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

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>> hope your monday is off to a great start. see you back here in an hour. jenna: "outnumbered" starts right now. ♪ harris: this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner. here today, andrea tantaros. fox news contributor, democratic strategist, julie roginsky. commentator, stacey dash is in the house. fox news senior judicial analyst, judge andrew napolitano with the fabulous laugh. he is "outnumbered." you are already happy. we love it. >> happy to be in this environment, let's face it. i just met this lovely actress. i can't believe i waited until now to meet her. harris: good to have you. we'll move on to the news. we have just more than 24 hours until the next republican debate. watch only on our sister network fox business this time around.
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there will be eight candidates on the stage at 9:00 p.m. eastern. one of those contenders who will be there tomorrow night is dr. ben carson. today he is pushing back against mounting claims he misrepresented parts of his biography. carson slammed reports as media hit job. saying he knows the main reason behind the harsh spotlight. >> because i'm a threat. >> to? >> to those, to the progressives, the secular progressive movement in this country. i'm a very big threat because they can look at polling data and they can see that you know, i'm the candidate who is most likely able to beat hillary clinton. they see that. harris: not only is dr. carson blasting the media, he said they're actually helping him rake in campaign cash. tweeting over the weekend this. we the people have made 10,000 donations each day this week, raising $3.5 million this beak alone. thank you, biased media.
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stacey dash is nodding her head. why? >> because it's true. more media -- there is no such thing as bad press. he is a very smart man. he is a man who does brain surgery. thousands of successful ones. he knows how to turn something that is bad into something good. and also he comes from a background that is disenfranchised. that is uninformed. and instead of taking advantage of that, of those people, like the last president did he is going to make sure they're informed. so they make an informed and secure choice. that's what he is going to make sure. harris: very interesting. what is also interesting, judge, he didn't have to turn the wheel that far with biased mia. a lot of people want to believe, you know what? somebody is pushing back at what might not be true. >> the timing couldn't be better of biased media after that disaster of a cnbc debate when ted cruz and chris christie called out the questioners,
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particularly senator cruz, why don't you ask us about something important. but to stacy's point, $3.5 million a day. that is fantastic. that is absolutely over the top. harris: for a period of days that is type of money. >> for the west point stuff, could he have used more precise language, yes. what i expect happened, general westmoreland you are the exact type of candidate we have here you know it wouldn't cost you anything to come here and probably be admitted if you applied. that is probably what happened. did he record that artfully? no. harris: had several times to say that andrea, since then. it broke as we were on the area last week on "outnumbered." your first words, in your anticipation was, well, let's hope this doesn't disturb the flow for conservatives who are backing him because they trust him so much. andrea: that's true. they still trust him although he has taken a bit of a to. he has drop ad little bit.
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this is not good press, it's not if this is liberal, no with would car. joe biden can say at top of the class in syracuse no one cares. there is story on daily caller, she applied to the marines. no, it is army. i challenged a opo researcher to today -- >> not only that we don't even have records on obama. we have no records. his records are sealed. why isn't anyone investigating that? andrea: there is double-standard that will be tough for dr. ben carson. >> same thing happened to clarence thomas. another black republican. so let's maybe consider that as well. harris: one of the things you heard dr. carson say though, is that he feels some in the liberal media, as he termed it, the biased media will target him because he is greatest threat or perhaps a big threat to hillary clinton. what are your thoughts. >> discuss me.
