tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 13, 2014 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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morning. today is saturday, the 13th of september, 2014. i'm anna kooiman. we start with a fox news alert. while you were sleeping, another nfl super star, adrian peterson turned himself in to the authorities. this time the charge child endangerment. we have all the details. >> this just in this morning, according to the white house, we are at war with isis. somebody ought to tell the secretary of state. john kerry trying to bailed coalition of support right now. spreading the word we are not at war. what is going on. >> and what in the world could be offensive about this? some serious feathers ruffled at a california high school over the chick-fil-a sandwich. do some people not like
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pickles on their chick-fil-a sandwiches? "fox & friends" begins right now. >> this is senator joe lieberman. you are watching "fox & friends." >> oh, yeah. well, good morning. >> washat joe lieberman? what a nice guy he is we are glad to see you. it is very early on the east coast. even earlier on the west. >> you can smell the fall air? >> i'm city thinking about chick-fil-a chicken sandwiches and milk shakes. >> pumpkin spice lattes. >> can we get some food out here? >> i used to have one literally on the corner when i lived in north carolina. we don't have very many chick-fil-as. >> they are all eating breakfast around here. that's why you are so hungry. more on food-related news in a moment. first the headlines to get to. >> we start with this. a fox news alert. a new scandal rocks nfl overnight. minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson turns
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himself in to police in texas accused of child abuse. he was quickly released on $15,000 bond. the alleged victim is peterson's 4 -year-old boy. he visited peterson's home in may. when the visit him in minnesota took him to the doctor to treat open wounds on his legs. the doctor reported the injuries to police. the quote whooping was punishment for his son pushing another child. his attorney issuing this statement. adrian is a loving father who used his judgment as a parent to discipline his son. the team now benching star player for tomorrow's game against the patriots. the nfl has not acted but is investigating. the desperate search continues this morning for a missing navy pilot in the western pacific ocean. two fighter jets collided yesterday near wake island. one of the pilots able to eject safely and is now in fair condition.
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rescue crews all looking for the other pilot. it's reported the flight deck crucify the uss karl vincent seeing debris flying in all directions. caught on camera, police in florida have another run-in with the george zimmerman. the former neighborhood watchman questioned outside of the building in an orlando suburb two days after a driver claimed as i rememberman and a friend threatened him while stopped at a light. >> is that a third time? >> and i looked over and it's george zimmerman was the driver and they were threatening to kick my [bleep] and to shoot me. >> well, two days after the threat, the man called police saying zimmerman was outside of his work building. zimmerman admitted to exchanging words with the man but says he was not following him. [inaudible]
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the man is not pressing charges. he was accused in the brutal murder of 17-year-old travon martin. he has been pulled over three times for traffic violations. it's the 10-million-dollar question. be there for your child's birth or compete for 10 million bucks. posed with that very question pro-golfer billie has already made up his mind with his wife expecting any day now, he has decided to compete for the 10-million-dollar prize at the tour championships and his wife, well, she says she is all for it he is currently in the lead and that baby may have a nice college fund waiting on him. >> that's how the men -- notice that his wife is totally for it. >> what would you do if you were trying to rally your country and the world behind the commitment of troops and a war?
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>> yeah. >> wouldn't you come up with a consistent way to describe what you were doing? wouldn't have you a conference call among all the principles who work for your administration to figure out what we are going to call this effort? >> or would you go out with inconsistent messages from all members at your top staff at the podium. >> or would you have a message and realize it's not working and liberal media question you on it so then you question your message. >> the call on what we are doing with isil and isis. even the name. are we at war or not at war. no we're not at war. listen to josh ernt white house press secretary we are at war this morning if you are keeping tabs. >> this is not a situation where it's the united states against isil. the fact is, isil has indicated that they are ready to go to war against
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the world. and this president, as is expected of american presidents, is stepping up to lead an international coalition to confront that threat. the united states is at war with isil in the same way that we are at war with al qaeda and al qaeda affiliates all around the globe. >> you heard it there. that's the president's spokesman. the united states is at war with isil or isis. or whatever we are calling it now. no one has told john kerry who by the way is the secretary of state of the united states. listen to his response when asked the same question. >> is the united states at war with isis? it sure sounds from the president's speech that we are. >> i think that's the wrong terminology. what we are doing is engaging in a very significant counter operation. >> i don't know whether you want to car call that war or sustained counter terrorism. i think frankly this is a counter terrorism operation that will take time. it will be sustained.
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we will not have american combat forces on the ground fighting as we did in iraq and afghanistan, which is what i think the american people think of when they think of a war. >> susan rice saying the same thing because there are no boots on the ground. it's not really a war. and, you know, and then there is is the semantics game with that, the boots on the ground too. authorizing more military advisors to go and i think they might wear boots and they might have boots on the ground. >> office complex 475 people in an office complex dictating. this exactly. so building this coalition of getting moderate syrian fighters which, by the way, what does that mean if you are a moderate syrian fighter? what is the litani must test for that which the president mentioned the other night. what other countries are involved in coalition building. you saw all these countries popping off. britain saying not really. listen to what charles krauthammer had to say about this with our allies last night. >> remember how democrats
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ridiculed george w. because he went it alone into iraq? according to the u.s. army, the center of military history, george w. had 38 allies with boots on the ground amounting to more than 25,000 allies on the ground with us. obama, as of today, has zero. and there are are very few prospects of any allies contributing anybody on the ground and thus far we haven't heard of anybody even helping us in the air. >> well, you can see why. if we can't even decide what it's called or what our objective is, can you see why people would be spooked to join us. make no mistake. this is about other countries in the region. we face a the lo of threats from isis or isil, or whatever we are calling it. the main threat is that we will topple our allies in the persian gulf, cut tar, amman. that's where our energy comes from. that region controls global oil prices. if those countries were to
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fall to the lunatics that would destroy the u.s. economy. we would be poor. that's the worse of all outcomes. that is the danger right there that those countries fall to these crazies. >> that's why you are hearing some support come from the likes of iran of all places to join with the united states. >> sure isis is sunni, they are not. >> and talk about our alliesando join when we have this strategy/non-strategy and lay out a strategy and call it war and not call a war. can you imagine being a military service member right now and trying to figure out what you should be doing and how you should be feeling and what you should be, you know, communicating to your family everybody is in a spot right now. >> i know you are feeling right now. >> hangry. >> chick-fil-a sandwiches that is what set you off the southern girl new. this is offensive, look at that sandwich how offensive it is the glamour shots
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background may be the most offensive thing about this. california school, huh-uh, no more chick-fil-a sandwiches. >> that's because their leadership there says that they don't agree with the owner's stance on gay rights and thinks it may offend somebody so they don't want these chick-fil-a chicken sandwiches on their campus. my question is are they going to start asking the green bean company and chocolate milk company what's your stance on gay marriage? what's your stance on abortion? what's your stance on gun rights? you are not allowed on campus either. >> what's so interesting is and ironic, the more we focus on tolerance on sparing the feeling of others the more intolerant we seem to become. of the ideal was live and let live. you have a different view, i may profoundly disagree with your view. i'm not going to try to hurt you or force to you conform. all the sudden it's not okay to have a different view. a lot of people agree -- disagree with if i can which i pray's decision but still
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eat there. >> are you going to police everyone's bag and see if they're eating a chicken sandwich. >> we have been moving in that direction. i have been joking for years about mandatory flossing. it's coming. >> let's face it for some people they need it. weigh in on ff weekend. check in with rick reichmuth. >> doesn't that add like seven years to your life flossing? >> yes, it does. any dentist. would you take a toothbrush or dental floss they will all go with the floss. >> my dentist told me if you had to do one or the other at the end of the night floss. >> i only do one. let us know which one that is, tucker. all right. clayton has been talking and it feels like fall finally out there. it also feels like winter for parts of the high plains and northern rockies. we had snow this week. hard to imagine we are heading into that time of season. it's coming a little bit prematurely, don't worry, it's not going to last too long. it's going to warm back up. rain showers move through the northeast during the overnight hours. we're watching a little bit
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of a tropical disturbance that's been moving across south florida bringing at love rain. now moving into the gulf. we are around the peak of hurricane season just a couple days past it. we think most of the environmental conditions will not be conducive for this to develop into anything more significant as it moves through the gulf. another tropical disturbance as it brings rain across texas and hurricane baja this will bring more rain across the southwest. none of it immediate concern at this point. temperaturewise we will warm things up a little bit. take a look at this if you are not enjoying warm temperatures. 70s by the time we get to parts of this week again. baja. [ laughter ] >> very good. coming up on the show. while the united states plans to battle isis overseas, the terror group is already within our borders, frightening new revelations about the hot beds in your backyard. >> there is no need to let it go just yet. disney bringing back the world of frozen coming back
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hot bed of extremists. according to the "new york post," the mosque, a frequent place for worship for tam merlin tsarnaev, the boston bomber is also linked to abu muse are must are. >> joining us live now. thanks for coming on this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> it sounds like we know or we believe we know that this one mosque really is a
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breeding ground for extremism. what are we doing about that >> tucker that's a really interesting question. what are we doing about it? what we are hearing from the administration we are at war maybe we are at war. that's an important distinction here because that sets up what we should be doing at home. from my standpoint, we are at war. let's make no mistake about this. we are at war. so, what this does is this says to us that this mosque, the people that are are coming out of it, the extremism that is coming out of this, this is really traitorous stuff here. let's not mince words. we are dealing with traitors here in boston and spreading throughout the country. >> we just had a report from the cia out yesterday saying that isis potentially is going to 31,000 strong and a couple thousand of them have western passports.
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it's not just boston. we talked about a 19-year-old girl in colorado. we have folks in minneapolis. what is the administration doing about it? we want to at least give the side from the cambridge mosque on this. they say that according to our records, we f. we can go ahead and show. this according to our records abu sum are a never came to or had association with our mosque. do you think that the administration is turning a blind eye the adage where there is smoke there is fire applies here. the administration is, i think, turning a blind eye but more importantly here what is going on is that we have not -- 13 years later, we still haven't learned our lesson yet. and this lesson is mainly about communication. it's about information sharing. it's about the federal government talking to local
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law enforcement. i think it's really important to state: we have 800,000 law enforcement officers on the street. and i think the federal government needs to do a lot better job of incorporating them here into the overall counter terrorism operation to protect the homeland because those are the people that really know america the best. >> right. it seems that one of the lessons has to do with immigration. the overwhelming majority of these people are foreign-born not all but most of them for sure. they come from a pretty small number of countries. has anybody in congress made the obvious point that maybe we should clamp down on immigration from those countries or the united states? why wouldn't we do that? >> tucker because i think we are -- congress especially has really confused the issue here. the issue is, i think like you are alluding, to it's about security. right? so what we need to do is we need to have congress and the administration back up on this. and sort -- and really pass a really strong border
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security reform because, without border security reform, any immigration that we do is really not going to be effective. we absolutely have to do it now there are bills. there are people that have -- my former boss, chairman michael mccaul, he has a border security bill that i really hope the congress and the house of representatives takes up. because it's really important here. >> we should point out this is legal immigration not just border. nice to talk to you this morning. >> very nice to talk to you. thank you very much. >> 20 minutes after the hour a new bombshell report the federal government forced yahoo to turn over private information or pay a quarter million dollars a day. so how is this government shakedown allowed to happen. >> the lives of snorkelers in serious danger when they lost track of the boat that brought them out. the rescue was caught on camera. we have it all coming up.
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hey, everybody. good morning. not taking any more chances the high school shooter t.j. ellayna and two other inmates transferred. now serving their sentences at a high security prison in northeastern ohio. this comes just a day after the three scaled offense at a lima prison and fled. they were busted hours later. and the terrorist gang that tried to assassinate. arresting the 10 militants connected to the 2012 shooting. he was targeted for speaking out against the taliban and
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fighting for gender equality. she has made a miraculous recovery. clayton. >> thanks, anna. listen to this. remember when it was revealed that several tech companies were data to the tsa. yahoo tried to refuse the request. even bringing the matter to court. however, the court ruled that they had to give up the information and threatened to fine the company $250,000 a day if they didn't do it. now, yahoo is making the court's papers public for the first time. here with more insight into the issue is tim become his or her specializes in internet and privacy law. good to see you. >> good to see you, clayton. >> what's the big take away from yahoo doing this. >> the big take away is not so much under the national security issues this information should have been handed over or not, it's really the fact that the american citizens didn't know about it for a good five years. >> they were fighting this fight behind closed doors. they were saying to the nsa we are not giving you our users' private data. you have no right to have
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access to this information. what was the nsa saying back to them? >> the nsa was saying that we have an order through the fisa court, the foreign intelligence surveillance act court and if you don't comply with the order then we will move for contempt. and ask the court to fine you $250,000 a day. >> so what specific data were they trying to get from yahoo and other companies? >> sure, emails, online activity. any kind of content that users input via their yahoo services. >> that of course run the gamut. one the largest email providers in the world next to g mail. flicker. so thousands of photos. millions of photos being uploaded every day to flicker services. yahoo finance documents. one of the largest in the world. >> exactly. plethora of interconnected services yahoo and subsidiaries. >> do we know what other companies rolled over for the federal government in this and complied and didn't put up the good fight? >> we don't know that they rolled over.
