tv Happening Now FOX News October 3, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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fox news alert. armed guards facing down ebola in dallas. enforcing the quarantine on the family members of the man de diagnosed. >> this is happening now. >> the actions that we took while unusual were appropriate. for the safety of the family as well as the safety of the public. >> ebola lockdown. family members of the first person diagnosed with the virus in america quarantined under armed guard for not following demands to stay home.
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plus -- their money is reportedly safe, but personal information may not be. chase bank revealing a cyber attack first announced this summer is much worse than first thought. tens of millions of customers potentially affected. so who is behind one of the largest corporate data breaches ever? and -- >> today i proudly announce my candidacy for president of the united states of america. >> it was 23 years ago that then governor and presidential long shot bill clinton made a run at history and won. so with anticipation building about hillary clinton's next move, is it the clinton brand of politics still resonate with voters? it's all happening now. but first our top story. right now the major effort in dallas in the fight against
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ebola and the effort to stop it from spreading. federal and local health officials tackling the possibly contaminated apartment where thomas duncan stayed and used sheets and towels and then became the first person diagnosed with the deadly virus right here on u.s. soil. welcome to happening now. i'm eric shawn. >> and it is no ordinary cleanup job. four family members under quarantine. and they can be arrested if they try to leave. meanwhile, an nbc cameraman working in west africa is now the fourth american to contract ebola. he reportedly got on a plane for liberia after lying about his contact with infected people. raising new concerns about air travel. and there is breaking news about another patient under isolation at howard university hospital in washington with symptoms of ebola, not yet confirmed.
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jonathan has all the latest developments. >> well, this case at howard university among a handful of suspected cases. officials using an abundance of caution isolating the patients until they can confirm either way whether they have ebola between the suspected case and the confirmed case in texas. it's drawing a lot of scrutiny to air travel. but both public health officials and airline industry officials say that as a passenger, flying is still extremely safe. i want to show you an e-mail that we got from a representative of a trade group who writes, airlines for american members that fly to affected countries remain in steady contact with health officials and have procedures in place to quickly respond to potential health concerns. before travelers leave those west african countries affected, airport screeners take their temperatures with infrared thermometers and ask them a series of health related questions.
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will keeps people with obvious symptoms off of planes which is important because people infected with ebola are not contagious until they actually become ill. a big concern, though, is people with no symptoms who evade airport screeners as they leave africa and then come down with ebola symptoms there. thomas eric duncan became ill in texas several days after traveling from liberia where neighbors say he had been helping a sick woman who eventually died from the disease. liberian authorities say done c done can lied on his exit questionnaire. liberian authorities plan on prosecute duncan when he returns to the country. critics say this points to gaps in the system. some people would like to see passengers have to provide documentation, perhaps hotel
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bills proving that they stayed in an area that was not affected by the ebola outbreak. back to you. >> jonathan, very interesting. and this raises present of complex legal yquestions. our experts will tackle them later this hour. how to the world's fight begins isis and brand new reports of heavy fighting in syria right next to the turkish border. they're advancing on the town of kobani. the fight has been going on there for several weeks as kurdish fires return fire. the ghoechovernment of turkey v kobani will not fall, but isis has captured dozens of other nearby villages. mortar fire even hit turkey, but so far no response from the turkish force there. greg is about 40 miles from the
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syrian border with the latest. >> reporter: we are just back from the turkey/syria border and we have witnessed a very long day of heavy fighting in that syrian town of kobani. it is a fight with broader implications for the u.s.-led war on isis. take a look at what we saw. for the past hour or so, we have been hearing and seeing firing coming from isis terrorists hitting kobani about a mile away inside syria held barely by kurdish fighters. we're watching it here from inside turkey. we know that the isis terrorists have been using mortars as well as artillery, possibly tanks. we've seen one isis tank about two miles away heading towards the town. we're told inside the town of kobani, it's basically empty except for those kurdish fighters barely hanging on and at least one expert on the ground here has said that the isis targeting has been very good. this could be the last end for
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this crucial location. while our kurdish sources tell us they're not in the city proper, we have seen and heard fighting on the eastern outskirts. they could be there soon. and we have witnessed a direct isis hit on a strategic target just overlooking the town. finally, the u.s. has hit with air strikes several times in the past week around this region. but they seem to not have anything to do to stop the isis advance. the terrorists are moving ahead. and crucially, in the last two days, there have been no u.s. air strikes. remember today we saw no fewer than three isis tanks and several isis armed vehicles rolling across the desert heading toward the town looking like pretty good targets. >> greg, the turkish government says kobani is crucial. thank you. well, canada and australia