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i have a little laryngitis as you can here. i don't think he is threat to hillary clinton. that is good thing to say to politician. that is how you set yourself up. you want to go up against the greatest threat to the republican party. he has amazing life story, i don't care how you slice it. he came out of detroit. came out of nowhere. became the preeminent brain surgeon. separated conjoined twins at very young age. some of the things -- >> this is example of someone picking themselves up by the bootstraps through hard work achieving. >> but here is the but on this. why tinker at edges when you have such amazing live story already? "wall street journal" came up with a few inconsistencies he has. why go down the road. almost like brian williams, someone said it. brian williams embellishing his biography when he mass amazing biography. >> hillary clinton had --
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andrea: lied about her grandparents being immigrants. when you're a liberal media ignores that stuff. ben carson is under scrutiny. i agree with you. why tingewer a story so fantastic. it will help him with the base. in the general if he moves forward it will be liability. harris: a a wake-up call for his team to do opposition research and that would be for any candidate. we'll move on. watch the republican debate tomorrow on the fox business network. our own co-host sandra smith along with trish regan and gerald seib will kick things off at 7:00 p.m. eastern. maria bartiromo, neil cavuto and gerard baker moderate the second debate at 9:00 p.m. it is in conjunction with the "wall street journal." to fine fbn on local tv provider log on to channel finder.com. andrea: first time more than a year, first time since the
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signing of the u.s.-backed nuclear deal with iran, president obama and israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu are meeting today at the white house. they haven't had smoothest of relationships. the nuclear agreement only made things worse. expectations are low for progress on a number of matters but both leaders say today's talk is an important one. >> it's no secret that the prime minister and i have had strong disagreement on this narrow issue but we don't have a disagreement on the need to making sure that iran doesn't get a nuclear weapon. >> i look forward to discussing with you practical ways that in which we can lower dissension and increase stability and move towards peace. andrea: judge, i'm pretty skeptical after what happened, this meeting will be one at that mends fences between these two men because they're so diametrically opposed. >> i agree with you, they are die moat i cannily opposed of
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the only thing they agree on is money we give to israel to increase its armed forces to stay and independent free state. they are profoundly different men with profoundly different thoughts about the role of government our lives and role of the united states government in the middle east. but you know a journey of a 1,000 miles begins with a single step. that is not mine by the way. i'm glad they're taking that step. harris: i like that positive. andrea: we covered this on the show. you mentioned it on "the fox report." i know additional hostages have been taken in iran. iran already reneging on many parts of that deal. do you that will come up today? harris: iran will come up. they had their photo-op an hour ago. we covered it live on fox news. i watched, looking contextually if they would mention that. you heard the president say that was one of the sticking points but an outlyer but he feels they come together on a lost points.
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i will discuss with the prime minister how to lower the temperature between the israel and palestinians as well. a lot to work to do with very little time so they were anxious to get tarted. first thing out of the netanyahu's mouth, prime minister of israel, our condolences for those lost in the american lives lost in the jordan incident today. just interesting that opening told you they had a lot of ground to cover. it is one step that you say beginning of a journey. they better get to stepping because the president won't be in office that much longer. andrea: there are a lot of issues at play. stacy, we've seen iran back off a lot of provisions of the deal. denying kfc to come in and build. that is one of the provisions we would be able to move in businesses. we also haven't transferred all the money we would give them. time to impose sanctions since they have taken more americans hostages. >> we should rip up the deal because it will not go through congress.
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they will not agree with it. it will have -- >> it is solely an executive agreement. congress rejected it during a bizarre procedure. >> him meeting with netanyahu will not change that. their conversation will be, i don't think will be a pleasant one. i don't think anything will change from it. i think it is just posturing. that's all. i think, what is he going to do? he is about to be out of the presidency. he wants to say, he tried. he tried to do this. >> understood. andrea: julie, why doesn't the president rip up the deal? i know he ceases it at part of his legacy but in last couple weeks iranians completely up thissed their knows at america, thumbed their nose at israel and he should rip up the deal because they broke a lot of promises in there. >> from his perspective, it is better than no deal. what is the next step. iran goes nuclear we end up going to war. that is what he believes.
