tv Huckabee FOX News March 9, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT
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fox urnlant. i'm harris faulkner. if you were tuning in to fox news, daybreak in east asia and new leads in the disappearance of malaysian nite which vanished without a trace some 37,000 feet in the air over the waters east of vietnam. vietnamese officials are trying to get a closer look at a piece of debris found by a search plane. they're saying it could be part of the plane's door. >> meanwhile, the search for the missing boeing 777 is expanding and it includes dozens of aircraft and ships from several countries along with the united states. they're looking at land now.
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they're searching nearby stretches of coastline by helicopter. teams from the fbi, the faa, the ntsb, even boeing itself on the way to asia to assist in the investigation. malaysia airline flight 370 had been in the air for less than two hours when crews lost contact. the flight was on it way to beijing. 239 people aboard, including three americans that we know of at this point. a man from texas who had recently transferred to a new job in malaysia and two small children, ages 4 and 2. meanwhile, more questions about how it happened and who was on the flight. officials say the plane appears to make a u-turn before it vanished and authorities are trying to identify four passengers who boarded with questionable or stolen passports. that has raised concerns about possible terrorism, maybe, but so far, no connection has been made. interpol, which tracks stolen
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passports around the world is also investigating a cup of the passports on the flight as well, calling them suspicious. stay with us for updates throughout the night, and foxnews.com for news when you want it. now huckabee. tonight on huckabee, putin blows off warnings to back off in ukraine. what does the u.s. do if diplomacy with russia doesn't work? and obamacare extends canceled health plans for another two years. >> the way the law was drafted, it didn't cover everybody under that provision. some people got cancellations, and that's the law that we have extended. >> but insurance companies say not so fast. can you get your canceled plan back? plus, on the brink of being deported to germany, a home schooling family is now allowed to stay in america. what pressured the obama administration to let them stay?
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ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. >> thank you. thank you very much. and welcome to huckabee from the fox news studios in new york city. well, the question most often presented in light of the crisis in crimea is, what should the president do? well, let me be so bold as to say it's the wrong question. because the question is, what should the president have been doing the past five years to avoid this knot? vladimir putin didn't just wake up one morning and impulsively order his soldiers to drop in crimea to have a look see at the port. he made a calculated gamble at the barack obama who fumbled the ball in syria worse than peyton manning's o manning's opening snap in the super bowl and turned his red line into a red face, that
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botched a once egyptian ally into the hands of putin. but whose only flexibility seems to be with the truth. the president obama who relaxed sanctions on iran and then got face slapped by the iranians who danced in the streets, forgetting what they wanted and getting nothing in return. yeah, the obama who treats israel like a disease and the palestinians like a cure. the obama who left four americans to die in benghazi and then awkwardly tried to blame an amateur video, and the obama who just announced massive cuts to the military. yes, that barack obama is a person who is not respected and certainly not feared by putin. so when putin had the excuse of protecting his interests in a warm-water sea port and storm into crimea, he knew there was no one to stop im. if putin shivered, it was only because he was shirtless on a
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cold russian day, not because he feared anything obama was going to do to him. and those who wonder why the europeans are so very quiet, it's because putin has highway on their necks by way of having his hand on their thermostats. they may not like the invasion in crimecrimea. had america been turning on it own spigots of energy, europe could have purchased energy from us, but we have a president who doesn't like oil or gas or coal or nuclear energy. he opts for green energy, which is great, except no one has found out how to make it profitable or affordable now. as for fears america would use the military to stand down his, we have worn ours out, and we're cutting back on what's left of it so we're going to have the smallest military since pre-world war ii. you really can't shoot when you have unloaded your gun.
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no other nation trusts us, listens to us, respects us, or fears us. we have become the shakiest gun in the west, and president obama is playing the role of don knots. our maybe, maybe he's reprising another don knots character, that of deputy barney fife. he kept one bullet in his shirt pocket, bun then again, one bullet barney at least had the one bullet. putin doesn't are a shirt, and we don't have a bull lt et in t pocket of ours. >> on thursday, president obama spent an hour on the phone with his russian counterpart, but the call did little to persuade putin to loosen his grip on crimea. can obama sway putin from his stance. joining me now, ambassador. it's a pleasure to have you
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here. i think you understand the situation better than most people. i want to get to this important point. everybody talks about what america sees in this. i don't hear many people speaking ability this from the russian perspective. what is putin looking at in the ukraine and specifically in c crimea that maybe we're not giving consideration to. >> putin came to power as president, replacing a president yeltsen who for all his democratic instincts and that he did to oversee the breakup of the soviet union peacefully, presided over a period of great loss of wealth and territory. putin came to power in 2000, vowing to restore not only russia's economy, internal order, but also getting respect abroad. and i think what we see now is that how president putin defines that has changed.
