tv FOX Friends FOX News January 21, 2016 3:00am-6:01am PST
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billy says a college degree doesn't carry the same respect that it once did. it's the learning process. "fox & friends" starts right now. good morning this thursday, january 21st, 2016. a major winter blast set to unleash crippling snow and strong winds to millions and for some the trouble has already arrived. look out. that's washington d.c. >> meanwhile sarah palin gets personal to make the case for donald trump. >> when my own son is going through what he goes through coming back, i can certainly relate with other families who kind of feel these ramifications of ptsd. >> more from sarah palin and why she says the dld would be the
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best commander-in-chief for vets like her son. the video is insane. watch as a little girl takes a tumble, a car driving right over here. look what she does. she just gets right back up. >> kids are resilient. snoof . welcome aboard. heather good to have you. >> great to be back today. thank you. >> listen, right now it's the quiet before the storm and we've got a fox news extreme weather alert right now. just a dusting of snow causing a major mess in washington d.c. slick roads stopping cars right in their tracks. the weather so far being blamed for more than 100 accidents around washington d.c. and in virginia and in maryland as well. >> and that snow even causing problems for the president. his helicopter grounded. it took more than an hour for
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the motorcade to travel just 13 miles from andrews air force base to the white house. >> the mayor of washington d.c. telling drivers to stay off the road. >> it doesn't look like much snow. >> they can't handle it, brian. they're not tough like us. >> no kidding. >> the mayor telling folks to stay off the roads. that guy certainly should have listened, sliding right into an suv. this is just the beginning for the capitol. another snowstorm is on its way to the east coast and could affect 50 million people. >> maria and i were just talking about this big storm. new york is going to get snow. washington d.c., one of the models has washington getting close to three feet of snow in the next couple of days. >> yeah, the models are all over the place but they've been showing that signal in the mid-atlantic consistently throughout this entire week showing that they're going to be expecting potentially two feet of snow, maybe even higher amounts. that goes for washington d.c. and also for baltimore.
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i want to switch gears and share with you some of the past forecasts and we can pull up that chart you guys made that has analog years. we could be seeing this storm potentially setting some records and it's being compared to some past storms. you can see back in 2010 we had a lot of snow across the mi mid-atlantic. the question becomes what happens in places like new york city. could we see significant snow. in 2010 education more of a west to east track keeping those heavy snow totals from parts of new england but a classic nor'easter could bring that snow all the way up to places like boston. it looks like we could be burying areas across southern new england. the mid-atlantic, it's almost a sure thing that we're expecting some very significant snow totals. first let's talk about severe weather because along the gulf coast we have an enhanced risk for severe weather today and we have that threat for tornados especially into the overnight
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hours across louisiana, mississippi and parts of alabama. this is a significant threat. you need to make sure you have a way to get weather warnings even into the overnight hours when you could be sleeping. again, louisiana, mississippi and alabama, a very dangerous threat as we head into tonight. the other concern is not just snow across the mid-atlantic and the northeast but coastal flooding. we have watches that have been issued in places like atlantic city. the storm surge that could result from this nor'easter is being compared to other storm surges like sandy so that's very significant. we're going to be seeing very high water levels and strong on shore winds with winds gusting at over 50 miles per hour. you can see watches across southern parts of new jersey and delaware. very extensive winter weather warnings, watches and blizzard watches. we have a blizzard watch that was issued for the new york city area and across long island, across the mid-atlantic, for d.c. and baltimore. the worst of the conditions for
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d.c. are expected as we head into friday afternoon into the overnight hours and through the day on saturday. the snow not expected to start in new york city until saturday now during the morning hours. there's a look at some of those model runs. you can see lower totals for places like new york and boston but d.c., the gfs bringing in 34 inches of snow. what? the euro bringing in 23 inches though. it doesn't really matter, two feet, three feet, it's going to be a mess, not going to be pretty in d.c. or baltimore. >> nothing gets done in washington. what a shock. >> let's recap. you got floods, tornados, you've got blizzards. locusts anywhere? >> going to be a tough couple of days. gulf coast tonight looking at that threat for tornados, very dangerous. louisiana, mississippi, coastal flooding along the northeast and blizzard conditions. >> weather everywhere. maria, that's why you led the show. thank you, ma'am. heather childers has some
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other breaking news including a fox news alert. >> we've been following this story all morning long. good morning, everyone at home. tensions between britain and russia just got a whole lot worse. vladimir putin likely is responsible for the poisoning of former kgb turned british intelligence agent a decade ago in london. the investigation shows that putin authorized two asassens to slip poison into a critic of putin, even claiming that putin was responsible on his death bed. nearly all public schools in detroit shutting down so the teachers can call out sick in protest. teacher sickouts shut down 90% of schools in the struggling detroit district yesterday causing more than 45,000 students to miss class, and the same thing could happen again today. those teachers complaining about unacceptable work conditions and
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not enough pay. the district has filed a lawsuit to force them back to work. and police on high alert this morning after someone threatened to kill officers in the name of isis. police in philadelphia say an mon news caller tipped them off, claiming that he wanted to shoot a cop. the nypd got a call from the same person. so far detectives have not been able to track him down. the threat comes two weeks after philadelphia officer jesse hartnett was ambushed and shot in his patrol car. the suspect, edward archer, told police that he pledged allegiance to isis as well. finally, look at this unbelievable video. a young girl's fall, ends up saving her life. the toddler was talking along the road in india when she tripped and fell. at that very same moment a car rounds the corner and drives straight over her as she was lying flat on her face on the road. the driver went on. amazingly the girl was not injured.
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thankfully that had a good ending. back to you. >> she didn't budge. >> thank you so much. little kids are awfully resilient. got a couple little ones myself. you see how they go down and pop right back up. >> luckily she didn't pop up until the car went past. we have a fox business alert. dow futures right now down this morning after a crazy ride yesterday an wall street. >> yeah, you can pick your head up now. millions of americans waking up much poorer, at least on paper, after their 401(k)s took a huge hit. one top ceo is no longer a billionaire. nicole was live at the stock exchange yesterday. >> as we kick this off this year obviously this is the worst start to any year in history. we're seeing the dow and the s&p down over 9% each and we're seeing all ten sectors to the down side. the billionaire that you mentioned was zach dorsey, the ceo of both twitter and square. both of those stocks are down about 30% this year thus far. that being said, what to expect for today.
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we saw dow futures down about 150 points. they've come off of that, still down about 75 or so, so we are looking at down arrows once again. but there is an incredible correlation between what oil is doing and what stocks are doing. as oil moves to 12-year lows in the $26 range yesterday, stocks took a hit as well. in fact, the dow had been down over 560 points and ended down to 50. the experts are saying to ride this storm. they're watching what's going on with oil closely. it's in the $28 range today. we have a mixed bag. we're seeing asia sell off this morning while europe is gaining. we're also in the thick of earning season but i would keep a keen eye on oil because that can give you an indication of what to do with the stocks. basically they say don't be emotional at this time. this is not the time to say we're down 10% i'm going to sell everything. that's not what you're supposed
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to do. >> buy high, sell low, wrong. >> the twitter ceo is no longer a billionaire, i will not rest. >> just don't be emotional about it. you make moves and you make them slow and we'll see. there are predictions that things can get much better. >> nicole, thank you for the update on our 201 ks. >> the glass is half full. >> let's talk a little bit about this. sarah palin is campaigning for donald trump. there she is in oklahoma yesterday. it's interesting, the night she was announced as an endorser of trump she did not mention that her son track had been arraigned on charges of domestic violence. there was a scuffle at their house in wa sill la with his girlfriend. yesterday what she did was without specifically mentioning the arrest, she did talk about how her son came back hardened
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by war and it's a problem that a lot of young men and women are having and linked it to our current president. watch. >> when my own son is going through what he goes through coming back, i can certainly relate with other families who kind of feel these ramifications of ptsd and some of the woundedness that our soldiers do return with, and it makes me realize more than ever, it is now or never for the sake of america's finest that we have that commander-in-chief who will respect them and honor them! >> it seems like on some level she's blaming president obama for the fact that her son, 26 years old, kicked his girlfriend in the knee and punched her in the face and threatened suicide with his ar-15. i think that is such a huge reach. paul rye kof who has been here often. he's an iraq and afghanistan veteran and has a foundation and
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says ptsd is a very serious problem and complicated by mental health. he's extremely reluctant to blame any one person especially when her son track served under president bush. that's a huge reach. >> on the other hand she's arguing the point that she believes that donald trump would do a better job handling our nation's veterans and the problem of ptsd which so many are affected by and she may be right when she's talking about veterans. trump has put together very few policy plans but one of the plans he did put forward was on what he would do about veterans care. among that, you hear these stories, especially in rural america, where people have to drive hours and hours to get to a v.a. hospital. he said let's put satellite facilities in hospitals. >> do you think that it helps anything for her to blame president obama for the fact that her son is threatening to -- or beat the crap out of his girlfriend? >> i don't know that she's blaming president obama. i think she's just trying to use it as a way to talk about what
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trump would do. >> she was talking about how her son came back hardened from war and then without naming him did talk about how the vets do need care. she said the elephant in the room is my son. we've had some problems. >> that's one of the things i would say that people love about her, that she's willing to talk about family issues, things that affect our families. look, family life sometimes can be ugly. we all know that. whether it's talking about teen pregnancy or this problem of what happened with track. >> e-mail us at fox and friends.com. more fallout from the botched fast and furious scandal. we're just learning that some weapons fell into the hands of el chapo. the uncle of the border agent killed by those same weapons joins us next. he says more people will die because of fast and furious. and how cold is it outside? just take a look. it's freezing the pants off people. when my doctor told me i have
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reaching the public eye. the scheme allowed weapons into the most dangerous of hands. now we know that includes mexican drug king pin el chapo. one of the guns used in the murder of border agent brian terry has come full circle now. joining us is brian's uncle ralph. thanks for joining us. as you pushed for answers with fast and furious, how significant is yesterday's ruling? >> yesterday's ruling is very significant. the department of justice and the obama administration have tried to hide from the terry family and the american public exactly what went on with operation fast and furious. no one has been held accountable within the government for what went on in operation fast and furious. unfortunately, my nephew, brian terry, laid down his life for that. >> and it was an american gun that took the life of brian through the hands of somebody else but who's under arrest. let me ask you something, ralph, in the big picture, what do you
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think the story is and what do you think we'll find out as people like senator grassley and darrel isa look through these documents? >> i think we're going to find out that attorney general holder lied to the american people when he told us that he did not know about operation fast and furious until long after the news media made it public. i think we're going to find out he knew very early in the process that he knew all about it. i think that's going to be a major, major revolution in this whole process. >> and you believe these guns were dumped into the hands of these, in some cases, illegals who were coming across the border and the worst of the worst in mexico in order to show what? >> i'm sorry, say again please. >> you believe that these guns, these american guns were put south of the border for what reason? >> the government says they wanted -- the atf wanted to track the guns to see how far they could track them into the
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drug cartels. so the plan was to give the guns to the cartels, find where they went, but it went awry when they lost track of the guns. but it was a very successful operation in one respect. el chapo did end up with one of the guns so they ended up at the highest levels of the drug cartels. and the bodies on both sides of the borders will continue to pile up, including citizens and law enforcement. it's a clear and present danger. we've got 12 or 1400 weapons out there and we don't know where they are. >> absolutely and we're about to find out what the facts are because those documents are now released back from 2012. ralph terry, thanks so much. >> you're welcome. thank you. coming up straight ahead, he had been lying in the snow for 12 hours. he had no pulse, no heartbeat. >> the coroner was already called and they put a field on me. >> guess what, the doctors were able to bring him back to life.