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a lot of people who support this deal and hold their nose supporting this deal, i was one of them. it is a huge gamble. i don't disagree. this is huge bet to still have to pay off but i think a lot of his supporters believe horrible deal is better than no deal and we'll end up going to war which is what will happen. harris: that they have already violated deal in substance by missile launch. u.n. looked to whether they will press for sanctions. our ambassador was going to do that. andrea: why would we give them the money when they have taken more americans hostage. >> i think that julie is right. this legacy for the president. >> right. >> in his mind anything that slows, delays or separates iran from nuclear weapon is a baby step. >> this is for his own agenda. andrea: president's plan to
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close guantanamo bay, he release ad plan to bring detainees to the united states and it could happen without congressional approval. officials are more certain that the rush hundred-bound plane was brought down by an isis bomb. could the president's foreign policy be part to blame? join us for overtime, owe tee, baby. www.foxnews.com/outnumbered. fire off questions about the debate. we have the judge here. fire off what questions you want to talk about and fire off some questions about it. 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. do you suffer from constipation or irregularity? trust dulcolax® for dependable relief. try free at dulcolaxoffers.com dulcolax® stool softner makes it easier to go comfortably. hurry! try free at dulcolaxoffers.com.
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andrea: fox news alert. dramatic development in the tense standoff at university of missouri campus. missouri president tim wolf under fire for weeks how he handled racially-tinged incidents on campus, stepping down in the past hour. >> i'm resigning as president of the university of missouri system. this decision comes from love. i love mu, columbia, where i grew up and state of missouri.
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i had thought and prayed about this decision. it's the right thing to do. andrea: tempers flared over the weekend when more than 30 missouri football players supported by their coach in this tweet joined student protesters, that they would not play until wolff was gone. student activists camped out overnight demanding racial justice. >> i can't say for a moment, that i feel safe on this campus. i don't feel safe walking through greek town. i don't feel safe walking alone during the daylight. honestly. >> this is something not unique to missouri. that is what people need to understand. it is an issue that is around the nation, but with the university, what happens here is that they have the opportunity to create an environment that is inclusive. andrea: pressure seemed to work. harris, we saw the university president step down in the last hour. we were watching that news conference.
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harris: at one point wolff quoted scripture and he asked his resignation be used to heal, not to hate. ask how we got here, what the group wants. they want quotas built into the school hiring system, such that it has more diversity in it. their next game was against brigham young, at an nfl stadium. this football team had a lot of leverage people don't know b that is millions of dollars here. they had a lot of leverage, some of the things they wanted, i was not clear how any of that other than his leaving would take place before the next football game. they have accused local police who responded to an incident on campus of excessive force. they want that looked at. so many things that these students were asking for, that just seemed to be the outside the realm of what is possible before the next football game. maybe i'm missing something. andrea: as harris mentioned 30 black football players would not aarp, one participating in hunger strike. this worked.
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will we see this at other universities? ferguson in missouri where racial tensions were fanned very high last summer. will this be a theme now? >> start with a couple of basics. this is not yale which had similar instances this is public school owned by the state of missouri and it has constitutional obligations of fairness a private university does not have. if that african-american woman is afraid to walk on campus obviously something is wrong with the campus, not with her. on the other hand, to have a couple of dozen students hold the presidency hostage and to have the football coach agree will set a very, very precedent. suppose they don't like the successor will they do the same thing? who is hiring the president, football team or board of trustees. andrea: right. harris: when it comes to ideaabe forward to justify that? i realize it is public school. >> that would make quotas unconstitutional. harris: you're trying to get
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best people for the job. these are students you're trying to educate. i'm asking that question because i'm confused what they want the endgame to look like. >> we don't know exact facts what preceded all this. obviously was very, very uncomfortable place. there was this perception that the president wasn't moving quickly enough to protect african-american students with legitimate bonafide fears but the president and the board has to run the school, not the students. >> they had teachers standing with them, the students. >> the coach. >> the coach stood with them. there has to be some truth to this. it had to be at escalated level for it to go this far. i think him stepping down was most honorable thing for him to do for himself. >> are they going to demand -- andrea: that's what i'm wondering, what comes next? the president came out and said i pledge to find out who did awful incidents. i don't even want to describe them on tv they were awful, julie. they have not found the
