tv The Kelly File FOX News April 15, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PDT
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tonight. miss megyn is next. i'm bill o'reilly. please always remember the spin stops right off so we're definitely looking out for you. i'm megyn kelly live in new york and tonight -- >> new questions over the showdown at the bundy ranch and why senator harry reid is joining the attack on the ranchers. we investigate. and then, on the same day the attorney general plugs the effort to legalize marijuana a major new study finds the drug causes brain-damage. brit hume on the dangerous misstep by team obama. breaking news tonight on a controversial decision to pull the plug on a program that tracks possible terror plots in new york city's muslim community. a big night on "the kelly file" starts now.
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breaking tonight the most powerful man in the u.s. senate comes out bladesing in the war on the range as questions mount about his involvement in this fight. welcome to "the kelly file," i'm megyn kelly. new reports out of nevada tonight that senator harry reid is going after rancher bundy calling him a law breaker saying it's unfortunate people decided to support mr. bundy. this comes just days after hundreds of people showed their support for the rancher saying this battle is not about his cattle or unpaid grazing fees but state's reits and government overreach. now some are questioning why mr. reid is weighing in at this point after staying silent for so long in this dispute. asking whether he has a vested interest in this fight, just yesterday after it was over he issued this warning. >> it's not over. we can't have american people that violate the law and walk away from it.
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so it's not over. >> our digital politics editor. good to see you chris. harry reid is out there saying it's not over. this is the first time he weighs in once it's over. >> right. he's got his sunglasses on so you know he means business about the whole thing. i'll be back. >> what is going on? if you tread internet there's all sorts of conspiracy theories what his role is in this nevada ranch dispute. what do we know? >> nevada is different than a lot of states in the union that harry reid is the undisputed political honcho of that state. he's backed by the glambling industry and unions. but and here's a big but, in nevada the federal government runs about 44 million acres of that state. that makes the bureau of land
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management very important in that state. it also makes activity important to lots of developers who patronize harry reid and funded his campaigns over the years. now harry reid -- >> harry reid was going be politically aligned with one group in this fight the bureau land management versus the rancher and those supporting him one has to put money on the bureau of land management. >> sure because the bureau of land management is run by a former harry reid aide. he got his man in the position to control 44 million acres in his state, 44 million acres, many of which are sought after by the developers who patronize harry reid politically. harry reid has a lot of skin in this game at different points. recently there was a political donor to reid, one of his pa terrell owens a develop who got convicted of some campaign finance irregularity. >> he's appealing it. >> campaign finance laws are complicated. we stipulate that. >> harry reid hasn't been accused of any wrongdoing.
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>> no. but there's a lot of money just to indicate that there's a ton of money involved in this as it relates to reid, developers and that 44 million acres that the federal government -- >> let me cut to the chase. harry reid would like to see bundy and his cattle kicked off these acres that he's been ranching for all these years because mr. reid would like to offer it up to some developers that donate to his campaign coffers? >> the reality there's a rising star republican in navy, the governor of that state who beat reid's son for the governorship in 2010. harry reid wants it to be very clear see the undisputed king politically of nevada and it does not go to that argument if ranchers and people on horseback are able to turn the back bureau ever land management troops that are under the command of harry reid's chosen designee and that
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agency. reid is talking about his next candidacy wants to make it clear that number one he can deliver when it comes to his promises and nobody will back him down and when it comes to the range war he's the one to back and i'm sure he wants everybody especially his donors to know that. >> what do you make of the timing of that? everyone in nevada was weighing in on this. everyone was taking a position. most were taking a position sympathetic to the ranchers, criticizes the fed's tactics but harry reid stayed silence until it was done and then double downed today. why is he talking tough now that it's done? >> because it's done. it makes it easier to talk tough about something when there's not until continent threat of violence. that's number one. number two harry reid deals with washington issues, talking about the koch brothers, trying to keep control of the senate for
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democrats so he stays in majority leader. he's back in nevada. they are on the easter break. it's time for him to shore up his control of that state politically. plus he looks good in sunglasses so he wants to do that. >> if you say so. all right, chris, thank you. >> you bet. new political fallout after the white house takes heat how the administration chose to observe a moment of silence for the boston marathon bombing which was a year ago today. in boston thousands stood at that finish line of the cherished marathon where at 2:49 p.m. two home made bombs exploded tearing through the crowd. that terror attack killed three people and injured 260 more. while vice president biden was in boston today the president and his close advisors chose to mark the moment in private. the only photograph coming from the official white house photographer. when the media pressed in a
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series of questions about access to the president they wanted more report towers go in, press secretary jay carney said this -- >> well clearly this is the anniversary. >> we certainly think that the moment is important but it is mostly important in boston. >> mostly important in boston. new york republican congressman peter king is a member of the homeland security committee. he was in boston today and joins us live. good to see you again. he's getting push back suggesting this terror act on u.s. soil. three people are dead and several others are maimed forever. it's important in boston. your thoughts. >> yeah. each president has his own way of observing these moments but to me, for jay carney to say this only had an impact in boston, what was so unique about
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this tragedy the whole country respond. boston symbolized the country. the fight back from boston is what americans support. the whole country suffered. the whole country was part of boston strong come back. jay carney was very wrong here and in putting it that way and, you know, the president may want to observe these things privately but the country wants to share in this moment. certainly other presidents i think would have been more public. not public in a political sense but public in a sense of making all the people part of showing their respect and honor for the people of boston for all of what boston did for this country. this is not a boston event. boston suffered. people in boston suffered horrific injuries and death. the fact is it was a scar upon the entire country and when boston fought back the entire american people fought back. >> they come under fire at this white house for limiting so much access to the president.
