tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News April 4, 2015 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT
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e it is better and cheaper. thank you creative destruction. thank you free enterprise for allowing it to happen. that is our show. see you next week. hello. i'm eric shaun. welcome to a brand-new hour of america's news headquarters. >> i'm arthel neville. let the politics begin to sell the framework deal with iran over its nuclear program. the president said it makes us safer. skeptics say it gets iran one step closer to getting the bomb. new details, shocking details of three women who face terrorist charges. prosecutors say two of those women in new york city wanted to make history while the one in philadelphia, they say she wished to become a martyr. and you just might want to put down that salt shaker.
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a new report says most packaged foods have way too much sodium. the doctor is in on your health. president obama again today defending the controversial framework nuclear deal that was reached with iran. he dedicated his weekly saturday address to it. critics say the deal concedes far too much to tehran and does not stop them from potentially building a nuclear bomb. israeli leaders say that the deal is a threat to their very existence. the president again insisted it is a good deal and he says will prevent iran from going nuclear. >> many key details will need to be finalized over the next three months and nothing is agreed to until everything is agreed. and if there is back sliding there will be no deal. >> in the wake of that deal, the questions continue. molly henneberg live from washington. what does the potential agreement say about israel and
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iran's relationship with israel? >> reporter: nothing, as far as we know. a state department spokeswoman says this outline for a deal with iran does not deal with, quote, any other issues nor should it. israel, however, believes otherwise. in his weekly radio address today, president obama asserted that this potential agreement cuts off quote, every pathway that iran could take to develop a nuclear weapon. >> international inspectors will have unprecedented access to iran's nuclear program because iran will face more inspections than any other country in the world. if iran cheats the world will know it. if we see something suspicious we will inspect it. this deal is not based on trust. it is based on unprecedented verification. >> reporter: but after a top iranian military official was quoted as saying that erasing israel off the map is, quote, nonnegotiable, israeli prime
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minister netanyahu responded by saying, the quote survival of israel is nonnegotiable. eric? >> there is a lot of controversy certainly and not only does israel say this deal threatens their very existence, the situation for an iranian general supposedly was still continuing their line that israel should not exist and be wiped off the map. so what is the prime minister saying about it in terms of the white house? >> reporter: netanyahu wants the u.s. to include a section in the deal that acknowledges that israel is on the map and staying on the map. >> israel will not accept an agreement which allows a country that vows to anilate us to develop nuclear weapons period. in addition israel demands that any final agreement with iran will include a clear and unambiguous iranian commitment of israel's right to exist. >> reporter: again, the state department indicated that is
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unlikely to happen. the obama administration is trying to get a final deal with iran and five other world powers not including israel, by june 30. eric? >> the times israel reporting there were six differences between the persian version that the iranians have and the english version that the u.s. has in this agreement. so still there is a lot to go. arthel? form cuban leader fidel castro appearing in public for the first time in more than a year. cuba's official web site released the images showing him inside a vehicle shaking hands with a group of people from venezuela. this happened monday of the he stepped down as president in 2006 because of serious illness. he will turn 89 in august. isis is opposing another posting, another disturbing video that claims to show more destruction of ancient artifacts in the cradle of civilization. it hasn't been officially confirmed, but just look at that.
