tv Happening Now FOX News September 17, 2015 8:00am-9:01am PDT
8:00 am
>> happy hour coming up. thanks for being with us. plenty more to discuss. >> have a great day. "happening now" starts now. >> was a contentious often personal battle, donald from dominating the gop debate from center stage, he was the target of frequent attacks. many analysts scored the match giving it to carly fiorina. welcome to "happening now". i am john scott. >> i am patty ann brown. the leading contenders came out swinging taking on the front royal donald trump channeling his confrontational style fielding questions on range of issues from foreign affairs to gay marriage and abortion and making the case for why they think they should be commander in chief. it happened at the reagan presidential library.
8:01 am
ronald reagan often cited by many in the gop field. >> donald trump said the following about you, quote, look at that face, would anyone vote for that, imagine that as the face of the next president. >> i think women all of the country heard very clearly what mr. trump was saying. [applause] >> i never attacked him and his look and there is plenty of subject matter right there. >> i know ben doesn't think that about me. i am sure he was talking about one of the other guys. >> excuse me one second. i didn't want. >> more energy tonight. >> i do give energy. if they get their news in spanish i want them to hear that from me, not a translator. >> the issue in 2003, i suggested to president bush that he not go to war. i just want that on the record. >> 40 years ago i smoked marijuana and i admit it.
8:02 am
others might not want to say in front of 25 million people. i am not happy i just did it. >> i think you are going to see a big impact. >> you heard dr. carson >> reporter: i've read your crystal ball report this morning, you pick one winner and loser from this debate. want to go with those names? >> tours and there's a consensus about the winner. people actually do like seeing carly fiorina. she did well enough to merely guarantees the fact that she will be in both future debate. she was a big important addition to that debate and made it a lot more interesting and in some
8:03 am
cases confrontational but the big losers scott walker. he has fallen further than any other candidate. . is second but walker has fallen further than anyone, down 2%, 3%. he needed some important good strong moments said he had one or two but it wasn't enough. he didn't connect. his donors will be very concerned. >> what is the purpose at this point of a debate like this? most of the people tuning in are tuning in to watch their favorite candidates. >> yes. i have wondered myself what early debates do. the first one fox had that introduce the candidates to a very large audience, those of us who follow politics minute by minute, we know these people, that people normally do not know these people. the first one is important for
8:04 am
that. by this time people are choosing sides so they really do tune in to cheer for their candidate like they cheer for their favorite team. doesn't mean people can't change candidates. in the afterglow of a debate every single quit, every moment seems important. if we talk about this next week, 95% is forgotten. >> what about donald trump? how did he do in terms of buttressing are hurting his standing in the field? >> he didn't do as well in this debate as in the fox debate and there's a reason. there was a large crowd at the fox debate and he was playing to the crowd and they were responding. that was a tiny group last night at the reagan library and you know who was in there? the republican establishment. they ran not responsive at all to donald trump's quips and
8:05 am
points. he felt he wasn't getting the feedback he normally does and as a result he was flat. i have to be honest, three hour debate, he was -- i was flat by the end of it. >> is there a performance here is that you think is going to wind up in this race. there are people so much on the bubble last night they won't be able to continue? >> chris christie was near the point of being eliminated. he had a good solid performance last night, he had several of those moments, that is what candidate wants, wants to be included in this summary. maybe maybe he saved his position for the next debate on october 28th. he is another one on the bubble,
8:06 am
he didn't have the moment chris christie did, all of the candidates did well and one or two of the questions, after all that was a three hour debate, once or twice over three hours you probably shouldn't be on stage. >> donald trump got the most questions and the most time on stage. we before we go we want to talk about the people, we have been talking about people who want to occupy the white house. in your latest crystal ball you focus on the current president, you say president obama's approval numbers are remarkably steady, somewhere in the mid to high 40% range, most of his presidency. why is that significant? for >> is significant, he is in the middle 40s, edging up to 47, he has had the most stable ratings overall win you look at the
8:07 am
whole six years, of any president since and including harry truman, below 50. a party in order to get a third term in the white house i think has to be 50 or above, somewhere in the general vicinity. he has some work to do or he is going to have to generate a very high turnout among minorities and he won't be on the ballot, tougher to do it when you are not on the ballot. >> very quickly if joe biden were to run he would have a tough sell. >> he has a tough sell for lots of reasons. he would inherit all the difficulties of the obama terms and the pluses as well. can degenerate the turnout barack obama did in 2008, 2012? i kind of doubt it. we will see. i am sure obama would campaign extensively for the he is the underdog for the democratic nomination even if he runs.