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perpetrator of that incident but the president said i would work on it. he came out, he apologized. it wasn't enough. to the judge's point does the football team going forward run administration and hr department? >> no. julie: what is interesting about this a peaceful protest accomplishing something. we haven't seen that in long time. this is something you haven't seen since the '60s, well before i was around. >> did you have to look at me? julie: i was, judge, looking right at you. >> we have the protests. julie: i know how crazy you were at the princeton in the '60s. >> telling me i was a hippie. julie: i know you. look, the nice thing about this, you actually have students, faculty getting together, trying to effectuate change. harris: that is a really good point. julie: no throwing of firebombs. no racist name-calling. getting together. >> this will show people if you make a stand for something, if
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it is true, then there will be a consequence for the actions that are wrong. if you do the right thing. but you can not get the right response when you do it with violence or, you know, with shouting things like kill cops. that is not going to work. andrea: harris, should they have allowed the president to stay, apologize and rectify the wrongdoing? harris: there are a lot of questions how the whole thing was handled. the chancellor spoke about it, they acknowledged there were some racism challenges on campus. my goodness they would have to be not to see them with some of the things reported. should the president have been allowed to stay is a big question. scratch my head, what will happen going forward? what is the endgame with all of this? i understand the peaceful protest, they would not have leverage without the football team. the timing and them stepping in those players made a world of difference. they accomplishes the one thing
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they might not have had with that in short order. that is to get everybody's attention. >> dominoes falling and they don't know where it will end up. andrea: judge, public schools the focus is really on them. >> yes. andrea: president obama looking to end the years long push to close gitmo. if he doesn't get congress to agree could he once again use executive action? the judge will weigh in on thatt ♪ thinking about what to avoid, where to go... and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions,
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♪ harris: the obama administration is pushing forward with a controversial move to close guantanamo bay military prison in cuba. the pentagon is expected to release the plan this week which could include transferring more than 100 detainees to up to seven american sites. some of them are on the map right there. among them facilities in colorado, kansas and south carolina. president obama has long promised to close that prison before leaving office citing financial and national security
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interests. critics say it would pose homeland security risk and relocating prisoners to the united states requires congressional approval. if congress does not agree, here's the headline. the white house says the president could use executive order to close gitmo. can he do it? >> let me give you both sides. the congressional argument is, the president is obliged to enforce all federal law whether he agrees with it or not. congress acted law he signed into existence prohibiting him transferring prisoners out of gitmo or spending any money to do so. the other argument is the under constitution prisoners are in the custody of president, whether the president or department of justice. he controls where the prisoners are or where they go. he can no longer tell the congress where to put prisoners than he can require congress to take a roll call vote. that statute is probably unconstitutional, he could probably fet away with it with executive order.
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where do they go? nobody wants them in their backyard. we can't trust foreign governments with them. the flip side and can we keep people and not charge them under the constitution. the supreme court says you can't do that. harris: couple things come to mind as you lay out the two scenarios. they communicate to me can do it but next president can do it, prisoners being under his watch? >> absolutely correct. the president can undo, disregard any predecessor's executive order. harris: i assume, i don't know what it would like like round them up and put them back i would assume. we have this agreement with cuba. now we're going forward and we're going to be friends and blah, blah. don't you think gitmo maybe came up? can't we work something out? andrea: of course it did. the president made a promise to his base when he ran for office he would close gitmo. that supersedes everything else including lodgic. you mentioned rounding them up, how will we do that? how will we do that? he released some prisoners to peru with no conditions.
