tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News October 11, 2014 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT
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>> we're supposed to go to special -- whatever it is. >> don't forget. d watch gregg jarrett on "the o'reilly factor." "special report" is up next. hello. i'm eric shaun. welcome to a brand-new hour inside america's news headquarters. >> i'm arthel neville. topping the news this hour, the battle against unspeakable brutality as the terrorists of isis inching ever so closer to taking over a border, key border town in syria. >> one of our nation's biggest airports ramping up the fight against ebola. coming up, we'll tell what you they're going to be doing to keep this often deadly disease from spreading inside our borders. we're told hackers have broken into yet another photo sharing service.
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snap chat. now they're threatening to go public with tens of thousands of photos and videos meant for private eyes only. we begin now with a possible looming slaughter in syria where u.s. led war planes launched more planes against isis. this after three weeks the kurdish ground troops in kobani are hanging on by a thread. they are surrounded on three sides. the kurds appealing to the world to save this city. upunion says 12,000 residents are stranded nearby. 700 mostly elderly trapped inside. this as hundreds to the miles east in baghdad, car bombing killed nearly 40 people. we don't know if that's the work of isis. there is no question the wave of terrorism is closing in. we do know isis forces are now moving in on baghdad. we're told they're within miles of the airport. launching hit and run attacks against iraqi troops in the
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suburbs. the pentagon predicted kobani will probably fall. but baghdad is stable, at least for now, we are reassured. peter doocy watching all of this from washington. hi, peter. >> reporter: hi. there have been 274 anti-isis air strikes in iraq since august 8. 133 anti-isis air strikes in syria since september 23. while there is little debate the strikes are degrading some isis capabilities, it's unclear now if air strikes alone will be enough to destroy isis and permanently eliminate the threat they pose. >> i think the level of effort on the part of the air strikes, i don't know the reasons behind it. i've been told the rules of engagement are too restrictive. i've been told we don't have enough isr that, is to help eye phi targets. but all i can say is looking at what you're looking at, come to the conclusion that our level of effort of air strikes is
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inadequate. >> reporter: just across the border, the turkish military has not been helping keep isis out of kobani, the key city apparently about to fall. so defense secretary chuck hagel is saying the pentagon will send a group to turkey next week that will tell turkey what kind of help we could excuse then see what kind of assistance they're ultimately comfortable providing, if anything. this comes as experts are looking back to 2011 at president obama's decision to pull all american forces out of iraq and wondering if a small american footprint could have prevented the rise of isis. >> i don't think that keeping a few thousand troops in iraq would have stopped isis. and it wouldn't have fixed the iraqi forces. , look, these are deep schisms inside iraq and they reflect the problems really that islam has. >> reporter: the state department says right now the iraqi security forces protecting baghdad are strong and that the u.s. is pitching in with some
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advisors to help protect americans in the area. eric? >> thanks so much. the question today is, can an isis victory in kobani can that be prevented? the occurreds are demanding heavy arms to help. we'll here live from the chairman who says if kobani can be saved. starting today, passengers traveling to the u.s. from west africa will be subject to additional screening in order to make sure they're not infected with the virus. the additional screenings will be first implemented at jfk airport. but will be expanded to four other airports across the u.s. over the next week. bryan llenas has the other three airports as well. >> reporter: that's right. good evening. enhance the ebola screening
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started here. those additional screenings at those four other airports will begin on thursday. nearly all of the 150 passengers that come into the u.s. every day from those three hard hit west african nations travel through these five airports. now, when passengers arrive, they're first given a fact sheet on ebola symptoms. then they are escorted into a private screening area where they complete a questionnaire and have to give their contact information. at that point, their temperatures are taken with no contact infrared thermometers. if someone has a fever, show signs of ebola or have been in contact with someone with the virus, the local health officials then decide if they need extra medical attention. >> this new entry screening procedure is just one part of a multi-layered approach.
