tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News March 23, 2014 9:00am-10:01am PDT
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foxnews.com/mediabuzz. we're back on sunday morning at 11:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. thanks for watching. at this hour, on the continuing search for flight 370. eight search planes were in the air today crisscrossing that isolated and remote area of the south indian ocean where data from a french satellite now indicates it may have spotted some possible debris. that's the third time in as many days we've been told that satellites seem to have spotted mysterious objects that potential could be from the plane in that vast south indian ocean area. hello, everyone, welcome to america's news headquarters. >> i'm jamie colby, and it may in fact be, but -- it's a search
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zone that's said to be doubled the size of the state of massachusetts. obviously the indians ocean is vaster than that, mike emanuel joins us left from warble. >> no question. now lawmakers in this. with american authorities in a timely fashion. on "fox news sunday" the chaim of the -- criticize the the initial search. >> we wasted a week of precious time up in that region when all along it's been in the southern indian ocean i think where the location is. i think this is hopeful that now we have the third satellite imagery of debris in this area. the good news is we have confined it to an area where the debris is, so we can get to the black box to finally find out what may have happened in this case.
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>> we just received clarification from france's foreign ministry are satellite-generated echos, and potential objects from 1400 miles in perth. as planes search that remote area, france will increase its satellite efforts to cover the zone, but one expert said since it's such a large area to comb, more resources are needed in a hurry. >> we need a lot more resources than eight airplanes, i think we need 48 airplanes, and we need it quick. i hope president obama is getting the right kind of information. we have a fleet of p-3 orions. they need to be looking. the u.s. air force have mc-130s, they can stay on station a lot longer. >> is a days after malaysia airlines flight 370 vanished,
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there's a sense searchers are working against the clock. we won't know exactly what happened to the people on the plane until we find some wreckage and the critical flight data recorder. jamie? >> thank you, mike emanuel. eric? jamie, an airliner flies silently for hours, no one hears anything from the passengers. it's happened before with the tragic results in 200 when a helios airways boeing 737 flew at 35,000 feet when a slow decompression caused the passengers and the crew to slowly lose consciousness and kill everyone on board. the helios was on its way from cyprus to prague. it continued about three hours on autopilot until it finally ran out of fuel. it under on out the automatic
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oxygen system was not turned on, and the pilots never realized it. officials say all on board died of hypoxia, the lack of oxygen at the high altitude. could flight 370 have suffered a similar fate? joining us former navy s.e.a.l. and federal air marshal. one major difference is the helios pilots reported a problem before it really got into trouble. we didn't heat anything from the pilots on flight 370. >> that's exactly one of the most telling things. i've been going back and looking at with all this talk about the debris fields and things i've been analyzing the initials happenings that went on right before the plane started doing its erratic movements. it just appears that there may be some type of -- either a
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pilot takeover or other people coming in, because you have that relationship between the pilot and the first officer. this first officer is new, he comes in and he could have been under stress, which would explain the last words that he said weren't typical of the way you sign off. that would be completely different than what you're talking about here with this other airline that crashed in greece. >> there's also -- and i have an a.d. that came out from the federal aviation administration a couple weeks ago said to start in april that has to do with cracks in fuselages under the antenna. we don't know obviously if that's the case here, but if you think there was a depressurization problem that potential the pilots would communicate in some way as opposed to the mysterious lack of communication? >> i thin it would be. still, it does not explain the systematic shutdown of all these things if you have a
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depressurization, that's not going to cause a systematic shutdown. if you had a fire or something, that would, but it doesn't explain the dive indication from the normal behavior in that cockpit. to me it's just, you know, apples and oranges, just add up. >> the a.d. says the problem could lead to rapid decompression and loss of instrumental beity. would the plain go and fly for another seven hours or do? >> most likely not. you still would in the hospital have a systematic shutdown. very interesting of the things that systematically shut down were the things that tracked the plane. >> in terms of the satellites, first -- and now we have france with this data. with all those countries an the geopolitical struggles and conflicts, do you think that someone is hiding something? >> i think what they are hiding is probably what they don't want people to know about how good their satellites are or where they're pointed as a specific
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time. unfortunately the way they're going used right now there's just yet a previous sound bite there from an investigate are. there needs to be more assets. if they're looking for debris, they need more assets flying, because by the time they get out there, that debris is gone. >> could even be the same debris, about the same size. finally, jonathan, if your gut, what do you think happened? and when will we find out? >> i've stayed away from making, you know, predictions of what i think has happened, but i think there are two leads that we should still be going after. one is definitely this debris field, we need more assets. but the other one is there's a corridor that is shown by that northern arc that goes toward
