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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  October 9, 2014 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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we'll stay right here for outnumbered on the web. click on the over time tab and you will see it pop up in a box. and tv version of us. we go in to the on line version of us. and "happening now" starts >> s alert. isis on the verge of a potential victory capturing the key town of kaboni in the border of syrian and turkey. >> as the u.s. war planes pound the targets. is this a battle point in the turning of evil? this is "happening now". >> there are air strikes and the key syrian town from isis control. but the black flag of terror is flying over kaboni. and also they are making sure they are okay. and if they start saying he has.
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>> and a sheriff's deputy who reportedly entered the texas apartment where an ebola victim lived while he was ill now sick. >> and a prowler on the loose. a car pounding mountain lion has a community on edge. >> i am concerned about the littler dogs. it is all "happening now". and the first the top story, battling the islamic radical terrorist in syria. isis capturing a large part of kaboni, a key town on the syrian/turkish border. >> american and allied war planes pounding isis camps and buildings and vehicles in the most intense air strikes of this
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campaign. isis terrorist control 60 percent of kaboni and could take it over complete plea and sparking a blood bath within days. analyst and military leaders agree to the battle of isis cannot be won solely from the air. ndoug has more and live from the pentagon where they expect kaboni to fall. >> reporter: hi, eric. as isis makes advances and the u.s. responding with air strikes in the past 24 hours and a bone bomber and fighter aircraft and unmanned drones launched five strikes south of kaboni and that damaged a isis training camp and dedestroyed a support building and vehicles and killed isis fighters. they believe that the kurdish militia control most of the city and holding out against isis thus far. a day after the president visited the pentagon, there is
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no sign of his deviating from his strategy of no boots on the ground even while critics increase pressure to do just that. >> we are two months of a strikes. the president's strategy is clearly not working and isil continues to grow and gobble up territory from baghdad to kaboni. >> we have forgotten and we need to remind people it is a long difficult struggle and not solved by military power alone. as dramatic as air strikes can be and on the battlefield they can be, they are not the solution here. >> reporter: the u.s. is putting tremendous pressure on turkey to put boots on the ground. turkey wants the u.s. to provide support for rebels who are trying to overthrow president assad of. and a no-fly zone and a buffer
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zone in the syria and turkish border to stem the tremendous flow of refugees flowing north. one unintended consequence of the u.s. air campaign. the air strikes on isis has allowed president assad to deviate his force to the moderate rebels. the very same people that the united states is trying to arm. part of the complexity of the hugely complex issue in syria and iraq against isis. >> ten minutes from now, we'll hear directly from the kurdistan national assembly on what to do. >> cowan took issue on the president obama. the u.s. will look feckless. is that accurate of how the white house is dealing with dire
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terrorist threat. we'll talk about it with chris wallace. anchor of fox news sunday. >> great to see you. >> you and i have covered washington. you hear trickles from the administration and we are hearing from the pentagon, as in the report talking about admiral kirby, that is not getting it done. are you sensing a split between the military community and the administration formal at this point? >> well, there has been a difference of opinion for a positived time. people in the pentagon said they believe you need ground forces and not hundred thousand troops and not an iraq invasion, but you will need troops in a forward position much more so in iraq than syria to help. we don't have ground forces to aid in syria at this point. you can overstate the impact of kaboni. most of us never heard of the
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town a week ago. if it falls it didn't make isis a bigger or smaller threat to the united states or u.s. home land. but on the other hand, it points out a lot of problems with the president's policies and the fact we haven't gotten together with turkey. turkey is right across the boarder and they can look and see the bombardment of kaboni and they could go over there. but the president hasn't agreed with turkish officials about going after the assad regime. this is a test case that shoes problems with the president's policies, whether or not kaboni falls or not while important to the kurds doesn't hurt national security. >> we know there is an apology involving the vice-president. but what do you make of our president's working relationship with a rka wa. >> they have a different point
