advil. ♪
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we're centurylink... a new kind of broadband company committed to providing honest, personal service from real people... 5-year price-lock guarantees... consistently fast speeds... and more ways to customize your technology. ♪ >> all right. many business leaders say regulations make it tough to keep their businesses here in the united states. but president obama has a different theory on why foreign
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investors are shying away from the red, white and blue. >> we've been a little lazy, i think, over the last couple of decades. weave taken for granted that people want to come out here and we're not out there hungry selling america and trying to attract new businesses into america. >> not only are we lazy, we've been lazy for 20 years, stuart varney. >> in the past three months, the president has said americans are lazy, soft and that we have lost our imagination and lost our ambition. that's what he's been saying. he's got into kind of scolding mode to america. >> he's talking about foreign investment here in the united states and why these companies can't bring here, why apple has to go to asia and build a plant in china rather than build it in the united states because of all the regulations. >> right. >> that was the question, that was the fundamental question that he seemed to be putting the blame on leaders. >> he was asked the question about competitiveness, he was asked that question by the chief executive of boeing. boeing is the company that has a plant in washington state that
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cannot move to the carolinas, a nonunion state, nonunion states, they can't do that. is that not an impediment? which foreign business guy in his right mind is going to come to america and be told where he or she may or may not build a plant. what about the canadians? they're not allowed to come here and build a pipeline. they can't invest their money to build a pipeline with 20,000 jobs. >> so we get cheaper oil. >> how about all the companies have been talking about and hearkening back to "60 minutes" a couple of weeks ago, it's those taxes that they save here at home. they go and earn all their money overseas. it's why wall street has had the huge bonuses, most of it is overseas, right? >> more than half of the profit of the 500 largest american corporations is made overseas. it doesn't come back here. the money doesn't flow back here if not invested back here because if it comes back here, it faces the highest taxation
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rate in the industrialized world period. >> not even in the top 10 for selling and opening a business in the united states. you can go to new zealand. >> we used to be. >> you can open a business on the same day filing the paperwork. united states isn't in the top 10. how do you go around the world and sell that? >> for generations mirk was right out front, easiest place to start a business. we've lost that position the last three or four years, we've ju lost it. >> you're number one with me, stuart varney. >> if the super committee fails, will they get rid of the automatic cuts? >> and of course, the italians. >> the g.o.p. candidates laying out their foreign policy plans this weekend. are any of them a better alternative to president obama's ideas? washington insiders up next. >> justin timberlake accomplishes his date to the marine corps ball and learns something that he'll never
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>> some quick headlines beginning with breaking news. the department of transportation suing american eagle airlines for leaving more than 600 passengers stranded on the tarmac. the lawsuit could cost the airline $900,000. last may, those passengers were stuck for nearly three hours on a runway in chicago without explanation. and when boxing legend joe frasier is laid to rest, his fiercest rival will be there to say good-bye. muhammad ali will reportedly attend his funeral today in philly. the two men fought three times. frazier won the first bout and ali took the next two. he died last week after a bout with liver cancer. gretch?
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>> thank you, brian, g.o.p. presidential candidates tackling foreign policy over the weekend. >> if we re-elect president obama, iran will have a nuclear weapon. and if we elect mitt romney, if you elect me as the next president, they will not have a nuclear weapon. >> we need to put economic pressure on iran by way of our energy independence strategy. >> there are a number of ways to be smart around iran and relatively few ways to be dumb and the administration skipped all the ways to be smart. >> the administration budget for every country will start at $0. $0. >> the candidates' plan very different from president obama our washington insiders are here this morning, former press secretary for chris dodd and brian darling, senior fellow in government relations at the heritage foundation. all right, brian, when you hear those particular candidates on the g.o.p. side talk about foreign policy, does it align with president obama's foreign
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policy? keep in mind, that's where he polls the high west the american public. >> the obama administration's foreign policy has been a failure in many respects. he's clearly put points on the board with the capture and killing of usama bin laden. if you look at our policy towards iran and obama doctrine which is constructive engagement more so than confronting our enemies, it's been a failure. our policy has not resulted in them having a nuclear weapon. our policy towards syria has not been tough enough. we've been weak in alliance with israel, in system of -- support of israel and we don't know how the arab spring is going to work out. many of these issues that are very important to the american issue when people look at republicans vs. democrats, they may be looking very favorable on the foreign policy to make sure we keep america safe. >> yet, america has been hockish, is he not? he took out usama bin laden and took out qaddafi but the interesting thing is he used a lot of president bush's foreign
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policies, didn't he? >> that's right. he used them a lot better than president bush did. when history books are written about the 2012 elections we're going to see that barack obama has demolished the traditional democratic advantage of national security. he's done it by, like you said, securing the country and taking out top terrorists like usama bin laden and qaddafi. and keeping his promise to end the war in iraq and bring our troops home. we've seen a vision that often is bereft of real ideas or strategies and at times -- >> i heard a lot of strategies on saturday night. i may have to take you to task for that. didn't president obama deliberately campaign against president bush's policies? don't you find it a bite ironic that he's embracing all these policies? >> there's a difference between those strategies as they're articulated and ones that are able to be executed. what we've seen with president obama is he's been able to
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actually execute these policies and do so extraordinarily effectively. >> he's done a very poor job of executing the bush administration policies and he overpromised to his base. remember, the liberals will look at this president and think he did not tell them the truth when he said i'm going to close guantanamo bay and pull out of the troops of iraq in 16 months. he tried to keep the troops in iraq, to keep the peace in iraq and the iraqis said no so this has been a failed foreign policy and republicans put out some great ideas and mitt romney was exactly right when he said if you re-elect barack obama we're going to have a nuclear iran. >> how do you respond to that, christie? >> i thought that was one of the most powerful statements of the night when he said there would be no nuclear bomb if he is president with iran. >> uh-huh. unfortunately, i think it's difficult to trust where mitt romney stands on any of the major foreign policies of the day whether it's iran, iraq, china, pakistan or afghanistan because he has been so all over the map. even if you want to look at
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afghanistan as one example, first, mitt romney said he didn't want a time line and then he wanted to be out by 2014. he said that he wanted to leave immediately. he doesn't know -- it's just really hard to know -- >> barack obama hasn't been consistent either. you can't criticize mitt romney when barack obama has been very inconsistent. he adopted many of the policies he trashed when he ran for president in 2008. >> right. very good points, very good of you to get up early as well. good to see you. thank you. >> thanks so much. >> we know medicare is broken. now we might know why the multimillion dollar system that checks for fraud can't find it. the professor wants to stop supporting the troops because they're going overseas and killing people. is that what a professor should be teaching our kids? first, happy birthday to mlb pitcher curt schilling. he's 45 today.
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♪call 1-800-steemer. [ cellphone rings ] cut! [ monica ] i have a sml part in a big movie. i thought we'd be on location for 3 days, it's been 3 weeks. so, i used my citi simplicity card to pick up a few things. and i don't have to worry about a late fee. which is good... no! bigger! bigger! [ monica ] ...because i don't think we're going anywhere for a while. [ male announcer ] write your story with the new citi simplicity card. no late fees. no penalty rate. no worries. get started at citisimplicity.com. >> welcome back to "fox & friends." your shot of the morning, check this amazing view out. 240 miles over planet earth. have you heard of earth? that's our home. >> favorite place. >> looking at 18 sequences of time lapsed photography. it's all actual photography.
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german designer actually put all of these together and the green there that you saw is some auroras. >> is it plural? >> i don't know. all those twinkling lights and the activity at the cities around the world and look at the dead areas over the ocean and then boom, population centers. beautiful. >> that is fake. i do not believe that for a second that that actually happened. >> it's remarkable. >> you don't? >> i don't believe the german scientist. i want proof. >> we'll work on that by the end of the show. >> joel, can you work on that? thank you. >> call into the international space station right now. >> i was going to give clayton props for knowing how to pronounce that. >> you know -- >> put it this way, we know so little about that, you might have pronounced that wrong. we don't know. >> don't ruin my street cred. >> let's do some headlines if you're just waking up. a judge cutting off norway massacre suspect as he tries to give a speech during the first public court appearance this morning. this is the first time families of the victims have come face to
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face with him. the judge will decide if he'll stay behind bars until his trial next spring. he's accused of killing 77 people in a bombing attack in oslo in that shooting spree on a nearby island. brian? >> all right, it's been more than a week and still no sign of a missing 2-year-old from washington. police now hoping -- hoping about a dozen new tips will help them find sky. they have talked to more than 20 people at a checkpoint in bellevue looking for clues. the toddler mom claimed someone snatched her son from her suv after she went to go get gas. her story is similar to a "law & order" episode being shown that week. >> a crackdown on medicare fraud, department of health and human services inspector general's report says general contractors are being inaccurate and inconsistent with the data they're using which makes it easy for medicare cheats to scam
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the system. this isn't the only new problems, they were exposed more than a decade appearing. >> got to love this story, it was an offer that justin timberlake couldn't refuse. >> i'm going to call you out and ask you to come to the marine corps ball with me. if you can't go, all i can say is cry me a river. >> so that was in july. corporal kelsey desantas invited the actor to be her date to the marine corps ball. timberlake said yes and he proved to be a man of his word. here he is this weekend about the ball in richmond, virginia. he blogged about the night and said it's one of the most moving evenings i've ever experienced. they made me feel so welcome to be there and i'll never forget it. wow. you know, in a time and era when you think hollywood actors are all nothing, that is exlempary.