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(whispers) now hide-and-seek time can also be catch-up-on-my-shows time. here i come! can't find you anywhere! don't settle for u-verse. x1 from xfinity will change the way you experience tv. some quick headlines now. the three american airport contractors abducted in iraq may have been taken by a shiite militia. the u.s. embassy in baghdad says it's working with iraqi authorities to locate the americans. and the american heros who saved a train bound for paris from a terrorist attack are getting a raise. anthony sadler, alex skarlatos and spencer stone signed a book deal. it's going to be called the 1517
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to paris and will be released in august, the one year anniversary of the foiled attack. he had been lying in the snow for 12 hours. he had no pulse, no heartbeat. the temperature outside was 5 degrees below zero. >> a 25-year-old male was found laying in a snow bank. the core temperature would not register. all signs lead us to believe that he's been dead for a considerable amount of time. >> given his age and the fact that he's had induced hypothermia, i don't feel comfortable to call him. >> dr. siegel refused to give up and brought him back alive after he had been frozen. >> there are some pictures of him there. smith's story of survival is one example of how doctors are now using this to save patients suffering from anything from oxygen deprivation to gunshot
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wounds. dr. siegel joins us now. this is part medical miracle and part, well, i think god telling this doctor to not give up on this man. >> and part good science, heather. the good science part of it is if you're cold you may be able to last longer because your tissues don't need as much oxygen, your brain doesn't need as much oxygen. we like to say in medical circles that if you warm a person up, that's the first thing you have to do to figure out if they're still alive. if somebody comes in cold off the street and i had this in bellevue hospital for ten years that i worked in the er. in the winter we would bring in people that were frozen off the street and literally thaw them. no pulse, no heartbeat. you thaw them and they wake up. >> this actually happened to my sister. years ago she was driving on a road in kansas, ran off the road into a ditch, wound up sliding under the steering wheel and it was below zero or approaching zero. she was there for hours. eventually somebody at sun-up, saw the car, went over and
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looked at her, couldn't find a pulse, took her to a hospital. a couple hours later she was fine. >> of course they probably did cpr. we're taught that if somebody is cold you still do cpr even if you can't feel a heartbeat and we're now using this therapeutically where literally if someone has a cardiac arrest, if i cool them down initially, their chances of surviving are greater. >> let's talk what happens to the body when you cool it down. first of all, the metabolism slows 5 to 7% for every two degrees that the body goes down. at three points below normal a person will begin to shiver uncontrollably. at 90 their lips turn blue and they're slurring their speech. at 82 they fall asleep. by the time the temperature plunges into the 60s their heart will stop beating. >> if you get into the really cold weather and you start to feel like you're blacking out or
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you're not quite focused, you better get out of there because we're telling a very happy story here but there's plenty of sad stories where somebody doesn't wake up. if you're starting to feel foggy or you're falling asleep, you better get out of the cold. the second thing is if you go below the 60-degree mark, i probably can't bring you back. so when the heart stops beating, i probably can't bring you back. i don't want people to think, wow, no problem, i'm going to fall asleep and someone will bring me back. i have a range i can do it in. >> part of what they did here, they gave him warm blood, fresh blood, and they never gave up on cpr. they did that for two hours. that takes a lot of work. who can benefit from this and does it have other applications? >> by the way, we also warm up the intravenous. we give them warm blood, use warm blankets. we can take the blood outside the body, reoxygenate it and warm it and put it back in. >> is this new technology?
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>> this is something they've been doing for about five, ten years but in the last five years we've been using it effectively for this. we can use it for gunshot wounds, for cardiac arrest. sometimes we can use it after surgery to cool people down, keep their brain going longer and then they wake up in better shape. we have to watch it though because when you're cold you don't -- you're blood doesn't clot as well so i don't intend to use it if someone is losing a lot of blood. >> i hope doctors know this across the country. >> they're going to learn about it this morning. >> wonderful story. thank you so much. >> i'm glad about your sister. >> i'm pretty sure she's watching right now. and it's cold where she's at. >> what's her name again? >> i'm not going to tell you which one. >> oh, right. big family. well, we've got a big announcement from the actress jamie lynn sigler, what she's been hiding for years. >> and how cold is it outside? take a look. it's freezing the pants off of people. there's some pants off some people. but first, happy birthday to
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palin gave a 20-minute speech to endorse donald trump for president while trump stood off to the side. palin described trump as a great leader while trump described being quiet for 20 minutes as the most painful experience of his life. >> it did look kind of awkward. i thought it was supposed to be like a five minute introduction and it turned out to be 20 minutes. >> i thought he looked like a
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proud papa. he looked proud to be standing next to her and he was beaming and having this woman in support of him had he needs the support of women. >> he got it and she's traveling all over the country on his behalf. we're going to talk politics all morning long. in the meantime we get some news and heather childers. >> good morning to everyone at home. debate over who is to blame for the water crises in flint, michigan. governor rick snyder releasing 270 pages of e-mails about the issue. they show blame shifted to local government officials just one day after dangerous levels of lead were first detected in the city's tap water. snyder's office insisted that the water was safe to drink despite numerous red flags. he is now asking president obama to reconsider his denial of disaster relief for flint. actress jamie lynn sigler revealing that she has multiple sclerosis and has been battling it for 15 years. >> i want to change people's
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ideas of what this disease means to them and possibly give people hope that it's not the end. >> the former sopranos star says she wasn't ready to tell her story until now and she says that it's still hard for her to accept the reality. sigler tried to keep her illness a secret but her tv dad, james gandolfini knew about it. sometimes she would have to sit down and take some breaks while filming to deal with the symptoms. houston, we have a massive planet. >> maybe it's a new planet. >> unlikely. it could be a dwarf planet. >> as long as it has a healthy gravity and all its moons i'll be happy. >> researchers have found evidence of a 9th planet in our solar system. get this, it is five times the size of earth. >> how did we miss that? >> i don't know. sounds like it's big. finally, look at this. this is amazing. one prankster turning a lot of
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heads in minnesota. he is putting pairs of frozen pants around minneapolis making it look like the jeans are on the go. tom gotting started the prank back in 2013 during the polar vortex. he says it is an effort to keep his neighbors smiling during minnesota's coldest winter months. other people have since joined in on the fun. that's cool. >> when it's cold there, my in-laws live there. my husband is from minnesota. you got to do something to keep laughing because it is brutal. >> anywhere that you have to plug in your car to keep it warm, i don't know. >> especially for a southern girl. >> no kidding. there you have the very latest on the trouser vortex as they would probably call it up there. so it is very coald. maria, we have snow to worry about and tornados and floods today. >> yeah, earlier this morning we had a tornado warning in effect across parts of southern louisiana so we're already seeing the storms rolling through this area and potentially producing some severe weather out here. it's going to be sticking around
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through this evening into the overnight hours and even through friday morning. so some states like mississippi, alabama, you could be looking at some tornado warnings being issued during the overnight hours when you're sleeping so have a way to get those warnings as we head through the night and early tomorrow morning. we have a risk for tornados and damaging winds across extreme concern texas, mississippi, alabama and western parts of the florida panhandle. the other concern with our storm system is that we're going to be seeing significant coasting flooding possible across southern new jersey. the problem is that our storm is going to brick some very strong on shore winds, potentially gusting over 50 miles an hour so that's going to be bringing in that storm concerning and coastal flooding. we have blizzard watches across the mid-atlantic and new york city area, very widespread stretching from arkansas into
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parts of the northeast and models all over the place in terms of accumulation but for now it looks like the worst of it will be in places like d.c. where they could see two feet of snow, maybe even some greater amounts. we'll keep you updated. >> they usually embrace that. they will have it in d.c. >> they love the days off. unfortunately, it's going to be saturday into sunday. thanks maria. that's maria covering the breaking news in weather. meanwhile, he's known for getting americans into shape. for example -- >> come on, get it and go. don't give up. come on, go. push, push, push! >> that is the creator of insanity. his name is shaun t. do you remember how popular this was a few years back? >> sure. >> shaun t. has taken weight loss on in a whole new way. when i think of insanity i think of michael tammaro.
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>> his workouts are insane but he's host of a show unlike anything the fitness world has ever seen. i caught up with shaun t. to find out what "my diet is better than yours" is all about. shaun t., thanks for joining us once again in the fok light. tell me about the new show. >> it's called "my diet is better than yours." we take five contestants with a diet plan and see which plan works the best. >> tonight you'll step on the scale and we'll find out how much weight you lost this week and which plan is working the best. >> how is it different from other diets? >> we don't eliminate the contestant. the contestant gets to eliminate the expert if their plan doesn't work. the other thing that makes this show different is that these people home. they're not sequestered and they do everything from their home and you just see the struggle
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that people go through with weight loss. >> down! >> what in the world? >> i see all of this sugar and part of me wants to dive into the sugar and just eat it. i really don't know what to think right now. >> usually diets don't work because people don't give them enough time to work. instead of taking little steps people think they can make a giant step. >> you're so inspirational to so many people. does it ever hit you and how does that make you feel? >> because i've helped a lot of people change their lives, i love hearing the stories and in times where i'm really, really stressed, i love hearing those stories because it actually keeps me grounded. >> it has been just a life changing experience. >> you're involved in so many endeavors. what's up next for you? >> i have my shaun t. apparel brand and i'm working on a book that's going to come out in 2017 which i'm excited about. i have a food line called prept
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food. i want everyone to feel good about who they are. >> thank you so much. be sure to check out "my diet is better than yours" on abc and everything shaun t. has to offer on shaunt.com. >> you can catch "my diet is better than yours" on abc thursday nights. for all my celebrity interviews check out in the fox light.com or find me on twitter or instagram. >> his food is called prept. >> yes. 19 minutes before the stop of the hour. next, four years after he stepped down from the cia, the pentagon considering demoting general david petraeus. judge andrew napolitano here to answer that question and a few more.
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i regret and apologize for the circumstances that led to my resignation from the cia and caused such pain for my family, friends, and supporters. >> two years ago that was general david petraeus apologizing for sharing classified information with his mistress who was also his biographer. he then stepped down as director of the cia and now four years later there is word that the four-star general could be demoted to three stars. joining me now, fox news senior judicial analyst, judge andrew napolitano. judge, why and why now? >> there's a lot of speculation as to why and why now. one thing we have to remember is this is not just the removal of a star from a uniform he doesn't wear anymore. this is a reduction in pension of about $50,000 a year.
