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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  April 5, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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chris wallace talks exclusively with general michael hayden. have a good day, everybody. fox news alert. a possible major break in the search for flight 370. china state-run media is saying that one of its ships detected a pulse signal in the southern indian ocean. it is not yet clear if the signal is from the plane's black box. after nearly a month of frustration and false leads, it does offer new hopes, perhaps, that the trail may be getting warm. welcome to america's news headquarters. happy saturday to you. i'm gregg jarrett. >> i hope it's good news for these families. it's always a long shot and a big area to search.
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this timing may be crucial because as you know the batteries on those black boxes don't last forever and are set to expire soon. the pinger signals at that point will stop which will make it harder to find the missing plane. now the search is intensifying since they feel they have sighted something or heard something. a fleet of ships and planes, even a british nuclear submarine are combing the remote waters off australia's west coast urgently trying to confirm if the signal is from that dimmed flight. david piper live from thailand with the latest. >> reporter: a potential breakthrough. the chinese ship detecting pings which could be coming from the black box of the plane. official chinese news agency says a chinese patrol ship detected the pulse signals in the southern indian ocean.
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the chinese report is believed to have come directly from the ship. the pulses were on the frequency same as the pings that would be coming from the girl's black box. they said some ships have been moved to new locations. it's worth being cautious about reports. there have been so many false leads before. the australian authorities which are leading the sea search haven't confirmed the reports but are likely to send ships and planes to the area sunday. earlier, the malaysia authorities leading the investigation says they won't give up on finding the plane. >> it's been almost a month since flight 370 has been missing. the search has been difficult,
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challenging and complex. our determination remains undiminished. >> the search for the black box is likely to be hampered in the coming days because of more bad weather. back to you. >> david piper, we'll check back as the day develops. it is a burst of hope in the search for flight 370. they had very little to go on. they are closing in on a month now. no sign of the missing plane. there was some debris found in the area where they felt they heard the pinging. that has not been confirmed to have any connection. >> the debris could be anything. it's a little suspicious that this a report from a single reporter onboard the ship. it is not from a reliable official source. he may be jumping the gun here. we urge caution in this latest report. >> if you keep it tuned to fox news channel, you are only going
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to get accurate reporting. we don't speculate on these things. we'll be there. coming up we'll talk to captain chuck nash a veteran pilot, retired u.s. navy captain. we had very good learning experience from him as he brought us along on this investigation. >> got a lot of insight. >>. >> polls are closed in afghanistan where the voters are choosing a new president line stretching for blocks even in the most dangerous parts of the country, despite threats and deadly attacks from the taliban in several key areas. 11 candidates seeking to take the place of hamid karzai. let's turn to colin powell live from kabul. >> previous elections here in afghanistan were plagued by voter fraud. significant improvement the violence was minimal. there were some attacks. at least one person killed and
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several others injured, but the violence promised by the taliban to disrupt this election seems not to have materialized at all. voter fraud is the big worry going forward. one top candidate said there is reproof of voter fraud here in afghanistan. that did blemish the previous election in 2009. three of the top candidates here in afghanistan are vying of a pool of eight to replace hamid karzai. the top three are considered the three main candidates. all three have vowed to improve the relationship with the west, particularly the united states. all three have said they would sign the bilateral security agreement that president karzai so far has refused to sign. if elected, they would sign that agreement. they said in the first days and weeks of their administration, that would set in motion the pentagon announcing probably somewhere in the force of about 10,000 to 15,000 americans here
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in afghanistan post 2014 to help train the afghan security forces. also to help with counterterrorism operations here in the country to battle the taliban and make sure al qaeda doesn't reappear. getting ahead of ourselves, we are expected to have some type of result in the next few days. maybe it could take as long as a week or so before the afghan election commission actually issues results. we saw positive things here in afghanistan. high turnout, much higher than in 2009. some 7 million afghans turned out, including increased voting from both women and young afghans. positive things here in afghanistan. a lot of concern going forward with concerns to the voting fraud which has plagued elections here in afghanistan. >> it has. conor powell live from kabul, we'll check back with you. our other top story, new details on the ft. hood shooting massacre. investigators are saying they believe it was an argument that may have triggered the deadly
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rampage of that army post. the alleged shooter ivan lopez killing three people and wounding 16 before turning the gun on himself. rick levinthal has been there since this story broke at ft. hood. joining me live. let me ask you about the latest on what they learned about what may have sparked this shooting. >> it's much quieter outside the base. there are no news conferences scheduled. we are expected to hear from a congressman less than an hour from now. we are learning more about the circumstances that preceded the shooting wednesday afternoon. there was some verbal dispute between specialistine lopez and members of his unit, trns portation battalion. according to "the new york times," the argument began over a leave request. lopez had been seeking time off to attend family matters and
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became agitated and disrespectful when his request was denied. friends told us lopez was angry with the army because he was than given enough time off to attend the death of his mother in puerto rico last november. the army confirms he was treated for depression, anxiety, sleep disorders, was on medication and saw a psychiatrist. he posted a series of cryptic messages on facebook. march 1st, the day he bought the gun, he wrote, i was robbed last night and i'm sure it was two flacos, or guys. green light and finger ready. as easy as that. he wrote, i have lost my inner peace, full of hatred, i think this time the devil will take me. a month later he brought that weapon post against regulations and opened fire. >> our hearts are with the families who lost those beautiful and wonderful soldiers there. what can you tell us?
