tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News September 11, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
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members worldwide watching this, troop talk, through american forces network and armed ships at sea. the first question we do want to be represented from one of the many service members we have here. so the first question will go out to the audience. if someone has one ready. and coming down with the microphone for you. >> good morning, mr. president. good afternoon. >> good afternoon. >> i'm sergeant brianna harvey, from texas, and my question is: what made you initiate mbk on the 27th of february in 2014 and will you create something similar for females and what will you miss the most once you're no longer president and out of the oval office. >> those are quit questions. what part of texas? >> parker heights, texas. >> tell everybody back home i said hi.
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for service members who aren't aware, what we're referring to when we talk about mbk is what we call my brother's keeper. one of the moe important principles of america is that no matter who you are no, matter what you look like, if you work hard, you can get ahead, and there are pockets of poverty in places where people don't have an opportunity, and that's particularly true among young men who too often are ending up in prison instead of going to school or serving our military. so we have been trying to set enmentorship programs make sure they're aware of what is going on, provide job training. had a meeting with folks in new orleans, young men who just came from terrible circumstances, terrible neighborhoods, we want to make sure they're ware of how they can break the cycle and do right by themselves and
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ultimately do right by their families, and one of the young member who was sitting next to me was interested in enrolling in the marines but was worried that he had heard a rumor he might not be able to serve if he had tattoos. said i've met a lot of marines. don't think that's a problem. so -- but gives you a sense of some young people are so out of the loop and have so little exposure that they don't know where to go, and how to apply themselves in ways that allow them to citied. so we are working diligently on that, not just ourselves but businesses and our military leaders are helping out on this issue. young women, we have a whole nuther set of initiatives in the white house -- a white house council on women and girls to provide opportunity for them as
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well. i have to say, generally, the young women are doing bert than the young men. that's because you guy us are a little smarter. but obviously they need opportunities inch terms of what i'm going to miss the most? i meant what i said. the greatest privilege i have is serving as your commander-in-chief. when i travel around the world, every place i go, i see folks who are doing incredible work, and it's not typically fighting. a lot of the times it's helping train other countries, so they can secure themselves am lot of times it's helping on engineering projects or development projects or helping people after a natural disaster. you're ambassadors and spread good will around the world every single day at enormous sacrifice
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to yourself so i'll mills that a lot. the plane is nice, too. i got to admit. but my lease is running out. so, i'm hoping i'm not going to have to start taking off my shoes again, going through security. >> president obama today and his one 9/11 event, marking the day 4 , years ago, when america came under attack. he did not go to the pentagon this year. made a decision to keep it as low-key as possible. 14 years to the day after everything changed. [bell ringing] >> at the world trade center in lower manhattan, bells rang and the crowd fell silent to mark the moments each plane hit and each tower collapse. relatives read the names of nearly 3,000 people killed in the worst terror attack on american soil. >> edmund james white iii. >> james patrick white.
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>> my mother, muriel. it's been 14 years but for all of us here could be 100 years, still feel like yesterday and fresh in our hearts. >> my husband, michael, thank you for loving me and for continuing to watch over michael and angelina, and i miss you more than words can say. >> at the pentagon, workers unfurled an american flag over the spot where that plane crashed into the headquarters of the united states military. our defense secretary, ash carter, said he has a piece of the pentagon on his desk, a chunk of rubble that each defense secretary has passed on to the next. >> beneath this piece of indiana limestone reads a simplen description, reads: to honor the 184 people whose lives were lost, their families, and all those who sacrificed that we may live in freedom. we will never forget.