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>> maybe justin timberlake is watching. tom brady tortures the new york defense late and early. last play of the first half, brady, for the score. 13-9. patriots were leading at the half. and why the jets left time on the clock, i don't know. i think about that this morning. same score, same result. 23-9 and put them out there in front. they go on to win. mark sanchez says wait a second, i want to go to the patriots. you want me to stop? the jets fans are crying here. it's been up and down -- anybody have a problem with the broncos highlights? it's been an up and down year for tim tebow. this result is up. he was good enough to come up with the best clutch play in the nfl yesterday. broncos lead 10-7. one completion on the afternoon. make this two. eric dexter, 56 yards. broncos win 17-7. two completions on the day. but they are now 4-5 on the
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year. we'll talk to tony dungy about him a little bit later in the show. >> let's check out the best move of the day. guys, check this out. a wide receiver on the buffalo bills will find himself open in the end zone. his name is david nelson and he'll make the catch but now here's his move of the day. he goes to the cowboys sideline and does a little hip pump. this is how gretchen greets me in the morning. you don't know that but now you do. yes, a dallas cowboy cheerleader will suddenly get a game ball. nelson speeds up, i have very little time for sports. more on that later. but nelson will find the cheerleader he called his girlfriend. give her the ball, a hug and now she no longer has any -- no longer has any cowboy friends because when you're a cowboy friend. >> look at that. >> watch this. >> you witnessed this this morning when gretchen sees me, she goes air bound and we just say hello, right? we don't even talk. so it's shoulder to shoulder like we did this morning. we leap into each other, right?
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>> here we go. >> that's how we say hello. good luck. >> that explains why i saw gretchen in an arm sling. yeah, but it's good luck. >> you have to keep in mind when i had shoulder surgery, it was a good idea it was my right shoulder because brian does do that. >> brian has a propensity to hit folks. >> it's a thing. >> i know you that you and alisyn camerota head butt. >> we do much that's how we prepare for the show. >> stop judging. stop judging. >> can players date the cheerleaders? i thought in some games, they don't allow that. >> other team? >> this is where brian has something. >> that's true, though, you're not supposed to acknowledge cheerleaders. >> i thought in some places it's actually banned kind of like co-anchors. >> joel, could you look into that, too, along with the pronunciation of that long word? >> he's going to look into that and look into this. did you hear about this story? this is an outrageous story. it's nice because of the holidays, put a care package for the men and women serving
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overseas. maybe stuff they don't have access there. a law professor got fired up, an e-mail went around asking folks, we're going to make some care packages. he flipped out. this is michael avery. he said uh-uh, this should not be happening on college campuses. >> here's his quote. >> i think it is shameful that it is perceived as legitimate to solicit in an academic institution for support for men and women who have gone overseas to kill other human beings. >> isn't that incredible? >> actually, one of the students is serving overseas which may have been the impetus to put together the care packages to begin with so the care packages would have helped one of their own. but is it right for professors to get involved in politics? why did you have to write that? if you don't agree with it, then keep mum. isn't that what your mom used to tell you? >> one of the students who told the local fox affiliate there, they said most of us disagree
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with the professor's sentiment and explain his views do not represent public opinion on campus. can you imagine that? a student trying to bring sanity to the faculty at suffolk. >> another service member saying hey, you know, men and women who fought and died so you could have that freedom of speech there on campus, those folks who went overseas to serve. let us know what you think about it. twitter there is our address, "fox & friends" on twitter. >> that professor, anti-minute man if you think about it. straight ahead, remember all the new rules limiting how much salt you can have. turns out too little salt can make you sick. dr. marc siegel from fox's medical a team explains. >> then if the super committee doesn't get its act together, the military budget could face a massive $600 billion cut. what would that mean for our troops? congressman and colonel allen west here live. [ male announcer ] have you heard?
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>> ok, the g.o.p. presidential candidates weighing in on whether waterboarding is indeed torture and should be used to interrogate terrorists. they say mostly it's a good idea but the president last night about 10:30 in hawaii feels differently. let's listen. >> water boarding is torture. it's contrary to america's traditions and contrary to our ideals. that's not who we are. that's not how we operate. we don't need it in order to prosecute the war on terrorism. >> joining us right now from florida, republican congressman colonel alan west. welcome to the show. i appreciate that. >> thank you. >> your answer to the president? >> i would say this, the president is the benefactor of a lot of information that came from waterboarding and the most
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important thing is when you look at the precedent, nonstate, nonuniform captain on the battlefield under the geneva convention are not afforded the same type of rights. we can make that determination. as a president, you need to do the things to do what is necessary to keep the american people safe. when we continue to read miranda rights to people such as the underwear bomber, we're using advantage that we have. and furthermore in the movie "g.i. jane" demi moore was waterboarded and we use that in military training and survival, escape, resistance in training. >> on top of that, you're very into this because you almost got court-martialed because of the way you handled a situation where you had a detainee in your presence and you knew american lives were at stake. >> that's the thing and so as a commander, that's my responsibility and this was the responsibility not just to those men but to those families to do what is necessary. i use a psychological intimidation tactic to fire a pistol over his head.
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it kept my men safe. they took it to an investigative hearing. i continue to fight for men and women in uniform. >> how concerned are you that the super committee that has 10 days to come up with some type of agreement cutting over $1 trillion from the budget as well as other reforms, that they're not going to reach that budget and it's going to be some automatic massive cuts to defense? >> well, i'm very concerned. what we saw last week was members on the house and the senate g.o.p. side were able to show them that you can get revenues, not by raising taxes but just by simply lowering rates and then, of course, eliminating loopholes in those segments within the tax code. and they walked away from it. so it's interesting we have this sheet that we carry around to talk about the impact of defense. >> absolutely. >> so you're talking about an army that goes from 569,000 to 426,000. you're talking about going from 288 navy war vessels down to 238. 100 army maneuver battalions down to 60 or 70 and we can't
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have those kinds of things happen to the military. we can't make the military, the families of the military or the veterans. >> i can't understand why cutting defense isn't bad for americans. cutting it down to those levels is bad for americans. >> it's absolutely bad for americans. you have people on the democratic side as the military being the bill payer for what they want for domestic programs. >> something happened last week, the keystone pipeline has been punted for years and it would have brought this friendly country from canada, it would have oil streaming from them. they want the business. we want the jobs. it seems to be the win-win. are you surprised that the president could not come up with a decision? >> i'm not surprised. you have a campaigner in chief and not a commander in chief. the decision in iraq to zero out our troops now also, the pressure that he got from hollywood elites and from the environmental lobby group which now affects our national security, our economy, and also, as you said, job creation to say that we're going to table this
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keystone pipeline decision until after the election. >> when you become a colonel, you went through a lot of leadership courses and classes from the day you get in to what you achieve what you achieved. where's the leadership quotient? what kind of grade would you give the president on leadership? when so many of these tough decisions he just puts off. >> you have to give him probably a d minus. i'll give the president a lot of credit for the fact that when we have the intelligence on usama bin laden and al-awaki, he gave the decisions that needed to be made. they've been made based on political expediency and not what's best for our country. >> i want to conclude by going back for a second. it's not waterboarding, it's a minor point in this big issue. we still don't have an effective policy with detainees. we don't know where to put them or handle them. that's a story. >> it's absolutely a story and when you look at what's happening in guantanamo bay. when you look at the fact that we've got a general by the name
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who we picked up from somalia, we kept him for about two weeks on a naval war vessel and turned them over to law enforcement and read him his miranda rights. >> i know you think one step at a time and you want to be the best congressman that you can be. would you say one of your goals would be president? >> i can't say that. that's a decision that's really a calling and that's something that the american people would have to look at. my family would have to look at. >> you wouldn't rule it out, though? >> i'm here to serve my nation. >> and you're doing it. >> thank you. >> thanks so much for coming here. if you have any problems with streets, i know my way around. i grew up basically -- >> this is not like down south. >> a little different than florida. i'm going to tell you. lot more buildings and a lot more cement. thanks so much. >> thanks, brian. >> meanwhile, at 11 minutes before the top of the hour, are your kids growing up in a different america than you did? comedian brad stein sure thinks so. >> i'm drinking water out of bottles and they're looking at me like that's normal. this is all they've ever known. this is where water comes from.
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>> brad will be here coming up. and remember the rules limiting how much salt you can shake. turns out they might make you sick. dr. marc siegel never makes us sick. he makes us smile from the medical a team. he'll be here shortly. so who ordered the cereal that can help lower olesterol and who ordered the yummy cereal? yummy. [ woman ] lower cholesterol.
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>> see all these big companies, mcdonald's pulling back salt, campbells in philadelphia getting rid of salt, lower salt soups that people are rolling out, kraft getting rid of salt. now we're hearing too little salt in this new report can be harmful. what's the deal? >> let me explain this to you. salt is something we use to keep fluid in our veins. we need salt. the problem is americans have four to five grams of salt a day and we only need two to three grams. what's all that extra salt doing? 99% of the studies show it's leading to high blood pressure, heart disease and strokes, the very things we don't want but the question is, clayton and that's why we're here today, what happens when you lower salt intake? and these studies that just came out, looking at 167 studies show that lowering salt precipitously may not improve your blood pressure to the extent we thought. >> let's take a look and throw some of the things on the screen
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here, that is what too little salt can do, bring cholesterol levels up. >> that's an unexpected finding. it shows you, you have to be careful what kind of intervention you do. bringing cholesterol levels up increases your risk of heart disease. one down side of the study is it only takes place about four weeks on average. the question is what's the long term effect of lowering salt and what level should we end up with? we're definitely having too much salt. >> diabetes may be a long term problem. take a look at the rest of this. too little salt. increase insulin production, diabetes, hormones that might lead to a heart attack, create more toxic elements in the body and cause the body to preserve salt. because we're not getting enough of it, our body goes into this, i don't know, ketosis phase. >> we need it for proper metabolic function. the problem is the studies is it's not really proof. all the things that you just mentioned that are dangerous like diabetes and high cholesterol levels, i'm not convinced that lowering salt is going to cause that in any
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meaningful way. the big question is what level should we be at. i don't want anyone out there -- look, 70% to 75% of the salt come from restaurants or prepared food. there's something called a salt institute. they would love you to believe this isn't a problem, salt. it is a problem. the salt institute, i won't be an advertiser for this. we have a problem with too much salt. again, these studies are very interesting because lowering it, if it's you or me may not make a difference. there are people that are salt sensitive, clayton, meaning there's people that 20% of folks out there actually have more of a problem with salt and are more likely to have the heart disease and the blood pressure problems. we cannot tell who they are in advance. >> interesting. dr. marc siegel, great to see you. thanks for cutting through some of that for us. >> i'm not taking a salt shaning -- shaker on the way out. >> the president making another big push with his i can't wait agenda. dana perino says we can't buy it. she's here at the top of the hour. the wall street protester didn't
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>> good morning, everyone. hope you had a great weekend. it's now monday, november 14th. thank you for sharing your time. herman cain's wife gloria standing by her man. >> i know he's not the person he is. he totally respects women. >> will voters stand beside her? we report, you decide. >> this occupier got owned by an ex-cop. his personal protest at a g.o.p. event did not go as expected. >> oy! >> we've got the pictures and he probably needs a new zipper on that jacket. >> great photo. and is this why american companies aren't bringing jobs back to america? >> we've been a little bit lazy over the last couple of decades.