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what have we learned more about them? >> the three men killed were all experienced army veterans who all served in war zones overseas only to come home and be killed at their home base. sergeant danny ferguson was 39 from florida. he was a four sport athlete in high school who had just returned from afghanistan. his fiancee says he blocked a door to keep lopez from getting in and killing more soldiers. sergeant timothy owens, 37 from illinois who served in kuwait and iraq. staff carlos who was 38 from puerto rico, just marked 20 years in the army in january and planned to retire soon. a memorial service is planned on post this wednesday. >> unbelievable. kathleen foster with your producer and you and i certainly feel what they are going through at ft. hood at this point. leadership doing the best they can under the circumstances.
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thank you so much. >> thank you. a bombshell report now uncovering a stunning case of government waste at the department of state. the inspector general's findings show that agency lost or just misplaced about $1 billion a year on average for the last six years. elizabe elizabe elizabeth prann is live from washington. >> the $6 billion missing funds are incomplete or in lost contract finals. they pose significant financial risk and demonstrates a lack of internal control. the mismanagement appears to have started before hillary clinton's tenure as secretary of state. it did continue through her six years there. critics argue it shows a corrupt department. >> not only is this waste, fraud and abuse, you could save a lot of money at the state department, prevent this waste from going on.
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unfortunately, people are not paying attention. i'm sure hillary clinton will get to explain this during her presidential campaign. >> the ig suggests the state department creates a better organized system and the department agreed with the auditor's suggestions. the clinton family has not responded to the latest findings. >> do we have any details on these specific contracts? >> to get a better understanding, here are a couple of examples. the contract related to the war in iraq. the report says 33 out of 115 files could not be found. those 33 contracts alone cost about $2.1 billion in missing funds. the report also showed another 48 out of 82 contracts also did not include the proper paper trail. those files came up to about $2.1 billion. the possible lack of oversight could really expose the department to substantial financial losses and add to a list of controversial issues that hillary clinton may node to
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answer to if she does become a contender in 2016. >> it's hard to understand how you can lose 33 files and $6 billion. we'll continue to investigate. elizabeth prann, thanks very much. >> thanks. a paradox in the employment picture. more people are finding jobs. fewer people are looking for work. we'll discuss what's going on. imagine this. sophisticated drug tunnels found under our southern border. where they lead. when i say sophisticated, check it out. who the feds say are behind them. a chinese ship reportedly detected an electronic pulse signal very deep in the indian ocean. could it be from malaysian flight 370? >> a lot of people have friends
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and family involved. they obviously have personal reasons to want closure on what happened. ♪ no two people have the same financial goals. pnc works with you to understand yours and help plan for your retirement. visit a branch or call now for your personal retirement review. gundyes!n group is a go. not just a start up. an upstart. gotta get going. gotta be good. good? good. growth is the goal. how do we do that? i talked to ups.
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welcome back. quick check of today's headlines for you. hundreds are praying for the washington community that's been engulfed by a mudslide.
