tv Happening Now FOX News August 25, 2014 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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brown just now getting underway. the unarmed teenager shot and killed by a white ferguson, missouri, police officer on august 9. brown's family asked protesters to observe a day of silence today as they la leave this on o rest. cateam coverage throughout the hour. we begin live outside the baptist church in st. louis. >> we have seen very long lines outside the church as a crowd gathers to pay respects for michael brown. 2500 people have arrived thus far, the family will be beginning any minute now. the main thing sure he has been filled to capacity here. among those attending his local state, federal politicians including a delegation from the white house. highlighting just how much of an
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event this has become, snoop dogg, likely and nick cannon expected to attend as well. the service is expected to last a couple of hours. we spoke to charles ewing last night preparing his remarks and he told us what he is prepared to say today. >> we all need love, the family, the community, the police department, the formation as a whole. >> reverend l sharpton will be speaking. he told the crowd to respect wishes for peace and calm but remember as soon as he is laid to rest that they will return to their mission for justice. jon: garrett, thank you. ♪ jon: california wine country
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bracing for more aftershocks after a powerful earthquake rocks napa valley. good morning to you. >> we will go live to napa california where just a little more than 24 hours ago 6.0 magnitude quake struck, causing a whole lot of damage knocking out power causing gas and water lines to burst and smoke and fires around the area. >> the quake hitting the victoria era buildings hard. the san francisco bay area in 25 years. the quake rousing people out of bed in the middle of the night. >> it felt like somebody was hitting ready to pull the house out from underneath us. yes, yes, it was scary. >> the ceiling is crashed.
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>> the most common thing we saw were people walking on broken glass. we saw a lot of folks who had furniture come down on them. >> the house was fully involved in flames and pretty limited amount of water due to the fact several water mains had broken. jon: scary stuff when you are fast asleep. it hit as the winemakers were getting ready to harbor the stock. live in napa for us. >> this is one of the hardest hit areas, with standing amid the rubble in downtown napa where they suffered a whole lot of damage, and her top corner of the office building behind me is gone and the restaurant below it seriously damaged and a huge cleanup draws the head.
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there is too dangerous, more than a dozen inspectors will inspect the damage in napa and surrounding communities. 90-100 homes are unsafe. i not out power to thousands did it works to fix downlines and water and gas mains, 150 customers are still without power this hour. residents still talking about yesterday's scary wake-up call. >> we felt it, the whole house shook. i got my boys and we went into the doorway, it is very strong, it felt like 1989 all over aga again. >> it caused $6 billion in damage and killed 63 people.
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no fatalities we are told as a direct result of this earthquake, still 172 people treated for mostly minor injuries like cuts and bruises, broken bones and a couple of heart attacks. one adult in critical condition as is a 13-year-old boy struck by a chimney. city officials say most of napa valley is open for business and they want the tourists to come. a day off for the kids, the schools are closed today because many often significant damage, they will announce if classes will resume tomorrow. jon: and the harvest is on as far as we know? >> the harvest is on, a lot of wineries are picking up the shattered glass from broken bottles, they're working fast because they want to save the barrel set fell down, but the grapes continue to be picked especially the white wine grap
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grapes, the red grapes coming out later in september and october. jon: thank you. heather: let's talk about aftershocks, scientists say the aftershocks have been taking place for the last day could be going on for weeks. my next guest says this area is overdue for an even bigger qua quake. director of the seismological laboratory joins me now. could this now be the time for a serious earthquake on top of the one we just saw? >> we know we see a large magnitude earthquake in the bay area with the likelihood of a damaging earthquake over the course of the next three years. this was a devastating earthquake magnitude 6.0, but we have to be ready for mind. seven or larger earthquakes along the san andreas fault.
