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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  September 10, 2015 10:00am-11:01am PDT

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i have cut out coffee which is insane and looking at being healthier emotionally and physically. i think it is g. >> you look great and it is such a great having me. >> your children are beautiful. >> thanks for joining us and thank you you, judge. >> the fox news alert. former state department workers goes before the house investigators this hour. the it specialist behind closed doors with the house benghaziñz committee. we are covering all of the newsl "happening now". >> we'll have so much winning if with win withing. rivals areéswc scrambling to 04 the trump juggernaut. >> and a luxury ride for a band
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turns in a scramble for their lives. >> and this is incredible. past. >> 3500 people died on ellis island. >> where ouran cestors were cared for and cured. >> this was the best hospital in the world at the time. it is all "happening now". >> we begin with donald trump. pulling ahead in the poll. only rival in his sites is dr. ben carson. >> i am jenna lee. >> and donald trump riding a wave of support as his support jumping to 32 percent up eight points last month in a new poll. carson in second place with 19.
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and jeb bush a distant nine. and in the year of the outsider, trump and carson capitalizing on the status of nonpoliticians and cruising to the top of the heat. a couple of things, nonpoliticians are getting the majority of the republicans and republican- leaning independents and also for the first time a majority of republicans think that trump will be the nominee. your reaction to those? >> it is stunning. there is no question about it. i am not a great mathmetician. 32 and 19 is 51. you are right. majority of the republicans being polled favor one of the 2 or 2 of the three if you add carly fiorina in that and you are higher over 50 percent and that is stunning and there was a lot of people who supported trump and didn't think he could
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win. 51 percent of the majority of those polled, think he will be the nominee. this is not just a statement anymore. this is people saying they like him and a good percentage of them absolutely believes he could be the next president. >> turning to what brett hume as trump's boorist sexist taunts. trump said this about carly fiorina. look at that face, would anybody vote for that. can you imagine that the face of the next president. she is a woman and i am not supposed to say bad things. but really, folks, are we serious? >> that prompted bobbi jindall and calling him shallow. >> this is the truth about donald trump. he has no understanding of policy. he is full of bluster and no
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substance. and lacks the intellectual curiosity to learn. you can't argue policy with this guy. and the only thing that donald trump believes in is himself. >> i don't know what that has to do with anything. but trump's comments about women not withstanding. he is up 16 percent among the women. it is confounding. >> first of all. i don't think bobby jindal went to say that because he was outraged. he went and gave that speech because he knew that was the only way to get on fox news or get coverage. 1 or 2 percent of the polls and will nbt predebate on cnn, and he knew if he went and gave a serious speech about tax reform or policy issue it would be ignored and taking a shot at
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donald trump will get him attention. he got attention. we played the clip. that's what that is all about. >> let me switch to the democratic side. hillary clinton lost 20 points in new hampshire in the last two months and now, let's put up the latest iowa poll, saunders for the first time ahead 41- 40 percent within the margin of error. chris, does this show how vulnerable hillary clinton has become. >> two things that show how vulnerable. we have separate polls in new hampshire and iowa that are of course, two states that will vote first and show her trailing. that one in iowa one point within the margin of error. and she had a big lead and it is gone. many more demonstrative she
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apologized for the use of the private e-mails and you know that she didn't want to do that. she's been resisting six months and only reason she did it with the good reporting of the new york times. they found that her supporters are not listening to it her because they want her to come clean on the private e-mail server. it has gotten her in trouble and find a way to respond to it. >> she is nevertheless strong going into the southern primaries for the southern primaries. >> she is now, but you get a possibility of a joe biden getting in. i think bernie sanders has the best chance of boating her in new hampshire and iowa.
