tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 12, 2015 3:00am-6:01am PST
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the president a no-show at that antiterror march in france and karen says it's difficult to believe that obama didn't go for the rally yesterday. it shows a total lack of leadership. >> kerry writes the absence of u.s. officials in paris makes us look bad in the eyes of the world. thanks for watching. "fox & friends first" starts right now. >> hi everyone. today is monday the 12th of january 2015. i'm anna kooiman in for elisabeth hasselbeck. america on alert. isis militants calling for lone wolf attacks here in the united states, threats against our police officers and the homeland. >> this morning we are learning new details about one of the killers behind the newspaper massacre. his connection to the underwear bomber. they lived across the hall from each other. the chilling terror ties ahead. >> more than 40 world leaders packed the streets of france rallying against terror. so where was the president? where was president obama? where was joe biden?
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where was john kerry? where was eric holder? those are some of the questions the america media and world media is asking today. you let the world down, mr. president, that according to "the new york daily news." i want to get your opinion because "fox & friends" starts right now. >> a fox news alert. america on alert this morning because while you were sleeping isis posting a new video on social media calling for more lone wolf attacks on our police officers, military and civilians. >> authorities taking no chances with this new threat. new york city police already sending out a memo instructing officers to, quote, pay close attention to people as they approach you. look for their hands. >> it didn't stop there. the memo also saying at least one officer must stand outside their patrol car at all times. this in light of what happened with the
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assassination of those two cops a few weeks ago. that precaution a sad reminder of what those two officers went through in brooklyn last month. and that came from the unions, more than anything came from the commissioner of police. >> greater details are emerging about the terrorists responsible for murdering 17 people in france. the hunt for the most wanted woman in the world moves to syria now. >> it sounds like that's where she is. this morning we learned one brothers wrote to radicalization. new video surfaces of the grocery store killing pledging his allegiance to isis. >> the man who does not need any sleep joins us live in paris. greg, how many times have we asked you this? what's the latest? >> a lot of times but there is a lot of new information coming out.
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after yesterday's massive march, massive security today. we are told some ten thousand french soldiers have been told to mobilize in case there's a new attack, and there are fears there could be as the investigation continues into last week's terrible events. and that is coming up with new leads. first let's go to hayat, the partner of the man responsible for that killing in the kosher super market last friday. it is thought she is an accomplice but it is now known she was out of the country at the time. it is now thought she is in an isis-held town in syria right next door to a place we've been reporting from, kobani. as for her dead partner people are looking at his video newly released yesterday. he pledges his allegiance to guess what? isis. it is revealed he had weapons and explosives in an apartment. it could have been worse. let's switch over to said kouachi. he and his brother are believed to be responsible
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for the slaughter around the newspaper office charlie hebdo. my contacts in yemen are telling me that he was there from 2009 to 2012. it is reported he had a lot of contacts with the al qaeda chapter there and contact, as you've noted with farouk the underwear bomber, the guy who tried to blow up a plane in 2009. one quick note, as bad as they are, al qaeda and isis don't get along and don't work together so that has investigators looking further into the attacks and the groups. >> greg, thank you very much. john kerry it turns out is going to represent the united states in paris on thursday. wait a minute. >> where did all the people go? >> the rally was yesterday. three million to four million people jammed the streets throughout the country of france. it was one of the most unbelievable collections of world leaders to be found everywhere. when you look at that front
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line of the 40 world leaders, who's missing? the president of the united states. you know what? the white house says that the reason the president wasn't there is because the security detail for the president is too big and it would have taken attention from all the other activities. >> was there a laugh track after that statement? is that a joke? >> of course there are security challenges and things like that, but they had some 2,300 law enforcement and soldiers on the ground there, sharpshooters on the roof. they didn't bother these others. >> i think that parade was probably safer than the white house. >> jumping the fence. >> hello? >> you had groups like the palestinian authority. mahmoud abbas was there, benjamin netanyahu. you had the ukrainian president and the foreign secretary of russia who said i have to be there. the jordanian president, the prime minister of turkey who is a muslim they all had to be there and locked arms. the worst thing is as an american we want to be
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president. if up you wanted to see our president take an opportunity to stand up and be a true world leader, he could have stood in the middle there. he could have led. he could have let everybody know, back to my place after. we'll talk about how we'll do it. come over to my apartment and in february i'll have a major summit about security. a chance to be a world leader. bill clinton would not have missed that opportunity and george bush wouldn't have missed that opportunity. >> could we put up the last slide we showed a moment ago. let's say the secret service has a good point the president of the united states security detail is too big. all right. why not send joe biden? that's why god invented vice presidents for events like this. john kerry they said had an invitation to do something in india and it could not be broken. eric holder was in paris. he was there attending a ministerial meeting about extremism, and yet he left paris before the actual event. >> steve he left in order
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to do the morning talk shows. >> except on fox, of course. in the meantime he of course didn't say anything about muslim extremism and left that rhetoric out of it. the other thing that was so moving for me and all these world leaders are marching arm in arm, it was so moving but it was embarrassing as an american that we weren't there. i feel bad for the french. do they know we're standing with them? i hope they do. there were rallies all over the world. it wasn't just paris or in france. washington, d.c. brooklyn. what if they said i don't want to travel, stay in the united states and march here. >> the whole thing goes on and on. istanbul beirut. israel. the president watched football yesterday. >> according to an administration official the president was not in
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attendance -- 11:00 yesterday they called the travel. an administration official said he was watching football. what's curious is we did have somebody there, low level. it was ambassador to the united states for france. and i believe her name is jane hardly. she was a bungler who got half a million dollars contributed to barack obama. i saw on the blogs this point, and i checked it out today and it's true. while we really didn't send anybody from washington to this particular event, when michael brown had his funeral in ferguson missouri, the administration sent three white house aides. >> the lack of american presence here at this rally for peace and freedom, it is an embarrassment echoed by many folks who have been on the channel including lieutenant colonel allen west. here's what he says. >> it was an incredible message that was sent when you have all the major leaders of the world that
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were there to stand in unity against terrorism and islamism. when you can have benjamin netanyahu and mahmoud abbas standing on the front line together but yet you have the president of the united states who can take air force one to knoxville free to talk about community college but yet he could not find the time to go to paris, france, and stand in solidarity against this tragic incident we had last week. >> 360 words he mentioned on friday. everything else was about his agenda, his accomplishment and the economy. even his weekend address, which i actually watched -- it was posted on a blog, i thought he was going to mention something about france -- not a word. all he talked about is his economic record and no one is going to stand in his way. >> the way he summed it up was have a great weekend everybody. the people in paris were not having a great weekend. the people worried about global extremism were not having a great weekend. yesterday he was watching football and couldn't go.
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today you know what he's doing? posing for a photo op and i know he hates photo ops. they'll be standing with a jersey and i know they won't be talking about islamic extremism that we know of. eric holder did make it on to some of the sunday chat shows, all of them except fox. he was there for ministerial meetings to talk about extremism. yet he doesn't really talk on the sunday shows about the true problem here: islamic -- rat cal -- radical islamic extremism. cannot say those words. has trouble saying them. >> i certainly think we are at war with those who would commit terrorist attacks and who would corrupt the islamic faith in the way that they do to try to justify their terrorist actions. so that's who we are at war with and we are determined to take the fight to them
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to prevent them from engaging these kinds of activities. i will say we are at war with the terrorists who commit these heinous acts and who use islam. they use a corrupted version of islam to justify their action. >> everybody in that administration is doing verbal gymnastics to not say radical islam whether it is josh earnest, whether it is his predecessor or the attorney general because the president has let everybody know that's n private meetings there are reports that if the c.i.a. officials or f.b.i. start saying al qaeda and radical islam the president stormed out of the room a few weeks ago because he didn't want even those terms used. by the way, he also did the attorney general go on to say when asked what can you tell us about who did this. we're still trying to find out. it is impossible to tell. really? it is between al qaeda and yemen and radical islamists who represent isis in the islamic state. we know who did this. >> let us know your thoughts. should the president have
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gone? if he could not have gone should biden have been there? let us know what you think. let us know on facebook and twitter. does the united states still have what it takes to fight terror? >> the united states has virtually no human intelligence whatsoever, and this administration failed terribly to even describe radical islam as what it really is. >> we'll ask the man who killed osama bin laden next. >> eric holder was not at yesterday's rally but he did find time to talk about prosecuting general david petraeus. really? right back. she inspires you. no question
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a fox news alert. more than 40 world leaders and an estimated three million people packed the streets of france yesterday in a stand against islamic terror. >> the war against radical islam won't be won by just marches. what will it take to defeat the jihadist terrorists. joining us now is the man who killed osama bin laden. great to be with you. thanks for being here. >> good morning. thank you for having me.
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>> these hot zones these no-go zones all across france where radicalization is happening on the streets, just a ten minute cab ride outside paris. sharia law is in place. you say because authorities aren't going in it is making it more of a hotbed and needs to be infiltrated. explain that. >> i think part of the problem is immigrants come in not just in paris but all over europe and bringing their culture with them. they have no-go zones where they enforce sharia law. the younger people aren't going to school. they are going to madras, not learning the tolerance they need to integrate with the societies in which they live. >> we heard a sound bite -- i'm sure you were able to hear it -- of our attorney general talking about the problem with extremist. it is not a problem with extremists. it is a problem with islamic extremists and it doesn't seem this administration is willing to say that. everybody sees it except
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them. >> i think extremists are bad anywhere except right now we're seeing it is islamic extremists and we need to deal with them and the best way is find out where they are being radicalized and find the clerics teaching this stuff and have other islamic leaders talk to them. we need to learn to live together. >> we're worried about the amount the number of islamic terrorists trying to go to everybody's shores and blow up everybody's buildings and attack our different nypd officials with axes. we were so concerned about al qaeda having a base we went into afghanistan not to get the taliban out of power but to get that al qaeda out of afghanistan. now we're giving them essentially a country. what's the danger rob, of letting isis put down roots in the iraq-syrian area? >> it's dangerous because
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we're giving them a place where a lot of these young muslims become radicalized and fight in the jihad. what we're seeing here is the enemy is really good at seeing we're doing it evolving. we had them in afghanistan they left. they went to yemen. we went to iraq. they're going to iraq. we need better alliance solidarity especially now with our arab partners. and then we need to go in the military a little bit and also with education. >> you talked about how we need to be keeping an eye on the clerics and imams. once upon a time we were able to send police officers in there but now we can't do that. and the other problem is -- and ollie north said this last night on the channel -- all the people with the good information we're trying to kill with drones and when you kill them, they don't talk. >> that's true. unfortunately some of the areas where we're fighting the only way to get them is with drones because we're trying to eliminate the threat with minimizing
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collateral damage so the drone strikes in places like yemen they work because we don't have the assets on the ground in order to get the human intelligence or capture them. it is a difficult problem. >> how long does it take to train a terrorist? >> how long does it take to train a terrorist? >> yeah. >> i don't think very long at all. they need the ideology. they need to know which end of the gun is the business end and they need a target. >> how does this trigger thing work; you're right. rob o'neal the man who killed osama bin laden joins us from the stocks stewed yes, sir down in orlando. thanks so much. >> ten minutes before 30 minutes after the white house. the white house still refusing to say we're at war with islamic extremism. lieutenant colonel allen west says we need swift action now and fires back. next.