8:08 am
sphere jon: thanks, larry. you probably noticed the dramatic backdrop that last night's debate. air force one, the one president reagan used, modified boeing 77 that ended service in 1973 during richard nixon's presidency, reagan flew over 660,000 miles to 26 different foreign nations, 46 states, it carried seven presidents before it was retired in 2001 when president george w. bush flew to waco, texas after going to an airfield in san bernardino, calif. ford was taken apart. from there it was trucked to simi valley and reassembled there at the reagan library. today is a centerpiece of the library's air force one pavilion which also includes the presidential motorcade and the interior of a pub president reagan visited in ireland. >> now pending showdown over the threat of another government
8:09 am
shutdown. republicans, the white house and democrats gearing up for a fight over federal funding for planned parenthood. after the emergence of controversial videos. congressional correspondent mike emanuel is live on capitol hill. >> congressional leaders are working on a short-term spending deal to keep the government open october 1st, house conservatives want to use this opportunity to strike funding for planned parenthood. a point john boehner addressed a short time ago. >> also vote to strengthen legal protections for infants that are born alive and strengthen some practices or address some of the practices we have seen in these videos. my colleagues on the democratic side in the house and senate should heed what the american people are saying. is time to stop these horrific practices and the selling of babies parts in america. >> the house is debating a measure to defund planned parenthood for a year.
8:10 am
lawmakers will consider a bill to strengthen protections against late term abortions. a key house democrats as the timing is risky with the government running out of money. >> would rather we debating that, they are bringing this up one more time and if mitch mcconnell stands by what he says he doesn't want to get into this and has made it clear that this is an exercise in futility but i think again we are wasting time. >> many lawmakers heard outrage from their constituents, and to cover videos this summer where officials talked about selling body parts, tissues and other graphic details. however the topic in the house notes even if congress passes cutting planned parenthood's money there's only so much they can cut. >> only 10% of what they get from the government comes from appropriated moneys, that 10%.
8:11 am
the balance, some $550 million is an entitlement part, the mandatory spending over which we have no control on the appropriations. the moneys that we would be able to defund on the appropriations is only 10%. >> leaders on capitol hill to not want to talk about a government shutdown, they're trying to avert that, pass a short-term continuing funding bill but there is some fight in rank-and-file members. >> live in capitol hill, thanks. >> powerful earthquake forces a million people forces the blood of their homes in chile, the 8.3 magnitude quake hit. several coastal towns flooded from small tsunami waves. the earthquake hitting off chilly lasted three minutes with travers so strong they were felt across south america. coming up in the second hour of
8:12 am
"happening now" we will speak with a seismologist with the u.s. geological survey. thousands of refugees costs at the border of hungary ramping up defense and keeping migrants out. three -- they're trying to reroute themselves trying to get to northern europe. the pentagon makes a major announcement concerning gitmo as the white house works to close the detention facility. we want to hear from you. to do you think won last night's republican debate? live chat is up on foxnews.com/happeningnow, join the conversation. remembered. it's good. does it make the short list? you remembered that too. yea, i'm afraid so. knowing our clients personally is what we do. it's okay. this is what we've been planning for. thanks, bye. and with over 13,000 financial advisors, we do it a lot. it's why edward jones is the big company that doesn't act that way.