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a vigil including governor jay ensley gave a standing ovation to the rescuers still searching the debris. 30 people confirmed dead, 13 missing after a mountainside collapse buried the community of oso. two drug-smuggling tunnels led from a warehouse in san diego to the border in mexico. the tunnel is equipped with rail systems. officers say one of them was allegedly run by a 73-year-old woman. it is the mother of all pot holes. they found it in central, ohio. road crews trying to work to fill this sinkhole back up after it opened up on a roadway filled with water and completely washed away the pavement. the possible breakthrough
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for the search for flight 370. a chinese ship allegedly has detected an unidentified pulse signal which has the same frequency as the plane's black box. how big a deal is this? could it be a false positive here? joining us, chuck nash, a pilot and retired u.s. navy captain. always good to talk to you. there are a lot of noises under water. one is tempted to say this could be something else, but this is supposed to be the same frequency we mentioned, which is 37.5 kilohertz. what do you make of it? >> the thing that captures my attention, they describe it as a pulse signal. if it was just a spurious signal, that would be one thing.
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the australians thought they had a hit and it was a random event. the fact the chinese are calling it pulse captures my attention. i just wish we had more information and come from where else than the chinese. they have not been all that accurate. >> it appears to come from a singular reporter onboard one of the ships. not from an authorized or official source. nevertheless, let's move forward. this is actually from you, the u.s. planes would drop a sonabuoy? >> the quickest thing is to get out there and cover that area as quickly as we can. ships move too slowly. you get the p-3s out there. drop sona buoy. it is a trans miss ee eer microphone. when it hits the water it lowers a microphone on a cable down
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deep into the ocean. anything that microphone picks up, it sends back up to the sona buoy which trans mitts that back to the aircraft. if you lay out a field of these, what happens is the aircraft integrates the inputs and can quickly locate with some precision where that signal is coming from. at that point, once you located it down to that small an area, then you can go forward with something like the bluefin 21 or one of the submersibles to take a look and verify what you think it is. >> sound under water doesn't necessarily evoke a straight line to the surface. you've got a bunch of currents involved here. talk about how that plays into this. >> it's called ducting. what happens in the water you have therma climbs. various temperatures between the
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layers and salinity layers. all that has to do with the propagation of sound in it. it may get caught in the layer and duct. these are present the atmosphere, as well. in the water, people who deal with sound propagation and water are acutely aware of salinity and temperature levels. >> even if this is a ping, or a click if you listen to it, finding the plane and wreckage could be a completely different challenge depending upon depths, right? >> and how did this thing hit the water? did it hit the water in a sully sullenberger hudson river thing where it floated a while and sank? if so it will be a tight debris
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field, if anything. if it smashed into the water, you are going to have more debris. once it sinks, your point is correct. it's not a smooth surface under the ocean. it's got mountains and valleys. depending on where that wreckage is, if it's sitting in an undersea valley, you could go right by it with sonar and never see it. you're imaging the side of the hill. >> talking about 10,000, 14,000 feet. the challenges here are immense. captain chuck nash, thank you for your insights. we'll check back with you. >> always a pleasure. >>. >> millions of students in dozens of states started the common core testing this week. if you're a parent, you know all about it. the feds are trying to set up uniform standards for education in this country. there are a lot of students opting out and doing it in record numbers. indiana already dropped that
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program as parents are upset over the government dictating what their kids should learn. and the data the government is collecting in the process. now common core could have a major impact on the midterm elections. how? brian llamas live with that story. >> all in all, 45 states and washington, d.c. opted into the common core initiative. new york was one of the first to implement testing last year. this year as many as 30,000 parents have opted their kids out of the test. from new york to oklahoma, concerned parents say the testing allows the federal government to dictate curriculum, taking power away from local districts and educators. parents and critics say common core testing is causing unnecessary stress and anxiety, forcing students to learn a test and nothing else. >> i think six days of testing