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it will release about three times as much energy as was released in this earthquake. heather: regarding able to predict with any more certainty the timing? possibly in 30 years, but could this happen a lot sooner than that? >> this could happen this afternoon or next week or a few years from now, this is the challenge were not able to predict when these earthquakes will owe kirk, but what we are able to do is provide a warning moments before the shaking starts. heather: what you said i think is so frightening to so many people who are certainly rattled from what happened. we have had situations before with earthquake after earthquake that happened, that is what triggered the tsunami in japan. is there anything you can advise folks in your area to do? >> this is a wake-up call for big earthquakes. how we are going to respond to
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the earthquake, how they will be protecting the family and the workplaces to reduce the overall impact of the earthquake when they do arrive. heather: let's talk about your early warning system, a test pilot program a right now. we have some audio, listen to that and you can explain it to us later. >> expected in three seconds. heather: so that message went out to some people in the area, tell us about that and how could more people get access to it? >> this is what we call the shake alert system, the early warning a project going onlong t coast and for number of years now, using 300 distributed across california to detect earthquakes and issue warnings when earthquake is underway. this not a public system, it is only in demonstration mode.
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we pushed out the warning to 150 test users including here in the san francisco bay area. the state legislature actually mandated that we built an early warning system yet there is no funding for it. with the appropriate push from the population public i think we could get this funded and build it, hopefully have a warning before the next earthquake. heather: we hope to be talking to you again soon, thanks. >> thank you. jon: you have missed on a hunt for the killer of american journalists james foley. have now identified the social media account used to post the first horrifying video of his beheading. chief intelligence correspondent
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live in washington with the latest on that. reporter: the jihadist is one of a dozen extremists acting on social media platforms and close to the state leadership. they were asked not to publish. wood tip off the user. posting pictures of senior leadership and counterterrorism groups telling fox news at just the operation the american journalist was controlled by top isis leaders. analysts say they are providing a credible alternative to the traditional al qaeda leadership. >> what other items they need to continue, the competition like any other marketplace will be good in the long run.
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reporter: many are shifting their routine, increasingly moving away from twitter as a video of the execution posted. once typical social media accounts are shut down. he is a leading suspect in the killing, fbi and british authorities have been conducting analysis on the video audio known in law-enforcement circles as the audio print, a multilayered approach. the flesh tone in the video because hand is not covered and of course he is a left-handed individual. the british ambassador told nbc news the community is close. they want a high degree of certainty of vivid a vacation
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because lethal force is on the table. jon: they seem to be moving very quickly. thank you. heather: he is accused the massacre at the colorado movie theater now the lawyers for james homes are getting ready to go to court trying to get certain evidence thrown out for the upcoming trial. and also following the president obama's frequent trips to the golf course throw democrats off course in november? we want to hear from you, should iexpand airstrikes into syria to target isis? go to foxnews.com/happening now and click on america's asking. hey, i notice your car is not in the driveway. yeah. it's in the shop. it's going to cost me an arm and a leg. that's hilarious. sorry. you shoulda taken it to midas. get some of that midas touch. they tell you what stuff needs fixing, and what stuff can wait. next time i'm going to midas. high-five!
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17-year-old originally pleading not guilty and then changing his plea not guilty by reason of insanity. the lawyers for james holmes accused in the deadly shooting spree at a colorado movie theater is now asking a judge to throw out fingerprint testimony: that evidence unreliable. he's accused of murdering 12 people and wounding dozens more. a suspect in custody after three people shot dead and for those injured on sunday. all within a san fernando valley the northern suburbs of los angeles, police say the attacks appeared to be random and they may have been carried out by the same gunman. we will watch that story. jon: president obama is back at the white house after two weeks vacation at martha's vineyard having in the face of criticism from members of his own party. "washington post" writes private the democratic party strategist are worried the style of leadership could hurt democratic chances in the midterm electio
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elections. let's bring in bret baier, anchor of "special report." he walks into the oval office saying thank goodness, my vacation is over. >> i tell you, the p.r. apparatus fo the white house is saying that. you will see him playing golf just because of the images, there were democrats speaking out of this perceived disconnected kind of president, and that is a concern were this close the midterm elections. thihis piece in "the washington post" hit it and that there were concerns not just from democrats and tough election, but democrats want the president to make the case for the party and the agenda, and question how and if he is going to make the case addressable. jon: you can see for the