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this is also a substantial impairment of his legacy. remember, he was -- >> let's remind people he's been out of the military since 2011. >> right. >> left the cia as well. >> right. also to remind everyone, he was indicted, charged, convicted, pleaded guilty to -- >> a misdemeanor, right? >> the original charge was a felony. guess what it was, failure to safeguard national security secrets. does that sound familiar? >> hillary clinton. >> of course. what general petraeus pleaded guilty to doing was keeping two loose-leaf notebooks in an unlocked drawer in a desk in his house. the house was guarded 24/7 by security personnel from the cia and having his biographer in the house with him. they originally charged him with showing the documents to her. they eventually dropped those charges. >> this is very rare for the military to demote a four-star
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general. also the army declined the decision to demote him, so ash carter would review this and make the decision himself. >> that's the great question. is this political. is this to send him and a message? don't tell everybody what you know about benghazi because we'll keep coming after you. is it to send hillary clinton a message, this is what we do to people who misuse national security secrets. is it to send the military a message, you can't get away with anything even if you're a four-star general. >> you know general petraeus. >> i'm in odd position of disagreeing with the war but knowing him, respecting him and believing he's a great man. he's brilliant and selfless. this is way too much. this is absolutely piling on. this is politically motivated, and quite frankly, i wish the secretary of defense would leave him alone. i have to say this, this could not happen -- >> do you think this will happen? >> i don't know but it will only happen with the president's
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personal permission. what is the president's end game here? is it hillary clinton indicted and not running for president? is it hillary clinton somehow exonerated from having done thousands of times what general petraeus was convicted of? more to come. >> just a look at the other side of this show, ash carter says he has to come down hard on military officers who do things unbecoming of an officer. he says he has to treat general petraeus like he would other officers. >> in the civilian world the justice department would not go after somebody four years after the incident took place. >> judge, i call you judge alicia. >> we don't tell everybody what i call you. >> thanks so much. great to see you. >> stevie wants to know. coming up, the fbi believes that this professor at one major university has ties to isis and may have even tried to recruit his own students. so why on earth is this guy
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among professional journalists, when the lawmaker proposed a law to create a registry for reporters to work in south carolina. the outrage was fast and fierce. "washington post" reporter writing, quote, what mr. pitt is proposing isn't just wrong, it simply capital be done. there's no stopping people from spreading the news in a digital society. certainly not with some outdated idea for a registry. that apparently was exactly the point mike pitt, the representative, was trying to make. if it's unconstitutional, and ineffective to make journalists join a registry, why make gun owners do the same? here to discuss is the research director for the media research center down in the d.c. area, he's getting ready for the big snow, rich knows. good morning, rich. >> good morning, steve. >> what was this guy trying to do? >> well, i think he was trying to show that there's a double standard when it comes to first amendment rights that the media will fight for and that we all
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should fight for because they're very important and second amendment rights which i think many in the media are joining politicians in trying to find ways around, ways to restrict, ways to regulate, you know, the media do not have the same affection for the second amendment. they don't consider it as precious a right as the first amend. >> sure. >> which they enjoy. and, of course, that's not -- they should be championing all of our constitutional rights. >> right. and after this legislator down in south carolina made the suggestion, my oh, my the universe of the internet just pretty much exploded, didn't it? >> well, it did. and you know i liked the south carolina press association president who said, you know, the constitution says nothing about a responsible press. they just talked about a free press. you know, you shouldn't have to prove to the government that you're qualified before you get your journalist license. well that's basically the argument that second amendment people have been saying for years now. that, you know, you can't negotiate away your constitutional rights. and yet, you know, every time there's a move in congress or the president wants to do
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something, you have journalists championing the idea of restricting the second amendment. and that's something where journalists should be looking up troe specificively, you know, if they're for constitutional rights they should be for all of them, not just the ones that benefit them. >> sure, so after he talked about starting this legislation, then he put up on his facebook, he wrote, i filed this legislation as an experiment to make a point about the media and how they only care about the constitution when it comes to their position on the first amendment. in doing so, it put the media under the microscope and they did not like it. furthermore, they love to trample on our second amendment rights to keep and bear arms. so in other words, reporters love to support their first amendment rights, but not so much on the second amendment. >> i think that's exactly right. i mean, this is, you know, let's just say it, this is a terrible idea. journalists shouldn't have to go to the government to get a license. >> right. >> and prove their point.
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but neither should law-abiding citizens who have been convicted of no crime have to go through government hoops to get their gun rights protected. >> did he make his point? >> i think he did. we're talking about it. >> we are, indeed. all right rich noyes from the media research center where he's research director. rich, thank you very much for joining us live today. >> thank you, steve. >> what do you think about that? e-mail us friends@foxnews.com. coming up, whoopi goldberg promises to leave the united states, depending on the outcome of the election. the candidate she says would make her move to a different country. we're going to tell you what it is in just a minute. look at her waving that finger. and are the terms infantryman, and crewman offensive? the army ready to take the men out of the military. good idea? we report, you decide. ♪
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good morning. it's thursday, january the 21st, i'm heather nauert, and it's 2016. the nation's capital nearly paralyzed by a surprise dusting of snow. but the worst, they say, is yet to come. crippling snow and strong winds about to hit millions of us. we are tracking it all so you can know what to expect in the next couple days. >> and donald trump and sarah palin, now ted cruz has glenn beck in his corner. but is it too little, too late? brand-new poll numbers that look good for donald. >> and whoopi goldberg threatens to leave america. >> i don't think that's america. i don't want it to be america. maybe it's time for me to move. >> time for her to move? the candidate she says would cause her to move to a different country. who is it? hmm. who do you think? we're going to let you know in about two minutes. live from new york, you're watching "fox & friends."
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>> i have no idea who she could possibly be talking about. is it rand paul? >> who did alec baldwin say if he was elected he would move out of the country. >> george w. bush, yeah. >> well is there another bush in the mix this year? >> maybe. >> maybe. >> jeb and whoopi. heather, good to have you today. >> great to be with you. >> last week everybody was talking every day about the powerball. this week everybody's just talking about that big storm that is heading east. meanwhile, a few inches of snow causing a major mess in washington, d.c. the weather being blamed for more than 100 accidents overnight. >> and the snow is causing more problems for the president. it took more than an hour for his motorcade to travel 13 miles from andrews air force base to the white house. people in d.c. just don't know how to drive. >> if he's late joe biden is in charge. maria molina has been tracking the storm for days.
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she hasn't slept in two months. >> she's so excited about this. >> i am very excited about it. but it is going to be dangerous across some areas, especially in the mid-atlantic, coastal areas in the northeast and also across the gulf coast. many different aspects of this storm system that we're watching. a want to start out with a severe weather threat. we already had a tornado warning be issued early this morning across louisiana. we are being looing at that threat continuing through the afternoon hours, and also overnight into tomorrow, so there will be a period of time that people will be sleeping and you could be having tornado ripping through some areas. so again very dangerous out here. we do have an elevated threat, enhanced risk across louisiana, parts of mississippi, alabama, and western parts of florida. damaging winds, and tornadoes will be very possible. ice is another threat. we haven't really mentioned this so much this morning, but across arkansas, into kentucky, and also in the carolinas, you could be seeing a quarter of an inch to a half inch of ice accumulation that will make travel very dangerous out there. and coastal flooding, we have watches in effect across southern parts of new jersey,
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also across delaware because of high water levels. coastal flooding, beach erosion and the problem here is that we have very strong onshore winds so we're going to be seeing gusts potentially over 50 miles per hour. and that's going to be pushing a lot of that water onshore and could bring moderate to even major flooding along these areas. a lot of snow forecast. anywhere from arkansas up to the northeast. you can see we have widespread winter storm warnings in effect, watches and blizzard watches. not so much because of the snow, but because of the snow in combination with very strong winds. potentially gusting over 40 miles per hour across places like d.c., baltimore, and even in new york city, so that's where we have those blizzard watches in effect right now. and they really begin across the mid-atlantic as we head into friday, and also saturday. for new york city it's going to be a little bit later. that's mostly saturday into sunday, as that storm continues to track northward. but the heaviest snow totals should be across the mid-atlantic, in d.c. you could be seeing two feet, maybe even greater amounts.
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>> the scary thing is the "b" word. because we're talking blizzard now. >> yeah. >> because you're talking about here in new york city area, and elsewhere, wind at 50 and 60 miles per hour. so not only are you snowed in, but maybe trees are down, you don't have power. >> yeah. power outages will be very likely. and travel is going to be impossible at times. because there's not going to be any visibility. you could be in your car and it would just be a whiteout. so just stay home. take the weekend. >> we should have appreciated december more. when it was unseasonably warm. now we're going to get slammed. meanwhile heather childers has a fox news alert. weather doesn't bother her. >> hi, heather. >> hello this morning. we begin with that fox news alert for you. is vladimir putin responsible for the poisoning of a former kgb agent turned british spy? according to a new british investigation, sure looks like it. the report revealing that putin authorized two assassins to slip poison into alexander litvinenko's drink in a hotel in london a decade ago.
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he was an outspoken critic of putin and claimed putin was responsible for his death right before he died. those three americans kidnapped in iraq may have been taken by a shiite militia. officials naming two militant groups as their top suspects in the case. the airport contractors were taken from an apartment last weekend in baghdad. the u.s. embassy there says that it is working with iraqi authorities. and a snowboarder, he survived an avalanche but he may be facing some criminal charges. >> oh, that's it! >> the sugar bowl resort in california now accuses michael mares of trespassing, and putting the lives of others in danger when he snowboarded down a closed off and very active avalanche area. mares insists there were not any signs saying that the area is closed. lucky to survive that, though. and snow days are being called all around the country. and one superintendent in west virginia is going viral for his musical way of breaking the
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news. ♪ hello, it's me i was wondering if since it was so cold you'd stay at home ♪ ♪ have a snow day what do you say ♪ >> well, he called another snow day by singing a version of frozen's "do you want to build a snowman." that sounds like a great superintendent, doesn't it? yeah. i think we should have maria molina do that. >> take that, maria molina. heather, thank you. >> he's channeling his inner adele. >> that's great. >> nice job. all right let's talk some politics right now. donald trump has sarah palin. now ted cruz has glenn beck in his corner. but is it a little too little too late. >> garrett tenney has brand-new poll numbers. he's live in our nation's capital. good morning to you, garrett. >> good morning, y'all. after this bromance ended the polls were probably the only
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place ted cruz and donald trump stayed close. and now at least nationally and in new hampshire, even that's not the case. in the latest wmur/cnn poll the donald's leading the field in new hampshire by 20 points. followed by cruz at 14% and both rubio and bush at 10%. and nationally it's more of the same. in monmouth university's latest poll, that has trump leading with 36%, cruz at 17 followed by rubio at 11%. the one place trump isn't beating cruz is in the crucial first state in the nation of iowa, in less than two weeks away from iowa's caucuses, trump is continuing to raise his friendly concerns about cruz's citizenship. while cruz is hitting trump for changing positions on ethanol subsidies, which are huge in iowa. >> he was a canadian citizen while he was a united states senator. he was a joint citizen of the united states and contoday, but how do you today that? and he said he didn't know about it. >> just yesterday donald trump
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promised not only to protect the ethanol mandate but to expand it. >> sarah palin hit the road with donald the last couple of days. yesterday in oklahoma she addressed her son track's arrest on domestic violence charges earlier this week, saying it related to ptsd after he returned home from iraq. and then she used the incident to blame president obama for not taking better care of ours nation's veterans. >> my own son is going through what he goes through, coming back. i can certainly relate with other families who kind of feel the ramifications of some ptsd and some -- some of the woundedness that our soldiers do return with. >> and this weekend ted cruz is bringing out star power of his own when glenn beck joins him on the campaign trail in iowa. steve, brian and heather. >> all right, garrett, thank you very much. very famous name in republican circles, bob dole, guy from my home state of kansas, he was the nominee on the republican side in '96.