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already there are 100% of the travelers leaving the three infected countries are being screened on exit with risk-based questionnaires asking about exposure, asking about symptoms and taking temperatures. >> reporter: public health officials say that there really is no 100% effective rate with these screenings. one reason is because symptoms for ebola typically don't start showing until eight to ten days after exposure. another, some passengers may lie on their questionnaire, or mask their fevers using medications like tylenol. >> additional screening might pick up a few extra people who might have been missed the first time around or might have come down with symptoms while they were in flight and it wasn't noticed. but the value added is small, but maybe it's reassuring to some people. >> reporter: the cdc also states in the reiterate there is no such thing as 0% risk and they
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also say that these new procedures would not have prevented tom eric duncan, the first patient to die of ebola in the u.s., from entering this country. >> so in total we're talking five airports conducting these ebola screenings. thank you so much. meanwhile, the new measures are in effect here in the u.s. there are new concerns about ebola in liberia. more than 40 u.n. staffers are now under close observation after a member of their medical team was diagnosed with the virus. u.n. officials say none of those staffers are showing signs of the deadly disease so far. this is the second case of a u.n. team member contracting ebola in that country. the first one died in september. while the current patient is undergoing treatment in germany. a typhoon pounding japan with 85 mile-an-hour winds, torrential rain and a dangerous
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storm surge. power has been knocked out to many homes and the u.s. military base there has been put on high alert. this is the second typhoon to hit japan in a week. the last one also swept past okinawa, killing several people, including three u.s. airmen who were swept out to sea from a beach. they've hit again. hackers. reportedly pulling off a massive breach. they're apparently leaking as many as 200,000 private photos and videos that were captured from snapchat. will carr is live in los angeles with these details. this really seems like an invasion of privacy. >> reporter: that's right. it absolutely is. this new hack job has a cashy nickname. they're calling it the snappenning. snapchat allows users to take pictures, send them to other people and supposedly the pictures are supposed to be deleted after they've been viewed.
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according to business insiders, snapchat user pictures, including a number of nude pics, some of underage users, started showing up on an on line chat forum at the same site where celebrity pictures that hacked . hackers appear to have been collecting pictures and videos for years. in response, snapchat took to bitter, tweeting, we can firm the servers were never breached and were not the source of these leaks. snapchaterser were victimized by third party apps to send and receive snaps, something we prohibit in our terms of use. >> this isn't actually a snapchat vulnerability. it's what other apps are trying to do and mind you, unlawfully, because snapchat doesn't want them to do it, doesn't allow them to do it. and what they're doing is trying to take information from snapchat users and they're not protecting it like snapchat has been.
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>> reporter: snapchat has 100 million monthly users and could be worth as much as $10 billion. experts say the company is focusing on security. but the bottom line is if you put any picture on social media, you have to be prepared that it could potentially wind up in the wrong hands. so better to keep that picture g rated than something worse and you regretting it later on. >> that's for sure. if you don't want nudies for everyone to see, don't take them in the first place. >> that's right. making up with obamacare, coming up, why some democrats who once shied away from president obama's controversial health care law have suddenly now having a change of heart. and what it could mean for next month's mid terms. and that became our passion. to always build something better, airplanes that fly cleaner and farther on less fuel. that redefine comfort and connect the world like never before.
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quick check of the headlines. kurdish officials are demanding the international community do something and intervene in the desperate fight to save the syrian town of kobani from the isis terrorists. they're also asking turkey to open a corridor to allow civilians trapped there to finally leave that town. six high school football players arrested, a 7th being sought for a series of sexual assaults authorities say involved hazing to the high school football team in sayerville, new jersey.