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pakistan and iran. the plane could have flown around or below india, or up along the himalayans, where radar is very spot request, if at all. i think that's something we need to continue to look at from the furthest distance in, looking at sources, trying to find out if anybody has seen or knows anything about it this. there has to be chatter. >> jonathan gillian, former special's on the joint task force, thank you so much for your analysis. >> good to be here. >> absolutely. jamie? great inside. the search for flight 370 is keying in on the south indians ocean, an area known as the roaring 40s, known both to the location's latitude and rolling winds and waters. could the weather make it even worse? i heard jenthough i notice
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umenyiora explain that a cyclone isn't a hurricane, but there is storm activity in the area. >> absolutely. they're getting into the fall and winter season. you mentioned the roaring 40s, those are strong westerlies present in the region, you have the furious 50s and screaming 60s south of that, but the lines here those are lines of equal pressure. when you see them tightly packed like that, those are very strong winds. this is the area where we think we have possibly debris, south of that, that's where we've got very stormy activity, but in the greens, that's where the rain is. so we have a period of calm weather for the next several hours, then another storm moves in. remember, we're about 12 hours ahead, so moving ahead we see the strong winds as well as the green on your screen, which is an indicator of rain, then a pertain of calmer weather, and then another storm moves in. we're getting into the winter months here in the southern hem
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i sphere. that means more active weather. we already have very strong winds in this part of the world, and not a lot of weather data, unfortunately. so there's your forecast wind gusts by satellite presentation, and again there's the possibility debris field, 30, 40 miles per hour as we get into the next 24 hours, a period of clearing, and most gusty winds and storms ahead. so very challenging for these decree us trying to investigates. >> but they are doing all they can, from what we understand. j.d., thank you so much. janice dean, every. a ride for prayer event to, to honor those missing from the flight. this morning more than 300 cyclists rode their flights from qualma lamb pur-- kuala lumpur.
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fox news alert for you on the other top story we're following. it shows russian troops surrounding a military babe in the port city of fiodosia if crimea, as -- capture when pro-russian forces, we don't know if they're official or pro-russian militia forces, rather, stormed the base. it's a troublesome development. congressman mike rogers telling "meet the press" that the u.s. has to take tougher stances against russia, and it better start now, he says. >> he goes to bed at night thinks of peter the great, and they wakes up thinking of stalin. we need to understand who he is and what he wants. it may not fit with what we believe of the 21st century, but that's nods who he is and what he's trying to accomplish.
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we need to be a little tougher with putin, or he will continue to take territory to fulfill what he believes is right flu russia. >> and if that happens, what does it mean for the united states? judi miller is a fox news contributor and pulitzer prizewinning investigative reporter and author, you know her well as well as her judi, i'm glad you're here, this is a disturbing element, that they have taken a commander when putin keeps say, no, no, i've gotten crimea. i'm cool now. >> this is in the area that he now says is part of russia, which the rest of the world thinks is iljet. he's apparently in -- >> forcibly taken into custody. >> according to the a.p. story, he was singing the ukrainian national anthem with his troops. that provoked the soldiers to act against him. we don't know about that.
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i'm much more focused than i think congressman rogers is also on eastern ukraine and southern ukraine, and the area that putin might be preparing to enter. >> if he does, what does president obama need to do about it? >> i think the first thing he needs to do, and here i would disagree slightly with the congressman, is not to make threats that we have no intention or ability to carry out, but to make sure that we do everything we can to let putin know that it really will be costly to proceed further. i don't think at the moment that the sanctions we have drafted and implemented so far have done that, but there are new sanctions waiting in the wings, and i think putin is well aware of this. >> can you explain for our audience who maybe hasn't followed this since the cold war or our younger audience who is coming up to speed, why it would be wrong in many people's opinions for putin to take those
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areas? >> i think what happened is after the collapse of the soviet union, the ukraine and the other republics that were once part of the soviet union broke away and their people voted to be independent. russia, and the united states and other countries said yes. ukraine, estonia, latvia, lithuania, you are now independence entities. crimea was given away by russia to the ukraine, when the ukraine was still part of the soft yes union, so the russians say, it was ours, we gave it to a part of ourselves, now we want it back. that's what they have done. >> so in simple terms they're being indian givers, there is a large number of the population of crimea, who wants to be part of russia, but listen to what mitt rom in i said. president obama is old enough to remember the cold war.