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he said, interestingly enough, yesterday he said if ted cruz were the nominee, it would be cataclysmic for the republican party. he said there would be wholesale losses. and bob dole said that donald trump would actually fare better. >> yeah. that was kind of interesting. i also thought it was fascinating to see these polls that garrett just went over, and see in most of the polls leading up to yesterday, but he's disappeared in this one. the person that has been consistent and on the rise, i know it's far from donald trump, believe it or not is jeb bush. he's right along with rubio. so cruz is second, which is good for that camp. but jeb bush is lurking. and if he gets some momentum in south carolina, you never know what could be happening, as trump expands his lead in the top spot. >> you know, brian, going back to new hampshire for a second with donald trump, 20 points ahead in that state of new hampshire. and ted cruz right behind him. and that sort of surprised me to take a look at that because you think of ted cruz as being more in touch with iowa voters in iowa. and that he's doing so well there. he's in second place there,
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according to this one. cnn/wmur poll right there. but i wonder this, because folks in new hampshire can't stand the idea of increased taxes. and one of the things that marco rubio has been hitting ted cruz for is his value-added tax plan. he won't call it a value-added tax. but it is effectively that. >> just tax everything straight across the board. >> and it's hidden every step along the way in the manufacturing process. so when people in new hampshire start to learn about that i wonder if they're going to have a different view. >> good point. >> just one other thing regarding the polls in the wmur, or rather in the monmouth poll was a national poll, we just heard donald trump question ted cruz's citizenship again yesterday. this is the national poll. one-third of americans have doubts now about cruz's eligibility. so it looks like if that was a tactic on donald trump's part, it looks like it worked. >> he did use mark levin, yesterday mark levin two barrels at him saying that donald trump is like nixon in a lot of his views. so it looks as though people are
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going in to the camp. they've broken up the trump-cruz coalition, they're now taking sides. >> okay. meanwhile, whoopi goldberg yesterday on "the view" made it very clear she's taking a side. she's on anybody's side other than donald trump. essentially she says if he is elected president, she's going to move. they were talking about -- she's said trump needs to stop blaming others for america's problems. here's whoopi goldberg. >> i've been part of that when they just use a blanket statement to talk about black people. or when they use a blanket statement to talk about white people. or women. or any other group. i don't think that's america. i don't want it to be america. maybe it's time for me to move! i can afford to go. >> yeah. >> where would you go? >> i don't know. you know, i'm always been an american. and this has always been my country. and we've always been able to have discussions. and suddenly, now, it's turning into, you know, not them. i need all the candidates to get it together.
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get back to the -- american values. >> you know -- >> it's so interesting she's saying that because what donald trump is doing is he's not being politically correct. he is talking about all those things. he is the exact opposite of what she seems to be complaining about. >> joy behar on the other hand she says look, i don't think people are going to vote for this. she said people voted twice for barack obama. twice for bill clinton. people will come to their senses, according to joy behar. >> did she mention george bush? because they voted twice for him, too. >> are you sure? >> never mind that fact. >> i'm noticing she only mentioned democrats. >> she's celebrities have come out every single year saying we're moving out of the united states if so and so is elected. i don't think one has yet to leave. alec baldwin, barbra streisand. >> where are they going to go? >> we can't afford to lose another celebrities. don't over react. >> not really, we have plenty. >> we do? >> have you not looked at tmz? >> "people" magazine is getting
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thinner and thinner every week. >> meanwhile, the fbi think this professor at a major american university has ties to isis and may even have been trying to recruit his students. so why is this guy still teaching? and actor will smith's opening up about that oscars boycott that his wife organized. plus the major slam from one of his fresh prince co-stars. >> uh-oh. "beth" by kiss
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then my doctor told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots, but eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. knowing eliquis had both... turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you.
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listen to this. a kent state associate history professor is now under investigation by the federal government, the fbi and the dhs because of possible ties to isis. reports say julio pino has allegedly tried to recruit students to join isis. the terror group. pino, a cuban-born convert to islam has denied the allegations. tim clemente is a retired fbi special agent and counterterrorism and tactical operations expert. he joins us today from las vegas. good morning to you, tim. >> good morning, steve. >> so what do you think about this? right now we know that they're investigating him.
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he said, i'm not supporting them. might just -- i'm not. do you believe him? >> i don't know that i do. i looked at his facebook page yesterday, and clearly he is enamored of the radical cause that isis might be in his eyes. he supports the palestinian cause versus israel. he was in one event where there was a speaker supporting israel. and he shouted out death to israel. so, he may be carrying the flag for a group like this. and he might think that that's really, you know, in vogue to do. but in reality, his free speech rights end at the door or at the line where a conspiracy might be taking place. and if he's trying to recruit students, that could considered a conspiracy to support a terrorist group, or even conspiracy to do something further. i don't know how involved he is. i don't know how involved the investigation is. but this is the type of person that needs to be looked at very closely, because we see kids being recruited, 16-year-olds, 15-year-olds, 20-year-olds, going off to fight for isis.
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>> right. >> somebody like this, that could be the intermediary between america's kids, and one of the worst terrorist groups in the history of humanity. >> sure. we're going to put up a couple of different graphics. one is a facebook post where he actually praises osama bin laden. and it -- i recapped it right there. let's go on to the next one. it's a facebook joke, and it's a graphic, and it says keep it a secret, that's me on the left. and then here's another one, where he's in front of the capitol, i come to bury d.c., not praise it. which is curious. if you're the faculty at kent state university, what do you do about this guy? he's got tenure. >> he does have tenure. and you have to look very closely at this, and what he's doing. and i would hope that there's some kind of an uproar with parents who have students at kent state university who are plenling their hard-earned dollars for an education there.
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and not an indoctrination. so i would imagine that the fbi and dhs have already spoken to students that are -- have attended this guy's classes. and that may be where this investigation began. it might have started with somebody saying hey, this guy has really gone off the rails, and he's saying things that lead me to believe he's trying to recruit. and you know, he, i saw an interview of him, and i did see those posts on facebook that you just showed, and again, i think he thinks that he's being, you know, avant-garde. he's being cutting edge. and unfortunately, the cutting edge that he's supporting is the cutting edge that slices off the heads of innocent christians and other people, and turns girls into sex slaves. he's looking at maybe the religious side of it from his perspective as an islamic convert. he's not obviously looking at the end result. which is bloodshed. >> well, let's see what the federal investigation turns up abt this guy. tim clemente, thank you very much for joining us today. thank you, sir. >> thank you, steve. >> all right.
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meanwhile, are the terms infantryman and crewman offensive? the army ready to take the man out of the military. is that a good idea? fair and balanced debate coming up betwixt those two.♪ i'm out of the office right now but will get back to you just as soon as i possibly can." join princess cruises for exclusive discovery at sea experiences. princess cruises. come back new. 80% but up to 90% fall short in getting key nutrients from food alone. let's do more. add one a day women's 50+ complete multivitamin. with vitamin d and calcium to help support bone health. one a day. theand to help you accelerate,. we've created a new company... one totally focused on what's next for your business. the true partnership where people,technology and ideas push everyone forward. accelerating innovation.
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all right. the u.s. military going pc. the army just submitted a request to change titles from infantrymen and crewmen to more gender neutral names. in other branches of the military may soon follow suit. so is this a good idea or a bad idea? i thought we had bigger issues. joining us is veteran u.s. marine corps captain. thank you so much for joining us. and a former navy s.e.a.l., common face here on fox news channel. welcome back to "fox & friends."
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first off is this overdue? is this something we need to do. >> it's a small step but it's a necessary step. it's part of a much larger movement of the secretary of defense to fully integrate the military and to make sure women who serve, who volunteer to serve are made to feel welcome. >> did you feel unwelcome? >> absolutely. >> really? >> for many reasons. there are very few women in the marines to begin with. so you stuck out like a sore thumb, whether, you know, you were doing anything or not. there were about 6% or 7% of the entire force was female. so anything that serves to segregate us will make us feel less welcome. >> carl? >> well, i mean, look, we have isis running rampant worldwide right now and we're worried about what we're calling our soldiers? the soldiers' job on the battlefield is to put bullets in bad guys. if they want to focus on -- i mean you're a woman. are you going to stop saying woman? i mean how do you make these names out of the actual title? >> it's not the primary issue at hand here but it's part of a larger move. we've seen this in similar institutions like the fire department, the police department. departments all over the country, not just here in new
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york city. where a fireman is now called firefighter. a policeman is now called a police officer. people don't even blink at these terms. it's very commonplace right now. >> i believe policeman is also commonplace. can we see the navy. the navy says they're considering essentially this. they're asking -- they're saying they're really considering whether they should do this or not so they're up in the air on it as the army maybe leads the way. there's some that just don't transfer. this review is an opportunity for us in a description of it -- well you got a chance to see what that said. so we're in the middle of -- this is middle of flux right now. >> how does this help our troops defeat the enemy? i mean, that should be the question on anything. there's all this pc push in the military right now. but we need to focus on how does this make the u.s. military stronger. the answer it doesn't. it doesn't matter what you call somebody. they need to be able to and women have been integrated greatly. women can become s.e.a.l.s soon, they're getting into rangers. they're doing everything they can to integrate them. do they have to chain the name? does it really matter that much?
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>> makes you people? >> they're really smart people who are working on this right now and most of our resources are not being poured into this. i don't want to -- i don't think we should exaggerate. this is a very small step in a larger integration. uniforms are being gender neutralized. there's a lot that's being gender neutralized. >> it's a pc push from a president who's never been in the military. >> it's not about politics. >> i appreciate both of your service. >> thank you. >> and tremendous respect to your training. anu and carl, thanks so much. coming up straight ahead, the u.s. markets looking to recover from yesterday's wild ride. should you be worried about your 401(k) or do like i do and don't logon? maria bartiromo joins us live from switzerland next. and, will smith just opened up about the oscars boycott. his wife organized. plus the major slam from one of his fresh prince co-stars.