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for an 8-year-old is egregious. i think the tests have to say something. it doesn't sound like this data will say anything meaningful. >> i want my children to love to learn and continue to go to college. i'm worried they'll burn out before they get there. >> parents say kids are coming home in tears. homework replaced with test preparation. tests are given in 90-minute sessions over three days. many schools forcing kids who opt out to sit and stare and do nothing in class. advocates say the test is to make sure all kids are getting a higher level of education. >> parents have the right to encourage their children to opt out. what is most important is what are they opting out of? do they understand what that means? we still don't know. the testing just started. common core is becoming a hot button political issue. this week a republican running for governor of new york publically announced he would not allow his children to take
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the test. he is going to make common core a principal issue in his campaign against governor cuomo. chuck hagel is visiting one of the america's closest allies in asia. details on his trip. a reported break in the search for flight 370. could it be? china saying one of its ships detected a pulse signal that is the same frequency as one of the data recorders in the indian ocean. [announcer] if your dog can dream it,
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♪ i ♪ and i got the tools ira ♪ to do it my way ♪ i got a lock on equities ♪ that's why i'm type e ♪ ♪ that's why i'm tyyyyype eeeee, ♪ ♪ i can do it all from my mobile phone ♪ ♪ that's why i'm tyyyyype eeeee, ♪ ♪ if i need some help i'm not alone ♪ ♪ we're all tyyyyype eeeee, ♪ ♪ we've got a place that we call home ♪ ♪ we're all type e ♪ a fox news alert on our top story. a possible break in the search for malaysia airlines flight 370 after chinese investigators searching in the south indian ocean say they detected a mysterious pulse signal possibly belonging to the missing plane's
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black box. mol molly henneberg is live in d.c. >> they are saying the chinese ship tee ployed a black box detector into the water in the southern indian ocean and picked up a pulse signal, a ping over time at 37.5 kilohertz, the same frequency emitted by the flight data recorders. the chinese say one of their air force planes spotted white floating objects in that search area. malaysian authorities are trying to verify this report. it's coming from the sources, the chinese state-run media. military planes and ships from several nations are scouring parts of the indian ocean where the plane may have gone down. >> there is some real skepticism about this ping, right? >> absolutely. because it came from the chinese state-run media, reports from
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there instead of from the international coordinator of the search. houston said he had been advised of the chinese reports but there is no confirmation that the ping and the floating objects are related to the missing malaysian jet. one fox military analyst says the chinese should have gone through the proper channels with this new information. >> the chief marshall should have sent out to see if they got the ping again. they should have done more due diligence. they enthused the world and clearly the parents, sisters, relatives and survivors and were in a position where if it doesn't, it is going to have a great impact on the credibility of the search. >> the batteries on the black boxes are supposed to last for about a month. the plane disappeared march 8th. today is april 5th time is of
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the essence for those searching for malaysia flight 370. >> there seem to be real questions about this report. thanks very much. >> to get more on what this development could mean to the investigation, i 2 urn to our own john scott. he is a licensed pilot and joins me live by phone because he's been up in the air flying today. thanks for taking time out for us. >> no problem. >> crossing the lightning bolt wires is a report from australia that the signals that the chinese have detected are consistent with those that come from an aircraft black box. are these signals consistent? all black boxes send out the type of signal? >> that's the case. i don't know a great deal about
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the transmission frequency of the black boxes. they all transmit on 37.5 kilohertz frequency. they are not designed to be used. the fact you have one in the water transmitting is unusual and if this ship did pick up that signal, i can't think of anything else it would be other than the black box. i'm skeptical about them actually finding that signal because the signal under water has a very limited range. they haven't found a single bit of debris. to blindly sweep the ocean and pick up that signal, not knowing within a 500 or 1,000 miles where that plane actually might have gone in, i think it's very surprising. if they did pick it up, more power to them. that will really shorten the
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search. >> it could truly be a miracle fshg in fact, it is the case. what i think is interesting is the reports coming out of the region are not saying that they're actually in the water at this time. we don't know specifics on recovery of the box. if it was located here and it was located near the wreckage, what could they learn if they were actually able to not only pull up the box but pull up parts of the plane? >> if they can locate the black box all of the answers to one of the greatest miseries of aviation history are going to be provided. they'll be able to send a submersible down, get a look at the plane and they'll be able to know whether there was some kind of fire or something that may have melted a hole in the hull. they'll get the flight data recorder which pulls the data
