tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News November 18, 2014 12:00pm-1:01pm PST
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saviour. >> i'm going into the chicken and there's the picture of what looked to me like jesus, and kind of took me aback. >> the man says he is not religious but is speier to all and seize this as a sign but doesn't expect any vigil outside of his him. here's shep. >> the bloodiest day in years in jerusalem. attackers armed with meat cleavers, hacking at innocent victims as they prayed. most of the dead are americans. we have the warning of revenge from israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, as some palestinians celebrate the murders in the streets. the fbi warns violence is likely after the grand jury's decision in ferguson, missouri. at issue here, whether to indict a white police officer for shooting an unarmed african-american man. we'll go to courthouse there where a decision could come
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another any time. a teen's recent life-saving lesson put to the ultimate test. she jumped into action when a baby stopped breathing at wal-mart. let's get to it. first from the deck this tuesday afternoon, israel's prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, promises a harsh response to the vicious attack in a jerusalem synagogue and started with an order to shred the attackers houses. three americans and a britton died in the attack, all four rabbis. several more people hurt. israeli police say a pair of palestinian cousins stormed the synagogue during morning prayers today. police say the attackers carried a gun, but used a meat cleaver to attack their victims. the violence ended with a shootout with the police. both attackers died in the
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gunfire. president obama talked about the attacks from his cabinet meeting room. >> the murderers represent the kind of extremism that threatens to bring all of the middle east into the kind of spiral from which it's very difficult to emerge, and we know how this violence can get worse over time. but we have to remind ourselves that the majority of palestinians and israelis overwhelmingly want peace. >> the president says the secretary of state, john kerry, spoke with bog the israeli prime minister and the palestinian president, who conned the attacks. he also cued the israelis of provocation, which the israely prime minister called imaginary. the prime minister ordered crews to bulldoze the homes of the two attackers and they're families, controversial practice that israel has not carried out in just about a decade.
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meantime, in gaza, hamas is praising the bloodshed. dozens took to the streets to celebrate by passing out candy. the officials in israel blame the palestinians for killing six people in the past few weeks a tension re-ignites after violence between the two groups this summer. connor powell is live in jerusalem for us this evening. connor? >> the tension here is mounting. there is probably a group of about 300 or 400 israeli men down there, channing "taking to arabs." all because of the violence in recent weeks and this horrific violent attack we saw today. >> as jewish worshipers in jerusalem gathered for morning prayers the growing violence between israelis and palestinian arrived at the doorsteps of the
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har nof synagogue. >> two men armed with axes, knives and pistols, stormed the synagogue this morning. they began stabbing and shooting people just as they were beginning to pray. >> most were able to escape, but the attackers started to slash and shoot at least four people were killed,ers were wounded in the attack. >> they stab people once and twice, to make sure they tide the job, very bad, very bad. >> israeli official says the two attackers were palestinians in their 20s from east jerusalem. clashes between police and protesters erupted in their neighborhood soon after. today's violence is just the late nest a series of attacks that have some fearing an outbreak of widespread violence, not seen here in a decade. >> prime minister netanyahu has blamed palestinian president for inciting the violence, but israeli police think all these incidents, the attacks are individually planned and don't sigh in the grand campaign by anyone to carry these out, which
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only makes preventing them all the more difficult. you can still hear, there are still loud protests outside as expected possibly to gone throughout the night. >> conor, thank you very much. let's bring in ambassador nicholas burns now. former state department undersecretary, also served in the american consulate in jerusalem. now a professor of diplomacy and international politics at harvard. thank you. >> thank you, shep. >> i'm trying to figure out where we are in this. there's so much talk of a -- action in the streets of both palestinian territories and jerusalem. what are your thoughts? >> well, the violence has been building, as your report showed. over the last self weeks violence by palestinians against israeli, there's been a lot of controversy over the settlements in the west bank and this is a very ominous event because the arab revolutions of 2011 never
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hit in a big way the best bank. other people fear, shep, that isis might be making inroads in the west bank. so it's a key moment. the thought i have is twofold. number one, very important, for president obama to have denounced this and clarified the !8hqv that the united states unreserve evidently denounces violence on both sides, in this case, the palestinian violence and terrorism against innocent israelis, and american citizens were killed in the attack. number two, i know that a lot of people were critical of secretary of state john kerry for the fact he worked so hard and this seemingly hopeless task of bringing peace to the israelis and palestinians when there's no movement in the peace negotiation. we have seen over the last 0 or 30 year it gives space to the extremists. so i very much agree with secretary kerry that the united states can never stop trying to be the interimmediate area to bring peace between israel and
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the palestinians, however remote that is, and right enough it's very remote. >> you mentioned this thought -- i don't have reports to corroborate that but this thought that isis may be making inroads in the west bank. if true that's very troubling. i wonder what you know and the basis for those concerns. >> there's no indication that i've seen from the reporting today that isis was behind these attacks. we know that isis at least isis influence has spread to some villages in jordan, and of course, there's a very close connection between palestinians and jordanians who live in the east bank of the jordan river, with palestinians on the west bank.