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we don't know where they are. he says qatar is watching most dangerous "taliban five." my question, judge, why not try them? we've seen tremendous success trying some criminals in federal court? >> i have argued that the federal courts are better equipped and move faster and have yet to lose. harris: that's right. >> a terrorist case, particularly in new york city. you may not want to bring the people here but facilities in new york city are extremely secure. the prosecutors are absolutely superb. let me tell you this i spent about three hours at secure military facility not too long ago, with the prosecution team and the investigative team, trying khalid sheikh mohammed. harris: okay. >> some of the best-educated, most experienced prosecutors in the united states. serious patriots, who are as serious about due process and fairness as they are about winning the case. he has been there for 12 years. the trial hasn't even started yet. and he is just one. many of them are there and
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haven't been charged with anything which is profoundly unconstitutional. andrea: why, judge? >> i think politics -- eric holder said he would try them in lower manhattan. rudy giuliani went wild. people in manhattan went wild. if they brought here at the time, everyone would have been convicted and fair trial. convictions would have been upheld and sent to prison. julie: amen, could not have agreed with you anymore. we should try them here. the crime happened here. hate to break it with people, zacarias moussaoui he is in florence, colorado, in federal prison. these guys that tried to blow up in '93 the world trade center, they're all sitting in federal prisons. you're absolutely right. the federal system is equipped to do this we should try them here, convict them here and serve time in supermax. >> i do not think they should be incorporated into our prison
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system because this gives them an open door to change more -- >> they're all in solitary. these guys are all in solitary. >> you're a judge, you know in prison people have ways to get stuff around and -- >> i hope you never have to go to florence, colorado. it is 450 feet below the earth. >> my fear they will get more people to become terrorists. >> that is legitimate fear. >> that is what my fear is. you bring them here. i think they should be isolated far away in gitmo where they belong. harris: we'll move on. we're coming right back on "outnumbered." by the way the university of missouri which we covered a little bit earlier, not the only school where racial tensions have been heating up. it is happening at yale university. we were just saying that. >> right. harris: could it happen someplace else, not a public school? we'll talk about. this one is all over some advice not everyone agreed with.
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that led to confrontation with her husband who works at university. >> it is not about being intellectual thing. it is not, you understand that. it is about creating a home here. you are not doing that. >> look with we're up against. >> they say, this is the way yale is? you hear that? they're going to leave, they're going to transfer because you are a -- >> we want unity. >> you can not sleep at night. you are disgusting. andrea: is anyone studying? i'm wondering judge. this is second story recovery. yale is private university. free speech though, i thought that still applied? does it here? >> i agree entirely with the professor.
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free speech should reign on campus. there is knot right not to be offended. there is no right not to be offended, even though this is private property, the first amendment does not regulate private property. only regulates the government. the people that run yale have decided that, freedom of speech shall reign and it should. if you don't like the costume, wear a contrary costume. clothing and costumes are expression. remedy for tasteless expression remedy is more expression, not refusing to ideas. andrea: they decided they are victims like something called halloween. >> trying to regulate feelings. feelings protection, right? that is just, the most subjective thing, feelings. how can you do that? you can not. so to try to tell people they can't say what they want, dress how they want because it is offensive? well, guess what, your offensiveness offend me.
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i want to do what my god-given rights are, where, what i want, say what i want, do what i want, within the law. okay? that is what i want. so this is very dangerous. this is totalitarianism. that's what i think. harris: may i yield my time back to the judge for a question? andrea: by all means. >> i could get used to this [laughter] harris: what is not protected in this environment of halloween costumes on yale university? >> fighting words would not be protected. a threat, where the person had the present, apparent ability to carry out the threat, a threat of violence would not be protected. mere wearing of a costume or articulation of even hateful words is protected speech. harris: not to go too deep, what if this person is wearing a white sheet or a hood, right? that's a question. >> as hateful as that is to everybody on the table, probably to everybody watching us now -- >> still their right.