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>> and in shankesville, p.a., a new visitor center open, telling the story of the passengers and crew members who heard about the earlier attacks, apparently realized this was no ordinary hijacking. they tack on the terrorist, forced them to crash the plane into a field, we're told. according to the 9/11 commission they saved countless lives as the united states capitol or the white house -- >> the trajectory of our lives and the course of our country have been altered emmerli due to the events of september 11th. yet the one constant that remains sacred to that day is the message of bravery, selflessness, and heroism. >> and today, at the white house, the president and first lady observed a moment of silence at 8:46 a.m. the moment the first plane hit the north tower at the world trade center. our rick leventhal was there 14 years ago today and is there for
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us again. hello, rick. >> reporter: good afternoon, shepard. there's some healing happening now over these many 14 years. thanks in part to all the support, the relatives of the lost are now creating a family of their own amongst each other, helping each other out through the difficult times. and we are seeing that at this remembrance here again this year. and of course, time helps to ease the pain for some people. but there's still an incredibly difficult and challenging level of pain here. we saw it today. a lot of tears shed for the nearly 3,000 innocent lives taken in the attack on that clear, blue, september morning, which is eerily similar to the weather we're experiencing today. joe daniels, the president of the 9/11 memorial and museum, summed it up this way. >> there's a light at the end of the tunnel in the sense that while the losses are still hard to bear, there's so much love and compassion that people feel on the memorial. it's such a tradition now, it's a national obligation to read
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the names. so it helps. >> reporter: daniels says the progress of the site helps. the towers finished. the museum is now open and the monday a is easily accessible from the street. so a pretty moving tribute to the lives lost that day. to. >> rick leventhal on scene today. good to see you, thank you very much. the president, as i mentioned and showed you, holding a town hall meeting with members of the u.s. military to mark the attacks of 9/11 and john bussey is here, the associate editor of "the wall street journal." won a purr litter prize for the journal's coverage. the title "eye of the storm. one journey through desperation and chaos "and today he seems comfortable the city is safe, the police commissioner. so much has changed. >> so much has not changed. the conk of "the wall street journal --" the journal got the
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pulitzer, not just me. i'm get only the subway to come to work today and there are firemen getting on board to go down to the services. you are reminded that even though it was 14 years ago, in the consciousness of new york, particularly, but also the nation, that this feels like yesterday. and then to a certain extent what happens today is in a way a memorial day, not the memorial day. doesn't supplant what happens in may but something of a national memorial day for what happened on september 11th and what happened accident to september 11. afghanistan, iraq, lost more than 6,000 people killed in both wars. more than 50,000 people physically injured, tens of thousands more emotionally and mentally injured. i think that's what has happened with us today. that's why is resonates so much with the nation. it is more than just what happened september 11, 2001. >> every year i think, i used to
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go down and read names some and then you hope that one of these years you'll wake up and you're going to be able to just have a normal day. i don't mean forget bit but just have a normal day, and you walk outside today and the sky is that blue color again. >> boy, doesn't it remind you? >> it reps me apart. >> the weather does. and also it will happen to you again -- this is particular to people in new york and in washington near the pentagon. either you walk into the neighborhoods of new york, and you happen upon a fire station, and out in front of the fire station, very gracefully friend, the photographs of that firehouse's loss in 9/11. the five or six or seven, sometimes nine, firemen who got on to their fire engines, in youville, on the upper east side of new york and raced down to the world trade center and were killed. so you're rereminded in the constant way in new york, and again, i think it's because it's
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taken on such a larger meaning for this generation of americans. two wars, still conflict, concern about terrorism, all of those things weave into how we feel on this particular day. >> really do. the brave men and women who got on top of the pile for the first couple of days, they taught trying to save live little now. h. now they have all kind odd diseases and there's legislation in congress to get them the help o help they need. the news continues after this.