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president he campaigned on ending the war in iraq, he has essentially bribe about bringing the troops home from iraq, now i iraq is inflamed again. his figure out what we do what course of action to take without reneging on the promises or the achievements he feels his administration has made. >> despite whatever the administration wants to see the world in the big picture, we are where we are with isis. depending on who you talk to, until it is officials will say the have-nots anything like isis for funding and the strength, the ability to train and recruit other terrorists in this terrorist army, not the messaging from officials is isis doesn't have the capability to strike the u.s. in a nine
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elevenths style attack. he just heard it here on fox say last hour, i think that is interesting, you look back last week at what was said by the defense secretary, vice president chairman of the joint chiefs between that message today and message of last week is pretty striking and isis is a threat, the question is how big of a one. jon: last week saying isis was as bad as anything we have seen, and yet chairman of the joint chief said he would not advocate airstrikes against isis in syria unless there was clear evidence it threatened the united states. if his boss, if the secretary of defense is saying is as bad as and if you have seen, doesn't that indicate it is a threat? >> the vice president said the same thing. the house intelligence committee chairman rogers saying more than
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2000 members they believe have western passports, and the ability to get to europe and get to the u.s., he said is one plane flight away. why is this messaging changing? perhaps it is because whatever message the president is considering will be dramatically scaled back from what his critics and even some democrats are calling for to deal with this threat. jon: the air operations that have taken place in iraq still have no name, correct? still no operation name given to this thing. >> there is not an operational name, that is fairly unique for a specific operation the pentagon. the number of airstrikes are significant and if you talk to the kurdish forces on the ground, it has had an effect in the fight against isis, billy to recapture the dam and other
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things, whether it expands and really goes after the heart of this organization, think we will have to see. the beheading of james foley was a moment, a turning point where a lot of the calls were coming from capitol hill. jon: a lot to talk about on "special report" now that the president is back in the oval office. bret baier. >> thank you. heather: a powerful earthquake rocked wine country, but how does the stack up against the biggest earthquakes ever to hit the golden state? and the president under pressure over isis, the white house considering expanding airstrikes into syria to defeat the brutal terrorists. more on that. you're on vacatio. in this place! (dolphin) sleep like you haven't seen your bed in days... no, in weeks!
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jon: the napa valley earthquake 6.0 damaged buildings and injured more than 100 people. the biggest quake to hit the san francisco bay area in 25 years but how does it compare to the biggest quake to ever hit that state? patti ann browne with some numbers on that. >> starting with the most recent, the northridge earthquake in 199420 miles northwest of los angeles, causing widespread damage clots in sections of major freeways destroying parking structures, residential buildings. five years earlier hit 10 miles northeast of santa cruz, 927.1, nicknamed the world series quake while the bay area baseball teams face each other. 63 people killed and 3750
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injured causing $6 billion in property damage. in 1971 the san fernando earthquake had magnitude 6.6 also known as the filmore quac . a magnitude 7.5, killed 12 people and injured at least 18 the dallas but also cause $50 million in property damage, and more than 100 years ago the great san fernando earthquake of 1906. 2 miles off the coast with a magnitude 7.8. killing 3000 people and some say double that. over 80% of the city of san francisco was destroyed by that quake, it extended
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296 miles. 3000 deaths, he can see it has come a long way. jon: thank you. heather: new growing details of the danger from terrorist in the middle east. the white house is considering expanding airstrikes into syria where isis has been a virtual safe haven there. and a big victory for isis over the weekend, capturing a large airbase in the eastern part of that country, imagine that. capturing a military base, that space is considered very important. several squadrons including helicopters. a main suspect in the beheading of american journalist james foley. a former national security advisor with the washington institute. let's talk about the u.s.
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possibly do more. is that strengthening the hand of a side, somebody we don't want in power anyway? >> you need a strategy to both roll back isis as well as to persecute the strategy of trying to get him to step aside. strengthening some of those forces on the ground syrian rebels fighting as well as isis. heather: how are we going to know now? >> that is an intelligence question, this is a type of problem with tackled in the past and the intelligence community if told to do this can do it. has to be a command coming from the president is committed to. heather: we have heard the
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back-and-forth in the last 24 even couple of hours, the administration stands on this issue, what do you think they're going to end up doing? >> some sort of conflict in the administration as it has been for syria. the president started with narrow objectives protecting u.s. facilities, saving those stock, and those objectives slowly expanded, but the strategy hasn't really caught up in a sense, so we need a strategy that matches some articulated objectives and we don't quite have that. heather: i wants to ask about the surprise release of this journalist apparently very involved in negotiating his release. his family says he did this on humanitarian ground, asking for release on the basis of that and no money was exchanged, do you believe that?