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now joining the fight against isis as the u.s. conducts air strikes on isis targets. brand new polling shows most americans support air strikes to combat the terrorists. they're similar to recent fox news polling showing 78% approve of the air strikes while 15% say they disapprove. but another fox news poll asks does the obama administration have a clear strategy for defeating isis. only 26% say yes. 64% say no. more than half of americans also say there is a high risk for a future terror attack on u.s. soil. let's bring in chief congressional correspondent for the washington examiner to talk about it. hi, susan. so what sood out to you yyou ine polling numbers? >> first what you pointed out, that americans support the idea of air strikes, but also that they don't have a heck of a lot of confidence in how the president is going to move forward. and i think it's interesting because the package you just
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showed about the problems in syria with the islamic terrorists advancing on towns there and also today there was an iraqi helicopter shot down in the northern part of the country, all demonstrate the fact that these air strikes from the u.s. may have limited impact which raises the question what next. and that's when the poll from fogs fox is also very interesting because asks americans how they feel about boots on the ground and there was a large number greater than 50% who said that they did support the idea of ground troops. that's one of the first polls where i've seen numbers that high. so is may suggest the public is beginning to recognize that air strikes may not do the job with these insurgents, that there may be ground troops necessary, even american ground troops, to get the job done. >> and we've seen polling consistently over the last few months negative for the president when it comes to how he's handling foreign policy.
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is the uptick a reaction against isis, but the fact is they are very concerned about this ptopi. and i'm interested to see how whether you think the you how the president is handling the issue will show up in the mid terms especially for democrats. >> interestingly, some of the poll numbers that we were talking about where the president saw very slight bounce from his decision to conduct air strikes, that seems to be dissipating a little bit. some of the poll numbers coming out today when you average them out show he may be coming back down from the four or five point advantage he got from that. so it suggests to me that people aren't -- it didn't give him enough of a bounce to help democrats. and if you look at the poll numbers where americans are really worried about this, it really does suggest in the elections coming up in just less than into two nmonths people wil really be thinking about this and it could definitely impact shall democr
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some democrats especially in key swing states. >> the president publicly said just a day or two ago i'm not on the ballot, but our policies are on the balance lot. how will that play out, plus or minus? >> he may not be physically on the poll, but in these individual races in many cases, it is about the president. and you have the republican candidate running against the president and his policies. don't forget, some of these policies have become -- are what is very unpopular. democrats supported them like some of the immigration policies. so if the president says it's just going to be about the policies, i don't think that will give any advantage to democratic candidates who by the way are trying to distance themselves from the president physically by not campaigning along side him. i don't think in the end they will be able to put enough daylight between themselves and the president even if he's not on the ballot. >> all right, susan, thanks so much. >> thank you. man, oh, man, is there wild weather out there today.
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severe storms hitting several southern states knocking down power lines and trees. in fact some 200,000 people are now left in ht dark in the south while in texas, at least two people at a baptist church were hurt by broken glass at a dormitory. they say winds clocked nearly 90 miles an hour. in california, the problem is an autumn heat wave. triple digit temperatures baeking the southern part ever the golden state. he have the normally mild temperatures in the bay area reaching 90 degrees today. the national weather service says the scorching heat will last through the weekend. new unrest in ferguson, missouri. more arrests as protesters clash with police in the streets. and the nation's largest bank under cyber attack. 76 million chase account holders affected. were you one of them? we'll tell you what you need to know. and we want to hear from you. are you better off than you were section years ago? our live chat is up and running. go to foxnews.com/happeningnow.
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hazmat teams are now on the scene where the ebola patient was staying in dallas. the big truck parked outside the ivy apartments where thomas duncan was visiting friends and family there. we're told that he sweated on the sheets and used the deirty towels. his fever was 102 degrees when he was sick in that apartment. the family took him to the hospital. of course the first time he went, the hospital released him only giving him some antibiotics. but now there is a big concern about the contents of that apartment and we're told authorities say that the family will remain in that apartment as the officials clean it up. of course they will likely be having contamination suits, taking that material out safely, disposing of it in very safe and
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secure way. officials say this whole process should take about three hours as that family has been restricted by court order to stay inside that apartment. they are there being protected and staying there by armed guards as you can see the hazmat team is on the site of where the ebola patient stayed. this is fox business alert. u.s. employers adding 248,000 jobs last month. driving unemployment to a six year low. the jobless rate fell to 5.9% in september down 0.2% from august. numbers that could be inching closer to what economists consider a healthy level. and the stock market looking very healthy. the dow surging 188 points on the news. >> that's good news after yesterday. here is some disturbing news. jpmorgan chase says about 76 million people had their personal information hacked along with 7 million businesses.