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off, control inputs and all of the data from the flight. the cockpit voice recorder is not likely to yield as much information because it's on a two-hour loop. >> i raised the issue why? why record over if something sinister is going on, it could be on that recorder in the first two hours of a long flight, not the last two hours. oxygen for passengers is only 15 minutes. that's for them to reach a safe altitude where you don't need it. in terms of this recorder, the fact that the battery life is only 30 days, wouldn't you think in our country at least where we have mit and other schools that train the geniuses of electronics, we could not come up with a 60-day battery? >> yeah. i think there will be developments that come out of this incident. in the world of aviation, they learn something from every
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incident. again, these incidents -- aircraft crashes, major airline crash is so rare that it's almost always going to be the case that every one is caused by a different combination of circumstances because they so rarely happen. i think you're right. there will be efforts to increase the transmission time of the pinger on the black boxes. nothing like that happens quickly in aviation. all of the electronics have to be checked. you would be probably powering it with lithium ion batteries which have caused problems for the 787. could have contributed. some suspect a cargo shipment of lithium ion batteries on this plane contributed to this. >> i remember that came up. there is so much to examine here. it will be rarer if we don't find anything and never get answers in terms of aviation
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history. jon, i'll let you prepare for take-off. thanks for bringing it in. have a great flying day. thanks for the information. you're always such a wonderful resource. jon scott. think about this. if the full force of the u.s. government goes after you, well, it could be a nightmare. suddenly even innocent americans can become the enemy. tonight on fox news we go indepth in a one hour documentary called "enemies of the state." among those targeted this guy, willman harold hamm. he discovered the oil gas fields of the northern plains. here is what happened when i asked about his trip to the white house. you had the opportunity to speak with president obama. >> i did. >> what happened? >> i wanted him to know for sure of the opportunity that we had, and we were creating a whole new
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renaissance of american oil and gas. there's a lot of good things that come from that. good middle class jobs, for nat. balance of trade. >> his reaction? >> he didn't want to hear it and he didn't hear it. >> two weeks later president obama's department of justice allegedly went after hamm bringing criminal charges against his company. the crime? killing a bird. that's right. a single bird. tonight on fox news, the story of harold hamm and three others, their fierce battle against an all-powerful government capable of crushing any individual who stands against it. "enemies of the state" airs at 10:00 p.m. and again sunday at 9:00 p.m. harold hamm is an interesting guy. son of sharecroppers, 13th in his family. i don't think he graduated high school. he's one of the richest men in america and he discovered this
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vast oil field. so the obama department of justice goes after him for inadvertently killing a single bird. maybe the bird croaked on its own and fell in a mud pit. >> i don't know. i'm all for the bird. >> the irony is the wind turbines president obama championed killed tens of thousands of birds every day. are they going after me because i killed a bird the other day with the windshield of my car? tune in tonight at 10:00. >> don't give it all away. good tease. we'll be there. jobs are up. unemployment down. more people leaving the job hunt. they have given up. how can we find them jobs? what does a teenage boy have in common with his grandmother? that could be osteoporosis. his computer could be to blame. become very popular. because when you buy the new samsung galaxy s5 on verizon,
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more people are finding work these days but fewer people are looking. numbers out for the department of labor. last month u.s. added 192,000 jobs but the unemployment rate stayed the same 6.7%. many economists say that's way too high. the number of working age americans who have a job or are looking for a job has dropped considerably over the past 15
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years. where are these workers hiding? let's talk about this with patricia powell, founder and ceo of the powell financial group. 192,000 jobs added. that's mediocre. you need 340,000 jobs to push unemployment down. you are not going to do that unless you have economic growth of 3% and 4%. >> yes. these jobs numbers have been lackluster at best. how do we know that? we compare that to other recoveries. you want to look at a horrible recession, go back to the early '80s. you look when we hit that recovery after having double digit unemployment, we start ed creating 700,000 jobs a month. 192,000 and people celebrating, they're insane. >> that was economic growth in the reagan years. >> when it goes going.
