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tv   The Five  FOX News  March 20, 2014 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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we have a special guest saying imrie dicklous, that he's defending the markets for pouncing what yellen said it was a reek mistake and she was stupid and i'm stupid for saying it wasn't stupid. we're going to argue because i'm so mad at this guy. hello, everyone. i'm andrea tantaros and this is a fox news alert. the world waits to learn whether the items spotted by satellite in the indian ocean is wreckage from flight 370 until it's daylight overseas. the united states, australia and new zealand have been using some of the most advanced aircraft to look for the debris. rick wright will join us with the details on weather and water conditions in the area where they are looking but we begin with national security correspondent jennifer griffin with the very latest on the search. jennifer? >> reporter: hi, andrea, the best lead has come from a private commercial satellite company, digital globe based in
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longmont, colorado, a private u.s. firm, not from the nsa or from any nation's classified satellites. the u.s. military has only two planes involved in the search, a fraction of its fleet. a single p3 orion flying over the bay of bengal and a p-8 poedson aircraft searching west of australia. the navy has four 3--8-s just within its arsenal. >> i wouldn't get into the specifics of each and every one of those tools because some of those tools we don't talk about. >> reporter:. p-8 spent four hours over the debris field. the p-8 poedson will take off again at 10:00 p.m. eastern. remember, this alleged depree field is halfway between australia and ant argument camp the closest u.s. naval as esare days away, and those haven't been ordered to move yet,
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jennifer. >> how surprising is it a private company, not a government, comes across this equipment? i know that you talk to your sources constantly. is there any surprise that the united states isn't committing resources to this? >> well, there's a degree of surprise, but what's really surprising is how much suspicion there is between the countries involved in this search. remember, china said very early on that it had repositioned reconfigured 21 satellites to help with the search. we talked to experts today who said they are doubtful that china even has 21 satellites, and if so, they are not that easy to reposition and no information has come from those satellites as of yet. the chinese are not sharing their information. the way digital globe works it's a private conditions as i mentioned, in colorado, and they -- they -- they basically share their information with governments. at the same time they provided the u.s., australia and new zealand these images, and then
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what we're told is basically those countries use their intel services to use super computers to go through the imagery and that that is how they might have actually honed in on this image. >> jennifer, this is bob beckel. let me ask you. the notion that this pilot or the two pilots decided to commit suicide and that they were just flying until, you know, until they crashed themselves into the ocean. why in the world take five hours to kill yourself? why not take the thing down when you go up? has anyone raised questions that that is a serious possibility, that they would fly that long? >> bob, there's so many unanswered questions and speculative theories espoused over the last ten days, and this is what happens when you have such a long period of time when people are searching, but i think some of the evidence doesn't totally add up at this point in time. right now it's -- it's really noteworthy that today most
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people are looking at this spot off the coast of australia, and there's been very little talk today about the terrorism theories that we've been hearing so much about in the last ten days. >> jennifer, so, you know, i've seen video of drones that can literally read a license plate from several thousand feet in the air. i'm wondering these images that were sent by this company, digital globe, is there a way -- has anyone taken and zoomed in on them and find out that there's a lot of speculation that it could be a container if it fell off the shape, however, if you look at it it looks like the shape that could be the tail section of an airplane? do they have this information and they are holding off? why aren't we hearing about it? >> u.s. officials tell us that they feel that this was a credible lead. that is why they repositioned the p-8 poedson so they do believe this is the best lead they have yet. drones can hone in, exactly, as you said, a license plate number and very great detail with
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drones. the problem is this is 1,500 miles off the coast of australia. drones require fuel, and they wouldn't be able to get out that far certainly, and that is why they are relying on thep-8 poseid poseidon, a 737 boeing plane that's been reconfigured. in terms of satellites getting closer to the imagery, you can assume that the intelligence agencies were able to make the images more clear. i don't think they could make them as clear as a drone picture, but the other problem is a lot of these intelligence services aren't sharing publicly all that they know at this point in time, but we're told that u.s. officials felt that this was a credible lead. that's why they moved the assets into place. >> that's what i was going to ask. we've been getting more bad tips than a lousy waitress, and i'm wondering in the context of all of these leads that we're getting, how do you feel about this? what's the -- do people think that this is actually a strong lead, or is this just another thing we're following until the
