Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  November 4, 2015 9:00am-10:01am PST

9:00 am
rates are competitive. so call today. and learn more about choosing the doctor's you'd like to see. go long. >> we will see you and jenna back here in an hour. jenna: el number they starts right now. >> this is the number diane andrea tantaros, sandra smith, harris falkner, host of america now and fox news contributor megan mccain is they can today's hash tag one lucky guy, we are glad to have him back, a member of the fox news medical aid team and professor of medicine next
9:01 am
n.y.u. medical center. dr. ben curtis meeting hillary clinton 50% to 40% in the face off. also stunning is this. clinton's traditional lead among women has all but evaporated. the female voters picking the retired neurosurgeon over hillary 45% to 44%. in the meantime when it comes to the republican primary race ben carson has once again given it to donald trump and giving a run for his money. what is it about dr. ben carson that america loves? is it that he is a doctor? what is it? >> i am about to find out. tomorrow i'm interviewing him in
9:02 am
miami and i will see if he passes the look you in the eye test which the many candidates do not. he has written the book a more perfect union basically saying everyone should be able to run for office, not just lawyers, car repetitions, bureaucrats. how about a physician? in four physicians signed the declaration of independence why not a doctor? maybe his measured speech is a way of telling people you can believe what he is saying. i am about to find out. hillary clinton is not winning among young women. maybe she can't pass the -- is it ok if you are just short of indictment? is that a qualification for running for president? don't indict hillary, she could be president. >> we used to do polling on capitol hill when we would have certain legislation having to do with health care we would poll to say which demographic americans should trust the most. number one was there dr..
9:03 am
congressman may be no. 3. >> i remember reading those polls particularly women. >> away from this, not that i think the fact that he is a doctor resonates with him but a whole show on this last night a lot of people are responding to the fact that he is a man of faith and says it openly and talk about praying before he does surgery, that is resonating with people. >> it is resonating with women. clinton's traditional lead among women evaporates among american voters, picking carson over her, women 45% to carson 44% for clinton, the ratio even bigger but it is amazing. he is reaching out to women and the lot of it is his spiritual out reach is so appealing to so many americans looking for that. >> i think spiritual healing is an issue. i am going to ask about that having been inside someone's
9:04 am
brain, save lives, having tried and failed, how much did that affiliate your spiritual side. >> there is a higher power although he was a great neurosurgeon, his demeanor is the anti donald trump, when i watch him in interviews ascents calm in the tumultuous times we live in. >> talking about the gop ticket. when you look at these candidates, months ago on a national level, it has been ben carson all along. state to state donald trumpis leaving the house with the dog but ben carson it hasn't been that way. now you are talking outside the realm of the gop going head to head with what looks to be because she is up to 62% in some polling among her competitors what looks to be the next nominee for the democratic party. >> when you talk about what is resonating with the american people, the american voter fed up with their government, i want to turn this around, how much of
9:05 am
this is dr. carson's willingness to show what he doesn't know or when he gets something wrong how many times have you seen him in recent interviews they i don't know but i will look into that and he does then come back after he has studied the issue with response and formed an opinion on it. ashley: is a good observation. not just ben carson, the left and many of the mainstream media seem to be attacking these candidates on things that dehumanize them. look at marco rubio, his 2006 american express bill. people better watch out. a lot of people have credit card debt especially after the mortgage meltdown. he can genuinely feel their pain. dr. ben carson says i don't know, i will get back to you. when you look at that stage the democrats with their odd degrees, faces of white privilege, the diversity, the republican stage, doctors, diversity, when they go after ben carson for being ignorant on an issue which is tough because he is a brain surgeon.