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if in 2000 he was one of the first people to call president bush -- rather in 2001 after the 9/11 attacks, if he was one of the first to call president bush and actually even overruled his war cabinet and green lighted the placement of american bases in central asia, it was because he saw russia nfs interest being served by america fighting the taliban. i think now, even though president pu president putin has continued to help america by allowing our war planes to transit through russian air space on their way to resupply our forced in afghanistan, he's less interested in partnership with the u.s. and more interested in making russia strong at home and in a sense re-creating some of what was lost when the soviet union fell apart. >> do you think, mr. ambassador, part of what is going on, though, is president putin sees this as an opportunity to protect his ports, to stabilize
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those ports in light of what happened in kiev, or is this the first of many steps that we should expect him to take to sort of rebuild the old soviet empire? which is it? >> i dent think he can build back the soviet empire. i think that the port that the black sea naval forces are using in ukraine was theirs anyway, as part of a long-term lease. that wasn't anything he risked losing. i think what he was concerned about is the political changes he saw happening in kiev just over the last five or six weeks in which he thought he had a president in president yanukovych who would support russia, who would join russia in the economic union that president putin wants to biltd, and sow that quickly fall apart in a way that he simply would not countenance. >> do you feel that the united states has basically been in the position where they don't have a
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whole lot to counter with? they're kind of a bystander in all of this, or is there something the president could or should be doing that he isn't right now? >> i think no u.s. president has been willing to use the military in a situation like this. president eisenhower didn't when the soviets went into hungary. president johnson didn't when they went into czechoslovakia. what we have now is a russia that is much more tied into the economic international economic situation than they were even ten years ago. fully half of russia's foreign trade is with western europe. and if the europeans were to get serious about an embargo on the impart of russian gas, which they could do now, russia doesn't have the munaupalonopole gas experts like they used to before the shale revolution, then it's possible with the sanctions president obama has
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announced we could begin to change the calculations in moscow, but we need to spend as much diplomacy in the days to come with our european allies as we do with the russians in moscow. >> thanks for your insight. i don't know of anybody who could give us a better picture of what's going on. we appreciate you being with us. a senior pentagon official told fox news that going to war over ukraine is not in the u.s. national interest, so what happens if diplomacy doesn't work with putin? i'll ask our military panel when we return. to comment on the show and share with me your thoughts. go to mike huckabee.com. go to mike huckabee.com. you can connect with me on [ female announcer ] research suggests cell health
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a diplomatic path to resolve the crisis, president obama said the u.s. is taking steps to uphold security and democracy for our european and nato allies. though steps include sending fighter planes and refueling tankers to the region. fox news military analyst major general bob scales and lieutenant commander rourke denver join me now. both of you welcome very much. let me begin, general. the uprising that we have seen, is there any military option or contingent that the president needs to publicly put out there to this ukrainian situation? >> is that to me, governor? >> yes, sir, it sure is. >> there certainly are, governor. there are several steps that we could make far beyond a few fighter planes. first of all, an option would be to move a combat brigade into poland. we could do that very easially,
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very quickly. the second is to put real, really powerful aircraft in places like poland and the balkan states. remember, in many ways, the russian army, the russian military is a joke. they don't have a single stealth fighter plane. their army is a bunch of ill-disciplined conscripts. their navy has only one operational ship in the black sea, but nobody knows that because no one yet, at least in natoo or the united states, has put real military power in the face of russia to force putin to come to grips with his own military inferiority and tell the rest of the world it's a hollow shell. all we have done so far is to do a head fake, if you will, with conventional aircraft. we could do more, short of going to war with the ukraine, before putin restarts his campaign of imperial aggression. >> general, let me follow up
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with that because one of the concerns would be is in order to do that and headache make it woa president the other side believes is willing to pug the trigger if necessary. does putin believe the president would pull a trigger. i go from the school you don't point a gun if you don't blan to use it. would be be pointing the gun without using it? >> he would back down because he would realize in a military sense he's facing over 5 million people. but you bring up an interesting point. the strategy he's using, you grab a piece of territory you want and then you pause, in this case, six years. putin realizes his best opportunity is over the next three years before america elects a new president who might not be quite so pliable as the one that's now in office. so that escalates the risk that