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>> is president obama right? we ask an all american businessman, donald trump about that coming up. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. >> this is curt schilling. you're watching "fox & friends." >> happy birthday. >> thank you very much. happy birthday and welcome, clayton is in for steve today. i want to say that colonel and congressman alan west gave me advice for the next time brian comes at me with his shoulder or hip bump. >> ok. >> what did he say? >> he told me to lean back and get out of the way. >> then hit clayton. >> see how far you go across the couch with your own velocity instead of coming into my shoulder. >> he's ready to pack some heat. >> one thing about colonel west, he can make adjustments on the fly and come up with a strategy to solve all situations including this one. we'll work on it and we'll see. >> let's do your headlines if you're just waking up right now. gloria cain, the wife of republican presidential
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candidate herman cain speaking out only to fox news. it's her first television interview about the sexual harassment allegations about her husband. >> to hear such graphic allegations and know that that would have been something that was totally disrespectful of her as a woman. i know that's not the person he is. he totally respects women. >> cain's wife of 43 years said her husband would have had a split personality to do the things he's accused of. see the full interview with cain's wife and kids on the record tonight on the fox newschannel 10:00 p.m. eastern. president obama with some tough words for iran. as he wraps up the asia pacific economic summit in hawaii. the president says russia and china agrees with him that iran cannot be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon. not ruling out military intervention. >> i have said repeatedly and i will say today, we not taking
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any options off the table because it's my firm belief that an iran with a nuclear weapon would pose a security threat, not only to the region but also to the united states. >> a recent u.n. report claims iran is secretly working to build a nuclear weapon. iran says the accusations, of course, are baseless. explosive news in the penn state sex abuse case. according to a new report, the judge who released jerry sandusky on $100,000 bail was a volunteer for his charity. conflict of interest? that charity was the second mile. the judge denies prosecutors' request for $500,000 bail and an electronic bracelet for the ex-assistant coach. there's also a report that sandusky is getting substantial monthly pension payments from penn state. since retiring in 1999, he gets $58,000 a year. sandusky charged with sexually abusing at least eight young boys over a 15-year period. he denies any wrongdoing. a wall street protester ends up
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occupying a seat on the sidewalk after interrupting the swearing-in ceremony for republican congressman bob turner in new york. turner taking over for disgraced democrat anthony wiener, the protesters started shouting as turner was being sworn in but a former new york city cop who volueered for turner's campaign didn't let him utter more than a sentence before dragging him out by his collar. and somehow, "the new york post" photographer just happened to be there and captured these amazing sequence of photos as that former cop takes him out and said i don't want to hear from you today. >> how they would like to do that down there who cost them half a million dollars in revenues. >> not including all the cleanup and the toilets and toilet paper they've used. >> and obnoxious behavior. >> bringing in dana perino on that point. >> speaking of obnoxious behavior. >> good to be here. >> the president, every time he's traveling overseas, before he leaves or hops on a plane,
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he's talking about these we can't wait bills that he needs to get through. first was, i think, the jobs bill. we need to get this passed right now. by the way, i'm hopping on a plane and taking out of town. now he's doing this again and here's a tweet we want to read from you from dan pfeiffer. we won't wait for president obama to return from abroad. we have announcements coming this week from the white house communications director. what do you make of these? >> i'm on pins and needles waiting to hear what it's going to be that will save our country. here's the thing, when you're in the white house and your president is going overseas for 10 days and you're in the middle of a campaign that they started way too early, you have to find some way to show that though the president is still paying attention domestically, don't worry, we have these we can't wait things that we can roll out. the thing is they're so small that they will have no impact. last week, it was about an executive order to save a few million dollars to not let offices have as many pens and t-shirts and mugs that they want to have. i read one report where a
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reporter called several of those and they said, we don't have any of those anyway. but i want to make a point about this from a political perspective communications wise. they started this campaign about two months ago. in the cbs poll from friday and in the battleground poll today, it shows that despite their efforts in the we can't wait campaign, they are continuing to lose ground on the economy. i think that this campaign, the we can't wait thing should burn itself out and they should try something different after the holidays. >> like what? >> well, something of substance. i think that something bold would actually be rewarded at this point. we're not talking about anything that will actually have any impact on our economy and our finances. for example, the super committee. the super committee is supposed to be this thing where we're going to try to save $1.5 trillion not insignificant except when you look at the bigger picture. we have a $40 trillion deficit. president obama has not been involved at all. i mean, the super committee can't wait for him to show up
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and try to help them. >> on friday, he picked up the phone and said hey, try to come up with something. i got to run. >> other than that -->> i got to go to asia for 10 days. >> some people are saying that his grand bargain that he was negotiating with john boehner over the summer should be the template for the super committee. isn't it all about messaging anyway? isn't he doing these we can't wait sort of slogans because for the average american who isn't paying attention to the news 24/7 that message starts to sink in like he's doing something. >> it's a double-edged sword so president obama, i don't know if they really want any success. they need to run against a do nothing congress. they don't want to have the signing ceremonies like with the free trade agreement that they've worked to get done. bipartisan accomplishment, no signing ceremony. what got the oval office signing ceremony last week? this thing about swag and t-shirts and pens. >> you have these -- the pardoning of the turkey coming
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up. >> that's my favorite white house tradition, actually. >> that's a very important moment. >> barney almost killed a turkey at the white house was a good one. >> barney the dog? >> barney bush, yeah, he got after the turkey and president bush had to save him, the turkey, not barney. >> last night on "60 minutes" everybody is talking about this, of course, the big "60 minutes" report about the insider trading as it relates to congress and who has access to information among federal agencies and such & go and buy trade stocks. let's take a look at the responses. steve croft asked speaker boehner and nancy pelosi about these things. >> what i'm asking is do you think it's all right for a speaker to accept a very preferential, favorable stock deal? >> we didn't. >> and you participate in the ideal and at the time you were speaker of the house. you don't think it had the appearance of the conflict of interest? >> no, only had the appearance if you decide you're going to
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have a -- elaborate on a false premise but it's not true. and that's that. >> i don't understand what part is not true. >> yes, sir. that i would act upon an investment. >> you made a number of trades going back to health care debate. you bought some insurance stock. did you make those trades based on nonpublic information? >> i have not made any decisions on day-to-day trading activities to my account and i haven't for years. i do not do it. haven't done it. wouldn't do it. >> but it is allowed, dana, right? >> right, it's like this -- there's not very specific allegations that you got this information and you specifically traded on it and you did this. the pelosi one is a little more specific but what he was saying last night overall is that even if you're not intending to do insider trading, because you are a member of congress and you
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hear things and you know things and you might get a tip from somebody that just says wow, i think our company is going to do great or it's going to do bad, you might be able to act on it. it reinforces people's feeling that congress operates on different rules than what they have. and they have better information than what they have. the legislation that was talked about in last night's piece, the stock act which got no support when it first came forward, require every congressional member to have their investments in a blind trust so they have no idea and they can't communicate with that person. that's what presidents usually do and it works better for them and this from a communications standpoint. i don't understand why speaker pelosi's office would not agree to an interview, everybody else declined an interview. but she did agree to take questions from him if you came in the audience and i thought she looked a little bit too defensive and she was questioning the premise of his question but without any specifics and so i think in some ways, it didn't -- it made her look worse even if there wasn't anything specific.
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>> coming up a little bit later today, the big story which you're not leading with for some reason is i get to be on "the five" with you. >> again. you passed your test on friday. >> i know. i'm not sure if they taped it or if it aired. >> i saw it. brian, i thought you were great and you sat in the chair that i usually sit in and your feet reached the ground which is a different thing than for me. >> ok. i did not know that. i don't know where i'll be sitting today. i think for greg. >> maybe to my left. so i can elbow you a little bit. >> and yourself. >> don't try to hip check me like you did gretchen. >> it's our tradition. goes back decades. >> it does. i was going to give you a warning about that. we'll all watch you on "the five" the two of you together. >> see you then, bye-bye. >> imagine this back to school checklist, notebooks, backpack and a blood test. that story coming up straight ahead. >> michelle bachmann calling cbs bias for not giving her enough time during the debate? is she right?