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a quick look at headlines. secretary of state john kerry in a car crash in india. the motorcade was heading to the airport when another car hit kerry's unfortunately no one was hurt. kerry visiting india for an international investment conference. a breaking story overnight. rescue crews just found both black boxes from airasia 8501. hours ago divers spotted the voice recorder from the plane's cockpit. the boxes found buried 100 feet under water wedged under plane's wreckage. >> more than three million people marched in france to honor the 17 people killed in this week's terror attacks. >> but is a rally enough to change the response of radical islamists or is it time to double down on muslim extremism? joining us is lieutenant colonel allen west. he joins us live from, i believe, dallas. good morning to you, colonel. >> good morning. how are you all? >> doing okay.
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yesterday u.s.a. was awol, missing in action at that big rally. what do you think about the president? the white house says the security detail is so big it would have distracted from the events. >> well that's the excuse, the mother of all excuses. when you have the leaders of germany, of england, of russia, their prime minister was there benjamin netanyahu, mahmoud abbas, why wouldn't the president who is supposed to be the leader of the free world be in attendance to take his place in solidarity against islamic terrorism, islamo fascism and jihaddism? it was a very glaring thing that the president of the united states or any representative of the obama was absent. the fact that eric holder even flew out from paris before the rally that's quite telling. >> don't worry we're going to have a big security summit in the middle of february. is that going to make everything okay? >> no, it's not going to make anything okay. as a matter of fact, that is just a rescheduling of the summit that was
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supposed to have happened in october. the time for talk is over. now we have to start recognizing and declaring who this enemy is. nidal hasan has been convicted and it is still being classified as workplace violence. this administration is not serious about the strategy to defeat and destroy. >> knowing the way this white house worked and the way the last white house worked i got a feeling george bush probably would have been opt front line at that -- on the front line at that rally. >> exactly. this is something different. this is not leading from behind. this is absence. >> colonel, mill tarl, as soon as we get definitive proof that this attack in france -- and i consider france an ally and you can say wait -- as soon as we find out that the responsible, do you think we should send an immediate message? because yemen has become a hotbed of formal terrorist
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training. should there be an immediate impact in that area? >> there has to be an immediate response because this enemy only understands strength and might. it is not just an immediate response. it is a sustained response. we need to develop a new 21st century force positioning of power projection so we can deny this enemy sanctuary. >> how do we do that without bankrupting ourselves. hitting every place on the globe from north africa to the middle east? >> what bankrupted the united states of america was this aspect of nation building, an occupation-style warfare. i'm not talking about building roads and bridges and building schools. i'm talking about finding the enemy and killing him where he is and pursuing him to the gates of hell as joe biden talked about. >> well, this administration, colonel, seems to be in denial because eric holder was on one of the chat shows yesterday and said we don't know exactly who these guys are. we know exactly who they are. one of them trained with al qaeda in yemen and the
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other guy posed in front of the isis flag in his apartment in paris. hello? >> we completely know who they are and i would recommend that the obama administration looks at the speech on new year's day that egyptian president el sissy gave to one of the highest ranking muslim universities there and said it is our ideology that is a problem. if general el sissy can understand, why can't the president of the united states understand that and why can't we develop a strategic objective, a strategic plan and policy to finally defeat islamic totalitarianism and terrorism and jihaddism? >> by the way, they offered troops, ground troops to fight isis. so did jordan. we have not gotten back to them yet. allen west, thanks so much. >> thank you so much. have a great day. >> you as well. it's about half past the top of the hour on this monday. coming up, new development in search for the world's most wanted woman.
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where investigators say the wife common-law wife and accomplice of the grocery store terrorist is hiding out now. rallying against terror in france our next guest says the greatest threat to france is not terrorism. it's their ban on free speech. we'll explain. i've smoked a lot and quit a lot but ended up nowhere. now...i use this. the nicoderm cq patch with unique extended release technology helps prevent the urge to smoke all day. i want this time to be my last time. that's why i choose nicoderm cq.
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we've got a fox news alert. new information this monday morning, revealing that hayat boumeddiene crossed into syria, the country of syria from turkey on january 8. that is the same day that her common law husband amedy coulibaly, shot a police woman to death on the streets of paris before he killed four hostages on friday inside that jewish grocery store. >> meanwhile a chilling new video has emerged showing
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coulibaly pledging his allegiance to isis leaders. >> all this going on as france ordering 10,000 troops into the streets this morning to protect its people saying the threat is still present. millions of marchers and dozens of world leaders rallying against terror in france yesterday. >> but our next guest says the greatest threat to france not terrorism but rather the lack of free speech and the u.s. could be heading down the same path. joining us right now, george washington university law professor jonathan turley. what has france been doing to restrict free speech that still got them into trouble? >> the great irony is that the editors and the writers of this magazine were pry may remember concerned with prosecution. they were in continual struggle with the government and people that wanted them prosecuted for the exercise of free speech. one of the editors, one of the surviving editors recently lashed out at people who were protesting saying where have you been for years when we were fighting these domestic
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laws and fighting these efforts to shut us down. >> give us some examples of how they are criminalized free speech in france. >> across europe -- not just france but france is one of the leading countries on this trend -- has been criminalizing all types of speech that criticize folks for their religion or sexuality or sexual orientation or gender. there is a trend towards prosecution of people who engage in hate speech or speech seen as discriminatory and these laws are often generally written as to whether you insult or annoy someone's religion. and it creates a slippery slope. the response is that people like those killed at this magazine aren't quite sure when they will be prosecuted and when they will be allowed to speak. >> some of the toughest laws in the e.u. on this topic. i saw a sign in the crowd yesterday that was a quote
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something like i don't agree with what you say but i'll defend it to the death, or something like that, which is really resonating with everybody there. what parallels do you see going on here in the united states? do you see us following suit at all? >> we are doing much better than, for example our neighbors, including canada. canada is way down this path. they crossed the rube con in that sense. the first amendment and its juris prudence do protect us but we're seeing a lot of these claims being made in the united states. there was a circus clown that pretended he was obama years ago and people demanded that he be investigated. the obama administration changed u.s. policy in the first term and worked with muslim countries to try to come up with an international blasphemy standard. it was shocking to many of us in the free speech community. >> and us to. let me add this to it. it is also kind of disturbing when you look at what happened leading up to benghazi after our 20 embassies were attacked on that day.
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the next thing you know there is a producer in jail on some ancillary charges and he's getting condemned for putting together this horrible movie. >> that's an excellent example of how we're talking about good game. after the danish cartoon controversy all the leaders came out for free speech but these countries started prosecuting people for divisive speech. the same thing happened there. what was the next image we saw? it was this producer being arrested on a collateral charge. that was not an accident. >> and what they have done in europe and in particular in france, which we're talking about today, they've given up some liberty and they have given it up a lot because it's hard to get back. the final line of your column yesterday in the paper was the terrible truth. it only takes a single gun man to kill a journalist but it takes a nation to kill a right. and that's what happened. >> unfortunately i think that's true. we have such close connections to france, we are bound by history.
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but france has taken a different path and i think it's a dangerous path for liberty. this is really the cradle of liberty. >> thank you so much for your ongses. jonathan turley law professor at george washington university. >> heather nauert, you have another update. >> good morning, guys. got other news to bring you. these gals wanted to move to syria to marry isis fighters but this morning two teenagers are now being detained in austria. police say that a 16-year-old was recruiting others to become wives of jihadists. the suspect and another 17-year-old tried traveling to syria last month. they were stopped in romania and forced to return home. the flu epidemic still gripping the nation and we're now learning a 26-year-old health care worker has died. she was a wisconsin radiology technician.
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she received a flu shot but she died after doctor say she developed sepsis and had a heart attack, all considered complications from a severe case of the flu. so far more than 5,000 people have been hospitalized this flu season. 26 children have died. attorney general eric holder staying mum on reports that former c.i.a. director david petraeus will face felony charges for allegedly disclosing government secrets. petraeus resigned after he allegedly gave paula broadwell classified information. holder not letting on about a possible indictment. listen. >> i don't want to comment on what is an ongoing matter. i think that anybody who shared information that led to that report did so inappropriately. the determination has yet to be made. >> in the meantime members of the senate including
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dianne feinstein, are coming to the general's defense. >> people aren't perfect. he made a mistake. he lost his job as c.i.a. director because of it. i mean, how much do you want to punish somebody? >> petraeus denied giving broadwell classified information. >> let's lighten things up a bit. nfl playoffs, denver hosting indianapolis. the colts beat the broncos 24-13 earning a matchup with the patriots in the afc championship. that loss for manning leading many to wonder if that will turn out to be his last nfl game. in green bay the cowboys good luck charm, new jersey governor chris christie on hand to watch his team play the packers but luck running out for dallas. packers beat the cowboys 26-21. no hug for christie like we saw last week. wisconsin congressman paul ryan at the game taking a bit of a jab at the
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governor on twitter saying this: do you need a hug now? look at that. like the beard. good luck there for him. the packers-seattle in the nfc championship game. >> thank you heather. new video from pittsburgh. an icy nightmare there. a winter storm bringing rain, freezing rain and sleet and ice and snow making for a very dangerous drive to work this morning. maria molina is on the streets in new york city where currently it is 37 degrees and it is raining. >> because temperatures are above freezing here in new york city thankfully that precipitation is staying in the form of rain. but areas farther north and to our west are not having the same luck. we do have freezing rain and also snow coming down. this is all associated with a very large storm system that is producing some form of precipitation all the way from maine down to the state of louisiana and out across portions of the mid-atlantic and also into the southeast.