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listen to his analysis of president obama's actions. do we have the sound bite? okay. what i was told is i can paraphrase it, because it just crossed. basically he calls president obama naive. >> well, i think that president obama was not naive to try and make hi reset work. he probably now understands -- >> we were just able to turn the bite. i really want your analysis, judy. listen. >> the president's naivete with regards to russia and his faulty judgment about russia's intention and objectives has led to a number of foreign policy challenges that we face. unfortunately not having anticipated russia's intentions, the president wasn't able to shape the kinds of events that might have prevented the types of circumstances that you're seeing as well as the things you're seeing in syria.
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>> wow, syria, too. this is a part of the world you know very well, judy. do you think that the current policies will have disastrous results, both for the people there and the united states? >> i this is this is a challenge that we are doing business with the russians. we are trying to did business with the russians with afghanistan, where we over-fly russian territory where we feed and fuel our troops, where we are taking oat chemical weapons, this is a great accomplishment. it's queshl whether that would be happening without russian cooperation. third, the russians are on our side supposedly in negotiations with the iranians to get them to give up the nuclear program. >> are you saying meddling is a dangerous proposition? >> that's exactly what i'm saying. that's the calculation that president obama now is making.
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he's sam am i going to sacrifices all at least of these goals in order to stick it to putin? and how do you make that balance? how do you draw that line? it's a tough one. people who think that it's easy i don't think i sitting in his chair. mitt romney was right about the russians of the he was always much more realistic about them than i think president obama was. president obama is now finding out the hard way who putin is. >> tough assignment. thank you, judy. really great to have you on this topic. i know will be writing about it. eric? thanks, judy and jamie. back here at home search and rescue teams have reported hearing survivors screaming for help as they comb through debris from a massive mudslide. so far authorities say three people have been killed, at least 8 injured, with six moments destroyed. don
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donna dom any di-natale. >> officials are just wrapping up a press conference saying the mudslide area is still too dangerous, unstable, fluid and risk -- to climb on top of it, and try to rescue those that are -- not clear yesterday the number of people that are absolutely missing. the voices of children could be heard late on saturday in the darks in. this was just outsigh oso in snohomish county up in washington. we understand that one 6-month-old basic is in critical condition. two elderly people critically injured. you can see just how dramatic it is. witnesses sdrip a wall of mud crashing through their houses. it swept across a 360-yard
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section of highway 530 leaving debris 20 feet deep. witnesses say it happened all in the space of just three seconds. >> darkness. i just saw the darkness. that's all i could see. everything from one side completely to the other side. you see a truck passing by you, like 100 feet in front of you, and bakley everything is gone. >> people actually swept away from the slide describe digging themselves out of the homes. the homes apparently left in, quote, a state of sticks. the danger is still -- apparently water rising between 10 to 12 inches every half an hour. and officials in those scenes saying there's risk of immediate and very severe flooding now. >> there had not very much water in the river, so it is an
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attraction that people need to be aware, when that mudslide breaks loose, the water can 2r568 downstream and catch people unaware. they could be swept away. >> and eric, people worried about the strength of that water from any potential flooding. they have stopped people from crossing any bridges over the river, because they're feared anyone on those spans could be swept to their death. >> the power of those misdemean misdemeanorslides so devastating. dominic, thank you very much. and working to clean up oil spills. plus bill clinton -- to give up control of a major function of the internet. why the former president says this would compromise access to information for everyone, not just us, everyone around the world. what the third satellite finds in as many days could mean
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solves the mystery. we're joined by former ntsb member who hayes investigated some of the biggest airline crashes. wait until you here what he tells us. you want a way to help minimize blood sugar spikes. support heart health. and your immune system. now there's new glucerna advance with three benefits in one. [ male announcer ] new glucerna advance. from the brand doctors recommend most. [dog] larrwanna play?arry? new glucerna advance. [announcer] a healthy dog is a playful dog. [dog] let's do this larry. [announcer] help him keep those muscles while he loses a few pounds with beneful healthy weight. de with wholesome rice,real c,