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e. >> breaking news and stunning developments in flushing, queens and, the united states tennis' bigger tournament of the year. serena williams just lost. serena was on her way to what would have been a calendar grand slam. first time that happened since steffi graf in 1988. she end up against an unseeded player today. an unseeded player from italy, named roberta vinci. and she beat her in three sets. and frankly we watched it in here. she made her look very unimpressive today. this roberta vinci, her passing shots were absolutely incredible. so, we're now set up for an all-italy final. the italian roberta vein -- vinci, who came in unseeded, and the number 26 seed won against a
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number two seed. an all-italy final in the united states open. never happened in the history of the tournament and they're dancing in the streets in tonight as the italians have taken it all and it's an all-italy final tomorrow at the united states open. nobody saw that coming. when panetta won this morning the commentator was like it will be a completely different match with serena because serena's game is so different. i thought, serena still has to play a match, and she lost in three sets. a marine died and six others critical after a seven-ton truck flipped over in routine training exercises at camp pendleton. 18 marines went to hop but did not elaborate about what went wrong. officials say it could take months to investigate this. in 2013, four marines tied at the camp while trying to clear explosives, also during training exercise. a massive construction crane today crashed through the roof
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of the grand mosque in saudi arabia. a disaster at mecca today. that is accord tolling investigators there who say at least 87 people are confirmed dead. this comes as hundreds of thousands of muslims get ready to take their annual pilgrimage to the holy city this month. 87 dead, scores injured, as the massive crane collapsed at one of the holiest sides in the world, at mecca. a 20-year-old man in florida is facing terror-related charges after the feds say he tried to help bomb a 9/11 memorial but the guy apparently claims he was just trying to catch a terrorist, his name is joshua goldberg. the prosecutors say an undercover fbi agent had been talking to this guy online since july. the fed says the man told the agent, thinking he was something other than than agent to plant a bomb at the stair climbing event
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this weekend in kansas city. it's an annual event there in which firefighters and first responders honor those who died in the attacks of 9/11. prosecutors say he called it the, quote, perfect place. they say the suspect even sent the agent instructions on how to build a bomb with a pressure cooker and rat poison to make sure it killed more people. and all the while, they say he claimed to be an isis supporter living in australia. after his arrest, prosecutors say the guy fessed up, but they've say he told investigators he intended for one of two things to happen. either he would warn police about the attack or the would-be bomber would kill himself. steve harrigan has the rest of the story. looks like he is either a troll or terrorist. >> reporter: that's right. either way he is in a lot of trouble. it's difficult to figure out exactly what the man is. he does have quite a history online, and this case giving information on how to build a bomb to an fbi informant. he said he wanted to warn police
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before any attack. he wanted to get credit for that attack. and the suspect's father says right now the interfamily is simply in a state of shock. >> we are not aware of anything at this point there has not been a prehearing. we have not been told any information. >> reporter: the 20-year-old actually used his mother's computer in the basement to goen online where he posed as a jihadsist in australia. >> what is next. >> reporter: right now he is in at the tension on the charge hoff give ought information to build a weapon of mass destruction this, 20-year-old could face 20 years in federal prison. >> steve harrigan, thank you. just last year, a russian president putin marched his troops into ukraine and took over the crimean peninsula. now sending soldiers to fight in syria as part of a secret deal in iran. the president spoke of this moments ago with his theory about what is happening there
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what does president putin have up his sleeve in we get into that next on this september 11th. growing up, we were german. we danced in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. when i first got on ancestry i was really surprised that i wasn't finding all of these germans in my tree. i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. the big surprise was we're not german at all. 52% of my dna comes from scotland and ireland. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com.
