tv Huckabee FOX News April 20, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT
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happy passover. thanks so much for watching. we wish you at great week. huckabee is going to start for you right now. keep it right here on the fox news channel. good night, everybody. tonight on huckabee. >> the first thing to come out of my mouth is negative. everything was bad. >> they were at rock bottom but a trip to the holy land helped these american heroes heal. >> israel gave me a little spark. then relentlessly bullied, she fought back with the help of friends and strangers. >> i just feel so special. >> standing with shay, tonight. plus on the brink of being deported to germany, a home-schooling family is now allowed to stay in america. what pressured the obama administration to let them stay. and he's just a regular guy in a pink tutu taking these
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photographs to help his wife fight a brave battle. governor mike huckabee. [ applause ] >> thank you. thank you. thank you very much. welcome to huckabee from the fox news studios in new york city. around the world, people of faith will be observing easter and passover. for christians, easter is the most important observance of the year. it celebrates the resurrection of jesus from the tomb. now if jesus is alive, then the faith of the christian is validated. and not even death can keep us with living with a deeply-rooted and justifiable hope. without hope, nothing we do makes a whole lot of sense. if there is no resurrection, then we simply live and then we die and we're nothing but someone else's memory. once we accept that fatalistic
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premise, there is no meaning to doing good or being responsible or acting unselfishly. for we eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow we die. for the jews, passover reminds us that god never breaks his promises and he is faithful to fulfill his covenant. if there is a god and he has an interest in us and has create interest in us and has create a pathway for us to know him then living according to his rules and standards makes perfect sense. in fact, it is the only thing that does make sense. to live otherwise is to be as reckless as the person he believes can he defy gravity and jumps off a high-rise building to prove it. that doesn't end well. and another does the -- and neither does the person who decided to live as if there is no god. if he is wrong, he has lost it all. but if he's right and but if there is a god, at least he lives to be a decent neighbor, friend, husband and father. now i'm sure i'll get nasty
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comments on my facebook page who are going to write and remind us that easter is a pagan holiday and had nothing to do with jesus. please spare me. because if some kids hit and hunt some eggs, i'm not sure that makes them little pagans. you know, there are enough cosmic kill joys in this world. as it is. better hunt a few eggs and tell the story -- a few eggs and tell the story about the resurrection than live without the hope of the resurrection. i hope you enjoy our easter weekend special that is planned to remind you that life is good. [ applause ] >> tonight we'll give you another look at the great stories that you told us that you loved. these are the encouraging and inspiring stories of people who have faced adversity but have come out on top. the horrors of war take tolls on our troops. many come home wounded spiritually and physically. but a group called help for
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heroes takes them on a journey to israel. judy schaefer is the founder of hero of heroes. retired sergeant charles hernandez spent two years in iraq with the army national guard and he said his trip to israel saved his relationship with his wife and allowed him to reunite with his family. let's talk to him right now. [ applause ] >> so many organizations reach out to veterans. and i'm wondering, because we you have these organizations is that an indication that maybe the v.a. and the government entities just aren't doing all they ought to be doing. >> this is a big country and the v.a. has a huge, huge job. there is no way one organization can handle everything. there are so many aspects to the challenges our veterans have. and as an american, as a mother,
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it's hard to let it all go. i couldn't just let these young men and women who raised their hands to volunteer so my sons could go on with their lives, i couldn't let it go. >> is that how you got started, is that the motivation for it? >> that was the motivation. and i think as parents and as american parents, my family is in tact. my children are able to go to college. they are able to continue with their lives because many young men and women raised their hand. they volunteered, they offered to go. their families are broken and i met some of those mothers and as a mother, i couldn't say, it's okay -- hey, it's okay. thanks. and walk away. >> you take american heroes and you take them to israel and introduce them to the israeli counter parts. and i want to begin with you. lynette, your husband came back from iraq and had really serious
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difficulty with post-traumatic stress disorder. you were separated for three years. when he first came back, did you notice something was wrong. >> oh, absolutely. >> it wasn't subtle. >> he was a different person when he came back from the war. >> what were you afraid of? >> i was afraid of him doing something to me or to himself. you know, he was angry all of the time. couldn't sleep. bad dreams. and so i -- i tried my best to comfort him. >> charles, how did you first hear about heroes to heroes and what did you think of it? >> it was actually a friend who told me, you needed a break. i needed to go out and reach. that i was losing faith that i didn't have anything to really stand on or to connect with. so i got the information and wrote to judy and i explained to her my situation. she said, yeah, you should.