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>> it is protected speech. yes. harris: i understand. andrea: julie, before i get you in, judge, in the block we did on mizzou, we didn't mention that the protesters were demanding that the university president say he was a part of white male privilege. he refused. almost like we have free speech being debated here, almost forced speech at mizzou, pushing him to say something. whatever happened to, the first amendment? >> guess what? the flip side of the first amendment, congress shall make no law abrent -- abridging freedom speech, the flip side is government can not force you to speak. you have the right to remain silent. andrea: what do you think of this case? julie: absurd. i agree with the what the judge said, what you said. stacy, we have right to be offensive, i may not agree what is the phrase. defend to the death your right to say it. no doubt in my mind if these kids want to dress up and offend somebody, by the way, stacy,
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you're so right, objective to whether something is offensive, say something as universally offensive as white sheet. harris: that's why i said that. julie: would i be horrified to see it? yes. do i have reluctantly say you have the right to wear the white sheet as costume? i do. as much as despicable and loathsome. these kids at yale, need to understand, you guys go to college to learn and expand your mind. this consolidation of thought -- suppression of ideas and speech. talk about it all the time. repugnant to me. i don't want my kid in 20 years that forces this group think upon me or him or anybody else. andrea: paying a lot of money to have speech suppressed. massive sexting ring busted in colorado. people taking photos and passing them along from phone to phone. the question is, should any of the students involved face charges? ♪
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because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. harris: more "outnumbered" in just a moment. let's first go to jon scott with what is coming up in second hour of "happening now." >> harris, university of missouri president tim wolff resigned under pressure after university football players went on strike you might call it. amid widespread complaints about
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wolff's handling of reported racial incidents on campus. more on the developing story as we get it. bernie sanders is he about to make hillary clinton's emails a campaign issue after all? suggestions that sanders did not intend to let hillary clinton off the hook during the last democratic debate. we'll get into it with ed o'keefe from the "washington post." new evidence a bomb took down the russian airliner killing all 224 people on board. one congressman suggested it might be work of isis. that raises question, is isis now more dangerous than al qaeda? we'll ask the fox news military analysts lieutenant colonel bill cowan, coming up, "happening now." harris: that will be a great discussion. we'll watching for it. jon, thank you very much. >> harris, thank you. >> a massive sexting ring busted at one colorado high school. authorities say more than one one kids were involved, many reportedly taking nude photos and passing them along from phone to phone, with hidden
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secret password-protected apps, disguised as calculators or audio managers. now that it has been uncovered, some students were suspended and some could face child pornography charges. here is reaction from the community. >> i don't know what the appropriate punishment. leave it up to the school officials and their parent but i think if we go that far, this is going to follow them forever. it is not going to be a learning experience. >> these are kids. those kinds ever punishments are obviously going to affect their entire lives. but, do i think that -- should be returned. abs slut not. these kids should know the difference between right and wrong. >> julie, should the state of colorado prosecute 100 sophomores and juniors and seniors because they sent nude pictures of themselves under iphone secretive codes. >> punish them for doing
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something really dumb. registering them as sex offenders. >> right. julie: as sex offenders, are you kidding me? this is something you do in high school that is dumb thing you do, but have it affect the rest of life or chances getting into college or living productive life, follow you into adulthood, it is punishment does not fit the crime whatsoever. >> you're local prosecutor. do you turn the other cheek or do something or ask school authorities to do something? >> ask the school authorities to do something. expel the children. don't suspend them. should be a consequence. but for the rest of their lives, i don't think so. i think also, the parents are the one who is are really responsible for this. >> are parents responsible for what kids do with their iphones? andrea: such a good question -- >> being a parent, i would say yes. andrea: guy calls the house, greek father. right, judge? would intercept the phone call, andrea, she doesn't live here. she moved to greece.
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>> i thought my father was tough. andrea: he would say she died. you can't talk to her. he intercepted this stuff, to your point how are parents supposed to monitor cell phones? these are serious charges i want to ask you about, class 3 felony, if you took a picture to send it to someone else. these kids are under 17. does that make a difference? >> julie during the break brought up more serious charges about satter to rape where people are having sex or some sort of minimal sexual contact, two young to consent. both parties are too young to consent. harris: pictures become a gait way to some other behavior. >> that is your concern, gateway. harris: this opens the door to parent to make tough decisions. >> because of technology. harris: how they talk with their kids about technology, exactly. it is going to follow them around. whether via this case or future boss, googling online next time.