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google, facebook. they admit doing so. under the fisa courts all of these appeals. they're secret. yahoo only just won the right to declassify the ruling. we don't know what other companies really even put up a fight at this point. >> i want to put this up. here is a statement from yahoo on exactly what they did and when they fought this. this is yahoo's general council. we consider this is a win for transparency. upmost seriousness but protecting user's data. l, clear or request laws we overbroad. will we see other tech companies coming forward now that yahoo has cleared the path for them? wouldn't we see some stuff released from apple a few months ago as well? >> i think we will see other tech companies try to fight this. there is research done. analysts are estimating that this could cost the cloud computing industry something like $35 million a year as european consumers move away from american providers to
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european providers who are under stricter policy. >> shouldn't would he be fearful of the services needing may have given data to the national security administration. yahoo we are on your side now because now we know you are putting up the good fight. leave those other services and jump over to yahoo? >> yeah. something can be to yahoo for seeking that sort of transparency. again, for five years the american public was not allowed to know what happened behind those closed doors when yahoo was fighting for declassification. now that we know it's certainly to yahoo's benefit that they were the first to seek out that fight. >> wonderful to see people leaving g mail and jumping over to yahoo as a result of it tim, great to see you this morning. >> thank you very much. >> coming up on the show the parents of jim foley speaking out now saying the federal government threatened to arrest them if they tried to free their son. this story you have to hear. and no need to let it go
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just yet. disney bringing the world of frozen back to life. i'm just thankful my 3-year-old didn't want to be elsa or anna for halloween this year. she wants to be a monkey. ♪ here i stand ♪ and here i stay ♪ and here i stay ♪ let the storm rage on ♪ like buy one get one 1/2 off select men's and ladies' jeans. and save $40 on these timberland steel tow work boots. dad,thank you mom for said this oftprotecting my future.you. thank you for being my hero and my dad. military families are uniquely thankful for many things, the legacy of usaa auto insurance could be one of them. if you're a current or former military member or their family,
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this week president obama gave a big speech from the white house where he outlined his plan to, quote. degrade and ultimately destroy the terror group isis. when asked how he said i'm going to build their web site. [ laughter ] >> that's pretty good if you ask the parents of jim foley, of course, the american journalist brutally killed by isis what the president could have done, could the president have intervened earlier to stop the spread of isis they said unequivocally yes. "on the record" with greta van susteren john and diane foley talk about the whole process over the past few years. we have gotten some insight into what they were going through over the past few years and they were trying to raise money. there was ransom money being requested at the hands of isis and other countries had been forthcoming. but what were they allowed to do and what did the governments say to them when they were trying to raise
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money to get their son back? listen. >> we were told we couldn't do prisoner exchange. we were told very clearly we could not raise ransom. that we would go to jail. we would be prosecuted. >> and that they would not negotiate with other countries. >> weren't the -- the thing that was missing was the trust. the trust in the fbi, the state department with us as hostage families. all i guess we were looking for was just some indication of we can't tell you what was going on. i just think we needed a little more information and a little more trust. we felt like outsiders asking favors. and i believe -- i believe in my heart that the government was doing the best they could. >> really, the best they could? so their son was kidnapped by lunatics in syria. and the obama administration threatened them with prosecution if they raised money. boy if only he had had been
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shot by a cop they would have been completely on their side and helping them. >> obama people threatened them. >> what would you as a parent do in that situation? >> absolutely. you wonder how are they told about this? how did they find out about this tragic death? essentially if you think about james foley's beheading that's really what caused the world to wake up and the administration to start getting the ball rolling and realizing how big of a threat isis really is. instead of apologizing to them or saying folks, we really are feeling your pain right now, about these tragic butcherers taking the life of your son, letting them know what was going on. they didn't find out from the government. the news. listen. how did you learn the bad news. >> not the greatest way. we learned about one journalist joining us and crying on the phone you have
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seen the news. and followed up with my brother saying oh, diane, you have got to -- and then we turned on the news. it was the news. >> you have seen the video? >> not all of it. we don't want to see that that's their propaganda. we want to remember how jim lived, greta. jim was just a beautiful young man. he was the best of america. >> just trying to get everybody to wake up and see what was going on there he was trying to spread the word. this is the plight that's going on. this is the threat of isis. >> two things stand out to me. how horrible it was they had to learn by a phone call and not the federal government letting them know what was unfolding in the last few hours and days as they had that information. the second part though is how remarkable this family is to me. from the moment that they stood out in front of that podium, i mean, resiliency, stead fast resolve to see justice brought to this part of the world. brother for the mom to the father. just a remarkable family. >> it seems to me the only reason we have a government
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at all is to protect and to take care of americans in their interests and so if one is being held abroad, there is no greater priority for the u.s. government. take care of americans, right? >> exactly. >> with contempt. threaten them with jail. >> we had an operation to go and try to rescue them. but the family was never made aware of it. even after it unfolded they were not made aware of it until they had to hear about it. >> you can understand the government's standpoint not negotiating with terrorists is is because the argument is it would put a price on every american's head traveling abroad to. handle it this way threaten with prosecution and arrest family going through something like this and having to hear about it by reading the headlines on turning on the television. >> more about that story throughout our show this morning. let us know your thoughts this morning, friends@foxnews.com. weigh in a give us your thoughts. >> other things we are reporting on this morning. mysterious lung virus spreading fast. new york more than dozen cases of the entervirus. health officials in
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connecticut can, arkansas also investigating possible cases. it was sickened hundreds of children in at least 13 other states since mid august. there is no vaccine and no cure. a dramatic water rescue caught on camera, two friends pulled to safety after their boat drifted away. the pair forgetting to anchor their boat while smork ling off beach in florida. after yelling for several minutes, someone on shore heard them and called for help. >> >> for a long time i felt quite calm. just taking in deep breaths and seeing slow air it was a long time. we must have been drifting out there, i don't know, over an hour. >> their boat was eventually found and toed to a dock. lava from one of the world's most active volcano could reach island any day now. the lava moving up to 300 yards per day could slow down and veering off towards more level land. residents have not been evacuated but were told to remain alert. >> how do you stop lava that
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comes near your house. >> get away from it. >> get the hose out? >> parents, are you ready to experience this is in -- are you ready to experience this in real life? ♪ let it go ♪ let it go ♪ i am with the one with the wind and sky ♪ let it go. >> sign me up. yes. disney world's epcot park in florida is about to get frozen. a new icy attraction is in development featuring favorite moments and songs from the animated family flick. there will also be a royal greeting area where kids can meet and sing with princesses elsa and ana. opening date not yet. >> i like epcot. that's the adult themed park in disney world because there is alcohol there. >> let's check in with rick reichmuth now. >> you will need it when you go to the elsa ride. >> i would need plenty. can you tell that it's a little dark out here? >> it is.
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>> shorter days. colder days coming. really cold this week. take a look at the weather maps. we have a couple things going on o. all kind of frost advisories in effect this morning. take a look at that from parts of colorado all the way up through parts of the western great lakes. northern plains, very cold mornings, some of those sensitive plains possibly in a little bit of harm's way this morning. first alert forecast for the day today. across the northeast. take a look at this. showers are going to move throughout the day. nothing that's going to be super heavy and behind it slightly cooler temperatures. tonight will be another cold night. in fact, colder night tonight than you were this morning. down to the southeast. here is where we have more rain showers. kind of this front that stalled out across parts of the great lakes in towards areas of the south. that's going to bring some scattered showers. also evidencier rain for south florida and watching threat for tropical development into the northern plains though. a really beautiful fall like day. temps getting back into the 60's. warmer and see plenty of sunshine. any time you are really cold in one place and really warm
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in another place. southern california. heat advisories going on. a very very warm day. we will see everybody looking at temperatures into the 90's. 101 again in phoenix. 87 up in portland. there is still some somewhere to be had somewhere you just have to go out west. guys? >> thank you, rick. >> coming up, is the war on drugs over? a new says just make everything legal. heroin, cocaine, legal for sale at the grocery store. former white house drug caesarins us live with the sobering reality of legalizing drugs. >> and martha stuart not holding back on gwinn paltrow on a new hold barred interview. why she is calling paltrow martha. that's next. and just give them the basics, you know. i got this. [thinking] is it that time? the son picks up the check?
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welcome back. some quick headlines for you. the medical director of the clinic where joan rivers had the procedure that led to her death has now stepped down. dr. lawrence b. cohen performed the throat procedure on rivers. now we are learning that he faced a malpractice suit in 2004 for a similar operation. the manhattan clinic is currently being investigated. and matha -- martha stuart gwyneth paltrow she is not a fan of the web site goop. saying she needs to be quiet. she is a movie star. if she were confident in her acting she wouldn't try to be martha stuart. i love it tucker? >> thanks, clayton. drug use and sales is to decriminalize heroin and cocaine and regulate them through the government. would the strategy really
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help or would it hurt? joining us now is former drug czar, old friend john walters. good morning. >> hi, tucker. how are you? >> i'm doing great. this is a report from -- it's not an official report but it's from former heads of state. former u.s. secretary of state george schultz among them and basically concludes the war on drugs has been a failure. it's super expensive. people die as a result. let's just give up. what do you think of that? >> it requires us to suspend what we know. do the people, first of all, as you said, this isn't an official body. this is a collection of people, including the president of colombia when the cartels ran parts of the country. not the one who cleaned up the place. president -- do we really want more drugs? do the people who run -- the rich people and other people who write this report, when they go to look for a house, do they live in neighborhood where there is more drugs or less drugs. when they want to send their kids to school more drugs or less drugs. richard branson is one of the members of this commission. he wants to fly pilots for airplanes. does he look for pilots more drugs or another kind of
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person? we all know and have lived with the consequences of addiction and subabuse. we know what the cost is and how much of that is devastating. do we really want a society where we undermine freedom by more addiction and more drug use? >> well, i can't help but suspect that in some cases governments, lawmakers are driven by the desire for more revenue. it's about money. we could legalize the stuff or decriminalize it and then tax it. clearly that is part of what drove colorado, it's lawmakers tomorrow brace legalized marijuana. there is that a factor, do you think? >> i do think this is a case where government has moved into areas on the grounds that oh, we are really doing this for your freedom. we really want the tax money. they were promised enormous tax revenue in colorado. the tax revenue was not coming. in people were not paying their taxes. they're are not paying their income taxes. i spent a book in denver and i asked law enforcement is there any conceivable way that these people that are growing marijuana left, right, and sideways are are even paying their federal income tax. they don't believe there is any way. nobody knows what is going on here. they were promised millions
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and millions of dollars. they have gotten a few isolated pieces and they have got drug use exploding. who wants to bring their business, who wants to bring their families to school systems that now, i met with parents, they -- kids can't bring food or drink to school because they are concerned it's going to be candy bars with marijuana, fruit use juices with marijuana, brownies with marijuana. you have to protect your kids as if they are going to be poisoned every time they go to school. who is going to bring your families to schools like. you are going to turn your town into detroit. >> frustrated with the war on drugs. here many are solve the neckives report. failure to produce a drug-free world. undermines human rights. fuels crime. wastes billions. some of those seem to be silly. some may be valid. dodo you recognize that there is frustration with the limitations on the war on drugs and some of the consequences of it? >> sure. it's stilly to say because we can't make everything perfect and create uniform happiness that we shouldn't
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try to make the world better and keep it from being barberrized. take our own cities. when we had the crack epidemic, would it be better if we had had more crack in places. look at colombia. cartels in colombia. taken over and governed by criminals. was it better? no. it's better now. it's economic, it's free. people there are happy. >> that's a really good point. anyone who remembers the crack epidemic would be probably opposed to legalizing cocaine anyway. john walters. thanks a lot for coming on this morning. appreciate it it? >> thanks, tucker. good to see. >> you a touching tribute to teammate killed recently. thanks to it a group of atheists the cross that was placed there in his memory was removed by force. the mother who lost her son and the player who tried to honor him join us next. and how much does it cost to raise a baby in this country? we'll break down the least and most expensive cities to be a parent. so you are thinking of bringing new life into the world? stay tuned.
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didn't even know the -- in place until i went to the montana state game. it was hard for me enter the stadium knowing that my son wasn't going to be there. but when i seen the guys come out with helmets, i felt as if my son and marquel owens' mother's son was on the field with those players. and we were very touched and honored that they respected our children enough to have that placed there. and we were just overwhelmed. we were thrilled to have that on there for them because they both worked so
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hard for football. marquel was a player and my son was the equipment manager. >> right. so what ends up happening is two complaints are received and nobody tries to sue the university or anything else but two complaints are received. it's taken to the legal team there at the university and they say all right, we're going to take this down. separation of church of and state. separation of church and school in this case. did you back that decision at all or do you think it was wrong? >> i mean, it was out of our control, really out of the football team's control. we initially. we initially wanted to show the cross because i mean, we're christian-based football team. and it's really because we fallen soldiers, the military does it as well. whatever fallen soldiers go down represented with the cross in a burial site. so, we wanted to always keep them there with us through
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the battlefield every saturday. really every day when we're out practicing. just keep them there with us on our minds and it was a big deal for us because initially we wanted to represent them through the cross and really through not -- it wasn't meant to be like a christian-based thing. it was just for the honoring of those names and that's really what is getting done right now. >> yeah, it wasn't the actual players who were feeling offended by all of this anyway. well, raz and michelle, thank you so much for europe time today. we appreciate you coming on. i'm sorry for your loss and i'm glad we could share your story and show the cross and show the initials both together. have a great day. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> 56 minutes after the hour. coming up on "fox & friends," a whole lot more. we have got more on the isis situation. don't go anywhere. stay in moti.
