tv Americas News HQ FOX News August 8, 2015 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT
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hello i'm kelly wright. welcome to a brand-new hour of america america's news headquarters. chuck schumer coming under fire for his fellow democrats for opposing the iran nuclear agreement could more defections bring down the deal? carly fiorina generating a lot of business after her performance during thursday's 5:00 p.m. debate. is her seemingly long shot campaign now the one to watch? i'll have a live debate on that coming up. new york city battling a deadly outbreak of legionnaire's
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disease. we will tell you what health officials are now saying. good bye ohio hello georgia. fresh from the debate. gop candidates are descending on atlanta for the red state gathering. here's a live look from that know. scott walker is scheduled to take the stage a few minutes from now. this as fox news confirms donald trump has fired his political advisor. a trump spokesman saying roger stone has been the focus of too much publicity when the focus should bead on the campaign itself. jonathan surrey joins us live from the red state gathering. how are the candidates interacting with one another and one candidate who will not be there will be donald trump? >> that's true. well outside of the red state gathering, there is certainly a lot of mud slinging.
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there is very little interaction because the red state gathering is more of a forum for conservative activists here individually from candidates and where they stand on the issues during this very early phase of the campaign. so the candidates are largely sticking to their individual stands on issues ranging from religious freedom to foreign policy. without taking jabs at the other candidates. the former florida governor jeb bush recently touched on the republican field here listen. >> my pledge to you is i'm going to fight hard i'm going to fight with heart. i'm going to do this in a hopeful, optimistic way. i'll do my best not to tear down my opponents because i admire most of them. >> we are going to have to get back to jonathan surrey later because we are having technical issues he is live via live view not satellite. it's a little bit dicey. we'll get back to him when we can. meanwhile, there's a major
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setback for the white house on the iran nuclear deal. senator chuck schumer says he will vote against the agreement what he calls serious weaknesses. could this cause support among other democrats in congress to crumble? kristin fisher is in washington with the latest. >> the top two democrats on the house foreign affairs committee have come out against the deal. it was senator schumer's vote that matters. not only is he the most influential jewish voice in congress he is in line to become the next senate dealer. officials are openly questioning if schumer should still get the job. former senior advisor posted senator schumer siding with the gop against obama, clinton and most democrats will make it hard for him to lead the dems 16. former obama speech said schumer who said it was a mistake to pass obamacare now comes out
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again against the iran deal. the risk iran will not moderate to pursue its goals is too great. i will vote to disapprove the agreement here is how john kerry responded yesterday. >> i profoundly disagree with the judgment made. i would respectfully say that rejection is not a policy for the future. it does not offer any alternative. >> but republicans are praising schumer's decision. today presidential candidate mike huckabee called the defection huge and significant. >> this is an example of statesmanship above partisanship. we owe chuck schumer a sincere round of applause for putting america and peace first and saying no, to the iranian deal. >> the white house is downplaying schumer's defection. they say it won't impact the decision of other democrats. make no mistake about it this is not the news that the
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president wanted right before the august recess. in washington kristin fisher, nobs fox news. we will dig deeper into obama's push. with former advisor to six secretaries of state eric miller coming up. "the washington post" reporter being held in iran will have a final hearing monday in iran's revolutionary court. jason rozion was arrested in july of 2014 and charged with espionage. his attorney says monday's court session will be devoted entirely to his release. by the way, he is opposed to iran bureau chief. he reportedly faced up to 20 years in prison. the post white house and activist groups have critsicized the trial and are demanding his release. severe weather and turbulence forcing a delta airlines flight to divert to
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denver. you can see the damage to multiple parts of the plane. passengers say golf ball sized hail walloped the plane in the air. here's a few of them describing what it was like on board. >> i fly constantly. and this was the scariest ten minutes of my life. >> we went around the corner and from the window we could see the shattered shattered windshield the hole over the engine, the nose of the plane was missing. it was intense. >> the passenger who took the photo, by the way, gave a shoutout to the pilots and flight attendants saying they quote, deserve a big thanks for the cool and professional way they handled it. >> wow. >> wow. >> that is so scary. wow. those people need a raise. officials in new york say the worst may be over in the worst legionnaire's outbreak in