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some guy taking a hammer, to stuff that is priceless, allegedly shows those extremists in an ancient city banging on the carvings until they're destroyed. they're firing at others with assault rifles. this is the united nations' world heritage site. isis also destroyed several shrines, including some muslim holy sites. we are learning more about two american women charged a home grown terror plot in new york city. investigators saying the two women wanted to, quote, make history and attack a u.s. target. meanwhile, a third woman in philadelphia is set for a hearing next week accused of trying to join isis. laura ingle with the latest. >> in this latest case 30-year-old woman had a lot to say online before she was picked up by federal investigators. and talk about how she hoped to become a martyr for the cause while communicating with isis
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fighters. the criminal complaint alleges that the woman who gave herself the name young lioness did research on travel points. prosecutors say a search warrant executed at her home prevented her from leaving the u.s. on a flight that was scheduled for march 29. in february investigators say she exchanged electronic communications with who they describe as a violent jihadi fighter with started with the fighter saying quote, you probably want to do martyrdom operations with me. in response, thomas stated, that would be amazing. a girl can only wish. the return response, i can make that wish come true. thomas is now in federal custody charged with attempting to provide material support to a terrorist organization. she could get 15 years in prison if convicted. earlier this week in queens, new york, two women were arrested for conspiracy to use a weapons
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of mass destruction. they appeared in federal court thursday. court documents say one woman had possession of multiple propane tanks and instructions on how to turn them into explosive devices with plans to detonate in the new york city area. investigators say the other woman had been obsessed with pressure cookers since the boston marathon attacks. she also told an undercover officer if they were arrested they would try to confront and shoot police. authorities say the public was never in danger. it was all part of a lengthy undercover f.b.i. operation. both are being held without bail. if convicted, they could face life in prison. >> thanks a lot. there is a new report on the emergency response to the boston marathon bombing. it reveals some police officers, it says, fired wrecklessly in the watertown shootouts with the two suspects. the report finding more than 2500 officers from new england and new york descended on watertown, across the river from boston, many, they claim didn't
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have orders to do that. the report also says some of the officers often failed to identify their targets completely before firing, which it says created a situation of dangerous cross fire. indonesian authorities rescuing more than 300 foreigners who had been slave fishermen. officials say the victims were lured into leaving their countries, then forced to catch fish under brutal conditions. they were often beaten and shocked with taser-like devices and some of them were locked in a cage. the victims are from other south asian countries like burma cambodia and laos. now the massacre in kenya where nearly 150 people were killed by terrorists at a university this week. officials say five people have been arrested in connection with the horrific slaughter which targeted christians and saying more arrests are expected. the terror group al-shabab says it will carry out more attacks. john huddy is in our middle east
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bureau with the latest. >> reporter: as kenya's president is vowing to hunt down the al-shabab militant the terror group issued a new threat saying that kenya's cities will run red with blood. this after 148 people were killed when the al-shabab gunmen stormed a university thursday about 150 miles outside nairobi. a survivor of the killing was found today saying that she hid in a crawl space above a closet. the attack was the worst in kenya since the u.s. embassy was bombed in 1998, killing more than 200 people. among those targeted in thursday's attack were christians attending a service at the school. pope francis condemned the killings friday, calling them an act of senseless brutality. as we know five people were arrested in connection with the attack. two at the college and three others actually trying to cross into somalia. four attackers were killed. kenya's president said his
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administration shall respond in the severest way possible. arthel some are questioning whether kenya's security forces are really up to the task of fighting back against those militants. >> john, thank you very much, reporting f jerusalem. typhoons battered the pacific and now the philippines are bracing for the latest. the government ordered 20,000 people to leave the coastal areas. volunteers from the philippine army are packing relief goods. the typhoon is weakening some, but could bring winds of nearly 100 miles an hour and winds up to six feet. it's set to make landfall tomorrow, which is earlier than usual for these type of typhoon typhoons. in our country two days of heavy rain causing flash floods in kentucky. police say one woman was killed after her car was suddenly swept away by the dangerous flood
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waters. severe thunderstorms have been developing across the southern plains, bringing the threat of possible tornadoes. janis dean is live in the extreme weather center. just a week ago we were talking about snow. now tornadoes. >> right. we're getting into that spring season where we got the clash of the two air masses and the potential for severe storms. you were talking about that flooding. we had inches of rain in just a matter of hours across portions of kentucky and that's why the video we saw flash flood watches and warnings still posted even though the storm has moved eastward and we have a drying condition in effect, although it's going to get cold tonight. so we have freeze advisories in place for parts of the tennessee and ohio river valley, which we'll talk about. you can see that front moving eastward, but we're also seeing the potential for heavy snow over maine, new england. overnight and into tomorrow for the easter festivities. sunday, midwest in towards new england more measurable snow.