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good morning. >> this just in. according to the white house, we are at war with isis. somebody better tell the secretary of state. john kerry is still trying to build a coalition of support right now by spreading the word we are not at war. same administration? different messages. what's going on? we will tell you. we want to warn you what you are about to hear may be incredibly offensive. >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. and to the republic for which it stands. >> did you hear that? apparently the pledge of
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allegiance is too political for one network. we will tell you which network. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. >> this is larry, if you you are watching "fox & friends," if you ain't, why not? that is our motto this september morning. it's saturday. good morning. if you ain't, why not? >> if you ain't why not? maybe people are sleeping. set your dvr the night before. >> if you ain't why not? which school district is getting rid of cupcakes in favor of kale? >> oh, yum. >> brownies in favor of carrots. >> which tv network has decided the pledge of allegiance is so offensive its viewers shouldn't be allowed to see it. >> cupcakes this morning. plaza steakums. >> wow. >> do you know what i'm talking about? >> no. >> well, stick around then. >> i'm getting some cheers over there it's meat and it's delicious. that's all you need to know, really. >> right now we need to start with this fox news
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alert. there is a new scandal rocking the nfl at this hour. overnight minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson turned himself in to police in texas accused of child abuse. he was released 30 minutes later on $15,000 bond. the alleged victim is peterson's 4-year-old son. he texas home back in may. when the boy went home to minnesota his mother took him to the doctor to treat open wounds on his legs. the doctor reported the injuries to police. peterson says the quote whooping was punishment for his son pushing another child. his attorney issuing this statement. adrian is a loving father who used his judgment as a parent to discipline his son. the team now benching their star player for tomorrow's game against the patriots. the nfl has not acted but is investigating. and also overnight, a pennsylvania state trooper is dead after a shooting at a police barracks. at this hour, the suspect is still on the loose.
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another officer was injured in the shooting. it happened just after 11:00 p.m. in bloomington grove about 40 miles east of scranton. swat teams and police helicopters are combing the area around the barracks. several roads in the area are closed. we will keep you updated as this breaking story develops. >> highly contested voter id law has been given the green light. a three-judge panel of the u.s. court of appeals reinstating the voting requirements. state officials are wasting no time celebrating the victory. governor scott walker saying the law will protect the integrity of our voting process. the law is expected to be in place for the november elections. >> and what if every soldier could run a four minute mile? that's the goal for researchers at arizona state university. they are developing a jet pack that will hope soldiers run faster on the battlefield. it's called the four minute mile project. right now a soldier wearing the pack can shave s
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off their time using less energy. developers say using it in a war zone is still a few years away. >> why not just work on a tractor beam. >> i thought jet packs was to help you fly. >> well, if you thought or suspected that the white house was incompetent in prosecuting its policy in the middle east, you will find your fears confirmed. ask the most basic of all questions. unbelievable. are we at war with isis or isil? here's the response from josh ernest, the white house press secretary yesterday. watch. >> the united states is at war with the isil in the same way that we are at war with al qaeda and al qaeda affiliates all around the globe. >> okay. so we're at war. >> now we are at war. >> on thursday we weren't because if you ask secretary of state john kerry if we are at war, he said no, that's a bridge so far. then ambassador susan rice also on thursday, huh-uh, we are not at war. mixed messages? you be the judge.
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>> is the united states at war with isis? it sure sounds from the president's speech that we're. >> i think that's the wrong terminology. what we are doing is engaging in a very significant counter terrorism operation. >> i don't know whether you want to call it a war or sustained counsel terrorism campaign. i think frankly this is a counter terrorism operation that will take time. it will be sustained. we will not have american combat forces on the ground fighting as we did in iraq and afghanistan, which is what i think the american people think of when they think of a war. >> so maybe you need to go to joe biden. here is what you have got to remember, as soon as you hear someone use the term frankly, you know it's nonsense, you know the person is not being frank or honest. >> or to tell you the truth. >> to be honest, we are not at war or don't have boots on the ground. actually we are at war and we do have boots on the ground so that's your version of frankly. >> hitting the base, sanitized version of war. we are going to be high up
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in the clouds, firing down on isis. don't worry liberal base, we're not going to actually get back into a war again. after all iran being the antiwar president. >> we're going to make sure we don't ask congress for a vote on this because we don't want to alienated any. >> congress can getting a pass on this. they have the constitutional authority to declare war. that's congress' responsibility. >> obligation. >> and as far as the mixed messaging goes on this, that really matters for several reasons. it matters for one when you are asking the american people to back something that's going to take a long time and going to cost a the lo of money. it matters for our military service members who are trying to figure out, you know, how they can rally themselves and make sure that their camaraderie is good and they know what their strategy is. and also when we try to build a coalition and have real allies. instead of phony allies which is what some are starting to call it. >> and what's happening here in this country? we have heard of concerns and rumblings about our own borders. of course, we have talked offensive about our willingness to go to other
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countries and build border fences and secure other country are's borders. what about the calls and concerns about isis coming across our borders here in the united states? some say it's already happening. we spoke to joshua cats earlier on the show. listen to what we had to say. >> make no mistake about this, we are at war. and so what this does is this says to us that this mosque, the people that are coming out of it, the extremism that is coming out of this, this is really traitor use stuff here. let's not mince words. let's not be politically correct. what we are dealing with are traitors here. in boston, and, listen, it's also spreading throughout the country. >> josh is talking about a mosque in boston. the worshipers of islamic society of boston. it has ties to several terrorists. including tam tam lynn, tam merlin tsarnaev.
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>> people foreign born, come from a small number of countries. what he we no what those countries are not hard to connect the dots. no effort to -- real effort to limit immigration this country from those countries. why can't would he be honest? why have to pretend that all immigrants are the same? he are are not. >> let us know your thoughts on that. friends@foxnews.com. while you are on the email machine. tune in and write us about this story because you may be outraged about it. this weekend the rodeo is this weekend? yeah. sunday, there is a rodeo on television. okay? so, you know, the it's a big event. one network decided to air it cbs. and a lot of people paying advertising to put their commercials on during this big rodeo. one company, a real estate company decided to run this ad, it was so offensive it got pulled off the air. watch. >> >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. and to the republic for
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which it stands. one nation, under god, indivisible, for. >> liberty. >> liberty and justice for all. >> glpg i worked at a bunch of other networks and look over at fox. i don't understand how fox is so successful because fox doesn't hate america. maybe that's like the first thing. it's not that hard. if you find that offensive, you are totally out of touch with the rest of the country. >> you know what they should have done, they should have bleeped out the under god part then it could have been fine. >> it wasn't that part that the network found offensive. >> cbs said it was too political. it was too political. >> it's very political. but you would have to be an out-of-touch network executive to believe that is political. political on behalf of what? what is she advocating? >> real estate. you know what that little
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girl was advocating ownership. >> when networks like that fail i will celebrate. >> let us know what you think about this email at friends@foxnews.com or hit us up on facebook or twitter. >> let's check in with rick reichmuth now. >> where is he? >> i'm right here. >> there he is. >> i don't get that. >> i don't either. >> i'm completely confused. >> you can get to the bottom of that. >> i will work on it hey tropics, kind of heating up. september 10th is the peak of hurricane season, we are a couple days past that edward out there. tropical. it will become a hurricane. don't worried about it curve out investigating this jerry. they might send out hurricane hunter aircraft later on today. likely that will not be needed. most of the models continue to pull this off towards the west. very unfavorable environment for significant strengthening. eventually later on this week, probably bringing significant moisture to southern parts of texas. that's what we will watch. we also have rain showers this morning moving into parts of the great lakes.
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move through the northeast. behind that, a little bit of cooler air comes in at least overnight. cold temperatures that we have been dealing with are going to warm up here across the plains. better today. get a little bit better tomorrow. and as we go threw the week, we are going to see 60's and 70s return there and 72 in fargo. you can look forward to that for tuesday in fargo. you are definitely needing that after this horribly cold week that you have got. guys? >> frost. >> thanks a million, rick. coming up. an american convicted of murder saying he acted in the name of jihad. doesn't it make an t. an act of homegrown terror in the press has totally ignored it, why? we'll have the whole story coming up. >> if you are a fan of olive garden and who isn't? you are a fan of unlimited bread sticks. that can all come to an end because of one group. excuse me in the outrage coming up on the bottomless salad and bread sticks.
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at the u.s. postal service, our priority is...was... and always will be...you. . has jihad reached america's shores? new details emerging in the case of brendan testify lynn, 19-year-old allegedly murdered in june by this man mohammed brown. at the time investigators ruled it random act. he was shot to death at a red light. since then brown has told police that he killed him for revenge for u.s. military actions in the middle east. why haven't you heard of this case? why hasn't it received more media attention? joining us now with more details is ty. thank you for joining us this morning. >> i had not heard of this until i started getting
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emails from viewers about it why aren't you covering it? that. >> would be be outcry. >> there has been a virtually media blackout on this story. >> shear a guy who admitted personally that he was on a jihad and was laying in wake for someone who was alone, who didn't have any elderly people or women in the car with him and he called it a just kill. and i read the details of the story and i said okay, i'm sure we are going to be hearing about a lot about this. and no one talked about it i do a music show, comedy music show on the radio. i'm not a talk show host. i felt so compelled to say something and do something about it it i live in the area. personal connection i have a 19-year-old daughter who drives those streets and i couldn't believe we weren't hearing about this story. so i just broke our format and talked for about 8 minutes. >> good for you. >> and our listeners kept it going for an hour and a half. because once they heard the details of this story, we just let it go. and it became a talk show that morning. >> and to be totally clear, the details of this case don't appear very confusing.
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so, brendan tavlin was at a light near newark, in new jersey and this guy walked up and executed them. they didn't know each other. there is no complex back story here at all. >> exactly. >> the word targeted was used early on which i think was one of the big hot buttons for the family. again, i only went on the air after talking to brendan's mom to get permission to make sure it was okay with her to talk about it the word targeted suggests that he was doing something wrong. that he was maybe involved in something that he shouldn't have been. that couldn't have been further from the truth. that's not the case. this guy apparently shot a number of other people in seattle also randomly and also in the name of islam. here are some words he spoke to cops after being apprehended. this is from brown. he said my mission is vengeance, iraq, syria, afghanistan, all these lives are taken every single day by america, by the government. so a life for a life. whoa. >> i mean, could it be any clearer? >> but then the police department has appeared to
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me, just reading the stories, pretty committed to writing this off as a robbery or an attempted -- they don't want to concede -- >> -- nothing was stolen. >> ideological point. >> nothing was stolen. his cell phone was missing but his wallet was still in the family car where he was shot 8 times, pushed over. the car was driven a couple blocks to an apartment complex. at this point it's about remembering brendan tevlin. young man, 19 years old, simply killed for being an american. >> what are his parents saying? >> they are devastated. clearly. three other kids in the family. they really wanted it known and that's where i felt compelled to say something that he was a good kid. he was the kind of kid you hope your kid will grow up to be. >> did the white house send two emissaries to his funeral. >> i don't believe so. >> they didn't. >> i don't believe so, no. >> sad. >> thanks for coming on. >> coming up the parents of james folly reveal their frustrations with the
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government's efforts to bring him home. >> we were told that we might be prosecuted. big deal. i would rather be in a prison here than my son being in prison over there. >> so the obama administration threatened to rest them if they tried to free their son. you have got to hear more. we have it and, how much does it cost to raise a baby in america? we break down the least and most expensive cities to be a patient. so think -- a parent. think before you procreate. we have the the information.
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up and at them. 22 minutes after the hour. news by the numbers. $2,200 how much money this tennessee woman made into duping people giving her money to help pay for fake cancer treatments. next, $3.2 million. that's how much taxpayer money the government spent on getting monkeys drunk. part of an experiment to determine what effect excessive drinking has on body tissue. clayton, you want to get in on that? >> yeah. >> finally, 124.6 million. that's how many single adults there are in america outnumbering their married counterparts. researchers say single people ages 16 and older now account for 50.2% of the population. it's a record number. all right, clayton. >> you know, why anna? >> why? >> they are scared about our next segment about how much it costs to raise a child. that's why they're staying single. national average is quarter of a million dollars. that number can vary greatly by hundreds of thousands of dollars depending on where you live in this country.
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where the most expensive places to bring up a baby? here to break it down travis h. brown author of the tax states. how worker freedom change everything. travis, great to have you back on the show. niles to see you. >> it's a pleasure to be back. >> what criteria goes into deciding what areas of the country are most expensive to raise a baby. >> our federal government, the usda has a report out every year. so we are looking at recent figures from 2013. and it covers all the essentials going from birth to 18 years of age. we are talking about things like housing, about a third of it. food, transportation, and then all the other things from child care, education and clothing, et cetera. >> where do you see the most-what areas are the most malleable when you start to go across the country? housing? >> house something a big part of the deal. regional variance. different parts of the country typically see on black bar the urban northeast the cumulative costs can be hundreds of thousands of dollars more. to break that down that's
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anywhere from $25 a day average in america to raise a child to upwards of $800 a day in manhattan. >> wow. that's on average. that's how many it costs to raise a child. >> $80 a day like manhattan or brooklyn here versus 20 or $25 in the middle of the country. >> that's some expensive baby food in manhattan. where is it the most affordable spot in this country to raise a child? >> we have identified out of 288 cities here in this analysis, these states in green, these cities like is he line that, kansas, pueblo, colorado. south of texas, as well as ashland, ohio. places while not inexpensive just a couple hundred thousand dollars from birth to 18 years of age. keep in mind this does not include the cost of saving in advance for college. >> all right. so we talked about manhattan. what are other areas in this country the most expensive place to raise a child? i see california once again a big offender. >> that's right. we have got on the west coast the cost of in san
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francisco as an example over $402,000 to raise one child there. and, of course, that multiplies if you have a bigger family. los angeles not inexpensive but that adds up. tech company job in san fran could raise a kid with a similar work atlanta half the cost. >> how could i find out how well education is in those states? >> well, i think a key part of understanding your return on investment, if you are raising a child let's say in the midwest and some of these least expensive areas is looking at the, you know, what you are getting from your state. for example, in inexpensive areas like oklahoma or texas, you might want to look at other rating scores such as this one. the national assessment of educational progress. so, as was mentioned, kansas and ohio score out relatively well compared to the rest of the country that would imply that you are getting a good return on your dollar and it's far more affordable to raise that child there.