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next thing? >> reporter: well, it's very difficult to say. i mean, we've all gone round and round for the last ten days or more on this. it's really hard to say, greg. i think that, you know, no one wants to say that this is for certain, but, as i said, u.s. officials feel it's the best lead that they have had as of yet. nobody knows for sure. if they did, they would have found the plane. >> jennifer, the u.s. has the capability to use robotic submersibles to be able to go to the depths and get actually those images and find out what exactly is going on if there is anything down there so they can at least rule out some of the plausible theories, especially in the area designated before it continues with the passage of time, stopping the investigation at nightfall to kind of narrow in, box in that area, because you said this is the strongest lead. can we use this as some leverage with the malaysian government to try to let us take greater control in this investigation so we can actually get some answers? >> reporter: well, it's really difficult. from my understanding, no, the
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malaysian government is still in the lead, and they will remain in the lead, even if they identify this craft -- this debris, this alleged debris as being part of the aircraft. remember, this is way out in the middle, halfway between australia and antarctica, so it is so far out there that even those ships that you're talking about, we understand that the closest u.s. navy vessels are days away and they haven't even been ordered to get moving. >> right. >> so it is -- it's very difficult for the u.s. to take the lead on this. these are all the sensitivities that they are dealing with terms of the diplomacy involved, but it's very frustrating for the fbi and others who want to contribute more. >> jennifer, can we bring the satellite picture back up here for a second. that's a huge area of water down there as you've pointed out. those two pieces of debris team to me to be so far apart, that even with the plane as big as that, to have something that far
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apart, must be hundreds and hundreds of miles apart. >> that is possible, bob. it's really hard to deal i tell for the naked eye to even look at these satellite images. i'm not convinces that these are -- this is the imagery that they replaced publicly, but it's very difficult to tell what you're looking at with these images released today. >> jennifer, very quickly. you mentioned a lack of coordination by all of these countries. why do you think that is? why can't they work together with all of their resources and technology? >> reporter: well, there's so much suspicion. you're -- the thais wouldn't tell the malays that the radar picked up the planes, the nearbyians wouldn't let us fly the p-3 over their territory. there's just so much suspicion and then, of course, you have the chinese involved and they are all suspicious of the chinese so the amount of sharing, i mean, we're just lucky that digital globe was able to share these images with
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the u.s. >> these aren't countries, it's mean girls. it's like a high school clique. that's why america needs to take charge of this, ridiculous. sorry. >> jennifer griffin, thanks so much. let's turn now to rick wright with the latest on the weather conditions at the storm area. rick? >> we had the storm that moved through yesterday so when they were out there yesterday searching. there was a lot of cloud cover and rain. that's that storm right there moving through. now they have actually some pretty decent conditions and as they get up over the next couple of hours, high pressure is controlling it and things are looking okay. still big waves. this is a really unforgiving and treacherous ocean and that never changes. it isn't that we go through more mild patterns of weather where it gets better. things are always bad. another storm right here. that moves in by the time we get in towards sunday morning, sunday morning hour time. so we've got about two days
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before the next storm goes through and another one develops right behind. it looking at 48 hours after that of really, really treacherous weather so the next 48 hours is the best chance they will get in and find that debris that they spotted possibly. >> and after 48 hours, rick, if disappears, it sinks, and then we're all back to square one? >> it continues to move. we're assuming that the wing, if it's floating will stay on the surface, but the general ocean current is the counterclockwise motion and that's the entire indian ocean basin which is controlled by the rotation of the earth and that's consistent so the general underwater current would continue to pull whatever debris potentially a little bit closer to australia, that at least you're getting closer to land which is good, but in that the weather above the surface causes all small eddys to form and the debris can get stuck in one of those and wouldn't move in the same direction so maybe if you have a plane below the surface, the
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ocean there is between 8,000 and 12,000 feet deep, that not going in the same direction that you could see the stuff on the surface, so that is one of the other things that makes it difficult for them. >> rick, a lot of the -- a lot of things we're finding is via satellite. i've got to assume over the next couple of days when the weather clears we'll have a more clear shot of maybe finding some of this debris with the existing satellites, right? >> yeah, possibility. think about if you had a dirty rug that you were cleaning and you were running that vacuum over the rug, that is where you would see the clean spot, and that's what a satellite does, just gets that one spot because it gets back across the other side the world so there's all different satellites orbiting around the world at different paces. very difficult to piece all of those together and in a spot down here where they aren't focusing on, turn some of the satellites to get a focus on that area but that will take more time. >> rick, that -- i've been over in that area of the world before when i was in the peace corps and in australia, i remember people talking about that area in the indian ocean.