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>> the white house insists pakistan is america's friend, with the billions of dollars of aid that the u.s. gives them each other. some of the g.o.p. presidential candidates during the debate over the weekend, they don't agree with that. >> we need a president of the united states working with a congress that sends a clear message to every country, doesn't make any difference whether it's pakistan or whether it's afghanistan or whether it's india. the foreign aid budget in my administration for every country is going to start at $0. $0. >> joining me now, former pennsylvania senator and republican presidential candidate rick santorum. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> i have a feeling that you
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disagree with governor perry, correct? >> yeah, look, we have a -- to say that our budget starts at zero, i don't think we say our social security budget starts at zero, our defense budget starts at zero, should we review the defense budget to make sure we're spending the money correctly? absolutely. the idea that we start at zero is crazy. >> why? >> because we need foreign aid. it's a very important part of our national security posture to make sure we build relationships with countries that are important to us in building strong alliances in deterring countries from doing things that aren't in our best interest. >> they do them anyway. they do them anyway, senator. >> some do, some don't, gretchen. that's not true. some do things to our values and what our interests are but a lot don't because of the relationships we've built. >> i understand where governor perry is coming from because it's a populous message, i think, to say that you start at 0% because a lot of people are
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thinking about pakistan and what happened over the whole usama bin laden thing. dumping billions of dollars into that country and they're still not really our friend. >> right. pakistan is a very complex situation. it's got lots of elements within the country that are not our friends. clearly, not our friends. but there are elements in that country, parts of the military, parts of the intelligence agencies, and certainly parts of the government that are, in fact, friendly to us and want our help to make sure that the more radical elements don't take control of the country and it is in our interest to make sure that doesn't happen and therefore to say that we are not going to stand behind our friends there and zero out their budget because they're dealing with the difficulties that they have to deal with and being with radicals in their own country does not send the right signal to them. >> uh-huh. many pundits thought you did really well in the last debate on foreign policy because you have a lot of experience in this area but some of the other candidates actually complained and they have some experience that they didn't get enough
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time. and i know that over the past couple of debates, you have also been unsettled by the fact that some of the candidates who are not necessarily standing right in the middle are getting enough questions. do you think that you were shortchanged saturday night? >> well, the most common thing i hear when i'm on the road, i know other candidates hear the same thing is why does the media decide for us who we want to hear from? and that the disproportionate number of questions go to the folks in the middle of the debate screen? look, i just think that folks are very undecided at this point. 70% to 75% of voters in iowa and ne new hampshire we're doing a lot of calls into those states and they're telling us the same thing, we're still undecided and yet the media sort of projects because someone is leading in a national poll that as a result of that, they should get the disproportionate number of questions. it's not in the best interest of the voters who are actually trying to make the decision. they want to hear from everybody and hopefully we'll have the next debate, that will happen.
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>> congresswoman bachmann was upset because their camp intercepted an e-mail from the cbs news political director where it said she's only at 4%, let's not give her a lot of questions. do you think that's fair? i want to look at the most recent poll that has you, i believe, at 2%. so do you feel like this is the appropriate way in which we should conduct the debates? >> i think when there are seven or eight people up there on the stage, seven or eight people should get the equal opportunity. again, go back to there was a pugh poll just a week or so ago that asked people if they could name any one of the republican potential nominees for president and half the people in the country can name any of us. the idea that this is a decided race or because one person responds today, another person the next day. let the people decide. let the voters hear from everybody and they can make their own decisions to who the favorite should be in the end. >> that's why people are really happy there are a lot of debates quite frankly so they can learn more about each of the
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candidates. >> it's been a very good part of the process and i hope we do have a lot more. >> all right. senator rick santorum, great to get your thoughts. thanks for joining us this morning. >> thanks, gretchen. >> coming up on the show, catholic college taking on president obama's entire administration. should they follow his health care law and hand out contraceptiv contraceptives? we report, you decide. are your kids growing up in a different america than you did? comedian brad stein says yes. >> dang, i'm drinking water out of a bottle and they're looking at me that's normal. this is all they've ever known. this is where water comes from. >> brad will be here live coming up next. let's go to vegas. alright, let's do it.
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>> the unemployment rate is still a whopping 9% but some businesses who used to rely on immigrant labor to survive say it's almost impossible to get americans to do the dirty jobs they're offering. >> everything from apple picking to fish gutting. standup comedian brad stein joins us now to talk about it. good morning, brad. >> good morning, my brothers. and my sister. great to be back with you. >> ahhh! >> i remember! >> thanks for the shoutout. all right, what do you make of this whole thing? do americans want to get down and dirty and do the tough jobs? >> well, the answer is are americans too lazy to do that? the answer is yes. more importantly why? who created this? because americans have always been the hardest working people on earth. as a matter of fact in the last 100 years every great invention we came up with. television, our idea. airplanes, our idea. computers, our idea. buffalo wing, our idea! why? because we believe in two
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things. the work ethic, puritanical work ethic. there's dignity in work. if you don't work, you don't eat. that's what we used to believe in. we used to make it shameful not to work. we call people that don't work hobos, what happened to the hobos? we need to bring these people back and make them feel ashamed but political correctness came in and said we don't want them to feel bad about not working. yes, we do! get to work! the ideology that told people that we don't have to work hard, we'll subsidize people and make high class hobos by taking money who work and give it to people that don't work. effectively they bought them off. >> this seems to date back years and years and years, even during world war ii, we were dealing with this issue that farmers, they couldn't get this kind of construction labor here in the united states. but what's happening right now in alabama and washington, other areas where they've cracked down on illegal immigration. farmers there and other businesses basically say, wait, we can't hire anyone. >> vermont, too. >> we can't get americans to do
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these jobs. >> well, that's what i'm saying because we've been trained not to do those jobs. we used to do it and during the depression, people took any job they can get. it's what's at stake. you know, people say americans won't go out in the field and pick cabbage for 10 hours. you know why? because we hate cabbage! that's really the key. what's the biggest problem that can happen? oh, there's going to be a shortage in cole slaw. nobody cares. you tell an american man that if you don't get on a boat for two months with the possibility of being swept aside and dying, if you don't do that, we're not going to have lobster anymore, you have everybody signing up. there's something at stake. >> good point. >> for me to get out in the field. >> it's about lobster. >> brussel sprouts. >> i love both! >> you're going to regret that when you get bags of brussel sprouts. >> i hope so. >> what's the solution? what's the solution?
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>> the solution is to retrain people that there's dignity in work. that you have to go out and do a job and if you don't, there's not going to be anything to eat. their point is america has always been when people said it was too hard to pick cotton, we created the cotton gin. we always rise to the highest levels because of capitalism. if there's nothing to eat, people will work. we act like it's not going to happen. it will happen. >> i blame supermarkets. if it wasn't for supermarkets, we'd be out fishing after work and getting a gun and shooting a fox or something. >> and skinning them and wearing them on our head. >> exactly. because we're cold. >> if you want to join you go later this afternoon, brian and i are going to go to central park and try to find some fox. > >> oh, my gosh. >> i believe there's some around there. >> i'm sure you can find some drunken squirrels in central park. they're easy to shoot. they're wobbling! >> all right and they're tame! brad, good to see you. hopefully see you next week as well. >> thanks, brad. >> god bless you sweetheart. see ya!
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>> he was talking to brian. >> a little offensesive. >> could this be the reason that american companies aren't bringing jobs back here to the united states? >> we've been a little bit lazy, i think, over the last couple of decades. >> is president obama right? we'll see what donald trump thinks about that coming up. >> then chances are you know this woman. not donald. this woman. even though you probably never met her. i can't believe i saw this story and i know who that is. and that's so odd for me. how can you get back pain relief that lasts up to 16 hours?
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>> shot of the morning. yep, here it is. talk about awake. 66 years after leaving the military, a world war ii veteran finally received his seven service medals. the strange thing, he didn't ask for them. the 93-year-old tom harrison said he got the mysterious package in the mail with no explanation inside. harrison didn't apply for them so someone else must have. harrison survived the death march and more than three years in a japanese p.o.w. camp. >> wow. >> i wonder what the back story to that is. >> to your headlines if you're just joining us, a judge cutting off the norway massacre suspect
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as he tried to give a speech during his first public court appearance this morning. it was the first time survivors and families of the victims have come face to face with bravick. the judge will decide if he'll stay behind bars until the trial next spring. he's accused of killing 77 people in a bombing attack in oslo and a shooting spree on a nearby island. >> government report being released today shows tens of millions of dollars in taxpayer money is being wasted in the crackdown of medicare fraud. the department of health and human services inspector general's report says government contractors are using inaccurate and inconsistent data which actually makes it easier for medicare cheats to scam the system. and these aren't any new problems, by the way, they were exposed more than 10 years ago. >> overnight a russian spacecraft carrying three astronauts lifted off from a snow covered kazakhstan. take a look. >> one american and two russians are headed towards the
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international space station, they'll replace the three crew members currently on board. the launch was delayed for two months after an unmanned cargo ship crashed in orbit. >> chances are you know her voice. after all, it's everywhere from the airport, the train station, even at subway stops. >> ladies and gentlemen, there is a brooklyn bound local train to station. >> so her name is carolyn hopkins and she lives in little village, maine. the 62-year-old has been the voice behind subways and international airports for more than 15 years. today, her voice is heard in more than 200 locations worldwide. it was so interesting to see this whole story because the minute you hear her voice, you go oh, yeah, just like john did. i recognize that voice. and then you wonder what the face looks like behind the voice and it was so interesting to see how she records all these messages in her little home in snow covered maine. i think it was. >> it's amazing how she'd be discovered. we need a soft, nice voice that
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was welcoming so when your train is four hours late, you hear nice carolyn's voice and you don't mind that your train is four hours delayed. >> meanwhile, talk about the face behind the voice, we know what he looks like because he's often coming in and excited about a brand new book out now. welcome back, donald trump. >> i know saturday night is date night for you. did you have time to watch any of the debate or pick up any of the debate. >> i watched the entire debate, absolutely. >> what did you think? >> there were no big mistakes and no gaffes. i think the standards came through again but i didn't see any major gaffes. i didn't like what huntsman said about china and basically sounds to me like he wants to give our country to china. i didn't like that. i didn't like certain people talking about pakistan like oh, gee, we have to be afraid because, you know, let's do whatever they want because they have a nuclear weapon which they may or may not have frankly, who knows? who knows if they know how to shoot it. but we really look weak with certain, you know, from what i
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saw and i liked what other people said but, you know, there were no major gaffes in the debate. >> there was one big highlight that came out of rick perry's mouth recovering from his wednesday night flop at the debate on wednesday night, he did sort of make a lot of headlines with this soundbite. take a listen. >> we need a president of the united states working with a congress that sends a clear message to every country, doesn't make any difference whether it's pakistan or whether it's afghanistan or whether it's india. the foreign aid budget in my administration for every country is going to start at $0. $0. >> and donald, that showed a clear divide on the stage. some disagreed. some agreed. what's your take on that? >> i think it's fine. look, these countries are ripping off -- we give aid to china. this is hard to believe but we give aid to china and we give aid to other countries and it should start at zero and then if somebody is good and if they're our friend, we give them what they have to have but maybe starting at zero is better than, you know, automatically renewing
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every year even though they're in many cases like pakistan probably our enemy. >> right. we just did a story about medicare fraud and now actually we're wasting money in the way in which we're investigating it. so i mean, it's just crazy. so i get your point on that. you know, let's re-evaluate when we stand with all of these countries. >> absolutely fine. >> my final question to you on this topic, if you were standing on that stage and it almost happened people would say the same thing. donald trump, he knows business. does he know foreign policy? on a president when you make your choice next month, do you want a president that has some experience in that area? >> experience is a wonderful thing but i think talent is more important if you want to know the truth. and you're going to get people with experience. you have to have a person that's a good decision maker that knows what -- and it's common sense. when we give money to people that are our enemies, when we give money to countries that are wealthier than we are, we're not wealthy anymore. we're a debtor nation. the politicians have seen to that. so when we give money to countries that are wealthier than us, and they're not our friends, that's common sense. that's not foreign policy.