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affect all of us who log on. former president bill clinton is speaking out against a plan that would have the u.s. give up oversight of the interneat domain registry. >> the united states has been by far the country most committed to keeping the internet free and open and uninterrupted. a lot of these people who say they want multistakeholder control over domain nanls, what they really want is the ability to shut down inconvenient exchanging within their own countries. >> under the obama administration's commerce department move, internet control would go to what they call the global internet community? think that's a good idea. angela joins us as rich and fowler, democratic strat did i. angela, our country, american with a bastion of freedom and democracy, exchange of ideas, we're going to hand over the
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internet to north korea, iran and vladimir putin? why in the world would this country ever do that? >> once again we're president a putting politics and legacy over policy and the creation of a better america. obama should listen to president clinton, because if we had the international community cake it over? who would it be? u.n.? wipo, the world intellectual property organization? the problem is we created internet. taxpayers paid for the internet. we should still control it. this is a great pr campaign for the president. >> richard, is that so? >> i don't think so at all. it's very rather that i agree with -- we won't happen hazardly will turn it over -- >> how do we know? >> because the -- we'll find the best transition for the world
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globally and find folks to neutrally manage it. if you go even further, the xhert department said a couple days ago, they talked about how if it doesn't work, the u.s. will still retain control. >> how? >> if it transitions, who it transitions to when the contract expires in 2015. >> andrea, you think that's going to work? >> there's a lot of ambiguity there. when you have a lot of ambiguity in politics, you better watch out. if el relinquish control, how do we gain it back? president clinton said we have a first amendment. so we're going to give that over to china? when you give up power, it's hard to get it back. >> that has nothing to do with how we control the internet. our first amendment rights will be intact, whether or not it gets transitioned. in america, the interneal is
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free, open and up adultated. beyond that point. the commerce department has been clear it window go to another country. it will be a global entity that deals with managing. right now it's a nonprofit organization. >> right now you have a global entity. itu, based in switzerland, 48 seats, guess who has the seats? russia, china, venezuela, saudi arabia, guess who they'll have the conversation in june? bahrain, bahrain that went after and killed protesters. >> richard, i'm sure you own your domain name and website, on if china or north korea takes that over and someone steals your domain name, who are you going to sue? in america we have the ability to fight in our court system. in china, i promise you you won't be able to. >> last word, should we be worried? >> we shouldn't be worried.
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intellectual property rites will still exist in the united states, and the icann, the person that sort of manages the dough may has oversight right now is the department of commerce. all we are doing is shifting the oversight, not shifting kropf the the internet, but figure out who will manage what icann does. >> if i was bill clinton and i can have a government contract with the department of contract, when that expires, is going to be up for free bidding. >> i guess you want icann, and angela wants i can't. >> those two are good sports. back to our stop story. france, australia and china are all pointing to the same general region where they say their satellites have picked up signs of what could debris. other -- but coming up, we're going to talk with a former national transportation safety board official right here live
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about what all of these sightings mean for the investigation. >> there are many theories floating around out there, none in my opinion connect all the dots at this point in time. that's why we have an investigation ongoing. [ sniffles, coughs ] shhhh! i have a cold with this annoying runny nose. [ sniffles ] i better take something. [ male announcer ] dayquil cold and flu doesn't treat all that. it doesn't? [ male anner ] alka-seltzer plus fights your worst cold symptoms plus has a fast-acting antihistamine. oh, what a relief it is! if your denture moves, try fixodent plus gum care. it helps stop denture movement and prevents gum irritation. fixodent. and forget it.