8:15 am
iflike i love shrimp, red lobster's endless shrimp... ...is kind of a big deal. it's finally back, with as much shrimp as you want, any way you want 'em. one taste of these new pineapple habanero coconut shrimp bites, and i already want more. they even brought back wood-grilled teriyaki shrimp! yeah, you heard me: teriyaki. and really: what's not to love about... ...buttery garlic shrimp scampi? here, the sweet, spicy, crispy possibilities are as endless as the shrimp. and yeah, they're endless, but they won't last forever. >> major developments regarding gitmo. transferred from the detention facility from t of morocco. ash carter informed congress of the move, currently 115 inmates are behind bars, the obama
8:16 am
administration works to close the facility. >> thousands of refugees going to croatia, to northern europe. using teargas or water cannons to turn back those who want to enter hungary. tens of thousands of people trying to escape terror and violence in the middle east, stretched to the limits trying to deal with this wave of humanity. he is live from london. >> europe pulling itself apart over this refugee cases, they continued to surge pointing the finger at one another, after a while it gets worse. there were violent scenes as people tried to get through the new razor wire fences.
8:17 am
the ring leader of the lie at who they say is arrested on suspicion of terrorism but refugees continue to come finding new routes, new borders and more welcoming countries to pass through. croatia put up buckets for and taking them to camps where they can continue the journey. many others continue to camp out by the hungarian border hoping for a change in policy and leniency which the hungarians seem unlikely to give. the hungarian foreign minister saying the refugees should, quote, wait out the end of the war as close as possible to their homes. the main goal for the migrants is germany believe in germany is backtracking on its pledge to allow refugees to come freely also imposing new border controls, it just can't cope but the flow of refugees across perilous seas from turkey continues without to 100 boats and their arriving on island of lesbos, one of the principal
8:18 am
entry points into your confounding e.u. ministers. the lack of any real policy means countries are asking their and best interests not the interests of the european union and all this against the backdrop of the syrian conflict which if anything is getting worse. many people say that until that can be addressed, and the brutality of bashar al-assad can be finished this problem will continue and the migrants will continue to come. >> wildfires raging through the west claiming lives and destroying hundreds of homes as fire crews battle to contain them. will the weather bring any relief? >> oh no! oh no! oh my god! >> taken away kicking can screaming, court documents revealing more of what happens when an american airlines flight was diverted because of an unruly passenger. when a wildfire raged through elkhorn ranch,
8:19 am
the sudden loss of pasture became a serious problem for a family business. faced with horses that needed feeding and a texas drought that sent hay prices soaring, the owners had to act fast. thankfully, mary miller banks with chase for business. and with greater financial clarity and a relationship built for the unexpected, she could control her cash flow, and keep the ranch running. chase for business. so you can own it.
8:22 am
>> devastating flash floods killed 18 people in utah. the national guard called in to help as people recover from a fist disaster while the search goes. william has the latest. >> let's begin in hillsdale where the search continues for the missing 6-year-old boy swept away monday in the flash flood. 13 women and children died when they tried to escape the rising waters. their van and suv carried with what looks more like a fast-moving river than a dry creek and inch of rain. the national guard is coming through debris and a 7 mile section of short creek for the missing boy. deceased include three sisters. three in that van with eight children, the other was in the
8:23 am
suv with five kids. three boy survived by swimming to safety. the victims all belong to a polygamous breakaway sect of the mormon church. >> they have vibrant personalities, they were fantastic with their children, pay attention to detail kind of people. >> these were beautiful, people. not only on the outside but the inside. >> 20 miles north rangers are searching for one missing hiker. the bodies of six others already recovered. the group for men and three women picked up their hiking permit monday morning at 8:00 a.m.. rangers want them flash flooding was, quote, probable but could not legally stop from. heavy rains began at 2:30 but by then it was too late to contact the hikers. search resumes today. >> working much more slowly,