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that's common sense. >> one of the things that president obama was speaking about at the apec kfrnls out there in honolulu is about trying to attract business in the united states. he was asked about that question into why we haven't been able to do it lately. here was his response. >> we've been a little bit lazy, i think, over the last couple of decades. we've kind of taken for granted, people would want to come here. we aren't there hungry trying to attract new businesses into america. >> what's your take on that? is he blaming businesses for not trying to drum up more americanism? trying to get companies to come here and build factories or is he blaming the government there? what's your take on that? >> my take is it's disgusting. he makes it impossible for us to do business and calls this country lazy. i think it's disgusting. >> he made similar comments two weeks ago and two weeks prior to that. he seem to be trying to drill us town or take us down a notch or reverse psychology.
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>> he talks about being lazy, he didn't make a deal in his life except his house. you ought to take a look at his house, that wasn't much of a deal. he can talk about lazy. the country has to back us and -- the business people, not us and the business people, and they're not doing that when other countries are eating our lunch and they're eating our lunch because of unfair practices that we allow them to get away with. >> let's talk about this keystone pipeline. this is an example of leadership. the president couldn't decide whether he should do this deal and build this pipeline from canada because it's oil and the environmentalists are mad but he actually -- but the unions want him to build it, that would have meant 20,000 jobs. he decided i'll decide next year. what's your take? >> well, he's torn between his friends in the union and his friends in the environment. you know, the environmentalists which by the way, i'm an environmentalist but i get things built. the problem is you have environmentalists that don't want anything to ever happen in this kunlt. -- country. that should absolutely be approved without question. it should be be approved and
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quickly. >> the difference is you are at least for now not running for office. and so many people were saying that this was a political move on the president's part to punt it until after the election next year. real quickly, before you go, i want to get your thoughts on this super committee because there's only 10 days left until they're supposed to come up with a decision. now they might even change their own policy about that deadline and speaking of punting, punting that off to a later date. if you were in charge of this super committee, what would happen? >> first of all, there would have been no super committee. this would be a deal made between president if he's a proper leader and he's not, and congress. they're really not doing the job. they're all afraid. they're politicians. they're on a committee and they're still politicians. and that's going to be proven to be true. but there shouldn't have been a super committee. there should have been a great leader in charge of this country, he should have gotten everybody in a room and they should have made a deal. and they should have cut a lot more than a trillion dollars or a trillion two, they should have cut $3 or $4 trillion and put
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the country back on the right footing. we have no leadership in this country. >> sounds like you agree with newt gingrich. he called the whole idea stupid. >> that i do agree with. >> donald trump, of course, is our show every monday on "fox & friends" and we look forward to it. >> and you'll make your pick on a republican candidate that you're backing one month from today? >> within a month, but i got a good, good sight on everybody and have a lot of respect for a lot of them. have some good people. >> ok. talk to you again next week. >> so long. bye. >> tiny catholic college taking on president obama's entire administration. should they be forced to follow his health care law and hand out birth control? >> then he coached the indianapolis colts to super bowl victory. now, coach tony dungy wants to coach you. i'll let him coach me. he's here. >> without a headset. [ male announcer ] you are a business pro.
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>> 45 minutes after the top of the hour. couple of quick headlines for you. police are looking for the gunman who physically assaulted two students at their dorm room at fayetteville university in north carolina. four to six men broke into the room and stole $500 and a computer. the victims, though, expected to be ok. and the american heart association urging that kids between the ages of 9 and 11 be screened for high cholesterol. this may help prevent the onset of heart disease later on in life. critics say early screening could end up leading to further unnecessary tests. clayton? >> thanks, gretchen. a mandate in the new health care law has a north carolina catholic college suing the federal government. belmont abbey college claims the portion that would require the school to provide precontraceptives or pay a fine violates the school's religious beliefs. fox news legal analyst peter
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johnson jr. is following this story. >> good morning. >> do they have a right to sue here? >> i say amen to belmont abbey, a school sent up by the benedicting monks down in north carolina. they're saying we should not have a mandate on catholic institution to finance contraception, sterilization, abortion, because it goes squarely against the cannons and principles of the roman catholic church. and that we should not be forced by a government to pay for those things in direct conflict of our religion and then be fined and be punished for the practice of our religion in not affording those things to our employees and students. >> i mean, it sounds like a church and state issue here. will they win this case if it's brought before a court of law? >> oh, i think this is a -- a superbly situated case. politically, it's an attack on obamacare but more than that, it's a case for religious
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liberty in this country. and so you're seeing a lot of faith based groups, a lot of christian groups, the u.s. conference of catholic bishops, the archbishop of philadelphia, the archbishop of new york speaking out and saying religious liberty is essential to our nation's future. so if you say to a catholic college or university or some other totally distinctly catholic or christian university, that you need to do this and you need to do this in conflict with your faith, that's unamerican and unconstitutional. >> and forgive my ignorance on that. but the universities that are catholic university have the same sort of exemptions that a church does? >> yes, it does. this is not an institution that accepts federal dollars and in fact, they subscribe to the roman catholic principles by which catholic education should go forward. some catholic institutions are
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kind of secular in that regard. this institution will accept students of all faiths. but they're saying we -- when you come to our university, and when our employees are here, we're not going to finance abortion, we're not going to finance contraception. we're not going to finance sterilization because we find it to be inconsistent and in violation of our religion. so federal government, don't order us to violate our religion and then don't tax us in order to coerce us to change our religion. i think it's an interesting case. i think it has a great, great chance of success. >> unbelievable story. peter johnson jr., thanks for bringing it here. appreciate it. >> good to see you. >> he coached the indianapolis colts to super bowl victory. lessons from his playbook to you and brian is taking notes. first on this date in 1995 check yes or no by george strait was the number one country song. [ male announcer ] cranberry juice? wake up!
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>> this is called tebowing, it's named after tim tebow who admits religion plays a big part in his life. former nfl coach of the indianapolis colts tony dungy joins us right now. we've got a great book on building up the success of your bestseller, the uncommon life. the daily challenge of the uncommon life. we'll talk about that in a second. first on tim tebow, you're fresh off last night's patriots-jets games. on tim tebow, he had two completions yesterday, the second one for a touchdown and
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he's getting criticized not on by the way he plays but by what -- by who he is. how do you feel about that? >> i think he is getting criticism for both. he's a lightning rod. i've never seen anything like this where people in new york are discussing whether he should be the starting quarterback for the denver broncos. >> on a 4-5 team. >> yeah. but he has been that way his whole life. he's a guy who is a leader. he's a winner. and he's a strong christian. he stands up for his beliefs on and off the field and i think that's what has people really excited to talk about him one way or the other. >> you're religious, too, and you're very successful and always been as an athlete as well as a coordinator and then a head coach and where does that come from? maybe a spiritual saying. >> i think that's the problem for many people. they say well, he shouldn't demonstrate his faith in public or on the field. it should be a private thing. but we always want to hear about our stars, what they're doing off the field. if he has a dui or a car crash,
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then we want to know about it. so he's just saying if you want to know about my personal life, here it is. >> it's a little heartening, i imagine, for you, the fact that the people kind of forced this move on the coach. didn't they? the fans -- >> there was a lot of public pressure and tim has been that way. i'll tell you what, he's been a winner high school and college and i think he'll win in the nfl. >> the one year, uncommon life daily challenge. tony dungy has this book out right now and something for people to live their life by on a daily basis and you want people not only to get it but live with it. >> basically it goes with seven topics, one per week and there's a little bible verse that you would read and a reflection from nathan whitaker and i on that topic and it's really just trying to get people to focus on the lord and focus on their life every day. and it takes 15 minutes to do. >> so this is something to make you a better person, not necessarily to make you rich or famous. >> well, yes, not necessarily to make you rich and famous. but hopefully those things will
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come as well. but it's more on how you're going to live your life, how you're going to relate to people around you, how you're going to relate to the lord and be a better person. >> let's take a look. this is an example of something that's in the book for november 14th which is today. friends and how to resolve conflict. >> yes. and the scripture comes from proverbs and talks about learning from other people so the advice is hey, if you're in a conflict, don't look at your side of the thing. look at the other person's point of view, stay calm and try to learn from it and not view the conflict as a negative. >> now, tony, you lost your son. did that make you more religious or less religious? did you ever go through a period where you questioned, wow, you know what? where is my faith now? >> i think that's what happens, when things are rolling around along well, it's easy to say i have faith and god is taking care of me. the real test is when something negative happens. when you have a negative situation in your life, it either pushes you away from the lord or draws you closer and for our family, we wanted to try to draw closer at that point.
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>> that's why this book is special, i imagine, for you. your book is a bestseller because of the message and who you are. but now you're helping other people who want to change themselves around on a daily basis. >> that's the thing. and for me, my christianity isn't, you know, necessarily hey, this is who i am. it's just trying to do that day by day and this helps to force me into 15 minutes a day at least to think about it. >> joel was a jets fan. could you make him feel better about the game that you called for nbc last night with the patriots? >> i was disappointed in the jets last night. i picked the jets to win it. >> come on. >> i'm like you, joel, i picked the jets to win. they did not play their game. i didn't think they played aggressively but bill belichek and the patriots, they have a way of doing that. >> great broadcast, great coach, great person, what a great mix. thanks so much. and best of luck with the book, coach. >> thank you, brian. >> coming up straight ahead, marco rubio getting more popular by the day.