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of view. turkey is upset about the fact that hundreds of thousands of refugees are coming over the border and they don't want their southern part of the country swamped by that. and they would like assad being displaced and we join the war and people argued for years we should have done that war. >> and president obama wants to restrict it to isis and so obviously there is a tremendous difference of opinion. and u.s. officials are upset with the president of turkey and his policys saying it is not the way another fellow of nato should react when they have ground forces within a few hundred yards of kaboni and not doing anything there. >> what about the administration making difficult judgment calls and decisions and taking stiff
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criticism from former defense secretary leon panetta. >> that is a impact, not so much on the president's political future. he's not running again. it will impact the midterm elections, but will impact obama's legacy and you have the man who is chosen to be the cia director and secretary of defense and saying that the president went against the top advisors when it came to keeping the residual force of u.s. troops in iraq and despite what the president said we could have kept them there. and the white house wanted out of iraq. and the president went against the top advisors when it came to arming the rebels. again, that is strong stuff and that will figure in the obama legacy when you have robert gates and leon pannet thea and
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hillary clinton talking about bad decisions by the president. >> yeah, it adds up. chris, thank you for making time to talk to us today. >> my pleasure. >> and chris will debate with karl rove architect of both bush campaigns and joe trippapproximate i. and check your local listings on sunday morning and tune in on fox news channel. eric? >> we also want to hear from you as we get closer to the midterms. live chat is up and running and go to fox news.com/"happening now" and click on america's asking and join the conversations about the races in the country. >> also "happening now", u.s. military plans are arrive nothing liberia to continue to stop bum bullthere.
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and the dallas sheriff's deputy who went into the apartment of thomas eric duncan, the ebola patient from liberia who died in the dallas hospital yesterday. the deputy was hospitalized after exhibiting symptoms of the virus but not all. test results for the possibility ebola take two days the health officials in spain hospitalized two more doctors who treated a nurse who was diagnosed with ebola. meanwhile the condition of the nurse has worsened. she contributed the virus. and believed she might have touched an infected hospital grove and touched her face. that may be how she came down with the the disease. >> here at home. cvc launching the effort to take the temperature of passengers arriving from west africa. jfk, washington dulles and international airports in
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chicago and atlanta and newark. leon viter joins us from dulles. >> reporter: shannon, 150 passengers coming to the united states on flights that originated in three key countries where ebola is running ram pant. liberia, sierra leon and guiny. when they arrive in the united states, there will be an extra check for customs and border protection. they will use a nontouch thermometer and see if they are running a fever and ask them health questions. and there at the airport, they are going to have folks from the health official agencies to quarentine if necessary. two major problems, one is the sense of false positives. a number of folks who get a fever because of malaria and that is something that the cvc is talking about.
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and there are major gaps, remember the the case of thomas eric duncan who threw in through dulles and went to dallas. these checks would not have caught him because of the incan youubation period. the cvc said the latest issues and checks, will be helpful, but far from foolproof. >> what we are doing, we are putting in additional protection. we are clear as long as ebola continues to spread in africa, we can't make the risk 0 here. we wish we could. we wish there were some way to make it 0 here. >> reporter: the other issue is making sure the hospitals are ready. in new york, hospitals are hiring actors to come in and show they have signs of ebola to make sure the doctors and nurses
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follow the protocol after duncan was sent home from the hospital when he had a potential of putting more people at risk of ebola. >> thank you, leland very much. >> fox news alert. all this week it is like a roller coaster. up yesterday and biggest gain of the year so far after the federal reserve said no rush at all to raise rates. it is going down. more than throw hundred points and just in the past few minutes and that number is going south. this is based we are told on global growth concerns and investors have the 401 k. it is a wild ride in wall street. and we'll do that and continues to keep an eye on the markets throughout the day and what this means and where it is going next and what could the impact be on our financial future, shannon.
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>> kurdish fighters locked in fierce battle with kaboni and they need supplies. but will turby jump in and help them fight isis, and if not? why not at this point? >> and plus, the mother of a young american hostage threatening by isis making a personal appeal to isis. will it do going to help save the life of her son?