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>> so bottom line, if you live in california, new york, move to colorado or some of those middle states to raise your child. it will be cheaper and then can you have more of them and run up the costs there. nice to see you this morning, travis. check out wealth of states.com for more information. thank you, travis. >> thank you. cale instead of cupcakes. snack attack coming to a school near you. and it's a challenge anyone can get on board with firefighters putting their grill skills to the test and a huge prize coming up. but, first, let's check in with eric bolling for a look what's coming up. cashing in. >> good morning, guys. what worries you most? isis or a porous border? how about isis forming terrorists sells -- cells at our porous border. were e*trade offers rollover options and a retirement planning calculator. now i know "when" i'm going to retire.
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without asking your doctor. get medical help right away if you have trouble breathing, swelling of your face, tongue or throat, sweating, extreme drowsiness, dizziness, or confusion. (male announcer) today's the day to ask your doctor about levemir® flextouch. covered by nearly all health insurance and medicare plans. morning good morning,ed what he a bear to do in a hot summer day. hop in a pool. caught swimming in a canadian man garden pond. this happens an awful lot in canada. after the dip they get off run by one, running off to find picnic basket or buy hockey tickets. >> it's a bear bath not a bird bath. that is so cool. >> did everybody at home hear that?
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>> unbearable. >> we'll repeat it for the people at home. thanks. mysterious lung virus outbreak is spreading fast. health officials in new york are now confirming more than a dozen cases of the entervirus. hospitals in connecticut, arkansas, and idaho also investigating possible cases. the virus has sickened hundreds of children in at least 13 other states since mid august. there is novak sin nation and no cure. the parents of james foley, an american journalist executed by isis revealed their frustrations with the government's efforts to bring him home. they say the feds threatened to arrest them if they tried to raise money to free their son. the reason? a top military official telling them ransom money would help support terrorism. >> we were told they couldn't do prisoner exchange. we were told very clearly we could not raise ransom. that we would go to jail.
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that wield be prosecuted. >> foley's parents have since started the james foley legacy fund in his memory. >> 17-year-old surfer can proudly show off the bite marks only a shark can leave behind. brendan murphy is lucky to be alive this morning after a shark attacked him while surfing on the beach. it took 15 staples to repair the damage. rikers, speaking out for the first time he said it all happened in a flash. >> the shark was just like thrashing around at my feet so i just like jumped back because i was super scared. basically tried to bite me and swam away. it didn't hurt that bad because my adresden adrenaline was rushing super hard at that point. >> the beach has been called shark bite capital of the world. i wonder how that's going for terrorism there? is there a war on bread sticks? investigators for olive garnett say backing off.
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people are ordering too many and ordering less. he has laid out a 300 page plan after boosting sales after a fall this latest quarter. those are are your headlines. >> not making enough dough. >> you need to give us these beforehand. >> dave, where are you performing this thursday? >> at the comedy. >> live at the laugh factory. >> let's talk about vermont this morning. granola eating state. it's pretty hippyish up there for eating granola and staying true to the ground. it looks like going to start eating a whole lot of cale if school districts get their way. that's the law cale and gluten free brownies in the school. no more regular brownies, a part of the school snack program allowed in the school. get rid of those cupcakes and brownies at your lunch. >> and also in hershey, pennsylvania. that's another one. shocking place. america's largest chocolate
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factory. >> you smell chocolate. >> is that true you really do? >> yeah. >> the school there is saying that instead of for kids' birthdays instead of sending in cupcakes and cookies and pies, send in nonfood rewards like pens and paper and erasers. >> kids love erasers. >> i'm bothered by in this story and i'm not -- i don't think sugar is all that good for you and all that i'm not defending kick cupcakes though i do love them. i'm offended by the trendiness of it. three steps back one of the problems with kids. kids don't read well, they are not into reading and two, they have kids out of wedlock at a young age. those are are the two really bad things that happen to kids in high school. shouldn't would he be spending all our time trying to get things to figure out how not to interest children and learn how to read. >> one of the things that kills americans is heart disease. comes from obesity. if you are eating a lot of junk food. you take those habits with you as you get to be older. i think the key is to make
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it a treat. it's okay if it's on your birthday or your friend's birthday don't have it after every meal. >> i agree with you and agree with you. i also think one of the big things kids face is attentiveness. arbitrary nature in which these rules are implemented. can't bring a cupcake or brownie to the school. part of the rule let's you bring this whole grain rich foods which we now know the science on whole grains. i asked one of the leading niewrming gists in this country about what that does to kids' brains. he says the adhd increased. removes whole grains from their diet, able to focus. arbitrary the government knows better than what parents do and leading neurologists what's better for your kids. >> i would rather have kids be fat than dumb and screwed up personally. >> what would you rather have? kids be fat and dumb what was it? >> i would rather have them fat than dumb and screwed up. who cares what they eat? pay attention to their moral and educational development. >> and love them. >> rick, what would you rather have, fat kids or --
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>> -- don't make me answer that clayton, you you might have worked at a restaurant. did you ever work at a restaurant where there was a salad bar? >> yes. >> and -- >> -- old country buffet. >> and cale was the thing that you would stuff in between all of the things in the the salad bar and you would keep it for a couple of days on the ice. that's all cale was ever used for before. now we have steakums. a giving back to our firefighters. steakumm firehouse challenge. here swufnt judges. america's firehouse chef. firefighter of 21 years. and then you became america's firehouse chef? >> i won a few contests and that gave me the right to judge this contest. >> steak-umm give back money to firehouses 2-6r7b8g9s $0,000 to the winner go. to steak-umm firehouse facebook page vote on the winner. winner gets additional $5,000. >> so it doesn't just go back to the firefighter.
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>> for their cause. each firefighter also submitted their charity cause that they wanted for their local fire. >> we have three of the firehouse -- of the finalists. these three finalists coming up later on in the show. but you are going to show us as the firehouse chef how to make something good with steak-umm. >> this is steak-umm stir fry cab back, zucchini, sesame oil and so soy. and steak-umm. >> we have some you can taste if you like. >> don't worry, i will do that. >> what do you do? >> one of the things nice about steak-umm it's quick and easy. two minutes, it's all beef. wind out here. >> okay, so it's all beef. >> all these recipes that these firefighters have made for us, interesting in unique ways and they did amazing job. i don't know hot winner is yet. it's going announced. they did an amazing job putting this together. they tested it on their firefighters that they worked wsmg and passed with
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flying colors. tough crowd to cook for firefighters. >> steak-umm comes already cooked; is that right? >> no, comes frozen. it cooks in two minutes sauteed slice it up like this. one of fighters made little sliders. another guy made a rollup. another guy made a baked casserole. >> okay. >> sadly we didn't have one firefighter from new york get into the finals. i was very disappointed. >> they have something to work on for next year. >> yep. >> steak-umm it's what's for breakfast guys. thanks very much. >> thank you. >> the finalists coming up later on in the show. later on send it back to you. >> eating again. every time you look up rick is eating. unbelievable. some gig you have. >> surprise surprise. >> a mother carrying a gun for protection makes a mistake crossing state lines. the prosecutor trying to put her in prison is the same person who let ray rice skip jail time. hear from the mother fighting for her freedom next. >> and everyone's favorite
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got some headlines for you. two days after being commit admitted to the hospital from abdominal tumor. toronto mayor rob ford announced he is no longer seeking re-election. is he going to drop out. is he going to be replaced by his brother, doug ford will be taking the spot on the ballot. the toronto mayor isn't leaving politics for good. he plans to run for city council providing more tape for us for years to come. two motorcyclists come face to face with oncoming train.
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[train whistle] >> holy smokes, brought to you by go pro-apparently. the pair had to jump off their bikes one bike nearly crushed by the train gets pulled away in the nick of time. >> anna? >> all right. tucker. thanks so much. 44 minutes after the hour. when 27-year-old allen was stopped for a traffic violation in new jersey, she found out the hard way that her conceal carry permit did not apply in that state. the single mother two of now faces 11 and a half years in federal prison. a punishment dealt to it her by the very same judge and prosecutor who kept former baltimore ravens running back ray rice out of jail. shah neon allen and her attorney louis nappen join us now. thanks for coming in to "fox
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& friends" this morning. your story, we just let everybody hear about that you say this was totally inadvert tonight. you didn't mean to do, this right? >> yes. >> and so when you hear, this and contrast that to the video that you saw of ray rice punching his girlfriend now wife in the face, that looked like that was on purpose. right? >> yes. >> so, when you hear about ray rice being a free man at the moment, and you are still waiting on your court case to be heard, how does that make you feel? >> well, it makes me feel like i have no justice right now. and i'm in the midst of waiting on -- you know, i lost everything. so i just i want some justice right now our biggest fear that he is getting off so easy. and i am getting everything taken away from me and my life and my kids right now really tough on me. i don't think it's fair. he is a man.
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we should be treated the same and be treated actually with justice. i don't have justice in this scenario. >> well, you have some breaking news for us. >> i do. >> this morning on this story. you spoke out this week the two of you to it a local affiliate, a news channel about this very thing and the contract between the two -- contrast between the two. >> yesterday afternoon. the whole point of this is that the prosecutor has discretion whether to indict or to dismiss as they see yesterday we received a letter sent by the prosecutor who has remained no comment throughout this entire thing. here i have shah neon here. he said he is presently in the process of reviewing our office's position on the appropriate resolution of this matter. his office being the prosecutor's office they have stood firm not going to
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allow any resolution. three and a half years in state prison, that was their best offer for shah neon. and it's just shocked the conscious to think the person who just made a paperwork mistake as opposed to a violent act would get such a thing. single mother here of two, it's just not right. i'm glad to see that they are reconsidering reremain hopeful optimistic that they might make the right choice here. injustice at this point. do you think because you spoke out this is may be a change in this? >> yes, i do. >> i'm glad that i spoke out. not only am i speaking out for myself now. i'm speaking out for all the other people that are going through the same thing right now still happening. they need to change the law or it's going to keep on happening. so, you know, i'm speaking out for myself and others that are in jail right now
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for the same situation and for my kids. just the justice for me. i have no one and i can't, you know, go to prison with my kids just in the wing for an honest mistake. >> it was an honest mistake you say and you were simply trying to protect your family. you are also not saying that standing look that it's right or wrong, everything that's going on with ray rice though. how do you feel for janay? >> i realize as a woman she must feel she has to do something. i hope she would get some kind of help right now. once they put their hands on you. it will happen again. and i don't think that was justice on her part by him getting pti because it's going to happen again. i hope it don't but i have been in that situation so i know. >> honest mistake had the
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gun in your car in new jersey. >> she actually is working towards changing the law. assembly men and senators from new jersey are proposing bills to make it so people who are interstate travelers like this in janine's scenario that the judge can have discretion in overriding prosecutors when it comes to this allowance to allow them into a diversionary program or wave these mandatory sentences. so she actually is hopefully bringing us towards rest pier ross rest pier ross city. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. >> let us know how everything works out. 49 minutes after the top of the hour. coming up on "fox & friends." brand new research just in reveals the secret behind choosing your child's name and you may not even know you you are doing it in a new study says the doctor may be overmedicating you the pain it may be causing to you and your body and
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overprescribing antibiotics. this is helping to breed dangerous drug resistant bacteria. what can we do as patients? here to explain is nurse practitioner and founder of mid level u.com. >> good to see you, clayton. >> why? why is there this overprescription of antibiotics. >> this is what happens. this is what i see in the emergency department where i work. patients come in. maybe they have a skin infection or urinary tract
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infection i order a culture and want to know exactly what kind of bacteria is causing this problem. maybe i take a swab of their wound or send the urine to the lab. i tell the lab, hey, let me know, you know, the exact pathogen that is responsible for this infection. well, this takes about two days to complete. and so in the meantime, in order to not delay treatment, i start the patient on antibiotics and sometimes i might start the patient on two antibiotics to make sure we have our bases covered while we are waiting for these results. the problem is, when those results come back, what we are seeing is that three quarters of hospitals don't remove that unnecessary anti-by 00 stick and so we are contributing to this major problem of antibiotic resistance. >> that second antibiotic that you haven't taken off the table is the problem. >> we are always told finish is i could have a relaps. >> right this looked at the hospital setting.