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delicious campbell's soups fill you with vegetable nutrition, farm-grown ingredients, and can help you keep a healthy weight. campbell's -- it's amazing what soup can do. >> gretchen: good morning. everyone. it's monday, november 14. i'm gretchen carlson. i mean you had a fantastic weekend. herman cain's wife breaks her silence. it's a fox news exclusive. >> i know that is not the person he is. he totally respects women. >> gretchen: gloria cain standing by her man. will voters stand by her? we'll report and you can decide. >> explosive news on the penn state scandal. is the story about the get worse? the school's new president speaking for the first time this morning. we'll bring it to you. >> brian: this professor says stop supporting our troops. the way he sees it, they're just cold hearted killers. "fox & friends" starts right now
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>> this is toniy dungy and you're watching "fox & friends." >> gretchen: that was a quick turn around. he was just sitting with you. >> brian: yeah. what a guy. >> what a nice guy. >> brian: even to you, clayton. >> usually the cold shoulder from many. he said i'm a nice guy, i'm gog treat you well. >> gretchen: you are in for steve today. nice to have you. >> nice to be here. >> gretchen: let's kick off our monday and get in gear, including me. here are your headlines. penn state's new president taking to the air waves this morning saying that the school is prepared for even more backlash over the sex abuse scandal in the weeks ahead. >> we understand that there will be lawsuits that will be filed and we're certainly prepared to do the right thing for all of the victims. >> gretchen: rodney ericcson wouldn't say exactly what the right thing would be. this comes as new reports say the judge who released jerry sandusky on $100,000 bail was a
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volunteer for his charity, the second mile. the judge denied prosecutor's request. they want add hundred thousand dollars -- $500,000 bail. theythey wanted an electronic fr him. no. she didn't give it to him. there is a report sandusky is getting substantial monthly pension payments from penn state since retire not guilty 1999. he gets about 58 grand a year. sandusky charged with sexually abusing at least eight young boys over a 15-year period. he denies any wrongdoing. protesters in portland, oregon forced to regroup after police kicked them out of two parks. police arrested more than 50 for defying the orders to get out from the mayor. officers sate tent cities have become unhealthy and unsafe. attracting drug users and thieves. here in new york city, business owners are planning a counter protest today. they're fed up with the occupy wall street movement, saying it's costing them millions of dollars in lost business. president obama with some tough words for iran as he wraps
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up the aish i can't pacific economic summit. he says russia and china agree that iran cannot be allowed to have nuclear weapons. >> repeatedly and i will say today, we are not taking any options off the table because it's my firm belief that an iran with a nuclear weapon would pose a security threat not only to the region, but also to the united states. >> gretchen: a recent united nations report claims iran is secretly working to build a nuclear weapon. iran says those accusations are baseless. while you were sleeping, a russian spacecraft carrying three astronauts lifted off from kazakhstan. you don't normally see snow for a lift-off. we think of florida. >> brian: we usual epostpone it. >> gretchen: yeah. that's is a beautiful shot because it's so different. one american and two russians
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are headed toward the international space station. they'll replace the three crew members on board now. the launch delayed -- see, brian. this was delayed, too, for two months after an unmanned cargo ship crashed. >> brian: that would be a red flag. >> we learned borat is on that flight. >> brian: we were told not to report that. >> oh, sorry. i heard. >> gretchen: there he is. all-time funniest guest on the couch, i think. >> thank you so much. i was wondering if he was here. let's turn to washington, d.c. where time is quickly running out for this congressional super committee to reach a deal on our nation's spiraling debt crisis. >> brian: now president obama putting the pressure on both sides to get a deal done. wendell goler is at the white house, has some details. hey, wendell. >> brian, the president has mostly avoided putting pressure on the super committee, but as you say, with time running out on their thanksgiving deadline, he told them it's time to get the job done. it's a reminder of eat our peas
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line. the impasse over the higher taxes democrats are demanding in exchange for the changes in medicare and medicaid that republicans say are necessary. the president told both parties time to bite the bullet. >> my hope is that over the next several days the congressional leadership on the super committee will bite the bullet and do what needs to be done because the math won't change. there is no magic formula. there are no magic beans that you can toss in the ground and suddenly a bunch of money grows on trees. >> the president spoke in a news conference wrapping up the apec summit where he's hoping to push expanded trade with countries around the pacific rim to boost the u.s. economy. ten days before the deadline, democrats haven't even united behind a plan. and texas republican congressman jeb hensarling says that's not acceptable.
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>> we have gone to the democrats and said, okay, if you don't like our plan, at least put a plan on the table. if you don't, here is a bipartisan plan we would be willing to negotiate around and that is the diminishing medicare plan and details would have to be worked out. indeed, you are correct, would have to be through a two-step process. >> democrat alice rivli. >> another democrat chaired a panel like the simpson bowles channel that remained a way to get the deficit under control. neither proposal got enthusiastic support. if the super committee doesn't come up with a plan, defense and domestic spending will be cut $900 billion and neither party wants that. brian? >> brian: all right. thanks a lot. we certainly have to cut it close, don't we? like always. >> did anyone think this was going to get months ago? you think congress is the type to get an assignment and they get the work done ahead of time? no, they wait -- they cram the night before.
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>> gretchen: that's what the discussion over the debt ceiling, remember? that went up to the inth degree as far as the deadline and now there is an interesting twist that started coming out over the weekend. i think we should pay attention. could it be they could change the rules on america? in other words, that they can push that deadline of november 23? listen to pat toomey. >> first of all, i'm not giving up on getting something done. i really think we still can and i'm going to do everything we can to achieve that. in the very, very unfortunate event that we don't, i think it's very likely congress would reconsider the configuration of that sequestration and figure out is this the best way to do it? >> dave: they're switching the time line now. >> brian: you have to have a deadline! congress has to know this is a real end. >> we thought thanksgiving would be the deadline. but that's not even really the deadline. it's the 18th because that's the when u.s. government runs out of money.
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so we're going to move the goal post down the line? >> brian: the "wall street journal" is saying that their sources say congress is trying to request that they put off tax reform for a year, maybe after the election, and they go ahead and agree on cuts, but they also say we'll be able to get that $1.5 trillion when we do tax reform. but we don't want to tell what you kind of tax reform we'll give you. >> gretchen: americans are frustrated is that there had been no kind of decisions with this stuff and now we're going to push it off again? you know what will happen after that? we'll get another downgrade because remember, the first downgrade came after we could not -- or that debt deal went to the end of the wire and some of those credit agencies believed that it didn't go far enough. if we don't do this, what will it do to the economy for the year ahead? >> they said if the super committee couldn't agree on something, they might be looking at further downgrades. you're right about that. allen west who says he's cuts that could be coming to defense, $600 billion, could really hurt
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the united states military. take a listen. >> i'm very concerned. what we saw last week was members on the house and the senate gop side were able to show that you can get revenues not by raising taxes, but just by simply lowering rates and then, of course, eliminating loopholes, those savings within the tax code and they walked away from it. >> gretchen: this goes back to donald trump's point because he joined us 40 minutes ago where he said he agreed with newt gingrich that the super committee was not necessarily a great idea. why? because the leadership should be coming from the top down, to paraphrase what he was saying. because is anyone surprised that this super committee, as partisan as democrats and republicans are right now, is anyone surprised that they can't come together on the biggest issues of the day? entitlement spending and the military? >> brian: the way the deal would have happened, the president the speaker. that's the way the deal is supposed to happen. they're still taking orders from
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their leadership. >> $4 trillion is what was sort of being discussed between speaker painer and president obama. so we're getting less than what we got by doing it by committee. >> brian: it takes months to make trillions of dollars. >> tonight, must see television. this is the first time we're get to go see herman cain's wife. gloria cain. she's never done an interview and this is sort of odd for a presidential capped date's wife. we've never seen her on the trail. she's speak to go greta van susteren and really greta asked about the sexual harassment allegations and what her thoughts are. take a listen. >> to hear such graphic allegations and know that that would have been something that was totally disrespectful of her as a woman and i know that's not the person he is. he totally respects women.
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i looked especially this last lady and the things that she said and i'm thinking, he would have to have a split personality to do the things that she said. >> gretchen: she's saying that's not the herman cain that she has known for 43 years of marriage. you can see the entire interview tonight on greta van susteren at 10:00 p.m. eastern time. >> brian: herman cain is not paying that huge of a price considering two weeks of controversy that surrounded hip, he's still up around the top spot. definitely considered first tier. coming up straight ahead, this professor wants us to stop supporting the troops. the way he sees it, they're cold hearted killers. should that lesson be coming from a professor? your tweets and e-mails on this controversial story. >> we have seen marco rubio's pour larrity spike. why will he not accept a vice presidential spot? we'll ask him next. [ male announcer ] have you heard?
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>> gretchen: rick perry and newt gingrich say when it comes to foreign aid, let's just get rid of it. >> the foreign aid budget in my administration for every country is going to start at zero dollars. >> you're giving some countries $7 billion a year. you start off -- or in the case of egypt, $3 billion a year. so you start every year saying, here is 3 billion, now i'll start thinking? you ought to start off at zero and say explain why i should give you a penny? >> brian: is it really a good idea to stop money from flow to go countries like pakistan and saudi arabia? joining us is republican senator from florida, senator marco rubio. i imagine you watched the debate? >> most of it, yes.