9:06 am
it backfires everytime. >> sandra's point is well taken which is that is how medical diagnosis works. you have it instantly, you look it up, think about it. >> get it right instead of get it wrong. just authentic, that is what people are craving. i believe what ben carson is saying. >> you can say that about all the outsiders which is why they pick up 50% of the polls between the two of them. we will move on. voters in san francisco having their say. they booted the sheriff at the center of the controversy, sanctuary cities earlier this year. lost in a landslide. kate -- 32-year-old kate steinle
9:07 am
was shot by an illegal immigrant. they requested he be detained the for possible deportation. there is the big question whether this might start a ripple affect at least looking at sanctuary cities, and maybe not changing the leadership but looking at them and asking about the viability in an age when you have so many illegal immigrants in the country. >> i completely agree with looking at this. one thing, not just crime that occurs. they don't coming the card says i don't have tuberculosis or the flu or this disease and these things spread around san francisco, it increases the rate of disease. >> i was reading the tuberculosis beating most of the diseases around the world and killing people. it is not treatment. doctors without borders and the this trying to help out in
9:08 am
essence, you say those words a you know the reaction people have to that. can you say that? is there enough correctness? as a doctor speak to the issue of what you said? >> what you said is important, they get treated, may get a resistance to tuberculosis that is more deadly. that is true of every disease. i can talk about that with a great deal of certainty because i have studied it. mental health issues, people who commit crimes tend to be of little more, not always that may be a little more unstable. one thing for sure, they are not getting mental health care, we are not even keeping track of it, they are not rushing to get health care and again there too there putting a burden on the health care system. >> say that in some corners and people want to fight with you. neil: to fear mongering republicans, zeno fauves, they hate foreigners. i am a first generation american, my father was an immigrant, i speak fluent spanish. i have the most sympathy in the
9:09 am
world. beyond the economic 3 it puts on doctors, we have trouble paying for american citizens let alone ones who aren't, there's the issue of safety, that is sanctuary city, not just cost. republicans tacked on kate's law idiotic lead to another bill, democrats blocked it. it is the safety issue. americans are losing their lives like katie steinle. >> a radical left city like san francisco has voted this man out of office, the tide is really turning. the case showed it. i don't think sanctuary cities should be anywhere in the united states, and there are proper channels to go through and the recent discussion about immigration is so complicated is immigrants see sanctuary cities
9:10 am
that different laws in different areas, is confusing. >> the other thing, we had one lucky guy, senator lindsey graham running for president sat in our couch and we talked about this, sanctuary cities and why congress hasn't done more to get rid of them but you are right. voters got the job done. the big question will this now signal a first step in san francisco possibly, kind of a tumbling affect. >> other counties that have these policies in place have to question and look inside and after seeing this election i agree with you that this could cause a ripple effect. who is next? who is going to be fired next? >> they don't have a formal designation but we ask our brain room to look at 300 of these cities exist in our nation. >> it won't be supported if people are fired. >> do you have a health problem? just pop a pill could be the answer.
9:11 am
more americans are doing that but it is the right thing to do? one lucky doctor now. >> i love it. >> we will talk a lot more about this as well. >> i am a human being with a conscience and when i see murder i cannot stand by and i have to call the murdered the murdered and i have to call the murderers the murderers. >> he is not acting. that was real. we might hear an apology from that hollywood director, quentin tarantino over comments he was making about police that he is not sorry. the boycott of his upcoming movie keeps growing. his new comments and the reaction they are getting next. this is claira. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for her she's agreed to give it up. that's today? we'll be with her all day to see how it goes. after the deliveries, i was ok. now the ciabatta is done and the pain is starting again. more pills? seriously? seriously.
9:12 am
all these stops to take more pills can be a pain. can i get my aleve back? for my pain, i want my aleve. get all day minor arthritis pain relief with an easy open cap. i brto get us moving.tein i'm new ensure active high protein. i help you recharge with nutritious energy and strength. i'll take that. yeeeeeah! new ensure active high protein. 16 grams of protein and 23 vitamins and minerals. ensure. take life in. ♪ don't just eat. mangia! bertolli.
9:13 am
9:14 am
who can name the third president? and the largest planet? someone we haven't heard from.