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history. mayor de blasio holding a news conference right now. more man 100 people have been affected and ten people have died. the state today is sending teams to help local officials test cooling towers in the broadcast where the outbreak occurs. brian llenas joins us now. >> five contaminated water cooling towers that sit atop buildings are suspected of causing the outbreak. the state is now sending inspectors to take a look at water cooler towers throughout the bronx today. governor cuomo deploying 150 trained officials to test 100 cooler water towers in the broadcast. bronx. the officials are taking samples testing for legionellae bacteria which causes legionnaire's
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disease which is a type of pneumonia. people get sick from breathing in water vapor. you don't get it from drinking waterment it's not contagious. 101 people have been diagnosed with legionnaire's in the south bronx. ten people have died. the latest case a gas plant worker in rockland county 50 miles away from the bronx was diagnosed with the disease on friday. the cdc says 18,000 people are infected with legionnaire's every year. over 500 in new york. it's rare so many in one community have contracted it like here in the south bronx. this summer's weather could be the blame. >> the humidity weather, there's sometimes it's cloud cover will change it a little bit. ultraviolet light helps to get rid of the particles. sometimes grow more. last summer maybe one particular tower didn't have that much legionellae in it. the weather currents you never
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know how the wind may end up blowing and what will be picked up and how the mist will be carried. >> the city has ordered all building owners in the entire city to really inspect for legionellae bacteria over the next 14 days. they say they are optimistic that the worst of this outbreak has passed us. we'll keep you updated. >> let's hope so. brian llenas thank you very much. hundreds gathering in ferguson one year after the fatal police shooting of michael brown. plus pope francis set to make his first papal visit to the u.s. he will be greeted in philadelphia with a special honor. courtesy of abraham lincoln. after her performance thursday is carly fiorina now the dark horse of the republican primary race? we will debate it fair and balanced. i will begin by reminding people jimmy carter couldn't
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honoring michael brown. it's been a year since brown was shot and killed by darren wilson. pennsylvania attorney general kathleen cane in court as a defendant. cane is facing charges of purgierpurgey for lying about sneaking information to a reporter as a way to punish a former colleague. prosecutors say she enlisted people to spy on officer employees. american teenager katie ludecky beating her own record at the world swimming championships by nearly four seconds giving the 18-year-old her fifth gold medal of the meet. congratulations. well one long shot republican presidential candidate suddenly generating a lot of buzz after thursday's happy hour debate. the 5:00 p.m. start time for the candidates who's poll numbers wasn't high enough to make it to
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the primetime show. one of them carly fiorina, has suddenly emerged from the rear of the pack. but can she keep that momentum going? or was thursday's performance just a flash in the pan? tammy bruce is a radio talk show host and fox news contributor. chuck is a fellow at the center for national policy and president of solidarity strategies. thank you very much for talking to us. chuck, tell me how to pronounce your last night. >> roacha. >> i wasn't going to go there because i didn't want to mess it up. thank you very much for talking to us. tammy, let me start with you. now that carly fiorina, she's made a name for herself at the debate. the question is can she capitalize on it and move ahead in the pack? >> that is the challenge. that was the amazing champllenge is she had to deliver in a way that it eclipsed everyone else. we know she can deliver under
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pressure. that's one of the important points of having debates. now the issue has changed. she has been low enough where she has not been attacked. she will receive critiques. seeing how she responds to those, i have a lot of expectations she will respond well. this is a woman who understands what it's like to be in a heated environment and how to deliver. she's running for president because she believes she can do the job. i expect her to be able to show she can be potus even in response to the media and any criticism. >> as a ceo, being in a powerful position nothing new to her. she doesn't come from a political background, she does have a fair share running for office. here is where i questionhearting her expertise. she won in a landslide running for california senate.