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but further south and mass market media states, maybe joe biden could impact. is she still the favorite to win the nomination? absolutely. but politics takes on a life and momentum of its own. if she were to lose. this is a woman who we thought would have a cornation of the nomination f. she were to lose iowa and new hampshire. i mean, if you talk about fear and loathing on the campaign trail. that would give bernie sanders impetus and others putting all of their stakes on a vulnerable candidate. >> chris wallace, thank you. >> you bet. >> chris has an exclusive
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interview with john kasich, check your local listings when fox news is in your area. >> a rebellion on the vote on the nuclear deal. party leaders thought it would go through without a hitch. the rank and file willd]0 not g it to the floor because the obama administration did not iran and the nuclear watch dog. mike has more on all of this. >> speaker john boehner said the argument and the fighting over the iran nuclear deal is far from over and he said congress to stop or slow down the agreement. >> the deal is worse than anything imagined over the deal. >> the house isóbw voting on th
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es saying that president obama did not submit allbv9u$e% necessaryeié-ç÷wk÷rç gqxl on the record. and a measure÷p÷÷ prohibiting t prsar to thear to for votes today and tomorrow. i president obama met with8lúw veterans and gold star mothers to discuss the national security agreement. describe. and has allowed i think a lot of members who may be feeling political pressure to remember what a sober and important decision this has been. >> this is setting up for house members to be voting yes or no on the iran nuclear deal on
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tomorrow 9/11 anniversary, jenna. >> mike, thank you. a russian military build up. seven massive condor transit planes are fly nothing syria and military vehicles are moved to russia's navy base. this comes as the pentagon tries to salvage the failed program to train the syrian army to fight isis. genener griffin is live from the pent gob. >> reporter: secretary of state kerry made p two calls to the counterparts. they have seen a total of russian connedor military cargo flights landing in syria. a massive build up by the port. they built 100 housing units and there is evidence that putin
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sent some of the plainclothes special forces that were fighting in ukraine. the pentagon press secretary is bound to be asked these questions. the pentagon lost track of all of the 54 syrian opposition fighters that they trained. dead, captured after they were inserted in syria and as of may, the pentagon spent 42 million to train this force out of the 500 million. and they would not provide updated figures. and immediately they were att k attacked by an al-qaeda affiliate. >> the initial phase of the program did not liftoff with the efficiency that we hoped. the secretary was candid and he
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said the fight will continue and supporting moderate syria force system critical. >> reporter: we learned that the pentagon inspector general is investigating a complaint by 50 central command intelligence analyst said intelligence assessments were changed to present a rosier feature of how the fight against isis is going. >> thank you. frightening new prediction of fiber attacks and after the breach that compromised the records of americans. more attacks are in our future and talking about what to do to stop them. one american city on edge after busy attacks on the highway. they are calling this domestic terrorism. do you think that more candidates will get in the 2016 race for the white house.
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join the club at brandpower.com. help get the nutrition you need everyday with boost® high protein. made a simple tripvere chto the grocery storeis anything but simple. so finally, i had an important conversation with my dermatologist about humira. he explained that humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your dermatologist about humira.
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because with humira clearer skin is possible. authorities in arizona investigating two new possible attacks on a phoenix air interstate. officials say something hit and shattered the window of a truck driving on the freeway earlier this morning and in a separate incident gunshots fired on the freeway several miles away. this is the 10th incident in less than two weeks. most of them on the same freeway. one official call them domestic terrorism crimes. no serious jurisdiction are reported. new information on the cyber attack. it comes in a rare open hearing in worldwide cyber threats. catherine herige has the story.
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>> reporter: the number be of americans compromised in the attack is far higher than 21 million and that is only the americans whose social security numbers were breached. and contain the applications and references that the sources can top 25 million. the director of national intelligence testified on capitol hill that the likelihood of a kosovoic attack is remote. but low to moderate attacks and national security will continue. the breach on the files is significant and the intelligence community made it an and a great concern to the employees that are affected and the families. and how it could be used in damaging ways. not only institutionally. and it is particularly for the
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intelligence people and in general how it could inflict. and the intelligence officials are less specific. on isis, the group want, and the nsa warned that there are retaliation and deterrents that might be affected. and it is a line that the u.s. will not cross. >> there are specific things that are not foreign in the cyber domain that are hard for us and we can't do. there is a different set of rules in many ways with us. >> reporter: the head of the nsa has not seen iran step back from the use of cyber in the u.s. financial institutions. jenna. >> thank you for much. greg? >> it is that time of year with
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students heading back to college campus and many are using drugs to help them focus and are not prescribed to them. and how new technology can do the job without medication and 14 years after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and new tribute to the heroes of flight 93, the only play that did not hit the inupon on on intended target in shanksville, pennsylvania.
