tv Fox and Friends Sunday FOX News March 13, 2016 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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hi, friends. good morning. sunday, the 13th of march, 2016. i'm anna kooiman. trump taking his protesters head on. >> hello, darling. go home to mom. go home to mommy. you know what, folks? we're going to take our country back from these people. we're going to take it back! he's a bad, bad -- these are bad, bad people. >> who is organizing these left wing disrupters? we take a closer look. and a scary moment on stage when secret service agents surround donald trump. [ audience boos ]
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>> former secret service agent is going to take us inside the mind and heart of these heroes. is this year's election more dramatic than the show "house of cards?" we'll show you how life is imtailing fiction on netflix. "fox & friends" begins right now. oh, it is daylight saving time. remember to drop the "s" on savings. remember to drop an hour on sleep last year. >> germans created it to save coal during world war i. we don't need it anymore! actually, we should demand, any of the presidential candidates right now, that should be one of their platforms. get rid of daylight saving time. because you lose an hour. we don't need it anymore. >> that's a great platform. >> am i the only one that feels
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this way? even the coffee guy didn't show up. he didn't show up to bring coffee. get him out of here! >> all right. donald trump did not win a contest on saturday, but he picked up a few delegates. >> and senator ted cruz won easily in wyoming, 66% of the vote. rubio with 19%. >> and in the district of columbia, senator marco rubio taking 37% of the vote, just 50 votes ahead of john kasich who came in second at 35%. >> and on the democratic side, voters there going to the polls thousands of miles off the california coastline in the northern islands, voting for hillary clinton. >> here's a look at the delegate score board. trump leads with 460 right now. and here's the leaderboard right now. trump with 460.
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and 370 for cruz and on the democratic side, clinton well aside of bernie sanders, 1,231. hard to see how he can come back from that. there is other big news, campaign chaos causing an uproar at another donald trump rally. >> oh, oh! [ bleep ]. >> you see that? this time a protester actually jumps the fence and rushing the stage there is the secret service, just swooping in to the front-runner's side. >> and garrett tenney has brand-new details on that disturbance. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. this isn't first time that the protester has made headlines in demonstrations. you can see from the incident at
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the dayton international airport the man we now know is 22-year-old thomas demass owe jumping the barricade and nearly making it on to the stage. within several feet of donald trump. secret service agents and security caught him just in time and took him away. he's been charged with inducing panic and disorderly conduct. it appears that the demonstrations are nothing new for him. he held to lead an anti-racism protest at dayton ohio. that included dragging the american flag and standing on top of it. those images were later used in an alleged isis propaganda video though the 22-year-old has no known connections to the terrorist group. but it was still a point that donald trump jumped on yesterday in calling out this protester. >> they bring them into the court and they process them. and the judge lets them go.
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he was looking to do harm. this wasn't a guy that was looking to, you know, have fun. then one of my people said, wow. they found his name. and it was probably isis or isis related. do you believe it? >> reporter: and looking at a twitter account that allegedly belongs to him, he does not appear to have any regrets and has been bragging about the whole incident since he was released. back to you all. >> all right, garrett tenney. there were a number of protests unfolding yesterday. dayton, ohio. kansas city. >> pepper spray being used. >> there was a video that shows you some of the people causing you the most severe problems. standing on the american flag. >> then in kansas city yesterday, trump was interru interrupted. he had people popping up and he said, we have all night. >> oh, here's another one.
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oh, get him out. oh, bernie. another bernie sign. get out of here, bernie. out! that's a bernie supporter, got the bernie sign. were you put in here by bernie? oh, would i love to run against bernie. i've got plenty of time. we're in no rush. anybody in a rush? we're in no rush. you know what, folks? year going to take our country -- we're going to take our country back from these people. these are bad, bad people. we're going to take our country back from these people. >> and many are saying it's an insult on freedom of speech. donald trump saying he's going to start pressing charges and that's the only way to stop the protesters, doing that. also pointing the finger at bernie sanders supporters because there were a lot of bernie sanders signs in the crowd. sanders put out a stay saying that trump shouldn't be surprised because of the heated rhetoric. he said one protester -- he
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recently said to a protester i want to punch him in the face and he yearned for the old days when a protester would be punch and carried out on the stretcher and a few days ago a woman was allegedly hurt by a trump supporter. >> american people will defeat trump because they understand that every religion on earth, christianity, judaism, islam, buddhism, all understand and teach us that love trumps hatred. this campaign is not just about electing a president. it is about transforming america through a political revolution. each and every one of us has enormous power if we are prepared to utilize that power. if we stand together, there is
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nothing we cannot accomplish. >> so much for calling calm there. hillary clinton denounced the protests but bernie sanders hasn't. >> move on.org said you don't see this violence at hillary clinton rallies. move on was created to make clinton look good. clinton and sanders had some big crowds. clinton does not. what happens when you get 25,000 people together for anything? when is the last time there was an nfl stadium where you get 25,000 plus people there for a weekend and nobody causes problems? >> and at an nfl game there aren't the hooligans out in the united kingdom like with their soccer. >> who is going to be respon
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responsible like the person yesterday who charged the stage hurts somebody? what happens when he hurts the candidate? >> if it gets worse, i wouldn't be surprised if it doesn't get worse. especially when we have statements from move on.org saying this is working, we'll do it more. mr. trump and the republican leaders who support him and hate filled rhetoric should be on notice. >> they're calling for more. this is why it's all organized. this is why donald trump has been calling attention to the fact there are printed out signs. they're showing up inside the event with hoodies on so they don't reveal the t-shirts they have underneath themselves. then thai take the hoodies off and it's anti-trump stuff. they're all organize. >> move on.org is saying to the people outside of chicago, thank you. did they see the bloodied police officers who were victims of some of these people? >> yeah, did moveon.org
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denounce -- they want more bloodied police officers? >> even bernie sanders's statement yesterday, he released a statement, he said, while i appreciate we have supporters at trump's rally our campaign did not organize the protest. the trump campaign should not be surprised there's a response. >> the move on people say, this was great. thanks for coming. let's do more. >> what are the republicans saying, are they coming to trump's side in an effort to preserve the first amendment or are they denouncing him and all of that? we hear marco rubio saying that donald trump has been egging on his supporters which then, you know, causes the protests to -- protesters to want to incite whenever they're doing, and john kasich saying he's creating a toxic environment. well, pastor jeffers was on with judge jeanine last night and saying they're trying to prop up their open campaigns and he has a problem with it.