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that's not a shipping lane down there, right? i mean, that's probably not a cargo -- peeves cargo coming off there because nobody in their right mind puts a ship down there? >> for one thing, not a lot of land you'll be shipping it to so the indian ocean, not any shipping that's really going on here, but you're absolutely right. these waters with treacherous all the time. the storms moving through, that doesn't ever change. this is a consistent pattern that you have of storms there and the seas are always bad there. it doesn't ever calm down. >> all right. rick, what kind of implication do you think this has long term, 48-hour, 72-hour delay because the objects could sink even deeper? they can spread the currents out and then we're going to lose even more time and then we heard from jennifer that our u.s. naval shapes that could be deployed haven't even been engaged, in stand down mode until they are told they can participate, even more time will be lost compounded by the weather? >> the satellite imagery it's
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important to get as a possible guideline to where to start searching but the satellite from the sky, radar is what you need where you can get a closer image at the ground. that's got to come from the ground so you have to get some sort of an asset based out here, get helicopters out there and searching. at this point i think it will be a visual cue that they get instead of another satellite scan of this. that satellite image we're going off of is already four days old so it has to be visual accuse and you need clear skies so planes go through and get a clear visual. they have 48 hours before the next storm comes in and makes it rough for them. >> rick, i was a little confused. how far apart are the two wreckage elements? >> you know what? my understanding on this, and somebody can possibly correct me, but my understanding is that those are 14 miles apart right there, and without any image of land to give a sense of scale, it's difficult to tell, but what i had heard earlier today it's 14 miles. >> why four days, is that
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normal? takes that long? >> no, it does not take that long. i mean, this is somebody who was scanning that -- if you look at the satellite image you can see a lot of white does the, some could be wave tops topping over or creating waves where you have really unsettled seas, some could be high clouds in the atmosphere, so, you know, possibly it took somebody that amount of time to deceiver it, possibly there's some other reasons that somebody didn't release that information, who knows. >> all right. rick, i'd love to ask you when it's going to get warm here in new york city but we're out of time. >> say two weeks maybe. >> thanks, rick. much more to come on the search for the missing plane, including reaction from the family members to news that possible wreckage may have been found, but up next president obama sits down for another hard-hitting interview, this time with ellen, talking about selfies and shopping with some obamacare mix in between. we'll show you the highlights when "the five" returns. ♪
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much more to come on the search when "the five" returns. ♪ ♪
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today two of the most adorable people ever converged. president obama appeared on ellen degeneres, no doubt, to talk foreign policy, obamacare, the greatest pyramid scheme since the real ones in egypt. i wonder if we've got about two weeks left until march 31st for people to sign up. >> we've got about two weeks left until march 31st for people to sign up. if you don't have health insurance right now, you should go on healthcare.gov, and especially all the moms out there who may have young people, 26, 27, don't have health insurance, but think they are invincible and nothing will ever happen to them. >> of course, ellen snapped. >> you've got 5 million people that have signed up so far which is an enormous amount of people that have signed up, so it's successful. i think everyone is very grateful that you did this, and i think it is important for people to sign up and to -- to -- it's just better to be