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your forecast, we could see some snow covered eggs for the hunt. we want to make sure they're indoors. there is sunday around 10 p.m again, sort of a stripe of snow moving across upstate new york. your low tonight, colder than average. you're used to this. 42 in chicago. 45 in minneapolis. 30s for parts of new england and 38 for new york. look at louisville. 37 for you. 39 in raleigh. so freeze advisories are in place for over half a dozen states including parts of the deep south. so protect those vulnerable plants and bring the pets indoors. quick look at the northwest. another storm moving in. we're going to get beneficial rain as far south as southern california with several of these systems, which again is good news for the drought. however, parts of northwest have seen their share of rain. quick look at your sunday forecast, across the west coast unsettled weather. gulf coast could see showers and thunderstorms and then that pesky snow that seems to bring more snow and wintery weather to
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the northeast yet again this weekend eric. >> i like the purple bunny. >> this should make you happy. >> yes. >> match the tie. it makes it a lot harder for an easter egg hunt when the bunny puts it out out the eggs in snow. >> he'll need a fur coat. >> happy easter. >> you got it. >> you, too. team hillary making a move that could signal her plans over the next two weeks as a new poll shows a tightening race in a focus matchup for the race for the white house. what caused this? a massive fire in kentucky. see that smoke? it engulfed a general electric industrial park. that noxious smoke visible for miles. we will tell you coming up what investigators are now saying. also an emotional moment after nearly 30 years on death row. new evidence surfacing in a crime prosecutors now say they can not prove this man
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time for a quick check of the headlines. the u.s. air force academy in colorado is investigating the death of a cadet, 21-year-old was found dead in his dorm room on thursday with unspecified injuries. and anthony hinton a free man after wrongly spending 30 years on death row. he was convicted in 1985 for the murders of two fast food managers in alabama. the prosecutors this week dropped charges for his retrial because the ballistics proved bullets from the scene did not come from hinton's gun. hillary clinton may be inching closer to make her widely expected white house run official. her team signing a lease this week for some big office space in an office building in downtown brooklyn, new york. turns out election law gives candidates 15 days to assemble a
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committee after such similar campaign activity. so some are preeing that this could indicate an announcement from mrs. clinton could be coming in the next two weeks. poll shows mrs. clinton in a dead heat with jeb bush if the election was held today. they are both at 45%. quite a change from last summer when mrs. clinton led by as much as 13 points. so are we on the eve of a clinton candidacy? what is that going to mean? tammy bruce is a fox news contributor. jessica is a form democratic candidate for congress and a democratic strategist. good to see you. tammy, let me start with you. she's going to run. she's running. she's going to run. now that they sign a lease supposedly, that's the first step how do you think they'll roll this out? what will she do? announce it on a web site or go to iowa? what do we expect? >> look, usually when the clintons have gotten in trouble, they kind of hunker down and that seems to have been the strategy here with the various
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issues she's been having. so normally they'd want to kind of have her stay out of the scene for as long as possible. kind of remain the recluse who then just will come out and declare herself supreme leader. but the longer she can stay out of the public eye i'm sure they're thinking the better. but at some point she'll are to come out. the point of signing a lease. at the same time, federal rules don't tend to bother the clintons too much. so maybe she'll say it's just a house for her servers. i don't know. but it will be an interesting dynamic and i think that the sooner the better that she gets out there and that will also tell the rest of the democratic field what they're going to need to do. >> jessica we're look at the building which is downtown brooklyn. right across from the federal courthouse. that loretta lynch is the u.s. attorney over. talk about supreme leader and the servers and all that that we just heard from tammy great lines. what does this mean, they have signed the lease and signing people up and hiring them.