8:24 am
looking through debris piles, looking at the high water mark. >> the national where there's -- national weather service says more people died in floods than by lightning, tornadoes and hurricanes. >> how quickly those conditions can change. thank you. >> much-needed rain falling in california where wildfires are raging. the steady rain has helped firefighters gain more ground on the valley fire but that fire has claimed one life and we are confirming a second person has died in the fire. maria molina is live in the fox extreme weather center. the fire crews continuing to get help from the weather. >> we needed that rain and got it from a big storm system, producing flash flooding across these areas out west, the ground is very dry. any bit of rainfall will create a flash flood threat out there
8:25 am
because of runoff but you ask will the relief continue over the next few days? the forecast does not call for that. we have that storm system in parts of the west, the rain is starting to end across many of these states and now we see a return at least across california for hot temperatures to return and also dry conditions are expected to continue. dry conditions will overspread much of the west over the next few days and we will see that some accident. the forecast is again temperatures not that bad forte, upper 70s. by friday temperatures climb into the upper 80s and they will continue to climb across california as we head into this weekend. when you look at how many areas are impacted by wildfires we're looking at the rockies along the west coast, washington state, oregon and departs of northern california. we need that rain out here, we need date humidity to continue and the storm system bringing areas of rain but a lot of it is
8:26 am
winding down across the pacific northwest where you still have the onshore flow bringing in that rain but for california most of it is over with. that storm system little more rain forecast across northern areas, washington, montana, wyoming but really coming to an end. we mention temperatures climbing, look at early next week, 90 degrees on sunday where we have impact from the huge fire, the forecast not good, it does look like conditions improve as we head into midweek, and very hot temperatures? >> thank you. >> the soldier at the controversial prison swap with the taliban, making his first court appearance. y bowe bergdahl's attorneys say he should not face a court-martial for desertion. live with details on that?
8:27 am
>> and american airlines flight was diverted, court documents are now revealing about the incident on board. >> what do you mean? e. 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. hi mi'm raph. tom. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, and we've got your back. legalzoom. legal help is here. ♪ look how beautiful it is... honey, we need to talk. we do? i took the trash out. i know - and thank you so much for that. i think we should get a medicare supplement insurance plan. right now? whether you're new to medicare or not,
8:28 am
you may know it only covers about 80% of your part b medical expenses. it's up to you to pay the difference. so think about an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. i did a little research. with a medicare supplement plan, you'll be able to stay with your doctor... oh you know i love that guy. mmmmhmmm. these types of plans let you visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. and, there are no networks. is this a one-size fits all kind of thing? no. there are lots of plan options. it all depends on what we need. and how much we want to spend. call now to request your free [decision guide]. it could help you find an aarp medicare supplement plan that's right for you. what happens when we travel? the plans go with us. anywhere in the country. i like that. you know what else? unitedhealthcare insurance company has
8:29 am
years and years of experience. what do you say? i'm in. join the millions already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance... plans endorsed by aarp. remember, all medicare supplement plans help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. and could really save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. you'll be able to choose your own doctor or hospital as long as they accept medicare patients. and with these plans, there could be low or no copays. you do your push-ups today? prepare to be amazed. don't wait. call today to request your free [decision guide], and find the aarp medicare supplement plan to go the distance with you. go long.