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fox business alert for you right now. dow futures are down this morning after a wild wednesday on wall street. >> man was it yesterday. 401(k)s taking a big hit. what is going to happen on this thursday? >> maria bartiromo host of "mornings with maria" is live in davos where i wish i was with the latest. >> joining us brian kyl immediate, steve doocy and heather nauert. good to see you guys. >> she's doing her show. we're doing our show. maria, you did not have to leave new york for snow. it's coming baby. >> i know it. i can't believe this. because i'm traveling back on saturday, and i hope everything goes okay. because, i don't know, the way everybody's talking about it, it's going to be really a major storm, huh? >> yeah. maria, i don't know what your weather department looks like here but ours is flourishing and pulsating. i got to ask you, i know this is not -- >> look how gorgeous this shot is behind me. >> it's beautiful. >> davos, switzerland, ladies and gentlemen. >> it almost looks real. >> but maria, tell us what now --
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>> it is real! >> -- among the rich of the rich, the billionaires of the billionaires, what are they saying about what's going on with our markets? >> you know what? it's funny, brian, because i'm telling you, i've been speaking with everybody from the ceo of the largest hotel company, marriott, which is in the midst of acquiring starwood to the ceo of nissan renault, an automaker, doing well, to stock strategists, and i keep hearing the same things, that these markets are trading as if the world is coming to an end, and it's just not that kind of doomsday scenario. now, of course, we've seen a real slowdown in china but why the market is so focused on the happenings of china, so much, to this extent that we lost $2 trillion in market value in 2016, seems a mystery to me. i think most people did miss the macro story of 2016. think did miss that the economy was a lot weaker than people thought. but i don't think that it is as
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bad as these markets are indicating. and i think that's what i'm hearing from most of my guests here. >> they want to hang out and wait. i want to ask you about the issue of iran, and you know, that country now awash in cash after we gave them a bunch of money. >> and oil. >> so i've heard that a lot of european companies are really excited about the prospects of getting that money, buying products, and doing infrastructure projects in iran. what are folks talking about in europe about that? >> yes, for sure, heather. i think people are looking at iran as an opportunity from the corporate level. now, when i spoke with treasury secretary jack lew recently he said american companies have to be careful. because they can't just go to iran and set up shop because there are still sanctions that may very well be, you know, not consistent with american companies going, and i'm not talking necessarily about european companies, but american companies going and doing regular business in iran. so i think there are still some, you know, issues in terms of any
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company going there, and thinking that they're going to just open up shop. having said that, you are talking about $100 billion. iranian oil coming onto the market. you know, all of the supply of oil on the global market has pushed oil prices down to, as you know, 13-year lows. that has caused job cuts, and that has caused capital expenditure cuts. so more oil is probably going to just obviously add to the supply. not a good story for the price of oil. but maybe at some point it helps consumers. >> that's right. because then gas costs less. all right, so maria, you're in davos, switzerland, where it is so beautiful. i don't know if you can have your cameraman just zoom, you know, move over a little bit so we can s it does look like currier and ives or it does look like a norelco ad. >> oh, that's so pretty. >> look at that. >> zoom over and show you how gorgeous this is. >> oh, there's a guy -- >> this is the ceo of cisco. sitting with me right now is the ceo --
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>> talking about how gorgeous i am. >> yes. you are gorgeous. what can i say? >> the space between you. >> the cameraman is have something a drink over there. >> exactly. are we going to talk about his business, and what -- i mean do you agree with my assessment? >> generally, i mean, you know, woo ef been watching this unfold while we've been here. >> yeah. >> so our latest view is, you know, this is -- we're in the quiet period for cisco right now. >> we're going to talk about that. we're going to talk about that, so chuck and i are going to get into it in terms of cisco and what he's see, brian, steve and heather. you see how gorgeous it is. really. it is real. >> it is real. >> when you're done, build a snowman. >> i'll do that and then i'll go and sleep in 3450i closet upside down. >> that will be great. that will be fantastic. >> i don't have time to build a snowman. >> she's very busy. >> she can't do it. >> bye you guys. >> thanks, maria. >> thanks so much. i asked her about -- >> can you please zoom out and
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show me the man next to you? >> yeah, right. i asked about the issue of iran and one of the things our white house correspondent was reporting the other day is all this money that iran now has is getting dumped into european banks. and these european companies including siemens, which is a huge german company they're talking to iran about building hotels, bringing luxury god goods -- >> and the hope for reforming that country to give people a better life, by the board, because we brought them into the world market. and got their money back. >> all right. 24 minutes before the top of the hour. we've got some other news and for that, heather joins us. >> good morning to you. and good morning to everyone at home. we begin in miami, where police officer is stabbed in the face. the officer who cops have not named yet was trying to get a drunk guy to leave a casino. it happened early this morning. the two got into a fight. and the officer tackled the man to the ground. and that is when he was stabbed. now the officer needs stitches. the attacker is undergoing surgery. one of will smith former
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co-star's blasting his wife jada pinkett smith over her oscar boycott. janice schubert calls it a photo-op. he also called her a pretend freedom fighter. smith is boycotting the ceremony because she says the nominees are not diverse enough. and nearly all public schools in detroit shutting down so the teachers can call out sick in protest. teachers sick-out shut down 90% of the schools in the struggling detroit district yesterday, causing more than 45,000 students to his class. same thing could happen again today. those teachers complaining about unacceptable work conditions, and not enough pay. the district has filed a lawsuit to force them back to work. and wait until you see this, believe it or not, look, this car was actually on the road. >> huh? >> a police officer in canada pulled this drive over. you can tell why, and the driver turned out to be an 80-year-old man. he told the officer that he was just too weak to clear off his
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whole car so the cop did it for him and then sent him on his way without a ticket. poor guy. that wasn't really safe though. >> we need steve doocy to dig him out. >> i did it last week for my daughter. in my state of new jersey you get a big ticket if you have a bunch of snow on your car. >> wait a second, i heard that governor christie has now made it legal in new jersey to shovel. >> really? >> i heard it was impossible to shovel. now he's saying you can shovel. >> happy days are here again. >> meanwhile, what was maria talking about hanging upside down in a closet? >> i think it's something to do with being a bat? i have a feeling -- >> or maybe that's how you get snow. >> maybe they're just having a lot of fun in davos. >> they're having a lot of fun over there. >> all right, meanwhile, speaking of the weather. speaking of snow, we turn to extreme weather in washington, d.c. take a look. >> it is considered the calm before the storm, but it is not so calm there. a dusting of snow crippled the nation's capital. >> you recognize any of those
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people? they're going to be late. we're live in d.c. with the latest. how is it outside? >> you know, is it fair to call an inch, an inch and a half of snow extreme weather? i guess in d.c., sure. because it just causes a complete shutdown here. this is a result of a storm. it's not the storm. that's due in tomorrow. that's going to be a huge mess. but you look at the kind of backup that just an inch and a half or so created during rush hour. people are talking about commutes that took five, six hours or so. getting around the beltway. it was a huge, colossal mess. as far as today's concerned. a lot of schools here are closed. a lot of them are delayed. the federal government is still operational today. but tomorrow maybe a different story. the storm is expected to come in around noon or so, so wouldn't be surprised if the federal government throws in the towel relatively early tomorrow, assuming they have employees come in at all. the good news here, of course,
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is that this is happening. mostly over the course of a weekend. because we expect this to be mostly friday, and then throughout the day on sunday, probably throughout the day on saturday, probably trailing off on sunday. but given our track record around here, we are probably still going to be digging out for a good portion of next week. this little storm that we had last night may have been something of a test. and if it was, we failed miserably. steve, brian, heather. >> they thought the test should be if doug luzader the schools should be open. the kids should be able to study. >> that's right. that's right. and the federal government can't show up to work -- well we don't know. they may actually end up working tomorrow. you know they're going to get sent home early. just given the timing of this thing. >> besides when they canceled the school they have to make sure the parents are at home, as well, to take care of them, so they go hand in hand out there. >> how about they just get better equipped to deal with the snow down there? >> we're not too good at figuring out unintended
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consequences here. >> every year winter sneak ups on the nation's capital. >> that's right. >> doug luzader who joins us from the national mall in washington. today he did not have to comb his hair properly. which is great. >> maybe taking it off. >> look at that. >> look at him. >> thanks, doug. >> it's great. >> this is why i leave the hat on. >> looks very good. >> if you think doug's hair looks good, write him. >> it does. he's a silver fox. everybody loves his hair. >> he's got hat head. >> you think america is the best country in the world, right? well think again. new rankings just out. we ain't. >> yeah we're in the semifinals. and we've been debating it all morning. are the terms infantrymen and crewmen offensive? the army ready to take the man out of the mill they're. good idea? your e-mails are pouring in on this. yes, men and women are writing us. lea gabrielle a former navy fighter pilot has an opinion, too. and she's a girl.
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soon learned that one of our ancestors we thought was italian was eastern european. this is my ancestor who i didn't know about. he looks a little bit like me, yes. ancestry has many paths to discovering your story. get started for free at ancestry.com he ran for senate saying he opposed amnesty... then he flipped, and worked with liberal chuck schumer to co-author the path to citizenship bill. he threatened to vote against it. and then voted for it. he supported his own dream act and then he abandoned it.
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marco rubio. just another washington politician you can't trust. jeb bush. he's a leader, so you always know where he stands. right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message. all right here's your news by the numbers. first the number four. that's where the united states now ranks overall. the country, that's where we are overall in the world, irt according to the u.s. and world u.s. news and world report. the best countries rankings came out. germany is number one. i guess they weren't there on new year's eve. the u.s. got beat out by canada, and the united kingdom. next, number one. the bills that's the bills hiring the first full time female coach. she'll be an assistant. kathryn smith was named the quality control special teams coach. that happened yesterday. she's been with the team for seven years. and finally number one the fox
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business network was the number one rated cable news channel after the gop debate last week. nearly 2 million people tuned in. hosting for cavuto. way to go -- >> wait a minute. >> okay. meanwhile, just debated the army's new proposal to take the word man out of its title. so now, we're hearing from you. is it a good idea to get rid of infantryman? and things like that? lea gabrielle a former u.s. navy fighter pilot joins us now with a look at what people are talking about. >> yeah. you know, this is kind of a hot topic. and you know i know this is a hot topic for mid shipmen. i'm seeing naval academy graduates. as you know i'm a naval academy graduate send e-mails around about this. what is going on with the navy that this is something that we have time and resources to put into right now. i want you guys to know i've been running around the halls here looking for all the bathroom plates that say woman and i'm changing to wo-mate.
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they're talking about changing it to midshipmate at the academy. maybe we should be calls womates now. >> my brother is in his second year at the naval academy and two of his terrific buddies and they told me about this story and my husband and i looked at them. and we said you're crazy. the naval academy might change this for midshipmen what would they change it to? midshippeople? midshippies? what do you call it? >> so many people, so many people have a relative, a brother, a sister, someone who is serving in the military right now. so i know this is a hot topic for everyone. and just like you said, you know, i'm seeing these e-mails, people laughing about this. but you have to take it seriously when you consider the fact that the military is cutting its budgets. right now we're talking about serious gender integration. the navy s.e.a.l.s are having to consider how they might accept women into their ranks because the implementation of gender neutrality and we're worried about how we're titling people. >> did you ever get bothered.
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when you're in the academy were you saying why is man in everything? did it bother you? >> so, no. i actually wore it as a badge of honor. i felt like it was a great honor to have earned a title to broken into a man's world that military's been for so many years, and to take on the title that only men have had for so many years as a midshipman at the naval academy. i was a naval of a eightier. i don't want to be called an aviatrix. being an aviator issing i was proud of. >> we have a lot of people interested in this. you've been monitoring social media. what are people saying? >> well, let's take a look at some of what people are saying. max says it is about time women get the same rights as a man. >> yep. >> they can probably do better. and let's see what some other people are saying. we've got a few more. okay, so we're hearing from laura, pc has gone too far. a woman is a human. a man is a human. i would be proud to be a shipman. i want my military to focus on
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the mission, not trip over words. and i just -- okay, and let's take this one ryan says i think the navy should worry about things that really matter, actually matter, like not being captured by iranians. that's a good point. kind of a stinger there. bottom line, i wore it as a badge of honor. it is something that is earned. we earn the right to be called a united states naval academy mid shipman. >> how about this, the army is ahead of you. it would have been infantryman. does that make a woman feel excluded? i wouldn't know. but i would say this the word man, steve has told me, is part of a compound word in woman. so it's wo-man. what is the problem? >> i guess mates. it makes us closer to primates, doesn't it? >> so let's see what the military does. in the mean time how long until they change the name of this island from manhattan? >> exactly. >> just saying. live from hattan.
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>> i will say i do understand that what the navy is trying to accomplish with this. what the military is trying to accomplish, it's good that they're wanting to make people feel more included. i just think that they're taking it a step too far. >> let us know on social media what you think. or you can e-mail us. lea thank you very much. >> thank you. >> you're a real inspiration to women out there to go on and take on these jobs. >> that's very nice of you to say. thank you. >> much more inspirational -- >> all right. meanwhile coming up, the car needs new tires, the furnace is on the frist, and you don't have enough money to cover your expenses. so what do you do? dave ramsey's daughter rachel cruz is here next to tell you. >> but first on this day in history in the year 2000, what a girl wants by christina aguilera was number one on the charts. >> i was trying to figure that out still by the way. >> navy would change that to what a person wants.
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if you had an emergency, could you afford it? nearly two-thirds of americans -- >> nice torso. >> it's an emergency. >> we're talking about this. there's a new study that came out bankrate.com and it talks about the amount of money that people have, or don't have in case they come up with an emergency. >> sure. counting on social security. >> your car breaks down. or you get a leaky roof or something. and astonishing number, 63%, have to resort to measures like cutting costs at home because they don't have $500 or more in the bank to cover that emergency expense. >> just look at that right there. this means that the average american family is living just about one paycheck away from bankruptcy.