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fox news alert. there are planes, there are ships, there are so many people looking for any part every flight 370, and they're looking in the indians ocean, which is one of the toughest places to search. they are facing weather, they are facing clouds, they're facing winds. now word from france, that there may be a third satellite indication that they may have spotted the same debris that was already spotted by two other countries. i want to talk to john golia, he's joining me on the phone. got up early this morning for
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us. we appreciate it. more than 30 years in the aviation industry. why i wanted to talk to you in tick larks you were the first ntsb board member to hold an aircraft mechanics' certificate. you know airplanes inside and out. why did they develop planes that would allow pilots, if in fact this is what happened, turn off equipment undefected, fly for hours and hours without being able to be tracked. >> first off, we have never had a problem with pilots going rogue. it seems to be a recent phenomenon. but second think there are times when you want to turn off equipment like this. i'm told that on busy airports, if the transponder is on, it causes lots of problems with things like the ground radar system, which is designed to prevent runway incursions and accidents on runways. >> so you might want to lessen
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the load, in terms of information being put out and if there's a fire, i understand you might have to cut some systems in order to prevent further damage or deaths. why is the voice recorder capable of recording only two hours of information at a time and then recording over itself? >> well, that raises a good question. the ntsb, we fought long and hard to get the two hours implemented. originally it was 30 minutes. it was only with the advent of a digital recorder that we were able to get it raised to two hours? >> does that make sense to you? >> no, i would like it longer. it should record the length of time with the longest flight possibility with the type of airplane. >> i'm grateful for you to getting that word out there.
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i hope some changes may be made. no matter what happened to this plane, the tragedy of it all should turn into saved, i hope going forward. one over thing that struck me, and we're all learning so much over the last three weeks. why is it that oxygen for passengers on some of these long flights, in the event of an emergency is limited to 15 minutes of oxygen 12? >> because the purpose of the unit is in the overhead. the purpose is to get from 35,000 feet down to 8,000 or 10,000 feet where you no longer need the oxygen. if you have a problem with the pressurization, whether it's a mechanical failure of the system, or whatever causes it to depressurize. the pilots tack it down to a safe altitude. the whole purpose is just to get
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you down to where we don't need the pressurization any longer. what's your report card on how this investigation is going? >> it depends -- early report wasn't very good. it's been pulled together and is running pretty good now. >> john goglia, your experience is unique. we do hope it's going in a better dreg. we appreciate your time. i would love to have you back, thank you. making this desperate search ear more difficult is the enormous search area. it happens to be in one of the deepest and most remote ocean areas on the face of our planet. >> the areas have been described as the most inaccessible spot that you can imagine on the face
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of the earth, and good reason. the search area is focusing really on two areas that are about 23,000 square miles. eight aircrafts are searching the area, but it takes them four hours to fly there, leaving them just two to three hours to search the ocean. now, trained spotters who are just using their eyes are searching for debris from the planes, and they're battling rain, wind and fog. the southern indians ocean is known as the roaring 40s. winds in this area change rapidly and hit 30 to 40 miles an hour, causing huge waving, possibly sinking any debris. while scientists can track ocean currents, small eddies or circular occurrence of wart can toss debris in any direction, making it nearly impossible to trace back to a crash site. by the way, there's also tons of
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garbage, manmade junk swirling in a rotating ocean current about 5,000 miles in diameter. if debris can be tracked to a crash site, the indian ocean floor is little over two miles deep in some sections. >> it's cold, dark and very uncomfortable. really it is a very hostile environment. it's difficult to get equipment to work reliably because of colds in, because of the pressure. >> it's been said we know more about the surface of the moon than about the surface of our ocean floors, which is not anything you want to here as the search continues. >> sounds like just a massive, incredible challenge. brian, thank you. you see this massive oil spill? we have an update. this barge carrying nearly a million gallons of oil collides
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with another ship. in happier news, it is officially spring. no one is ringing in the season like they are in one part of the globe. you are going to go there, next. [ male announcer ] this is kevin. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he's agreed to give it up. that's today? [ male announcer ] we'll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. i was okay, but after lunch my knee started to hurt again. and now i've got to take more pills. ♪
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barge carrying nearly a million gallons of oil collided with a ship. they say the spill is a serious threat to bay and shorebird habitat. a shuttle bus overturned on i-95 in virginia. police say they're looking for a white passenger vehicle that they say swerved into the bus's travel lane causing the driver of that shuttle bus to strike the guardrail and then the bus overturned. president obama leaving for the netherlands tonight for the third nuclear security summit of his presidency. it will also serve as the backdrop for an emergency meeting of the g-7 leaders to discuss the crisis of the annexation of crimea. well, janice dean broke the news, another storm is on the way, and millions are wishing it would finally feel luke spring. when is it coming? be need it for more than a day, but spirits are a bit more