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what does she do different? >> you're seeing it now. you're taking the words out of my mouth. she's trying to be the anti-politician. taking a page out of the donald trump handbook. there is so much frustration. you have these hardworking americans who feel like washington hasn't been working for them. she took advantage of that during the happy hour debate. it's great to win the jv team. if she gets more attention and more out there i think people will pick her to pieces more. that is when we will see if she has the muster for this. >> she was the first presidential candidate to come forward and blast donald trump for his comments about women and saying that's not okay. she's the only woman and she's standing up for a woman here at fox. one thing she brings to the table is that none of her other fellow candidates are women. here are the conversation i want to ask you. she was asked on the record with
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greta van sustern last night about the talk of her being a vp candidate, not presidential candidate. here's how she addressed that. >> i don't know. my guess is going forward it will get batted around less in that way. but i think to be president, and that's what i'm running to be requires an understanding of how the economy actually works. i do. and understanding of how the world work and who is in it. >> as a feminist do you find it insulting as talk as a vp is coming up? >> there will be patronizing it. hillary clinton has been the only person that's been batted around and it's not been impressive. i like that people are seeing with krvecarly fiorina that there is a different way to think. it's boss when it comes to the economy and culture and leadership. i think it's pate runizing.
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the test is not even if that's put forward. it's how she responds. that's the key. she is not someone who has complained or whined or gotten upset. she won that debate because she pushed forward and delivered. and that's what leadership is. i think that her candidacy will show people that real leadership is earned. and that you can take it. i think that is one of the major things she'll present in the framework. >> as a politician you need to know how to take criticism. and as we know some of the republican party don't take it as well as others. remember the last woman weep had in this position was sarah palin who ended up being vp nominee alongside john mccain. we know how that ended. so let me ask you, if fiorina rises in the polls she will be facing harsher criticism. how she handles that will be key. what kind of scrutiny should she be planning on facing? >> let's be clear, the republican party needs carly.
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they need a female face in this position. the entire republican leadership in the house are men. mainly white men. thy want to reach out to a broad swath of voters. i'm a political consultant. you bring a broad group of people together and having a smart woman on top of a ticket or running and representing the party is a kn thing for that party. i think that's why the people want her to be a part of the bigger debate next time. >> if i can add one thing. i'm a big fan of sarah faypalin was chosen. carly fiorina has made the decision on her own. >> that's a big difference. >> paln had a few weeks. carly fiorina can make this work. >> thank you very much. and if you missed the debate and you're among the 1% that didn't watch it for the seven candidates that didn't make it to primetime fox news is airing it again. catch it after our show at 5:00 p.m. eastern. for more on carly fiorina, check out "fox news sunday" tomorrow
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morning. she'll be joining chris wallace to discuss what is next for her campaign. so check your local listings for times. a piece of america's past getting a second chance to go down in history. the podium used by aibbraham lincoln for the gettysburg address will bed by the pope as part of his visit to the u.s. we have more. >> his whole thing is he's looking out for underprivileged and people that are -- have been neglected by society. that's kind of what abraham lingen did in a way. it's very fitting. >> to the average person the simple walnut lectern may not seem to matter. it is an important civil war artifact that will link former president abraham lincoln and pope francis' historic visit to
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philadelphia. >> the holy father's use of this lectern is incredibly significant as it is the same lectern used by president abraham lincoln to deliver the gettysburg address. >> it was a little over 150 years ago when president lincoln used this lectern to dedicate part of the civil war battlefield at gettiesysburg as a cemetery. >> to borrow a phrase from the address, it is all together fitting and proper that we should do this. that this lectern be used bide pope francis to deliver his address at independence hall. >> the lectern is on loan to the union league for its civil war artifacts collection. the idea to have pope francis use it came about at a meeting of vatican officials and event organizers at the union league earlier this year. >> to have this man of faith who
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speaks for peace, love and religious freedom around the world, to use president lincoln's gettysburg lectern to address all those who would visit philadelphia and come to see him at this historic moment is eventful. >> it's awesome. it's going to be a great affair. >> if he's going to speak from the same podium that abraham lincoln spoke from. that's us showing our love. >> thanks. philadelphia is just one of the city's pope francis plans to visit during his trip to the u.s. his first stops will be in washington and new york. a big turning his back on president obama's nuclear deal with iran. could this cause support among other democrats in congress to crumble? and in the battle between healthy snack verses all things
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a major roadblock for the white house on the iran nuclear deal. new york senator chuck schumer says he will vote against the agreement due to what he calls serious weaknesses. this makes him the first democratic senator to indicate a vote against the deal. the white house called the senator's decision disappointing, but not surprising. world leaders announced the deal to curb iran's nuclear program in exchange for billions of dollars in release of sanctions. congress has the chance to review and possibly reject the deal. here to break it down for us,
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aaron david fillmiller thanks for joining us. it's good to have you weigh in on this. listen senator schumer refusing to support the iran nuclear deal what impact will this likely have on the president's push to have congress approve it? >> it's a disappointment. you have an influential senator, the next majority leader opposing a sitting president's policies. it's not a happy situation for the white house. but i also don't think it's a fatal one. i've been arguing for weeks now that this deal such as it is is a done deal. in effect, it's very difficult for congress which is inherently adverse when it comes to matters of foreign policy to oppose a major foreign policy issue by a sitting president. the last time it happened was 1986 when congress actually overrode president reagan's veto
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opposition to sanctions on south africa. >> i glad you bring it up because president obama in this case is expected to veto any legislation that kills this deal. that threat needs 2/3 of lawmakers would be need today halt the accord. are there enough members to override the president's veto at this point? >> gebagain, the congressional math can get complicated. there's another month before the vote will take place. i think if i had to bet right now, and none of us can predict the future i'd say, yeah there will be enough democrats in the house to sustain a presidential veto. and i think you have a president that is perfectly prepared. wasn't terribly interested in getting congress involved in this to begin with. bob corker iran's sanctions review act was a creative effort to give them a voice but not necessarily a veto. i think the president is going to win this one.