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putin will act much sooner than perhaps he would have otherwise acted in order to gain a piece of the ukraine or a piece of estonia, which, by the way, is 40% russian. >> commander, let me goto you. at this point, the fear is would nato be willing. do they have any stomach whatsoever to unite to say no to vladimir putin? >> well, it's always hard to take a guess or predict what that organization, what nato will do in the face of -- in the face of aggression. that being said, it is again yet another good question to ask because they're on the front lines. i agree with the general. we could move assets and powerful assets into positions on the chess board the i don't think would do any harm, but the greater context, your guests have knocked the questions out of the park, are we will to do anything with it? that becomes the greater situation. when our leader says we're using
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aggressive conversation in these negotiations, you kind of confirm by saying we're using aggressive words that you're not, by saying that. if you weren't, you wouldn't need to back it up. so it's -- it's really hard to tell what nato is going to do in this scenario. >> i only have about a minute left. if president obama had not had the kind of actions he had where he essentially fumbled in syria, fumbled in egypt, fumbled in the iranian situation, would we be in a different place today with russia than we are? >> absolutely. i think putin has gotten the measure of the man. oh, by the way, i think most leaders in bad places in the rest of the world have as well, and the next three years for our potential enemies is a prime opportunity to continue to elevate and threaten -- elevate the threat against america. i don't think there's any question.
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>> commander, your thoughts on that? >> agreed 100%. we are sadly the boy who cried wolf. until we recapture a position of power and strength that took years to develop and earn off the backs of military and great political decisions, we will be, you know, in the negative in making statements or moves to move forward. absolutely. >> commander, general, thank you both. great to have you here. your perspective is valuable and we appreciate your joining us. once again, i think one of the things we see from all of this is that america, if it's going to have strength, has got to be willing to use it. the best thing is to have more strength than we need and we never have to use it. up next, she's a cancer patient, she had a health plan and it worked for her. then obamacare t took effect. her plan got dropped. she got a plan that complies with the affordable care act, but that didn't cover her medication. after her story became public,
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she's all of a sudden covered. katherine blackwood and her story is next. hey kevin...still eating chalk for heartburn? yeah... try new alka seltzer fruit chews. they work fast on heartburn and taste awesome. these are good. told ya! i'm feeling better already. [ male announcer ] new alka seltzer fruits chews. enjoy the relief! [ ship horn blows ] no, no, no! stop! humans. one day we're coming up with the theory of relativity, the next... not so much. but that's okay. you're covered with great ideas like optional better car replacement from liberty mutual insurance. total your car, and we give you the money to buy one a model year newer. learn about it at libertymutual.com. liberty mutual insurance.
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to do her homework. now, more than one million americans have been connected at home. it makes it so much better to do homework, when you're at home. welcome to what's next. comcastnbcuniversal. this week, the obama administration announced it would let people whose insurance plans would be canceled under obamacare keep those plans for another two yooers. last week, we introduced you to steven blookwood whose mother lost her coverage for cancer medication after obamacare kicked in. since that interview, steven's mother received a letter from her insurance company said she's now covered again for the whole next year. why the reversal? joining me is katherine blackwood and her husband, who is a family practitioner. dr. blackwood, great to have you here. we so enjoyed having steveb. he wrote a letter that got
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published on the wall street journal. he was on the show, and suddenly, you got your coverage restored. why do you think that happened? >> first of all, thank you for having me on your show. he wrote an extraordinary article that was completely true. and it drew a lot of attention. within two days, the vice president of humana was calling him. and he, you know, basically negotiated with steven. and now i have insurance for an entire year, covering all of my cancer treatments. >> that would have been expensive, right? how much are we talking about to pay for that kind of medication if you had not been covered? >> if we had to pay for it ourselves, it would have been $42,200 every two weeks. >> every two weeks? >> every two weeks, plus, i received a medication to help you with your bones, and i receive that as well.