9:15 am
anyone else? when comcast offered low-cost high-speed internet to low-income families, more than two million hands went up. and pretty soon, so did everyone's in the classroom. ok, veronica. amphibian excellent! internet essentials from comcast. helping to bridge the digital divide. >> he is not backing down, clinton tarantino will not be intimidated by police groups calling for a boycott of his upcoming film after he made inflammatory remarks at a new york city ballet just days after an nypd officer was murdered in the wind of duty. in his first comments about the controversy tarantino telling the los angeles times, quote, all cops are not murderers. i never said that. i never even implied that it
9:16 am
feels lousy to have a bunch of police mouthpieces call me a copy here. i am not a cop here. that is a misrepresentation this that is slanderous. that is not how i feel. we also have this from harvey weinstein, the hollywood heavyweight behind tarantino's latest flick. he says the filmmaker, quote, should be allowed to speak for himself. they you think this explanation is enough? >> yes, clinton tarantino and say what he wants and americans can decide not to go to his movies anymore. team makes the most violent movies ever made an effort. you have seen pulp fiction as i did as a child, it is really graphic and traumatizing. he makes money offf violence and now he criticizes police officers who are the first people in the line of defense to save us in prices situations, they don't get paid enough money, now police officers in america being targeted simply for being in uniform. hollywood liberalism and its very worst. i lived in los angeles for a year-and-a-half before i moved
9:17 am
to new york city, there is a special kind of hollywood delusion i experience and this is living proof. >> his words speak for themselves, he can't change what he said and he is not choosing to take back what he said. his explanation change the way you see those words at all? >> it changes the way i see him. i am surprised at this. as a filmmaker he of all people should realize the media presentation of something is distorted to begin with. you see one crime occur and you conclude all cops are this or that? costs are putting their lives on the line, the police are trying to protect as a to use that as an excuse to attack police does make me rethink about his films which i am a fan of pulp fiction despite the violence but now i am wondering if reservoir dogs or paul pixar his way of saying we need a lawless society where criminals run amok packers in those. >> this explanation he addressed the cop heaters as he put it that have been coming after him.
9:18 am
he never specifically says in this statement i support the police, i support -- >> how can you support somebody you just called a murderer? certainly as a storyteller he can appreciate the conflict of ideas in that sentence, i imagine his ego was engaged but harvey weinstein that you mentioned is interesting because it wasn't just that he is saying he is going to step back. he is saying he has no control over it. he has no control over is that. i don't believe that. this is his movie. i don't believe he couldn't pick up the tone and say i'm rolling out this flick, you better get back on the lectern and explain what you meant and make it right and apologize. >> he might not be able to. >> a lot of money you are talking about. >> his tone has changed from the story we got which makes me think behind-the-scenes he said
9:19 am
i am not going to -- i will back away, but distance between myself and it and say you stand alone. have fun with that. i do think there is something bizarre about his statement. she is lying. he did say it. we saw on film. did he forget he is a filmmaker, there is film, he called cops murderers right after a new york city police officer was gunned down. eaton come out and apologize or clarify or express love for the police, did you think polices is rich white neighborhood in l.a.? do they use near the basket is the cops keeping his house safe. listening to him call 911 would be pretty amusing. >> keeping him say, that is for sure. >> you heard the acknowledgment that a police officer had just been murdered here and appear in a few days later saying what he said was so off, and inappropriate, he didn't include
9:20 am
that in his comments here. >> he is not taking back what he said. thousands industries in iran protesting against the u.s. as their supreme leader thumbs his nose at our policies. this is our partner in that controversial new deal signed just months ago. the rapid collapse of government-backed health care plans have some republicans sounding the alarm is. why these are failing and how many americans are in danger of losing their insurance. actors the show more from the couch for "outnumbered," by logging on to foxnews.com/"outnumbered" and click on the overtime tab. you have questions for the doctor, tweet as those questions plus what topics. before earning enough cash back from bank of america to take their act to the next level... before earning 1% cash back everywhere, every time... 2% back at the grocery store...
9:21 am
and 3% back on gas... vince of the flying branzinos got a bankamericard cash rewards credit card, because he may earn his living jumping through hoops, but he'd rather not earn cash back that way. that's the spectacle of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you.
9:22 am
9:23 am
if you have moderate to severe ...isn't it time to let the... ...real you shine... ...through? introducing otezla, apremilast.
9:24 am
otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase... ...the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ask your doctor about otezla today. otezla. show more of you.