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and when i told her i was going through with my wife and family and everything was already broken, you know, you could be here but you are not here and your heart is not here and everything is hard to connect. >> so you knew something was wrong, too? you weren't just saying i'm fine, everything is great. >> to me, everything was -- the first thing that come out of my mouth was negative. everything was bad. everything was rude. everything was a challenge. everything was not with a thought process. everything had to be wrong. i just fought against the world. it was just wrong. >> when you got to israel, what happened? what changed? what impacted you that made things different? >> you know, when you go home, you want to be embraced by your loved ones, you want to be embraced by your people and embraced by those who put you there, respectfully. because was a job you -- because that was a job you did. i'm not jewish, i'm a catholic.
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so going to israel, this was overwhelming to me. the first thing is shalhom. welcome. you are home. so me that was like, wow. it took me to another level. when someone says you are home, and when i went home to the states and i didn't get the, how are you doing? that took a lot out of me. >> did you come back home a different person when you had made the trip with heroes to heroes and made the trip to israel, what you got back, what was different? >> i think the trip was overwhelming for me to accept, to define who i am still, to understand what i'm planning to do and what i want to do and how i should continue on this path. i think israel gave me a little spark in me that told me you can do it. you can try. we know you have this, but try to manage it and work with it. the people at the rehab -- the events, the places, they all gave a helping hand to make sure
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i was okay. >> that is valor, your service dog who is speaking up. he's disappointed that i have not asked him a question. >> probably so. >> by the way, charles, that is one big dog, by the way: i understand part lab and part dane. >> yes. >> i think there is more dane than lab in the dog. >> right now there is. >> when charles came back from israel, did you sense something was different in him? >> absolutely. he was more -- he communicated better with me. he wasn't as angry. i mean he still has work to do, but i want to thank judy so much for helping my husband. because it really is a different life now. [ applause ] >> up next you'll hear from a veteran who said his trip to the holy land saved him from killing himself. judy will stay with us. you better as well. we'll be right back. om killing . judy, stay with us. you better as well.
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>> if you would like to share with me, i welcome your response, go to my website at mike huckabee.com. sign up to follow my regular messages on twitter or leave comments on the feedback section at mike huckabee.com. starts with back pain... ...and a choice. take 4 advil in a day which is 2 aleve... ...for all day relief. "start your engines" to get a long way from boring. with models up to 62 horsepower
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you'll get a warm welcome in the new new york. see if your business qualifies at startupny.com the group is called heroes for heroes. the mission is to send vets to the holy land and find peace after the post traumatic stress they've endured. back with judy schaefer and harrisan manuela who served until injuries caused him to retire. he said before his trip to israel he was living in darkness. and greg served as a scout sniper in both iraq and afghanistan. he just returned from israel less than a month ago. great to have you guys join us. [ applause ]. >> harrison, you went with the second group of heroes to heroes
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back in 2012. he said the group saved your life. that is dramatic. how did they do it? >> the thing was at the time, coming back from iraq, i was feeling depressed and i didn't have anyone to counter anythings i was going through, didn't know how to act and i didn't even know what ptsd was. but there was a phone call made to me from team red, white and blue that someone knew from heroes to heroes. it was actually august 10th that i got the phone call. and i had just visited the v.a. i just went to the v.a. and they gave me more medication and said, hey, this is what you need to do. and i told myself, i can't take any more medicine. my faith isn't there any more. i'm going to do something, it will be today. i don't want to be here any more. and lord and behold, i got a phone call that day.
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i was contemplating, my kids were at school and i was alone at home and i got the phone call and they said heroes to heroes wants to send someone from the houston team. would you be willing to go. i want to thank judy, heroes to heroes for saving my life and my kids' life. >> on the day you were thinking of suicide, you went to israel and ended up getting baptized in the jordan river. >> yes it. -- it was amazing. [ applause ] >> greg, you just got back from israel a month ago and one of the things about heroes to heroes, it is not just for christians or jews, but there is a specific connection no matter what the person's faith is because it is home to three significant faiths that we know of and christianity, judaism and islam.