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>> new moving tribute to the heroes of flight 93 and only plane prevented from hitting its target. and they are opening the doors to the public nearly 14 years to
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the day after the terrorist attack. the center use us video and gives visitors a view of how the heroes on board that charged the cockpit and regain control of the jet intended to do so. it over looks the crash site in pennsylvania. >> it is really hard it concentrate with technology like smart phones and bombarding us with with information. and a new app to help people focus and students head had -- heading back to college. >> reporter: every day our technology sgroes ability to pay attention seeps to shrink in
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college. alex gordon is a senior studying business with a lot of the reading and competition. the competition is so fierce, a lot of your peers are turning to adhd medication for an edge. in the last ten years, sales of those drugs like ridlinand a derroyl tripled. last year, a third of college students took the drugs to study and three quarters of them had no prescription what so ever. jack said he had the solution which he called "you health. ". it is software on a smart phone that trains the eye to focus without medication. >> a safe and easy way to focus.
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>> you health's simplistic games uses the process or and phone to keep the user focused and helped to detect brains in concentration. >> and cutting edge technology that researchers five years ago could only have dreamed b. and technology can tell if you looked away. >> you health tracks eye movements in real time. >> great news for alex who used new health last year and has been in the top of her class all without the side-effects of rid linand adderol. she has an alternative which is affective. that's it from here.
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back to you. >> fascinating new technology. joishgs do it without the pills. >> got to be better, thanks. >> talk about focus. everybody needs more focus, right? we have to check that out. and a on capitol hill. hillary clinton's it man in before the house combhitee and we are hearing from our people on the hill next about what is going on on. and politicians debate future immigration. and we'll take you back to ellis island where hundreds were detained and few had seen in decades. we have a private tour you don't want to miss. >> the public has access through tours that you would give them, right? >> right. we'll go upstairs where most people don't go. >> this is special for us that no one gets to it see. 't thin have a heart attack. but i did. i'm mike, and i'm very much alive.
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now my doctor recommends a bayer aspirin regimen to help prevent another heart attack. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen.
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department. the top democrat on the party asserted that it is all about politics but said something interesting, he believes that the house should consider what senate gopper's that brian should get immunity. and so we'll see where it goes today. and today as expected the fifth was asserted and it was only 15 minutes and we go on from here. greg. right now litheuana's comfort will accept 1100 refugees. they are struggling to reach britain and france. and very little about what it is like once they arrive and whether it was worst risking their lives. ben hall has more. ben?
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>> i spent time with the barasi family who came to england illegally and recently given asylm. far from the promised land that the father thought he would find. his life is more like a purgatory. when you find jobs they are menial. doctors are cleaning streets and he wishes he hadn't come. this is no life and he feels guilty about leaving his country and strong words for those wishing to follow him. >> the reality is that they should stay in their cities, and their land. >> in stark contrast, his 16-year-old daughter couldn't be happier. she embraced the new culture and fitting in the school and doesn't want to leave. she believes europe should open
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the door to all refugees. >> i will study and i will make a name for myself. and i want to just you know, let everyone know what is really happening in our home. >> it really is a tale of two generations. the younger knowing horror and tragedy and pain and the older fearing to be losing their identity and accident a relevant underclass. the real problem lies with the assad regime and the brutality there. and until that is dealt with, weather little will change. the new life is not all they expected, greg. >> benjamin line in london. and this breaking news out of the white house just moments ago while benjamin was speaking. the u.s. according to the white
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house preparing to accept 10000 syrian refugee. that is the first word that america will be taking some of the refugees. >> it is interesting insight of how the generations are handling the new path forward and it ties into the story that we brought you last hour and took you inside of ellis island and half of all americans have one relative who make it through the gateway to the american dream. it was in health inspectionses and hospitals on the grounds of ellis island treated hundreds and hundreds of patients. it it was the largest health facility in the united states at the time. and this is where nurses lived full-time. for some they moved on and others, their journey ended. there were key areas of the
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story that is seldom told. >> if you did have a contagious disease you would be sick and also upfortunately not make it, right? >> 3500 people do die on ellis island. >> this is an autopsy amp theater. >> oh, my. this is incredible. you have to see this. an amp theater. it looks like something out of a medical school? >> this is a teaching hospital and people did their residencies here. this was the best hospital in the world at the time. >> medical students would stand up here and observe? >> the body would be where the cart is. >> that's probably not the autopsy table.