8:30 am
8:31 am
now he's making his first court appearance as the army begins an article xxxii hearing to determine if he will face a military trial. fort sam houston, texas. >> does hearing underway as we speak and the building behind me is entirely possible that sergeant bowe bergdahl could testify at this hearing. it is on the table. we haven't been told that he will but it is possible because think of this as the mini trial. the defense and the prosecution will call witnesses, present evidence, they can cross-examine. this is the military equivalence of a civilian grand jury proceeding except it is open court. what will happen following this? everything presented in the hearing will be written up in a report and in the coming weeks the commanding general of the u.s. army will ultimately decide
8:32 am
if the 29y soldier will stand trial or if be reached. it is possible he could plead not guilty, have a trial, testified, here is why i left. >> bowe bergdahl's primary counsel is asking the court to release his client's interrogation transcript. he was interrogated extensively when he was released from the taliban. his lawyer believes information contained in that will help bowe bergdahl in what he calls the court of public opinion. he says he's trying to counter the negative publicity he feels his client is receiving due to
8:33 am
the controversial nature of this case. >> keeping an eye on that, thank you. >> court documents revealing more about an incident involving an unruly passenger on an american airlines flight. that is 25-year-old danielle reyes who was kicking the seat in front of her, the guy complained and witnesses sank she punched him in the shoulder. a flight attendant intervened, she grabbed her, kissed her and punched her in the face. flight attendants try to put her in flex cuffed, she fought them. it was a big drama. we have for prosecutor keith evans. thank you for joining us. after all of that the flight attendants could not get the cuts on her, the pilot goes over the intercom and says if there are any able-bodied men out there please help restrain this woman, even then after she got the cuffs on she is trying tofi
8:34 am
passengers. obviously a nightmare but is it the airline's fault? >> i would say it is not. something like this is not foreseeable. unless someone can prove this woman was intoxicated or showed signs of mental instability before the flight even took off, you can't say the airline is at fault. clearly this woman had something wrong to be made in such an unruly behavior but at this point is more a criminal case as opposed to civil liability. >> there are charges and we will get to that soon. the plan is heading from miami to chicago. they had to stop the indianapolis to get this woman of. as she is taken into custody she need this officer and a fire resulting in a 90 minute delay. is in actionable in any way? >> it will be criminal, the airline didn't have any way to anticipate this type of completely erratic behavior. this is not the type of thing you see frequently on a flight. i have never seen anything like
8:35 am
this. is bad, so many witnesses, hundreds of other passengers, also very credible witnesses in terms of flight attendants and law enforcement that witnessed this behavior. sort of mental capacity or intoxication in voluntary at that i really see her being convicted. >> those videos as well. unfortunately people misbehave everywhere. if you are at a baseball stadium and someone acts up you can joel the stadium liable, same situation here. the airline is not responsible unless there's evidence in advance. what about suing the individual who caused the delay, the drama. >> with a litigious society, anything and everyone, what by think will happen is to ever, they won't have that much luck,
8:36 am
paying out what damage was to pay. they may have a judgment against her but they don't get into that. >> we had criminal charges, they are being considered. >> it makes sense. when you talk about something on an aircraft, and that type of criminal behavior, suspicion could be linked to that. i think the feds are right to consider moving forward with federal charges. >> the american civil liberties union filed a federal lawsuit against the city of honolulu, city officials, homeless people of their food and other belongings during raids on homeless encampments. family say they lost medication, identification documents and other valuables in fees. several years ago honolulu and the storing of property on sidewalks, city officials say we are following the law but
8:37 am
lawyers say actually the law requires you to give 24 hours' notice before you take these people's property and after you take it you have to give them a chance to get it back. instead what is happening, they are destroying the property immediately allegedly. is that the crux of the legal issue did you >> it certainly is. when they had another option they had two requirements by the courts that you point from out exactly right, the notice requirement given in an opportunity to retain their valuables at a later time. i understand the safety concern which is why they were doing these that you have to give people opportunity and these people suffered heart from medication, valuables, they don't have much to begin with so they should have respected that notice requirement. >> the aclu has asked for a stay on further raids. the city said the case goes to the courts, they will keep doing these raids. do you think the aclu will get a stay or be successful in that request? >> i don't think they will.