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but tell me about your experience. you just got back. what did it do for you? >> it's tough to put into words. it was life-changing. growing up as a catholic, my mom dragged me to church every saturday, sunday, holy days of obligation and as i grew up i got away from that. but to go back to stand on the spots you learned about in school and to experience the energy and the positive that was just there, i think i was emotionally hit every day by something at one place or another. it was really moving in so many ways. >> and you planted a tree. because that is a very important tradition in israel is to plant a tree and reforest the country. when you planted that tree, did you feel like you are saying there is something here that 20, 30, 50, 100 years from now may still be here that my hands put there. >> i was picked on a little bit. i took a gps with me everywhere i went and i have the gps coordinate of the tree. but the group that was there
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before us, their trees were already taller and growing strong. and between us and god making it grow, we planted a few that day. and i shared my tree -- one of my trees with one of my israeli veteran friends i met over there. and between the two of us we put a tree down for our foreign warriors and his foreign warriors and it will grow and be there for ever. >> tell me about the relationships you had with the israeli defense forces. how did that impact you? harrison, you first? >> you know, getting a chance to meet them and spending ten days with these guys, completely changed how i viewed the culture there when it comes to israeli and the military and the pridefulness that they have with each other. it just showed brotherhood, like if we were part of their army and they didn't know us. and i really appreciated that because these men and women are doing this, two year service or four years, or whatever it is they do, the entire country
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serves and have served. and it just made us feel like there was a connection, like we're going to be brothers and sisters for the rest of our lives because we know what it is to be at war, we know what it is to be ptsd or dealing with darkness or invisible wounds or physical wounds. it was just amazing. it really connected me to them. >> well i just want to say to both of you, i'm so glad that you were introduced to heroes to heroes. so glad you were able to go to israel. i've been between 25-30 times myself over the past 40 years. and judy, thank you. thank you for what you are doing. you've never worn a uniform but in many ways you too are a hero to reach out and care for veterans who have served our country and to give them the hope of restoring their faith. i hope people will support heroes to heroes and that you'll continue to make this kind of impact on these great americans just like harrison and greg. thank you so much.
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all of you. >> thank you. [ applause ] >> what an honor to have you. heroes to heroes raised approximately $34,000 that they directly attributed to their appearance on our show. we're proud of that. and glad for them. [ applause ] >> and the veterans featured in that past segment, greg and harrison have since led a fourth team who traveled to israel for a ten-day journey in march. that team consisted entirely of veterans who were referred to the organization by family and friends of veterans who watched the original segment here on huckabee. well, coming up, a prime example of how perseverance pays off. the german home schooling family who were about to be deported by the obama justice department but never gave up their fight. and just when it looked like they were down and out, they got back up and they won. that's next. kx
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in 2008, this family had fled their native germany where home schooling is against the law. they settled in tennessee but the department of justice denied them asylum and they faced deportation. but in march the department of homeland security granted them indefinite deferred status. which means they can stay in america and home school their seven children. their attorney of the home school defense association shared the good news with us last month. >> congratulations, uva and hannah. were you surprised when this ruling came a day after the supreme court said they won't even hear your case? >> well, it was such a big day
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for us, of course. on tuesday, we were so relieved and just happy about the good news after the day before we got the bad news. so we are -- we are just rejoicing. >> why do you think the reversal happened. because i think it caught all of us off guard? >> well we came here because we felt like god was leading us to the united states and from the day one, we trusted that god would help us. and when we came in and all of the troubles, he were just trusting him because he said call upon me in the day of travel and i will deliver you and you shall glorify me so we knew god would be doing something and we know there were literally thousands of people praying. and i think it was an answered prayer by god. >> everybody in america who has children with you right now is being sympathetic with you. you are dealing with one not quite ready for television and saying i don't want to be on this tv show.