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and i'm not exactly sure of the cost, i think it's around $1,000, plus it has to be administered by an infusion. >> now, you know, i can't help but think there's more than just the figures thrk facts, the dollars and cents. what does this do to you personally and emotionally when your life is in the balance and you have insurance companies saying, we're not going to give you your medicine? >> i had fear, dread, terror. stress. i spent countless hours on the internet and the telephone. and i'm used to negotiating because i work, you know, as an administrator at our office, so it was an incredible time. i cannot tell you how a cancer patient feels, first of all, that they're burden already on their family, the system, your physicians have to do so much for you. and if you can have anonymity and feel like you're on your own
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journey and do it yourself and, you know, proceed and go forward, it's so much -- gives you so much more hope in your life, just to proceed as a normal person. then when you hit these kinds of impassed, it just becomes incredibly difficult. again, my family came to my aid. my son, you know, amazing job. and helped me out, and my husband, all of our children have been supportive, but i worry about the people who don't have that. they can't negotiate. they don't have their son writing a wall street journal article. >> you know, i think that's what's so significant here. it's tough enough to fight cancer. now you're having to fight to get the medication that can keep you alive. but you'ra person experienced because you work in a clinic, you understand the language, the vernacular, and even then it was an incredible stress.
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one of the things a lot of folks probably don't know, you came here from canada. you were a doctor under the canadian system and you escaped what you have now ended up inheriting in america. how does it make you feel that we're going the way of a sustm you found to be cumbersome in canada? >> i was amazed to come to the united states and find out how many options and choices there were available. one of our sons were 14 at the time, had a serious, nasty fracture of both bones in his forearm, and for his follow-up orthopedist appointment, he was offered an mri the next day. when we left canada, mind you, this is going back almost 20 years, there was one mri scanner in the entire atlantic region for 4.1 million people. i was floored he would have access to that care. truthfully, not every child with a fracture needs an mri, but the
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option was there. but just to be fair to the canadian system, they do a very good job at pramary and secondary care, but when it comes to tuckary care, they have care -- >> the kind of care your wife needs would be difficult to obtain. that what worries people about obamacare. it'sigate to have wellness checks and preventive health care, but when you're faced with something like you are, that's pretty troubling. you have demonstrated an extraordinary amount of faith and courage. we appreciate you sharing your story and we pray for a successful outcome in the treatment you're going through. i am glad you got your coverage restored. you don't need that pressure on top of fighting the disease itself. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. while katherine got her coverage back, she was not able to get her original plan she had
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before obamacare began. now, will others be able to get their plans back? we'll ask a health insurance executive when weout it. stay with us. all we do is go out to dinner. that's it? i mean, he picks up the tab every time, which is great... he's using you. he probably has a citi thankyou card and gets 2x the points at restaurants. huh the citi thankyou preferred card. now earn 2x the points on dining out, with no annual fee. go to citi.com/thankyoucards to truck guys, the truck is everything. and when you put them in charge of making an unbeatable truck... ... good things happen. this is the ram 1500. the 2014 motor trend truck of the year
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i'm harris faulkner. a possible break in the search for malaysia jetliner that suddenly vanished from radar screens saturday with 239 people onboard. new video shows an expanded search that now includes land. planes flying off the coast of vietnam have reportedly spotted what appears to be a door of a plane. they have reached the area off the southern coast of vietnam. the ntsb and faa have also sent teams to help in the investigation. meanwhile, investigators are trying to figure out what happened to the flight. radar signals show it may have tried to turn back, make a u-turn before vanishing. malaysian authorities are looking at footage of four
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passengers who may have boarded with stolen passports. they're trying to figure out who they are. now we'll return you to regularly scheduled headlining. even though the administration now says you can keep your canceled health insurance plan for another two years, it's still up to the individual insurance companies and state insurance commissioners whether or not to offer the plans back. so can you get your canceled plan back? we invited ceos of several health insurance companies to answer that question, and they declined. we did get a few responses like this one from health care service corporation. thanks for your expressing interest, but this does not sound like the right opportunity for us to participate. cigna said this. we're evaluating the recent announcement and the impact it