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and it was a table for instrument. he found the table in 1972 and he left it there sense. >> built to hold 750 beds. they treated them in identical will rooms. >> this is an open ward. meaning if you suffer from something that it a lot of people had you are in the room together. these are measles wards. and there would have been a bed in between each window and the windows open for air floor. and the corners were rounds. >> the ellis island foundation opened the wards for limited tours. >> we'll go upstairs which is where most people don't go. >> this is special for us and no one gets to see. >> that is true.
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what will we see up here? >> you so this chair. >> this is my favorite ward. and when i see these chairs. you want to know who is sitting here last and why? >> and i don't sit in any of the chairs. >> it looks different than the other wards we go into and the next story that i would try to explore. and the story of world war ii on ellis island. >> immigration flowed through ellis islands in the the '30s and '40s the hospital remained open for treatment for the shell shocked in world war ii. >> this whole place doesn't have the eerie. knowing the morg and people stayed here for years. i expected to have the haunted house feeling. it doesn't feel that way in
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here. it is different. >> it is like the whole level of care that people were given and dignity and respect and how they were treated here. i don't necessarily think the ghosts are creepy feeling. it is more energy and emotion. >> i am not sure i would like to be here in the dead of night in halloween. >> i will not come back on halloween. >> our travels take us to one final room. immigrants from different countries. waited to learn their fate. most made it through to mainland america. and the american dream remained just that, an image than a reality. >> you could be in one of the beds here being treated and look out of your window and see the statue of liberty. i can't imagine what it was like to be here. so close to being able to being
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free and you were detained and this is what you were able to look at. >> so those contagious disease wards are interesting in the way they are set up. they left the windows open in window. >> they believed in air circulation. jessica told me that doctors told her that that was actually great for health and something that we don't do now in hospitals and maybe should consider. >> was it a personal journey for you? >> it was. i hadn't been to elus island until this past year with my little brother and my great grandmother came through italy to ellis island. and what was interesting in learning the history. almost half of americans there today. northerly half of you have one relative that passed through
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ellis island. my grandmother, i found the steam mast of how much money she and how many children. >> it was interesting what we think about in immigration in the country and the facts really are and they are different. and so if there is a further conversation about immigration at times. >> very interesting. >> we'll look into it. and i have a lot of viewers writing about their families and their stories. >> keep them coming. in the moan time, it is it a top secret military testing range out in the nevada desert made famous in movies like "independence day" "indiana jones". area 51. and where heroes battles agents and soviet agents. in real life, the u.s. military
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want to buy up the land next door. the owners have only a few hours before the government takes it away.
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test test
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hi, everyone. i am gretchen carlson bobbi jindal calls trump shallow. and donald respond. and the white house said the country should be prepared to allow in 10000 refugee. walk wither said the united states should not allow in any. and football season starts tonight. are you ready for football? top of the hour. property owners have an hour to
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accept the offer but after that they will have seizure. we'll get into that. the property surrounded by the top secret area. and the weapon testing range made famous by hollywood. and the military offering what it could a premium offer of 5.2 million and from the groom line property and they are starting a process to condemn it and take. it the owners think it is much more and here to explain why in the area 51. it is nice to have you both as we learn about your stories, joe, tell will me about the properties and why it is valuable to your property? >> the property has been in your family since 1889. and the great grandfather and the patents and the claims were located in 18corand signed by
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ulysses grant and he got there in '89 and recorded them in 1893. and we have been there since then. and my father is buried on the property as one of my ufrngles. and this is part of our lives for 130 years almost. so. >> a lot of history and we are seeing the property. it is beautiful land and i am curious is the issue with selling an emotional one. and do you not want to sell at all. and you don't like the price or the people trying to buy it, which is the air force. they never intended to make a fair offer to the shshgs heahanfamily. they okayed through the congress before meeting.
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we love the property and going there our whole lives. >> we have a statement from them and i will read it afterwards. and we would like to show both sides. we are offering them the offer because we are not allowed to be on the property. and what is your response to that. >> my response to that, that is disingenous i would say given the fact that the first meeting we had they had gone to congress and not said a word to us. they just did this and sat in the first meeting and their lawyer said they had the option of condemnation in the first meeting and we were assured condemnation was not where they were headed. why did they go to congress ahead of time. we are willing to sent down and we told them.