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>> brian: and your thoughts about where the republicans, the gop, those eight on stage, stay on land, on international relations. >> i think a lot are developing and i think for the most part, they did a good job on the stage. i think there is a debate in the republican party about where we should be on foreign policy. ultimately i think we've always been the party of a strong national defense, the party that understands the role of america in the world and how at the end of the day, every aspect of our daily lives, especially our economic lives, are directly impacted by things that happen halfway around the world. we have to make that argument because it happens to be true and the american people need to know that. >> gretchen: which camp were you in? gingrich and perry seemed to be of the belief we should start at zero, start at zero and then see if they deserve money. santorum and bachman disagreed with that. >> yeah. i think start at zero. would put words in their mouth. but i think what they need is we need to examine all of our foreign aid and make sure it makes sense. there has never been a good time
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to waste money and now is not a good time. on the other hand, the foreign aid that we put out is a very small part of our overall budget and important part of it. i do think there has to be performance matrix associated with it. there is something called millennium challenge match that are based on that. you give money to people, but you fund specific projects and you measure what it's going towards and whether it's advancing our national interest. that's what they meant at start at zero, i don't know if that's a bad idea. i think it's important that our money be accounted for. but we need to have a foreign aid budget. it's important for our national security. >> brian: right. it's not a black or white issue. saudi arabia, yeah. the hijackers from saudi arabia. but there is a lot of allies within that government. so it's something that needs to be nuanced, perhaps. i want to bring you to a few weeks ago, the the "washington " decides he's getting too popular. let's find something to attack him with. at that time you fired back. answered wes and your popularity is climbing again because of the way you handled it. does that make you more apt to maybe reconsider a vp run?
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>> no. i'm focused on my job as a senator from florida. if anything, i don't pay a lot of attention to the polls 'cause if i do, i have to pay attention to the bad ones, too. i'm focused on representing florida in the united states senator. it's 100% of my focus and make sure florida's voice is heard on all these issues that confront our country, including foreign policy that you just asked me about. i hope it's reflective of that. >> gretchen: so one of the reasons that your name keeps coming up is because you're from florida, which is such an important state in the presidential election, and also you represent the latinos and possibly huge chunk of the latino vote, which we know is ever growing in our nation. i want to bring to you this next topic, which is should conservatives stop talking about immigration right now? i want you to listen to linda chavez, once a nominee for a post in the administration. she had this to say on "fox & friends." >> all of the public opinion polls that have been taken in the last year which people are asked one of the most important voting issues for you, illegal immigration ranks at the very
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bottom. two to 4% of american voters think that it's the single most important issue. the other thing is that republicans ought to be patting themselves on the back and saying, hey, we have had a real impact on slowing illegal immigration. illegal immigration now is at the same level as it was in 1972. >> gretchen: do you agree with her? >> first of all, jobs and the economy is the number one issue. we should be focused on that. it should be 90% of our focus right now in terms of domestic policies because people are hurting. by the way, that happens to be true in the latino community. americans of hispanic descent have been hurt very badly by the president's economic policies and we need to make that case. i would say this about immigration, it remains a problem that has to be confronted. it's also an opportunity because i think a legal immigration system that works will be really good for america. so what i've been saying is the following: the republican party should not be labeled as the anti-illegal immigration party. republicans need to be the pro-legal immigration party. i think it's time for our
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candidates not just to talk about what they're against. we're against amnesty and people get that. but what are we for? let's start talk being how we modernize our legal immigration system. how do we reform our visa program so it takes into account the challenges for the 21st century. ultimately, how do we come up with a legal immigration system that honors our legacy as a nation of immigrants, and also our legacy as a nation of laws? >> gretchen: that's very interesting point of view. you would know something about that particular topic and so much more. always great to pick your brain on different thoughts. senator marco rubio, thank you for your time. >> thank you for having me this morning. >> brian: two florida legislator s. colonel west and now senator marco ruby. next, when baby lisa vanished without a trace, her parents were in the police spotlight. now a break in the case changes everything. her parents' attorney joins us live. >> gretchen: then scammers are getting rich by ripping off medicare. turns out we pay people to check
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>> clayton: he is one of america's legendary movie stars, known for "the thomas crown affair." but steve know the truth about steve mcqueen's career and private life until now. a new book features rare photos and new interviews with some of the people closest to him. mark elliott is the author of that book and he joins me now. nice to see you. >> nice to see you. >> clayton: you took on this project you and wrapped it up. what was the biggest surprise to you about steve mcqueen's life? >> there is such a disconnect between his image and the person
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we believe he was from what we know about his screen work, to who he really was and the turmoil that drove him. >> clayton: on the screen, tough guy. right? no one would mess with this guy. >> mr. cool. >> clayton: mr. cool. tough guy. no one is going to get in his way. but off the screen, you say very self-destructive. he was vain. he was constantly worried about what people thought of him. >> that's a basic insecurity of a lot of actors. he was trained by the method in new york city before he went to hollywood. i think the method kind of killed his natural ability just to let it out as an actor and not worry about what every single thing meant. actors like clint eastwood, for example, never worry about that. they go on, they do their scenes, they run off to the golf course. so surprisingly, steve mcqueen and clint eastwood, same age. clint today, at the top of his
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game. had steve mcqueen lived, it's interesting and fascinating to wonder where he would be today. >> clayton: you also talk about in the book a number of the roles that he turned down. i was surprised to learn he turned down the role of butch cassidy because he was obsessedd with paul newman, but he didn't like the billing he would get against him. >> that's right. that's a very hollywood thing is that whoever thinks he or she is the biggest star wants first billing or first name above the title. and he and newman couldn't get together on that. so after months of negotiating that, he left the film. he up and quit. fox had bought the film in a preemptive bid because they thought they had newman and mcqueen. then they went to warren beaty and he didn't want anything to do with it. he said there weren't enough women in the film for him. >> clayton: we all know what happened. robert redford became a massive star. "the french connection," we know what that did for gene hackman.
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unbelievable stuff. what was the biggest take away you got from this project when you left? >> i felt that there was a little bit of citizen kane in his life, that his mother and father, his mother was a woman of easy virtue. his father was a stunt pilot who left the life after 20, 25 days. i think that steve was searching for someone to nurture him and to love him for who he really was. >> clayton: perhaps his whole life. >> his whole life. i don't think he ever found it. >> clayton: the book is "steve mcqueen, a biography." i can't wait to dive into it more. thanks so much. >> thank you. >> clayton: coming up here on the show, he fought for the right to wear the american flag to school on a mexican holiday and lost. that student here to explain what happened with that battle. then this occupier gets owned by an ex cop. his personal protest at a gop event did not go as expected. we'll have the pictures coming up for you.
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♪ that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm [ male announcer ] for half the calories -- plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. try smart balance buttery sead. 's heart-healthier than butter. with omega-3s. 64% less saturated fat. andlinically proven to help support healthy cholesterol. ♪ put a little love in your heart ♪ >> brian: i'm adequating all them. it was an offer justin timber lake couldn't refuse. >> i'm going to call you out and ask you to come to the ball with hi and if you can't go, all i can say is cry me a river. >> brian: wow. in july, corporal kelsey invited
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the actor via youtube to be her date at the marine cover ball. he said yes and proved to be a man of his word. here he is this weekend at the ball over in richmond, virginia. afterwards, he blogged about his night, saying, quote, i felt so proud to be there, like i was getting a chance to be among my heros. they made me feel so welcome. i will never forget it. that is good. >> gretchen: yeah, it is. now to the rest of your headlines for a monday. it's been more than a week and still no sign of a missing two-year-old boy from washington state. police now hoping about a dozen new tips will help them find sky metalwala. they talked to more than 20 people at this checkpoint in bellevue looking for clues. the toddler's mom claims someone snatched him from the car, but investigators say her story doesn't at up. julia has since hired a criminal defense attorney. >> clayton: new video in to fox news from the court hearing in norway for suspect anders behring breivik. cameras were not allowed to show
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him as he came face-to-face with survivors of the victims. a judge ruling that he has to stay behind bars, but will eventually be allowed to have visitors. he's accused of murdering 77 people. >> brian: a government report being released today shows tens of millions of dollars in taxpayer money is being wasted in the crackdown on medicare fraud. the department of health and human services report says government contractors are using incorrect and inconsistent data, which actually makes it easier for medicare cheats to scam the system. this is great. and these aren't new problems. they were exposed ten years ago. >> gretchen: a wall street protester ends up occupying a seat on the sidewalk after interrupting the swearing in ceremony for republican congressman bob turner in new york. so turner was taking over for disgraced democrat anthony wiener. the protesters started shouting just as turner was being sworn in. but a former new york city cop who volunteered for turner's campaign didn't let him utter more than a sentence before dragging him out by the collar.
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some of the best photos of the day. >> brian: grabbing occupiers by the day. >> gretchen: this particular sequence here, he had enough. >> clayton: google the front page of the new york post. >> gretchen: we can say it in the after the show show. >> clayton: stay tuned for that. >> gretchen: we've gotten so many tweets and e-mails about this story that outraged you that we told you about earlier in the broadcast. has to do with this law professor at suffolk university. the school came up with this great idea because one of their students being shipped overseas to serve in the military. they said let's put together some care packages for not only that student, but all the other members of the troops that are over there serving our country and keeping us safe. >> clayton: the holidays. that's what you do, right? you want to send a taste of home to the folks who are serving our country overseas while we're here at home enjoying the holidays. he sent an e-mail to the rest of the faculty because he thought it was shameful, he says, that it's perceived as legitimate to
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solicit in an academic institution for support for men and women who have gone overseas to kill other human beings. you wouldn't believe some of the comments. some service members say we fight and die so you can have freedom of speech at the university. a lot of e-mails. >> brian: the students say he doesn't speak for us. listen. >> personally i very much disagreed with the sentiment that was expressed in that e-mail. >> i don't think that reflects the overall feelings of suffolk law in general. clearly it's a patriotic school. we have a huge american flag up in the atrium. >> i think a lot of people are doing it. >> gretchen: that's professor michael avery. this tweet from tracy payne, at the very least, he needs to be fired and put on a list never to be able to work in education again. bet that won't happen, though. >> clayton: near tweet says maybe he needs to relocate where there is no military protection and no freedom of speech. >> brian: i have an e-mail to
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show how diverse we are. i think the professor avery be sent over to a war zone so that he would see who our soldiers are actually fighting. i'm sure the taliban and al-qaeda will welcome him with open arms and much love. >> clayton: let us know what you think. you can find us on twitter and our web site. >> gretchen: coming up, the search for baby lisa, there is a possible break in the case now involving a cell phone call? the family's lawyer here with the latest details. >> brian: he fought to wear the american flag to school and lost. that student here to explain what happened.