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stop traffic. we don't know yet how it started or whether anybody is hurt there, but we do know that the weather is -- makes things difficult. it's kole in the northeast and many parts of the country. 200 million people expect freezing temperatures. it's cold in south jersey and a windy day as well, which is never go for fighting fires. you can see the entrance on the back side of this one facility here and this large and sprawling farmers market. the attempt now is to try to keep the fire from spreading, and firefighters are hard at it, even as we speak. you seek the ladder trucks there
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being used to get firefighters up to get a better shot at the flames. it's obvious to see what the winds are doing to the smoke and flames. the question we have is how many people were in there. mid-day on a tuesday, the farmer's mark, we don't know what the status would be. but if there are injuries or anything else we have no reports. this in south jersey, 30 miles outside of philly. should we get more information we'll bring it to you right away. the u.s. senate right enough is getting ready to vote on the keystone pipeline. the house has already given it the okay but tense times in the other chamber as the louisiana senator, the democrat, mary landrieu, scrambles to pick up a key 60th vote. they need 60 votes to stop a presidential filibuster. the thinking down in louisiana and the mary landrieu campaign is, if we can just get this push through i might have a shot in a runoff coming up. the polls indicate she might be wrong. either way we'll take you live to capitol hill for the
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there's a political battle brewing and it's a big one but doesn't involve republicans. this battle is about senate democrats and the democratic white house. the clock is ticking on capitol hill. supporter0s the controversial keystone xl pipeline scrambling to get enough lawmakers on board. the house proofed last week this
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pipeline. it's marked there in blue on the map. the idea is to bring hundreds of thousands of barrels of oil each day from canada to nebraska, then down to the gulf of mexico. not for use here but for shipping elsewhere. for years, the proposal has triggered debates over the environment and energy independence, and enough its immediate future is in the senate. keep in mind, president obama and the administration officials have suggested that the president will veto this bill if he gets a chance. and neither the senate nor the house has the two-thirds majority needed to overcome a veto. or that's what they think. mary landrieu is sponsoring this from louisiana and says, i've got to the votes. mike emanuel is on capitol hill for us. not everybody is so sure about that, mike. >> it should be close with 45 republicans and we'll see how many democrats, main independent center angus king announced he is a no vote. that could be devastating in the
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search for 60 votes. there's been plenty of debate on the senate floor for and against going forward with theodicean xl pipeline. those against say they are concerned about the impact on the environment. you can expect the debate to be heated over the next couple of hours. here's some bipartisan support for the project. >> i've been fighting for this because of energy independence for america. we are proud producers of energy. we produce mostly oil, mostly gas. >> the president's remarks opposing this bipartisan legislation are certainly not helpful. republicans are committed to getting keystone approved. we want to see the jobs created as soon as possible. that's what the people want. >> landrieu has been a key player on the senate floor, clearly hoping it will help her re-election effort with a runoff on december 6th. although, her republican challenger's bill that passed
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the house so there may be a new central benefit there. >> -- neutral benefit. >> if. >> say they get 59 votes and the president vetoes it, won't mary landrieu be able to say i fought for you with this, and then be in senate changes we'll fight again, we'll push it through again. i'm fighting for you, louisiana. i'm against the white house on this. can't she make that arguement? might that help her? >> she can certainly make the argument and all indications are she will. bill cassidy, if elected, would be joining the senate majority, the majorityity party has more influence in the senate so that it up for louisiana voters obviously to decide. today at the white house they're saying that essentially the state department has been reviewing this for the past couple of years and they'd like for that to continue. >> the president believes that this is something that should be determined through the state department and the regular process that is in place to evaluate projects like this.