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we have this lackluster recovery. >> let me show you this graph courtesy of the "wall street journal." this is the employment participation rate. look at that. it's down at an abysmal rate of 63.2%. hasn't been that bad since 1977. the employment number's more revealing, 58.9%. while unemployment has gone down, the labor rate has not recovered. >> this is serious. this is important and serious. >> can you blame the obama administration, their policies are just not working? >> certainly, there are a lot of things going on happening at cross purposes. when you raise the cost of labor, the affordable health care act, talking about raising the minimum wage, it has consequences. the consequences could be as simple as part-time jobs being created instead of full time or
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the next plant being built outside the united states instead of inside the united states. these are unintended consequences of what some people think are well-meaning policies. >> say there are many things you can do. fings t fix the trade agreements. reducing entitlements. >> those are important. particularly look when someone is unemployed, there is a spectrum. you have people here when they lose that job they are out there the next day searching for a job, doing everything in their power to get that next job. over on the other side you've got the couch potato and everything in between. our policies are treating everybody as though they were the first group i described. we have long-term unemployed that may never get back into the work force. this is a serious problem. >> you mentioned the 1980s.
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arguably reagan had a tougher economic picture to deal with. economic growth went up to 4%, 5% creating all kinds of jobs. he cut taxes. if president obama gets his wish in the latest proposed budget, that would increase taxes. >> we already have a tax increase this year. they passed it on january 1 last year. we are still seeing the impact of that. all those people that say clinton raised taxes, they forgot he raised taxes in '93 and '94 we had a recession. they forget about the immediate consequences of doing that. when you take growth out of the economy, make labor more expensive, you create problems. a lot of what we've done in government has been at cross purposes for what we say we want. >> it's common sense in washington. >> economics. >> thanks very much, pat powell. >> good to be here. when was the last time your kid said, can i go out and play?
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chances are they are in their rooms playing video games. i want you to know about a shocking new study about why too much time in front of their computer or tv screen could be putting teenage boys at risk for a condition usually associated with elderly women.
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you may have figured it out. the effects of spending too much time in front of a computer screen. according to a study, teenage boys who spend hours vejing out have weaker bones and they are more at risk of developing osteoporosis. what can we do about it? dr. david samadi, co-host of "sunday house call" about you let's get to the story. you're a parent of a young son. i had to buy my son every single version of every single video game. can you have a discussion, weaker bones, they are going to regret it? >> this will be a good discussion at our house. i've been telling my son get away from this ipad and tv and
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video games. studies coming from norway. they looked at 450 girls and 450 boys. boys are spending more time in front of the computer. more than girls. what they did was look at the bone density and they look at the bone mineral density. they find out when they sit in front of these tvs and ipad they have a much lower bone mineral density. in the future they have a higher risk of having osteoporosis. when you're out there, we were out there playing sports, soccer, football, you build up the mineral density in your bone. you have more reserve that will last you longer. osteoporosis is more common among women. by the time of age 75 men catch
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up. try to build it up. >> it's worth a try trying to convince a young man you want to play sports, want to break more bones, do less of the video game playing. at what age do you stop developing bone? >> interesting new enough, the peak of your bone is around 30 to 35 is when you peak and you have maxed out. then every year you will start losing some of that bone mineral. by adding calcium and vitamin d, making sure you continue to exercise, it would delay some of that process. this paper was published in the journal of osteoporosis. you bet i'm going to talk to my son about this. >> what age should you start supplementing kids for their bones, whether drinking milk
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fortified or taking vitamin d? >> right now in this country, the screening for osteoporosis starts around the age of 50. that's when you should get your bone density checked. if your doctor thinks you have a reduced reserve, they will put you on some of the calcium and minerals. >> people always feel better after they watch sunday house call. >> i feel better now. my mom was right. when i grew up in the 1800s, they said get out and play. mom was right. >> unfortunately, kids are being addicted to this and your mom was 100% right. other thing is you want to announce the new time for sunday "house call" 12:30. >> don't miss "sunday house
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call." you'll be on this afternoon with the latest developments of the search for the pinger of the plane. >> that does it for us. "journal editorial report" next. i bought a car, over and tells you, and you're like. a good deal or not. looking at truecar.com. there's no buyer's remorse. save time, save money, and never overpay. visit truecar.com
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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. this week on "the journal editorial report" president obama takes a victory lap declaring the affordable care act a success. should democrat senate share his enthusiasm? a supreme court ruling deals another blow to campaign finance limits. how it will affect big donors and political parties this november. >> with middle east peace talks on the verge of collapse, we'll take a look at secretary of state john kerry's track record in the region. welcome to "the journal edit

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