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covered. >> what? no butterfly kisses? it's always creepy in grim times to see someone plug a prock, but as i say in my new book "not cool" available now everywhere to get americans to do dumb things you need the cool to apply peer pressure so celebrities who act so rebelous turn into obedient propagandists, but if obama had forced them tone roll when n what they are pushing they would scram. it's like asking a herrin dealer to inject his own bad stash. who can blame obama for asking up celebrities, cool means detached and the world's coolest leader only cares about the cool stuff. it's not cool that we see it's obsess. for him sol valujeting his namesake obamacare takes priority over the crisis. he's ahab, obamacare is the harpoon and america is the poor whale. if obama got more fixated he'd need a restraining order. the world needs america to keep
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the peace, simply by keeping a present. some guy once said that 80% of life is showing up. maybe one day obama will, or at least buy my book. it's available everywhere. >> what's next? qvc, i bet he could sell it on qvc or perhaps "the shark tank." >> i bet he could sell some of your books on qvc. three's a charm. i'm actually agreeing. andrea and i were talking earlier, if he spends less time actually working on it, maybe we won't have so many messed up problems, but now because he has such a stinker with this obamacare he's calling on his friends, calling on ellen and everybody else, an act of desperation and trying to do the whole perception is reality, if he says it's cool and awesome enough, so many times, if people actually might believe it, but really what irritates me is now he's going after the mothers. >> yes. >> couldn't he -- haven't we been through enough? >> that's an interesting point, and iia. it's like he does less damage if he focuses on this disaster and it localizes it.
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>> i've said i want him in the oval office watching "house of cards," lock the door. just leave him there, beyonce videos and all. i think this is pretty insulting to women, honestly. that's assuming that mothers don't know what their deductibles are, can't see premiums going up and don't know what the cost of health care was, assuming that all these women that he's talking, to none of them have had their plans cancelled or changed so i think a lot of women watch the president went you again. what i don't understand is why somebody like ellen would put her brand on the line. i know he's the president, and it's a big get for an interview, but it's one thing to have him on the show, another for her to say sign up, and your point, which is the most genius of all, ellen is not signed up to obamacare. that would be the real test. >> yeah. >> eric, can i play a song for you. >> please. >> ellen asking obama about some very important things. roll. >> i know you're busy and it's the end of the day and you've got to walk the dogs and do the laundry, but before we go, do you watch "house of cards?"
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do you watch "scandal?" what are your thoughts on those shows? >> i watch "house of cards." i haven't seen "scandal" but michelle has watched "scandal." i have to tell you life in washington is a little more boring than displayed on the screen. >> yeah. >> may i? >> please. >> so ellen asked him if he likes "house of cards," whoopi, when he said down with thedies said what's your favorite color? that's what he does, because he doesn't get the tough questions, doesn't get the question, mr. president, how come only 5 million have signed up? mr. president, if 5 million signed up, how many have actually paid? mr. president, are you going to tell me with 25% of people who signed up are young people, that means 1 in a quarter million people are young, not sure how many people paid. that's going to support 30 million people because everybody else who is signing up is taking on the system. you need the young people to support it.