9:25 am
>> today marks 36 years since the iran hostage crisis, thousands of iranians miking the day by burning american flags while hard-liners continue to round up the journalists, activists and cultural figures in the country. a lebanese american man was arrested in iran accused of flying even though the government invited him. on this day in 1979 militant students took over the american embassy storming their building and took 66 americans hostage holding 52 of them for 444 days. despite the nuclear deal that happened with iran hostility against the united states is front and center. iran's supreme leader ayatollah caught -- ayatollah, she is offering a clarification, he claims death to america doesn't mean he wants americans to die, just is warning the u.s. cannot be trusted. your thoughts. >> i think the ayatollah doesn't have a deep understanding of american history because this is one society where death to
9:26 am
america means death to americans. our government protect us especially when it is working right which is what we want, freedom is our idea here. obviously he is also killing americans in iran. they are killing americans. on top of that our government needs to be protected. this is a very insidious and scary remark and shows you how shortsighted this iran deal was. it is a scary remark because it reiterates what we know since 1979, nothing has changed. we should not be making deals, our president who talks loudly and carries a small stick. >> the doctor is absolutely wright. it ranks up there with the worst thing this white house has ever done. i really thought the president couldn't top the bowe bergdahl prisoner swap but the iran deal tops it. i don't see how democrats could have voted for this. at the same time they cast those yes votes while the ayatollah was saying we are not going to listen and don't have to honor these contracts and are in the process of violating it.
9:27 am
the worst is yet to come. >> they launched this missile recently and there was talk with ambassador samantha power within the ever-growing to hold acumen council meeting on that and see if it violated the deal and so on and so forth and it went off the headline page. my question now, you think the ayatollah will try to rewrite his version of history to make it look better for him now that he figures he can get anything done? >> if you know nothing about foreign policy and i understand this is dense, we are giving $500 million to this country that stands by the fact they are saying death to america. i agree with you. of all the things president obama has done, he will have the longest term repercussions and it is the most insane. no one on the left can clarify to the house this is a good idea. >> remember the cheering in the streets, the celebration? >> death to israel and -- >> those chants and protests
9:28 am
continued in the streets. >> they are burning our flags. >> like something out of a bad science-fiction horror movie. >> it is ideal and the british went to every there, they took the head of shell oil, the british beaters and shell oil to see what economic possibilities are open. franchises of and up over there. >> extremely volatile and extremely dangerous situation but look, we are talking about a country that is dangerous, the we trusted and entered into this agreement with. that they would hold up their end of the agreement. you go and do business in the country is a dangerous and volatile thing. >> we don't have an embassy there. that they will go ahead and get the nuclear weapons. >> a special kind of delusion president obama and his
9:29 am
administration have about the middle east, not living in reality, he lives in a liberal fantasy land you talk about in a classroom. he is now living in real life. >> we're going to support democracy everywhere, the president seems to be joining george was in democracy promotion missions, why wouldn't he supported with a green revolution in iran when their birth thousands of young people who did? >> maybe someone will ask hillary clinton that question. >> what is happening here. >> there are new troubles for obamacare, republicans sounding the alarm over the rapid collapse of several health care co-ops, government-backed health plans aimed at providing a nonprofit alternative to major insurance companies with the idea was to keep premium if premium prices down and prevent monopolies in the marketplace but almost half of the 23 co-ops that opened in 2013 have closed or plan to close in the coming months leaving nearly 1 million americans in danger of losing their insurance. where do we stand on this? >> i think of this as the
9:30 am
symptom for the larger disease which is obamacare was never as promised because they were supposed to be a cheap alternative, if you couldn't afford the exchanges here is a co-op, the premiums will be lower, that will subsidize $2.4 billion of gone into them, over half of the mark closing which puts tremendous pressure on the state's to bailout those who have been dropped. the key here is they don't have the networks, the doctors. universities like mine aren't accepting these co-ops so patients are not getting the care. >> i have heard your take but can i challenge you to beat penn to the care optimist for a second? what good has come out of this? >> what good has come out of obamacare is that more people are insured and before. 9.1 million more people are insured than before. when they go to the doctor's office most of them have large deductibless. >> and a week because not enough doctors want to participate.