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most of the precipitation is just in the form of rain. you can even see some thunderstorms coming up later today. take a look at the radar. that is snow coming down across parts of indiana, ohio and into interior portions of the northeast. because of the winter weather we have winter weather advisories in effect. you're going to be much colder behind the storm system in the plains. highs in the single digits today across parts of north dakota. >> very tolerable here. >> coming up, islamo phobia is the buzzwords in the media but did you know there are more hate crimes against jews than muslims? >> would that paris newspaper attack have been worse here in the united states because of our gun laws? a washington poet --
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15 minutes before the top of the hour. french jews make up 1% of the country's population but 20% of all crimes in france are directed toward the jewish community. antisemitism is on the rise across the world even here in the u.s. where the f.b.i. says the vast majority of all religious hate crimes are against jews. not against muslims. here to react, the only jewish republican in congress congratulations on your election. talk some serious stuff. no coincidence that one of these terrorists ended up in a kosher super market? >> before these attacks in paris we had jews in france fleeing the state. all over the country of france europe, all across the world there's been this rise in antisemitism.
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i think it is important the israeli prime minister was there in paris yesterday praying with jews, but the rise of antisemitism is very real. >> absolutely. for example, did you know that 7,000 jews left france in 2014? that is double the usual number and most of them are heading to israel which is great news for that country. no wonder they're leaving. look at this. the rise in antisemitic crimes in france, 15 teens were beat by a jewish man. a kosher restaurant was fire bombed in july. protests threatened to kill a woman and baby while waiting for a bus. orthodox man beaten on a train. that is a huge message here no one is paying attention to. >> definitely a rise in awareness is going to probably result from what happened last week, in the course of the last few days. i think the rally yesterday which was strong historic -- i was wondering
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where my president was. he should have been there with everyone else. but as i was watching the pictures of the prime minister speaking to this group, the reception he got, the four hostages will be heading to israel to be buried there. hopefully there is an opportunity with the heightened awareness to the antisemitism in france. it is growing well. with the height end awareness maybe we can turn the tide. >> you're in the foreign relations committee. with eric cantor out, do you feel a special responsibility to make sure the jewish concerns are heard? >> it's important that we understand whether you're jewish or non-jewish, i strongly believe our strongest ally in the entire world is israel. as i've been watching the obama administration, there has been daylight between the u.s. and israel. we have to cut it out. >> nice seeing you in the studio. 12 minutes before the top of the hour. if that french newspaper attack happened here it would have been a whole lot worse. least that according to one
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"washington post" reporter. the reason why? our gun laws. wouldn't that attack have been stopped sooner because our cops have guns. hillary don't have what it takes to become president that according to jay leno. >> seems to be very slow and very -- i don't see that fire, that fire i used to see that i see in elizabeth warren. >> that really true? we'll examine it. ♪ i make a lot of purchases for my business. and i get a lot in return with ink plus from chase. like 50,000 bonus points when i spent $5,000 in the first 3 months after i opened my account. and i earn 5 times the rewards on internet, phone services and at office supply stores. with ink plus i can choose how to redeem my points. travel, gift cards even cash back. and my rewards points won't expire.
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it would have been much worse because of our nation's gun laws? >> one thing that's different here is weapons are universally available and so it is actual will he a very good thing that the tensions are not exactly the same because we would expect to have a lot more carnage here. >> so is that really the case? here to debate it is chief investigative reporter emily miller and democratic strategist ryan benjamin. lisa, you have a theory why they picked paris in the first place. >> emily. yes. i think as far as french gun laws, it's basically a gun priscilla kwon free zone. as we've seen in the united states, gun free zones lure crazy andful people like terrorists because no one fights back. when you have a terrorist attack somewhere someone has a gun or any attack, any public shooting that's where they fight back. gun free zones like france, which unfortunately, even the police aren't carrying a gun s a
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very attractive to somebody who is going to go in with a gun. >> brian when we see terrible massacres happen in the united states, don't we see them in gun-free zones like theaters and movie theaters? >> we do. but the concern we have to have is lone wolves and this is starting to pick up around the world. my concern is because we have the ability for these guys to just go into any gun show and pick up guns legally, you can be -- my concern is what happens if they just start shooting people everywhere around the country because they have the ability to do it and our government actually allows it with our gun laws? >> here is the point, and robinson, the columnist, should write this out in his explanation for this ridiculous comment. it's the polar opposite. the second amendment is what keeps us safer from terrorist attacks because foreigners know we have guns. i'm a gun owner. i was a victim of a home
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invasion a few queers ago. i decided to get a gun to protect myself. half the country has a gun in the home. a terrorist knows that if he goes in places not gun free zone, people can shoot back. like the camera phone at this horrible crime this police was shot in the head begging for mercy. the person taking the video, if they had been a concealed carry holder, they could have shot the man. but instead they watched and took a video. >> brian, do you think that could have been the case? could the carnage have been reduced? >> it depends on where. i think to her point, yeah, i'm not worried about my counterpart today. i'm worried about the terrorist who might show up at a gun show and buy these guns. if they go to a school, they could cause massive carnage and we could be part of it. it's not like they had to go on the black market. that's my concern.
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>> absolutely. first of all if -- we will know apparently, according to our government isis sleeper cells in the united states, if they are u.s. citizens, if they don't have a felony, if they don't have criminal background checks, absolutely they can get a gun, just like rest us. but the fact is that there is a lot more people ho can shoot at them. mostly in they're foreigners they can't buy a gun legally. but it doesn't matter. because all the gun control laws in the country will never stop crime. in fact, in the history of this country, and you can tell me if i'm wrong if you have another example, there has never been a gun control law that has reduced crime. i can't think of any gun control law that prevents terrorists because you know what? if they're murderers, they don't care what the laws are already. >> emily and brian we're gog have to leave it will. thank you very much. >> thank you. 56 minutes after the hour. coming up, president obama a no show at the antiterrorist rallies in paris.
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good morning. today is monday, 12th of january, 2015. i'm anna kooiman in for elisabeth hasselbeck. days after the deadly terrorist attack in france, isis militants called for lone wolf style attacks right here in the united states. details on the new threats our military police officers and the homeland. >> the world comes together to take a stand against extremists even the prime minister of israel and the palestinian president put aside their differences. so why were these men nowhere to be found? we'll trio explain. >> and they blame no go zones like mosques in paris for harboring the terrorists hyped the attacks and believe it or not, we've got these here, too.
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the reporter who uncovered them in the united states joins us live in the next 15 minutes. live from new york city, you're watching "fox & friends." it's monday. we kick things off this monday morning with fox news alert. america on high alert this morning because while you were sleeping, isis released a new video calling for more lone wolf attacks on american police officers military, and civilians as well. >> and authorities are taking no chances. new york police already sending out a memo instructing officers to quote, pay close attention to people as they approach look for their hands. >> the memo also ordering one officer that must stand outside the patrol car at all times. a sad reminder of the two officers assassinated in brooklyn last night. also overnight, new details emerging about the terrorist who
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murdered 17 people in france as the hunt for the most wanted woman in the world intensifies. get this turkish officials now say she has slipped into syria. they've been monitoring her phone. >> this morning, we learn one brother's road to radicalization included crossing paths with another terrorist convicted of trying to blow up a u.s.-bound airliner with an underwear bomb of the you remember that on christmas day several years ago. and new video surfaces of the grocery store killer pledging his allegiance to isis. >> greg palkot joins us from the city center in paris with the latest. >> reporter: hi, yeah. massive march yesterday massive security. today the french authorities telling us that they are mobilizing 10,000 french soldiers to be at the ready in case of more attacks and there is a fear according to authorities, of more attacks. this as the investigation into last week's terrorist attacks continues, coming up with new leads. first to the partner of the man
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responsible for, among other things killing those people in the kosher supermarket. it's thought that she was an accomplice. it is thought, however, she was out of the country at the time. now it's thought that she is inside syria in an isis-controlled town, next to a town we've been reporting to you about, kobani. as for her dead partner, they're look harder at a video leased in which he again pledges allegiance to, guess what, isis. also revealed he had a whole storehouse of guns and ammunition in one apartment. it could have been worse. let's go to said kouachi. he and his brother believed to be responsible for the slaughter at charlie hebdo. my contacts confirm to me that he was there from 2009 to 2012. there are reports that he got training with al-qaeda in the arabian peninsula, a chapter of al-qaeda there. my sources confirm to me that according to him he knew mata
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la the so-called underwear bomber, who tried it blow up a plane in detroit in 2009. the one itch we have to tell you is as bad as al-qaeda and isis are, they don't get along. so investigators here are now looking hard at how these claims work what kind of relationships there could be what kind of dangers lie ahead. back to you. >> all right. it looks like the terrorists went to college together. let's bring in donald trump who joins us every monday at this time. mr. trump, i'm sure you were struck by those images of those 40 world leaders marching through the cold streets of paris yesterday in solidarity unified against islamic extremists. you know who is missing from there, is our president or vice president or secretary of state. as it turns out, eric holder was in town but he left early. john kerry this morning says that criticism that the president wasn't there is
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quibbling. the president's team however, says if he would have been there, his security team would have been so big, it would have been distracting from what was going on. why wasn't the president there donald trump? >> well, i think he would not have had to have been there, but somebody at a high level should have been, whether it's kerry or the vice president. somebody had to be there. there is no question about it. >> when talk about leadership all the time. not only would you have been there to make america proud, but this is also an opportunity to stand in the middle of 40 great nations and to have the focal point be on you and then with all of those people there and their attention that might be an opportunity to strategic a true war against radical islam. >> it's an opportunity lost. we lose all of our opportunities. this country is losing opportunity after opportunity. just another one lost. he could have had -- whether he's there or biden is there or kerry is there and -- somebody
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should have therein there. the attorney general was in paris. so he could have been there. but i would have said the vice president at a minimum should have been there. it was sort of an amazing display. and these world leaders were the top people from the top countries and we were represented at a very low level. >> you know what? this administration sent three or four white house aides to the michael brown funeral in ferguson missouri. they sent that many. and the ambassador for france was there yesterday, a form obama bundler. but that was >> well, you know, we're in a very strange time in the country. we have no leadership. the leaders are from a different planet, i guess, and you look at what's going on in the world. you look at how the world is crumbling. we have caused a loft that, to be honest with you, and you know that better than perhaps i do. but certainly this was an unbelievable chance to show the world that we're all together and unite and the biggest and
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the most powerful, at least i think the most powerful -- we used to be the most powerful -- but the biggest and most powerful nation in the world was not represented. represented really in a certain way was represented by very, very low level officials. >> yeah. and the president is being criticized widely. you've seen the cover of all the daily newspapers that we've been showing you this morning. >> by the left as well. >> absolutely. >> by the way excuses. instead of saying, well, we should have been. i wish i had -- it's like excuses. like it was okay. it was fine. always excuses. they never admit anything. i'm not saying you have to do that but it's always excuses with this leader. >> we had rob o'neil earlier the former navy seal whoa killed osama bin laden. he said terrorists are evolving and we all need to stand together. listen to this and i want you to respond. >> what we're seeing here is the
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enemy is really good at seeing we're evolving. we had them in afghanistan, they left to yemen. then they went to iraq. we need better alliance solidarity, especially now with arrest arab partners and then we need to go in their military and also with education. >> so how do you respond to this, as well as where we are going to be seeing the president today? he's going to be doing a photo op with the spurs today. >> well, he's going to be with the basketball players and i love that team. i think it's a great team, but this is maybe not the time to be there. you have so many other things you have to be doing. and frankly, look, this is a time when we really need to stop being politically correct. we're talking about waterboarding and they're chopping off people's heads. these people must be laughing at us as we talk about the various forms -- not of torture of less than torture. and they're cutting off people's heads and shooting people in the face. and we're worried about being politically correct all the time. they must be laughing at us.