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but again, i'm not in a position to issue veto threats. >> the white house seems to be hoping it will get 59 votes in the senate, landrieu can make her case to her cop city students at home but the pipeline will fail. >> she says she has a report. we expect the vote tonight and we'll have complete fox team coverage tonight on fox news channel. another look at this spreading farmer's market fire in flames in burlington county, new jersey, just north and east of philadelphia. the burlington county times reports this market is not normally open on tuesdays. 65 stores usually open from thursday to sunday. we are hearing the building is completely engulfed. the newspaper reports the market has 65 stores, 1200 spots for outdoor vendors and usually has thousands of visitors when it's open. this has been in continuous operation since, get this, 1919.
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updates a we get it. folks in ferguson, missouri, are waiting for word of the grand jury's decision in the shooting death of michael brown. when police officer darren wilson killed brown in august it ignited days of violence. yesterday we learned the governor of missouri activated the national guard in an effort to avoid a repeat of the chaos, but more than that to avoid the anarchists and others who are antilaw enforcement who may be coming into ferguson to cause trouble. we'll take you to the courthouse where the granders have been meeting. the teenaged hero of wal-mart. when a baby stopped breath showing ran to help and saved the infant's life, say the doctors. ahead, the surveillance video and the 9-1-1 call as it all unfolds. and ah, so you can see like right here i can just... you know, check my policy here, add a car,
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it's cold, brutal round of cold weather spreading across the entire united states and dumping a foot upon foot of snow in some areas. forecasters say all 50 states saw some degree of freezing temperatures at some point today. yes, 50 would include hawai'i. you can see here the wind chills. it's chilly outside. buffalo, new york, dealing with more than four feet of snow. four feet. and it's still snowing. showing you these images. this first one is when this band of snow first started moving across lake erie. peeks tub the water, freezes it and dumps it on buffalo. buffaloans know this is coming. the snow has shut down a nearby highway for more than 100 miles.
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look at this guy. this is this car back behind him. another twitter posted, a twitter user posted this, showing just how much of the snow covered his vehicle. and see this mounds of snow in the backyard, and this is a yardstick. 52 inches, it says, right there where that little star is, 52-inches of snow. four feet officially so far. four feet. and counting. good luck. officials in missouri making moves to try to prevent the potential violence ahead of the grand jury decision in the ferguson shooting case this: the grand jury expected to announce any day now the decision on whether the grand jury decided to indict the who it police officer, darren wilson in the shooting death of the unarmed black man, 18-year-old michael brown. the fib sent out a warning d their fbi sent out a warning that the grand jury's decision will likely incite violence.