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if they're in the habit of posting naked pictures on line, perhaps this was not only time they did it, this is perfect opportunity for parents. there should be consequences, i think at home. i know what i would do with mine. give me the phone! >> how do you control parent use of iphones. julie: i can't even control my 3-year-old. if he is so out of control -- i don't know the answer to that question. andrea, you're so right. my russian dad, if he ever got the phone call i would be grounded. i'm 42, i would still be grounded. he would still -- andrea: that is question, how involved are the parents? we're learning not just having high level sophisticated sexting ring where you get points, they're having fake instagrams. >> got it. something a little lighter, controversial nevertheless. take the family out to eat, along with menu, get a rule card how the kids should be based. happening in houston. some folks love it. some folks hate it. we'll debate.
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♪ at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? 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. jeb bushwe have to beave to be tthe world's leader.n. who's going to take care of the christians that are being eliminated in the middle east? who's going to take care of israel and support them - our greatest ally in the middle east? the united states has the capability of doing this, and it's in our economic and national security interest that we do it. i will be that kind of president and i hope you want that kind of president for our country going forward. announcer: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message. same eyes. same laugh. and since she's had moderate alzheimer's disease, i've discovered we have the same fighting spirit, too.
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♪ >> this is wild. >> or not. a mexican restaurant in houston getting a lot of mixed reviews
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not for its dishes but for handing out rule cards, to parents, urging them to keep their children under control. the move comes after an incident where a child caused $1200 in damage when he was alluded to wander around the restaurant with no supervision. the owner says the cards re mind, remind the parent, wait for it, to watch their children. >> doesn't offend anyone. it is set of rules. they don't touch anything. they don't touch the murals or anything of other patrons. >> i -- >> do you like this idea? >> you know what? i do because there are some parents who need to be reminded, hey, you have got a kid. watch it. julie: i actually have had the theory for a long time. remember smoking, non-smoking sections, should have adult only sections. probably totally unconstitutional. >> keep going.
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i like where your head at. >> private property. restaurant can do that. you're matter than you think you are -- smarter than you think you are. julie: this is my dream restaurant. adult-only sections when you want adult-conversations. and kids only sections and don't have to be humiliated because he is trashing your restaurants. >> you're one of parents don't need a card. julie: if you come up to complain about my kid. i already know. i get it. >> you're getting a card. harris: i was raised differently. >> all of us on the couch were raised differently. >> there were table manners. harris: i mean, it would make you sit up straighter, your vocabulary would straighten out. >> you gave me that look two months ago. harris: no. that is look of love! julie: making you that you are a crappy mom. harris: no. we go out. my kids travel a lot. i have taken them to several
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restaurants over their lives. i adopted my mother's look. i gave it to my husband other day, i'm not sitting up straight? >> want to see the look. harris: the look? i don't know if i can -- >> whoa. andrea: don't want to get that look, believe you me. harris: i don't know i never knew i had it. andrea: you know who else gives a look? waitresses. growing up we didn't give out rule cards at restaurants. when i saw parents completely checked out and kids throwing cheerios on the floor and i knew i would vacuum it up with a business sell, not a real vacuum, because it would never work, i gave them the side eye. harris: watch out. what. andrea: what do you think, judge? >> i think card is a great idea. >> really? >> absolutely. >> really good. julie: i'm loving idea of segregation of kids and no kids. only segregation works. harris: i will sit at the kid's
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table. >> segregation never works. harris: stay here for "outnumbered overtime" on the web. foxnews.com/outnumbered. book on it. v at noon eastern. glad the judge is here and stacy too. she will be back here tomorrow. "happening now" starts right fox news alert. wall street seeing its biggest plunge in more than a month. >> it is an interest rate hike bite federal reserve. we are covering all of the news "happening now". >> republicans gearing up with debate number four. with high stakes how the candidates are preparing. >> plus, we tested tsa. >> and new fears about the deadly skies. >> this is a bomb, in the sinai. al-qaeda and isis are the greatest terror threat

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