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they have no fear, believe me. >> right. let's talk about 2016. some news over the weekend. first the fact that jeb bush raised about $100 million already and then suddenly mitt romney puts together some of his friends and after their meeting he says if anybody asks let them know i'm considering running. what's your reaction to that? >> well, i've always liked mitt but he was a man that didn't get the job done. he didn't close the deal. he's like a deal maker that can't close the deal or a golfer. you have guys that get to the 18th green, they're winning and they can't sink the three footer. they have no chance of sinking it and there are many of them. most people are like that, frankly. mitt was unable to close the deal. it should have been closed. it was an easy win. the republicans should have won. he actually got less votes than john mccain. had he gotten the votes that john mccain got, he would have won. so will i support him? i can't support him. i want somebody that's going to get to the finish line. i want somebody that's going to close the deal. i would not support mitt romney.
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>> would you support jeb bush? >> no. the last thing we need is another bush. >> you know what? i think you would support donald trump. >> i agree with that. i would totally support donald trump. >> i'm following you on twitter. people ask you every day when you're going to make the announcement. and i know you haven't decided officially, but it sure sounds like you're going to do it. >> well, i may surprise a lot of people. there might be a lot of people surprised. these politicians, they're all talk. they're no action. i've been watching it for years. i deal with them. most of them have come up to my office. they want my support. i deal with them. all talk. no action. i will not support somebody that didn't close the deal last time and that deal should have been easy to close. i think that was easier than running against, frankly hillary, and i'm not saying hillary is very strong. but i think that was an easier one to win than running against hillary. >> real quick, yes or no, with the "celebrity apprentice" stop from you running like it did last time? >> no, because it's going to be
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overt by the way with the ratings are through the roof. we're happy about that. but no, in another six weeks, that ends. and it's on tonight and it's doing well and i look forward to watching it. but we have much bigger problems right now in this country than "celebrity apprentice." so sometime after that, i can't even talk about it during the show because that ridiculous law that don't let us do that. but i will be making a decision and you people may be very surprised. actually you people pay not be that surprised. >> donald trump, thank you so much. we'll be watching "celebrity apprentice." geraldo rivera is on there. i saw him making meat pies last week. heather joins us now with some headlines. >> austria, this story may surprise some folks or maybe not. two austrian girls busted for trying to move to syria to marry isis fighters. this morning they are now headed back home to austria. police say that a 16-year-old was recruiting others to become
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jihadi brides. both traveled to syria last month, but they were stopped in romania. overnight, rescue crews finding both black boxes from air asia flight 8501. do i havers spotted the voice recorder from the plane's cockpit. the boxes found 100 feet under water. they were wedged between the plane's heavy wreckage down there. the recorders are usually found in the tail of the plane but now crews say that they may think that the plane exploded in the air when it couldn't adjust cabin pressure and that is possibly what scattered debris all overt ocean. we'll keep you posted. the golden globes going political. george clooney wearing a i am charlie pin as a tribute to the deadly terrorist attack in paris. joshua jackson diane krueger posing with a sign on the red carpet. in the meantime, north korea and the sony hack attack taking center stage. stealing the show mocking kim jong-un. take a look.
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>> are you enjoying the show so far? no? you don't think it's fun to see all these big movie stars? >> you know have thousand baby playing guitar at the same time. you know have people holding up many costume in one big picture. you know have dennis rodman no basketball at all. >> the movie "boyhood" that won three golden globes, including the best drama. those are your headlines. i'll see you back here in a half hour. >> thank you very much. he's a decorated general credited for turning around the united states war in iraq and now some inside with the obama administration, some insiders want to send david petraeus to prison. a former white house insider comes up straight ahead. and they blamed no go zones like mosques in paris for harboring the terrorists behind last week's attacks. and believe it or not, we've got
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cells not only in france, but certainly in other countries and yes, even in our own. >> it's the scorned fighter pieces that disturb me greatly because we don't have a good handle who is on the ground. >> last week's terrorist attacks in paris raising new concerns here at home. how many terrorists are hiding in plain sight, right underneath our nose? reporter tom lyden has been on the chase for home grown terror for a number of years and joins us live. tom, i know you were watching in minneapolis what's going on over in france and you've had a terrible radicalization problem as well in the twin cities that is going on right now. how are they doing it? >> you know really began for us back in 2008 with al-shabab. we had minnesotans leaving to go fight for the al-qaeda linked group in somalia. then it really started metastasizing in the last year and started to go to syria and iraq to fight for isis. it's only in the last few months we had indictments.
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we've had two people die in syria from minnesota. this is what we haven't had. we haven't had any indictments for the recruiters, for the middle men, the people who are handing these guys and some cases women 4,000 bucks and a plane ticket saying you need to go fight for the caliphate in syria. that's who we haven't seen indicted. we've had cryptic references to a mosque and some people on the internet and social media. but so far we haven't seen any of those middle men indicted. >> i understand the people of minnesota are wary of what's going on in the world and at one point not too long ago, a mosque actually contacted the f.b.i. and said hey, you got to take a look at some of these guys. we're worried they've sailed off the deep end. >> yeah. this is a mosque in bloomington a suburb here that, did exactly the right thing. they discovered someone who was radicalizing actually they were notified by one of the travelers who went to syria that you have
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someone here in the mosque, amirror michelle, who is radicalizing young people. you need o do something about it. they called police. local police department called the joint terrorism task force. we know from our research and our investigation he has connections to most of these travelers, but he has not been indicted yet. he's a very mysterious figure, actually left a training camp in syria men years ago, held by the f.b.i. for three or four months and released. some people believe he may be a double agent. we know he's on a terror watch list. so far no indictment of him. >> obviously they're doing something right in the twin cities because the way they're handling extreme muslim extremists is going to become a pilot program across the country. is that right? >> yeah. our u.s. attorney is doing this. he's reaching out to the local somali community. it will be a model program they're going to try to duplicate in boston and l.a they're getting these young people, 50% unemployment among men in our somali community. getting them in touch with job
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programs. the problem is, they've seen this before. in 2008, but all the money went to law enforcement. didn't go to these youth programs. >> tom in minneapolis, great work and thanks for getting up so early with us today. >> no problem. coming up, overnight secretary of state john kerry's motorcade involved in a crash. we have some breaking details about him. and jay leno putting all jokes aside, he says hillary clinton is too old to run for office? really? ♪ ♪
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good morning. quick fed lines and a fox news alert. we're just learning that secretary of state john kerry arriving in pakistan on an unannounced counterterrorism visit. but before arriving, secretary kerry in a car crash in india. his motorcade was heading to the airport when another car hit kerry. fortunately, no one was hurt. he was in india for an investment conference. children in pakistan heading back to school today without dozens of their peers. 150 people died last month when taliban militants went room to room gunning down students and teachers. soldiers are stationed at the entrance and a new security gate is in place. they say slow and steady wins the race. but jay leno says that's not going to work for hillary clinton. >> let me ask you about hillary and and i like her.
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i don't see the fire. her and elizabeth warren are almost the same age. i see elizabeth warren come out boom, boom boom. she seems to be sort of -- very slow and very -- i don't see that fire, you know, that i used to see that i see in elizabeth warren 'cause i say to people how much younger is elizabeth warren? oh, 15 years? no, 18 months. >> here to react to that our political panel dallas and darryl. does she look slow to you? >> she doesn't look slow. i think who is slow is jay leno. if i had retired, if i didn't have the stamina to do a late night show anymore, i'd be the last one going around saying someone was slow or old. hillary clinton would work circles around jay leno. >> but dallas, she didn't have a great year, run away, most popular. she's going to get the
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nomination. a lot of mistakes, average selling book. you saw some vulnerability didn't you? >> absolutely. look, my mama raised me better than to talk about a woman's age, so i'm not going to do that. i think it is the age of her ideas. she does look tired. she needs a strong primary challenge from elizabeth warren from brian schweitzer the governor of montana. there needs to be a vigorous debate to enjoy the democrats. i think her ideas look tired. >> dallas, no one knows what her ideas are yet. she's not announced candidate. >> she's been on the public scene for 40 years and nobody knows what she's about? that's the problem right there, brad. >> no, i'm saying that she has an opportunity, if she decides to run for president she has an opportunity to bring forth maybe a whole new set of ideas. you don't know. >> you have to make bell bottoms cool again.