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he won't get that. >> maybe if he sat here he would get one. >> bob's got a migraine, obamacare will cure it. >> we're all wrong. i know, but can i ask you a question. >> okay. >> president obama announces, you know, these penalties and costs against russia. so russia retaliates over obama announces this with their own little banning of u.s. officials, including harry reid, stroke of genius on their part. that's a russian sense of humor. they were actually mocking the president, so, so you're blocking six guys that we don't care about. harry reid is no longer allowed in st. petersburg. >> it's pretty funny actually. >> i know you're married to one, but i've yet to meet a russian who has a sense of humor about anything, but can i please for a second -- >> smirnoff? >> isn't he from -- >> can i go back to this for a second. you're scraping the bottom of the barrel looking at the obamacare care. here's the bottom line, just occurred. the answer to the question is
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80% have paid, according to the insurance industry, add it had together and 80% have paid. >> you think so? >> that's what the insurance company said. >> but you hate the insurance company. >> the first -- i'll put my last dollar that it's going to be wrong. >> and the other thing is they are going to make their 6 million by march 31st. >> it was 7 million. >> but the time you're able to change this thing, even if you win the senate, you'll have to wait if you get a republican president, this is now done. it's finished. it's over. obamacare is the law of the land. it's never going to be changed. >> wait a minute. >> you can change it at the edges, said the democrat whose party change it had how many times, 27, 37 times? >> but the time you get to 2017 when a new republican president, by the time they can move a bill, there will be millions and millions of people involved in this obamacare. >> only president obama can change it. >> it's a done deal. you lost. you might as we'll get used to it. >> you can do something about it. >> it's not a done deal yet. it is the law. it can be repealed --
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>> after 20 million people are on it. >> however, you know what's not a done deal, the cost. the cost of obamacare is going to skyrocket. keep talking obamacare, bob, because you're going to lose 2014, and you're going to lose 2016. as long as obamacare is around you'll lose. >> you'll never change obamacare. >> the employer mandate, that tidal wave, you will not be able to escape it. >> you're not going to change obamacare. >> no delay will save you. >> president obama will keep changing obamacare. >> you're right. >> you'll never be able to change that. >> now the insurance is there in the country and will be that way for decades to come. >> putin is playing chess. >> stop whine begun it so much. >> putin is playing chess and obama is playing foosball. >> a principal loses her job after banning students from speaking spanish at her school, but did she deserve to? later, a "wheel of fortune" contestant win with two letters on the board even surprises pat
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zajac. did you solve this problem? we'll see how one wordsmith did next.
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isn't at a conflict? search "proprietary mutual funds". yikes!! then go to e*trade. we've got over 8,000 mutual funds and not one of them has our name on it. we're in the business of finding the right investments for u. e*trade. less for us, more for you. the fund's prospectus contains its investment objectives, risks, chargesexpenses and other importt information and should be re and considered carefully befo investing. for a current prospectus visit www.etrade.com/mutualfunds. i love spanish, love the language and the culture and use my limited spanish whenever possible. that said a texas middle school principal is in trouble for telling her students to stop -- >> hot water. >> to stop speaking spanish on campus. the principal announced her restriction over the school intercom. she was promptly put on paid leave, and this just. in the school district is now
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saying they will not renew lacey's contract. by the way, more than half the students in the school district, wait for it, hispanic. k.g., your thoughts on this. this is a tough one. >> yes. >> she tells the kids don't speak spanish on campus at all. >> i think she went a little too far in the legal world we call that over broad, strike it down, but if she could specifically tailor it saying we would like to speak english in the classrooms because we have a vested interest to give you the best skills to succeed going forward to get an actual job where you can't bring your u.n. interm ter to understand, you know, pass me the big mac. what are you going to do? how are you going to get a job if you can't speak the language. be excited to be here and try to learn, it just like we take electives to learn another language as well and that's coming from a -- >> you're absolutely right. in a sad world where common sense advice is seen as mean. >> right. >> this woman is actually saying, look, you've got to do
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this in order to succeed because there's going to be another kid that will learn english better than you and will take that job. i had a spanish class in high school committee the teacher said you have to speak spanish all the time in the choose or you won't get a good grade. he's right. i got a lousy grade. that's the problem. the people that say that you shouldn't ask people to speak english are -- are the actual bigots because they believe these kids aren't capable of learning the language. it's insulting to them to think they can't do this. they should want to learn it and get ahead inly. it's important. >> the other side of that coin is a lot of people feel like -- that english is the official language of the united states of america, and i believe 31 says the it's actually mandated the official language and people get offended when they hear something that's not english. >> yeah. you know, i don't think this principal should have been fired, and i don't think think that should be a national let's call the doj and let's have an investigation. i just personally don't think other languages should be banned in schools. i know she probably meant well.