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>> rattedical islamist terrorist could be on the brink of taking the border town of kaboni. isis fighters are attacking the defend kurds. this is a symbol of american and coalition resistance against isis. the white house wants turkey to join in the fight.
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they are on the border sitting watching like bystanders. they are trying to convince the turkish government to pitch in. what do the kurds think of the inaction and the u.s. response. they join us now. and thank you for joining us. what does it mean first if kaboni falls to isis? you for kaboni is for us, resisting the culture of isis and terrorism in that region and as a kured and a kurdish leader in syria it is targeting us and target the west and united states and allies and so if if isis wins in kaboni. they are focusing on kaboni just to defeat the west and it is it the beginning that they would
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come to europe and eventually end up in the united states. and for us, it is survival. and we are fighting on behalf of the western allies and the united states, and the people who have the same values as american values. and the bottom line, we are trying to survive and isis is trying to defeat the west and use the kurds. and they view them as zionist and in trying to create a zionist state. we ask the international community to help us because the administration is not doing anything. >> lookingality the black flag of isis fly nothing kaboni and the administration is not doing anything. do you feel betrayed? >> absolutely. this administration soon as they came to office they promote muslim brotherhood and not engaged the kurds and in fact
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people who work for him in the central command and retired generals, all of them, they disagree with his policy. the kurds demonstrated that they have the same values and protect the minority and christians and yazidis and they are a friend of america and west. under the leadership of iraq, the u.s. is not willing to engage in the group, they can engage many syrian kurds. and we can deploy and help. but turkey not allowing them to come and the united states is not helping, and so in my view, all the united states is doing is taking tax money to support and create more isis. they send them to saudi arabia in fact those people are most of the money comes in from the petro states. >> you know, the pentagon
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launched 20 air strikes in kaboni last night and have been launching hundreds so far and the administration said it would take a year to train the free syrian rebels to do this. you are saying there is no action, but there is some but critics say none. what about turkey? what do you want him to do and what do you predict will happen and fear? >> the free syrian aircraft rabs and radical islamist as well. they will not represent the kurdish interest. the kurds are not in that equation. on turkey president. he has two issues. he wants a regime change and replace muslim brotherhood and make sure they don't create. >> i apologize, we have a computer that cuts us off
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whether or not we like. it thank you for joining us in the fox news channel. >> is isis gaining ground in the key syrian town. will kaboni fall and can we defeat isis from the air? while every business is unique,
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>> we just heard from a top kurdish official who called on the administration to do more. you heard him blame the obama administration and others in part for not being aggressive enough to engage the kurds and fears a possible catastrophe if kaboni is captured. despite a new round of a strikes, there were 20. with those air strikes work and can we beat back the success of
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isis? we have president of the global intelligence security joining us now. mike, the pentagon admits that kaboni will likely fall and the air strikes are not enough. do we sit back and home? >> hope is not a national security policy or when we talk about the slaughter. there is a disconnect. the white house, the problem is the obama administration is banking on a strategy, in an ideal situation what they are going to do focus on iraq with minimal ground support to the iraqi military to take care of iraq. and kicking the syrian can down the road while they conduct the air strikes and try to train up the mythical syrian opposition groups that will be aligned with our interest. but the problem, that strategy
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sound and the attempt doesn't mary up on the reality on the ground. it will not prevent the deaths of a left people in syria, while we are pursuing the grand vision of dealing with the problems and that doesn't connect with our image of ourselves as americans. we are the ones who go to the rescue and that's how i grew up. i was the son of a world war ii officer and i grew up believing that is who we were. there was trouble and we helped and now we are in a different reality. >> we have's legacy. i am a son of a b24 pilot who was shot down in 1944. we heard of the chairman of the syrian national assembly talking about boots on the ground and helping the kurds. should we arm them now and how do we do that to help them fight against isis in kaboni. >> the kurds have been whether we are talking about kurdish elements in syria or iraq.