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the bureau says common practice but there's concern anarchists might be coming in. the governor hoff the state of missouri declared a state of emergency so he could call of the national guard. he says he directed the missouri state highway patrol to take charge of any civil unrest. along with the st. louis county police department and the st. louis metropolitan police department. noticeably absent there the heavily criticized ferguson police department will not be involved in this coverage. so, why call out the national guard? well, garrett tenney is live in clayton, missouri. tell us how this area is preparing. >> well, shep, along west -- the road in ferguson where protests took place it looks similar to a town along those before a hurricane. that's not a lot of traffic. most of the businesses are boared -- boarded up and nearly
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everyone is on edge. there's ban lot of training going on for both police and protesters. officials are expecting more of those mass demonstrations after the grand jury's decision and they expect a majority of them to be peaceful but they say they're preparing for the worst. that is along with many folks in the community who are worried about their own personal safety. gunshots are reporting -- gun shops are reporting high sales and applications for conceal carry person mitts is up 50% from august compared to a year ago. >> i keep hearing there's concern that calling out the national guard kind of sends the wrong message, increases tensions. what's the thinking on the ground? >> well, that's exactly what we're hearing from most of the demonstrators who we have spoken to they say calling out the national guard this early, it goes against in the idea the picture of peace and just stokes the flames of frustration these
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demonstrators have been seeing since august and really just been building up until now, and police are hoping, though, they do remain peaceful and don't boil over again as we saw in august. >> thank you. representative john lewis, civil rights leader in the day and to this day, is calling for mass protests, though nonviolent protests, across the country. we'll see what happens. a high school student jumped into axe -- into action win a baby stopped breathing in a wal-mart. here's the teenager, abby snuffed grass. she learned cpr in the school's health class youch can see the mom take the 11-month-old out of the shopping cart and start patting her on he back. people started to crowd around and a store manager called 9-1-1. listen. >> 9-1-1, location of your emergency. >> i would ridge wal-mart. >> what is going on. >> we had an associate called
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over the -- needing cpr no pulse no breathing. a customer performing cpr right now. >> do you know how old they are? >> 11 months old. >> it's 11-month-old that not breathing? >> yes, yes. >> well, that customer was abe, whom you just met. the teen says she ran over once she heard the commotion and that the baby did not look alive. that's a quote from her. so, she asked if anybody knew how to do cpr, and then the says she just started doing it herself. then 40 seconds laser, the store manager interrupted the dispatcher with incredible news. >> if you can have the customer that is performing cpr make sure they don't stop until my paramedics arrive -- >> the child is breathing. >> the childing breathing? >> yes. >> just like that. official says the baby is doing just fine but rescue workers say without that teenager's help the
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infant could have died. we invited abbey to be a guest and wanted to but she has a job at wal-mart and she is doing that job now. so, we were proud of her. thought we'd give hear shoutout. the government is rewriting the way it tries to free u.s. hostages. i says rewriting. meant to areviewing. the yacht has a policy we don't pay. if there's an american hostage, say the islamic state militants have captured an american, officially we do not negotiate and we do not pay anything. european countries and lat of others do. so, now, there's review of that policy, but there is one part, one part of the policy that the white house says the government will not change. the details are coming. plus, inches from death. a plane smashes into a home next to a sleeping couple. the details as we approach the bottom of the hour and the top of the news. earning unlimited cash back on purchases. that's a win.
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>> more headlines from the fox news deck. a photographer has lost an appeal after he flew a drone over the university of virginia campus. the feds fined him 10,000 decide for being reckless. his attorney size the feds should not punish him because they had not issued regulations for board but a safety board decided the drone is an aircraft. a judge will decide whether the photographer was reckless. >> emergency workers in switzer leaned are digging out after a deadly landslide hit a village. at least two people died. officials are watching for more possible landslides. in canada, firefighters say an explosion at a waste party facility spread a substance that caught fire. the plant is north of los angeles. five people are reported hurt. >> back to the wal-mart rescue. the toddler, the 11-month-old, the one who did the life saving was abbey and she works at
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to the white house says president obama ordered a review of how the united states works to free hostages taken abroad. this news -- the news of this comes just after we learned the islamic state fighters sliced off the head of another american. the white house says the government will not consider paying ransom to terrorists because doing so would encourage them to kidnap more americans. >> the president continues to believe, as previous presidents concluded, it's not in the best interest of american citizens to pay ransoms to any organization, let alone a terrorist organization, that is holding an american hostage. the rope is simple. we don't want to put other american citizens at even greater risk when they're around the globe. >> the white house says president obama ordered the review, not now but over the summer, because of the, quote, extraordinary nature of american hostage situations this year. just a couple of day others islamic state militants released a video which appeared to show the execution of former american
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aide worker abdul rahman kassig. the u.s. does not pay ransom to terrorists. relatives of james foley said the feds threatened to prosecute them if they tried to pay a ransom for his release. james foley was the first american hostage the militants bee headed in august. analysts say isis still control large parts of iraq and syria and investigators say all three of the americans isis kill has gone missing in syria. the islamic state is reportedly holding another american hostage, 26-year-old woman, after somebody kidnapped her in syria. >> john bussey is with us here. they've never killed a woman on camera. >> what happened today at the white house, they talk about this program they undertook in the summer to address this issue, and the issue is more pronounced because there are more are more hostage-taking.