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>> right. >> i'm not sure what that means, but i enjoyed t. brad, i would say this, there is word last week that she's going to start separating herself from the president. that should be interesting. let's walk over to governor mitt romney. i spoke with ann romney off and off camera saying mitt is not running again and then last week we get this, everybody in here, he tells his friends to go tell their friends that i'm considering a run. what's behind that, dallas? >> well, look, mitt is a good man. i think he ran a pretty decent campaign. i guess the next one would be better. i think mitt and jeb both bring good things to the table. but i don't like that in the last week or so it has already evolved into a seventh grade battle for the harvest fest homecoming parade. what we need is a good battle over policies. the republicans have a unique challenge here that they can talk policy like they never have before. we need to involve the current
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governors across this country whether it be rick perry who just left, but also saw is a in a martinez, we need a real policy debate and i don't want to see these two heavy weights getting into a fight. >> dallas, you took too much time now. are they the same candidate? >> i think they are the same candidate and i think what mitt romney sees is he believes he's better. he thinks he's figured out the formula to win the primary and then compete in the general election. he doesn't think jeb bush can do both of those things. >> brad and dallas woodhouse, as long as you promise not to get along and agree, you can keep coming back. >> not a problem. >> okay. >> thanks. straight ahead, he's a decorated general credited for turning around the war in iraq and maybe afghanistan. now some inside the obama administration want to charge general david petraeus with a felony? what's going on here? a form white house insider straight ahead. and days after the terrorist attack in france, isis militants
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good morning. a fox news alert. just days after the deadly terrorist attacks in france, isis renewing its call to followers to launch attacks in the united states. >> ainsley earhart is here with the breaking details on what is becoming a disturbing report this morning. >> chilling. while you were sleeping, isis posting a new video on social media calling for more lone wolf attacks on our police officers and our soldiers here in the heartland. >> we're seeing that they are using the momentum from the paris attacks in part of their messaging strategy to see who
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can we get to follow this? it also specifically mentions as targets civilians, police officers and intelligence officials and military. so it is something of concern. we've put out a city wide notice to police officers last night advising them of the message and reminding them to take extra care and be extra vigilant. >> as a result of that authorities are now taking no chances with this new threat. new york police immediately responding, sending out a memo instructing officers here to, quote, remain alert and consider tactics at all times. pay close attention to people as they approach and look for their hands. the memo also telling officers to not sit sit in their patrol cars together. one partner must be outside of the patrol car keeping watch. isis clearly has influence here in the u.s. last year the f.b.i. arrested 12 americans trying to join the brutal terror group. back to you guys. >> we thank you very much. meanwhile, given what's
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happening over there right now, yesterday in downtown paris there was a gigantic rally. they are estimating that 4 million people took to the streets of france yesterday to stand up to islamic extremism and terrorism and right across the front line were all the leaders of the great nations. who is not there, who is not represented? the united states of america. the president according to white house, the secret service was worried his detail would take up too much of -- >> that's an embarrassing excuse. >> would take you have too much influence. then joe biden we don't know where he was. john kerry was in india. couldn't get out of the deal. and eric holder apparently was in france, but got out of town before the actual event. we did send our ambassador, but that was about it. so people are being very critical on both sides of the political spectrum why our president gave the french the kissoff. >> right. this is the french, we used to be represented by thomas jefferson and benjamin franklin
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and now we're sending a donor. one said note the word leader painfully obvious we do not have one. >> another says the absence was embarrassing. we get stuck paying the tar for his fund-raiser, which he never cancels, but he stays home to watch football while the rest of the world is rallying against islamic terrorism? >> sandra writes, to the people of france, although our leader wasn't there, the american people stand with you. >> the french interior ministry says this is the largest demonstration that they have on the books. this is something that could be written about in our history books. this is going to be part of president obama's legacy. >> sure. >> this was a bigger rally and you were covering it live yesterday -- than they had at the end of world war ii. >> a man who france put sanctions on, he showed up, along with the palestinian authority. >> everybody showed up, except the united states. >> heather nauert showed up, we asked her.
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>> showing up for work. good morning. i've got news here to bring you. that flu epidemic is still gripping the nation and now we are learning that a 26-year-old health care worker has died from the flu. katy mcquestion is a wisconsin radiology technology. she received the flu shot but died after she developed sepsis and had a heart attack. those are all considered severe complications from a case of the flu. so far more than 5,000 people have been hospitalized this flu season. 26 children have died. the tsa's latest report claiming all of new york's airports are gun free looks to be a bit offtarget. the "new york post" reporting that the port authority police have records and it shows that they are vastly different from the tsa records when it comes to gun seizures. at three new york airports jfk la guardia and new york the tsa claims to have seized 12 guns in 2014. records show that the port authority police claimed a
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whopping 64 of them. at least 18 of those seizures occurred at tsa manned checkpoints. clawing their way to history, we have told you about the two climbers at yosemite national park trying to compete fort world's most difficult free climb without ropes they just cleared the toughest stretch. they're making their way up the 3,000-foot smooth granite wall. one climber spending days stuck at this difficult spot. he just got past it. and since he now has renewed momentum to finish, they're hoping to reach the top by midweek. we covered that story last week. i can't believe they're still hanging out there. >> i know it. >> guess they want to win. >> that's courage. >> thank you. 23 minutes before the top of the hour. nor nearly four decades, he proudly served his country. a general who led and designed the surge. >> now general david petraeus may be headed to prison if some inside the obama administration get their way.
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the f.b.i. is considering felony charges against the former director of the c.i.a. for what he told a woman who was not his wife. jeremiah o'keefe worked with general petraeus, and is the founder of o'keefe global advisors and a former white house foreign policy advisor and joins us today from dallas. good morning to you. >> good morning steve. >> what do you think is going on? i mean, there are white house officials who have leaked things to the press much more significantly than david petraeus. yet he's going to be prosecuted. what's going on? >> it's funny here, steve, or not so funny, is the fact that we have former national security advisor, sandy burger, if you remember, years ago during the clinton administration being caught taking classified information out in his underwear. we had former c.i.a. director john deutsche with classified material at home on his computer. none of those folks faced a felony or prison time. i want to reiterate something
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that you folks have been saying here this morning and i've gone back and forth whether or not i wanted to reveal this on camera. but i will, given the importance of what is happening. as you mentioned, i had been involved with the white house and had been over in baghdad and got to know petraeus there. and i was given this document by the white house -- let me just stress here to the viewers -- >> what is this? >> well, i got to be very delicate about this. congress did subpoena some documents back in 2005, 2006. there are talking points. and i've got them here. let me reiterate what it says here at the bottom. this is when petraeus stepped in. we are heading for catastrophic strategic failure in iraq. general petraeus stepped forward
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and saved us from potentially the deaths of hundreds of more american men and women in uniform, let alone iraqi civilians. >> jeremiah, those are talking points from the white house? >> yes. >> from president bush. that was the president bush years. >> i don't want to go any further. only to say that i've kept this for the last ten years and when i hit baghdad, i hit the ground with a purpose. i went outside the chain of command through the state department. i was a diplomat. reported back to petraeus. did so at the national security council at the iraqi desk and also did so -- >> the thing that they're saying is he gave access to paul will broadwell through his e-mail that was top secret. did he do that? >> he is denying that he did. even if he did perhaps okay having been in the intelligence community, we all know that everyone from the white house to
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congress to men in the field, agency dod, we have what's called compartmentalized intelligence, access to it. we're given our own little bit that we can talk about and to analyze, if you will and to operate with. it is commonplace for folks to share information with each other. we have to remember that this colonel, this woman, she had a security clearance already in place. >> absolutely. and everybody knows, even the president said when he accepted reluctantly his resignation, he didn't give up any information. so jeremiah -- >> let me throw it. >> we have to go. thank you very much. >> joining us today from dallas. >> 18 minutes before the top of the hour. up next, coming up a judge's ruling forces a teen-ager with cancer to continue to get chemotherapy. can that controversial decision really hold up? does her family have any options? peter johnson, jr. was inside the courtroom last week and
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should a 17-year-old diagnosed with cancer have the right to refuse chemotherapy? last week the connecticut supreme court upheld the ruling against the girl who once refused the treatment until the government stepped in. fox's peter johnson, jr. went to the hearing and spoke to cassandra's mother. >> have you given up? did you decide you don't have a choice? >> have i given up? no. i will fight to the end. if this is what she wants and she does not want chemo and poison put into her body, i will do whatever our attorneys and myself will do to keep on fighting to get geraldo her her rights
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back. >> the courts decided you're the mother and decision maker. are you going to change your mind and allow her to have chemotherapy while she lives at home with you? >> if she wants chemotherapy, that's her decision. again, this is her decision and her right, which is what we're here fighting about. >> peter johnson, jr. joins me right now with a unique perspective, of course you're an attorney, but also having had cancer when you were about the same age. >> i had the same disease at age 18. and unfortunately for her she's wrong on the law. the connecticut supreme court decided that it was the mother's decision that the mother had not done what she should be doing under the law and therefore, the girl was taking it to state care in order to be given the chemotherapy and they decided the case pretty strongly and straightforward in about ten minutes after an hour long argument before that court. >> and doctors gave her an 80 to 85% chance of surviving if she had this treatment. and felt like she wasn't mature
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enough to refuse it? >> it's almost 90%, in terms of a cure. and what the court said is that there is not a mature minor doctrine in the state meaning certain minors have a right to make their own decisions. in fact, they said even if there was such a standard, young cassandra would have failed that standard because she displayed her immaturity by not keeping the original court order. in this case, the mom had understood that the girl faced this terrible diagnosis of hodgkin's disease, but unfortunately, didn't bring her to the doctor on several occasions. now they're switching their tunes and saying it's about alternative treatment. the truth is there is no alternative treatment to this disease. the treatment is a chemotherapy and a radiation. >> does this come down to us deciding what we can do with our own bodies? >> that's what the family is saying. the connecticut supreme court disagrees, especially with regard to a child. the interest of a child is the
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best interest. the state has a role in protecting a child preserving life preventing suicide. and in their view although they didn't state it explicitly the life of the child was not being preserved and obviously this would have been a death sentence if she didn't receive the treatment. in my view, form of assisted suicide, by the state. and i said so with regard to the aclu participation and with others participation in this case. >> the correct decision made? >> absolutely correct. i thought i was in an alice in wonderland chapter at the court that day. the fact that a mother would want to make sure her daughter didn't get treatment. i thought it was strange. >> peter johnson jr., thank you so much. >> okay. 49 minutes after the hour. you've heard people describe countries as, quote, melting pots. now one u.k. politician taking a ton of heat for saying that's what led to the terrorist attacks in france. but does he have a point? he's here next.