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they are the only group to carve out and say long- term. they have proven their their behavior and track record, they are essentially aligned in a big way with our interest. so is there a group out there that we should be focused on more than others, yes. we are doing it, but not in syria not to simplify the syrian problem and the white house is dealing with the complex issue they are ever going to face. >> could kaboni be saved and could we stop isis in its tracks and sit back and say there goes kaboni, next? >> and we are americans and if we weren't worried about polls and political numbers and we said this is important because we are saving a lot of lives and it is just the right thing to do? i realize that means we have to put our blood and treasure at risk and it is it easy to say
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you are going to do that. and different to be the commander in chief and do it. we put our might behind this, we could stop the islamic state. could we stop them from taking kaboni. we sat by and hoping that turkey would blink and they will do the job for us. i don't know if kaboni could be saved even if we went in full force. could we turn the tide and defeat the islamic state. it would require us and the american boots on the town and the might of the u.s. military, and without, that is slammic state will grab territory and get stronger and one day, we'll really, really regret we let it happen. >> that's for sure. and top officials are trying to convince turkey to do something. he's against the kurds and we'll see if that achieves and they are a nato ally. thanks for joining us. >> a day after stocks posted the
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biggest one day gains of the year, wall street take a sharp turn and this time down. we'll tell you what is fuelling the latest selloff. >> and what really 7d in missouri. you're driving along,
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next beheading victim appealing to the terrorist leaders. tweeting this letter. i am trying to get in touch with the islamic state. i am an old woman and we have no help from the government and we would like to talk to you. how can we reach you. her son converted to islam while in isis captivity and hundreds of people gaerthed to attend a vigil for him. in local muslim leaders called on isis to follow the teachings of the religion they believe in and spare their prisoner's life. >> god is forgiving, we ask that his cantors be equally forgiving. >> he was captured in isis while providing aid to syrian refugees, a fellow captive said he prays every day and confined
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to a single sell with a bucket as a bathroom the mother of a black teen killed. disputing the claims of her son fighting. and holding a sandwich at the time of the shooting. angry protestors took to the streets. garrett has the story. >> reporter: some of the family members are saying that the 18-year-old held a sandwich, but the police said he had a handgun and fired three shots before his weapon jammed. the off duty officer encountered three men on the street who took off running when he pulled up and he chased the group on foot until one of the teens who police say was no stranger to law enforcement opened fire. the officer fired 17 times
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killing the young man. and the st. louis police chief said that he didn't know how many hit the suspect or why the officer fired so many times, but the investigation of the incident is underway. >> emotions are high and tensions are high, but the reality is, what we have seen and evidence tells me right now. the individual pointed a gun at the police officer and fired three rounds and continued to pull the trigger. >> tensions in st. louis are high. and word spread across social media and several hundred demonstrators chanted the hands shoot. and many others are pushing on officers and yelling incentatives and damaging police cars as well. police did not retailiate and none of the demonstrators were arrested. >> thank you for keeping us
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updated. >> you got it. another round. fighting calories and getting the most out of your work outs. and a new app created by students in georgia tech. it keeps an eye on your caucus health. here are the details. and who knows what that check engine light means anyway. >> cars are unsophisticated and can't tell you everything. and that makes some of us ignore big problems. >> john pope is a mechanic in the garage in hawthorn, new york and dozens of drivers ruin their cars by ignoring the check engine light. unfortunately they ignore the lights because sometimes they are meaningless. and other times, they can be serious. >> it is catastrophic.