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>> is that a good thing? >> well it depends on where you are with respect to the deal. you know in my view from the beginning there are no good deals. you're dealing with a repressive regime that has a different than what we do as what constitutes a stable middle east. and there's no question that for the next decade you'll end up with an iranian nuclear program that's smaller, slower and perhaps maybe more easily verified. the problem is, that the iranians will reap billions of dollars in sanction relief. and a decade from now, you will be left with a sizable nuclear infrastructure. should they choose to weaponize -- >> who is there to stop them? for example, senator schumer explained it this way. why he decided against the deal. and an excerpt of his statement
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was published in the new yorkers. inspections are not anywhere anytime, the 24 day delay before we can inspect is troubling. inspectors would likely be able to detect radioactive isotopes after 24 days that delay would enable iran to escape detection and improving of possible military dimensions. having said that some people are saying he's defected from his party. yet, one could argue has acting correctly for his faith in -- he is the most promontinent jewish spokesperson there. he's soon to be the democratic leader. >> i read 1,600 word statement very carefully. this was a statement from man clearly politics are involved but this was a vote i suspect -- it was a tough one for him. based on one fundamental fact. he says it before at the pen
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ultimate paragraph of the statement. if you believe iran will evolve over the course of the next decade you could probably cast a yes vote for this agreement with a clear conscious. if you believe, as schumer does believe, that the chances of iran moderating over the next decade are slim to none you might be able to persuade yourself and others that the only course is to disapprove the agreement. that in fact is what he's done. we're not talking about a peace treaty. it's not as if you're voting for the egyptian israeli peace treaty. you're talking about an agreement that will not solve the problem. it will delay the crisis. it will produce a smaller slower program. in the end, it may not answer the mail. >> we thank you very much. aaron. >> always a pleasure. thank you. well if you are trying to watch your waistline you may
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want to make sure you relax it more at home. a new study finding when people are stressed the hormone cortisol makes your brain crave foods that make you gain weight. you're more likely to grab a cookie. we have private practice md to explain the science. what is it in our bodies that makes us lose our will power? >> that's what's interesting. we've known that chronic stress makes us pack on the pounds and add inches to our waistlines. this study shows how. they took 51 men volunteers what they did is divided them into two groups. one that was exposed to stress and the other one not exposed to stress. they showed them images of objects such as cookies and
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chicks or chips and apples. they were 24% more likely to choose the stress group the unhealthy option. while they were making their decisions they were doing a functional mri. functional mris can determine the activity levels in the brain. they do it by measuring the blood flow. they show the areas that were most active of people that were stressed out was taste censors. they were amped up and sending signals to the pleasure centers in our brain. the judgment centers were down. our will power wasn't able to battle that. >> we talk about the half of the 51 men who were put under stress stressful conditions. a stressful condition required them to put their hand in cold ice water. the not stressful condition was to put their hand for three minutes in room temperature water. that may not found stressful,
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apparently they equate it to arguing with a spouse or friend or getting stuck in struck. it doesn't take much stress. >> that's what's -- >> to trigger this chemical. >> you bring up a great point. they want to simulate stress and see how they make their decisions. this is what we see in daily life. it can be something little but it can make us reach for cookies or chips or something that can add 200 or 300 calories to our daily consumption. >> my daily stress is more stressful than ice cold water. if they're reaching for cookies instead of carrots because of ice cold water, i imagine we need to learn from this and decrease our stress. ice cold water will be the least of your problems that you run into on a daily basis. how do you combat this? >> our decision making when it comes to choosing our foods is not just about willpower there's a lot of things that go into it. we can see the texture of food as well as the sounds our food make can sit there and want us reach for these things. the more information we know about the types of triggers that