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they just want the white house photographer to document everything they don't want the press to go in there and do their job. we can have one pool reporter come in. no we should all come in and document this moment. they said no. jay carney said the news is in boston today. i want to move on because this is the one year anniversary of the boston terror attack, and obviously we know one of the terrorists is dead. one is facing charges and will face the death penalty if convicted and then the wife of the now dec who was an american and converted to islam after she married tamerlan tsarnaev. raising a child she shared with this man. there's a grand jury still investigating this woman. >> right now -- let me say up front the fbi and justice department keep this very
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secret. i under that. from what i know and you know the grand jury is still sitting. grand jury has brought in members of her family. and also the grand jury has subpoenaed certain items from her that may rethe light a murder, actually a three way murder that was committed the year before. it's hard for me to believe a woman this intelligent who comes from an intelligent family, her father was a surgeon, grandfather, she's a college student, and for her to live in a small apartment and not see bombs being prepared, not seeing bombs being put together, not to pick up any of the radical language and views of her husband, to me it's very, very hard to believe. so i would hope that the pressure that's being brought on her is first of all find out anything she knows about what happened, what led up to this, why he did what did he and who else was involved -- go ahead. >> her defense is i work 70 to
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80 hours a week. i was outside of the house. i didn't know what my husband is doing. this is the husband taking care of a 3-year-old child. wouldn't you know what was happening at home who was watching the child while he was making bombs. the question i have for you tonight do you think because they called many of her family members before the grand jury but they haven't called her and typically that is the way it works when they are going indict you, when you're the person they are looking at you don't get called. do you think this woman will get indicted? >> certainly from my experience in practicing law when they call family members and. people deploys and don't call you that means that they must consider you as a possible target that she must be the one this investigation is focused on. i would not be surprised if she were indicted. people i've spoken to in law enforcement told be unofficially they would be very disappointed if she were not indicted. they have a hard time believing a woman living that close to the scene would not know what was going on.
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>> congressman peter king, good to see you. there's a dramatic new study tonight on the health effects of marijuana. it's like harvard, northwestern, on and on. and this is creating some new political questions about the administration's policies and statements on pot which the authorities are now saying conclusively causes brain-damage. particularly in young people. brit hume reacts next. a controversial decision to pull the plug on a program that tracks possible terror plots in new york's muslim community. plus the case of a woman's suicide is being looked at as a possible murder investigation now after new evidence suggests the husband could be involved. >> that wound on the back of her head that she could do it herself is not -- >> bull [ bleep ]
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not being tough enough on the enforcement of marijuana laws and when mr. holder was just asked how things are going in the first two u.s. states to legalize weed for recreational purposes he told the "huffington post" quote, i think so far i'm cautiously optimistic about how it's going. brit hume, the timing could not be worst on this. he reaffirms he smoked pot himself. president said he smoked pot and was unhealthy and no more dangerous than alcohol. this study comes out that's strongly-worded. before i get your reaction i want to show the audience what they concluded. this is from they'd of the study. i developed a severe worry about whether we should be allowing anybody under age 30 to use pot unless they have a terminal illness and need it for pain.