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but the bank is insisting that so far there is no evidence that any the accounting information was compromised. the hackers whoever did this, if they sucked out anybody's money, laura engel live with more. >> well, that's a good way of putting it it. this new information coming to light in report filed yesterday. jpmorgan chase disclosing user contact information including mac names, addresses, and phone numbe numbers have been compromised. now, there is no evidence that account information like account numbers, passwords, user i.d. or social security numbers were compromised during the attack. this is according on the document filed which states customers are not liable for unauthorized transactions on their report if they alert the firm right away. the firm has told its customers
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they don't need to change their user names or passwords at this point and that their money is safe. this breach was first disclosed in august, but during the bank's investigation, it determined the cyber attack dates back to june. i want to also mention i spoke with jim lewis, a cyber security expert in washington, who says this is basically the equivalent of hackers breaking into the marketing department. but not into the vault. he add it s it doesn't mean it a failure for the hackers. there is a black market for this data. and that adds up. cyber attacks are happening more frequently. this comes on the heels of target's breach last holiday season which also compromised names, address, e-mails and phone numbers. home depot was also breached in september that hit about 56 million payment cards. >> so just check your balances as afternoomuch as you can. on this day in 1991, bill
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i order b14. i get b14. no surprises. buying business internet, on the other hand, can be a roller coaster white knuckle thrill ride. you're promised one speed. but do you consistently get it? you do with comcast business. and often even more. it's reliable. just like kung pao fish. thank you, ping. reliably fast internet starts at $89.95 a month. comcast business. built for business. he was a long shot. bigger democratic names in the race. but 23 years ago today, the relatively unknown democratic governor of arkansas made an announcement that will launch one of the most powerful political brands our country has ever seen. >> to provide that proven leadership is our challenge in 1992 and that is why today i
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proudly announce my candidacy for president of the united states of america. >> so is clinton '91 similar to hillary '16 or not? online editor of the weekly standard and professor law of political science and fox neu e contributor p welcome to you both. what are the contrasts and any similarities between bill then and hillary now? >> well, bill clinton ran largely as an outsider. he was a young attractive southern democrat running against the establishment. hillary clinton meanwhile, if she is to run for president, it will be as the ultimate insider. she has houses how in washington, d.c. and chappaqua, new york. she's an establishment figure who can't really rayil against the establishment.
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obviously bill clinton's main message was on the middle class and trying to help the middle class. hillary clinton is likewise expected to establish some sort of message if she ever does around that central theme, as well. >> susan. >> well, i'm just laughing, some message if she ever does. i remember 1991, bill clinton was trying to break a long string of democratic losses interrupted only by the election of jimmy carter, a southern moderate. we had been losing over and over again. clinton has you see him there now, you know, as a 40 something-year-old governor, he certainly wasn't going to run on foreign policy experience. he wasn't going to run as somebody who had the decades of experience to deal with terrorism around the world and changing global economy. he was running with the demographics such that for a democrat to win at that point in
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time, we cooperate win with the established con statistic espn cities. we had to do much better among moderate white men, among southern men. of course hillary will be different. >> but he was the comeback kid. he came in second and then he got gennifer flowers. the draft letter. hillary has some objecstacles le benghazi. >> gennifer flowers came before the comeback kid. and remember he would have won the new hampshire primary. he was on his way to cruising because the democrats by '91 to '92, the primary focus i think was winning. and the understanding was that clinton was more moderate than dukakis or mondale.