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what did they decide to do? they decided they're going to work on coordination between agencies, which still get in the way of each other in terms of communicating, the fbi, defense department, cia, and other agencies, and they're going to do a better job of communication with the families. what they said they are not going to address, as you point out, this very controversial issue of whether or not families should be permitted to pay ransom, which the u.s. feels is funding terrorist organizations. >> all of that said, and understood, other nations do pay. >> that's right. >> other nations' people go free. >> it's murkey area. so britain and the united states got the group of eight nations to agree, including france and italy, they're not going to pay official policy is going to be they do not pay ransom, but we know that ransom -- in win way or another money has gone to achieve the freedom of a hostage. where does that leave the united states? leaves the united states as a
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bit of an outlier, and as a result the feeling is that hostage of u.s. citizenship are more likely to be killed. >> sometimes in the past instances where money has gone from one party to another, not through public channels. >> that's right. that's right. and in the case of foley, the family was very much underway in terms of raising a large amount of money to try to win his freedom. the united states also has traded prisoners. bergdahl in afghanistan. five prisoners that were being held by the united states, exchanged for his release. the u.s. considers that a prisoner release, very different from paying ransom to a terrorist group. >> is this -- it's a policy now set in stoken the review complete and now we have what we have or is this ongoing. >> you have disagreements. some agencies say that a case-by-case analysis should be used. maybe they feel that there could
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be some success in paying a ransom and gaining somebody's freedom. others say, no, the policy has to stay firm, because if the united states starts eye officially allowing ransom to be paid, more u.s. citizens will be abducted broad. >> thank you. in virginia, woman is behind bars after fbi agents say she was promoting the islamic state on facebook and claimed to be in contact with those terrorists. the feds say they've been watching the woman's activity on social media for months now. according to court documents she was posting images and messages supporting the extremists. those documents show that she also offered to help somebody connect with the islamic state in syria but she tide not know she was communicating with an undercover fbi agent. her lawyer says this is just a case of facebook going badly. that's a quote. and that as far as he knows, the suspect has not traveled anywhere. catherine herridge is live in d.c. hough strong is this case
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really? >> well, shep, when you dig into the 12-page criminal complaint against heather kaufman, you'll find is that they charge, making a false statement to a federal agent, is bury yesterday on page 10 and laid out in two short paragraphs that read in part: kaufman was asked whether the undercover law enforcement agent supported isis or alf quite. kaufman told the fbi special agents we don't talk about things like that. asked if the undercover agent ever expressed any support for isis, kaufman responded by saying, huh-uh, and shaking her head. that's the totality of the crime in the complaint, and a defense attorney who handled high profile national security cases says that if kaufman had the able to connect people with isis the feds would have been for the more serious charge of material support of terrorism and they did not do that. >> catherine, thank you very
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minute. a husband and wife in their 80s escape without a scratch after small plane crashed into their living room. eight inches from where they were sleeping. it happened early this morning near midway airport in chicago. the pilot reported engine problems right after takeoff but could not get the plane back to the away in time. the investigators say the pilot died in the crash. nobody else was onboard. >> lea gabrielle is her. she has flown planes from f-18s to cessnas. sounds like they got an all clear. thank goodness. >> the happened right in the mid ol' a neighborhood and in the middle of the night. trying to land onsite. runway 31, and airport official tells me the pilot hat taken off runway 22 and was circling back to try to land on runway 31. we have aerials of the crash scene. investigators say it crashed into the front of the home and