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prosecutors say four students, fellow players were attacked last month in the high school locker room as part of that hazing ritual. a powerful typhoon pounding japan with rain and winds. u.s. military bases there in okinawa also are expected to be hit by the damaging winds through tomorrow. this time last year, a lot of democrats were running away from obamacare as the disastrous rollout dominated the news. headlines fade and obamacare is suddenly quite popular with groups that lean democratic, like unmarried women and minorities. time magazine says obamacare could be the democrats', quote, silver lining. we are joined by tammy bruce and leslie marshall, both radio talk show hosts and fox news contributors. good to see both of you. >> hi. >> hi. >> so tammy, you're going to be up first. silver lining or pie in the sky? >> i would encourage all
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democrats to talk about obamacare up until election night. that would be great. the fact is actually it's not in the news because it's not good news. you have to admit that if this is good news for the president or for the democrats, it would be all over the place as it used to be. there is news to report, though. you've got wal-mart canceling 33,000 of its employees because of obamacare. the state of virginia says it's canceling a quarter of a million people because of obamacare. so you've got a dynamic where especially with women, as you mentioned, we're the ones who lost as everybody did, but our doctors and our hospitals, we haven't forgotten that. and the media is not covering it. doesn't mean that it doesn't matter anymore that we love it. it means that it's bad news. you know if it wasn't, obama and josh earnest, everyone would be touting it and they're not because it's still a disaster. >> leslie, do you agree with tammy? >> absolutely not. you have almost 10 million people that have insurance that are very happy with the
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insurance. wal-mart posted just this past quarter higher earnings than they had in the two previous quarters. so they don't have to cut these and they don't have to blame it on obamacare. in addition to that, we have two huge issues, you guys may heard of ebola and isis. they're pretty much taking up all of the headlines on radio, television, print, on line. and at the end of the day, americans always have and always will care about the economy, the jobs numbers, and historically there has been a correlation between the approval ratings of popularity of the president, which haven't been as good. they've come up two to 7% since the beginning of september. but that's still not over 50% for the mid terms. so it's going to be very close for the senate. >> you mentioned mid terms, leslie. we talk about obamacare, which is the single most or second single most important issue to single women, to minorities, to the young folks or definitely the first two groups. but the combined is the tri pod,
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the base of the democratic voter base which typically they don't turn out for the mid terms. will this play out in terms of voter turnouts for mid terms or no? >> quite frankly, this is -- as a democrat, i feel the democrats have not just in the midterm elections, but in all elections, i feel republicans are better at reaching out to those who they're not sure will vote for them. those people, for example, for democrats to reach out to those in the gop who are unhappy with or disillusioned with their party, to the centrist, independent, people that don't want to be aligned with a political party, especially in the hotly contested districts in the red states. we're looking at nine races that will determine who controls the senate. i think it will come down to two independents. so i don't think it's just about them distancing themselves from obamacare, talk being it or not talking about it. i think they just didn't have the outreach effort that republicans had and at the end of the day, i think what will get more people to the polls, especially latinos, will be
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immigration reform and i think democrats should talk more about it as the president did this week. >> okay, tammy? >> look, to say that the obama team and the democrats aren't good at outreach to their core is -- doesn't make a lot of sense. they are really the experts at this. the fact of the matter is, they're not doing outreach. it's not working. their base is not going because their base is disappointed. insurance premiums are also going to rise. they have already started to rise before the election. we're going to remember what the problem with obamacare was even though you got the enrollment period reopened, we also have 310,000 people, hhs is likely to be canceled because of citizenship or immigration issues. so you're looking at still a web site that is not fixed on the payment end. you're looking at problems with hacking and identity theft. and i think that women especially in the democratic base is disappointed. if you have isis and ebola, the fact is if ebola ebola was good
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news -- obamacare was good news, it would be at the top of the news. >> leslie, you say what? >> i say that the women that do come out and ladies, please come out, regardless of who you're voting for, and i like you better if you're voting on my side. but if the women come out, the bottom line is historically, the women vote overwhelming for democrats in these races. they will. so will the hispanics and the youth an african-americans if they get out. i didn't say the democrats aren't good at reaching out to their base. they are. i said they're not doing a good job in this midterm election -- >> already. >> you're preaching to the choir, trying to get the vote of your party -- >> already, leslie, we already have with the polls when it comes to the senate races, women in fact are not breaking heavily for democrats. they are maybe single point ahead for the breaking to the
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democrats or even and that indicates that women, if they are going to go out and vote, democratic women, will be voting as they did in 2010 for the republican or for an alternative. you're going to see the same kind of shellacking that the democrats saw in 2010 because women decided that in that instance because of obamacare and they're going to be deciding it again in november on obamacare as well and they're not going to be voting for democrats. >> tammy, do you think that it's hands down, especially some of these highly contested races, where it's really, really tight, are you saying hands down that the dems should houston a it up and the gop have it in the bag? >> the dems have already started cutting ads. you notice they're not moving a major push on obamacare. nobody wants to talk about it. that's why the media is not covering it. they're noticing already as people are beginning to think about the election, as they do as we get closer, just a little over two weeks out and they're breaking for the republicans.