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>> it has been going on for many months since he was kidnapped, but certainly since the gruesome murder of james foley, lot of attention has been on their support for some of the extremist groups in the region and it may well be they decided they have to try harder on this in order to convince people they weren't behind other jihadist groups. heather: thank you very much, lot of other reporters being held in syria as well. you have the media panel coming up, we will talk more about isis and how the media has been covering the story coming up in a few moments. jon: the damage from the powerful napa quake could top a billion dollars. a shockingly low number of residents have earthquake insurance, we will tell you why. and live in st. louis as michael brown laid to rest after he was shot and killed by a police officer. sparking a violent protests, now
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>> right now let's take a quick look at what's to come in this hour of "happening now." a major fast food restaurant in the united states working on a deal to buy the canadian tim horton's donut chain. the move would switch the company headquarters abroad and result in a lower tax bill. ebola stretching beyond west
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africa as two people test positive with a new strain of the deadly virus. this as another doctor given an experimental serum as died. this 6-year-old boy playing at the side of a road is run over by a careless driver and it is all caught on video but amazingly, that little boy stands up and walks way from the s.u.v. we'll tell you how he managed to survive that accident. >> unbelievable. now to the battle against isis. president obama calls that terror group a cancer spreading as kro the middle east. secretary of state john kerry condemns them as savages but some suggest there might be a problem with the categorizations that this kind of language plays into the hands of the terrorists. this as the others in the media suggest the u.s. is actually overreacting to the threat of isis. joining us is the contributing editor and writer for american conservative magazine, alan
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colmes is with us, author of thank the liberals for saving america, both are fox news attributors. isis was rampaging across syria and parts of iraq, they were beheading children, burying people alive, engaging in wholesale, you know, raping of women and slaughtering of entire villages. and yet it took the murder of the awful beheading of an american journalist before the u.s. media really started to pay serious attention. why? >> right. and when they did start paying attention, they still have a hard time processing this concept of evil. looking at news busters and i note the work of tim graham and tom bloomer, both of whom caught the "new york times" and national public radio and abc news saying who are we to judge? this is very important. it's really george w. bush's fault. he got us into this 10 years
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ago. the media is afraid to call evil evil and they're also afraid to do anything that would make it look like we have to go back and fight in iraq again and maybe bush had a point a decade ago. >> alan, you say there was overreaction to 9/11? >> absolutely. we went into afghanistan to get the terror training camps, went to iraq that had nothing to do with 9/11. we risk the same reaction now, overreaction based on what the geo political risk analysis says this is a group of people who can't even defeat the sunnis in southern iraq and yet, the level of threat that they present has been so overstated, you have jim doing a local interview in oklahoma city, senator saying they're going to attack an american city, a major american city, this is a scare tactic. yes, we have to confront it, deal with it but usually words like evil and revving people up is exactly what the terrorists
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want us to do and it's the reaction we had after 9/11 that didn't surface well. we said we're going to defeat evil, we're going to defeat terror then. how good of a job have we done? >> jim, they did manage to, you know, overrun iraqi military installations, steal american equipment that we left there for the iraqi army. >> you're right. they're quite -- i think they're quite a threat. the idea they might have some of these surface to air missiles, hand held things that shoots in airliners alone gives us a real urgency. listen. if you take alan's point, to say that we need a measured, thoughtful response to isis, you might even look at the "new york times" editorial this morning on isis but it says we need to coordinate with arabs and other muslim allies and so on such as they are. they're right. here is where we have the problem of the current situation which is the president is too busy playing golf f. we do need as the "new york times" says a plan to work with turkey and saudi arabia and egypt and jordan and whoever else, where