8:38 am
a lot of citizens are complaining there are so many homeless people they have mental health issues and may be bothering other citizens so they're looking at a protection of the community as a whole so i don't think they will be successful. >> an economic issue for honolulu, big-time tourist city, that is a part of this. >> absolutely, thank you for joining us. >> right now we are getting a first look at previously classified presidential daily brief from the kennedy and johnson administrations in the 60s. the c i a releasing key analyses of major events from that time including documents and the cuban missile crisis, israel's six day war and vietnam. kathryn heritage live in washington with more on that. >> the cia released 2500 pages of documents known as the president's daily brief standing
8:39 am
at eight year period in the 1960s. after decades of resistance the cia declassified briefings considered the most of force if assessment produced by the intelligence community of the time and shared with president kennedy and lyndon johnson. the briefings, the cuban missile crisis including this matter of confirmed sites for surface-to-air missiles, suspected sites and runways that make aircraft. there granular in detail, and read in part seven of 12 sites observed in this occasion have missiles on launchers. some are operational. these hearken back to a simpler time. >> president kennedy and in johnson's day, the soviets and clients as communication networks were given in the pre-world. they carried little or no legal
8:40 am
ambiguity. terrorists we face today use the same channels everyone else does. >> presidential daily brief after the kennedy assassination. and lee harvey oswald had recently visited mexico city were true, and oswald visited cuban and soviet embassies, trying to arrange visass, to the u.s.s.r. and havana. and some of the most important and intriguing events of the 20th century in the 1967 middle east war. it harkens back to a time when it was a lot simpler than it was today. >> what information, thank you. backlash against police officers shot or killed in the line of duty as law enforcement widely criticized for its action.
8:41 am
and in some parts of the country, what is behind the dollar and what needs to be done. another honor for three american hero's credited with stopping but terror attack, we will have that next. did you know that good nutrition is critical for brain health? brain food, hmmm. ensure has b vitamins that help support brain health - now that's smart nutrition. ensure's complete balanced nutrition has 26 vitamins and minerals and 9 grams of protein. ensure. take life in.
8:44 am
>> fox news alert, live to the white house, president obama meeting with three brave americans credited with stopping a terror attack on a train bound for paris. three childhood friends jumped into action when an armed man threatened passengers on that train. working together they helped to subdue the suspect.
8:45 am
later today the three men attended an awards ceremony with defense secretary carter where they will all get medals for their bravery. >> speaking of bravery police officers shot or killed in the line of duty making headlines across the country. law-enforcement comes under fire for its tactics and treatment of suspects. at the same time the violent crime rate is rising in this country sparking our next guest to write about the backlash in an odd bit in the wall street journal titled america's legal order begins to fray where she writes in part, quote, something more fundamental than even public safety may be at stake. there are signs of the the gold itself breaking down in urban areas which there is total lack of respect for police. the purpose feel more empowered to carry guns because they know that we are running scared. heather macdonald, thomas smith fellow at the man had an institute wrote that op-ed and joins us now. you point out the fact that in
8:46 am
dozens of major cities in the united states the crime rate is dramatically up. >> 35 cities are seeing a very big spike in violent crime. the big cities, especially those with urban populations, lock themselves. >> we saw what happened in baltimore. is that we were talking about? >> i'm talking about scary situation when they go to use lawful authority, they are surrounded by increase hostile crowds, many riots breaking out. on a regular basis not covered by the police. officers go to make an arrest people are interfering with their authority taking cellphone cameras in their faces, and as a result officers are backing off. they are not engage in the type of proactive policeing that brought us the most extraordinary crime drop of last 20 years that has brought crime
8:47 am
to record-breaking lows in this country. >> you quoted one new york city officer who said they won't get out of the car these days for reasonable suspicion stop, a kind of things a year or two ago they would have done routinely. >> this is the kind of thing the left has seized upon saying it is racist. it is not. the police go where victims are calling for help. and they are trying to interrupt crime before it ripens into a felony and given the fact that minorities are overwhelmingly the victims of violent crime in this country that has to put them in minority neighborhoods but the reason cops are there is they believe black lives matter. when cops back off, what we are seeing is crime goes way up. but is more significant is the fact that law itself, law and order is losing its legitimacy thanks to the nonstop campaign against it from the obama administration on down through the mainstream media that can't
8:48 am
go a day without perpetuating some why about the fact that the criminal justice system is racist or police unfairly single out minorities. >> does this in your view start, you mention the media, there are many characters involved but the at ministries and bears blame? >> it absolutely does. it is shocking to meet the president obama is willing to to repeat an absolute fabrication of the criminal justice system which is the disproportionate share of minorities in prisons is the result of racism, not crime. that's sort of message repeated again and again starts to fray the very fabric of law-and-order and we are playing with fire in this country. unless the national leadership steps up and starts to tell the truth about policeing and our criminal justice system which is fair and just. >> the hands up don't shoot me and started with the michael
8:49 am
brown shooting the >> was then under myth but brown is treated like a martyr. but that was a myth, the justice department show that the press has never given up that concede. >> we will point viewers back to your article. >> investors keeping a close eye on the federal reserve as we await an important decision on interest rates. in two hours, what could it mean for the markets? the economy and your 401(k)? also old neighborhood shocked when a plane lands in the middle of a street. how disaster was averted.