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once we know the exact pathogen you can alter those antibiotics safely. costs more money and more risk of side effected and bacteria can adapt so they are no longer responding to that treatment in the future. >> what are we now creating? we are creating monsters, super bugs as a result of this overprescription. what is that? >> well, i have talked about this before with mrsa, that anti-by 00 it particular resistant staph. they are adapting genetically so the bacteria are adapting genetically so bacteria no longer work against them. world health is calling this worse than the aids crisis of the 1980s. >> really? >> antibiotics are one of the pillars of modern medicine. we have all taken them before. they cure all these common infections. but we are starting to see cracks in that pillar. >> what can we do as patients? is it now incumbent upon us to let our doctors know well you have given me two of these, which one should i
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not stop taking is that the answer here. ultimately the responsibility lies with us as healthcare providers. as a patient if you have a culture taken, if you know that it a sample of your wound or a urine culture has been done. call back to get your test results. a lot of people leaf the hospital, they leave the emergency department. we never hear from them again. but call back if you have had tests done and you haven't gotten all of your results. ask is this medication necessary? do my medications need to be changed as a result of what you found? that's the most important thing can you do. don't approach with cavalier attitude. we need to be serious about these and use them appropriately. a lot of times working the er i want to give my patient a prescription but it's not always necessary. >> erin tolbert good to he see you. great advice as we head into the flu season. >> obama administration playing the name game in the fight against isis. are we or are we not at war? governor huckabee joins us
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good morning, friends, today is saturday the 13th, 2014. i'm anna kooiman and a fox news alert. new overnight, more controversy in the nfl. vikings running back adrian peterson turning himself into authorities accused of child abuse. what peterson says happened. >> and if you are just waking up, this may be news to you. >> the united states is at war with isil in the same way we are at war with al qaeda and adied affiliates around the globe. >> according to john kerry missed the memo. secretary of state just days ago said we are not at war. what's going on? governor mike huckabee straight ahead. >> supposed to be a tribute to her son who was recently
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killed. >> it was hard for me to enter the stadium knowing that my son was not going to be there. >> thanks to an eightist group, the cross was removed. hear the heart breaking response from the mother who lost her son and the player who tried to honor him. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. >> hey there this is kellie pickler, you are watching "fox & friends." >> thank you, kelly. >> standing flight behind the couch. >> she is? >> of course she is. >> you never know who is here. good morning, everyone. governor huckabee is going to join us in just moments. then we will be outside on the plaza cooking up some delicious cheese steaks. >> of course we are. >> yummy. >> clayton morse, anna kooiman. >> tucker t. carlson, nice to see you. >> get to it a fox news alert. because a new scandal is republicanning the nfl
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overnight. minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson turned himself in to police in texas, accused of child abuse. he was released 30 minutes later on $15,000 bond. the alleged victim is peterson's 4-year-old son. he visited peterson's home in texas back in may. when the boy went home to minnesota, his mother took him to the doctor to treat open wounds on his legs. the doctor reported the injuries to police and peterson says he used a tree branch to punish his son, his 4-year-old son for pushing another child. his attorney issuing this statement. adrian is a loving father, who used his judgment as a parent to discipline his son. the team now benching their star player for tomorrow's game against the patriots. the nfl has not acted but is investigating. also overnight. police are calling it a targeted attack. one pennsylvania state trooper is dead. another wounded after a shooting outside a police barracks. at this hour, the suspect is
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still on the loose. happened just after 11:00 p.m. in blooming road about 40 miles east of scranton. one trooper was leaving and another coming on duty when they were shot. several roads in the area are closed at the moment as swat teams and police helicopters search for the gunman. police in florida have another run-in with george zimmerman. the former neighborhood watchman accused by police after a driver called 911 saying zimmerman and a friend threatened him while at a stoplight. >> i looked over and it's george zimmerman was the driver. and they were threatening to kick my [bleep]. and to shoot me. >> well, the man who didn't call police until my two days later also said zimmerman followed him to his job. >> [inaudible] zimmerman admitted to exchanging words with the man but says he did not threaten him.
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no charges were filed. last year if you will remember zimmerman was acquitted of second degree murder of shooting 17-year-old trayvon martin. since then arrested for aggravated assault which was dropped and pulled over three times for traffic violations. and did you decide your baby's name or did a keyboard? a new study claims the layout of the querty board. >> querty keyboard. >> the order in which the letters appear. qwe. >> baby names that favor letters on the right side. university of chicago study shows that three of the top four baby names include a jordan of right side letters. >> that makes sense. >> how lazy you can be? >> what was that thing had you to type all the time red fox jumped over the fence or
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something. >> now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the press. >> tucker is mostly on the left side. anna totally on the left side of the keyboard my son miles on the right side. >> whatever is easiest. >> governor huckabee. >> where is that? >> on the right side of the couch. >> i'm always on the right side of whatever it is. name anything and i'm on the right side of it. >> correct and metaphoric call. what do you make of the inability of the obama administration to decide whether or not we are at war isis? >> remember the old abbot and costello are a teen? great parody. what is a war? how hard is it to say that we are at war with terrorists? we are at war with isis and islamic i didn't harassment we are. let's get over the word dance here. >> hard, governor, when your base doesn't want another war and you are placketting your base and run as the antiwar president. antiwar candidate and tell your liberal base and donors
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that no, we are not going to go back to war. we will call it protracted coalition against terrorism or whatever you want to call it. >> coalition of one. because you don't have anybody that wants to join. everybody is running from us. sadz part is he is more interested in satisfying the left wing base and recognizing the threat. on the couch and every single person sitting around breakfast table in america today. this is a will he jdimytai legie threat. we have a president going to the dictionary to see if he can find a better word for war. it's crazy. >> what about correct me if i am congress for this? if you were the president of the united states would you call upon congress whose constitutional duty it is to declare war? they have been absent on all of this. john boehner doesn't look like is he going to move forward with it harry reid is not going to modify forward with it. congress is sitting on their
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hands. >> they don't want to deal with it either a complete lack of leadership on both sides of the aisle. it's distressing. here is how the president has-to-approach it. don't make a public announcement saying i'm going to go to congress and go. you get on the phone and bringing people over to the white house and you go to capitol hill and you sit with people and you make the case. and you persuade them and explain to them why they need to be on board with a unified front. this isn't about the politics. this is about projecting the right message to the world. and saying harry reid, john boehner, rest of congress, this isn't about you and it's not about me. it's about those people that are counting on to us stand up for them and not see their blood shed in the streets of america. let's get this deal done. that's how you have to do it. we have a president and a congress that plays with each other on the front page of the "the washington post" rather than sits down, builds relationships and governors. >> bingo. >> do you think that action that or lack of action talking to congress quietly ahead of time, this no
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strategy strategy on isis and then not calling it a war and then calling it a war, do you think all of that is part of the problem with trying to get a real coalition together and get britain to join us in air strikes and get some help in this? >> why would they join us? nobody trusts us. nobody trusts us. because right now with the u.s., our word is dirt. and everybody knows it. whatever we say, nobody believes that we're going to stand by it now, we have got groups like the saudis and others in the middle east that ought to be willing to put their boots on the ground. i said for a long time if they are not willing to, then we need to say to them, okay, then we will not lift one finger when you get overrun. just be prepared. you are on your own. good luck out there. >> that is the danger, isn't it? >> it is the danger. >> if the gulf gets shut down. >> yes. >> the persian gulf gets shut down and we are looking at $12 a gallon gasoline, our economy grinds to a halt. we are poor. that's a disaster. >> the other side that ought to be happening on this side of this whole situation is
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an escalation of energy exploration under our own feet here in the united states. we have long been too dependent upon the balance of energy, projections coming out of middle east. if we have got enough to take care, not only of our needs but to become an exporter of energy for 600 years or so. >> this is not a three red particular call threat. >> it's a real threat but an opportunity. why we are not putting drills in the ground here and getting natural gas and oil and coal out of the ground and being basically able to say to the middle east we are interested in peace, we are interested in protection, even of your interests but the bottom line is if you are not going to fight for yourselves, we will close our borders and got help you we will be okay because we are drilling our own energy. if we don't do stuff like that, why not? we have got to protect america. >> let's go to your home state of arkansas. >> yeah. >> what in the world is going on down there, governor. got to get your take on this
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story. arkansas state university one player and their equipment manager, marquel owens and barry wire passed away this year the campus and some of the other players rally around, put these cross decals on the helmets. we spoke to the mom of marquel owens earlier on the show this morning. and she said this about what it meant to her when she saw these students take the field honoring him. watch. >> it was hard for me to enter the stadium knowing that my son wasn't going to be there. but when i seen the guys come out with helmets, i felt as if my son and marquel owens' mother's son was on the field with those players. and we were very touched and honored. >> that was the mother of barry weyer there and marquel owens. because of the atheist group those crosses have been removed from the helmet? >> apparently some local attorney in jonesboro where asu is located.
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he got in. sent a personal letter. my son graduated from asu and student body president there about 10 years ago. it's a fine community and great campus, great school. i think it was a wonderful way to honor these two students. frankly i care a whole lot more about this grieving mother than i do some attorney who got his feelings hurt. there is nothing in the constitution that says that we have a right to not be offended. i get offended every day. my values get trampled on every single day in this country by people who hate what i stand for. you know what? i get over it i move on. it's life. can i handle that i think we are getting to the place where people just need to put their big boy pants on and they need to accept that there are going to be people that disagree with them. >> and it was voluntary. nobody had to wear it. >> it was not done to promote a religion. this idea that established a religion. no, it showed respect for a couple of kids who had died. i don't think that's an establishment of a religion. i think what we have done, we have established the religion of secularism.
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we have made that the national religion are. that is a religion. it's a religious point of view. and i would like to complain of that being established as the religion of america. >> governor, the arkansas state athletic director came out with a statement and i want to go ahead and read that. he said i'm 100% of our players and coaches expression of faith. in order to ensure that we're in full compliance with constitutional law we will be modifying the decal to still honor the two individuals who are no longer with us. and the poor mother that we heard from she said she is not mad at the school. she is just mad at the removal of it so, in a sense, she seems to side with you and say she is upset with society for making this be the way that things are now. >> the school did what they did because their lawyers told them that's what they better do. they didn't want to subject the school to millions and millions of dollars worth of damages and lawsuits which their lawyers probably said, you know, stupid as it is, we will lose. the only thing i disagree with i wish they wouldn't have said the constitutional
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protection. because there is nothing. let me be emphatic. there is not one thing in the constitution that says that a football player can not wear a cross on his helmet voluntarily. there is nothing that says that. >> of course not. i will tell you what it says that the government can't keep him from wearing a cross on his helmet. that's what the constitution says. we have ignorance in this country. >> history is worth learning. i guess that's the point. you have a learned history program. >> we started animated series for kids learn our history partly because i see stuff on fox all the time people don't know what 9/11 is people have never heard of isis. they don't know who the vice president is is american kids are growing up today ignorant of history. learn our history is a project. kids get these dvds that's animated. they learn history. they are entertained and educated. >> what's the web site. >> learn our history.com. get a free sample at free god dvd.com. >> your program tonight right here on the fox news
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talk about a bad call. congressman darrell issa leading the investigation into the irs targeting of conservative groups says that justice department staff accidently called his office asking for help spinning the scandal. what is going on here? former doj official one of our former guest jay christian adams. thanks for coming on this morning. >> good morning, tucker. >> if i understand this correctly. this obama functionary was attempting or planned anyway to quality office of a
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democratic congressman and instead called darrell issa's office. is that your understanding of what happened? >> it is. and what he was trying to do was to ask a democrat congressman to leak confidential documents that the justice department, ledge larve affairs office refused to leak because he wanted to get ahead of the story. he mistakenly calls issa's office. tucker, what this shows is that the justice department has become a fully integrated wing of the democrat national committee. it is not supposed to be this way. it hasn't been this way in past administrations. but this office of public affairs under holder has been leaking information to places like media matters, other soros funded media organizations. left wing places like huff post and they are doing it to change the narrative. they are acting like political operatives not part-time interested -- interested in justice. >> they have the capacity to
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put new prison the rest of your life. execute you. they have a ton of stuff. they have a political power. i want to put up on your screen the letters sent to eric holder. i'm extremely troubled by this attempt to improperly coordinate the release of ie democratic staff. this effort to release chosen information undermines the department's claims that it's responding in good faith. that's an understated letter. but basically he is saying you are attacking the rule of law when you do stuff like this. >> yeah, same old same old over at the doj. it's a waste of time, tucker, to expect there to be any accountability for what this guy did. give up. it isn't going to happen. nobody is held accountable at the justice department these days. there is lawyers there. there is staff there who created perjury who are still work hog have engaged in pros could you recall prosecutorial misconduct.
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this guy who was attempting to leak things to the media was doing what the attorney general wanted. so why we ever be held accountable because he is doing precisely what he is supposed to do in the obama administration. >> and he, of course has now been fired. getting really third world and scary. thanks a lot for bringing us the latest on this. jay christian adams from washington. >> see you, tucker. >> coming up, closer by the hours, homes and other obuildings on the brink of descrution destruction as molten lava inches their way. latest on horrifying story. dog shock collars good for training or torture. should you put those on your kids or is that going too far? fair and balanced debate from experts on both sides of this controversial issue. stay tuned. ♪
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welcome back, some quick headlines for you now. lava from one of the world's most active volcanos could reach homes on hawaii's big island any day now. officials believe the lava moving up to 300 yards per day could slow down and start veering off toward more level land. residents have not been evacuated but were told to remain on alert. like the movie the blob. remember that? and problems with g.m. now putting the brakes on the 2015 corvette. delivery of 302,015 models put on hold over issues with break brakes and airbags. all shipments on hold as g.m. tries to prevent more defects. anna? >> 24 minutes after the hour. new study says using electric shock collars on your dog can do more harm than good. citing there is no real
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benefit from using them. they have been banned in parts of the u.k. and canada. so should they be banned here as well? dixie, what do you think? >> well, joining us now for a fair and balanced debate is american kennel club vice president gina denardo and dog trainer coming in on opposite sides of the argument. good morning, guys. thanks for being with us. >> good morning. >> sean, i'm going to start with you because you you take the side of the study and say hey, these things are not good. or excuse me you say that take the opposite side these things are great not just for discipline but teach them a lot of great things. >> modern dog training. modern collar training is a subtle gentle way of communicating with dogs. it's not the days of old where people would just strap collars on and blast dogs for misbehaving at really high excruciating levels. perceptions are things that ecollars are really dangerous and inhumane
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tools. these days instead of having one level you have between zero and 127 levels. so you have a bunch of different increments in between so you can find exactly the right level that works for your dog at a comfortable point to where he is happy to work but is he not stressed or freaked out or anything like that. >> and sean also says that these can be used as a warning before they get to the line it will beep at them or give them a minor shock that wouldn't actually hurt them to warn them. >> the american kennel club wants what's best for dog. happy, healthy, well trained dogs, responsible owners. there are better training methods than using shock collars. shock collars can cause stress, distress, sometimes pain. used inappropriately, they can prevent dogs from even being receptive to other training methods in the future. worse case scenario the dog might become aggressive. we believe in using positive
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reinforcement as a training method. that seems like clicker training, treat, reward, praise based training. using those methods have been proven by hundreds of thousands of trainers to be effective not only for treating -- teaching basic commands like stick, stay and come but even advanced obedience in agility where you have national champions trained using positive reinforcement techniques. >> i know one of your arguments as pet owner you are not always going to have a treat with you on hand but as gina says what about positive reinforcement. do you think that is an equal substitute and might just replace these things. >> i think porch reinforcement is a positive thing and i use did all the time. the problem stems from when you have a situation with a dog who is in a mental state or emotional state that is an excessive point there becomes a point where rewards, treats, things like that no longer register on
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the dog's radar. so, if a dog really wants to go chase a squirrel or a cat or run out in the street and chase a car, there is a treat reward disappears. >> i'm going to completely disagree. if you are a responsible prom owner you are going to train that dog those commands so no matter what the environment and stimulus, the dog will respond to those commands. teaching properly come, sit, and stay will save your dog wants life. if it can't then quite frankly you should be a responsible dog owner and keep it on the leash. >> i feel like i'm a responsible dog owner. he can sit and stay and does about the 9% of the time i don't want him to run into a car either. >> so part of we have great program called canine good citizen program it teaches not only those training methods but also be a responsible owner. dogs don't mind being on a leash in a park. it's safer. >> thank you for your time today. everybody at home let us know what you think. this is a big debate.