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will have on policies purchased prior to 1-1-14 to determine the best approach for our policy holders. given that we're still evaluating it wouldn't be appropriate for us to appear on the governor's show. joining me now is samuel gibbs, with a leading online health care marketplace for health insurance products. thank you, first of all, for doing what few executives want to do, which is talk about it. my question, why won't insurance executives and companies openly discuss the challenges they're facing? >> well, the reality is that health insurance is a fairly complicated product, as you know. and they're not nimble organizations. it takes a while. for them, they usually spend months or years planning out their products, and for this case, to say we're going to mag a change, it would be like the airline industry saying we have another 100 people you want to put on the airplane, can you do
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it? we can accommodate it, but we'll nee a new crew, a new airplane. they're not nimble, and it's difficult to make decisions and to make appearances on the fly. they need time to plan. >> i want to be fair because i understand having been a govern governor, they have to submit plans, show their tables are sound and financially prudent. why don't they just tell the american public what the president is doing to them is absolutely a disruption to the marketplace and they can't move that fast because they have to retool their entire marketplace, change the actuarial tables. >> look what has happened. basically last summer, president obama said, okay, if you have your plan, you can kind of keep it, maybe, and so, you know, as you pointed out, really it's not up to president obama. it takes the state regulators and the insurance companies to
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agree to that. a few of them did and a few people were able to keep their plan from last year. now here we are three or four months later, their making another change. the industry is not set up to make the changes on the fly. it takes a lot of planning. as you know being a governor, the insurance office and there's a lot of people who need to weigh in on this. we have to get away from making these knee jerk reactions. if the law is the law, let's plan accordingly and let it play out the way it's supposed to. from a company like e-health insurance, we deal with this all the time. we represent a bunch of different plans and we have been fighting the federal and state exchanges to just let companies like us help enroll low-income folks. they're being discriminated against because they can only go wait in line at these state health insurance exchanges as your previous guest points out,
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it's very complicated. the more qualified people you can get to talk to you, the better off folks are going to be. >> sam, thank you for being here, and i appreciate your willingness to speak out. it's hard to get folks to talk about it. we're delighted to have you here. thank you for joining a. >> thank you. one thing i would huv to say to every insurance company is this. just be reminded, the government works for you. you dont work for the government. if the government is doing something that disresults your business and obligation, you have the right to speak out. don't act like the government is your boss. you're the government's boss. i would say to every american, act like that. remind them who bosses who. it's not the government telling you what you can and can't do. that's how we save america, we remind the government who the boss really is. they and their seven children were facing deportation to germany, but all of a sudden,
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the federal government that wanted to throw them out said they can stay in america. that's where they're going to be free to home school their kids. what caused their fortunate reversal? they and their attorney coming up next. so our business can be on at&t's network for $175 a month? yup. all 5 of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? test test let's close!
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millions have raised their hand for the proven relief of the purple pill. and that relief could be in your hand. for many, nexium helps relieve heartburn symptoms from acid reflux disease. find out how you can save at purplepill.com. there is risk of bone fracture and low magnesium levels. side effects may include headache, abdominal pain, and diarrhea if you have persistent diarrhea, contact your doctor right away. other serious stomach conditions may exi. avoid if you te clopidogrel. for many, relief is at hand. ask your doctor abouxium. well, kn news for a german home schooling family whose story we first featured on the show last year. back in 20008, they had fled their native germany where home
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schooling is against the law. they settled in tennessee. the department of justice denied them asylum and after several failed appeals, they faces deportation. this week, the department of homeland security granted the family indefinite deferred status. that means they're allowed to stay in the united states and home school their children. they join us from tennessee and also their attorney. congratulations. what relief this must be to you and your family. were you surprised when this ruling came just a day after the supreme court said they're not going to hear your case? >> it was such a big day for us. on tuesday, we were so relieved, just happy about the good news after the day before we got the bad news. so we are just rejoicing. >> why do you think the reversal happened? i think it caught all of us off
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guard? >> well, we came here because we felt like god was leading us to the united states, and from day one, we trusted that god would help us, and when we came here and all the trouble began, we were just trusting him because he says call upon me in the day of trouble. i will deliver you and you shallgloshall glorify me. we knew god would do something and there were literally thousands of people praying. i think it was an act of prayer by god. >> everybody in america who has children right now is being very sympathetic with you as you're dealing with one who is not quite ready for television, is saying i don't want to be on this tv show. hana, let me ask you, what did this mean to you personally, the relief you felt when this decision, and you no longer were faced with deportation hanging over your head?