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but he had to strike a new course. i think the country is in a very different place and when you talk about the clinton brand, it isn't simply the announcement and i'm sure the book goes much further, but it isn't sirnl simp simply the announcement 23 years ago. it's that people recall the eight years of clinton presidency putting monica aside of years of peace and prosperity and i think hillary will run as the candidate who has the experience and maturity to deal with a very dangerous and insecure world which is very different situation from '92. >> and do you think she can capitalize on that? she's going on a campaign tour for some vulnerable senate democrats and of course she has her granddaughter now charlotte who she apparently is already mentioning. >> absolutely. he we have an opportunity to test whether or not hillary clinton works and whether or not she can attach herself and connect to voters across the nation over the next month
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she'll be going to several states, at least section, and in at least three, kentucky, iowa, georgia, democrats are behind. can she help those democrats by her presence. these are questions we'll all be looking at as she continues. i think one important difference obviously, and this is so obvious i hesitate to even say it, hillary is a woman and she's going to be running as the first woman president. and that is one advantage she has over her husband, bill clinton as we look forward. >> well, susan, daniel, thank you so much. she's going to run. well, new calls for flight restrictions after a case of ebola is diagnosed in dallas. raising interesting legal issues. our panel will wae eigh in next. and julia pearsierson lost the
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to start because there are so many different issues here. liberian government already suggesting that they will prosecute this guy potentially if he lives for lying on a travel document. but this are so many things along the way where people have responsibilities, hospitals have responsibilities. what do you think could be the flare here? fred, i'll start with you. what could be the one legal nightmare that we have? >> there are a couple. i think the guy lying on his form about having been did expo that's a fairly serious charge. but he's worried about saving his own life. he checked in in to the hospital. they send him home. ebola originally presents as a common cold or flu. however the guy is not a u.s. citizen. he's a liberian. and i think that should have raised a red flag. >> if other people get sick, you worry about the civil suits against the hospital, that kind of thing. so we also now have the situation where the family is being quarantined. we have reports they didn't like being locked in there. so now there is essentially a
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court order and guard. >> maybe a defense attorney who focuses on search and seizure, obviously there are laws on the books in texas that this is absolutely legal what they're doing. but if you think about it from a you humanitarian point of view, the people who are in the apartment with him, they may not have been exposed at that point. so now you're locking them in and you're raising the level of the likelihood of them getting the virus. and now apparently they just september over a truck to desanitize the place. this is going to be driven by chon sense. i think one thing that would make sense would be people from that area of africa right now while we're getting our legs under us maybe have to be screened much more thoroughly before they get on a plane very much like ellis island 200 some odd years ago. if you had pink eyes, you had to be quarantined until you were
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better. i don't think that is out of the realm of possibilities. >> when you raise those concerns and possibilities and questions about limiting travel or different screening, people immediately do scream about civil liberties and targeting and profiling. >> the most important our government does for us is keep us a safe ass citizens. quite frankly, that's their only real job. at this point we have a much bigger problem. if this virus spreads, it's deadly in most cases. the more people that died in this outbreak than in all -- >> tell me about the machine they were telling me about. >> i went to taiwan back this last summer and for reasons which now i understand why, i go walking through like a metal detector, next thing i walked through, they took high body temperature. >> and i don't think people would think that it's out of order if you get screens physically health wise at this period of time when we don't have control over this. if you have 104 fever, you can't get on the plane to come to
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america. sorry. >> i thoughts of interesting the texas law on the books if you don't cooperate can twith the quarantine, it's a third degree felony. i would think a lot of states have a similar law. >> and it's to stop an outbreak. i don't think it's overly intrusive given how deadly it is. >> and they're in their home. if you go to ellis island and see where they quarantined the people, they were worse than skral ce jail cells. >> the state has a compelling interest to make sure nobody else gets sick. >> something like a life and death threat that will often unite us in trying to find that balance. so thank you both. >> thank you. it is now 1:36 in the
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morning in hong kong and those massive protests have spark some had violence there. they's trying to evict the pro democracy protesters as police try to keep both sides apart. this is beijing, warning of, quote, unimaginable consequences if it continues. david piper with the latest. >> reporter: yes, clashes took place in various locations around the city and in response, the protesters announced they were postponing those talks which were key to trying to solve the crisis. now the confrontation between the rival groups has been brewing for quite some time. the procemany business owners a unhappy with the disruption and today they con fronted the protesters at several camps in the city. trying to dismantle the barriers and tents set up.at several cam.