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>> yeah. >> the way of delivering that message over the intercom probably not the right way. >> banning is a strong thing. >> and we sit around the table a lot and talk about freedom of speech, and i just think, and i'm not going to say, it that word, if it's banned, i just don't think that that should be the issue. i also think is there a benefit maybe to the other students learning spanish? i hate to say it but let's be real, we're becoming more and more hispanic by the day so it wouldn't hurt to have english speakers speak spanish. i had ten years of spanish myself. not a bad thing so i can see both sides of this. >> we just got a time cue in spanish. >> i had two years. >> did i hear right, that you're going to say -- the liberal on the panel is going to say this -- this was a good call by the cool district to fire her? >> no, no, i was not going to say that. i have for a long time been suspicious about bilingual education after it goes on beyond the third grade. when you get kids in, they should have bilingual
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opportunities, but after that, every year you give them bilingual education is a year you're taking away from them integrating into the economics of the united states so i think that she did go too far. >> assimilate. >> but i think there is something to be said about it for the first two or three grades but after that you ought to be immersed in english. i went down to mexico to learn spanish. there six months. i don't want to say the words i learned, but -- >> only questions that you learned. >> seriously, i do think we have to be careful that we don't essentially penalize these kids by not -- >> what about on the recess ground or hallway? >> of course. >> i think it's ridiculous. >> you agree with me, that's overbroad. >> muslims speak muslims in the hallways. >> haven't heard about speaking arabic in the hallways. >> side story, drafted by the pirates -- pirates minor league system, heavily hispanic, taught all the baseball lessons in
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spanish, kid you not. could the families of the people on board the missing plane finally be getting the answers they have been waiting for for so long? you'll hear from them next. are you still sleeping? just wanted to check and make sure that we were on schedule. the first technology of its kind... mom and dad, i have great news. is now providing answers families need. siemens. answers. save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.d everybody knows that. well, did you know pinocchio was a bad motivational speaker? i look around this room
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families and loved ones of those on board flight 370 are anxiously awaiting to find out if debris spot in the indian ocean is wreckage from the missing jet. here are some of their reactions to the news from the last 24 hours. >> i don't think i've stopped shaking since, you know. we just finally settled in to a -- into a normal routine of waiting, unhappy waiting, with you at least, you know, we were going back to normal sleeping cycles and getting in, and i've continued to teach at work, and now this just throws it all, you know, all up in the air again.
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>> you know, tremendous uncertainty, imagine if you're one of those family member and you know another country has the means and economic wherewithal to get this investigation going in the right direction, and i yeah, where you can get some answers for these poor people, how frustrating, like having a cure for a disease and you just can't reach out and take it. >> i know. i mean, watching the footage and watching the footage of that malaysian woman being played over and over lastt's just so sad. think how long it took for them to get this kind of media attention. i mean, living in mal sharks the government seemingly ignored these people. they didn't want their stories to get out. they weren't talking to them. i mean, they were taking -- you see the cameras. they are saying no one has come to my house, no one has told me what has happened. bob, get ready, put these in