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a piston meltdown and wouldn't be determined unless you check the engine light. mechanics usually need to plug a car into a sophisticated computer like this to diagnose what the light means. up until now it is only available in a dallasership or garage. >> we wanted to solve a problem. >> enter georgia tech student rachel ford with a new cell phone app called fixed. >> this plugs in your car and can tell you everything a mechanic's diagnostic tells you. >> it is the problems that don't trigger the chick engine device. >> this plugs in your car's computer and alerts you through blue tooth if your car's air filture needs to be changed. >> it is simple that normal
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drivers like ourselves can understand. >> things like pull over or keep driving for a few miles and information vital to keeping a car in good health. >> it is great. and that is an idea of what is going on. >> and knowledge that will not only save money and make his job a lot easier. back to you. hey, doug, that is great. >> and yeah, john is an honest mechanic and some of them are not. it is good for those ones. >> good, thanks. >> and whiplash on wall street. dow heading south and dropping 200 points day after prospects of lower interest rates and fox business network is live from the new york stock exchange. and nicole.
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why today, the big selloff. >> as you noted we had a big jump on the idea that feds leave interest rates near 0 for a long time. and today, worries are back front and center not only about china but the big trading partner euro. and that weighed on our markets and the dow is down over 330 points and we have our weekly unemployment and jobless claims. and when they came in better than expectsed than 270000. and that was the lowest that we have seen in eight years. and show that employers are dealing with. recovery is slow but it is it a recovery and that is good news. >> what is the billionaire investors saying about apple. >> he sent a 4000 page letter and saying number one congratulating him on what he did with apple and the buy back.
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and looking forward to a lot of growth in three years. he thinks that the stock price hovering around hundred bucks is worth $202. he thinks it will double and wants more buy backs. >> and he has a lot of ideas for apple and sees continued growth in ipads. another story that is front and center is the ebola story and we know biotech stocks are battling the virus. and the has mat suits. there is a small tiny companies and called lake land. that stock up 50 percent today because huge orders for these has mat suits and the u.s. state department recently ordered 160000 of these suits as everybody is trying to prevent getting the virus in the first place. back to you guys. >> thank you so much. >> and shannon, our country going on the offensive against
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a deadly epidemic. >> as long as ebola spreads in africa, we'll do everything to stop it at its source. >> coming up. we'll talk to an expert who will fill us here on how to stop ebola here at home. >> a bucket of milk. and a feline doing the stray cat strut.
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>> coming up on the real story. exclusive interview with one of the doctors in nebraska treating the cameraman with ebola and go inside the biocontainment unit and it is incredible. and our soldier will be wearing uniforming that are lighter and stronger and cheaper and made in the usa? and don't miss this. what is this? a a robot helping in the fight
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against ebola. how does it work? we'll show you in the top of the hour. >> caught on cam remarks a mountain lion jumping on the top of the car to get a better view. david was a sleep in san jose. and look what he saw when he checked the home surveillance footage. a big cat. neighbors spotted a mountain line in san jose. and they will be more careful when they go out at night. the big cat in the video was two years old and just trying to establish his territory. all right. now an update on a new possible victim of ebola in dallas. officials say he is not showing symptoms consistent with the disease but exposed to the apartment where the victim that died had been staying.
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the cvc director is calling the outbreak the biggest challenge since the emergence of aids. joining us now is the doctor sought of sacramento. doctor, thank you for your time today. >> thank you. >> what do you make of the comparison. we heard about the hiv virus and what it exploded into. fears and some of them confirmed and many of them not. what do you make of the comparison of ebola? >> it is an interesting comparison. and hard to make a direct one. hiv is endemic in the population and how transmitted with ebola you are not infectious unless you are symptomatic and that is different than hiv. and with ebola, we have proven infection control practices to limit spread. i think the comparison is that
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hiv is a huge problem and ebola is estimated half million cases in liberia and sierra leon and guini unless we ramp up the efforts. >> yesterday secretary of state john kerry talked about the ebola. and put up the chart and listed how the countries and called out other international partners saying they could do more. what do you think about the international response? what could the world do better? >> i think the international response was horrible and pathetic frankly. in that when ebola was first transmitted many organizations pulled out. borders were closed and that's opposite of what needed to be done. we needed to get more resources to the area and thankfully that is being done. the cvc has a handle on it and the the largest international
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deployment by the cvc and start to get a handle on this. >> we'll talk about the other virus making news as well. the enterovirus. victims are young and respiratory problems and this is a great concern to people especially with the death of a little boy, who went to bed and seemed fine and didn't wake up? >> and yes, the enterovirus 68 is a concern. starting off like a cold or flu, just like any other virus and then what happens is that children who are prone to respiratory problems and prior episodes of wheezing and previous asthma have a higher rate of having wheezing. it can be so bad children need to be admitted to the hospital and icu and sadly some of those children die. >> thank you for lending us your expertise today. we appreciate it. >> thank you. >> eric. >> shannon, there is a historic
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flame. it is te destroying homes and people's lives. it is not flames, but lack of water is destroying the salad bowl of our country and the farmers who grow our fruits and vegetables. we'll feel the pinch soon. we will be live on the farm, coming up. g?góéj÷ç÷ç
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hot dry weather soaking wildfires in california along interstate 08 north of sacramento. several fires close the highway, burn five homes, and continue to threaten dozens more. our story live from our newsroom. >> hello. over 1,200 firefighters are currently battling that blaze, which is 20% contained.