9:31 am
>> less money for seeing them. >> that is a conversation we had early on. it is hard to participate in this if you have bills today as a doctor. >> absolutely. hi know you want me to say something optimistic but if your basic health-care is supposed to prevent you from a larger disease like the ones we will talk about later in the show, you don't go to the doctor. new study says you don't even go to the doctor, you stay at home and don't get your thyroid scan or blood tests or mammogram you need. in this end by don't think it pays. >> you brought up the one bright spot. there was a way to fix the problem of the uninsured without completely redoing the entire system. they complete the gutted the health-care system and then put the onus on the taxpayers to pay for it when they should have focused on getting the uninsured covered. if you bring up the democrats couldn't get single payer in obamacare so this was the alternative. the private insurance companies went nuts because they said if
9:32 am
the government acts this they will strongarm doctors into taking lower reimbursement rates, cheaper drugs and dr. siegel, you are right, this is foreshadowing, the first death spiral to happen with these co-ops failing and all 12 on the taxpayer, hundreds of millions of dollars put into these non-profits -- >> better now failing -- >> i have heard and tell me the biggest strain will be on the millennial generation because we have to pay for older generations that are sick and ultimately we will be, i can said on television, the most affected. >> this is exactly the point i was about to make, millennials are smarter isn't that. you guys are not signing up, 10 million out there supposed to sign of that haven't signed of going without insurance and would rather pay the penalty or fighting private insurance outside obamacare, the idea that you will pull the older people, diabetes and all the heart disease and medical problems, it is not happening, you are smarter than that and will be the debt spiral of obamacare because prescription drugs and
9:33 am
other treatments are so expensive. >> why would anybody site and up for a plan when the penalty is so much less than the premium? >> it is right now although the penalty has increased. third enrollment period is getting very expensive to participate and not to participate. you don't have a choice. it will be expensive no matter what you do sell my question dovetailing on what you were saying has to do with going forward. people are living longer. if the millennial generation is going to be tasked with paying for this and they don't want to participate we could see nonparticipation rates skyrocket. the penalty could get to be something they don't want to pay and probably very quickly because we will be living longer. that is a blessing by the way. don't mean to make that sound bad. >> basic services for the elderly will be hard to come by. if premiums keep going up and doctors don't want to take humanitarian work because it takes longer to take care of an elderly patient with a huge list of prescription drugs, more people on huge list of
9:34 am
medication. >> we have a doctor shortage. not a lot of people want to be dr.s. it is a sticky mess. good thing we have a doctor on the couch to talk about it. thank you. on a similar theme a new report on the nation's health. >> what researchers are saying about prescription drug use in america and what can be done to address the growing problem. ♪ hi i'm heather cox
9:35 am
on location with the famous, big idaho potato truck. our truck? it's touring across america telling people about idaho potatoes. farmer: let's go boy. again this year the big idaho potato truck is
9:36 am
traveling the country spreading the word about heart healthy idaho potatoes and making donations to local charities. excuse me miss, have you seen our truck? you just missed it. ahhh! aw man are you kiddin' me?
9:37 am
bounty is two times more absorbent. more "sit" per roll. so one roll of bounty can last longer than those bargain brands. so you get more "life" per roll. bounty. the long-lasting quicker picker upper.
9:38 am
come on! let's hide in the attic. no. in the basement. why can't we just get in the running car? are you crazy? let's hide behind the chainsaws. smart. yeah. ok. if you're in a horror movie, you make poor decisions. it's what you do. this was a good idea. shhhh. be quiet. i'm being quiet. you're breathing on me! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. head for the cemetery! >> troubling new report card on the nation's help find more americans than ever are using prescription drugs. orting to new research in the journal ofaccording to new resee journal of the american medical
9:39 am
association. those are related to obesity with cholesterol and blood pressure medications leading the pack with 15% taking five or more drugs at once with that is an all-time high. with julie: taking anti-depressants. what do you make of this? >> it is an epidemic. don't want to be too simplistic, i want people to exercise more and eat less cards and fats, have a mediterranean type diet, get off the couch. 36% of americans are obese, 1.6% of japanese are obese, 6% of french even with all that wine. >> the other side are doctors over isn't as prescribing? >> maybe that we have great drugs out there. there is cardio metabolic syndrome. if you are obese you have a high risk of diabetes and heart disease so you might have a triumvirate, heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol and i want to keep you all lives. more and more baby boomers now, we are living longer and keeping
9:40 am
people alive with more medications that actually work began exercise and weight loss. >> how many people do you talk to say i have this problem, i can take medication or went out and ran a few miles and lost some weight. >> they want the easy road. it is hard work to get up and go to the gym but i am fascinated by this addiction to anti-depressants. we see especially with women, it has doubled with women in their 40s and 50s antidepressants. what is going on with that. >> anti-depressant work, i look at it in an overcoat, anti-depressants work, increase serotonin in your brain but also exercise, they take the easy way out. >> more depressed than ever, are we more bummed out nation than we were a decade ago and he >> the way we deal with men every day i don't know. they la red many more they're depressed, economic woes and stress lead to more depression.