8:50 am
bill's got a very tough 13lie here...... looks like we have some sort of sea monster in the water hazard here. i believe that's a "kraken", bruce. it looks like he's going to go with a nine iron. that may not be enough club... well he's definitely going to lose a stroke on this hole. if you're a golf commentator, you whisper. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. this golf course is electric... >> will ben carson su
8:53 am
>> "outnumbered" comes up at the top of the hour. what do you have? >> donald trump on the defensive last may, carly fiorina on the big stage. /night at the age shaping up for you in your house, the race for the white house. >> closest an admission from the military, half a billion dollars spent training syrians to fight isis has bought a four five fighters on the ground. is it time for a new strategy? >> shocking research on when kids are shaping their face book and twitter pages, is social media at keeping them up that night? we will discuss. hash tag one lucky guy, never know who it will be. "outnumbered" at the top of the hour. >> fox business alert, wall street keeping a close eye on the federal reserve as officials decide whether to raise interest
8:54 am
rates for the first time in nearly a decade. let's look at the markets right now, barely up 7 points so what would a rate hike mean for wall street, the global economy and your bottom line? joining us live from the floor of the stock exchange fox business network's nicole petallides. nicole: we are certainly waiting with bated breath to find out what the committee decides. we will hear from janet yellen, get policy statement, economic forecast followed by question and answer press conference. big picture, we haven't seen the fed funds target rate move, it was last raised in 2006 but why do you care overall? is an economic indicator, they feel the economy is improving and that is a good sign. we have some improving conditions since the great recession but the global picture still worrisome and when you ask traders on wall street they debate whether the rate hike is the right time.
8:55 am
that being said, regular folks, even if you are not an economist these are some things that will be front and center, might be the stronger u.s. dollar not good for disney and tiffany but good for you if you're going to travel to europe for example, not getting much on your savings that that might pick up. home sellers and buyers, you may see a lot of action, mortgage rates very low, up got a lot in the refinancing. that is something we are watching closely. also mortgages could be higher but you see a lot of activity in the home area. auto loans if you have good credit you will get zero% or something close to and credit cards, that is something to worry about because they will jump on board and raise the rates very quickly as rates go up. battle credit cards out for business. those are consumer type stories related to low rate hike.
8:56 am
get some sort of knee-jerk reaction that is your money, 401(k)s and iras but most of the big guys, strategists by the end of the year start to trend higher. >> thank you and say with fox. we have that announcement when it comes this afternoon. >> california neighborhood gets a shock when a plane lands on the street. the small piper cherokee making an emergency landing with pilot and several students on board. the pilot part of the plane right there on the edge of a row. no one was hurt, no homes, cars and buildings damaged. officials say the plane was not able to make it to nearby john wayne airport. the cause of this emergency landing now under investigation. >> new next hour of "happening now". a powerful earthquake rocked she lay forcing a million people
8:57 am
9:00 am
>> we will back with more in an hour. "outnumbered" begins now. this is "outnumbered." i am andrea tantaros, here today is harris faulkner, sandra smith, democratic strategist and fox news contributor julie is back. and senior editor of the national review, jonah goldberg is live. >> you were the funniest person
146 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on