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your thoughts. >> the president sympathetic to marijuana use and same forreric holder are not holding a controversial position among many american. the move towards permissiveness on the use of this stuff is pretty strong. >> we have a poll which we'll put up on the board. keep going. >> put it up at any time. i would say that's the direction where things are going on this issue. and this study is striking in the sense that it says that, you know, even casual use of marijuana causes brain abnormalities. i was wondering how the reaction would go so i post ad link to the story about this study on twitter tonight and i got some very interesting reaction. some people said that's why they call it dope that's the kind of reaction one would expect. one said abnormalities. one didn't say damage. i forgot about the good kind of
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brain abnormalities. my sense in political terms i don't think this study by itself is going to change the momentum very much on this issue. i think it would have to be confirmed by further studies. >> momentum is one thing. the country will feel how it feels. there's a question about what the president of the united states should be saying, what the top law enforcement officer of the united states should be saying when the medical experts are saying this drug causes brain-damage, in particular brain-damage to young poem. >> well, that's true. it's interesting to see what the surgeon general has to say about this now. see what the department of health and human services have to say about this issue. this does put the issue on the door step of responsible officials all over the country in every state and the federal government. how are they going to react to this. what will they say when questioned about this? will they come out -- should the surgeon general -- remember megyn, you don't sip it in a
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drink you smoke this. it can't be good for your lungs. >> so far beyond that. listen, o'reilly rails on this all the time i don't hear you railing about pot but i read the study. as a parent you have to pay attention to these things and they are talking about how it's irreversible damage, how casual use is related to major brain changes, brain abnormalities. it's directly related to the number of joint a person spokes per week. the more joint the more abnormal shape and density of the brain regions. >> the regions of the brain that are affected according to the study are those that affect the way in which you evaluate stimulants in your environment, things in your environment you react to and respond to. so, this is -- as a parent or grandparent in my case it's pretty disturbing this study. now mind you it was 40 people.
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20 in the controlled group and 20 in the study. >> there was another study done by northwestern not long ago that came to similar conclusions. 54% of the american people are more in favor of legalization. then you have a study like this that says your kids will bet brain-damage. the president and attorney general saying i did it and no worse than alcohol and the attorney general saying, you know, i feel cautiously optimistic about the legalization of the drug. >> right. one senses he was talking about being cautiously optimistic about it being legalized elsewhere, the movement to legalize it would go forward. >> he may very well be right. >> well, he may. it will be interesting to see how these officials respond. the study hit late this afternoon, be formally released tomorrow. be interesting in the days and weeks ahead to see what kind of government response we get. >> see you, brit. >> up next developing news in
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. developing tonight the new york city police department has now pulled the plug on a secretive spy unit that watched for terror plots in the city's muslim community. the controversial program sparked outrage from community and civil rights activists who say they were being targeted unfairly. they believe. we have a former perfectist with
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the nypd and national security editor at the blaze.com. good to see you. you're the perfect person to talk to because this was brain child of cia and carried out in new york after the september 11th attacks but became controversial once news of it became public. what was the program that's been ended? >> the idea was to essentially map the human terrain. that's what we call it in the intelligence community. but just as if you're a police officer patrolling your beat. gives you and idea what to look for. in a crisis situation, you have to track down a terror cell you want to know the communities you're operating in or might be operating in. it was an idea they want to get ahead of the game not wait until they get a tip there may be an operation cell operating in this community in new york city and then say we don't know where that is, we don't know how to get in touch with them. so that was is what was mapping the human terrain to get a sense where different groups were in the city.
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>> is the controversy is we were dispatching plain-clothes policemen build relationships with innocent muslim citizens under the guise to get to know them while we were spying on them. >> i feel i can't walk through central park without being tapped on the shoulder by a plain-clothes officer who wants to know if i want to buy drugs. this is a well shown tactic in different investigations, with drugs and such. people many times all over have challenged whether there's people operating under plain-clothes or different pretexts. >> police admitted it never generate ad lead. >> it was meant to understand the human train of new york to get a sense. if you got a tip from the fbi or cia saying there's an afghan terror cell in new york city, a number of individuals who train
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in their terrorist camps or afghanistan you may want to know where they could have familial ties. it's a very big city. pretty small police department when you think about the amount of terrain i want has to cover. this is not a perfect situation. >> i'm trying to get -- >> little beyond what would have been prudent. >> one of the people who pushed to end this is the one who helped to get honor diaries shut down. she helped to get this shut down. the mayor came out and i'll read you in part. he said this is a critical step forward in easing tensions between the police in the communities they serve so cops and citizens can help go after the real b they felt the muslim community felt alienated and trying to heal rifts.