9:41 am
they are turning to kills more. >> startling new study revealing white middle-aged americans are dying at a growing rate. according to researchers at princeton university, the rise occurs primarily among men and women between 45 to 54 who have not earned a college degree and the biggest causes of death, suicide, alcohol abuse, drug overdoses and chronic liver diseases our most to blame. researchers say economic stress could play a role in that substance abuse. >> that breaks my heart. to say nothing of the economic woes of this country affecting this. suicide and alcohol, the slimmest thing i have heard in a long time. >> you know better than anyone we have not seen an economic recovery and is weighing on people that are stuck somewhere with a part-time job with dreams being shattered and the press and they turned to alcohol. >> living paycheck to paycheck. >> i talk about how medications
9:42 am
work with other diseases like heart disease, but guess what there is no medication for alcohol. no medication for prescription drug abuse. it is hard to get people off of these things. they are addictive and lead to suicide. >> you can go to rehabilitation. tell me the things on the list of interesting correlation between the anti-depressant been leaned on in one part of society and these people are not getting enough of them. they are so stressed out there doing other things. >> they are not getting proper treatment. >> i want to segway to something you were almost going to say in the previous segment which had to do with the length of the doctor's visits. you and i talked about how doctors don't spend enough time with their patient any longer because they are forced to try to make up financially in some areas to get more patients on their docket or feel the pressure because there are many people in the system. >> i had a shocking story, a woman came to me with a sinus infection and my head was buried in the computer screen and i looked at her before she left it
9:43 am
she said i am very depressed. i almost missed it because of the modern medical visit which is all about the computer, all about focus. reminded me. >> i have a phobia with doctors on their phones and computers in between patients. i want them to a alcohol those devices but that is just me. >> i am impressed after that segment, needing an anti-depressant is very sad. >> but she did well. >> school principals barking and national controversy writing an op-ed saying girls need to dress modestly to protect their virginity. some asking what do boys have to do then? back to the couch in just a minute. at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good?
9:44 am
not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda. diis critical for brain health?n 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. i research. i dig. and dig some (trader more. search.
9:45 am
because, for me, the challenge of the search... is almost as exciting as the thrill of the find. (announcer) at scottrade, we share your passion for trading. that's why we rebuilt scottrade elite from the ground up - including a proprietary momentum indicator that makes researching sectors and industries even easier. because at scottrade, our passion is to power yours. about what happens when you turn sixty-five. but, really, it's what you do before that counts. see, medicare doesn't cover everything. only about eighty percent of part b medical costs. the rest is on you. [ male announcer ] consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, it could really save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. so, call now and request this free decision guide.
9:46 am
discover how an aarp medicare supplement plan could go long™ for you. do you want to choose your doctors? avoid networks? what about referrals? [ male announcer ] all plans like these let you visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients, with no networks and virtually no referrals needed. so, call now, request your free guide, and explore the range of aarp medicare supplement plans. sixty-five may get all the attention, but now is a good time to start thinking about how you want things to be. [ male announcer ] go long™. about how you want things to be. who can name the third president? and the largest planet? someone we haven't heard from. anyone else? when comcast offered low-cost high-speed internet to low-income families, more than two million hands went up. and pretty soon, so did everyone's in the classroom. ok, veronica. amphibian excellent! internet essentials from comcast.