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so hannah, let me ask you. what did this mean to you personally, the relief that you felt when this decision -- and you no longer were faced with deportation hanging over your head? >> yes, that is right. we were very relieved and it took a while to believe it. but now we are very happy about the decision. >> well we are all very happy about it. i want to go to michael far is, your attorney. michael, this has been a roller coaster of a legal battle and you and i have talked over the period of time the family has been fighting this. tell us, first of all what, is deferred status. what actually has now happened and how confident are you that this settles this? >> for this family, this settles it in an essentially permanent basis, as long as the family doesn't get any -- into any legal trouble or felonies or things like that. they'll be allowed to stay as long as their children are being
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home-schooled. so it is very good news for them. and it is a great day. the problem with the -- this particular form of the outcome is it doesn't set any kind of positive precedence. there are plenty of other families in germany that would like to come to the united states and we have set no precedent for them. and there are things in the ruling that are emerging, and people that need to come to this country for religious freedom, and all of those yet need to be addressed. >> congratulations on the case and especially to the family. we are so glad this turns out well. we hope in the future it doesn't have to go through this. and by the way, 127,000 people signed a petition to support the family and that had to have had a big impact. michael, thank you. >> thank you. >> and thank you and congratulations to the family. so very happy for your family. >> thank you. thank you all who prayed and stood with us.
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these could be sig of rare but seris side effects. crestor! yes! [ female announcer ] ask your doctor about crestor. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca y be able toelp. >> hi, we're life from america's news headquarter. i'm jamie colby. pope francis is celebrating his second easter sunday mass with a plea for peace. a crowd of well over 150,thoi pilgrims in st. peter's square. a hope for peace in ukraine and syria. francis easter message also more attention be paid to the sick and elderly and out casts and the scourge of hunger. divers in south korea have
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in the process of recovering bodies. the toll close to 59. close to 240 missing. i'm jamie colby keep it right here at the "fox news" and foxnews.com. we've heard way too many stories about bullying that have made headline for all of the wrong reasons lately, but here is a story that gives us hope. texas high school senior shay shawhan was born with a brain injury that caused her to have seizures. for months she was the victim of brutal online bullying. this is how vicious the texts about her were. here is one. it said, shay, it is so annoying but cute. i want to do more than kiss her, i want to rape her and then kill her. that will finally make sure she goes away for good. shay's mother set up a facebook page to raise awareness about what her daughter was going through and word spread quickly. last fall shay's school football
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games with packed with supporters who wore i'm with shea t-shirts and they carried banner from her and the rival schools. shea and her mother visit us in our studio. i want to know, how did it make you feel when the students stood with you. >> it helped me through a lot of this. because i -- it was -- like when i saw people just out there wearing my t-shirts, supporting me, i felt good because their -- they're really nice people. i know that. and for them supporting me means so much to me and how this makes
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a whole lot because i -- >> you're doing great. let me ask you this, shea. how does it make you feel and since this has happened, you have stepped forward, have those messages that were so hurtful, have they stopped? >> they have stopped. and i'm very grateful for that. [ applause ] >> that is beautiful. what do you want to say to the kids who said those horrible things? >> you may not be watching this tv show, or you may be staring at me at school and thinking, well, she -- she's not pretty or she's not popular, so we're going to dislike her and put her in this unpopular kid group.