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>> that was the spin making a particular community uncomfortable. it had to do with what information you can and can't collect. this is an imperfect thing. this san art not all science. when you look at the information they are collecting this is stuff in the public view. we'll be less safe if what this turns into is using this as a political football to say the nypd's efforts need to be taken aback dramatically not just this one unit because of the sen sensitivities. this is very personal for me. i joined because i was born and raised in new york city. i know what happened here in 9/11. i haven't for gotten any of that. it's something we still have to pay very serious attention to and strike a balance between civil liberties and security. maybe in this case they edged a little far but don't throw out
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the baby with the bath water. >> a potential case of suicide is getting a lot of attention. what we're learning about this mother of three. new motors ukraine is on the brink of a civil war that russia made and this administration's efforts to contain this thing is failing mightily. up next why that matters to a lot more than folks living in the ukraine. >> isn't there a sense in the administration and the european capitals in which you're dealing with that what's going on is not working? it's back, but not for long,
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moscow face further costs for its actions in the ukraine, russia warned that ukraine is on the brink of civil war. as ukraine military and pro russian militants are battling for control. the administration was challenged yesterday about whether president obama's approach here is failing. >> isn't there a sense in the administration and european capitals in which you're dealing with that what you're doing, whatever you're signals are not being heeded or misread and this entire approach which is to not escalate isn't working? >> no, major, because the premise of the question is based on the notion that all the united states ever has to do when something happens in the world that we don't like is say stop it and they will stop. >> join me now a former spokesman for four u.s. ambassadors to the united nations and a fox news contributor. good to see you, rick. the approach is not escalate and
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yet escalation is occurring. so major garrett pressing them. it's not working. >> first of all, we have to say we agree with the administration that we don't want this escalate. it would be terrible escalate this. and it's escalating. that's a real serious problem because russia and president putin are not listening to the united states. >> why? >> we have this ability to pull a whole bunch of triggers and we're not. i believe president obama has this theory that either we go to war or we ignore the situation. he really political doesn't want to do either one and so we're left with really basically nothing. i think we can win an information war and what we should be launching here is a healthy debate throughout all of those in europe to think about the capitalism and free market. we're not trying to push forward our information and we're
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dialing back radio free europe, we're allowing the russians to shut down voice of america, we're allowing the russians and president putin to shut down free media across russia and ukraine. other countries are very nervous about this. >> i know you say russia is playing us like a fiddle. what toes that mean? how? >> president putin has watched president obama deal with syria and iran and egypt even, you can go back all the way and he sees that when there's a red line, he sees that when the administration says something, specifically when the president says there will be consequences for something, we don't really see consequences. we don't see a ratcheting up. president putin is saying you can keep talking, we'll keep acting. >> do you really believe then that he would not be doing this, putin if we had a different president in the white house? >> i absolutely believe that. i think he would see that there is a consequence to our words.
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when president bush said something you knew actually that he meant it and that he was going to follow this up with action. again, i want to go back and say i agree with president obama we don't want to escalate but their strategy of trickling out some comments and then not following up with swift action. let's take for instance he said on monday if russia continues there will be consequences. they can'ted immediately. we should have come out today and said we're ratcheting up the sanctions not some travel sanctions on a couple of on oligarchs. how about taking $20 million, in surge the information war. we should relish this debate. when you put two types of life styles in front of someone in eastern europe they are going to choose the one with more freedom, greater democracy and capitalism they are not going to choose the russian way of life.