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trying to dismantle the barriers and tents set up. they were joined by pro beijing groups. there is also suggestion now that triads were also involved. police tried to separate the two groups. protest leaders warned when the violence started they would call off the talks with the government if they weren't protected from the other groups. and in the last hour or so, they have said the talks have now been shelved. the offer of talks is made by chief executive late yesterday local time in an attempt to diffuse the crisis which has paralyzed the city. the protesters want full democracy rather than what is being proposed by china. basically china has said everybody can vote in hong kong in 2017 but they will be in effect vet the candidates they vote for to be chosen as chief executive. now, at the moment on the streets, protesters are
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gathering more. there has been a bit of a lull today before the violence. but i do imagine there will be more on the streets tonight to get the word out. back to you. >> and showing no signs of ending anytime soon. thank you. well, pro-russian rebels meeting strongresistance. there are report of she willing at a terminology of the airport and is threatening a september 5 truce. the ukrainian spokesman said two service men have been killed and another nine wounded since thursday. secret service director julia pierson abruptly resigning this week after a series of major security breaches that question the agency's ability to keep the president safe. in the wake of her stepping down, she told bloomberg news, quote, the media has made it
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clear this is what this they expected. howard kurtz and host of media buzz joining us. howard, did the media do it? >> well, largely yes. if it had not been for the "washington post" and then the washington examiner, reporting these stunning details of security lapses whether it was the fence jumper getting all the way to the east room or the convicted felon with a gun getting on an elevator with the president, pierson would still be the head of the secret service. but more than that, this drumbeat every single story, should she go, should she resign. president who does not like to fire people had to conclude the only way to change the subject was to get rid of julia pierson. >> it's really i would say chutzpah for her to blame the media when in fact secret service basically lied to us, the government that first said, well, the guy got to the front door. then, no, he got into the portico. then, no, the east room. then, no he actually was trying
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to get the group room before he was tackled. and then it turns out he was tackled by somebody off duty.up was tackled. and then it turns out he was tackled by somebody off duty. >> they not only lied to the public, but also the white house about some of these incidents. the president was angry to find out just before they were published. so on the way out, of course there were ungenerous leaks saying she was never very qualified and she watch theed the white house to be run more in a more friendly way like disney world where she worked as a character in high school. that struck me as a low blow. but i think it became clear this is a president who likes to give his aides even when in trouble a lot of rope, that this was such a smoking performance. if you couldn't get canned over this, i don't know what would get you out the door. >> if they said she wasn't qualified, why was she in the job in the first place? >> she didn't help herself obviously with her very weak and
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defensive performance on capitol hill. but finally, one of the things i fault the media on, we go crazy over these incidents. this was a very important story that jeopardized the lives of the first family, but once the person resigns, we tend to move on. today we're talking about ebola. not like the problems of the secret service were resolved. so i think we need a little longer attention span. we need to keep asking these kinds of questions because the problems of the secret service and the culture is now clear are so deeply rooted. >> and it apparently took a whistleblower to come out, tell the media about that gun in the elevator incident, secret service did not say that. so two cheers for the whistleblowers. hour, we'll s howard, we'll see sunday. ebola now on u.s. soil. what we're doing on combat the deadly virus and what should you know about it. . >> i wish we could get to zero
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coming up on "the real story," why are we down near bill o'reilly's studio? i'm giving and you sneak peek because today bill will be on our show defending his commentses that people traveling from west africa to not be allowed to come into the united states with the ebola scare going on right now. we're also going to have an exclusive interview with the schoolboard out in colorado. and wouldn't it be fantastic if we could come up with a ganl either on help the weather people always get the weather picture right? we may have found it. find out top of the hour. we are learning more about the first ebola case diagnosed on u.s. soil. at least 100 people may is been exposed to the deadly virus through this one guy.
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we're hearing out of the texas state health department have identified 50 people who need to be monitored daily, including ten that they say are high risk contacts. currently no cure for ebola, but there are new experimental drugs that have worked with some patients in the past. chair of urology is joining us. you've heard comments about travel, whether we should be limiting it. what is your take? >> this is a problem that i have. so this patient mr. duncan came from west africa and didn't have any fever over there. so the whole inspection at the airport over there, flashing some equipment, knowing whether you have fever or not, i think it's irrelevant. you may have the virus and then five days later, you may he said oig up having all the symptoms. but he comes over here and i think we're a little bit at fault because he was this our emergency rooms. the nurses knew he had fever.