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we saw the same trend in 2010 for the same reasons. they didn't like what they were seeing with what barak obama was doing. barak obama as we know is not someone that any of the candidates on the democratic side are embracing and that's for a reason as well. you're going to see a replay in november for these very same reasons. >> you get the last word, leslie. i started with tammy. >> okay. we're on national television. tammy, you're going to be wrong. let's make a $5 bet. >> wrong on what? >> on the fact that the democrats are going to keep the senate. it's going to come down to two independents and we'll have one if not both vote to keep senator harry reid as the majority leader and the democrat also keep it. they'll have a one-seat majority. that's my prediction and it's not going to be about obamacare and the women are going to vote for the democrats. not for the republicans, especially single women who care very much so about the affordable care act. >> that's nice. that's a lifetime movie and that's all that is. but i'll buy you a beer as a consolation prize for your loss.
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>> i tell you what -- >> i'll take the beer. >> i want in. all three of us will go out for drinks. >> no matter what. >> arthel, i'd love it. >> tel aviv us, tammy, leslie, thanks very much. >> i want the chaser. >> now back to the serious news of what's going on overseas. we've been asking this question about the radical islamic terrorists. will they triumph and when? kurdish fighters desperate to save the syrian town continue to battle back in fierce fire fights. they're begging for help and even after dozens of u.s. air strikes, can the international community do anything more say, "i never thought you would quit." you know, i really didn't either but chantix helped me do it. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. it gave me the power to overcome the urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior,
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this as isis militants in iraq reportedly advance on baghdad. there is new measures on ebola. jfk airport today becoming the first one in the country to implement additional screenings for travelers arriving from parts of west africa. the centers for disease control said it's all part of the latest effort to try and stop the virus from entering our country again. and popular photo and video sharing app snapchat becoming the latest target of hackers, now threatening to release a database filled with 100,000 intimate pictures. snapchat said third party apps s are to blame. the battle for kobani is raging as kurdish ground fighters struggle to defend their home. u.s. and allied war planes trying to help out from the air carrying out several strikes on isis targets. but the strikes having little effect except for slowing down the militants. the kurds are outgunned and begging for help to keep the
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border town from falling. greg palkot has more from the turkey side of the border. >> reporter: it is another day of bitter fighting in kobani, which has really become a symbol for the blood thirsty advance through this region of the isis terrorists. there is some new amateur video out today which reports to show isis fighters inside kobani. we can not confirm its awe they wantickity, but it gives a face to the fighting. the word we're getting is the terrorists are having no problem getting resupplied and reinforced. the kurdish defenders say they're getting neither. but there are reports they are fighting on against the terrorists on all sides of the town. confirming six new air strikes against isis, including some right near the center of the town and fighting. remember, for days before isis entered the town, their tanks and vehicles were out in the open, they were easy to hit. there was very little u.s. help at that time.
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turkey does not seem to want to get involved in this fight. but it is reported today they have agreed to train some 2,000 moderate syrian rebels to help fight isis. that's a long-term process. finally, there are new fears for the fate of those civilians trapped inside kobani and for the refugees who have fled isis and are here in turkey. their number is up to 200,000. there was a human tragedy unfolding on both sides of this border. arthel? >> indeed. thank you very much. we're going to have an interview with a turkish official coming up a little bit on this newscast. stick around for that perspective. now with the crucial midterm elections less than a month away, the "washington post" says its election model shows republicans with a 95% chance of winning the senate. meanwhile, the democratic national committee planned reported planning to transfer large sums of campaign cash to the parties house and senate campaign committees in the run up to election day.