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>> inning. good to see you. we'll continue to follow it. new developments in to a murder mystery that a family calls shocking. igetting a lot of new attention from police and major media outlet's. ashley, the mother of three is found dead in her mommy on new year's day two years ago. she died from a gunshot wound in the helped. police concluded she killed herself. case close. but now new evidence is leading to this case being reopened. . trace gallagher has the story. >> reporter: everyone agrees that tom and ashley had a new year's eve party and both were drinking and tom got angry because ashley wanted to smoke marijuana with her family so he abruptly ended the party. several witnesses heard the couple continue to shout obscenities at each other then a gunshot. tom says he was in the closet changing, heard the shot, ran to the bedroom where his wife laid
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dying. he called 911. ashley's family claims tom shot his wife and their 6-year-old daughter witnessed it. the police report says the daughter saw nothing because the door was closed. the 15-year-old neighbor said he overheard tom tell his father he shot his wife but the police report didn't mention that. the neighbor now 17 tells our fox affiliate that he stands by his story. listen. >> i remember i heard them distinctly say i shot her. i told them everything i told you. he satin chair. sitting where the camera was. and he wrote it all down. >> now that young man's mother claims that she told police on the night of the shooting that a woman who lives nearby called and said call the police your neighbor just shot his wife but the police report says that she says quote police tell me you called the cops, your neighbor
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just shot herself. ashley's family believes the detective covered up the crime because tom is a local deputy. here's the family. >> you need to be made an example of what will happen to a police officer that takes the law into their own hands and ruins the lives of the innocent by altering the course of justice. >> hours after the shooting tom was questioned by a detective who indicated that suicide would have been improbable. here's that. >> i didn't shoot my wife! >> that wound on the back of her head isn't where she could do it herself, tom. it is not. >> bull [ bleep ]. >> it is not. >> bull [bleep] [bleep] >> a coroner says she was not shot in the back of her head. in fact it went through her right temple. tom also took a gunshot residue
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test. it's unclear what happened to that test but now been handed off to two other police departments to fully investigate this crime. >> wow. tomorrow night programming note four. i'll speak to the parents of ashley in an exclusive interview. set your dvrs. this will be an interesting one. up next, tv host and actress jenny mccarthy is known as many as an autism activist. but the single mother is back tracking on one very big point. she now claims she is pro vaccine. really? we report, you decide next. >> the problem here, jenny, that people sometimes casual or listen with one ear and will pa knick and not vaccine at all. >> probably. but guess what it's not my fault.
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and personal victories. we grow new beginnings, and better endings. grand gestures, and perfect quiet. we grow escape, bragging rights, happier happy hours. so let's gro something greater with miracle-gro. what will you grow? share your story at miraclegro.com. tv host jenny mccarthy is known by many as an autism activist. she had a warning about vaccines. cases of mump, measles and whooping cough come up she's come under fire for her vocal position. now she says she was never anti-vaccine. >> isn't the problem here, jenny, that people sometimes casual or listen with one ear are going to panic and not vaccine at all?
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>> probably. but guess what it's not my fault. the reason why they are not vaccinating is the vaccines are not safe. make a better product and then parents will vaccinate. >> evan was diagnosed with autism in 2005. without a doubt in my mind vaccinations triggered evan's autism. >> do i believe there's a correlation between vaccinations and autism. i don't think it's a sole cause but i think they are triggering, it's triggering autism in these kids. >> there's so much more. dana, it's shocking to hear her now talk about how she actually says she's pro vaccine. >> yeah. that kind of shocks me as well, megyn. i know jenny. i've guest co-hosted on the view. that's one of the things she told me. i know there's a lot of controversy about this but i never said i was against
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vaccinationed. her quotes say otherwise. if you're not vaccinations you don't say things if we'll stay in line for autism or measles we'll stay in line for measles because you're pre-supposing all vaccinations are triggering autism which you're entitled to our own opinion but not your own set of facts. science is disputing this. this is a really serious issue. and, you know, i have little ones. you have little ones. i don't want to be label as a bad mother if there's junk science that comes out. but i'll go to my pediatrician who has studied this. >> she has such a high-profile she raised a lot of people's fears about this. i mean, in her defense, she did also come out and say along the years it's not the vaccines per se, it's what is in the vaccines. the overall message was very
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anti. in her defense i want to play some of the context that's been left out. >> a lot of people, the backlash, a little backlash, she's anti-vaccine. she's anti-vaccine. what i really am is anti-toxins in the vaccine. we're not telling people not to vaccinate. i don't understand why it's so hard comprehend we deserve safe shots. and safer schedule. >> she's basically saying we're not anti-vaccine we're just anti several vaccinations. >> that's not support busy evens. this is the same woman promoting e cigarettes. inhaling nicotine. she's a big supporter of getting botox. those are one of the most
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deadliest things you can inject in your body. i'm not sure where she draws the line. you're right. she has a position of influence and it is wrong -- >> a big one. >> a big one. it's wrong -- this isn't about pro vaccination or anti-vaccination but i was told bay pediatrician the pediatrician crowd decide they can't fight her what he said was, these pediatricians are old guys with beards and i go out there. who will they listen to. listen to this beautiful well-known celebrity holding up her child who has autism saying i'm telling you the vaccine did it. what parent will walk away saying she was only talking about a couple of ingredients so i'll do it anyway. >> yeah. that's the other thing. i get a little angry at those parents who do that. if you care about the health of
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your child go and investigate this further than just listening to what a celebrity says on it. a couple of years later she says something else. i'm not going to lecture people about heart surgery. i'm not a heart surgeon. i know some valves in the heart. i won't lecture people about surgery. go beyond and get a different medical opinion not jenny mccarthy's opinion unless you want to ask her about e cigarettes. >> good to see you, dana. coming up the penalty for women who talk too much and coming up at the top of the hour -- >> get back there and take care of that work and leave us alone here in nevada. and selling her car wouldn't fly. we helped sydney manage her debt and prioritize her goals, so she could really turn up the volume on her dreams today...and tomorrow. so let's see what we can do about that... remodel. motorcycle. [ female announcer ] some questions take more than a bank. they take a banker.