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have been around for a long time. a lot of people coming in opposite side of the argument after this study came out o. coming up on "fox & friends." the lives two of store clerks in serious danger when they lost track of their boat and the rescue all caught on camera ahead. we want to warn you you what you are about to hear may be offensive. >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. >> is that offensive to you? did you hear it? apparently the pledge of allegiance is too political for one network. we will tell you about that so i can reach ally bank 24/7, but there are no branches?
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right now there is talk that former secretary of state condoleezza rice could replace commissioner roger goodell. well, if they are going to go with the secretary of state to run are the nfl i'm just glad it's not our friend john kerry because that just doesn't seem -- [ applause ] >> that's not fair.
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that's obviously a bad photo. that's -- can we show another photo? >> catching a a football you want to close your eyes. >> yeah, you do. >> follow the ball with your eyes. >> but if you think that's scary, we're going to show you something and we want to warn you that this might rattle your cages this morning. take a look at a commercial that cbs sports rejected because they deemed it too political. it's offensive. >> brace yourself. watch this. >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america for which it stands one nation under god with liberty and justice for all.
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windemere rae tricities, kinnewick, washington. >> did a john kerry. >> going. >> maybe if they bleeped out the under god part. cbs said this was too political. i didn't see a single political partisan anything in there. did you? nothing. and in fact, i would say that the owner of this real estate company was doing a fabulous thing teaching america to be patriotic and his wife or daughter or whoever it was that was being responsible market research teaching their daughter a good thing. >> show this ghocial a cross section of americans. only the liberal executives would find that upsetting there is a reason that stations that networks like that are failing going under
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have bad long-term prospects because they are out of touch. >> youtube is beating them. >> by a lot. >> cbs that decided not to air it for political reasons. the owner as you mentioned, he knew that it was going to air during the week of 9/11, so he he wanted to show some patriotism for his country and that's why he put that in there. jonathan writes us this morning emailing us. the reason they pulled the commercial is because there is a war on patriotism. more patriotic than ever thanks to fox news. well, thanks, jonathan, appreciate that. >> and on facebook, angela says are they going to stop singing the national anthem at sporting events now? >> if can you imagine it, if it's in the realm of possible, it will happen. wendy writes this on facebook how in thunderation little girl citing the pledge political? sounds like more like bullying in the name of so-called political correctness. >> that's exactly what it is. >>. weigh in as well ff weekend
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or facebook as well. >> has jihad reached america's shores? new details are emerging in the case of brendan tevlin, a 19-year-old american gunned down while inside his car in new jersey, investigators ruled the june incident a random act but since then brown has reportedly told police he killed brendan as revenge for u.s. military actions in the middle east why hasn't this case received more attention. earlier radio hosted to weighed in. >> here is a guy who admitted personally he was on jihad and laying in wake for someone who was alone, who didn't have any elderly people or women in the car with him and he called it a just kill. and we just want to get the word out that here was a young man, 19 years old simply killed for being an american. >> 29-year-old brown admitted for killing other men for his muslim belief.
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>> a dramatic water rescue caught on camera. two friends pulled to safety after their boat drifted away. the pair forgetting to anchor their boat while snorkeling off of oliver beach near miami. after yelling for several minutes, someone on shore heard them and called for help. >> the truth is for a long time i felt quite calm, just taking in deep breaths and really slow air a it was a long time. we must have been drifting out there, i don't know, over an hour. >> their boat was eventually found and towed to a dock. new developments in the ray rice saga. the nfl players' union may appeal the decision to suspend the former ravens running back indefinitely. this after receiving a former letter from the nfl commissioner roger goodell of the punishment the union has two days to decide what it will do. they t. is likely at they will file a grievance without rice's support. and, parents, are you ready to experience this in real
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life? ♪ let it go ♪ let it go ♪ i'm one with the wind and sky ♪ let it go ♪ let it go ♪ >> disney world's epcot park in florida is about to get frozen. a new icy attraction featuring favorite moment and songs from the animated family flick there will also be a royal greeting area where kids can meet and sing with princesses elsa and anna. and opening day is not yet set. is this all because of your beseeching, clayton? you said come on o, disney you have got to do this. >> i want to hide it it as much as possible. i'm glad it's at epcot because there is alcohol at epcot. parents will need that. >> not before the tea cup ride that could be dangerous. rick reichmuth knows firsthand having spoiled many a tea cup ride. >> i can't do them anymore. would you go to epcot center for that? >> absolutely. i have two nieces that would go there and they would have
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a blast. >> i thought that song was let it snow. weather, it's cold, she likes cold weather, that's what i say. take a look at the weather maps this morning. speaking of cold. here you go. your temps says you are waking up across the northern plains 335 in aberdeen and 32 in rapid city. breezy. i can't believe it's here and talking about wind chill. feels like 22347 aberdeen and rapid city and 30 in nebraska. some chilly air there. don't worry. take look at your first alert forecast. see some showers spread from west to east, behind it some slightly cooler air come in and tonight will be a very chilly night all across areas of the northeast. not freezing, no freeze advisories, but it will be a cold one. down to the southeast. get ready for some showers and a little disturbance moving across the central gulf. watch that and see if there is any tropical development. i don't think it will happen but bears watching none the less. all right, guys. back to you inside. >> thanks a million, rick.
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coming up, isis succeeding in recruiting american women to join their violent cause. what could make these women turn on their families and their countries. we will tell you coming up. >> do you coddle your kids too much? a new study says you could be doing some serious harm. but, first, let's take a look what's coming up on america's news headquarters. >> the cia now says isis may be three times bigger than we first thought. this news as congress debates the president's plan to take on the terrorists. coming up at noon, you will hear from senator john mccain along with key congressman democrat elliott angle and ed roy. a look back at the fall of saigon with film maker rory kennedy. you know what? i'll dri! i really didn't think this through. brakes, tires, oil, everything. (whistling) why not your eye color? new air optix® colors prescription contact lenses
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christi mountains, desert and gulf of mexico. he they will report back to the data to the faa which develops the rules and procedures on drones. it's coming, folks. more drones. and a new study claims parents that coddle their children can actually do more harm than good. this is a surprise? researchers at arizona state university found parents that try to help their anxious children are actually creating a, quote, protection trap which can lead to even more anxiety. encouraging children to face their fears is is considered a better alternative. shocking, anna, tucker? >> thanks so much. women wanted. islamic terror groups like isis aiming to attract more females and thanks to their social media reach, even american women are answering their call just this month 19-year-old nurse's aid pled guilty in a court to trying to help isis. what is drawing women to tear groups like this. we have a perfect person to act physician and author of "in the land of invisible
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women." doctor, thanks for coming on this morning. >> thank you. >> this is shocking on so many levels but maybe most surprising is the idea that western women. women raised in the west all the freedoms afforded here would want to join isis which by definition has retrograde attitudes about women. what is that? >> great question. shocking particularly new york female jihadists well known we convicted a woman and sent her to federal prison for 86 years for aiding and abetting al qaeda. this has been a problem for the long time. the western woman going now to isis and well studied in london are on young, 16 years old. two twins. 20-year-old a woman in scott lands actually hoped that she -8d be the first fee nile behead what she terms an infidel. they are attracted the lure of a fictional image that they believe is islam but is really totalitarian ideology. you hit the nail on the head. they don't know anything about isis's own views on
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women. >> this is something that baghdadi called for in the beginning in order to grow the islamic state you have to have women to procreate. that's what this 19-year-old was going to do. be a nurse and marry a guy and have isis babies when she got there they can be even be foot soldiers. >> i would completely agree. they did respond to his call which i think is very strategic. they also know if they engage women, particularly western women, it's another way of attracting female youth and other youth that's what's being discovered by studying them on social media. >> there is something wrong with a culture as rich as ours or that of europe a problem in u.k. as you said where women decide i want to leave it all to join like some mid evil force that beheads people. it does make you wonder. >> i don't know if it means that our culture is fundamentally flawed. i do think there are people who have aberrant beliefs and are caught up in what they think may be a romantic
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fantasy. may involve foreign travel. the image of a foreign fighter. but also we should not under estimate women themselves can be potent radicalizing forces. israel has some of the best academic studies on what they call the smartedder bomb or female suicide jihadists propagated from the tigers. women can be just as radicalized as men. we don't like thinking about women in that fashion. >> is that why they end up getting called upon too because we don't expect them to be life extinguishing. we think they're going to be life bearing? >> very much so. and also the western jihadists that go now as opposed to the child jihadists i have met in pakistan who are boys. the ones in the west have hand held devices. they have wi-fi. they have other assets. they have literacy in languages. somebody is producing these glossy videos for isis. western jihadist may have many other assets that you might not find in a young person let's say from the hindu. >> that's completely
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distressing. doctor, thanks for that. >> thank you very much. >> horrifying but interesting. >> here is what is coming up on the program. what in the world could be offensive about this? some serious feathers ruffled at a california high school over this delicious, tasty chick-fil-a sandwich. >> too yummy for school. have details have. you ever seen a ufo? did you tell anyone? did anyone believe you? our next guest attempts to explain the explain to clayton, the perfect audience next.
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my favorite segment of the morning. from ufo sightings to building the great pyramid, these phenomena are being explained in a time life book called "mysteries of the unknown: inside the world of the strange and unexplained." unlock the secretstember 16th. of the world is the editorial director of time liv books, steve kemp. nice to see you. >> good morning, clayton. >> why write this book and put it all together in one place? >> it es inspired bay 20-volume set published a generation ago by time life books. people loved it. we brought it back as one volume and how science can't quite explain the legends. >> there's so much phenomena we can't explain. i love you update the book and added news stories. for instance, 2006, one of the most famous ufo sightings at o'hare international airport. what happened there? >> someone's working at the gate, a worker for united
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airlines and sees this strange object hovering above the tarmac. and it suddenly then zooms away into the sky like no aircraft could. and the "chicago tribune" investigated and they found that 12 other united airlines employees saw this too. and the faa has never been able to explain this. >> so the people there, pilots saw it. >> yes. >> and people at the air traffic control center as well saw this thing. you'd be worried internationally if there's a giant cylindrical object hovering above your airport. >> and what was it doing there, refueling or what? >> the bermuda triangle had a lot of ships and planes vanishing. >> it's defined as the points bermuda, miami, and puerto rico, and strange things have been going on there ever since the days of columbus who saw strange lights and weird compass headings. as time goes on, world war i, a giant cargo ship going from
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brazil up to baltimore just disappears without a trace. 300 people on board, never was found. and then around world war ii, a whole squadron of fighter planes just disappeared. and what was oddest was that the leader of the flight said that everything looked strange, they were heading into white water, nothing was right. then two planes went out looking for them and only one came back and not a shred of evidence was found where they went. >> fascinating. the nazca line. tell us about this. >> peru, one of the driest pl e places on earth, these people lived a thousand years ago. one of the weirdest things they did was drew pictures in the sand, but you can't see what they are unless you're up in a plane or out in space. they're remarkable and people wonder how did they do this. >> and you, like, fly over and there are giant animal drawings the psi of many, many miles. >> right. >> the pyramid and then i want
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to get to -- of course the pyramid are in the book. we know a lot about those. still a lot of mysteries. but what's cracken the sea monster? >> norwegian sailors talked about this giant animal with tentacles and eyeballs as big as your head a thousand years ago. it's haunted sailors ever since. even better than moby dick and 20 thoush,000 leagues under the. we've had film of giant squid 50 feet long under the ocean that are quite like the legend. and one wonders well, did one attack a boat once and launch this legend? we don't know. we also don't know if there's other species like that. >> and we see sperm kwhals with giant marks in the size of their bodies from these creatures. the book is out on september 16th. it is called the unexplained mysteries -- >> inside the world -- inside the worrell of the strange and unexplained. >> thanks, steve. appreciate it. looking for it in my notes.
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coming up, will the soldiers of the future come equipped with soup speed? look at that. a jet back going through testing. and music to your kids' ears. schools are banning homework. is that more of a wussification of america? it's a bit like asking if they want a big hat... ...'scuse me... ...or a big steak... ...or big hair... i think we have our answer. geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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(together) it's got grains, which i like. i like the little bunches of oats. what i like is actually the flakes. it's got crunch, which i love. mmm. it's really good. honey bunches of oats. yay! hello, everyone. today is saltd, september 13th. right now, a massive manhunt for a cop killer. one state trooper is dead, another wounded after a shooting outside a police bar rabs. get the breaking details on what officials say is a target attack. and if you're just waking up, this could be news to you. watch. >> the united states is at war with isil in the same way that we are at war with al qaeda and al qaeda affiliates around the globe. >> we know that. you know that. does john kerry know that? because the secretary of state just days ago said no, we're not at war with isil.