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the leader of the united kingdom independence's party is taking heat for saying the melting pot mentality may have led to last week's terrorist attacks in france. listen. >> we in britain and i've seen some of it in other european countries, too have pursued a really rather gross policy of multi culturallism. by that what i mean is that we've encouraged people who have come from different cultures to remain within those cultures and not to integrate fully within our communities. >> which means it's not a melting pot. here to weigh in is british politician nigel. you're getting a lot of heat for saying multi culturallism is the cause. do you regret saying it? >> oh, no, not at all.
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multi culturallism division and allowing within some of the mosques and some parts of the muslim community for an ethos to be spread that has been violent i don't recoil from that at all because after all that's what caused it. you must remember that across many european countries we've pursued immigration policies over the last few decades effectively of an open door. we haven't even been doing security checks on the people that have been coming to settle in britain, france and germany and elsewhere. so i don't regret it and i'm quite sure that my thoughts are not only true, but in line with public opinion. >> just to be clear on this, i want to make sure you can clarify this. there are 5 million muslims in france. it's the largest population in europe. but that's not the problem you say, right? the problem are these no go zones. there is 750 of them.
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>> i go to new york and i see all sorts of different people from all over the world who came to new york in the last couple of hundred years. and who in the melting pot all got an identity a new york identity, an american identity and they fly the flag and they're americans and speak to each other and work with each overt the problem although the french government had a slightly different attitude to the british government, what has happened is there has not been integration. so we've got in the suburbs of most actually of the big french cities effectively areas that have become muslim only areas. and if you want to live in a happy, free society that works together, you have to speak the same language and you have to integrate. >> sure. and we had somebody on our air, i think it was george will, talking last week about how certain neighborhoods of paris are so-called dish cities because outside the house, you've got the satellite dish so they can get the tv signal from
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back home. i just don't get why people would want to move to another country and not assimilate. they want to move to another country, but still really be living in the old country. >> i'm afraid that's right. and that has happened. certainly in britain. taxpayer funded multi culturallism has encouraged them to keep speaking their own languages and to live within their own communities, thereby fostering further division. all i've done is state the facts behind this problem and the reason i've had the criticism and the heat from britain's leading politicians is because they are the guilty men and women. they have caused this problem and do not have any solution. >> last week they were protest not guilty germany because of that. much to the chagrin of the german government. i think you're saying what a lot of people are saying, nigel. >> oh, without a doubt. look, i am not on some crusade against islam. far from it. i'm here in the european
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parliament. one of my youth here is a practicing muslim. he is moderate. he's british. he is fully integrated. this is not a question for me. it's a statement of fact, almost a civil war going on within islam. >> if you don't want to be french, then don't go to france. thanks a lot. i appreciate it. unfortunately, we're out of time. but i appreciate you made your point. straight ahead, bret baier, dana perino and the medal of honor recipient dakota myer, plenty more ahead on fox.e. don't go anywhere.
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details on the new threat to our military, police officers and the homeland. >> world leaders come together taking a stand against islamic extremists in the streets of downtown paris, even the prime minister of israel and the palestinian president putting thei aside to join together in unity. so why were these men all americans nowhere to be found? bret baier covers washington and is next. they blame no go zones like the mosques in paris for harboring the terrorists behind the attacks and believe it or not, we've got something similar in our own backyard. do you expect the administration to crack down now? mornings are better with friends we've got a fox news alert. america on alert because while you were sleeping, isis has released a new video calling for
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lone wolf attacks on our police officers, military members and civilians as well. >> authorities are taking no chances. new york police already sending out a memo instructing officers to quote, pay close attention to people as they approach look for their hands. >> the memo also ordering one officer must stand outside their patrol car at all times. a sad reminder of the two officers who were assassinated in their cars last month. so moments ago in paris, israeli prime minister netanyahu surrounded by a tight ring of security as he visits the kosher grocery store where four people were killed during a horrific hostage situation on friday. this as new details emerge about the terrorists responsible for murdering 17 people. >> and the hunt for the most wanted woman in the world intensifyies. turkish officials saying she slipd into syria on january 8. >> also this morning we learn one brother's road to
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radicalization included crossing paths with another terrorist convicted of trying to blow up that u.s. airliner landing in detroit by lighting his underwear on fire that had a bomb in it. how are they connected? greg palkot joins us with the latest. >> reporter: good morning. let's get to those concerns in the wake of that attack on that kosher supermarket. we have new details about new protection at over 700 synagogues and jewish schools throughout the country some 5,000 extra french police have been put outside of those places to make sure that there aren't any more attacks. this in addition of 10,000 french soldiers being mobilized in case of any other attacks and there are fears there could be those. this as the investigation into terror events continues with a bunch of new leads. first the partner of the man
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believed to be responsible for killing various people in that kosher supermarket. she is thought to have been an accomplice, but it's now believed she's been out of the country and thought she's in syria in an isis-held down not far from the town we know about, kobani. her dead partner has been in a new video released in the past 24 hours pledging his allegiance, yes, to isis. also revealed he had a storehouse of weapons and explosives and it is revealed today that the authorities are now looking for yet another accomplice, maybe somebody on the ground at the time of those events that's involved in helping them out. let's switch over to said kouachi. he and his brother are believed to be responsible for the slaughter around the charlie hebdo newspaper. i've been on the phone with my contacts and they say said was there from 2009 to 12 and he
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knew aduma tap lab, and shared a building and a school with him. no more further information on that. you've got al-qaeda and isis together. that's what got investigators scratching their heads right now looking further. >> greg, thanks so much. can you imagine if when we got motalub, we could have been able to get something from him. >> bret baier joins us every monday at this time and he is in our nation's capitol. i know it's not for ten hours but i've got a feeling today on "special report" you're going to lead with the fact that all eyes in the world were on paris yesterday. all the world leaders of the important countries were there except representatives of the united states. the president didn't go. the vice president didn't go. john kerry wasn't there. eric holder left town before hand. the president's team says his security would have been so tight, it would have messed
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things up. the white house has got a loft explaining to do because yesterday george clooney and even the simpsons acknowledged what was happening in france, while our president was missing in action. >> good morning. i do think it's a big deal. critics are out and about saying that this is really an abdication of the moral responsibility of the white house and other things. there is an interesting write-up by doug schoen about his thoughts about the president, and the vice president not being there. the white house said it was about security. but if you look at that line - up, with israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu and palestinian president abbas and the german chancellor and the british prime minister, you can't say that the security was going to be the issue. so they say it's not about us. but it is about the u.s. and the fact that eric holder was in paris for meetings. the attorney general didn't go either.
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so there is a lot of people scratching their heads and i think there will be a lot of questions about the optics of this day. >> sure, because where was the president? according to one report from an administration official, he was watching football all day. >> yeah. we don't have his schedule. there was no schedule. the vice president was in delaware. secretary of state had a previous commitment in india. he is now heading to france. >> too late. >> that image on the front page of papers around the world it's just noticeably absent. and i think the president has acknowledged before that he doesn't do political optics very well. this was not a good one. >> i just believe bill clinton would have been there and george bush would have been there. it would have been a no painer, especially when you talk about islamic terrorism and you talk about al-qaeda and isis. this is something we've been pushing the world to do anyway. they're finally up to our level and we don't show up. >> yeah. whether the president would actually be there or not, it
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obviously would have sent a signal if he was there. but vice president biden or secretary kerry or the attorney general who was in paris, it would have made a statement. >> or if you're not going to go, go to the one of the marches or rallies in brooklyn or boston or other major cities around the world. so we had ollie west on the program and he said this shows where the administration's priorities lie. >> why wouldn't the president who was supposed to be the leader of the free world be in attendance to take his place in solidarity against islamic terrorism, and jihaddism? it was a very glaring thing that the president of the united states, or any representative of the obama administration was absent. the fact that eric holder even flew out from paris before the rally, that's quite telling. >> absolutely. something else, bret baier that's also telling is the fact
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that this administration has refused to call it what it is. it's radical islam. that's really what we're fighting here. yet, the president and his team refer to extremists. why don't they get a little more specific? some people say, look, he's being pc or he's got some other agenda. what do you think? >> it's just been the modus operandi to talk about act he was violence and extremism. finally the president did in his remarks get to terrorism and -- >> that's an improvement. >> yeah. as far as not being radical islamic terrorism, they have not -- they don't talk often like that. even though that this is, no matter who you look at -- >> but that's what it is. >> isis, it is under the broad brush, broad umbrella of radical islamic terrorism. >> we had a british politician
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getting a lot of heat because he said multi culturallism is the thing that's really giving rise to this islamic extremism. and he talked about it and defended his position today. listen. >> multi culturallism, division, and allowing within some of the mosques and some parts of the muslim community for an ethos to be spread and has been unpleasant, i don't recoil because that's what caused it. you must remember that across many european countries we've pursued immigration policies over the last few decades effectively of an open door. we haven't even been doing security checks on the people that have been coming to settle in britain france, germany and elsewhere. >> your thoughts bret? >> i think it's a major issue in europe overall and the concern is that there will be this backlash that is overwhelming and then that becomes the story
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and therefore, churns up more of this hatred that's already obviously through the roof in those communities. i think that listen, for world leaders, it is a challenge. how you talk about it is something that is specific. one more thing the administration points out that the ambassador, janet hardly was there. and they point out that they're working very closely with the french. but the optics and the words are important. >> absolutely. we should point out, she was a bundler for the obama campaign and that's how she wound up with the job. today trying to figure out what genius said, you know what? let's not send anybody big. >> the cowboys are on. >> have that tonight at 6:00 o'clock eastern. would you? >> it will be in the briefing and i bet it will be on the show. >> thank you very much. >> at least ed henry will ask it. has anyone seen heather nauert? >> over here. good morning. hope you've off to a great day.