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your ears, feels like the families of benghazi, just saying, and we're better than that. >> very difficult. eric, your thoughts and reflections when you see something like this, it really tugs at your heart, it does. >> look, obviously the family members are still holding out hope. somewhere in the back of their mind they are hoping that it landed somewhere, probably an unlikely scenario, but what it is doing is when you see the media frenzy going on like that it keeps it on the news, on the front page of the newspaper, on "the five" and all the other major networks and forces the media in malaysia to focus the search and throw assets as it where if it was a quite story no one was talking about it and threw it under the rock, they may not be as willing to spend that kind of money to find out what happened to this plane. >> greg? >> i agreement originally i was like i just didn't see the intrusion of these cameras, but i'm thinking like, you know, you always hear about somebody who goes mission, and the family is
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trying to get press, somebody doesn't come home from work one day, and she has to go to the press, and, i mean, this actually -- it's perhaps the only way to get any progress happening. the problem with the press right now is that may is the new is. it's like we don't have any facts so this may be that rather than this is that, so the debris field is in a way the information that keeps coming out over a period of weeks now, and these poor souls have to keep digesting this every day. i can't believe how that must be. >> bob, how does it sit with you? how do you feel about it? >> i think frankly news of the debris field is probably the worst news they would get. they have held out hope that this plane has landed someone and now the potential for more debris. went through this once and it was a false alarm. if i was there and i were a family member, god, i hope that's not something else, i
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hope there's still a possibility. let me make one other point. the malaysians have not obviously handled this as well as they could have, but as large as this body of water is, and everything that is involved in this, i'm not so sure that the united states of america would answer this question by now. i think it's too big, too much, even if they let the fbi in early. may have come up with more ideas about what the pilots were about or if they could have found the plane. i don't think you have more capability. >> now that we have the computers we'll be the ones to solve it quicker. >> nobody has still talked about the family of the pilot, like what happened to them? >> where are they? >> was that story false? did they not really leave? has anybody asked them? where are they? are they at club med? >> if you were the family of those pilots, wouldn't you leave, too? wouldn't you worry that some of these people -- >> that's very suspicious, disappearing before the flight. >> before. >> and that may be the best case for letting the united states take over the investigation.
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they can do the deep dive on every single human being, not on the plane but everyone associated with them, malaysians and the others don't have the assets or the capability of doing that. >> we have a list of the people on the plane so i'm sure the united states -- >> i'm not sure. >> the chinese said all their passengers were culled. >> you can't trust them, just like we're doubtful about their 21 satellites that they were looking. verify. coming up, is america surrendering control of the internet to other countries? that's next on "the five." you don't want to miss this. c'mon, you want heartburn? when your favorite food starts a fight, fight back fast, with tums. heartburn relief that neutralizes acid on contact. and goes to work in seconds. ♪ tum, tum tum tum... tums! america's favorite lasagna. topped with a mouth-watering blend of fresh cheese and aged parmesan. it makes our lasagna a delicious centerpiece
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at a company that's bringing media and technology together. next is every second of nbcuniversal's coverage 0f the 2014 olympic winter games. it's connecting over one million low-income americans
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to broadband internet at home. it's a place named one america's most veteran friendly employers. next is information and entertainment in ways you never thought possible. welcome to what's next. comcastnbcuniversal. did the u.s. give up control of the internet? last week the department of congress decided to release our last bit of oversight to the worldwide web. the move made the international community happy but the u.s. said it will hurt our ability to regulate censorship. a new pole shows 61% of u.s. voters oppose the move. i take it, eric, you oppose the move. >> yeah, yes. why would we do that? what's the upside to do that?