9:47 am
helping to bridge the digital divide. >> more "outnumbered" in just a moment. let's go to john scott with what is happening in the second hour of "happening now". jon: police saying charles joseph glienowicz staged a
9:48 am
crime scene before killing himself. investigated as a crime, hillary clinton pulls ahead of her main competitor bernie sanders in a new quinnipiac poll but there is an issue that could end haunting her as we approach the general election, trust. donald trump official the filing to run for president in new hampshire today. he is still leading in most polls but is seeing some new competition and going on offense as well. more on that head, "happening now". >> of high school principal from michigan standing by an editorial that he wrote saying the girls should dress modestly to preserve their virginity. the principal of christian high school posted the op ed in response to an opinion piece in the local paper about sexism in school dress codes. he wrote because men are sexually distracted by tightly covered skin when young ladies, quote, should cover up rather
9:49 am
than be considered sex objects. he went on to write, quote, by requiring female students dress modestly we're not penalizing them, we are protecting them, exclamation point. we would like them to preserve this wonderful gift, virginity, for their one and only but women activists slamming his comments and raising the question why is it that women have to take the blame for being objectified. you are nodding. >> i went to an all girl catholic school that had a strict dress code. thanks for making me spend most of my senior year in detention for being out of uniform. it didn't affect women or teenagers from my friends doing things that whatever you want to say, don't know what i can say on television but dress codes have nothing to do with how you act in your personal life and women should cover-up, it reminds me of islam extremism and how they treat women and women should be completely covered. >> dr. siegel, i have to confess
9:50 am
there was a period i went to a
9:51 am
9:52 am
inside. has a parent i have the choice and responsibility to teach my child, and you are blaming the dress like you blame it on the dress she wore a provocative out fit so she asked for it. i don't buy that. biology with young boys they conceal woman's ankle. >> boys think evil thoughts no matter the address so i agree. >> men do too. >> i have an 18-year-old, that is true. >> you think looking up fact on google makes you smart? think again. the new study showing why people who rely on googleing are not as smart as they think. is the google effect for real? we will discuss that. hi i'm heather cox
9:53 am
on location with the famous, big idaho potato truck. our truck? it's touring across america telling people about idaho potatoes. farmer: let's go boy. again this year the big idaho potato truck is traveling the country spreading the word about heart healthy idaho potatoes and making donations to local charities. excuse me miss, have you seen our truck? you just missed it. ahhh! ..
9:54 am
9:55 am
9:56 am
9:57 am
>> all that googleing can make you think you are smarter than you are. 18 of researchers at yale university, subject to separated into two groups, one task with finding the answers on the internet and the other without the internet's assistance. researchers found participant who use the web to search for answers were more likely to overestimate how smart they really are on a particular subject. your thoughts? >> i deal with this every day. people google their symptoms, they think their own their doctor, everybody thinks they have the worst. >> i do that. i have cancer. >> just knowing where to go, which is the best web site. in the case of medicine is university websites. >> ever had to go against a patient who had it all wrong but was so convinced they were right and spend your time trying to fix it? >> every single day. >> or the opposite.
9:58 am
ever had a patient you couldn't figure out, they finally figured it out on their own, searching on google. >> embarrassing as heck. you have to be open to that, information traveling everywhere so someone can get to it before -- >> my concern with this would be the idea people think they are can't go deep on this subject but pretend they can. >> the internet is the huge benefit if you're trying to get quick facts, remember the days of going to the library, look for books, i love it too but it has become so easy to get facts. as dr. siegel pointed out is not just health. a lot of facts on line are not accurate. >> you are missing the worst part of the internet which is dating, where people google un there is inaccurate stuff on the internet. it happens to me all the time. i and single and don gaetz all
9:59 am
the time, i saw this thing on the internet. >> beyond that remember google is a search algorithm. i know because i googleed it. it is and algorithm and it controls what you see when you search for a word or news subject. not just a raw search. >> you are always getting the right answer. and that is interesting. >> there is a movie that came out last year, a woman with alzheimers, but such an part where she can't remember what month she was born. she's losing her memory. google helped her find her way. there are some things that are positive in medicine about technology in this engine. >> if you know where to go. julie and more won and academy award for that performance, she was very accurate from a medical point of view. if you know where to go you can get information and join support
10:00 am
groups too. >> good to have you. >> free health care for an hour. who is going to say no to that? we will stay here for "outnumbered," on the web foxnews.com, can't wait to include you on the conversation was back on tv tomorrow at noon eastern. now "happening now". we start off with a fox news alert. five students dead in a university in california. >> authorities of the university of california said the attacker was shot dead by the police. >> search for a cause of a deadly plane crash. and will the black box hold the answers. >> and a guy who spent time in solitary confinement. >> reliving the iranian hostage crisis of

263 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on