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upbeat in spain where thousands have been celebrating the start of a season in a really big way. alicia cunya has more. >> reporter: this week they celebrated spring in noisy, colorful and spectacular fashion. dating back centuries, a worry to celebrate st. joseph, the patron saint of wood crafting. now sophisticated, obvious designed with laser technology and climbing up to nine stories high. most usually carry a double mean of satirical humor and political commentary. over the course of the week-long festiviti
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festivities, communities compete in every imaginable way, including how they light up their streets. everywhere you look, beauty, history and food. for all the fun, it carries deep religion out meeting. for two days, thousands walk for hours on end to make an offering of flowers to the -- of the forsaken. each commission leaves flowers of a certainly colors, used to fill in the likeness of the virgin mary. the scent of flowers is all around. the costumes are a tradition. in a spectacular farewell to winter, the finale known as la crema, statues are burned to the ground. what takes about a year to create gone in a matter of minutes as valencia welcomes a new spring. alicia cunya, fox news. well, we could use a spring
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real soon. >> coming up on the fox news channels, more search planes were in the air today. that's where the data from a french satellite indicates they may have so theed possible debris from flight 370. coming up, we'll have the latest on the search. [ male announcer ] a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion nds to stay in motion. staying active can ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, this can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain and improve daily physical function so moving is easier. because just one 200mg cebrex a day can provide 24 hour relief for many with arthritis pain. and it's not a narcotic. you and your doctor should balance the benefits with the risks. all prescription nsaids, like celebrex, ibuprofen, naproxen and meloxicam they all may increase cardthe chance of heart attack or stroke, which can lead to death. this chance increases if you have heart disease or risk factors such as high bloodressure
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politics and money have created a target. for a look beyond here is a commentary. >> there is no sadder sight than an aging politician stricken by the thought that he may lose his job people like harry reid are having a monumental crisis. people have made a living out of name calling. reid is wearing himself out on the senate floor attacking the two men in america who could reduce him to life as an ordinary citizen. charles and david coke. dumping millions with lots more to come, not just the mid term election but the big one in 2016. shaping up to what may be the best weapon in years.
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you can always tell when democrats are nervous, just check the front page of the "new york times". t announcing he will do whatever it takes to expose their campaign to rig the american political system to benefit the wealthy at the expense of the middle class. reid, only a multimillionaire is a rude little man and calls the brothers unamerican, radical and shadowy, the kind of talk you might have heard during the russian revolution. we all know how that turned out. commentators on the right and middle if there is one are rushing to compare with that of the legendary far left community organizer. his major work, rules for radicals, has been the blueprint for obama's social philosophy.
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directing attention to rule 13, pick target, freeze it, personalize it and polarize it. reid is probably following rule five that ridicule is man's most potent weapon. it is worth noting he was financed by one of america's foremost capitalists, marshall fields iii. will someone tell us why george left wing of all time continues to be the invisible man in all of this? the billionaire's sorrows runs a world wide network of progressives who have for years woven itself into the country's political and media institutions. many journalists and schools take money. the argument here is over the progressive cause for big
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government as opposed to free market individualism. hovering over the debate is the failure of obamacare, a real-life example of the obama belief that government cures all. the forces argue that big labor has subsidized for years with disastrous results. it is a figure impossible to find mainly because journalists reporting the story rely on groups called nonpartisans. the so-called objective sources are often funded by many of the networks. it is like asking mr. putin how the people of crimea are doing. >> thank you for spending some time with us. with all of this breaking news you can follow us on twitter. >> when we are not in the chair
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we are working the stories for you. we send you to washington now for another hour of "america's news headquarters." have a great day everybody. >> take care. i procrastinated on... buying a car because i knew... it would be a scary process. truecar made it very easy... for me to negotiate, because i didn't really need to do any negotiating at all. save time, save money, and never overpay. visit truecar.com some brokerage firms are but way too many aren't. why? because selling thfunds makes them more money. which makes you wonder. 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.
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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. your hepatitis c.forget it's slow moving, you tell yourself. i have time. after all there may be no symptoms for years. no wonder you try to push it to the back of your mind and forget it. but here's something you shouldn't forget. hepatitis c is a serious disease. if left untreated, it could lead to liver damage and potentially even liver cancer. if you are one of the millions of people with hepatitis c, you haven't been forgotten. there's never been a better time to rethink your hep c. because people like you may benefit from scientific advances. advances that could help you move on from hep c.
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