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competence. that's just one of the findings laid out in the new book called "the confidence code." joining me now the woman behind the book and katy kay. >> he guess that at home from me so that's fine. >> we'll get that out of the way. it takes a confident woman to be married to jay carney. what's the biggest finding. >> there were two. one there's a confidence gap between men and women and the data is all there and we need to get over it because the other thing we found as you just suggested when it comes to success you need confidence more than you need competence. for many women that's a weird idea but it's true. >> we need it but we don't have it. most women don't have it. why not? >> a lot of reasons.
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some we were surprised to learn biological. >> it's controversial. >> we did find there are some differences in the way men and women think. testosterone matters because testosterone drives risk taking. >> now you sound like eric ericson. >> i'm not. we're built differently. there's great things women bring to the table. women help the bottom line of companies when we're there. we need to get better at risk taking. we need to get better at failure. this is what we found. especially little girls don't grow up learning how to fail and mess up and we got to teach them that. they are too perfect. >> megyn you were in student government. we're better off when there are women at the top as well as men whether in politics, business, in government, in television. but we can't hold ourselves back by not believing we can go for thing. >> you looked at my bio and saw
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i was in student government. you did your homework. i can relate to what you're saying. confidence has been important in my own career and my own life but one of the greatest pieces of advice i had is take more risks. when you have permission from your boss to do that. >> stop being a perfectionist. that's a killer for women. we try so hard to get everything right. we're not trying stuff. >> right. we don't want to fail. we want to be liked. i want to be successful. >> women have one moment of criticism and we're still thinking about it three days later. we need to let this stuff go. one interesting thing we've done is created a confidence quiz or confidence assessment with some psychologists, first of its kind on our website, confidencecode.com five minutes. you can find out how are you confidence stacks up to everybody else's. in a day and a half we had 7,000 people take site far. >> women out there who are not
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feeling that confident is called "the confidence code" and this is your key. thank you so much for being here. we'll be right back. awesome, amazing, and that's epic, bro, we've forgotten just how good good is. good is setting a personal best before going for a world record. good is swinging to get on base before swinging for a home run. [ crowd cheering ] good is choosing not to overshoot the moon, but to land right on it and do some experiments. ♪ so start your day off good with a coffee that's good cup after cup. maxwell house. ♪ good to the last drop maxwell house. if yand you're talking toevere rheuyour rheumatologistike me, about a biologic... this is humira. this is humira helping to relieve my pain. this is humira helping me lay the groundwork. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for ten years.
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we are volvo of sweden. marge: you know, there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips fiber good gummies. they're delicious, and an excellent source of fiber to help support regularity. wife: mmmm husband: these are good! marge: the tasty side of fiber. from phillips. fantastic. look at this woman.
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there's a new lady stealing british hearts 79-year-old granny and her 39-year-old dancing partner pulling off a salsa routine people half her age can't do. i want to be like her when i'm 79. i want to be like her now. see you tomorrow night. welcome to hannity and this is a fox news alert. the federal government may have surrendered against the battle against bundy but senator harry raid sa reid said this is not end. >> this is not over. in a moment bundy will be back. a former nevada sheriff claims his sources inside the federal government say that the bureau of land management may be quietly planning to raid the bundy ranch. now we reach out to the former sheriff for confirmation. he told our team of producers today quote, we have intel
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