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>> it's pretty funny, tammy always cracks me up. they are definitely moving toward campaign. maybe inevitable but they've got time and they're willing to take their time. she's definitely being organized and i think she's actually showing the kind of organization and thoughtful thinking that she would show as the executive and leader in chief. so this is exactly what they're doing. they're getting a good office space. they've been hiring the best people and they're going about what needs to happen in order to make the strongest run possible for president. >> let's look at the latest poll. she's been as much as 85%, but here she's at 61%. joe biden, wow, way back there at 12%. what's so fascinating about this, take a look at the guy who was making the most noise, martin o'malley former governor of maryland, over 2%. o'malley has stinging criticism. he says the presidency is not a crown to be passed between two families so tammy this guy is
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making all the headline, but he hasn't inched up in the polls. >> there are a couple instances that still with the exception of bush and clinton, you're looking at a name recognition game. and the rest of america, people are still working and they're trying to find jobs and they're not necessarily watching the news and there is other big international news. so people haven't really started focusing yet on this. people like us have. at the same time, martin o'malley is being issued what almost seems like threats by certain people. governor granholm was on cnn and she indicated that because of his critique that he should be careful because he could look like a good person for her cabinet. she seems -- hillary seems particularly disturbed by the idea of competition and yet, it would make her certainly a better candidate. i appreciate martin o'malley going out there. he lost maryland to the republicans so i think he would be a fabulous nominee. >> jessica do you think it's
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good for hill tree have an opponent. some say bring it on. >> i think she's sharp. she's already been through this circus before. so it's not her first time at the rodeo, as we all know. >> yeah, but it didn't work. >> well, with primaries, it's interesting and we saw this in 2012 with the republican primary, it can work to sort of detriment of all the candidates and can be polarizing. when we're looking at her very far out and ahead. usually it's for someone like a martin o'malley who doesn't have the name i.d., who doesn't have really any sort of brand within the national conscious, they want to get themselves out there, make these big statements. the press love it because then they have something a little more meaty and interesting to go after. i have that i a lot of -- think a lot of that's been happening to hillary and jeb. the press is trying to stir up the field on both sides because of the sentiment that it sells more newspapers, gets more
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eyeballs on the television. >> he certain israeli creating a bit of a stir and it's making things interesting. thank you both. if they do sign that lease in brooklyn, that means we'll be spending a lot of time the american press corps eating cheesecake. >> there you go. >> arthel? >> thanks. christians from all over the world gather not guilty jerusalem on this holy saturday to attend the solemn easter vigil at the basilica of the holy sepulcher. that is where christians believe jesus was crucified and entombed. the procession and mass is held the evening before easter sunday when the faithful celebrate the resurrection of jesus three days after his death on good friday. the iranian nuclear deal, do you think it could stop iran from building a potential nuclear bomb? that is the deal that. is the promise. that is what they say. critics doubt that very much. the details, its meaning and what could happen next coming up here on the fox news channel.
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bottom of the hour, time for the top of the news. it's possible that a lightning struck that started that massive fire that destroyed a ge warehouse in kentucky but it could be weeks before they know for sure. the fire started yesterday and still smoldererring today. thankfully no one was hurt. a california judge order the state to grant a transgender inmate sex change operation saying that denying surgery to the 51-year-old violates her constitutional rights. an 18-year-old florida man beaten unconscious after a father caught the teen molesting his 11-year-old son last july has been sentenced to 25 years in prison after plead nothing contest. his mug shot shows the aftermath of that beating.
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the framework deal with iran is being herled as an historic moment. iran's president saying it's the first step toward ending iran's isolation and building a better relationship with the rest of the world. but that stands in contrast to remarks last month from iran's supreme leader, ayatollah when he said iran was negotiating fully on the nuclear deal nothing else. can nearly 40 years of bad blood between washington and tehran be erased with a deal that critics say is a terrible mistake in the first place? let's bring in lisa a middle east journalist and fox news contributor. good to see you. >> good to see you. >> i want to start here. so there are optistic comments from president obama and iranian president roux hany. iran's foreign minister saying earlier on regional tv that, quote, differences remain between the u.s. and iran. so will the mistrust go
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unchanged? >> yeah. it's going to be very difficult to erase 36 years of history when this deal is so narrow in its scope. we'll be lucky if we get any type of change and any type of curbing of their nuclear program if that. remember, the iranians came to the negotiating table in order to have a visual moment, in order to come, shake hands, take a nice photograph to declare victory to have the sanctions removed, and just that. and at the same time, the narrative that's being sold in the west is that we only have these two option whether go forward with a bad deal or no deal. will to bomb iran or let them get the bomb and in fact, there is obviously a third option or better option, we can have a good deal with iran. >> which would look like what? >> look, at the core of it, this deal is meant to curb iran's nuclear program. that needs to dismantle the program. not to leave the iranian regime at a threshold capability right
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around the corner from a bomb. secondly, and most importantly, this bomb does not -- deal does nothing to leverage any behavioral change from the regime. the bottom line, the west should be telling the iranian regime, if you want to be normalized back into the international community, you have to act normal. you want to export oil, you have to stop exporting terrorism. that means they have to change their behavior. in syria, stop the blood bath there. stop supporting the rebels in yemen. stop taking advantage of the political vacuum in iraq. stop supporting hezbollah, hamas. stop the awful, awful human rights abuses back at home and more importantly to us here in the u.s., release the three americans and give us information -- >> that's where i was going, because you're saying they should change the behavior. let me pull up a full screen right now. brings me exactly to this. you've got three imprisoned americans in iran and one missing american, last seen in iran about eight years ago, if
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you showed these pictures, here we are. the question is, will iran release these prisoners? >> not been a part of this deal. from the beginning, president obama, secretary kerry said they done want to mix anything else with this deal. they don't want to bring up human rights whether it's calling out the iranians with their human rights abuses back at home against women against journalist, against other innocent individuals, or against the americans that are being held there. we didn't want to mix these two. so we're not going to see any behavioral change and that's a huge mistake. when we have the iranians coming to the negotiating table, before we lift these sanctions, we have to leverage any type of power we have to see any significant change. >> so you don't think that diplomacy, there is absolutely no place for diplomacy when it comes to talking to iran and trying to get them to reduce their enrichment capability and to ultimately stop them from getting a nuclear bomb?