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what is going on? >> it was supposed to be a tribute to her son who was recently killed. >> it was hard for me to enter the stadium knowing my son was gunpoint to be there. >> but thanks to a group, this cross was removed off the back of these helmets. governor mike huckabee is fired up on this one. hear what he had to say straight ahead. "fox & friends" hour four starts right now. >> good saturday morning, everyone. >> good morning. 9:00 a.m. on the east coast. anna, the spiritual center of this program. good morning. >> can we get the ha! >> and the dance sent e of this program. >> she is. i'm clayton morris. that's tucker carlson. great to see you all on the show. >> a big show lined up for you right now. but this fox news alert. police are on the hunt for a cop killer in pennsylvania. one state trooper is dead and another wounded after shooting outside a police barracks.
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officials calling it a targeted attack. the shooting happened during the shift change just before 11:00 p.m. in blooming grove about 40 miles east of scranton. several roads in the area are currently closed as s.w.a.t. teams and police helicopters search for the gunman. authorities say they are following several leads. also overnight a new scandal rocking the nfl. minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson turning himself in to police in texas acued of child abuse. he was released 30 minutes later on $15,000 bond. the alleged victim is peterson's 4-year-old son. he visited peterson's texas home in may. when the boy went home to minnesota, his mother took him to the doctor to treat open wound on his legs. the doctor reported the injuries to police. peterson says he used a tree branch to punish his 4-year-old son for pushing another child. his attorney say, "adrian is a loving phatter who used his judgment as a parent to discipline his son." the team now benching their star
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player for tomorrow's game against the patriots. the nfl has not acted but is investigating. does this chicken sandwich offend you? a california high school principal is banning the football booster shrub club from selling the chick-fil-a sandwiches during a fund-raiser because she disagrees with the company's political stance against gay marriage and worries the chicken sandwiches would offend someone. the superintendent of the ventura school district backed her decision. do you have any scraps of red, white, and blue cloth marked ft. mchenry in your closet? the smithsonian wants to speak with you. the original star-spangled banner that hung over the fort in baltimore 200 years ago was cut up and clippings were given away as keepsakes. the museum believes about 20% of the scraps are still around. and in honor of the star-spangled banner's anniversary, the smithsonian is hoping to get some of those back for preservation.
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>> declarations of independence. i'll check under the bed. have you ever had the sneaking suspicion that you wake up in the middle of the night and it dawns youn that maybe the obama people have no clue what they're doing? we have confirmation this morning. what are we calling our efforts to destroy isis or isil? here's josh earnest, white house press secretary, with his version of what it's called. watch. >> the united states is at war with isil in the same way that we are at war with al qaeda and al qaeda affiliates around the globe. >> so we're at war. >> we're putting american soldiers in harm's way. we're raining hell down on enemy targets with our american warplanes. we have boots on the ground already. that by all accounts is war. right? but not according to secretary of state john kerry and ambassador susan rice late they are week who didn't seem to be on the same page as josh ernest. listen.
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>> is the united states at war with isis? it sure sound from the president's speech that we are. >> i think that's the wrong terminology. what we are doing is engaging in a very significant counterterrorism operation. >> i don't know whether you want to call it a war or sustained counterterrorism campaign or i think frankly this is a counterterrorism operation that will take time, it will be sustained, we will not have american combat forces on the ground fighting as we did in iraq and afghanistan, which is what i think the american people think of when they think of a war. >> no boots on the ground, so it's not a war, then it is a war. why does this confusion matter about this rhetoric, this semantics veil as some have called it? why does it matter? because if you're trying to have some long-term effort, which is what we've heard, that it could go beyond president obama's -- the rest of his term, you're trying to rally the american people, you're trying to rally the troops and get a coalition together to join you in the fight, you ought to know what
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your stance is going to be and you ought to know what you're going to call it. >> they don't want to admit the truth, which is president obama, who campaigned against the war in iraq going back to 2004, just restarted the war in iraq. >> yeah. >> i mean, maybe that was a good idea, maybe it wasn't, but that's just what happened and they don't want to admit it. why do they need to because if you want to inspire other people to follow you, get allies involved, spill their own blood, you need to know what you're doing. >> do you think this about face hurts us even more? when secretary of state john kerry said that, you imagine that's what the president told him to say. don't say we're at war. when rear admiral kirby was on on with elisabeth hasselbeck, are we at war, he wouldn't say it either. now admiral kirby again, now he is saying that. so the message changed. so do you think that is -- the message changing is going to hurt us too with trying to build
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allies to come and join this coalition with us if they can't trust us to know what we're doing? >> let us know what you think about that and this too, ta that isis may be within our own boarders. frightening new revelations about several terrorists that were in boston. we talked to joshua katz earlier on the show and he had some frightening details about this. listen. >> make no mistake about this, we are at war. and so what this du is this says to us that this mosque, the people that are coming out of it, the extremism that's coming out of this, this is really traitorous stuff here. let's not mince words. we're dealing with traitors here in boston. and listen, it's also spreading throughout the country. >> yeah. we know the stories of course last week in minnesota in a mosque out there as well. >> but why? why minnesota? because minnesota has a massive muslim immigrant population. that's why. and nobody wants to say that out loud. speaking of political
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correctness, we pretend all immigrant group are the same. an immigrant from somalia is way more likely to join isis than one from south korea or india. that's just true. why doesn't our immigration policy reflect that truth? because everyone is afraid to be honest. >> try to be too politically correct with that mosque in boston which has ties to several terrorists including one of the boston bombers. but what took so long? what took so long? also, the girl in colorado, the 19-year-old who wanted to go and be a nurse for isis and get married there. >> right. we had governor mike huckabee on the show earlier this morning and we would be remiss in not asking the former arctic national wildlife refuge governor about his home state where there's some controversy this morning, because arctic national wildlife refuge state university, where his daughter went to school, had this issue unfold. see these crosses on these helmets? those were put out in honor of two fallen members of the student body that had died this year. so the students rallied around,
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decided to show their support for them, putting these kros on the helmets. well, because of an atheist group they're now being removedremoved ed and replaced with other items. one of the moms is just beside herself. listen. >> it was hard for me to enter the stadium knowing my son wasn't going to be there. but when i see the guys come out with helmets, i felt as if my son and markell owens' mother's son was on the field with those players, and we were very touched and honored. >> now, keep in mind the players are wearing these crosses voluntarily. no one forced them to. no one tried to establish a state religion or make them pledge allegiance to jesus or anything like that. they decide to do it voluntarily and they were prevented by force because some atheist group was offended. the one upside to this, it's nice to see the cross still has the power to rattle people sufficiently that they're moved to do things like this. i completely disagree with it,
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but it's not an empty symbol pimt's still a powerful symbol. that's an upside. >> this poor mother said she's not upset at the school for the removal of the cross but just the fact that it's happening, it's such an issue to her, the freedom for religion foundation said thank you for making the correct decision. essentially what the mom is saying is she's upset with society for making this be the way our culture is and governor huckabee says the same thing, people don't have a right not to be offended. listen. >> i think it was a wonderful way to honor these two students. frankly, i care a whole lot more about this grieving mother than i do some attorney who got hiss feelings hurt. there is nothing in the constitution that says we have a right to not be offended. i get offended every day. my values get trampled on every single day in this country by people who hate what i stand for. you know what? i get over it. i move on. it's life. i can handle that. i think we're getting to the place where people knee to put their big-boy pants on and need
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to accept that they're going to be people who dils agree with them. >> and we had a lot of viewer responses as you can imagine this morning. an e-mail from tina who wrote, i'm sick of my beliefs being trampled on. we've got to stop letting people take away our freedom to believe. >> a tweet from larry says religious displays are a no-no in public venues supported by taxes. take it to your church of choice. >> not true, by the way. this message on facebook. the crosses should stay. i agree with governor huckabee. these people need to grow up and put on their grown-up pants. a lot of things offendtoo. >> you can write in about your grown-up pants. or send us a picture of your grown-up pants. rick has been with us this morning. >> elastic waistband? i just saw that i was on tv. i was talking with everybody out here. do you know who's out here? a rocket scientist. hi. a rocket scientist. >> hi. >> i didn't even know that existed. so awesome. take a look at the weather map
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as you're waking up this morning. tropical stuff going on out there. tropical storm eduaouard. don't worry about it. then that little invest, a little area of circulation that's move off of florida an is going to sit there across parts of the gulf. this time of year, anything in gulf you often think that will develop. most indications are that it will not develop conditions not favorable for it, but we will see some rain across parts of texas and generally across the gulf for the next number of days. a very cool morning across the northern plains. one more cool morning. you will warm up this week. we do have frost advisories in effect. don't worry. by tuesday, back into the 60s and 70s. back to you inside. >> thanks so much, rick. >> coming up, the parents of james foley speaking out now saying the government threatened to arrest them if they tried to free their son by raising money. this you have to hear. and cupcake, the snack attack coming to a school near you.
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so whatever they save, you save. hassle, time, paperwork, hair-tearing out, and, yes, especially dollars. esurance. insurance for the modern world. now backed by allstate. click or call. a brabd nu rrt from the central intelligence agency indicates there mooib more than 31,000 islamic fighters in the middle east. that number three times bigger than previous estimates. >> the new number comes just days after president obama announced that he is drastically expanding the u military campaign against isis. so will these new numbers impact the president's strategy? joining us is buck sexton, former cia official and national security e or the for "the blaze." judging from the history of this administration, what would you say? >> the answer is yes. the fact that the numbers have
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gone up so dramatically are indication of a few things. one is just the success of the propaganda that isis has been able to engain in over the last few months. they've been using the victories they've had on the ground, the seizure of city, even the fact america has had to intervene as a reason or some sort of way to compel people to come and join the islamic state. so the numbers are going to continue to grow. while we're talking about strategy here and even in the case of yes with john kerry, whether we are at war or not, the administration still debating that point, people from around the world are deciding they're going to wage jihad and are looking at this and saying yes, and that's why the numbers are going up dramatically. a huge problem. >> it's growing and fast moving. it seems one of the big fears could be they could overwhelm one of the gulf states and cut off or choke off a lot of the world's oil supply. what are we doing to prevent that? >> gulf states are getting involved in some capacity because of the fear of what happened if islamist groups in their own base rose up. >> that would be a disaster for
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us. >> a huge disaster. also why you can't ignore iraq. when the president mentioned somalia, in the case of iraq, which the islamic state has seed some, you're a self-funding mechanism now. not only can you build up your infrastructure to fight against whatever efforts we have -- remember, the enemy gets a vote in this. they have a lot of things they're doing. they're digging in, getting more weapons, more funding. they also can export terrorism around the world. if we look at a month el of, for example, iran, starting 1979 to today, hamas, hezbollah, and other groups have been assisting them. so it's not an isis specific problem. they can assist other extremist groups in the region. >> some say the harder we hit isis the more this is going to inflame them and infuriate them and get them to fight harder. take a listen to tom brokaw on msnbc. >> you're dealing with people who have in my judgment a completely distorted view of their faith, but it drives them. if we begin to hit them hard in
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isis, i promise you it will light up the middle east for young men who say i want to join isis. >> is that a reason not to do it? >> no. this is one of the recurring idiocies you hear from people who shouldn't be doing terrorism analysis. the fighting of terrorism against is not the same at incitement of terrorism. if you believe that, you should leave the battlefield right away and why try to fight back. >> and this islamic group has nothing to do with islam. but no one told them, apparently. thanks. >> appreciate it. coming up, bananas or boos. wait till you hear how some of your taxpayer money went straight to the monkeys. they want to get drunk and we're letting them do it. >> and they loved it. and music to your children's ears. schools banning homework. is banning homework for of the wussification of america? or is it the greatest thing that's ever happened ever? our parenting panel live next.
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well, it's time for your neuse by the numbers. first up, 11:45 a.m., that's when a fighter jet looking like this is supposed to land at washington, d.c., reagan national airport today. officials warning you should not be alarmed. an unarmed prototype can be brought to an airport conference. don't be afraid. next, $3.2 million. that's how much taxpayer money the government spent on getting monkeys drunk. part of an experiment to
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determine what effect accept drinking has on body tissue. the monkeys thoroughly enjoy it. and finally, $124.6 million. that's how many single adults there are in america, outnumbering their married counterparts for the first time in recorded history. that has never happened before. single people ages 16 and older now account for 50.2% of the population. clayton? for eharmony. this morning we have news that your kids will be happy to hear. a growing number of schools across the country are banning homework. concerns among educators and parents have driven home schools to opt out of homework all together. is this the right move? here to discuss is psychologist jonathan fader, mothers jennifer and ella. you're on the side of this. extreme homework, get rid of it.
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>> get rid of extreme homework. >> what is extreme homework? extreme sports? >> that's the kind of homework i did. >> what is it? >> when we think about homework, the general rule is ten minutes per grade is what we think, so if you're in first grade, ten minute, 12th grade or a senior two hours the maximum. the reason is if you have extreme homework it doesn't really teach kids anything. more content doesn't really do anything. what we need to do is teach kids how to regulate their behavior so just enough homework to help them to learn how to learn, not just to focus on the content that they're learning. >> do you acknowledge it's a smart move, jennifer, to ban it? >> no, i don't. i don't know when homework became the enemy and a puni punishment and i think it's a bad message to send children. i think moderation is the key here. >> what about the reversing of homework? we've heard, you know what, doing homework in class where there's actual discussion and cooperation, when you're at home you're not doing homework, you're sort of contextualizing the stuff you learned in school, maybe reading or adding more to
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what you took from class. >> i think the case for homework is not just as good for the kid, who have with moderation that self-regulation and the discipline of accountability but also for the parents. it's very easy for us as parents sometimes to disconnect from the curriculum of what's going on in the classroom. this could be also an opportunity. with moderation for it to be a point of discussion of what they're learning. so you get involved in that learning process as an extension in the house. >> another story that was making headlines this week about generation helplessness. how are kids -- are kids able to do anything? i always think about if we had the zombie apocalypse, would these kids know how to go to wood shop, do different things? >> little selfies. >> pictures of the zombies. >> look at this story. what can children do confidently? right now 57% of them work better on a mobile phone than they do other things. they tie their shoe laces, 53% of them. and 49% of them can tell time. soo kids know how to use a mobile phone more than they know how to tie their shoes.