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got news to bring you. this morning secretary of state john kerry arriving in pakistan for an unannounced counterterrorism visit. he is now pushing the nation of pakistan to step up the fight against terror groups along the border with afghanistan. the state department releasing this statement just moments ago. the visit, quote serves to advance shared interests in a stable, secure and prosperous pakistan and acknowledge the u.s. and pakistan's partnership role in promoting regional and international security. also breaking this morning, cuba has now officially freed all 53 political prisoners as part of that historic deal to reopen relations with the united states. the u.s. plans to keep pressing the communist country for the release of more political prisoners. we'll keep an eye on that. overnight, rescue crews pulling one of air asia's black boxes out of the water. however, strong currents are keeping the other box wedged beneath the debris.
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it's 100 feet underneath the java sea and say it will take two to three days to download the information from the box that they were able to recover. lighting things up nothing was off limits last night at the golden globes. take a look. >> we celebrate all the great television shows that we know and love, as well as all the movies that north korea was okay with. that's right! the biggest story in hollywood this year was when north korea threatened an attack if sony pictures released "the interview," forcing us all to pretend we wanted to see it. >> okay. margaret choi stole the show. george clooney getting a little bit political. a reference to i am charlie, to the deadly terrorist attacks in paris. he was there with his new wife amal. >> amal is a human rights lawyer who works on the enron case, was an advisor to kofi annan and
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selected for a three person commission investigating war crimes. her husband is getting a lifetime achievement award. >> that's cute. as fort big winner "boyhood" won three golden globe including best drama. those are your headlines. now that we sidelined the c.i.a. and the nsa, what's the united states strategy to stop the terrorists? our next guest says the outlook is not good. that's coming up.
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one of the government's most important jobs, keeping us safe. that means catching terrorists in their tracks before they attack. but general martin dempsey chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, says we've got a long way to go. >> we try to keep pressure on that network with the sweet of capabilities we have, whether it's building partners, in some cases direct action. >> do we need to do more? >> i think so. absolutely. >> so what's get not guilty our way? islamic terrorism expert douglas murphy says we sidelined the only system that works. what is that system douglas? >> good to be with you. the problem is that paris shows that the terrorists can get through. of course they can. there is no fail-safe way to
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stop them. they will always be lucky at some point. but i do think that what we've seen in recent months and arguably years from the u.s. in particular, has been a succession of shots at our own feet in terms of our own capabilities. we've seen the devastating snowden leaks which revealed to all the world how you're government agencies and my government agencyies collect information that immediately weakened one of the only, if not the only which is to stay one step ahead of the terrorists. and that capability has been as the head of mi 5 said in a speech last week that dramatically weakened by those revelations. but there has been a whole set of such things. you recently have this report on the c.i.a. the majority democrat report in the u.s. all of these reports one by one these leaks turn the general public, in my view, into thinking that the security service is the only people keeping us safe are our enemies.
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>> it's unbelievable. they're making the c.i.a., the mi 5, seem like the bad guys, as if we're being intolerant causing this terrorism. prior to that the thing a well, if the u.s. didn't have bases in saudi arabia, there wouldn't be an issue. that turns out to be a farce. there is more bases around the world of terror than ever before, including isis. they have a virtual country. >> yeah. they do have. they have a bit of two countries under their control. we said after 9-11 that ungoverned speeches were the problem. look it's absolutely covered in ungoverned space. >> real quick, what changes? what changes today that wasn't like this last tuesday? >> look, i wouldn't get hung up on the protests in paris yesterday. it's very moving, very important and so on. but actually most of the world leaders who turned up, if charlie hebdo had been publish publishing in their country,
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they would have probably tried to close them down in most of those country, including free democratic countries. there is a enormous hypocrisy going on here. we are at war with radical islam, your government won't admit that. and actually the previous government of the united states wouldn't admit that. the bush administration wouldn't admit that. we are collectively cowed and we are losing. >> got you. douglas murray, a guy who tells it like it is, islamic terrorism expert. thanks so much. >> thank you. coming up straight ahead, we move ahead, the president gave him an -- now sergeant da sew at that myer has something to give to our commander in chief, about not going to france. he's here live.
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they can have two years of community college for free. is that fair to the taxpayers who might ultimately foot the bill? executive director at the student debt crisis and editor in chief of campus reform.org are our guests. thanks for being with us. >> good morning. >> you're a supporter and you say that this is a fantastic idea. but is the issue really higher education needs to be more readily available to america's youth or is it jobs need to be more readily available? >> well, it's both. we need both jobs and we need higher education. higher education, a college degree is the surest ticket to get a job. most people that have college degrees, unemployment is much lower. you're more likely to get a better job and definitely going to make more over the lifetime of your working life if go to college. it's very important. we applaud this plan.
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we still need more comprehensive solutions along with the president's plan. >> caleb, what do you say about this? there is no such thing as a free lunch. is there such a thing as free community college or is this just shifting who is paying for it? >> this is shifting who is paying for it. what we're seeing this administration turn into in many elements is one giant infomercial. they're talking about from the makers of free health care and free phones and free amnesty comes free community college. and you can have it for the low payment of over $60 billion over the span of ten years. yes. college is extremely important and it does increase your employability, however, it is not the government's role to be providing free college and the point, this is not going to be free. it will be a massive expanse passed to the taxpayers and ultimately hurt students. >> some say this is just a power play because it doesn't appear that it may pass the
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republican-led congress and makes the gop look evil. how do you respond to that? >> i believe that this is starting the discussion. we need to talk about college affordability in this country and caleb is right, it's not a free lunch and the president himself said so. this will be free to students. not free to taxpayers. the department education has projected by the cbo to make over $130 billion in the next ten years. that's more than double the president's proposal. i see the money right there. >> allall right and the way it would break down is the government would pay for three quarters of it and the states would be left to foot the rest of the bill. that means all of us would be paying for it. caleb, a lot of people think that the college education the problem is that the middle class are the ones who have the biggest problem. the poor can get scholarships. the rich have spare cash for college and the middle class needs to be helped. does it help them? >> it does not help the middle class. the point she made is there is over $120 billion there.
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look how the affordable care act was implemented. it was campaigned on the idea that this is only going to cost $900 billion. when the cbo came out and actually analyzed the true cost associated with it it came out over $1.8 trillion to implement. as we're seeing when the government is proposing a plan they're never able to actually give the correct cost of what it will take to implement it. if this plan goes through and it's most likely not going to go through, they would have to receive spending approval by congress and the newly elected republican congress is probably not going to approve a government takeover of community colleges. and this is not going to help the middle class at all. it's going to be a bigger burden. >> we certainly want all of our youth to have access somehow to hire education and fight the brain drain and compete on an international stage. but is this the answer? thank you so much for your time today. >> thank you. coming up on "fox & friends," she spent years work humid the scenes at the white house with president bush. so what does dana perino think
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fox news alert. america on high alert this monday morning. isis, the terrorists, released brand-new video overnight and they're calling for more attacks on police officers, military members, and even civilians, brian. >> yep. and there is more new video just out. this one shows the grocery store terrorist pledging allegiance to isis leaders. the black isis flag behind him. >> and another chilling thing is the french media is investigating investigators found a go pro camera that he
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may have attached to his head. he may have record himself shoot shooting people in a store and uploaded it before he was killed. >> for recruiting purposes. extraordinary new pictures released show terrified hostages inside the freezer of that grocery store. they show terrorized hostages as they sent desperate text messages to loved ones while the suspect was in a stand-off with police upstairs. there were two coolers downstairs. >> you know who led them to that freezer? a muslim worker there said go in the freezer and hide here. as dozens of world leaders join millions from around the world to march in solidarity, honoring those killed in the attacks in paris, the usa is mia. so why did america's top officials skip out? senior administration officials say this in their efforts to explain. their security detail was too big and they didn't want to distract from the march. my goodness, 40 world leaders, the head of israel head of the
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palestinian authority, ukrainian president, along with the russian foreign minister and they're worried about security for the u.s.? >> they were dealing with 4 million people. they could have dealt with the president of the united states. so what was the administration thinking? our next guest knows a little bit about working behind the scenes of the white house, dana perino joins us from houston this morning. dana this is a problem that the white house is going to regret, not sending somebody -- if not the president, at least the vice president. that's why god created vice presidents was for that kind of event. >> and certainly joe biden our vice president, is game to go anywhere. just two weeks ago he went to the funeral of the two police officers who were murdered in new york city. i'm sure he would have been willing to go. now, it could be that they had legitimate security concerns. however, i do think that that's a great point. they had 40 heads of state, 3.7 million people around the country. i do think that france could have handled the security
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aspect. probably today the white house is thinking, bad call. we probably should have gone to that. they think it's a small quibble. i heard that was john kerry's explanation this morning. but there are times when your friends need you to go and support them. and it might be very inconvenient to you. you might not want to give up your saturday and sunday and travel all the way across the pond to go to a march and you think oh, we've done enough already. but the thing is, when you're friends, that's what you do. if it's inconvenient to you, it doesn't matter. you figure out a way to go. or at least send somebody that would have been representative. i also can understand that they probably thought it was just symbolic. but the point about symbolism is that is what matters. that's why you do things like speak in front of greek columns when you get the democratic nomination. optics matter. >> the optics could have been so much better if the president was there. instead what we'll see from him today is a photo op with the spurs. and an excuse for not coming was
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while his schedule was wide open and one report says he was watching football, i thought we learned that isis was not junior varsity. let's get rid of these sports symbols and act right right? >> it could be that they were surprised that the march was so big and that they actually got 40 heads of state. now, there are some who say we knew it was going to be like that. i don't know. what i do know is that this morning, john kerry went to pakistan and seems like maybe it was planned before hand. sometimes you don't announce going to that region before. but they're pressing them on terrorism. you also had just last week a story that we did not cover enough that 2,000 people were killed in nigeria at the hands of islamic terrorists. so next month february 18, president obama announced just yesterday, interesting timing -- but it's a good thing. they're going to have a counter extremism meeting in washington d.c. and i will bet you that a lot of leaders around the world
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show up to that. what i thought yesterday is that as americans, we would have liked to have been there in the show of solidarity and liberty. we wanted someone to represent us. however, in a way isn't this a little bit like what president obama wanted is that the rest of the world takes a more of a leading role? that the united states has done enough, that we have people in the front and perhaps, looking at that picture, this is what leading from behind looks like. >> right. leading from way behind. let me ask you this projection. my sense is that bill clinton and george bush wouldn't have missed this moment to be a leader of the world leaders. but doesn't seem to me from the way the current structure of the white house is does anyone there who can get to the president, david deferringen jim baker to say listen, i know you're the president, but go with me. you have to show up there. is there anybody that can tell the president what to do?