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so, we've got a list of things you could do to actually dig yourself out. you know, if your car needs a new transmission or something like that, $1500. and you've only got $500 in the bank. what do you do? >> you put it on your credit card usually and get you into more trouble. here's some tips you could build off of. number one make saving a priority, even if it's $2 a week, $10 a day, find a way to do it. corral your family around it. even get your kids involved. >> that's a good idea, brian. have you ever done this where you stick maybe 20 bucks in a drawer at a time and eventually that just really adds up. >> it sure does. >> also leave money in a pocket of jeans you rarely wear and then be shocked -- >> don't you love that? >> i get so excited. >> i remember when i first got started. i remember looking through the couch cushions -- >> try to help you with the story. >> looking through the couch for laundry money, stuff like that. >> yeah. >> create a cushion. in other words you've got to have some money somewhere just
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in case, the rainy day fund. and you know, as much as you can afford without, you know, going completely without everything. >> yeah. the question is how do you do it? and brian you brought up a great tip. and put it away little by little or you could cut out some everyday expenses, a cup of coffee. the movie theaters, baby sitters. >> stop going to clubs if you're looking to cut down on expenses. don't go to the movies. go on to netflix. cut out some of your subscriptions on some of your magazines. read most of it online. just some of the little things. or, have you -- don't use your car, walk everywhere. >> well that's not practical if you've got to use your car to get somewhere. but then again -- you might take mass transit. >> or you could -- >> call steve and brian and maybe they'll float you a loan. >> oh, yeah. >> don't call. >> we're giving you the good advice to help you. >> and also, yesterday there was a big story that four out of every ten americans don't even take a vacation anymore. meanwhile coming up straight ahead, donald trump sparking a
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brand-new feud. yep, this time he's going after karl rove. karl rove is here at the top of the hour to fight back. >> plus, my little boy gage is right there with karl rove and our little puppies. we'll tell you how to train these dogs with kids. >> karl rove is raising your family? delicious berries and cream. soft, chewable, calcium plus vitamin d. only from citracal. and i quit smoking tracal. with chantix. i decided to take chantix to shut everybody else up about me quitting smoking. i was going to give it a try, but i didn't think it was going to really happen. after one week of chantix, i knew i could quit. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix definitely helped reduce my urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood,
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good morning, today is thursday, january 21st. we start out with a fox news alert. did vladimir putin poison one of his critics? there is a shocking or not so shocking new report about how the russian president may have gotten his revenge. >> wow. >> meanwhile extreme weather overnight strikes, leaving our nation's capital nearly paralyzed after a dusting. and you know what? this isn't the bad storm. the worst is yet to come. a crippling blizzard with winds 50, 60 miles per hour about to hit millions and we are tracking it live. you need to know about it. >> yes. and donald trump leading another poll this time in new hampshire and using those numbers to attack karl rove.
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>> well, it could change. it doesn't mean that much. it can change. you couldn't even hold his breath he's like a boiler waiting to explode. >> wow, karl is here. >> a boiler. >> and keep in mind -- karl i'm not laughing at donald. i was laughing about something else. >> boiling over. >> mornings are better with friends. ♪ >> the mom is out here. that's my youngest son, that's gage. he's in preschool. >> what do you teach your kids at your house? he's sitting on the back of the couch, the dog is on the couch. >> and that's our new puppy sawyer. he's a yellow lab. >> you need a trainer. >> we sure do. especially with two little kids and they're constantly pestering the puppy. so it brings a whole new level. they want to play. and did you know that karl rove
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is a good baby-sitter? >> by the way, how great is it, just like home you're watching the dog underneath the steve doocy painting. >> it's so appropriate. >> i need one for my kitchen. >> we should get one. >> are we going to meet this puppy? >> yeah, my son's coming out. husband's in the back room. >> plus today is "cooking with friends." and you see kristin fisher every day here on "fox & friends." she is here with her entire family, you're going to meet them very shortly. >> nice. >> we talk also about the next planet we might have discovered. >> family of astronauts. >> but whose aren't. >> meanwhile two minutes after the top of the hour. karl in a moment. right now heather childers starts with the weather. >> hi, heather. >> good morning to you. we're talking about extreme weather. parts of the south, northeast, now under blizzard and winter storm watches. and it's already causing major problems in d.c. just a dusting caused a mess on the roads there. more than 100 weather-related accidents were reported in d.c. and virginia. and that area could see up to
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two feet of snow this weekend. other parts of the country expecting ice, rain, and severe thunderstorms. now to another breaking story. is vladimir putin responsible for the poisoning of a former kgb agent turned british spy? according to a new british investigation, sure looks like that. the report revealing putin authorized two assassins to slip poison into alexander litvinenko's drink at a hotel in london a decade ago. he was an outspoken critic of putin and claimed putin was responsible for his death right before he died. and keeping terrorists out of the united states, that is the goal of a new visa regulations that are set to be revealed today. dual nationals in iran, iraq, sudan, and syria, or people who have visited those countries in the last five years, would face some much tougher restrictions. the new law exempts anyone who has traveled to those countries for government business, humanitarian work, or reporting. and now to some unbelievable
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video. look at this. a young girl's fall actually ends up saving her life. the toddler was walking along the road in india when she tripped and fell. now at that moment the car rounds the corner and drives straight over her as she was lying face down. the driver amazingly went on, the little girl not injured at all. that is amazing. and lucky little girl. >> indeed. >> all right, heather, thank you very much. right now we've got a fox news alert. fox just learned that some of the newly identified hillary rodham clinton e-mails are beyond the top secret classification. they are so sensitive that even some of the lawmakers on the oversight committee didn't have enough -- high enough clearance to read them. that coming in from catherine herridge. we're joined by karl rove. also we understand that the, you know, this all got started the, the intel community's inspeor general came out with this. and apparently he didn't even
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have high enough classification rating to look at this stuff. >> mccullough iii. >> this gets worse and worse for the clinton team. you know, we were told nothing classified. it was approved. you know, other people have done this. and it gets worse and worse. there is a very serious fbi investigation going on in this. i would not be surprised to see them make a referral to main justice sometime this year. i'm not certain it's going to be hillary. but i think it's going to be people around hillary. i think her defense is going to end up being, you know what? they told me we could do this. they told me it was okay. >> she's a lawyer. they who? >> whoever, cheryl mills, houma an dip, i don't know. but let's go back to the very beginning. if you wanted to do this the first thing you should have done as the secretary of state is walk into the office of legal advice, the general counsel for the state department and say, can we do this? clearly they never did this. they were so reckless. they were so paranoid and so contemptuous of the rules that
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didn't apply to them that they didn't bother to sit down with the lawyers at the state department and say can we do this? >> i thought it was very important people brought up the hearing, republicans say this, democrats think this. this is an inspector general report that catherine herridge came forward with and the response from brian fallon her spokesperson -- >> hillary's. >> hillary's spokes people that trump mccullough iii is essentially a partisan stooge for two gop senators. >> he's an obama appointee. >> he's an obamaappointee. these inspector generals are insulated from political pressure. they have long-term appointments. >> they're civil servants. they're not political appointees. >> they're appointed by the president. >> but, you can't get -- confirmation of a political hack. and this is -- for them to do this is another sign of the desperation that they've fallen into. there's a reason why nearly six out of every ten americans think hillary clinton is not honest and not trustworthy, and this simply confirms it. >> one of the things about the clinton campaign is they try
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their best to have message control. and right now the way to control it is to simply say, this is no big deal. >> yeah. >> here's hillary yesterday, on npr. >> this is the continuation of an interagency dispute that has been going on now for some months. as the state department has confirmed, i never sent, or received, any material marked classified. and that hasn't changed. >> isn't that because she told people take the classifications off? >> part of that. but also, look, this is -- this is playing a game of semantics. this material was classified. >> period. >> period. and she received it at a point where it was classified, and yet had still not gone through the formal process of -- but if you get a secret, whether, you know, somebody gives you a secret whether it has been classified or not. if it is classified information. >> you should know it. >> it's still classified. she's the secretary of state and she had satellite data sent to her on an unsecure -- on an
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unsecure network and kept on her server. and everybody knows that satellite data is, even if it is never passed through the classifier's hands, it is classified. and she was receiving it in an insecured network and keeping it in her apartment -- her house out in chap yeah. >> and karl there are reports they could have involved potential drone strikes, communications about that, and if that fell into the wrong hands -- >> people's lives at risk. >> let's talk about doesn't trump. he's taking aim at people like charles krauthammer. he's taking aim at jonah goldberg and at karl rove. in fact, yesterday -- >> karl rove. >> i'm in good company. >> karl rove, this guy, he predicted, he still thinks romney won the election. remember the evening? no, romney won. i had a poll that was so incredible, i was killing everybody. like a month ago. he's on television saying, well, it could change. it doesn't mean that much. it can change. he couldn't even hold his breath.
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he's like a boiler waiting to explode. the hatred. the hatred. and what it is is establishment. because i'm not taking anybody's money. i don't want their money. they don't control me. i'm doing what's right for you. >> oh. >> do you hate him? >> no. but let's -- let's unpack this a little bit. why do i supposedly hate him? because he -- the -- we -- he won't take our money. i assume by that he means american crossroads the super pac i'm involved with. for which i'm a volunteer. let's get this right. i hate him because he won't take money from a super pac which means that i don't have to go out and ask people to write big checks to fund his campaign? that he can fund it himself. what if -- please why should i hate him because of that? but let's take the more important point. >> okay. >> he says things in essence aren't going to change in iowa and new hampshire. let's take a look. >> regarding his poll status. >> regarding anybody's status. now first of all, let me complain, this is not a very good white board that i was provided. in fact not only that put the pen doesn't even write. so please check with your
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budget. i'd like when you have guests -- >> hold it still. >> zoom in. >> in iowa in 2012, in the exit polls, 18% of the people said they made up their minds who they were for on the day of the caucus itself. >> wow. >> 28% said they made it in the last few days. 21% in the last month. so 67% of the people made up their minds in iowa in the last month. in new hampshire, it was 21% said they made it up on the day of the election, and 25% in the last three days, for a total of 46%. so nearly in both states nearly one out of every two voters made up their minds in the closing days. so look, if he believes that nothing is going to change and that it's all locked in, then the best thing, the rational thing would be to do, sit home and wait for the results. but obviously he knows it's going to -- >> because he's working very hard is what you're saying? >> yeah, he's working hard. >> do you not think he will win? >> i don't know. i think there's a good chance that ted cruz wins iowa.
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i think trump is way ahead in new hampshire. i was in a campaign that was way ahead and ended up losing by 19 points in 2000.s likely to trump is likely to win new hampshire. the question there is how close is number two? and does he begin to rise. how does he perform compared to his numbers? >> what about these people who we've been hearing about, they had given up on politics. they haven't voted in years and they're coming back because they like this guy. >> well, these are not people -- >> that's hard to quantify. >> it's hard to quantify. but i make one minor point. these are people that trump supporters are not people who have given up on politics and used to participate. they look like they're people who haven't been participating in republican primaries really ever. >> mm-hmm. >> so the question is how many of them are going to turn out. and that's why this is so exciting to watch. >> which party will they turn out for? >> the iowa political director for obama bang in 2008 she was on special report last night and she said that trump reminds her a lot of obama. >> right.