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lead us to want to make the unhealthy decisions can help us make wiser decision whz it comes to what we choose. knowing stress is an issue why don't we just our stress? there are other options. exercise in a great way to reduce address. >> after you've gone for a run or done exercise you don't want bad food. you come back and want to eat healthy. you want to drink water. that's a good point. it's interesting to note though this involved 51 men. how does this differ to women, especially when women are going through a certain time of the month? i tell you, cold water ain't nothing compared to what we have to deal with. >> we don't know right now because men and women are different. one is from venus, one is from mars. why the study is interesting is because it outlined the centers that interactions of what areas are working. we know stress affects our choices it's the taste censors are on steroids.
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our willpower is being muted. >> i still thing that women have a harder time rejecting cravings for some reason. i don't know that's my personal feeling. i know i'm not good at it. thank you very much. kelly? thank you. the right to be forgotten. it's essentially a digital clean slate. so do you have it? our legal panel is here to tell us all about it. yet another major data breach impacting more than two million cell phone users. ♪ we all feel the calling to build something great. ♪
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don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you.
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and usaa actually makes that process so much easier. you can find the car and you can find it to your liking by using their app. i'm definitely able to see savings uh, through using the car buying on usaa. i mean, amazing savings. i was like, wow, if i could save this much, then i could actually maybe upgrade a little bit. (announcer) usaa car buying service powered by truecar. save money, zero hassle. personal information from millions of customers of a phone company in the uk may have been compromised. new security measures are in place for car phone warehouse as the company launches an investigation. company officials revealing a security breach this week. they say hackers may have got their hands on the names, addresses and dates of birth for more than two million customers. credit card information for 90,000 customers possibly exposed as well. the company operates in a dozen
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european countries including britain, ireland and germany. do you have the right to be digitally forgotten? according to the highest court in europe its citizens do. now france's data protection agency wants this right to be forgotten to extend to all search results wherever they may appear throughout the world. but could that impact u.s. constitutional rights in america? google is fighting the decision. the search engine and free speech advocates are calling the ruling vague and overboard. and that's not all. let's bring in misty morris a trial attorney and keisha heaven a defense attorney and former prosecutor. good of you to join us. you know this is a touchy subject for americans. because no american wants to have their right to free speech infringed upon. does this do that? >> that's a important tenet in america. that's the difference.
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europeans have a different idea of what constitutes privacy. this is the problem. we could have something that this new ruling says you have to take that off the internet that would be protected by the constitution in the united states and would rightfully be out there. that's what this vague, vague standard is creating. it's a big problem in america. >> if i have something on my e-mail or have something on the internet about me and i don't like it and someone is attacking me. i can't just go to the court and say, hey i want that expunged. google will say fat chance. >> i'm an advocate for this law in europe. it's great. the right to privacy out weighs the freedom of speech in these instances. i do a lot of criminal expungements. they can go through the legal process. then you do a search on the internet and it's all there. it's defeating the purpose of people's rights to privacy. i think it is a good thing. i don't think it's you know
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bad for the public. most of us don't want our private information on the internet. >> we have have a pro and con. this case emanated from a situation in france where someone had got into bankruptcy and it was on the internet. they wanted it expunged off the internet. the company obliged that person and had it done. >> now we're relying on google about what appropriately taken down and what's not appropriate taken down. as keisha referenced there are legal mechanisms to deal with the types of issues. we have lawsuits you can bring, statutes like hipaa that protects your medical information. the united states deals with these issues on unique basises, it doesn't have a broad idea of hey, google you decide what's
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private and what's not. >> everything is out there on cyber space. we may have hipaa and you do a search and google doesn't restrict the links it will be there. it is up to them to say we will delete the links if somebody asks them. >> they have no way of enforcing that -- >> no, there's no statute in the united states that makes this a requirement. >> let's take this to another level then. we're talking about national security. we've had a debate where there was a exchange between senator paul and governor christie about exchange of our privacy. if they do this if we can follow through with what france is saying, europe is saying would that be an infringement on our national security by having that information out there? am i asking the question the right way? >> it can be. because certain things are out there, whether it be security