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>> well, it could have been and maybe they would say that the u.s. secret service said it was impossible to guarantee his security. i don't think that other presidents would have missed it. but i don't have all the details that informs me all the decisions that goes into it. i do think they would have found a way to send somebody. i think the white house is kicking itself and maybe kicking at the television to say this is a menu outrage but again, symbolism matters. and i think if they had a chance for a doover, they would have asked for it. >> keep in mind, eric holder was in paris yesterday, but left early. >> he was not there for this. he was there for something else. >> it was a ministerial level thing where they were talking about terrorism. so it would have been kind of a no brain. he's going to show up -- >> he's not high ranking enough. >> after 9-11, 2001, one of the first world leaders to come to the white house was chirac of
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france. >> right. it was a world wide outpouring. the first phone call was from prime minister of japan. one of the things i've asked is that if you had to look back at -- if you looked back at several presidents, you could pinpoint who their best friend in the world was. so reagan had thatcher. clinton had blair. president bush, the president of japan. if you had to pinpoint one for president obama, it's hard to. so when the brown stuff hits the rotating blades, who does he call? and i think -- >> valerie jarrett. >> i think they wanted to have him there and it was important for us because people that bristled at the global war on terror branding by president bush, but just look at the last three months and list the terrorist attacks in the different countries in which they happened and you're pretty close to a global war on terror. and it was maybe slightly owe finishessive that prime minister abbas is there yesterday. he's the leader of the plo.
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he has hamas which basically harassed foreign journalists. however, he shows up yesterday. even if that was slightly offensive, if you're an american leader, you press the advantage with them and say, i'm glad you're here. now we need to you do these three things. >> absolutely. >> it's this kind of great analysis she has on "the five" every day at 5 with those four other people. dana perino, thank you very much. we'll be watching. thank you very much for joining us today. >> thanks. >> now other stories heather nauert joins us for those. >> good morning. you were just talk being eric holder. we've got news regarding him. he's staying mum on reports that former c.i.a. director david petraeus will face felony charges for disclosing government secrets. petraeus resigned from the agency in 2012 after a federal investigation found that he had an extramarital affair with his biographer, paul will broadwell and allegedly gave her classified information. holder not letting on about a possible indictment.
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listen. >> i don't want to comment on what is an ongoing matter. i think that anybody who shared information that led to that report did so inappropriately. the determination has yet to be made. >> in the meantime members of the u.s. senate including diane feinstein, are coming to the general's side. listen. >> people aren't perfect. he made a mistake. he lost his job as c.i.a. director because of it. how much do you want to punish somebody? >> petraeus has denied giving broadal classified information. they just couldn't take it anymore. angry chinese passengers opening three emergency exits after they sat on the tarmac for three hours because of the snow. the plane was already seven hours behind schedule when the crew finally started the de-icing process, but the passengers lost it when the air conditioning got shut off. 25 passengers on board were
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detained. you can see one of the pictures right there. today a church in arizona takes its fight over signs all the way to the nation's highest court. the good news community church trying to advertise its services on signs. they were told they had to be limited to six feet by six feet. politicians can post signs up to five times that size. church leaders say they want the supreme court to overturn that law. they call it a clear violation of their constitutional rights to free speech. it is finally christmas in outer space. really? a shipment of much needed supplies and belated holiday gifts arriving at the international space station today. it's carried by the space x rocket that launched in florida two days ago. that probe sent by the same rocket that was supposed to land back on earth, but crashed in that historic attempt. at least they're getting their christmas gifts now. those are your headlines. >> what christmas? they had a package of furbies.
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>> that was a while ago. >> cabbage patch dolls were lost. next up, he's supposed to turn the other cheek, right? wait until you hear what the pope just said about radical islam. that straight ahead. and the president gave him the medal of honor. now sergeant dakota myer is giving something to our chief. our commander in chief. a message about not showing up in france. he'll be here live.
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happy monday everybody. let's get moving. 45 minutes after the hour. some headlines making news around the world this morning. pope francis calling on muslim leaders to condemn radical islam. in his annual foreign policy address, he refers to the terrorist attacks in paris as the result of a throw away culture where human beings and god don't really matter. two austrian girls trying to move to syria to marry isis fighters. this morning they're headed back
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home. both tried to travel to syria last month but were stopped in romania. and in pakistan, children there are heading back to school today without dozens of their peers. 150 people were killed by taliban militants who went room to room gunning down students and teachers. steve, over to you. >> they cross into our country illegally. but this they want a job they're in the clear? a recent ruling from a federal judge blocks arizona sheriff joe arpaio from enforcing state i.d. laws that make it a felony for undocumented workers to use stolen i.d.s to get work. but is that fair to american citizens who are also looking for work? immigration attorney francisco hernandez joinses from dallas and from kansas city, secretary of state chris. he helped draft arizona's immigration law. let me get this straight, francisco, you say it is okay for somebody to use a fake or stolen i.d. to get a job?
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>> no, that's not what i say. i say it's sill gee. >> you don't have a problem with it. >> of course we have a problem. we ought to just do immigration reform and fix this whole thing. but they're not stealing social security numbers. most of them are fake numbers and they're contributing to and my social security system. we need to fix it. there is like 600 million or billion dollars in suspense accounts in the social security trust fund that's unassigned. it's all these decades of contributions. if we're going to arrest them, okay, then let's gm they give them a refund check. we don't want to do that. >> chris, essentially what this judge was doing was brushing back sheriff arpaio because he's been arresting hundreds of people and saying, look you're using fake i.d.s to get jobs. now the judge says go ahead. use fake i.d.s. >> no. >> steve, i spent most of my legal career arguing cases very similar to this one. what this judge did was incorrect and really quite extraordinary.
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in order for a judge to strike down an arizona law or any law like this, the judge has to show there is some conflict between arizona law, the state law and federal law. but there was no conflict. the two laws are are in perfect harmony. he said to say no, arizona you don't get to protect people against identity theft and penalize employees who steal someone else's number. this is a big problem. millions of americans have this problem. >> here is what sheriff arpaio says regarding this, quote, i do not understand a federal law can preempt state law when the federal government has proven it has no desire to protect its citizens in those areas. i hope the decision to appeal this particular opinion is made bravely and quickly. francisco? >> well, i guess he doesn't believe the constitution preempts state law either. we're talking about equal protection and due process clauses. look, first of all there wasn't a line of citizens lined up to take these jobs.
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nobody wants those jobs. look, as far as secretary co- back -- >> that's wrong. >> quite frankly they're not saying that i'd tie theft is correct. they're just stopping sheriff arpaio, who is up for reelection, so can you tell why he's trying to make national news? we forgotten about him already. but this is all about politics. demonizing people who are here trying to work, trying to contribute to this country. not trying to destroy it. >> the final word? >> what the judge's decision does is it prohibits arizona, not just joe arpaio but anyone in arizona from enforcing the state law against identity theft. and that puts millions of americans, not just americans living in arizona because they will steal social security numbers from americans living in kansas, in new york texas, wherever you are and that can be a huge financial distress for the person whose number is stolen. you can find you have tax liability, your credit rating goes down. it's a bad deal and we have to protect the americans and because of this judge's decision, people like arpaio
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will not be able to protect the rest of us against i'd tie theft -- i'd tie theft? -- identity theft. >> you know it has to create -- it has to be appealed. >> i hope it is appealed. >> it will be. >> and if they do, we'll have you both back. thank you very much. coming up, your comments have been pouring in about president obama not attending the rally in paris. neither did joe biden, john kerry or eric holder, who was in town. we'll share your e-mail coming up next on "fox & friends".
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>> i'm bell hemmer. the latest on the terror strike. why was a leading u.s. official missing in action? where is the plan on defeating isis? we're still waiting on that. the keystone debate crossed yet another line. it's busy on this monday morning. martha and i will see you at the top of the hour. see you then on "america's newsroom." we'll be watching bill. we had planned to bring you an interview with sergeant dakota myers who had strong words about the president of the united states not showing up in paris yesterday, nor vice president joe biden. we had a satellite problem. we apologize for that. we're going to try to bring him to you tomorrow. >> i blame the space station.
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>> how? >> just calling somebody out. i'm good at pointing a finger. >> so 3.7 million people gathered across the state of france. there were rallies all overt world in major cities and american presence, mia from our top leaders. >> sorry charlie. that's the headline in the new york post. >> right. so you're weighing in. facebook, someone says political correctness makes one spineless. he's alienateed our allies. >> kathy says this, this sickens me and to know eric holder was there and didn't care enough to participate just boils my blood. yeah he did a bunch of morning show interviews. >> ruth tweeted us perception is everything and this administration is perceived as weak, unstable and in favor of extremist islam. >> they're not pro extremist. >> that person's point of view. >> another says dear france, embarrassed by the absence of obama and france, but please know the hearts of the american
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people are linked arm in arm with you. >> absolutely. from the left, jeffrey at the atlantic wrote, it would have been nice to see the country whose birth was mid wifed by france send its leader to stand with france yesterday. >> and that's from somebody on the political left. >> another man said the same thing. the new york daily news called out the president. bottom line is, whether you think he was there, it was a missed opportunity to show we're leading the world. >> right. will this be part of his legacy? this is something that will be written about in history books. >> where was america? where are we going in we're going to step aside. we'll be back in two minutes. you're watching "fox & friends".
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coming back tomorrow. >> senator marco rubio wrote this book called "america dreams." this is the kind of book you write when you're running for president. i think we should ask him about that. >> if it comes up. but don't force it. we have also the car czar tomorrow and one second left on the show. now none. bill: noticeably absent from the unity rally in paris. missing from that picture the leader of the free world. martha: good morning. i'm martha maccallum. this was a stunning image showing key leaders united against radical terrorism. bill: the headlines in "the new york daily
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