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susan is the chief congressional correspondent for the washington extra examiner. good to see you. >> hi. >> what was your reaction when you saw this election model? >> well, i've heard that enthusiasm before that it's really looking good for republicans. but if seems a little bit generous to me just because i tend to look at the races individually. i'm also thinking back to 2012 when a lot of the polling information turned out to be wrong. so i have a more cautious outlook for the republican party because let's face it, there are nine seats that are really vulnerable for democrats, but republicans have their own problem with several seats. they need to net six seats in order to gain control of the senate. but they're having some of their own problems in iowa right now. the new poll showing the democratic candidate catching up, south dakota. you have an independent candidate that may make things difficult for the republican senator, senate candidate who everybody thought was going to walk away with this thing.
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so each race matters and when you look at the individual numbers, you're seeing people -- candidates of leads with three points, four points. that's not a run away victory. that means anything could happen. we've got less than 30 days. so it is looking definitely more likely tore republicans 'cause election is getting close. fewer undecided voters. given all that, the races are still pretty tight, which means democrats i think have probably better than 5% chance. but still, it will be difficult for them and it is definitely more likely that republicans are going to be in control of the senate. though not guaranteed in january. >> that's interesting. you say it's not guaranteed. if you are those democratic candidates in louisiana, in georgia, you should just hang in there and keep running strong. >> oh, sure. >> do you think there will be an election in either -- runoff, i mean? >> that's a great question. louisiana -- when you look at the individual races, there is a case where republicans are safer
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in betting they're going to take over that seat. but there will likely be a runoff. december 6. that's likely. georgia, another possibility. that runoff is not going to be until january 6. so that's so far off that we may not even know the majority of the senate until january if that becomes a pivotal decision in all this. so those are close races. georgia race is essentially tied right now. so it's really tough to predict. it's a toss-up seat. so that's not going either way for either party. again, these are races that are not necessarily going to be known on election day. alaska is another situation. takes two weeks to count votes in that race. again, republicans are looking good there, but there is 30 days left. you mentioned earlier that democrats are putting a lot of money into the races. what does that tell me? they're not giving up. soon we'll have hillary clinton campaigning for allison launderson grimes in kentucky. another close race. held by mitch mcconnell.
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they could lose that seat. it's not all entirely clear he'll hang on to it. he's got about a four-points lead. that's not a big lead. >> as you said, both are bringing out the big guns for the run up to these last three-plus weeks to the mid terms. but let's talk about issues. is there any particular issues that are outstanding that could tip the balance either way? >> sure. i think right now foreign policy has surged right to the top of what americans care about right now. foreign policy could probably bet was probably pretty low over the past couple years. now that the wars were winding down. it's high up on the list again. immigration reform. some republican candidates have been able to use that successfully against democrats, aligning them with the president in saying that they're going to make it harder for workers in america to find jobs by making it easier for immigrants to move here. that's another big issue. health care reform. everyone says nobody cares about that. that's not true. that is another thing that's high on the list of things
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voters care about and they're talk being it on the campaign trail. what's not working, at least in one race, is this war against the women theme. mark udall in colorado, he used this again and again in colorado. he is now -- he's lost his double digit lead. he's now essentially tied or losing to the republican challenger and his hometown paper is endorsing cory gardner, the republican, specifically because they didn't like his war on women theme. they thought he wasn't talking about things voters cared about. but thought he was using scare tactics. that backfired. so you've seen democrats try lots of different things to try to capture the voters' attention. so far they're really struggling. they already will suffer from low turnout in this election, just given it's a midterm. republicans seem to be doing better with voter enthusiasm. >> bottom line, when you talk about the specifics that you just highlighted, those issues are very, very important. so at the educational background of the day, those particular