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punched right through to the ground floor and became. the couple's grandson says the couple is okay and they'res are with the pilot's family. >> just trying to get all the valuables out and clothes and get organized and see what we got to go from here. 55 years without a plane crash, i think that pretty good odds for our airport here. >> well, you weren't able to see it here but right after he finished the sentence a plane flew right over the head of the son. to give you perspective how close this house was to the runway. >> are investigators saying how this happened? >> not quit about this atwin engine plane and the pilot reported engine problems right after takeoff. now, you can see from the picture of the crash site, the plane crashed very nose-down. as a pilot that indicates a possible stall and the stall could be stalled -- stall would cause a rapped nose-down pitch
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of the away. that would question cause evidence the pilot lost power and was trying to hold off the nose. investigators will be able to get to the bottom of what happen, if that happened. they said they'll be able to do a detailed investigation of both engines and inspecification of the air frame itself. >> the air frame is more or less intact. we're confident we're not dealing we enough type of breakup or something like that. other than that i can't elaborate much more because i don't have the information. >> now, according to an online aviation magazine, the pilot actually reported a problem with his left engine. looking back at this map, if that's the case, the pilot turned left from runway 22, to come back and circle around to runway 31. i look at the wind last night that would have been the most suitable runway for the plane.
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14 minutes before the hour on a chilly tuesday in new york. now that temperatures are dropping across the nation, you may be considering new car tires this winter season, but consumer reports is out with a doozie of a new warning for americans. be ware of low-priced tires made in china. there's a chance they could be counterfeit and dangerous. gerri willis is here. she hosts the willist report at 5:00 eastern. counterfeit tires. >> that's right. gray market tires being sold as the real deal. what's the difference between a
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counterfeit rollex and the cows first tight? a counterfeit tire can kill you. pegasus, they cost 95. what you're looking for is a dire riff a cato stamp that end inside 12. that means you have the bad tire. >> date code stamps -- >> in the side wall. >> and if you have this 12 on your date code, what do you do. >> get rid of this thing as soon as you can. you may not be able to sell it right away because -- >> just pawn it off on somebody. >> as other people did. you check the tires a lot and look for bulges and cracks. met give you a low-priced tire that would be better and not get you in trouble, rated by consumer reports, the continental cross context, lx20. this is a tire you can use instead of the chinese tire
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that's going to kill you. >> the back story is somebody took over a plant or something? >> so, there was an american company that is contracting out these tires, right? doing in china. eventually they decided the want to end the relationship. apparently somebody burned down the factory, and then stole the tire patterns, and continued to make them. so it's not this company that is the problem. the companies whose name is on the type. it's the people who stole the intellectual material and continue to make the tire. >> like the knockoff dress you bought. you throw it in the washing machine and falls apart. >> but it doesn't kill you. >> we have all been doing it wrong. at least that's what a patient who -- i should say file -- flying wrong has to do with this next segue: at least that what a patient filing -- what? pat at any time. why don't you tell me about it. i don't know what they're talking about. looks like it says plane was like a cabinet meeting in the
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middle. this is mark. >> this is all weird go on. >> it's strange. they call it the flying doughnut and they say it would be more efficient than the cigar-shaped planes we fly, and passengers would sit in in a circle. >> seriously? >> well, that's the idea and it's called the flying doughnut because of the hole in the middle. that would be more fuel efficient and save the airlines money. they like to make money to get on you have to take an escalator up to the inside thereof doughnut hole. very weird thing. the jet is up here. and still have full classes of service. first class hope to inside of the dough newt, coach in the cramped seats up here, and then economy. thening years for airbus say this is thousands of ideas they have every year. >> looks like a stealth fighter with a meeting room in the middle. >> yes, and no windows. >> no windows. at least before you crash you won't have to see it.