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is the president on this? last time we heard the secretary of state on this issue, he was trying to negotiate a piece between israel and the palestinians or fighting the all important threat of global warming. the administration has to get his private off the golf course and on to what it takes to actually contain and roll back isis. >> i don't believe the president should be photographed playing golf at this time nor should he have been perhaps on vacation. this has been a bad move optically for the white house but it's so easy to say they're playing golf and talking about global warming when they have addressed this. john kerry is one of the people who did call isis evil and i'm not sure that kind of rhetoric truly helps. i think we're playing into their hands by doing this. >> seems that the administration itself doesn't quite know how to describe this threat. you know, when the chairman of the joint chiefs says that isis is an immediate threat to the west, but then says he wouldn't advocate airstrikes in syria until it becomes an immediate threat to the west, you've got
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john kerry calling them bar baric, the president using similar kinds of language, they can't all get on the same page as to what the group is. >> right. and we're leading from behind. that was a favorite line from libya, from three years ago. look. i think that's still clearly where they are. the president said that isis is the junior varsity and we shouldn't worry. the rhetoric has shifted and gotten more urgent relative to the situation. what you haven't seen, though, is concrete action. you haven't seen john kerry pulling together a summit conference of interested parties in the area and keep the countries that surround isis and do anything about it. "new york times" editorial this morning is important. it's damning of what the administration has failed to do. >> how can you say we have not had concrete action? we've gone into northern iraq, gone after isis, done target bombing and i'm concerned about going into syria. who are our peace partners there? we're on the side of asad, would
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we not? who do we partner with as the president pointed out in an interview a week ago? we don't have a peace partner there and we would be, i want to reiterate, partnering with asad if we fight isis in syria. >> many thorny questions yet to be hammered out. president is back in the oval office today. the vacation is over. we'll see what happens. we'll be keeping an eye on it throughout the day. thank you. >> thank you. >> folks in northern california were jolted out of bed very early on sunday morning, a 6.0 magnitude earthquake rattled the bay area but homeowners could get an evil bigger wakeup call. we'll explain that coming up next. >> and also, the home of the whopper may no longer call the united states home. burger king announcing talks to buy a canadian donut chain that could radically alter the fast food giant.
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top of hour. what do you have coming up? >> hi, guys. should the united states go after isis in syria? the chairman of joint chiefs of staff saying not so fast but some the threat to the united states is real. wheat the best move to make? >> president obama back at work today after receiving a loft criticism for how he handled crises during his vacation. can he change the conversation in time for midterms? >> pediatricians are saying that kids need their rest but what about enforcing earlier bedtimes? >> all that plus our hashtag one lucky guy, the first time he's been on "outnumbered" at the top of the hour. sdm looking forward to that. we'll find out who it is in 15 minutes. >> thank you. >> all right. the san francisco bay area and also the napa area are facing really big costs from yesterday's earthquake. the u.s. geo logical survey reports that losses from the quake could top $1 billion. california, of course, has numerous fault lines and geologists have warned the state
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faces a high risk of far more powerful earthquake, yet we're learning that just 10% of homeowners in california actually have earthquake insurance. so what can homeowners do about it now? let's bring in the correspondent for the fox business network. we should mention that homeowner's insurance doesn't cover earthquakes, either. so how are we paying for this? >> this is a moral hazard. if you keep bailing people out in the areas, if the government hands them money, they will keep moving back to these areas and listen. i'm not for government mandating insurance. i'm also for government not bailing out people that made the stupid decision to move their house to live on a fault line and expect nothing ever to happen. these people are out of luck, unfortunately. >> let's get to that point about moral hazard in a second but how are they going to pay for that? government bail them out? do we bail them out? >> i don't know yet. there's a certain degree, i don't think anybody knows.