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just in to fox news channeling. a parade of heros to honor the three men who stopped the would-be terrorist from the tack on a crowded train in france. this is a live look, sacramento, california, where the heroes are being honored this september 11th for their bravery. the group roof friends jumped to action on the train in france. they stopped a man armed with an assault rifle, beat the crap out of him frankly, and hog-tied him until to the police arrived. tonight the heroes will be on
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with megyn telly as we listen to and hear the stories of the three member who dipotentially change the course of history, especially for the nation of france. testimony on "the kelly file" 9:00 eastern, 8:00 central. the fight in congress over the iran nuclear deal is over and the grandma is all but a done deal. republicans forced to vote on the measure to support me deal which aims to slow iran's nuclear program. the republicans didn't want the dole to go through. instead analysts say they wanted democratic supporters to go on the record backing the arrange: that way the g.o.p. can point fingers of the deal goes south. also the house republicans knew the deal did not get enough votes for the g.o.p. led house. the deal's fate was sealed last night when at some democrats voted to block opposition for the republicans. this sets things up for a frankly awkward meeting this fall. the white house expects
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president obama to meet with the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu, one of the strongest opponents of the dole. last time prime minister netanyahu was in the united states was to rail against the deal in congress. president obama did not meet with him during that trip in the spring. breaking news and just in, president obama said moments ago that russia's troop buildup in syria is, quote, doomed to failure. the remarks at the president's town hall meeting with the military members. the president said his administration will keep the pressure on russia as the country continues to send troops to syria, this comes we get word the russias are not just helping the dictator, they're now co-leading the plody war against the syrian men, women and children that was from the intelligence official. we reported on the buildup of russian troops and supplies in syria. secretary of state john kerry called his russian counterpart
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twice this week. now we're learning more about what is behind the russian troop surge. intelligent officials say the buildup began days after a secret meeting in moscow between iran's military commander and the russian president, vladimir putin. our jennifer griffin exposed the meeting in august. now we're told parts of the meeting involved iran iran and russia teaming up to support bash shall al-assad. the rightless leader who killed his own people, murdered innocent families with poise sonnous gas. according to one humans rights watchdog the death toll in syria's civil war is closing in on a quarter million people. now the killer behind it is getting a big boost, thanks to his pal, vladimir putin. jennifer griffin has the news in washington. the president went on to say he believes this is a sign that assad is getting more and more nervous, losing the conflict and rische of reaching out to the russians for help. if they're helping, that's a problem, isn't it. >> well, western intelligence
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wasn't sure at first why the shadowy iranian -- at had gone to moscow in july. our sources told us it was -- at the time it was to discuss arms deals. even though sewell man any was barred -- sewell man any was barred from traveling. no we're told the russian military buildup is a result of that meeting and the two sides discussed working together mill tearily to bowlster assad. the pentagon traced -- tracked an eight russian transport plane landing in syria today alone. >> any official reason for this russian escalation in syria and the partnership with around? >> well, the official reason the russians say they have been doing deals with syria, there's at least 1,000 russian fighters
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in syria. not advisers. even ukraine's president has expressed alarm. >> these day green men are landing in the hundreds in syria. >> i'm told that the russians who are now on theground in syria, some of them even tweeting out these selfies of them on the ground there are members of russia's elite special forces, the equivalent of u.s. army rangers. oddly the state department continues to publicly downplay the report. >> i don't know i would call it a buildup. it's unclear exactly what some of these military activities are all about. i don't know that we're ready to call it's buildup necessarily. >> israeli security officials have been quoted saying, soleimani and iran have sent hundreds of fighters into syria in recent days to work with the russian. >> that's weird end don't want to call it a buildup. help us understand that. >> what is strange is there's been a disconnect from what we have heard at the podiums both
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here at the pentagon and state department. they've been downplaying this for several weeks now. even though we keep pointing out the buildup of russian troops and forces. today it's interesting that the president finally in the troop talk at fort meade, said -- acknowledged the russian troop buildup and said his officials will be continuing to reach out to russia and he called it -- he said it would be, quote, doomed to failure. today we heard the state department spokesman say that russia could join an antiisil coalition but should not support assad. right now it's very clear that russia is not listening to any of these pleas from the state department not to get involved further. >> that's crystal clear. jennifer griffin at the pentagon. thank you. same thing with crima. now they're trying to get a land bridge and stand around and pretend like it's not happening. like a little kid. close your eyes, doesn't mean no one else can see you. they can see you. this is -- baghdad bob action
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happening here? wildfires raging in california but now they're threatening one of the state's most iconic natural wonders. a grove of trees that is thousands of years old, and sarah has the details over here at bat 7. what's happened? >> it's been a particularly bad year for wildfires. this is the worst wildfire season since 2006. the national fire center reports that over 8.5 million acres have burned this year. and now they're threatening -- the fires threatening the giant sequoia 2003s and -- trees and they're considered a national treasure. there's 25 stories and can weigh over 12 million-pound and some of them are more than 3,000 years old. >> one tree, 12 million-pounds? >> yes. and they're so old, going back to bc time. so they're remarkable trees, and the current fire that is threatening these trees is actually in central california.