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well, that's all right. that's all right. [ applause ] >> you know something, i think you're very pretty. and i think you're just a remarkable young lady to have the courage to do what you are doing and not letting this just destroy you. you know, kerry, when i see the horrible things that have happened to your daughter, i want to know, what has the school done. because that concerns me. have they stepped up and been supportive of shea? >> their words are trying to be. i wish they would do a whole lot more. i wish there were assemblies, i wish we had a parent meeting to let parents know about these apps their kids are using because they are not aware. so the school really hasn't done as much as i would like them to. >> what would you like to see happen to the people who have done the bullying, because some of the things that were said about shea, i read that and i'm
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thinking, i'm an adult and i've been through 20 years of politics and some of that is so over the top, i don't care who you are, that hurts. >> absolutely. they definitely need to be brought to justice. unfortunately, i don't know if our justice is prepared for what this is because bullying, this isn't i took your lunch money, this is a hate crime. i mean, a lot of these messages were you need to have a seizure and die and it is karma for me giving birth to her. is they attacked me in some of the text messages. and so if they are a minor, i would like their parents to have some sort of punishment or community service, if this person is an adult doing this to shea or these people, they need to be brought to justice in community service and working with special needs people just might open their eyes to what shea has to suffer through daily. >> and you have opened all of
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our eyes to not only how terrible these actions were to you, but you've opened our eyes to, shea, to what a beautiful person you are and how worthy you are of our love and support and standing behind you. and i want you to know, i'm with shea too. >> thank you. within just ten days of the media attention to shea's story, the local police department arrested and charged the juvenile girl with harassment. they claimed that she acted alone. they the accused teen did attend shea's school and lives down the street from her family. she is due in court at the end of the month. meanwhile shea has made a whole lot of new friends since she spoke up. she and her mother are featured on the cover of the spring edition of thrive magazine. [ applause ] up next, why is this man wearing nothing but a pink tutu in the middle of new york's time square. oh, no, he's not a street performer, he's doing it for a
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famous landmarks from coast to coast. they've been at the lincoln memorial in washington, d.c., the golden gate bridge in san francisco and to the grand canyon in arizona. he did it to cheer up his wife linda who was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2003. he has since photographed himself in his tutu around the world. and he's now published a book called ballerina. bob kerry and his wife join me now. bob and linda, so nice to have you here. >> thank you so much. >> you know, i wanted our audience to know as close as i'm getting to the tutu, i'm wearing a pink tie in your honor. no way i'm getting in a tutu, bob. >> come on. >> ain't gonna happen. first of all, how did you think this idea of a tutu, bob. what was going on in your head? >> well, it started out as an assignment, because i'm a commercial photographer and it was for a ballet company -- ballet company in arizona.
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and i had the prop over. and linda and i moved to new york 11 years ago and we had it in the car and i've been photographing myself for a long time any way, i put it on and there it was. >> well, i'm going to move the tutu off the table so we can see these photographs better. this is -- where was this one taken? >> in italy, the tianna in tuscany. >> now that probably caused some heads to turn. >> yeah. a few -- a few italian ladies kind of giggled and kept walking. >> well it is better that they did that and say you're the kind of guy i'm been waiting on all of these years. >> very much so. >> linda, when he first showed you himself in the tutu, i'm curious, did you say, bob, you need help? >> no. i'm sure i laughed quite a bit. i'm used to bob's creative solutions to projects or just
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life situations. and i laughed. i know i laughed a lot. because, i mean, come on, he's in a pink tutu. >> you were fighting breast cancer when this started and that is why he did it. >> well actually it started before that and it grew once i was diagnosed with breast cancer. >> did it cheer you up? >> certainly it. was a great thing to focus on when i was going to chemotherapy and we had just moved to the city and it was nice to have -- just a break from life. >> when you showed this initially to some of your friends, and said, hey, here is my husband, i'm just curious what kind of response did you get from that? >> i think our friends understand because they knew bob and some family wanted to know story behind it. what is bob up to now. >> one of the shops we have -- >> and bob, where is this one? this is from the ballet company. >> it was the american ballet theater at lincoln center. >> and they let you go on stage
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in your pink tutu. >> they set it up. one of our fans was a stage manager there and he helped make it happen. >> this is one of my favorites. this is standing in an opera house in new jersey. this is willie nelson's guitar named trigger. most famous guitar probably in america on that b bx king's lucille. and willie said the day the guitar gives out, because it has a hole in the bottom of the guitar, he said he is finished and retiring. you got to stand there and hold it and that is pretty cool. >> and all i remember hearing is the crew saying, do not drop that guitar. whatever you do. >> linda of all of the photos bob has taken in this tutu, do you have a favorite? >> this one right here. it just so happened -- good timing. i love this photograph. i think -- >> it is a little corny.