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information, and it's easily accessible through other countries, that can have an impact on our national security. that's why i think it's another reason why these search engines such as google and all these other big companies need to really be careful. because it can cause huge problems you know with security. >> look at the flip side too, though is you know what? we use the internet to find out a lot of information about what's going on all. >> it's nosy. >> that's a good place to end it. i hear that giant question mark about regulations? more regulations? >> right. i think that with the internet age, we see this all across the board in different ways. this is just the next step. >> right. >> thank you. that's a good way to end it. on nosy. i'm going to be looking at your stuff. >> that is scary. all right. a massive volcano erupting sending ash thousands of feet into the air. we'll tell you where it happened
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stage, hillary clinton shadow walks through her campaign. sometimes surfacing to introduce herself to america once more. talking about her anises spree how she warrior for the poor, will vanquish corporate greed. this is a lard sell when the world knows that between 2001 and 2012 hillary and husband bill, have amosed a confirmed fortune of $136.5 million. as usual, she avoids reporter's questions, an easy posture whether you're unopposed and out of sight. her network of handlers insists she would rather have an opponent to sharpen her message. but they see trouble coming and it's not just hillary's low ratings on the trust and liability scale. suddenly, but not surprisingly, here comes old washington war
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horse, senator joe biden. the dc wags are agog with the possibility that he might jump in. should he decide to confront hillary in the primaries the vice president with 36 years in the senate behind him will change the game. true he has one or two dozen juicy bits of going off script in his resume, but hillary carrying enough designer luggage to sink the qe 2 will have much more to explain. she made a mess of her presidential run and brack. [. the nation is on to hillary a woman who want help fouling up every job she's ever had. she'll tend herself by brushing off attacks on her clark as a right wing version ofic excellent history. it will be much more difficult to evade the more recent
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questions dog her campaign. one, the generous gifts to the clinton foundation from foreign governments while she was secretary of state. and two the 31,380 e-mails she delete from her at home private server. no one can see them, except perhaps, the russians or chinese who may have hacked her account. more worrisome for her is the f.b.i.'s investigation of the secret system. is it a trove of classified information? larceny is the dominant gene in the clinton dna. she's essentially unlikeable, a character deficiency that she and her staff obviously find immaterial to nailing down votes. stay tuned for her feminist screens, fault with whacky notion about the capital gains tax and the string of left wing bad ideas. biden says he'll announce a
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decision by the end of the summer. or he may just let hillary twist in the wind. caught on video check out this footage of plex co-'s most -- mexico's most active volcano erupting. no evacuation have been reported. authorities in peru cracking down on pigeons what they're doing and why the birds are becoming a major health concern. ♪ ♪
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and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection
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like an open sore, the flu or a history of copd a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way. >> authorities in peru cap stahl city try to put a lid on the pigeon population. they're banning people from feeding them or they get find. and double that for subsequent offenses. health officials say they're concerned because the pigeons spread disease and they estimate there are about 30,000 of the dirty birds flying around their city. we got a loft pigeons around here in new york city. one man that knows them, he grew up with them. i want to wish a special happy birthday 84th birthday to an army veteran whose parents migrated from italy in 1920, he was born there new york city, had nine children, started a clothing company in the bronks. one of his kids, one of my best
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friends, living the american dream. a perfect example. happy birthday, sal. >> the debate is next. >> this is the first official event in the campaign for the republican nomination for president. welcome to cleveland, ohio. it is debate night. i'm bill hemmer. >> and i'm martha mccallum. it all starts here. we are ready, the candidates are ready. we're live at the quicken loans arena where we've partnereded with facebook to bring you the voter into today's debate. >> you'll hear from all 17 candidates tonight. you'll meet seven of them right now. starting with three-time governor in the state of texas, rick perry. >> also two-time senator from pennsylvania rick
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