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it's east of fresno in the grant grove area, and local officials say, given the drought, they're just not taking any chances. a local fire department is clearing a big area around this particular grove of second company ya, setting up springers and doing what they took protect these trees. >> have to save those. >> absolutely. >> thank you, sarah. a really disgusting situation in hungary. migrants being treated like animals. police holding people cages. >> vice-president joe biden gets emotional talking about the 2016 race for the white house. the news continues in a moment.
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hey, what's up? i'm ted. rudy and i have a lot of daily rituals. namaste. stay. taking care of our teeth is one of them. when i brush my teeth, he gets a milk-bone brushing chew. just another way to keep ourselves healthy. i'll go change. a fox report now. many families escaping terror and war in the middle east have to live like animals in europe. that's the word from the wife of an austrian politician who released this video of a packed refugee camp in southern
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hungary. police there tossed sandwiches into the crowd. the white house plans to accept 10,000 syrian refugees in the next year. a jump from the 1500 the u.s. has welcomed since the war broke out but european leaders strongly disagree on how to handle the crisis. there are 4.1 million refugees and we're taking so thousand. nations are rejecting a quota system to spread out refugees. one woman who arrived in germany says she is thankful she sir individual. >> what the people are sinking in the sea. >> rail service being cut. many trials ahead.
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his son who died of brain cancer in may. the vice-president opened up about one of their last conversations. >> and he said, dad, i know how much you love me. you have to promise me something. promise me you're going to be all right? because no matter what happens, dad, i'm going to be all right. promise me. >> the vice-president said his son had great courage and great empathy. he also talked about what it takes to be a presidential candidate. saying, nobody has a right in my view, to seek the presidency unless they're willing to give it 110%. >> they can look at the folks out there and say, i promise you, you have my whole heart, my whole soul, my energy, and my passion to do this, and i would be lying if i said that i knew i was there. >> in fact he said the process can really overwhelm you. team fox coverage now. campaign carl cameron.
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let's first turn to petey doocy. the vice-president spoke at an event today. >> the vice-president spoke at a 9/11 commemoration just as he has for the last several years and as vice-president cheney did before him. this year's remarks can be seen through a different lens since biden shares the peopling of loss many families have struggled with for a decade and a half. >> this is an important day of remembrance, but it's a tough day. it's a tough day for all of you who lost buddies, lost friends, even tougher for the family members. >> reporter: last night the vp spoke out about how events like that are what make him reluctant to run. no because there's sad it's because his son is so much on his mind and he could break down at any time. he doesn't have one foot in 2016
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race because of that. >> always an emotional guy. gate sense from how the people are reacting? >> he is a hilt with iowa caucus-goers. just about everybody who is likely to town out, 91% find him to be honest and trustworthy. bernie sanders is lower, hillary clinton is a lot lower, biden says he is not thinking about how clinton is doing or what fundraisers are doing. his decision that there is no timetable for willey just about how he is feeling. >> thank you. runs -- a poll shows donald trump on top in iowa, and also as the candidate whom republicans say would never get their vote. the new quinnipiac survey shows donald trump with 27% in iowa, just as in other recent polls, ben carson is second with 21%.
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anybody else -- nobody else breaks out of single digits. look at the epic fall of the former front runner, scott walker. wow. he grew up in iowa, and he now at 3%. down from 18%. just two moms ago. but trump's rice to the top comes with a twist. 25% of runs in iowa surveyed say they would never support him. former florida governor jeb bush next on the list with 23%. then the new jersey governor, chris christie. carl cameron is live in washington, outsiders are really sort of lapping what is been called the best g.o.p. field in decades. what happened? >> reporter: trump. they got trumped. or trump happened. and scott walker is a great example. he led the polls in iowa just in july, and now is literally running tenth, a precipitous fall to say the least. trump and carson in the 20s in and nobody in the teens.