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the nfl today announced the vikings star adrian peterson is done for the season-suspended, and without pay. but he says the league is not playing by it own rules and that he should be back on the field. we'll break down both sides. with patent or something coming up. ght, so this tylenol arthritis lasts 8 hours but aleve can last 12 hours. and aleve is proven to work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this?
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how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. it says here that increases at the age of 80. helps reduce the risk of heart disse. keep hrt-healthy. live long. eat the 100% goodness of post shreddedheat. doctorrecommend it. so i'm the one living and i've listened to the tips, the trends and have-you-tried-this. now, i'm ready for someone to listen to me. welcome to fit2me.com, your free custom-fit, diabetes support program that actually listens to you. start building your fit2me program today using key areas of diabetes management. let's start with food. mexican? asian? italian! want recipes that reduce calories?
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you may have heard the nfl now suspended the minnesota vikings running back adrian peterson without pay for at least the rest of the season. the players union will fight it. the vikes benched peterson in september after prosecutors say he hit his four-year-old son with a tree branch, or switch as he put it. peterson said he did not mean to hurt the boy. he was disciplining him. this month he took a plea deal in the case. the league barred the all-pro
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from doing anything with the team. he played in just one game this season. trace gallagher has the rest of this from the west coast news hub. what's the nfl's reasoning here? >> well, commissioner roger goodell laid out three reasons. the first one is that adrian peterson clearly caused injury to his child and that was emotional and psychological traumas well. the nfl said that peterson's repetitive use of the so-called switch is the equivalent of a weapon, especially in the hand of an accomplish athlete, and the nfl says peterson has shown no remorse. roger goodell writing to peterson saying, quoting here, when indicted you acknowledged what you did but said wow use not, quote-unquote, eliminate whopping my kid, and defended your conduct in text messages the child's mother. this completes raise a serious concern you do not fully appreciate the seriousness of your conduct. in other words the commissioner believes he will do this all over begin, and the vikings had
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accepted roger goodell's punishment without any comment whatsoever. >> what's the next step here, trace? >> the players union plans to fight this thing, saying this thing has already been resolved in court. and now the nfl is going above and beyond with their punishment, saying, and i'm quoting, the affects are at that time adrian has asked for the meeting with roger goodell. the discipline imposed is inconsistent and an nfl executive told adrian his time on the commissioner's list would be considered as time served. the players union says, in other words, that gooel -- goodell is going back on his word. goodel has not responded but the union is now asking for a new central arbitrator to decide adrian peterson0s punishment. >> in a moment we'll look back on this day in hoyt and bring you the closing bell on wall street. stay tuned.
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>> pope francis is ralphing off item for charity. gifts people have given the head of the catholic church. the raffle, part of the pope's effort to help those in need. tickets are $13 each. on this day in 1959, the three-1/2 hour long epic holiday ben-hur" roared on to its first moviestring. charlton heston played ben-hur, the prince who fought for glory. the movie was like nothing audiences had seen before. the sets and costumes stretched the budget to $120 million in today's money. it took three weeks and 15,000 bucks just to film the famous che chariot race. in the end the gamble paid off. "ben hur" won 11 academy awards, a record that two other movies has since tied and no movie has broken. the charityots rolled in 55
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years ago today. when the news breaks out we'll break in because breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. the dow, breaking another record. context and perspective on "your world" with cavuto starting now. >> stocks up but you better bundle up. a deadly winter storm is bearing down and is spreading out. welcome. i'm neil cavuto. buried on a blanket of snow, at least four feet of snow in the buffalo area. try two feet in grand rapids, michigan, and a foot in kalamazoo, too. and those freezing temperatures, virtually every state in the contiguous united states getting slammed with them, and we are all over them and the implications of them with mike tobin in the windy city and charles in new york on how expensive this will be. we begin first with
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