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the doctors knew that he had fever. he came from west africa. and west africa plus fever should automatically mean that it's ebola at this point until we figure out what else we need to do. and this guy was -- whether he lied or not. if we're not going to be able to contain, we should try to at least have in-flight in from our troops and doctors going there, with all the help that goes there, but we should not have leisure somebody who wants to go for a wedding or someone just visit families at this point. we should restrict those until we isolate the disease and roll it. now, the numbers that they're talking about is somewhere between 6,000 to 8,000 people that may be cop tamcontaminated. 3,000 are dead. we'll be heading to more the 20,000 range before dies down. one thing you've heard from a
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lot of doctors is we won't have a huge epidemic in the country because it's not airborne. but if we're not going to do what we're supposed to do, isolate them quickly, this can turn around to become a huge complex issue. so don't think -- of course we want to say don't panic, but that's all good until it becomes a problem. and now this guy has contaminated 100 people. who knows what they have done. and this can really become escalated to a problem. >> they're worried they're not getting the full story because when you hear that it's bodily fluids, people say what about a she's. isn't that some kind of fluid. and even though it's not airborne, if that is a bodily fluid and it gets into a cut on someone else, is that a concern you need to have? >> it can stay on the cdoorknob address s and surfaces a two to three hours. so if there is some exposure, yes, you can get some of those. diarrhea, vomiting, kissing, all
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of those are ways to get this virus. the other thing is we also only have four in this country, nebraska, nih, other places. we probably need more of these. now this patient is in isolation. should we fly them to one of those places or not? every hosp? these are the questions that we should be thinking very quickly very fast, but on the positive note, i will say the fact that we sent some of our doctors about 500 health care workers over there, we should take the war -- we should take the fight over there and keep it there and try to isolate as many people as we can there until this dies down. opening up some of these ebola clinics over there, spending more money there as the government is doing, these are all very positive things. if they are not emergency rooms diagnosing early, can't -- >> we can't miss one link in this chain. >> thank you for coming in. eric. >> john wayne was called the duke, and he, well, always won. his family today not so lucky.
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how they went down for now to another duke over the use of the hollywood legend's nickname. our project in the waters off miami sparking concern about the future of the delicate marine life there on the ocean floor. phil keating coming up with a preview. alka-seltzer plus night rushes relief to eight symptoms of a full blown cold including your stuffy nose. (breath of relief) oh, what a relief it is. thanks. anytime. i have $40,ney do you have in your pocket right now? $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week and let it grow over time, for twenty to thirty years, that retirement challenge
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there's an underwater battle. it's dredging that port to accommodate the much larger container ships that were soon passed through the panama canal. environmentalal groups say it's threatening the majestic coralr says sp reefs like you see there. hi, phil. >> hi, eric. it's about saving fragile possibly coral versus an ongoing $1 billion jobs program. the biscayne bay water team just
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filed this long threatened lawsuit saying that the u.s. army corps of engineers in the dredging project that's still going on is not only endangering the endangered species act, it's violating it. the corps's $200 million project is deepen and widening government cut here so that those mammoth ships can make it in and out. the megaships can carry three times as many containers, 13,000 per ship more cargo, more jobs, say the ports, but florida's department of environmental protection warned the corps that it is harming if not killing critical coral. these pictures show the damage sediment that's been stirred up. compare to that these coral which the university of miami rescued and transplanted before the project. >> corals can come back if they're removed, but they take ang awful long time. a single coral colony the size of your fist or the size of your head can be dozens of years old, and so if we lose corals, it's going to take an awful long time for them to come back again.
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>> last night the u.s. army corps tells fox it believes it is in full compliance with federal and state regulatory requirements. now, up and down the east coast, charles, norfolk, baltimore, new york, they were all racing to be ready for the expanded panama canal. that project should be completed in 2016, and that will mean bigger ships from az yashgs along the east coast, more cargo, and all of the u.s. ports are racing each other, but here in high my, it sounds like it will now be up to a federal judge to decide via in lawsuit whether to freeze the dredging project until the coral are better protected or keep the project going as is. eric. >> all right, phil. thanks so much. shannon. well, eric, with public distrust growing in the federal government, can americans trust washington to control ebola? we'll examine as part of our continuing coverage on the deadly virus now here in the u.s. people with type 2 diabetes
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with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms, stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar,kidney problems, and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections, changes in urination, and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life ♪yeah, you do the walk of life need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga
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>> thank you for joining us. >> the real story with gretchen carlson starts now. >> thanks, guys. we start with an alert because the story about ebola keeps changing. ten people now said to be at high risk for coming down with the disease after coming into contact with the first man diagnosed with the disease in america. hi, every. happy friday. i'm gretchen carlson, and we are about to give you the real story. the news comes as a fifth american came down with ebola while working in liberia. freelance cameraman, he works for nbc news. well, now the rest of the crew is also in quarantine for 21 days, and they apparently will come back to the u.s. for treatment this weekend. as for the family of the first person diagnosed in america, they've been put under armed guard now after disobeying orders to stay inside their apartment or be arrested. if that's not enough, yet another person now being evaluated for ebola in
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