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voters are going to be concerned about issues and not necessarily to be hood winked by any last-minute propaganda or talking points by either party. >> that's right. don't forget, the number one issue that we just haven't even mentioned yet is the economy and it is jobs. the employment rate -- unemployment rate is now under 6%. that's good news for democrats, good news for the president's approval rating. still people are living in a sluggish economy and the president's popularity is the other big issue. he's absent on the campaign trail. democrats are staying away from him. but he's kind of the missing -- phantom person on the balance. he's dragging down democratic candidates and it's because of his low approval rating overall six years into his tenure. >> susan, i have to leave it there. always good to see you. thanks. >> thanks. u.s. airways has been forced to issue an apology after a flight attendant refused to hang an army ranger's uniform jacket in the plane's first class cabin
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closet. first sergeant albert morrow asked to hang up his jacket, didn't want to have it wrinkling while he was on the flight, but he says he was told by a flight attendant that the coat closet up front was only for the first class ticket holders only. a fellow passenger -- fellow passengers were outraged. >> i asked if she would just hang his coat up out of goodwill and she kept saying that it was against company policy. at that time i offered to trade seats with sergeant morrow and she was not enthusiastic about that idea. >> it wasn't just that passenger, but sergeant morrow reportedly turned down other offers from other folks to take their first class seats. u.s. airways says it is investigating. overseas, what do you think it will take to fight isis and defeat them in kobani? what will it mean if they take it? coming up in a few minutes,
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we'll hear from the chairman of the kurdistan national assembly who says if isis wins, we lose. who does he blame and what can we do? often enough, but thank you. thank you mom for protecting my future. 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, get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. you know.... there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips fiber good gummies. they're delicious and an excellent source of fiber to help support regularity. mmmm. these are good! the tasty side of fiber. from phillips (coffee be♪ng poured into a cup.)
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authorities in new jersey arresting seven students at sayerville war memorial high school for allegedly sexually assaulting freshmen during a hazing ritual. investigators say the incidents involved four students trying out for the school's football team. japan bracing for a powerful typhoon after pounding okinawa with 85 mile-an-hour winds. torrential rains and a dangerous storm surge, this is the second typhoon to hit japan in a week. the two storms are being blamed for at least nine deaths, including three u.s. military servicemen. crews in california gaining the upper hand against a wildfire raging near sacramento.
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so far firefighters have contained about 55% of the flames, but nearly 500 acres are already torched and hundreds of homes are still under threat. back to our top story, the fight for kabbani. 42 air strikes and the terrorists of isis keep coming. they are flooding the besieged city, we're told, as the defying kurds fight back. they've been begging for help and now face the prospect of a possible massacre if isis conquers the city. they say we hole up not be seeing a people beheaded. what could this mean for us as we face the terrorist threat? the chairman of the kurdistan national assembly of syria joins us. what do you need right now, this moment, tonight, to try and save kabbani or is it too late?
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>> hello, eric. thank you for inviting me. obviously the kurds of syria and most kurds of all parts, they appreciate american and allied air strikes. unfortunately, it's not enough. the kurds of kobani need immediate weapon help to all kind of supplies logistic. they have been surrounded by the most advanced weapon that american left in iraq. iraqi army transferred it to them. syrian army transferred the russian weapons to them. so those people, they're determined to take kobani because they use that as a symbol to defeat the west and america and the super power and the whole western world. unfortunately the kurds are in desperate help and turkey is not helping at all. >> the super power says no ground troops. they're waiting to train the
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rebels and you talk about turkey? the tanks are sitting in idle, in neutral watching all this stuff. with all due respect, who can send the heavy arms that those brave fighters need to fight these islamist terrorists? >> kurdistan regional government can. turkey did -- the kurdish peshmerga have not received any weapon. the only delivered to iraqi government. and in fact, speaking of training the syrian rebel, most of those are isis and they're condemning american air strikes. in fact, they're supporting isis to have kobani fall. so the kurds are the boots on the ground. they're ready to receive this weapon. but no weapon has been transferred to them and the united states is not helping. turkey is not helping. turkey is helping isis and taking their injured, getting