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the reason why we did do it is other countries were worried that we were favoring the united states customers more than -- than foreign customers, you know. there's finding domain names and keeping certain domain names here. look, if it started with -- with our group in silicon valley, let's just go around the table. >> the united states, they say hasn't been managing it where it can trust the other countries. al gore is probably very upset right now, giving oversight up. i don't know why we would do this. the united states and our service providers pay money to expand the networks. they pay to maintain these networks. i think, again, it's the united states. vurndering our oversight to countries that don't have --
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>> are we going to have new fees or increased costs? i mean, now our costs are pretty low but if we give it to other countries, i don't know if people have it hitting their pocket, u.s. surcharge. >> if this is what they are going to do. they chose global feeling over american interest. again, another part of that we want them to like us, but just pick this stuff -- if you're going to give away things, give away vermont or the show "glee" or -- >> or harry reid. >> or the prius. >> i would love to see somalia -- somalia's take on "glee." >> what do you think? >> i'm going to agree with all of that. i concur. please, i beg you all take cash if you give up harry reid. this makes no sense to me unless you deliberately want to undercut america, unless you're against this country. why would you do this? there is no reason for it, and a million reasons against it, and
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i think this is overall the part of the problem as we go on like this apology tour of a country. we're sorry for being awesome and now we'll give you the internet. >> i'll take a contrary view on one part of this and that is to say of the 3.5 billion who use the internet we represent a very small percentage part of the internet. the control of the names works cares who controls the names but what meters is the interconnectivity of the networks which should be should off. >> cyber tramp. >> can we give al gore away with it in a lock box? >> no. ♪
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time now for one more thing. mr. eric bolling. >> this happened last night on "the tonight show," hilarious. pay close attention. i want to ask you something after, watch. >> you're forcing people to accept something that the majority of them don't even want. >> yes, in russia we have word for this, obamacare. >> ouch, ouch. ouch. now that hurt. >> yes, does obamacare cover burns? >> ha, ha, ha, very funny, and
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no. >> so that was a great skit, but now we're having to debate whether or not jimmy fallon, clearly he played putin, but did he also play president obama and if he didn't, hit me up on twitter. i'm eric bolling, who was president obama in that skit? what do you think? >> very funny. let me think about it and get back to you. bob? >> "wheel of fortune," pat sajak and the lovely vanna white, take a look at what happened when they had the bonus round worth 45 grand. >> new baby buggy, new baby -- new baby -- >> that's it. >> oh, my god. >> i'll tell you something. say jack looked like he swallowed -- this guy got this whole thing done without two letters out and hit it for 45,000. may have had a date with vanna,
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i don't know. >> you would love that. >> i would. >> i'd like to buy a volume. all right. this is the saddest story, well, not as sad as the missing airplane but close. listen to this. high school students now are not going to dances, including eric bolling's son, because they would rather stay home and text, so the staple of i would say my life, junior high, high school, people aren't going to anymore because they just want to sit around and, i don't know, be on facebook. i think that's really, really sad. >> are they still doing -- >> i loved prom and going to dances. >> springhouse junior high school, led zeppelin and "stairway to heaven." >> you have to make sure you're with the right guy because that can be deadly. >> especially when it fast. >> enough of sharing over here. >> greg. >> odd individual. >> it's time for -- >> i hate these people. today -- today it's snide
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cashiers at book stores who pass judgment at books you purchase because it don't match their assumptions or ideologies, a few e-mails from people buying my book, "not cool" which is available everywhere who say whenever they ask for it they have to go look for it and the cashier is always like fox news, like they -- they smelled flatulence from a goat. >> greg, you know your book is available everywhere. >> yes, it is. >> but i want to say next time somebody does that to you you should lecture them and tell them your job is to sell me a book, not to tell me that it's bad. >> oh, really, you don't like it, i'll take 50 copies. >> oh, that's good. >> have kimberly have a shot at you. >> starbucks not only making great cove but a big donation from the ceo, donating $30 million to u.s. troops to help fund a study into ptsd for troops as they leave afghanistan. also making a hire at least 10,000 vets and their spouses. step in the right direction. >> now i like him again. now i like him. >> traumatic brain injury, such
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a big problem that returning veterans are facing. >> that is a good person. >> don't forget to set your dvrs so you never ever miss an episode of-5-. see you back here tomorrow. "special report" is up next. good evening. i'm bret baier. the world's attention has been captured by two major stories, the international hunt for missing flight 370 and the russia-west standoff that began in crimea and has continued to spiral. with what all sides concede are many far-reaching consequences now and in the future. we are tackling these stories with fox team coverage tonight. ed henry looks at the geopolitical chess match involving multi-lateral sanctions and the new cold war possibly, but, first, chief intelligence correspondent catherine herridge has a look at the latest development in the missing plane saga, possible debris that's being treated as a plausible lead. hi, katherine.

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