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are you troubled by this? >> it's very scary. looking at some numbers, from 0 to 8, 9% of kid from this country are using mobile devices. that's up from 38% in 2011. and the iphone was first introduced in 2007. we're now starting to see the 7-, 8-year-old, preteens that are going to be of this generation. and you're seeing different behaviors because you're not interacting with real people. >> what's the problem? come on, an iphone, really, is it destroying our generation? >> i don't think it's the iphone or the ipad that's destroying it but the parents and the lack of regulation. >> bingo. >> we can't blame technology. we blame the parent. if i left -- you know, if i left oreos all over the house, my children would binge on them. >> eat them all. >> exactly. we need a technology diet. >> if you don't limit the kids' time with electronic devices, you're in trouble. >> steve jobs says he limited it in his household. everything in moderation. aristotle was right. phone adams to you.
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your shoe laces aren't going to adopt to you. the kids need to learn like homework, self-regular gags. it's our job as parents to teach our kid how to moderate. banning it is no good, but it's teaching them how to limit it and use those skills of self-regular gags so they can use that in all things in life. >> great discussion. jonathan, lily, and jennifer, great to see you. coming up on the show, what you're about to hear may be the most offensive thing you've heard all morning. i pledge of allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. >> oh, turn it off. so offensive. did you hear that? apparently the pledge of allegiance is too political for one major network. we'll tell you which network. and a challenge that anyone can get on board with. firefighters putting their grill skills to the test. and the grand prize, you'll meet the top contenders coming up. and we're going to eat well this morning. hey, i notice your car is not in the driveway.
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pack can shave second off their best time using less energy. developers hope one day to give all soldiers the ability to run a four-minute mile. >> that's great but why don't we use ironman armor? that's what i want. think about it. wouldn't the soldiers benefit from that as well? why am i the only one supporting this? iron man armor. >> coalition of one. >> al those to poed -- >> yeah, maybe. >> all right. we have some stories making headlines to tell you about this saturday. a fire outbrake is spreading fast. health officials in new york are confirming more than a dozen cases of the enterovirus. arctic national wildlife refuge also investigating possible cases. it's sickened hundreds of children in at least 13 other states since mid-august. there is no vaccination or cure. the parents of james foley, an american journalist executed by isis, reveal their
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frustrations with the government's efforts to bring him home. they say the feds threatened to arrest them if they tried to raise ransom money for their son. the reason? a top military official telling them ransom money would help support terrorism. >> they couldn't do prisoner exchange. we were told very clearly we could not raise ransom, that wealth go to jail, we would be prosecuted. >> foley's parents have since started the james foley legacy fund in his memory. is this commercial offensive to you? >> i pledge of allegiance to the flag of the united states of america. >> cbs sports seems to think so. the tv network blocking this cute commercial from airing during the wrangler champions rodeo broadcast. cbs told the advertiser his commercial was rejected due to its, quote, political nature.
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that's right. a 4-year-old recruiting the pledge of allegiance is a political statement. soun political to you? let's have a tag sale. a school in vermont tells kids to bring kale instead of brownies for a bake sale. it's required by the new smart snacks in schools program. cherrie says if i had children still in school i'd be protesting outside the school. it's up to parents to limit junk at home and teach proper nutrition. lynn says bake sales have been a tradition for decades and help support clubs and trippings and help kids who can't afford to participate in sports. to take away a souers of volunteer funding just because a school is afraid to lose federal dollars is long. janette says it's a sad world to deny a child a cupcake. maybe the current white house just puts frosting on kale? those are your headlines.
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officially designated by the department of agriculture a kale-free zone. no kale on this set ever. >> but we are allowed to have chop up steak on the grill. and rick is outside with steakums. >> there might be some kale. we'll see if there's some kale mixed in. a couple hours earlier we told you about the challenge to give $20,000 to the best firehouse chef using steak-um products. you have three finalist here. first finalist craig wine balm from florida. saying it's chilly this morning. >> it is. >> it's not. just you're from florida. what did you make? >> the stuffed steak-um stuffed with pesto, cheese, and spinach, rolled up, hearty, thick tomato sauce that i made over red bliss potatoes. >> okay. good. >> good? >> now i have to talk with my mouth full. so take it over. andrew, what did you do? >> this is the anytime casserole, meaning you can eat it any time of the day,
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breakfast, lunch, or dinner. >> what's in it? >> steak-um, eggs, pepper, onion, sharp cheddar cheese and french fried onions. >> that's good. >> i'm glad you like it. >> where are you from? >> hershey, pennsylvania, area. >> you're from -- i know pennsylvania but we have another floridian. two floridians made the finals of the steak-um challenge. >> yes. >> alex. what did you do? >> i'm making the steak-um slider and i like to construct one for you really quick. it's made on a potato roll with a little garlic aioli sauce i made and i top wit a delicious steak-um right off the griddle. >> this is looking good. >> some caramelized onions karm lied in marsala wine and a little bit of melted havarti cheese on top. >> i have to tell you just by the descriptions, sounding pretty good. like a tough competitor here. this is awesome looking. hey, our clayton morris is a big steak-um fan because he grew up in philadelphia, but it's not
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just for philadelphia anymore. is that what we're saying? >> absolutely not. no. this is the boca version of it. >> awesome. all right. so the winner will be announced when, in october? >> october the 6th, i believe. >> and the winner gets $20,000 for your firehouse. >> that's correct. >> awesome. but another challenge where the winner gets $5,000. you guys can watch videos of these guys on facebook and vote and then the winner gets $5,000. >> there's a fan voting also for an additional $5,000 towards our cause. >> i'm not going to judge, but i have something in my he. this is awesome. good luck to all of you. >> thank you. >> appreciate it. >> firemen can cook. coming up, only 16 drivers remain in nascar's chase for the sprint cup. one of those drivers, kevin harvick, is here live in the track with a huge update to his team. this week's race. and first it was beer, cigarettes, even a lap dance. now we just found out you can buy weed with welfare.
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including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. if you're still just managing your symptoms, ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible.
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hey, everybody. good morning. 42 minutes after the hour this sat. some quick entertainment headlines. medical director of the clink where joan riversed that procedure that led to her death has stepped down. dr. lawrence b. cohen performed the throat procedure on rivers, and now we're learning he faced a malpractice suit in 2004 for a similar operation. the manhattan clinic is currently being investigated. and martha stewart slamming actress turned lifestyle specialist gwyneth paltrow. she's apparently not a fan of
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the movie star's website say, "she just needs to be quiet. she's a movie star. if she were confident in her acting she wouldn't be trying to be martha stewart. ". well, it's remarkable but it is true. the federal government is now admitting that welfare recipients can buy manl with their benefit money in states where marijuana shops are legal. responding to al mannar senator jeff sessions' inquiry on the issue, the hhs secretary wrote this -- "the hhs has no authority to preseib policies and practices for the states to implement in order to prohibit the use of benefit card at marijuana stores." colorado state representative libby salvo says the state's hands are tied because they can't legislate a federal program. wow. we have more. libby, thanks for joining us this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> i'm not sure i understand how this works. so the state of colorado has now
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been informed officially by the federal government it is up to it, your state, to ban this practice, the use of federal money for marijuana. and the state hasn't acted yet on it? why? >> well, i'm not sure why the state hasn't acted on it. back if july they said they were promulgating a new rule that would add it to the departments already banning the card being used at liquor stores and strip clubs and those type of establishments. but we all know that those ebt cards and the federal funds and the taxpayer dollars that go to that are to be used for food that provides nutritional value. >> well, it's so insulting to taxpayers, obviously, who are paying for this, but it's also insulting to the idea of charity, the idea that we help the very neediest people who are hungry, who need food. i mean, this insults the concept of welfare.
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>> exactly. it does insult the taxpayer that the federal government is actually taking their hard-earned there ares to provide entertainment and recreation n recreati recreational use mank marijuana. it's appalling actually. i think if we went to the streets of denver and asked people would you allow your tax dollars to be used to provide marijuana for people, i think they'd give a resounding no. >> but i'm always amazed by how unoffended certain lawmakers seem when stories like this come out, stories of shocking waste and abuse of public funds. it's like they're not bothered. so governor hickenlooper, the governor of colorado, has he come out and issued a statement on this? >> you know, he has not. he has not issued that i know of any type of statement. it's very interesting because when we were -- when the initiative was in play in
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colorado, governor hickenlooper said he was against it. but from what i know, he also took a bunch of money from the recreational marijuana people to run his campaign this year. so there's kind of a disconnect there. but, you know, last year a couple lawmakers, my colleagues, representative dan nordberg and senator vicky marble ran a bill that would prohibit this. and the senate democrats killed that bill. >> no matter where you are in legalizing marijuana or prohibiting marijuana, i mean, the principle remains the same -- i, as someone with a job, shouldn't have to pay for your weed or your breast implants or your newports or your 12-pack of milwaukee's best or whatever. it's for food and that's all it's for. >> exactly. you know, it's for food, for you and the -- you know, the people
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who -- to have these card and for their children, to feed their children, not to use for alcohol, weed, and all these other types of entertainment. that's just not appropriate. >> and it just makes people super cynical about government, you know, in the end. libby, thanks a lot for join us this morning. >> exactly. thank you for having me. >> appreciate it. coming up, only 16 drivers remain in nascar's chase for the sprint cup. one driver, kevin harvick, is here, live in the track with a big update telling us what his team is up to. a massive amount for our military families too. stay tuned for that. when you told me about this "candy crush" game at first i thought "so what?", but now i can't stop playing. that's not how it works. i mean it's so simple. it's like my car insurance. i saved 15% in fifteen minutes.
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big weekend for nascar. racers hit the speedway for the first time in the chase for the sprint cup. among the favorites are kevin harvick. he will display a special support to the troops this weekend. kevin harvick is joining us alongside dan rooney. welcome to both of you. nice to see you guys. >> thank you. glad to be here. >> nice to see you. before we get to the news, big pit crew change. you are taking over tony stewart's pit crew in time for the race. why? >> i think it's kind of a two-fold hope that we have here as we go into the future. we want our guys to be more consistent. they can get that with tony and everything they have going on with their car the last ten weeks and come back today toe
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that strong. his team has a lot of experience in these situations. hopefully it pays off. swhak are the chances? what are you in sixth for the cup? >> we really haven't won a race yet. we are looking forward to racing in chicago and hopefully having a good weekend and improving upon that for next week. >> next to you is major dan rooney, a good friend of the show as well. folds of honor is involved this weekend. >> kevin and i go way back on a lot of levels. we are here because jimmy johns is making a million dollar donation to the folds of honor. unbelievable. it will fund 200 scholarships for us. j.j. is a great american dream. he started the first store as a loan from his dad. loaned him $25,000.
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now they have over 2,000 locations across the country. he understands, you can't do what he's done without the freedom we all live under. you can't come out here and drive fast if we are not free. it's great to have a partnership with j.j. and kevin here. we are wishing them the best of luck today. >> folds on honor is going to be on the car, am i right? >> right. it's on the nationwide car that will race today. hopefully we can put that car in victory lane and celebrate with the folds of honor folks and jimmy johns. >> that is incredible. >> for those not familiar with what folds of honor does, tell us. >> we give scholarships to spouses or children who have been killed in combat. put out $10 million in
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scholarships just this fall. representatives in all 50 states across this great nation and we are just really blessed to have partners like j.j. and kevin that support this wonderful mission and the viewers there at fox as well. >> all right, guys. great to see you. good luck in the race, kevin. if folks at home want to help out folds of honor, go to foldsofhonor.org. great to see them, as usual. more fox and friends next outside on the plaza. we'll be right back. when folks think about what they get from alaska,
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they think salmon and energy. but the energy bp produces up here creates something else as well: jobs all over america. engineering and innovation jobs. advanced safety systems & technology. shipping and manufacturing. across the united states, bp supports more than a quarter million jobs. when we set up operation in one part of the country, people in other parts go to work. that's not a coincidence. it's one more part of our commitment to america.
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in california that banned chick-fil-a on campus because the owners disagree with the idea of gay marriage. you responded in force on this question. nancy wrote, we worry about selling chickens in our schools when we should be worrying about why they graduate and can't spell chicken. >> facebook, another writer writes in and says, allowed to sell them. they should be allowed to sell them. any offended person has the option to not buy the sandwiches. >> good point. john on facebook says this, the problem is, the ones preaching tolerance are not tolerant. something we see very often. >> it is a weird irony. the more concerned we become with other people's feelings, intoleran intolerance, the more intolerant we appear toward those who
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disagree with us. >> the same thing happened on a different issue, which was religion. that was at a arkansas state university. two of their students from the student body died so they put decals on the helmets that were crosses and put their initials on. they got a couple complaints. because of the pressure, the legal team said you have to remove the crosses. the family members are going are you kidding me? this meant so much of us. >> if you are a player, it's a lot to ask of kids. i'm not taking it off. it's my helmet, i'm going to wear what i want. it would be nice for people to stand-up more. >> i would like to see that. be brave. you might be benched or lose a
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scholarship. tim tebow putting scripture here. west point band is here. >> so great. we'll have a sample on how blood type can change. stay tuned. see you tomorrow. time for the sheik to hit the fan as the u.s. sends more of our troops and more of our money to fight isis terrorists in the mideast. oil rich nations in the mideast are said to be offering tepid backing, even though isis is in their backyard. time for the sheiks to step up and pay up. hi, everyone. i'm brenda buttner. this is bulls & bears. here they are this week. welcome to everybody. john, time for the oil sheiks to step up and pay up? >> my, god, yes. why have we not asked them to do that before?
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