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>> in that so many new people, so many fresh people were attracted by the energy, and were turning out to vote as a result of that. so for her to say that -- >> oh, and look this going to be one of the really interesting things. let's look at iowa and compare what trump's final percentage is -- >> in fact let's take a look at the polls. >> because that will be a sign. >> new hampshire. this just came out yesterday. trump's on top increased his lead slightly. the bigger surprise, cruz moves to number two and bush and rubio tied at ten. in this poll unlike the other ones we saw trending kasich has disappeared. >> yeah. which is why first of all this we don't know which poll is accurate. this one might be accurate. as compared to the others. or the others might be accurate that show kasich in second place. this is why this is not a scientific precise thing. what's interesting is even in that poll, trump between december and january goes from 32% to 34%. but cruz moves eight. so there is change possible. and look, trump knows that. which is why he's out there, as you say, working his posterior
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off campaigning aggressively. >> what do you make of the earth shattering news whoopi goldberg may leave the country if trump is elected. >> i liked your charitable impulses and caused me to think of farm aid. we could have celebrity aid. we could start it here. sort of nationwide telethon and get people to send money so we can get them 24erpy. maybe even therapy dogs. we could get them their own sawyer. >> you could be -- you brought it up. it's your idea. i'm all for it. >> let's see you involved in a cause that gives celebrities more money. >> karl, thanks for baby-sitting my son and our puppy. >> he's got a lot of personality. >> what do i owe you for that? >> not a thing. >> coming up a big announcement from the actress jamie-lynn sigler. you know her from the sopranos. something she has been hiding for 15 years. >> and so much more hakuna matata. the lion king is now being called racist. sexist. and pro-capitalist. too much for kids. >> about time they cracked down
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>> that's right. yesterday they got a dusting. just a dusting, and yet things came to a screeching halt in certain locations. however, in the next couple of days, washington, d.c. could get between 2 and 3 feet of snow. and because of the weather the redskins did not practice. maria molina is live in the fox extreme weather center. hey, maria. >> hey, good morning. and thanks are going to get really ugly across the mid-atlantic, coming up as we head into friday and saturday with very heavy know in the forecast. i want to share with you some other aspects of this storm. because we're going to be seeing problems as far south as the gulf coast. not with snow or blizzard conditions but looking at the threat for severe storms out here with the potential for some tornadoes, and some damaging winds, anywhere from eastern texas into the florida panhandle. the greatest risk area here, the enhanced risk, including parts of louisiana, mississippi, and also in alabama. so, again, you could be seeing tornadoes even during the overnight hours tonight. ice, another big concern, especially across the carolinas.
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they could be seeing up to an inch of ice accumulation. you're also looking at ice accumulation possible across kentucky and arkansas. so dangerous traveling conditions out there over the next couple of days. we're also going to see strong winds with our nor'easter. potentially gusting over 50 miles per hour. and that's along coastal areas of the northeast. some of the worst coastal flooding could be across southern parts of new jersey, also across delaware, so we're also looking at beach erosion a big concern because of how strong those winds will be, and they're going to be pushing that water onshore so we have a number of watches in effect again across delaware, and parts of new jersey. very widespread winter storm warnings, watches, all kinds of advisories, anywhere from missouri and even kansas into the northeast but those blizzard watches include big cities along the i-95 corridor. places like d.c., baltimore, and new york city, the heaviest snow totals right now forecast to be across the mid-atlantic. let's head over to you. >> all right, maria, thank you very much. here's what i'm predicting. throughout today, the grocery
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stores from boston to the mid-atlantic and back through the mid-ohio valley, there will be a run on them. and you won't be able to buy milk and eggs and toilet paper for some reason people always buy those three things when there's a big storm. >> right. toilet paper what else can you use? write us or tweet us. >> you don't get the sears catalog anymore so you're in trouble. >> absolutely. ten minutes now after the hour. >> okay. >> coming up, a student in trouble for pledging allegiance to isis. >> i would think so. and does your house look like this? >> heather just got a brand-new puppy and knows all about the chaos that comes with it. >> shouldn't your children be wearing clothes? >> some expert at vice next. >> what's he doing there? >> that would be the problem. before earning enough cash back from bank of america to help pay for her kids' ice time.
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all right. time for some quick headlines. the three american airport contractors kidnapped in iraq may have been taken by a shiite militia. officials named two militant groups as top suspects in the case. u.s. embassy there says it's working with the iraqi authorities. let's hope so. and a student sparking a federal investigation after pledging allegiance to isis instead of to the united states of america. he switched the words out during the school's daily pledge. his mom says the school acted irrationally. and the american heroes who saved a train bound for paris from a terrorist attack just signed a book deal. anthony scadler, alex scar lotos and spencer stone will release
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the 1517 to paris in the month of august on the one-year anniversary of the attack. and now buckle your seat belts, folks. >> too late. >> exactly. >> come here. >> just one second. >> see those words over there? that's television all right. i think. by the way -- >> yesterday this is the -- >> this is exactly like steve while i'm talking. yesterday i got some great advice for my two puppies rocky and apollo. i notice this guy already is a little bit more of a challenge. rocky's already walking towards the door when he has to go out. and then this guy will see rocky and follow him. >> yes, and that's why i told you take then. remember we talked about it. it's about taking him. just follow him. when we train rocky to do something, he'll follow. >> that's the hope when you have two. but what about when you have kids? today heather needs some help with a brand tsh new puppy
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sawyer, and her son gage, the cutest kid in america. >> okay, everybody. >> and here's travis. >> yes. >> -- new york! >> travis so you could get a sense of the issues we have here. >> outstanding celebrity trainer. >> hold on, honey. we'll tell you in just a second. >> what does sawyer do that you don't like? >> he bites. >> he bites. and that sometimes puppies do that, don't they? >> oh! >> what do you do? what do you do when they bite you? >> he cries. he jumps up on the kitchen counter. i have a 6-year-old son who is 5. we have two of them. and they're constantly at the dog. and then the dog goes at them, which has presented a real problem when it comes to training. >> absolutely. so what happens is the puppies, of course, feed off this energy. as you can tell. >> by the way heather's being very well behaved. >> how do you bring treats -- >> and travis look at this. this is my other son peter and the dog is chasing him around
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our kitchen. life is chaos. >> when they start to bite and nip the key is to replace what they're biting and nipping with something they're allowed to bite on. >> or somebody else's kid. >> right. but that's the key. any time the kids get roolly, really excited it's okay to take a break. >> i got you. >> and you know, have them in a separate space so everybody can calm down and have that be the reward to come back and play again. >> okay. >> travis this guy is going to make your life better if you're just nice to him. >> gage, do you think we can get pete the high five? you want to do that? >> yeah. >> come stand right here. can you put your hand down there? put your hand right there. >> oh, my goodness. >> my goodness. >> good job. there we go. so a lot of times, when they're going crazy -- >> if you can work on stuff with the puppies, get them engaged from a training standpoint they can focus -- >> so the kids see success and that inspires them to respond or react better with the dog. >> versus just jumping and playing and grabbing and pulling. >> when you say it's okay to
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separate them, how do you do that? do you put the dog in a kennel and take the kid away? >> it's important you use the kennel only for a time to relax, not a time as punishment. it has to be a positive place. >> i also learned puppies, dogs, think the kids are other puppies. >> absolutely. >> they only look at the adults as adults, but the kids they think they're one of them. >> that's right. exactly right. so when that energy rises everybody gets wild, and when you have puppies it's so important to promote calm behavior in the beginning. so any time the play gets too excited, take a break, let everybody calm down -- >> you can see our life is all about calm. brian i'm struck by the contrast between my puppy, a yellow lab so he's a hunting dog and pretty high spirited and your dogs who were just napping. >> my dogs slept for 3 1/2 hours, and then nine when they got home and got up. gage, did you learn anything today? >> mom, can you push this thing right here -- >> sure, baby. >> got to put this on.
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>> gage, what have you learned today about dogs and your relationship? >> what do you think, bud? >> i think -- >> i think he likes your dog better. >> what i did was i put some treats in one of these toys to keep sawyer interested in something positive, versus wanting to go -- >> he ate it! >> he ate it already. >> he did. >> he did eat d job, buddy. >> travis, thank you. great tips. >> we'll do it at home, right, buddy? >> oh, yeah. >> i believe there should be more heckling on the show. i think he'd be perfect. >> i don't think that would be possible. >> steve, tell us what's coming up next. >> all right. thank you very much. i learned a lot there. moments ago will smith spoke out about the oscar firestorm, why his wife is set to boycott the ceremony. so will he join her? find out straight ahead. and you've seen her reporting from the white house. but this morning, kristin fisher is live here at "cooking with friends." and family. her husband is here.
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and her parents, who are astronauts. they're going to make astronaut chili. ♪ ♪ (cell phone rings) where are you? well the squirrels are back in the attic. mom? your dad won't call an exterminator... can i call you back, mom? he says it's personal this time... if you're a mom, you call at the worst time. 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. where are you? it's very loud there. are you taking a zumba class? wheall i can think abouthit, is getting relief. only nicorette mini has a patented fast-dissolving formula. it starts to relieve sudden cravings fast.
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really cold. >> oh, yeah. >> he's doing it to keep his neighbors smiling during minnesota's coldest winter. when have they had a warm winter? other people are now joining in the fun. you know what if you have a torso you could really make this exciting and have torsos all over the place, pants in other places. >> how do you do it with a torso? >> just have torso -- >> it's easy with pants. you take a pair of pants, put them in water, take them outside, hold them up and they freeze. what do you do with a torso? >> put a shirt on them with no neck -- >> where do you get the torso? >> from mannequins r u.s. everybody knows. >> those are just pants. >> sometimes just by the torso, act now. >> huh? >> hey, right. if you like -- write us. heather childers wants to update us on full body. >> take it away, heather. >> thank you. good morning to everyone at home. stories that we have been following. just moments ago will smith speaking out for the first time about his wife who is boycotting
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the oscars. jada pinkett smith is skipping the ceremony because the nominees are not diverse enough, she says. so, what is will going to do? stand by his woman. >> i heard her words, and i was knocked over. you know, i was happy to be married to that woman. there's a position that we hold in this community, and if we're not a part of the solution, we're part of the problem. >> meanwhile, janet hubert, his former fresh prince of bel air co-star is calling the boycott a photo-op. she says jada is a quote, pretend freedom fighter. actress jamie-lynn sigler revealing that she has multiple sclerosis and has been battling it for 15 years. >> i want to change people's ideas of what this disease means to them, and possibly give people hope that it's not the end. >> she tried to keep it a
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secret, but she did tell her tv dad she says james gandolfini. she admits sometimes she would have to take breaks while filming "the sopranos" to deal with the m.s. nearly all public schools in detroit shutting down because the teachers called out sick. a teacher sickout shut down 90% of the schools in the struggling detroit district yesterday causing more than 45,000 students to miss class. the same thing could happen again today. those teachers complaining about unacceptable work conditions, and not enough pay. and finally, it is a disney classic that we all know. ♪ hakuna matata what a wonderful phrase ♪ ♪ hakuna matata ain't no passing phrase ♪ >> but one professor thinks "the lion king" tells a whole different story. according to a senior editor of the fordham political review the professor calls it sexist, racist, and pro-capitalist. mm-hmm. for some example he compared the
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hyenas -- well he says the hyenas right here are nazis. no comment from fordham. no, that's not a joke. >> they're going to take on little mermaid. >> thank you very much. >> by the way, a fox business alert now. wall street on edge with less than an hour until the trading starts, today. >> at a global stock sell-off could mean another rough day for the markets ahead. >> nicole petallides is live at the new york stock exchange where they're going to buckle their seat belts. >> up deed. because they have to buckle their seat belts for a wild ride. they call it the white knuckle ride like you're on the roller coaster. this morning we had down arrows reporting to an opening roughly 150 points to the downside. i just heard a moment ago 100 points almost seems wild. stocks have started after 2014 in the worst shape -- 2016 in the worst shape ever in history. all the sectors are lower. when i talk to traders they say you've got to do the pillow test to know whether or not you're
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ready to sell. if you can't put your head on the pillow at night because your kid is going to college in a few months and you want to pay for it you want to sell. but you don't necessarily sell in a down market. if you think your companies are going to be lasting for five years and ten years then you hold on. that being said all 30 dow stocks are lower. we're following oil very closely and that's going to be the key. watch oil and you'll know what equities are doing. the correlation has been extremely tight. back to you. >> all right nicole, thank you very much. meanwhile you've seen her delivering all the breaking news from our nation's capital. this morning she's delivering her family's out of this world chili recipes. fox news reporter kristin fisher joins us along with her tall husband. >> i know. >> and her parents astronauts anna and bill. both doctors. both astronauts. the fisher family. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> fortunately. >> thanks so much. >> this is fantastic. first off we've got to ask you about the breaking news. our solar system the milky way has gotten a little bit bigger. there's evidence of a ninth planet? >> yes.