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now, how those wildfires started remains a question. however, cal fire says any time multiple fires are started in the same area along the roadside, they usually point to human activity, but not necessarily arson. electricity in yosemite valley was out. facilities were using generators. as a precaution, power lines near the crash site were shut down. now, at current count, 1,000 homes are threatened by the blaze, and six residential streets are under evacuation orders. five homes have been destroyed. the deadly air tanker crash occurred on tuesday at four cal fire aircrafts were battling the blaze on a steep canyon wall th. tankers were grounded
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indefinitely. they're considered an essential resource in fighting wildfires that each can carry 1,200 gallons of fire retardant. the wildfires currently stretch across 420 acres. yesterday the body of air tanker pilot jeffrey craig hunt was recovered. 62-year-old hunt was a 13-year veteran pilot. shannon. >> oh, dangerous. all right. thank you. shannon, those firefighters not getting any help from a severe drought in california. nearly all of the golden state feeling that drought according to the national drought mitigation center. as california enters its fourth year of a historic drought, food prices have shot up for
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consumers across the country. >> we see those increasing by about 30%. >> half the nation's fruits and vegetables come from california's central valley. the farmer's steve managerry has made a living for 25 years. >> of the trees are dead. at this point about 40% of the trees are dead. if you look at the county wide, the 25% of the cherries have been removed this year because of the drought. >> when is the last time you had a significant rainfall? >> it's been 70 days we had 1/100th of an inch, and before that it was in may. >> bee keepers are feeling the sting of the drought as well. the crops were being -- have been slashed, while honey production has been cut in half.
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>> state-wide those pumpkins are wider than normal, and they're smaller hand normal, and that's because pumpkins are a water-intensive crop. >> farmers have to choose which crops to help their businesses survive. >> we'll be right back. ng isn'te of them. you're either too far from the curb. or too close to other cars... it's just a matter of time until you rip some guy's bumper off. so, here are your choices: take the bus. or get liberty mutual insurance. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. see car insurance in a whole new light. call liberty mutual insurance.
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athat's enough plastic bottles boto stretch aroundery year. the earth 230 times. each brita filter can replace 300 of those. clean. clear. brita water. nothing is better.
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so i can reach ally bank 24/7, but there are24/7branches? it's just i'm a little reluctant to try new things. what's wrong with trying new things? feel that in your muscles? yeah... i do... try a new way to bank, where no branches equals great rates. thanks for joining us. the real story with gretchen carlson starts now. >> thanks, guys. fox news alert. an american with ebola in the fight for his life right now as he gets treated with the help of a survivor. hi, every. i'm gretchen carlson, and we are here today to give you the real story. the nbc news cameraman contracted the disease while working on location in liberia. the experimental treatment used on two other americans won't be available for weeks, so survivor dr. kent brantley coming to the rescue offering up his plasma to try to kick start his immune system and get him healthy. time for real talk now with .

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