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>> look iran came to the negotiating table because of the sanctions, because of the pressure back at home. the people want the sanctions lifted. i talked to hundreds of iranians all the time interviewing them all types of iranians, all over the political spectrum, all over the economic spectrum. they want the sanctions lifted. it's about the price of bread. it's about jobs. they want the sanctions lifted. they came to the negotiating table. now that we have them here, of course we want them to curb their nuclear program. but at the same time let's connect all the dots. let's connect the activity that the iranian regime had all over the map. it's not going to be stopped with this one deal. >> right. lisa, do you think -- the option to put the sanctions back put the clamp back down on iran with sanctions that always is an option. do you think if they don't come to the table come june 30 and really agree to whatever terms they finally agree upon, that that would even work to threaten them with reapplying those
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sanctions, if you will? >> once we open the flood gates there are so many that are enthusiastic to do business with the iranian regime and rightfully so. once we open those flood gates, it will be very very difficult to apply the sanctions back on the iranian regime. we have to get whatever we can out of them. again, there aren't just two option. the third option is have a good deal and everyone across the globe, whether it's israel, saudi arabia, the u.s., the west, allies, everyone will agree with the good deal if it will mean significant change from the iranian regime. >> that is the big question what is a good deal? we have to go. i'm not asking you to answer 'cause i know you don't have that answer either. >> i wish i did. >> lisa, always good to talk to you. we'll see you soon in new york. >> of course. >> remember all those americans who are missing and still imprisoned there. the nuclear deal with iran has drawn strong criticism from many republican including some gop candidates. how would the agreement impact the race for 2016?
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carl cameron is in washington with a look. >> reporter: at the june deadline for president obama's nuclear deal with iran to the foreign policy flash points overshadowing hillary clinton's presidential announcement this month. most gop hopefuls distrust iran and oppose the deal. jeb bush said he won't stand by the deal because it was flawed from the start, quote, these negotiations began by president obama's own admission as an effort to deny iran nuclear capabilities, but instead will only legit mayes those activities. wisconsin governor scott walker said the threat is so grave, that he would undo the deal right after his inauguration. >> if i'm honored to be elected, i will pull back on that on january 20 2016. because the last thing we need is a nuclear armed iran. >> there is evil in the world today. >> reporter: the conservative american legacy pac where
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dr. ben carson chaired efforts to kill it, is running ads that morphed chamberlain into president obama. >> in a dangerous world it's time for american leadership, not surrender. >> democrats know republicans will blame clinton if the deal collapses and also if it comes together. >> if it passes muster, they'll still be attacking her for giving a pathway to the bomb to iranians. >> reporter: as the top diplomat during obama's first term she helped design the strategy to iran. she said reaching a deal in june is crucial. then left room for her to abandon it, quote. i know well that the devil is always in the details in this kind of negotiation. there is much to do and much more to say in the months ahead, but for now, diplomacy deserve has chance to succeed. rand paul who argued dealership employee city is better than going to war action didn't weigh in on the deal. he was unavailable all week to
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propose for his campaign watch this tuesday. he was also silent on the big debate over religious freedom this week. >> carl cameron reporting. leaders in indiana and arkansas back pedaling in the face of enormous public pressure over their religious freedom laws. we're going to take a closer look at the politics behind those laws. the clarifications and how a messy process may have actually worked. new research showing certain foods have way too much salt. how much is too much @e8ñúñ÷@@@0@úe plane and thought...