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it is true. >> what does this mean for us? >> it means there may be a planet five to ten times the size of the earth beyond pluto. >> for astronauts is that pretty exciting? >> i think it's exciting for anybody. but yes. >> -- the astronaut handle -- >> what was it like -- >> how did we miss that? is it so big how did we miss this planet? >> it's so far away. >> let's talk about something that's really close. >> yeah. >> "cooking with friends" you're going to make astronaut chili. >> that's right. >> where does this come from? >> every year the johnson space isn'ter has an annual chili cook-off. for years my parents have been attending. you can see she's been a judge many years i'm pretty sure the judges that she's just stolen all the best recipes and put it into hers. hopefully you'll get something good today. she was the team captain back in 1982, of the chili cook-off team
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and he won not for best chili, but for best name. because -- >> whart was the name? >> james massacre chili. >> you're responsible for that. >> he's got a sick and twisted sense of humor. >> everybody sit back. walker take over. just kidding. anna -- >> the tall guy -- >> that's not any beer it's ufo beer. >> what's the secret? >> what i use, ground beef, brown that with onions and garlic and now i add chilly peppers, and we add some beans. >> teriyaki sauce. >> is that here? did we bring that? >> we have some teriyaki sauce right here. >> beans, any kind of beans you want. pinto beans, kidney beans, whatever. the girls tried to get me to write this recipe down but i never make it the same any time. >> why in the crock pot? >> that was kristin's addition. >> tomatoes. >> as you all know you're working all day, i like to come home if i'm going to cook, which
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isn't often, i like to have, you know, it's sitting ready to go when i walk in the door and then i feel like a good wife. >> -- the great equalizer. >> you dump it in. >> this recipe's going to be on our website very shortly. >> these is what we had for christmas eve. >> what about super bowl? that's what we do in our house. >> how did you get so lucky to have kristin as a bride? we love her work here? >> we met studying abroad in greece. eleven or twelve years ago and reconnected in d.c. when she was in the local news there. and you got to know when to hold 'em and know when to fold 'em. >> you like your son-in-law? if not this would be a perfect time to say so. >> oh, no, no, he's perfect. >> he seems like a great guy. >> i would have picked him for kristin if i could. >> oh. >> he's now the favorite child in the family, i'd have to say. >> okay. >> my sister cara and i are really, we've taken the back
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seat. >> and you've already dished us up some and you can decorate them. >> i want to make sure everybody gets to try some. here you go. >> the one key thing here this is what we call the fordham flair, walker loves corn bread in the bottom of his chili. we want to make sure you get the corn bread in right here. you sort of just mash it up. there's really nothing to this >> it's good. >> and you put the chili on top. >> i like the name, the fordham flair. the chain saw massacre chili. not bad. >> it's delicious. >> and then here you go. darling. >> makeup and eating chili at 8:30 in the morning. >> come on back any time >> kristin, thank you very much. >> thank you so much. >> in the nation's capital they're going to think there's that chili cooker. >> thank you. >> it's delicious. >> thank you very much. >> very nice to meet you. >> as i eat this, ponder this, coming up a fox news alert. did vladimir putin poison his
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critics? a shocking new report just revealed we have details straight ahead. >> not the vladimir i know. >> and sarah palin may have gained big news for endorsing donald trump but something else stole the spotlight. her sweater. so what's the big deal about it? we'll tell you. that's coming up next. >> she wore it two days in a row. i think it landed last tuesday. one second it's there. then, woosh, it's gone. i swear i saw it swallow seven people. seven. i just wish one of those people could have been mrs. johnson. [dog bark] trust me, we're dealing with a higher intelligence here. ♪ the all-new audi q7 is here. ♪
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(two text tones) now? (text tone) excuse me. (phone tone) again? be right back. always running to the bathroom because your bladder is calling the shots? (text tone) you may have oab. enough of this. we're going to the doctor. take charge and ask your doctor about myrbetriq. that's myr-be-triq, the first and only treatment... ...in its class for oab symptoms of urgency... ...frequency, and leakage. myrbetriq (mirabegron) may increase blood pressure. tell your doctor right away if you have trouble emptying your
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bladder, or have a weak urine stream. myrbetriq may cause serious allergic reactions. if you experience... ...swelling of the face, lips, throat or tongue or difficulty breathing, stop taking myrbetriq and tell your doctor right away. myrbetriq may affect or be affected by other medications. before taking myrbetriq... ...tell your doctor if you have liver or kidney problems. common side effects include increased blood pressure... ...common cold symptoms, urinary tract infection... ...and headache. it's time for you to make the calls, so call your doctor to see if ...myrbetriq may be right for you. visit myrbetriq.com to learn more. a couple political head lines right now. bob dole says that if ted cruz ends up as the republican nominee, the party would have a cataclysmic and wholesale losses. he said he'd rather see trump win the nomination. ron paul says donald trump not his son will be the likely republican presidential nominee, despite the fact that he believes that the polls are
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rigged. >> what's he talking about? >> and we're sorry you can't get the $695 sweater that's worn by sarah palin when she endorsed donald trump. it's a fringed sweater with shiny tassels, and it is sold out. she's a trend setter. remember the glasses that she wore so many people went out, bought the glasses after. i think they sold out. so she looks fantastic and she stood out. >> she did. >> bad news for contact lenses. 13 minutes to the top of the hour. a brand-new report -- poison a former kgb agent turned spy. joining us right now with the breaking details blakeberman. >> hi brian, steve, heather. a british judge has published a report this morning that determines there is a quote, strong probability that a russian security agency killed aleksandr litvinenko and that it was, quote, probably approved by vladimir putin himself. litvinenko was the former russian agent turned kremlin critic who died in london in 2006 just weeks after being
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poisoned. that british judge says it's believed he, laced with poison, killed litvinenko and he was certain that two russian men were behind that fatal dose. so far no comment from putin himself over being named by the british as probably approving the killing. but a russian spokesperson is shooting this down. the russian government has always denied any involvement, and the aassociated press cites the spokesperson today as saying, and i'm quitting here, reregret that a purely criminal case has been politicized and has darkened the general atmosphere of bilateral relations. the ap also says litvinenko's was calling for the immediate expulsion from the uk of all russian intelligence operatives. brian, steve and heather, on his death bed litvinenko accused putin of being behind this killing. back to you. >> so that's where the story got started. blake burrman, thank you very much for the live report. i can't imagine vladimir putin killing one of his -- >> it would be crazy. >> he always embraces his enemy.
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>> and brian and i were talking of the other case, there was a former spy who was hit with the umbrella that had poison tip on it and perhaps -- >> ukrainian guy, right? >> yeah. >> ten years ago or so. >> all right coming up, fighting the war on terror, from texas. governor greg abbott says his state is at the forefront after an isis supporter there just arrested the governor joins us live here next. >> but first, it's my great pleasure to introduce bill hemmer to tell us what he's put into his show. >> dogs. dogs are great. lab any time. good morning new polling on the picture for both republicans and democrats today. also, what is the palin effect for donald trump? we'll analyze all of that in a moment. is hillary clinton in big trouble? where does her e-mail story stand today? and first big storm of the year for millions on the east coast. who's in the crosshairs? we'll tell you. marsha and i will see new ten minutes. top of the hour here on america's newsroom. lot of doubt. i was a smoker.
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hands down, it was... that's who i was. after one week of chantix, i knew i could quit. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced my urge to smoke. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. some had seizures while taking chantix. if you have any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse or of seizures. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you have these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have heart or blood vessel problems, or develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. most common side effect is nausea. life as a non-smoker is a whole lotta fun. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you.
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an isis sympathizer posing as an iraqi refugee in houston, texas, remains in federal custody this morning after being indicted for providing support to isis. well now the state of texas is doubling down on its effort to block certain refugees from resettling in the lone star state. texas governor greg abbott joins us live from davos, switzerland today. governor, tell me a little bit about how your attorney general is appealing to the federal government saying, hold on, we're not interested in refugees from some of these countries? >> well, texas took the lead in filing the lawsuit to try to stop the refugee program. we did this a month ago.
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we have more hearings coming up, but we made clear at that time the danger that these refugees posed for one simple reason. and that's because the fbi director himself said that terrorists could intermingle among the refugees coming here, and it was proven. and that's exactly what happened in houston, texas, and in this case it was an iraqi as opposed to a syrian refugee. but the challenges with the syrians, with iraqis, with others. we know the danger is very real. we think it's irresponsible to allow these refugees in. we have one simple request and that is the president show them leadership now and the resolve now that he showed a couple of years ago when he provided a temporary home to the iraqi refugee program, we need to do the same thing right now in the united states to protect the safety of our fellow americans. >> absolutely. and i know you wrote a letter to the president saying hold on. but can you stop the federal government from dropping them off? governor? >> well, people raise that same question about whether or not texas would be able to stop barack obama's illegal
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immigration amnesty. we won in the court appeals there, now the supreme court is taking the case. we hope to be able to prevail in the same way here. now we have tangible proof that a refugee who came to the system, who was supposedly vetted, tried to blow up a huge mall at a galleria in houston, texas. fortunately we had federal and state authorities who were able to snuff that out and stop it before it happened. how many more are out there that we are not going to be able to stop. >> absolutely. i know you're in switzerland right now to appeal to the international business community. come on to texas. and bring your business with you. you also a couple of days ago were in jerusalem and you met with the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. what's the takeaway from this message, from this meeting? >> well, i had extremely positive long meeting with the prime minister netanyahu that was very, very productive. he admires and respects texas and i made clear to him that his
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strongest ally in the globe is the state of texas. and i announced at that time that texas would be continuing its economic sanctions against iran. i have instructed all state agencies in the state of texas to either divest, or to not invest, in any type of iranian business so that we can continue to fight back against those who declare america as their enemy, such as iran, while we can also build a closer relationship with our strong ally in israel. >> that's right. so while the president is talking about easing the sanctions, texas is not. all right, the texas governor, mr. abbott, thank you very much for joining us today from switzerland. >> thank you. >> we're going to be right back. this is joanne. her long day as a hair stylist starts with shoulder pain when... hey joanne, want to trade the all day relief of 2 aleve with 6 tylenol? give up my 2 aleve for 6 tylenol? no thanks. for me... it's aleve.
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bill: good morning. new polling numbers show donald trump pulling away. his biggest lead to date. ted cruz reveal something new-found strength in the granite state. martha: good morning on this january day. look at these new numbers. done up by 20 points to with a 34% support rate? sarah palin pushing back against cruz's claim that trump is not
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