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there's a certain amount of disaster relief from the government that will cover half of it. here's the thing. if you live on a beach, expect a hurricane to some point possibly wipe out your house. get the insurance. if you don't, we the taxpayer should not be bailing you out. >> a lot of mortgages and folks who watch us on the southeast, a lot of mortgages require that you have flood insurance if you live in a certain flood zone. that's not required of mortgage holders in california. >> it's odd in this sense. california is the epitome of the nanny state. taxes are off the charts out there. this is almost a socialist country yet the one thing that they should be doing is require people to have earthquake insurance. my guess is, they know that people are so overburdened that that might be just another reason for people to leave, if they're mandated to have insurance on top of taxes, on top of everything else. >> let's about the second topic and that's that burger king is
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looking at buying tim horton's. it's a big donut chain. >> i've heard of them. i know junk food >> so you're the donut guy. why would burger king do this? there's speculation that they would save a lot in taxes and that's why. >> they're going to come out and say the economy, synergiesynerg putting two companies together, financing is cheap. we have a fiduciary responsibility. horton's is headquartered in ontario. they can move their corporate headquarters up there and burger king could save a lot in taxes. this is a problem with our u.s. tax code. it's so injurous to american corporations. tax rates in our countries are much, much less. obama administration is going to try to stop some of this, either by fiat, executive order, i'm not sure but jack lou is looking at somebody. the real problem is we need
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corporate tax reform. if they just lowered the corporate tax rates, guess what? money held overseas by all the big tech corporations like apple probably will come to the u.s., be able to tax it but also that money would be coming back to the u.s. and they might be putting it to use like hiring people. >> here are the corporate tax rate. it's 35%. in ontario it's 20% less than that. >> you're the c.e.o. of the company. you have a fiduciary response to your shareholders. by law you have to try to lessen that corporate tax bill. by law. >> interesting. would burger king still pay taxes based on the u.s. sales even if they move there? of course they would. >> it's the corporate tax we're talking about. they're going to get taxed. if you buy a whopper, there's going to be a tax with it, i guess. >> a lot of folks in the administration say no, they're not paying anything. they're shipping everything overseas and that's not altogether accurate. >> if they're saying that, they are like -- you know, that is not true. i mean, we're talking about clearly the corporate tax rate
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which is a lot lower over there than it is here and that's why companies are doing it. c.e.o.'s of companies have to do this. they're required by law to lessen their tax bill. >> thank you so much. talk to you soon. >> there are new fears that deadly ebola outbreak is spreading and as a health care worker arrives in the u.k. for treatment, we're learning about the death of another doctor similarly infected. we're live with all the breaking developments. plus we're live in st. louis. family and friends are saying go ahead bye to michael brown there, the teen shot and killed by police earlier this month. his death sparked those violent protests but his family is asking for a day of peace as they lay him to rest. team fox coverage next. when you run a business, you can't settle for slow.
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>> this just in. new developments in the deadly ebola outbreak from the death of a doctor given the experimental drugs to new fears the virus is spreading beyond west africa to a new country now. steve brown is covering it all from the new york city news room. >> only six people in the world have received the experimental drug. two were the americans who survived after contracting ebola in liberia. three were line earian health workers and a sixth, a spanish missionary priest who got the drug died and now one of the three line earians, a doctor has died. health experts stress it's not clear whether it works. they say there's no proven cure or vaccine for ebola which kills 90% of those who get it. survival is more likely if a patient is treated with intravenous fluids and their oxygen status and blood pressure are maintained. still the current outbreak has killed more than 1400 people
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across west africa and now there is frightening evidence that this devastating illness is spreading beyond west africa. official in congo says two people there have tested positive. it's a different strain from the one in west africa. in fact, 13 people in congo have died from ebola-like symptoms in recent weeks. so far blood samples from only two have tested positive for ebola. world health organization says the congo strain appears to be unrelated to the epidemic in west africa. meanwhile, a british health worker infected with the virus is now being treated at a high level isolation unit at a hospital in london. a scientist who worked with him identifies the patient as a 29-year-old volunteer nurse. >> thank you so much. >> some brand new stories we're working for you on the next hour of "happening now." an explosion at a recycling plant kills at least two people. we're following the latest as crews on the ground try to
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>> he may be the world's unluckiest or maybe luckiest child. watch this surveillance video out of china. an s.u.v. runs over the boy who is playing in the road. the driver never even hit the brake. but after he is hit, the boy gets up and walks away. he was treated at a hospital for minor scrapes and bruises but he is absolutely okay. unbelievable video. wow. i guess playing in the road not the safest thing. >> kids that age so it's very hard for me as a mother to watch something like that. thank. ly he's all right but boy, that's crazy.
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>> and the driver apparently had no idea. >> all right. poor little guy. >> we'll see you back here in one hour. "outnumbered" starts right now. >> this is "outnumbered." today's hashtag one lucky guy, twitter demanded it, fox news contributor and former spokesperson for the u.s. ambassadors to the u.n., rick grinnel and he's outnumbered. >> how does it feel to be surrounded by all the ladies? >> feels good although they told me i have to put my tush here in the middle of the section. crack on crack. >> one way or the other. is that what you're saying? >> i'll see how it goes. >> don't cross that line. >> social media loves you, by the way. >> i would say some on social
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