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okay, audience, calm down. >> it is. i just like the fact that you don't know whether he's disappearing or emerging and i think symbolically for someone with cancer there is all of these questions that are going on and it just really appealed to me. >> you created a book from this, a foundation. you raised money for people going through breast cancer. bob, bottom line, why do you do this? >> well, we've seen a lot of people going through their treatments and there isn't a lot of organizations that help women during their treatment. it is all about a cure or research. and for us, you know, linda has seen first-hand her friends that would come to chemotherapy with their child because they don't have childcare. and it is like, that is one of the hardest parts of the treatment, is to deal with the chemotherapy and the side effects. and for us, if they don't have
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the means to be taken care of, i feel like it is up to us to be able to help out with that. >> well, let me just say that what you've done is unique, creative, and i hope you're the only man in america that wants to do it. >> well there are a few. >> it is a wonderful tribute to your wife. >> thank you so much. >> you have chosen a unique way to express your love and your support for linda. you're beautiful people. it is so nice to have you hear. and thank you so much for sharing. >> thank you so much. up next, celebrating easter with a song from a christian duo, shane and shane. we'll be right back. e me... ...hey breathing's hard. know the feeling? copd includes emphysema and chronic bronchitis. spiriva is a once-daily inhaled copd maintenance treatment that helps open my obstructed airways for a full 24 hours. spiriva helps me breathe easier. spiriva handihaler tiotropium bromide inhalation powder
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does not replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms. tell your doctor if you have kidney problems, glaucoma, trouble urinating, or an enlarged prostate. these may worsen with spiriva. discuss all medicines you take, even eye drops. stop taking spiriva and seek immediate medical help if your breathing suddenly worsens, your throat or tongue swells, you get hives, vision changes or eye pain, or problems passing urine. other side effects include dry mouth and constipation. nothing can reverse copd. spiriva helps me breathe better. does breathing with copd weigh you down? don't wait to ask your doctor about spiriva.
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that corporate trial by fire when every slacker gets his due. and yet, there's someone around the office who hasn't had a performance review in a while. someone whose poor performance is slowing down the entire organization. i'm looking at you phone company dsl. go to comcastbusiness.com/ checkyourspeed. if we can't offer faster speeds or save you money we'll give you $150. comcast business built for business. they are a couple of musicians from texas that have a deep faith in god and they spread their message through their -- their message through their songs.
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please welcome shane and shane. it's naet that you are named the same and you have a real harmony, but not just in your music. you are working on something called the worship initiative and tell me what this is about because i think this is going to be an exciting tool for people, for musicians and not just church musicians but everybody that likes to play. got the opportunity to pour into people, to do songwriting and pour into worship leaders and had doors open up and creating this resource called the worship initiative that's going to be designed for anybody who's a musician, a worship leader or a songwriter to get better in their craft. we want to disciple them in their craft. and in their calling, what they're called to do in life. they're called to more than music. they're called to lead people in worship. >> you've got videos and how-to instructions on every instrument in the band.
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so a bass player like me or somebody who would like to be a bass player like me could watch these videos and learn not just by listening but watching somebody do what they're doing. >> we had our favorite musicians come down to the studio in dallas and we recorded 100 songs to start with. we videoed every instrument in real-time. so yeah, if you're a bass player you can watch the actual track being played with chords and chord charts. yeah, as a training tool it's really going to be useful. >> i hope people if they're into music will get a hold of it. we want to do a song you wrote. it's one of your songs. it's all about the liberty that we have in christ. it's a great song about our freedom. spiritual freedom. called "liberty." ♪ ♪ hey yeah hey
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bringing you uplifting stories of peopleor who face real challenges and who turn things around, maybe that would be t refreshing. some of the greatest most important stories have nothing to do with washington or wall street.ey they are not about politics they are about the stories of peopled like you who decided giving up or giving in wasn't an option.so we are reminded there are truly core rig gus and unselfish or people in the world who sometimes stand up for their rights, sometimes they stand up for others they give of themselves not because they are paid to but because they have something money can't buy. charact character. what will turn america back around sunday put back on our feet isn't action by withe politicians but when the character of our citizens is much like the people you have to met tonight.do you don't have to be on the front pages of the papers to be a hero. you might be a hero to someone in your family, your neighborhood or your community m
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simply by an unselfish act of kindness. i can't think of a better way to celebrate easter or passover. (applause) from all of us here at fox news huckabee from new york. good night and god pebless. >> special good friday edition of "the o'reilly factor" is on. >> i hope you have the presencea of jesus in your life. >> what about money is the new pope against capitalism?ow the n >> i think the only thing to be low you is not to have a job. don't work until you can get tht job that you want to have. >> a big tv star preaching self reliance to american young people. we will takeok a look at ashton kutcher's campaign. >> everything is possible with
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