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>> yes, that's right. we were very relieved, and it took a while to believe it, but now we are very happy about this decision. >> we're all very happy about it. i want to go to michael ferriss, who has been your attorney. michael, this has been a roller coaster of a legal battle, and you cand i have talked overthe period of time they have been fighting this. tell us first of all, what is deferred status? what has happened and how confident are you that this settles this? >> for this family, this settles it on an essentially permanent basis as long as the family doesn't get in any legal trouble for felonies or things like that. they're going to be allowed to stay as long as their children are being home schooled. very good news for them. and it's a great day. the problem with the -- with this particular form of the outcome is it doesn't set any
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positive precedent. there are plenty of other families in germany who would like to come to the united states. we have set no precedent for them. there are things in the court decision that are troubling about parents' rights and religious freedom and america's attitude toward inviting people who need to come to the country for religious freedom. all those things need to be addressed. >> congratulations on the case. we're so glad this turned out well. we hope in the future it doesn't have to go through this. by the way, 127,000 people signed a petition to support the rumikas. that had to have a big impact on it. thank you, and family, thank you and congratulations. so very happy for your family. >> thank you. thank you all who prayed. >> god bless. come u, former army ranger kenny thomas is here. he'll perform one of his hit songs, so stay with us. -- rang
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kenny thomas is here. ♪ lobsterfest is the king of all promotions. [ male announcer ] don't miss red lobster's lobsterfest! the year's largestelection of lobst entrees like loter lover's dream or new dueling lobster tail withne crab-stuffed tail and one topped with shrimp. hurry in and sea food fferently. lovely read susan. may i read something? yes, please. of course. a rich, never bitter taste cup after cup. 340 grams. [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] always rich, never bitter. gevalia. never bitter. image not beinghave near this so often.er,
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>> served our country as a member of the u.s. army rangers. now a country music artist and he continues to serve by performing for our troops stationed overseas. he has a p brand new album called "give it away" would you please welcome kenny thomas. is there anything the audience needs to know about the song? >> every morning we get up and writed these huge giant country hits. this morning this particular morning we said what do we have to write that country music
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needs that country music fans can never get enough of and that would be another song about mexico. the good thing about songs about mexico you already know what's going to happen you are going to do something south of the border do something with someone you shouldn't have done something with and it evolves around the rhyme and you are going to put senior eita with and it rhymes with a mixed drink, margarita. flush ♪ ♪
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these are good. told ya! i'm feeling better already. [ male announcer ] new alka seltzer fruits chews. enjoy the relief! i'm saving a ton of time by posting them to my wall. oh, i like that one. it's so quick! it's just like my car insurance. i saved 15% in just 15 minutes. i saved more than that in half the time. i unfriend you. that's not how it works. that's not how any of this works. [ male announcer ] 15 minutes for auote isn't how it works anymore. with esurance, 7 1/2 minutes could save you on car insurance. welcome to the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. click or call.
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william guarnere >> the group american atheists sued back in 2011 to block the display of what's called the world trade center cross. it was formed when two beams of metal burning melted into what appeared to be a cross. it was discovered by rescue workers who found solis in the presence of the cross. many of the workers christians
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jewish and others were encouraged and given hope as they encountered the sight of the beam. not everyone was encouraged. the american atheists sued to prohibit the display of the beams in the museum which tells the story of the world trade center and selfless heros who initially risked their lives to save the lives during the rubble and spent months risking their safety and health looking for the remains of those murdered on 9-11. whether the atheist group likes tonight that cross is part of the story and history of the rescue effort. i am tempted to say to the atheists get over it you whiney self absorbed loons but that wouldn't be nice. let me try to say it another way. the atheists claim the mere presence of the cross cause them to suffer indigestion, depression and more physical symptoms. seriously? it takes more faith to believe that nonsense for them to just
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say they can't stand it for some people to have a joy that escapes their pathetic lives. the case is now pending were the u.s. court of appeals. if i sued someone every time i got offended by those who treated my faith with ridicule and attempt i would keep a large law firm in business. i am not in the least offended by the jewish star of david or the muslim moon and stars, but i am offended that an activist group of atheists get their shorts in a wad because the atheists say a couple of pieces of metal beams of scrap metal might get in their way. if i were the judge i would tell the atheists since they think other people are stupid to see something spiritual in those beams just laugh at them for seeing suing in scrap metal, get a life. the good news is the ultimate judge will still like to give even those atheists an eternal life. well that's it for now. this is mike huckabee from new
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york. until next week, good night and god bless. stay tuned for "jstice with judge jeanine. >> hello and welcome to "justice. i am judge jeanine pirro. barack obama is about the lowest presidential ratings in the history of polling. congress is so far down the black hole it's not even worth poling them any more. political ads are so incredibly negative these days even the liable and slander laws don't want to be associated with them. claims are made that are so outrageous even a grand jury comprised exclusively of defense attorneys would hand up a criminal indictment in a new york
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