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so now you see trump beginning to sort of attack carson's faith and his skills as a world renowned neurosurgeon and comes bush and jindal, rick perry has been attacking trump for quite some time. jindal calls trump a narcissistic madman, and walker started out strong in iowa. shot to the top of the polls and in the last six weeks has gone to the back side. eight candidates in the q poll are seen favor my by 60% or more of g.o.p. caucus goers, trump is also in the group. when you look at there, favorable, 60%, unfavorable, 35. having said that, trump and bush are polarizing between 20 and 25% of them, as you showed in the earlier poll, republicans will never vote for either bush or trump. not good numbers for them. very, very early. and iowa and new hampshire and south carolina, i'm going to say this to you every afternoon -- they don't make up their minds until the last week or two. >> that's right. you're spot on.
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i was watching gretchen's hour and saw dr. carson in ferguson. people were surprised he went. >> well, maybe, but he has actually been talking about race and going to ball more and other places where there's been racial strife regularly. he give a news conference, and to give you an idea what happens when you get close to donald trump and you're in second place and have broken away from the pack, ben carson was on all three cable news channels, simultaneously, all of them took his news conference, and he faithfulsed lots of questions -- faced lots of questions, heard them all before, and was calm and shows what happens when the outsiders begin to break away and lead the news media, starts becoming big to them and what happens to the rest of the candidates the donors tend to lead them. makes hard to raise money when you're watching trump and carson get all the attention. >> i was watch thing to these channels, everybody was on
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dr. carson, the president of the united states started watching for this 9/11 event, i'm watching on other tvs and nobody went to it. everybody stayed with dr. carson, i was like, wow, how times have changed. good to see you, carl. what does chris wallace think about donald trump? i wonder if he'll tell us the truth. he'll get true with you every now and then. maybe i'll ask him. chris, tell me the truth. that's next. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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missed you, but in any case -- >> thank you. some of does. >> all i can say -- go on. >> i'm note going to get dirty yet. >> yes. everything that i have thought about this guy, didn't think he would run help ran i. thought he would be in the trouble after what he said about hispanics and his announcement speech. he wasn't. i thought he would be in trouble with what he said about mccain. he wasn't. he got into a flap with all of news the fox debate. he did nothing but go up in polls. at a certain point you say there's something going on i don't fully understand and will just sit back and watch. clearly tapped -- anger is too easy a word -- a frustration and just a sense of being fed up with politics and politicians as usual, and is he unconventional? absolutely. people seem to like that. >> the carly fiorina face thing, i'm like, if this doesn't do it, nothing else will.
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that just goes to show the tiffs was real. this women thing is real, said krauthammer. >> well, that's what krauthammer said. he says what he says. >> you sound scared of him. >> the point is people seem to see something more than that going on here. it's becoming a cliche, about two weeks, authenticity, and you talked about authenticity with joe biden. authenticity with donald trump. not politically correct. people say i know who he is, real person, and they seem more interested in him than in policies, which he hasn't spelled out much yes. >> jeb bush got $20 million. when these attack ads start coming -- and they'll come -- i wonder if that will change things. >> you know -- >> i just wonder. >> i don't know. he has already started the ads, and he has had the ad about where trump said he was a
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democrat, said i think differently than people in iowa and all of that. didn't seem to hurt him much in the polls. still at 30%. let me ask you a question. if you had to decide right now, would you trade places -- if you were jeb bush -- would you trade places and be donald trump? >> would i trades and be donald trump? hell no. >> anybody in the campaign who wouldn't like to be in donald trump's situation right now at 27, 30, 32% in the polls? >> the rebels are favored by 30 tomorrow. i'm going down to oxford for that. >> i mean, you talk about somebody ducking. look at scott walker, perfect example. he was at 18% two months ago and now he is at 3%? you think he wouldn't like to be in trump's situation with all of, quote, trumps problems? >> we're playing fresno state. >> what? >> we're playing fresno state. >> what did you think about roberto vinci beating serena