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yeah! empty seat next to me. and then i saw him slowly coming down the aisle. one of those guys who just can't stop talking. i was downloading a movie. i was trying to download a movie. i have verizon. i don't. i get that little spinning wheel. download didn't finish. i finished the download. headphones on. and i'm safe. i didn't finish in time. so. many.
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stories. vo: join us and save without settling. verizon. people ship all kinds of things. but what if that thing is a few hundred thousand doses of flu vaccine. that need to be kept at 41 degrees. while being shipped to a country where it's 90 degrees. in the shade. sound hard? yeah. does that mean people in laos shouldn't get their vaccine? we didn't think so. from figuring it out to getting it done, we're here to help. look! this is the new asian inspired broth bowl from panera bread. our hero is the soba noodle. (mmmm) which we pair with fresh spinach (ahhh) mushrooms (yes) and chicken raised without antibiotics. (very nice) then top with a soy-miso broth. that noise!
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religious freedom law. governor hushson did the same thing in arkansas. that after those measures generated enormous controversy and a lot of media coverage. our next guest believes they are examples of when the messy political process can work. susan estridge, fox news contributor, campaign manager for michael dukakis and his 1988 presidential campaign. good to see you as always. >> good to see you. >> both states indiana and arkansas, put their religious freedom restoration acts on the books and bam. why do you think everything they went through shows that the system does work? >> well, because a few years ago people were tripping over themselves trying to pass laws that denied equal rights, they were called special privileges. but they're essentially equal rights to people based on sexual orientation. there was talk even in the liberal community that this was a dangerous issue, that putting
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gay marriage on the ballot may have cost some democrats their seats. there was real worry still in the democratic party as recently as a decade ago that the gay rights issue was hurting us, the gay marriage issue was hurting us. prop 8 passed. and now here we are a decade later and you've got two conservative states doing tap dances to reassure business groups and gay and lesbian groups and political groups and major power players that no, god no we're not passing a statute that would allow discrimination against gay people. we would never do such a thing. i mean, ten years ago, if you tell me that that was going to be the scene today, i would have laughed and asked what you were smoking. >> you point out supporters say they're not intended to discriminate, that they're really intend to do protect the deeply held meaningful ten ets
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religious beliefs that people have against government intrusions. but these laws went further because unlike the 1993 law signed by president clinton that has been replicated in other states, this one caused more controversy. >> well i think it's also because it's not 1993 anymore. you've got very different demographics and you've got a much more vocalized, organized, empowered political voice in the gay and lesbian community and because the politics have completely changed. in 1993, remember bill clinton got knocked around pretty badly when he suggested that gays serve in the military. something which we now see has not caused the sky to fall and widely accepted by everyone. the idea of gay marriage clinton was on the other side of that one. i think what's really changed is dare we say it the political process we've changed. everybody is sort of looked
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around and seen that they've got friends relatives colleagues who are gay. i just think the country has changed. and that change is reflected in the political process and there you got andrew cuomo as good a weather vein for the political process as anybody, turning on a dime and saying, okay. now i will go to indiana. this worked. >> but what about those who say religious beliefs need to be protected? is it your sense that they are? >> how will it weigh out in 2016? >> of course religious beliefs need to be protected. i don't think anybody was really debating that. when this act passed a lot of colleges and universities used to go out of their way frankly to make it tough for groups that women could have a group or farm workers, people interested in agriculture could have a group. but they were very tough in giving equal access to campus
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facilities to groups that were religious in nature. i think that problem has frankly -- everybody knows they have to do it and they do it. >> susan estridge, always good to see you. one of the many issues we'll be talking about over the next year or so. thanks. you can read susan's column in newspapers across the country every wednesday and friday. a new warning about salt. the centers for disease control saying some foods have way too much of it. which ones are loaded with sodium and how you can cut back
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lunar eclipse will happen in late september. i'm glad there is nice weather in the northeast so you can look up at the moon. >> i agree! so a blood moon, unlike the yellow moon. jewel julie is up next. >> kenyan cities will run red with blood. vowing more attacks after carrying out a massacre in students in kenya. investigators say the militants slaughtered nearly 150 people in cold blood after questioning their faith. kenya is striking back with officials reportedly making five arrests. then the president says his government will retaliate in the, quote, severest way possible. i'm julie banderas. al shabab
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