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treated in hospital and a lot of the web site operate from turkey. turkey is not an honest broker. >> of course we have the u.s. air strikes. turkey did announce today that they will train 3,000 of these syrian rebels on their ground. is that enough or are you afraid they'll have kurdish blood on his hands and he is at fault if kobani falls and the islamists take a huge victory there? >> the issue is fundamentally iraq, iran, turkey, all of them, the gulf petro state. they want to use isis to crush the kurdish aspiration in syria, to send a message to the whole country that the kurds will never get their independent kurdistan or any autonomy in syria or elsewhere. so they all agree on one thing they're working on this point. and obviously they're pushing isis and many isis is not a
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homogenous organization. >> it is complicated. you're absolutely right. but look, you're going to have a blood bath. you see what the -- there is going to be a massacre and slaughter. what does it mean if isis wins and kobani fall as soon as what does that mean for the west? what does that mean for the coalition air strikes? >> obviously u.s. is claiming that they're fighting terrorism. again, we salute the american men and women that are trying to help. at this moment the u.s. administration absolutely not doing enough. turkey is not doing enough. we're afraid that half a billion dollars that american aid that congress authorized is going to train more isis. >> you think kobani will fall? is it lost? >> if there is no assistance, it will fall. >> there is no assistance. >> what happened at the moment
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from -- all the kurds are being signed up and being moved to the region, but they'll try to hold on. it's a matter of days unless the western nations do something. it is a really shame that here an organization like isis can defeat the whole western nation, all civilization, the whole united states as a super power. this is a morale of the united states that's taken. i don't understand why the white house is not doing enough. >> a shame that an organization like isis, as you say, can defeat the west? >> absolutely. u.s. army's prestige and status at the line here. we're not asking american boots on the ground. we're asking they can drop help and assistance. if they don't trust the elements, absolutely not all are -- they're fighting for their life, from their heads being cut off. and the kurdistan is a good ally for the west, but turkey needs to allow them and america needs to equip them and the syrian
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troops to fight isis. >> that is the desperate battle that's now going on. we will be watching it to see what happens to those people in kobani. we thank you so much for joining us today on the fox news channel. >> thank you for inviting me. >> is a global slowdown on the horizon? that's the prediction from some top economists. what does it mean for your bottom line? we'll have the answer when we come back. [ hoof beats ] i wish... please, please, please, please, please. [ male announcer ] the wish we wish above all...is health.
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starts at $89.95 a month. comcast business. built for business. all right, so what is going on in wall street? the roller coaster highlights growing fores of the impact of the global xhechlt the projected slow down in global markets could make serious problems for us. gary, it was whiplash this week. one day the dow dives hundred and then up 200 and what is going on? >> this week for me, it is a change in the market. we had the market going up and this time it is going down. no doubt it is forecasting a global slow down and it is worse than people are saying.
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>> how bad would it be? >> germany is in recession. i think we'll go to no growth and my biggest worry i don't know what the central banks can do after printing trillions of dollars. >> you think we are in ten percent correction territory. >> and first of all, on the good front. ten percent corrections are normal and they usually happen every year. we haven't had one because of the central bank and easy money. i am worried we will get a bear market and they talk about 20 percent. there are countries and sectors that are down 20 percent and the small cap indexes are down 13. there is carnage already. who gets hit hard first s&p 500? >> the small companies got hit first and now the popular
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indexes that are normal and the dow, and s&p 500, and i think we will hit a low soon. we haven't had a bear market and no correction in two and half of ten percent and without a doubt in my mind we have a economic slow down. >> we'll have dips every once in a while. and the fed has been printing the money and that will ride us out. >> that is the big worry. the market is used to the fed printing money and easy money. because of easy money we had a big technology boom in 1999 and then a bust. we had the housing boom and then a bigger bust and we took it to the hundredth power. there are so much leverage and debt and margin in the system.
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things going south they will go harder. vsxtñ ngary, you are making me want to go under the table. >> it is not my fault. >> what can we do besides putting in the mattress. we are on the cost of freedom gamble, big cap defensive industries, and people are going to buy their soap and coke-cola people still selling their sodas. >> all right, gary, thank you so much. >> bye-bye. >> i am glad you put it that way. stick around julie bandaras is up next with the fox report. e. clear huh? my nutritional standards are high. i'm not juice or fancy water. i've got 8 grams of protein. twist my lid! that's three times more than me. 17 vitamins and minerals. and zero fat! hmmmm. you bring a lot to the party!
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