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you want to counteroffer and you told us this was your best and final. we are willing to sit down and we have information from our representative that congress is stonewalled by the administration. that means president obama, it is his secretary of an air force and we are hoping to get ahold of the secretary of a force and send her back to negotiate. >> and just so they have to go to congress to do this. >> and there is a process for it. ben, i read the offers that referenced in the negotiating process and not a desire to have one is how your family is treated over the years.
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how dow feel about this. and pop culture and these mysteries that might happening there. >> and we are not at liberty to discuss anything that goes on down there and we are not unamerican. what goes on down there we don't know. why they are taking our property. for safety reasons? i haven't seen anything. >> i do have. >> i do have some things that they have done to us in the past and maybe this is safety reasons. when you fly an aircraft over someone's property and you scrape the buildings, that is something that was done on purpose and that is not accidental. and there was children there. >> what is that?
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>> these i am sorry, they are spent shells and 20 millimeter and 50 cabber. these came from shells. these are from the 40s and '50s. >> that happened during that time? >> yes. this is a current one. this shell, they still use this today on aircraft. >> that's one of the reasons. safety and security. unfortunately i'm getting cut off by a commercial. i think we have a good idea of your story, and we're going to be following it. 6:00 p.m. eastern time is the deadline. we would love to hear from both of you if something changes over the next several hours, because that's something we're going to be watching. >> jen, if you look at this picture. they weren't concerned about our grandparents' safety when they did this to them? >> what is that? >> that's a 1953 article out of
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"national geographic" of our grandparents and ben's father at about 4:00 in the morning with a nuke blast in the background. >> that's interesting. something does take place there. pleasure to have you. we're going to read the statement from the air force after the commercial. i want you to get their side of the story. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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you just heard the. last year the air force offered to buy the land for $2.4 million or the appraised value if later determined to be higher. the owners declined the office. an august 11th the air force once again offered to buy the property and submitted its best and final offer of $2.4 million. once the air force gets a formal
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appraisal of the property the government will pay the appraised value. the air force prefers to acquire the property through a negotiated sale. we'll see what happens. is that going to be explored? or do they finally figure it out? we'll let you know. >> yeah. >> what do you think? >> take the money and run. later on it could be a lot lower. house calls may seem like a part of our past. maybe not with the help of technology. adam housley has the details. adam. >> you can get just about anything on your smartphone these days. from food to cars. health care in your home may be returning what's being dubbed the uber of health care. >> hi. how are you? >> house calls are making a comeback. old-school medicine goes high-tech. >> anything that can be done in the routine doctor's office visit can be done in your home or at your desk at work, in your hotel room. >> reporter: all it takes is an
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app. for example, pager in new york and heel on the west coast allow you to schedule a doctor's or nurses visit within an hour or when it fits your schedule. >> you don't have to go to the emergency room, wait in long lines. >> it's going to ask you some cl questions about your health history. >> reporter: a physical, flu, strep test, sutures, the doctors can do it in your home. it allows you more time with patients. >> we don't like running from room to room and all the administrative issues that have burdened medicine over the past few years. >> it's become to treating what the patient needs and not rushing through. >> reporter: users say it's well worth the out of pocket cost. >> having a doctor come to the house is great. it's much more convenient. they can come when we want them to come. it's very affordable. >> reporter: affordable. $99 to about $2.
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insurance companies are starting to work with some of these apps and others are trying to join in as well. >> every day a new great app. thanks very much. we'll be right back. why do so many people choose aleve?
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for a free quote today. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. that's going to do it for us. >> thank you for joining us. have a great day. "the real story" with gretchen starts now. >> bye-bye. thanks, guys. congressional republicans saying they will use every tool that they have to try to stop the president from signing that iranian deal and to avoid his veto altogether. hi, everyone. i'm gretchen carlson. welcome to "the real story" today. the idea is including three separate votes and a potential lawsuit against the administration. holding a resolution of disapproval of the vote should the senate pass it or just not voting by the september 17th deadline at all. the argument being they never got all the details of the so-called side deal tehran made with the iaea and therefore the deadline should be pushed back another 60 days. are you following us? mike emanuel is and he's live on capitol hi.

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