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williams. >> cooperate believe -- couldn't believe it. were you watching? >> i was watching it. >> heck, yeah. cooperate -- couldn't believe it. the moment was probably so big, trying to win all the grand slams in a calendar year, nobody has done it since steffi graf, and you could see the emotion in here. >> this is so great, folks. here's me little thing. i take this bright, shiny object and put it up here and shep follows -- forget about donald trump. let's look at the -- >> forgot about donald trump. >> i've missed talking to you. >> i do, too. i missed talk to you last week when the rebels lost. >> how do you el -- scored 76 points -- >> have three quarterbacks who have never been started, all needed to get reps in. needed to run the offense, and nobody wants to win like that, by that many points but a lot of times they would run offtackle
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and score. what are you going to do? next week is a big test. we are playing alabama next week. that's a big one. >> well, that's not a test. we know what's going to happen there. >> we beat them last year, chris. we beat them last year in the friendly confines of the stadium. katy perry was there and we hung out. i know you're jealous. >> i'd like to meet katy perry. >> i'm sure she will be there. all the cool people come to oxford. >> i thought you said waitness tuscaloosa. >> that's for bama. we play lsu at home. we play tax a&m at home. play alaska at home -- play arkansas at home. >> not mailing -- playing mississippi state. >> they have some in tailgating going on. they're going to bring in people -- fema trailers. >> don't go around with zack prescott. >> i hope there can be two
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losses in one game. hope for that. chris, you'll be doing the "fox news sunday" this weekend before soup, right? >> i will. >> will you talk politics or something else? >> well, sell the program. >> chris will talk with one of the run candidates, the ohio governor john kashich. chris will also have the latest on the refugee crisis in europe, and talk with ron johnson and chris murphy. that's is in sunday on "fox news sunday." check yourlollis listings, how was that. >> good. >> great to see you, kiss the wife. we'll be right back. hi my name is tom. i'm raph. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom.
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we figure you probably don't have time to wait on hold. that's why at xfinity we're hard at work, building new apps like this one that lets you choose a time for us to call you. so instead of waiting on hold, we'll call you when things are just as wonderful... [phone ringing] but a little less crazy. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. two weeks into a string of shootings along a busy interstate in phoenix,
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investigators now say it looks like they got a person. certainly have a person they're calling a person of interest. they tell us they had been questioning two people, man and woman. they let the woman go. they're questioning the man. they say we will be speaking to him all day long. they think they're on to something. a total of 11 shootings confirmed so far. william is in phoenix. we're now hearing from the person of interest? is that a right? >> reporter: that's right. the stop was made about ten miles west on the i-10, about another four miles north of basically downtown, which is where i'm at right now. again, police say the man is not a suspect. here's what he had to say from the back of a squad car. >> they tell you why they pulled you over? >> when i got in the truck they rammed into the back of the truck and throw me on the ground, and my mom was guns all over her. they haven't told us and keep on asking them and they're like, can't tell you. can't tell you.
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but the -- i got back injuries and they just laid me down on the ground. [inaudible] >> reporter: look at the photos of the white chevy tahoe. looks like police blocked him in a parking lot of a convenience store. tells me that basically they could have followed him off the freeway, gone a few miles north and made the stop. this is a city of 4.5 million people. 250,000 people. drive on this freeway every day, shepard. people are being very vigilant. you can see a sign down here saying to call the hitman hotline if you see anything. back to you. when your windshield needs fixed... trust safelite. our exclusive trueseal technology means a strong reliable bond.
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the best week since early july. things locking up at least for the moment. news brecks out, we'll break in. until then, good day to you and yours. neil cavuto is next. >> you're right, the markets are enjoying the first up week since around the end of august, something they've not seen for a while: a 300-point runup on the week. details on the special day and anniversary day. on the view in new york and the view in washington, the freedom tower on the left, the pentagon on the right. but on a day remember with what horrible guys did on a horrible day to innocent victims, fears it could happen again because we're funding the group that many say was behind it then and is behind a lot of awful attacks on americans even to this day. mike is one of those veterans against the big deal, the
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