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>> clayton: quick headlines. the department of transportation suing american eagle airlines after it abandoned 600 passengers on the tarmac last spring. they were stuck for almost three hours. the airline that flies under the american name could be forced to pay up to $900,000. check out this amazing view. 240 miles over the planet earth. you're looking at 18 sequences of time lapsed photography edited at this german designer. it's two auroras. those are some of the activity around the biggest cities in the world. to boldly go, brian, where no one has gone before. >> brian: but that is not real.
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we first told you about the story about a year ago. four boys were sent home from school and nearly suspended for wearing american flag t-shirts on cinco de mayo. they sued, but a california judge just ruled in the favor of the school. we're joined by matt, he's one of the students who was sent home and nearly suspended and his lawyer, john whitehead, attorney for the other students involved. john, first off, shock -- i know disappointed in the decision. but shocked by it? >> yeah. i'm shocked. i think it's absurd. the central issue in the case is free speech because some students objected or one of the school officials said one of the students might be offended. first amendment rights were extinguished and there is an equal rights issue and that is that if you can fly the mexican flag that day or the chinese flag or whatever, why couldn't you fly the american flag? so these students were treated unequally. but the key issue here is that can school officials extinguish free speech because someone might be offended?
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i think the judge basically agreed this was a political correctness issue run amuck. >> brian: why did you wear it on cinco de mayo. they said you would be disruptive, you and your buddies. >> we wore the flag pretty often throughout the year. we were showing our pride. if they're allowed to show theirs, we should be allowed to share ours at the same time. >> brian: and you did. you wore it you and ended up in the principal's office and nearly suspended. why was this so important for you to follow through on this and get what you call justice? >> if i were to flip any shirt inside out, it would have shown disrespect toward my flag. i wasn't trying to disrespect anyone else allowed to wear their flag. >> brian: did you, when walking through the halls with or without your friends, were you causing disruption? were some of these hispanic kids getting upset that you were doing that? >> no. i mean, there is no problems up until when the vice principal came up and decided to point us
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out. there is no issues. >> brian: so john whitehead, you are in a situation where you're going to the appeals court. what do you think will be different there? >> well, the farther you get away from lower courts, the better chance you have. plus we have three judges here. we'll have three different judges. not one judge. but there is controlling supreme court precedence and the supreme court has said you have to show actual facts of substantial disruption. what this case basically boils down is probably a few teachers were offended or didn't like the idea or thought it might happen. but it can't be speculation. you have to show facts. so that's the key legal issue here and constitutional issue. >> brian: i just think it's staggering to think, matt, that you could wear a flag t-shirt to school in a school that does not require uniforms and you can nearly get suspended. fundamentally, that seems to be the hardest for you to live with. am i right? >> yes, sir. >> brian: and that's why you continue to push on. here is what the judge said.
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judge james wear says the school officials reasonable forecast that plaintiffs' clothing could cause a substantial disruption with school activities and therefore, did not violate the standard set forth by requiring that plaintiffs change. so therefore, your first amendment rights were not violated. john, your reaction to that conclusion? >> well, first amendment rights were violated. the question is whether or not substantial disruption occurred under the supreme court precedent. there is no facts to show that here. none of the hispanic students were told to put away their flags or their shirts. so for some reason, one group of people were targeted and constitutionally, the courts have held that you can't do this. this violates equal protection under the 14th amendment as well. but this is happening across the country. i think this is a really key test case. it's going to be whether or not school officials can extinguish the rights of students to express themselves. you're going to see more of this if this case is upheld, unfortunately. >> brian: and matt, how far are you willing to go for this? how disruptive has this entire
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case been to you, your life, your family and your friends? >> hasn't been disruption at all. but i'm hoping that it ends in the 9th circuit, we get the decision going our way. but if it doesn't, i'm going to go until we win. >> brian: you're going to keep fighting. matt, in case you get to our set, you can always wear a flag shirt. no one will suspend you, in fact, we'll embrace it. john, attorney for alt students involved, thanks so much. we'll follow the case. >> thank you. >> brian: all right. coming up straight ahead, the search for baby lisa. there is a possible break in the case involving a cell phone call. the family's lawyer here with the details next. >> i'm an iron worker from new york. i believe if you work hard in this country, anything is possible. that's why i'm proud to be an
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>> coming up on america's news room, michelle bachman joins us with a look at the debate and her reaction to what president obama is now saying about water boarding. interesting stuff. you're going to hear from gloria cain this morning as she finally speaks out as the top of the ten, the supreme court will come forward with the moment you've all been waiting for. will they take on health care? we'll find out here in america's news room. we'll see you then. >> gretchen: thank you very much. it's been more than a month and police are still asking where is baby lisa? now could a mystery phone call hold a clue? joining me now on the phone, joe tacopina, the attorney for deborah braddably and jeremy irwin. good morning to you, joe. >> good morning, gretchen. >> gretchen: so we have this
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mystery phone call. the way the story went was that on the night that baby lisa disappeared on october 4, she was gone and the parents also say that three of their personal cell phones were gone, except now there was a call made from one of those phones around midnight that night to a woman named meghan wright. do i have the story correct? >> yes, you do. meghan wright, gretchen, it's important to remember that she has absolutely no relationship with deborah. deborah doesn't know her and she doesn't know deborah. we checked deborah's phone records. it's never once called that cell phone number before. but the interesting connection here, and it's starting to piece together with other evidence which i think is becoming a substantial case, is meghan wright was the on again, off again girlfriend of this guy known as jersey. this quasi drifter in the area who had just been spotted that
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night within a few blocks of the irwin residence. don't forget, the couple, the neighbors, identified a male watching jersey's description a little bit after midnight holding a baby with a diaper on. subsequently, i'll skip over that, that gas station video, but subsequently at 4:00 a.m., we have mike thompson making an identification describing an individual who looked again, matching the description of the individual named jersey holding a baby with a diaper on. that's three individuals who have no connection to the irwin family, are credible human beings, who made similar descriptions seeing a man matching the description with a baby with a diaper on in the middle of the night. with that phone call at midnight, i think we're on to something. >> gretchen: i want our viewers to be able to listen to meghan wright herself about that phone call that came to her phone at midnight on october 4.
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>> apparently there was a 50 second phone call made from one of the family's phones to my cell phone. 50 seconds in length, i don't know what was said or who called or who answered my phone. >> gretchen: here is an interesting thing, is that police have gone on record as saying they've interviewed meghan wright. she's not involved in this case, according to them. they also say more importantly, that they have interviewed jersey, the bald man who had sometimes on again, off again relationship with meghan wright, but he too, has been cleared. what do you make of this? >> if i were a defense lawyer representing jersey and i had this kind of evidence, i would be concerned. how they could clear someone when two individuals, rather three individuals have identified a man matching his description carrying a baby with a diaper in the middle of the night in kansas city, coupled with that phone call, how that phone call called meghan wright's cell phone number at
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midnight, with these other facts is baffling. i would like to know what they've done to clear him 'cause i don't understand how they cleared him. >> gretchen: there seems to be some confusion about your clients as well. the parents of baby lisa, and whether or not they are actually suspects. your attorney on the ground in missouri, had this to say. >> you think they've been focusing too much on the parents? >> absolutely. >> do police consider them suspects? >> they told us as much, sure. >> what have they told them? >> just what you just said. and debbie in particular. >> gretchen: so joe says that the police have told the parents they are suspects. but the police tell us that they're not suspects. >> you know, look, i think they're being politically correct and danced around words. they're not deemed suspects and not deemed suspects, but let's be realistic, what john was saying in that interview is what i've been saying all along.
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within the first hours of this baby going missing and deborah there wailing, begging for assistance, some of the forgetting police officers accused her of having a hand in the baby's disappearance. whether they were suspects or not, it's semantics. from day one, they have insinuated and alleged that she had something to do with it. >> gretchen: in the spirit of being fair and balanced, we do want to remind our viewers that she has admitted to being drunk that night and so there are other extenuating circumstances here. so obviously we're not going to judge her guilt or innocence. but are you advising these parents now to not speak at all to the media? because the police are saying they're not being cooperative and i'm not saying that by talking to the media that means you're cooperative, but are you advising them to do that? north texas not talking to the media? absolutely. when i came in there, i shut them down that first day, about a month ago, we stopped all communication with the media because this was not -- this was
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really turning into more of a media show than what it should be, which is really a hunt for this baby. >> gretchen: but are you telling them not to cooperate with police either? >> gretchen, that's the most ridiculous thing. if i think the police say that one more time. we last week for a second time brought the brothers of lisa in for interviews when we didn't have to. we've consented to every search they've requested, which we didn't have to. the parents collectively have submitted to over 40 hours of questioning over five times. a lot of things that happened during those questioning were actually done in -- things said to them were really not proper and appropriate. so there has not been a dual sense of cooperation. cooperation is not a one way street. but let me say this, they've answered every single question they can answer time and again regarding anything they knew about what happened that night. they have no answers as to what happened to their daughter. they're looking for them, but they haven't. i wish again the police would
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focus on some of these clues as opposed to hone not guilty on this lady. >> gretchen: she celebrated her first birthday where no idea where she is. joe tacopina, thanks so much for joining us today. >> thanks. >> gretchen: coming up next, herman cain explains how to separate the real men from the boys. we're back two minutes from now. i'd race down that hill without a helmet. i took some steep risks in my teens. i'd never ride without one now. and since my doctor prescribed lipitor, i won't go without it for my high cholesterol and my risk of heart attack. why kid myself? diet and exercise weren't lowering my cholesterol enough.
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>> clayton: how can you separate the real men from the boys? herman cain, former ceo of godfather's pizza and president cal candidate has the answer and it's all on how he orders the pizza. he told gq magazine, a new big interview out today, quote, the more toppings a man has on his pizza, the more manly he is. manly man is never afraid of
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