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>> i want to see a word about the other spineless gop candidates. you know, instead of exploiting the situation to try to prop up their failing campaigns, what they ought to be doing is standing up and saying, you know, we may not agree with everything trump says. we may not even like the way he says it, but we are standing in solidarity with his first amendment rights. they won't do that because they're too weak which is why they're losing. >> but another important point to what he is saying, this is not about donald trump. this is about the first amendment. people do have a first amendment right to protest speech or rhetoric they don't like. you don't have a right to go and beat up somebody at a rally or rush the stage and potentially put a candidate in danger because you disagree with what they say. >> this is not helping their cause either to get the message out. we'll have much more on this throughout the show.
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we have great guests to talk about it. but right now, we turn our attention to what's is making news headlines. isis reportedly launched two chemical attacks in the northern city of kirkuk. the attacks killed a 3-year-old girl and injured 600 other people. the injured are suffering from infected burns, infection. the u.s. led coalition says that the chemicals that isis has used are chlorine and a low grade sulfur mustard gas which is not power. the second violent inmate who escaped from a new mexico prison van is now back behind bars. lionel clah surrendered to police after a woman said he was holed up in her apartment. clah seen here in 2007 claims the prison restraints fell off of him and he escaped with convicted murderer joseph cruz.
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both were spotted on a hotel security camera in plain clothing. the chicago river turned green in celebration of st. patty's day. thousands of people lined both sides of the river, cheering as crews carried the unique tradition out. 45 pounds of an eco friendly vegetable dye is used to transform the river. it was followed by a downtown parade which has become one of the largest in the country. those are your news headlines. this is on my bucket list. i have never been. >> i'd love to catch the fish out of the river, green fish. >> sounds like a dr. isis -- dr. seuss book. >> yeah. two window washers were trapped outside a high rise building. how this ended. plus, we showed you how the secret service agents surrounding donald trump came in after a protester rushed a
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welcome back. secret service, watch this, forced to react to the protester who attempted to rush the statement at the donald trump rally yesterday in dayton, ohio. [ crowd boos ] >> that guy hauled out. protester after protester disrupting the rally. as well as in missouri yesterday. that also happened. here to weigh in on the uptick of violence in demonstrations at the campaign events former security analyst evie pomporus. >> good morning. >> it's amazing. holy smokes these guys are impressive, that had to jump up there. right in the line of fire.
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four of them jump up on stage to protect trump. how do they protect something like that? they knew there might be this type of antagonizers jumping up. how do they coordinate knowing that more might jump up? >> much like dancers, they're in specific positions and they know what to do. it isn't an initial reaction, because they're trained. anybody is going to want to cringe away from a problem or go away. but through training over and over again, you're kind of psychologically set. your body is set to go up on stage and protect. we are seeing a lot of the strong reactions at the trump rallies. you know, their response time was magnificent. obviously the security measure was the great. it was one guy who jumped on stage. what if that was ten people jumping on stage? what we're seeing it's not just
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one or two people at the rallies that are showing up. my concern is what if we had a group of ten people jumping on the stage, could they have handled the amount of people? trump is in a sea of people. always like 360 degree, you know, surrounding of trump of people. that's also concerning. it looks great for the camera shot. they want that beautiful camera shot with all his supporters but they got this -- you know, the one or two egress points but what if those get blocked? they'll have to start thinking a little differently, maybe leaving a back area open where you can actually get him out of there. >> that's interesting because the optics of a campaign, right, having the people behind you -- >> it's a visual thing. they love it. >> so to cut that off and have a brick wall or boxes behind you, you know, doesn't look as good. the trump airplane sitting right there. it's the optics but over safety. >> but that would happen, not just with campaigns but with any individual.
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they want to have -- look, that camera shot. i think because of the level of violence that we are seeing, i think the strategy is going to have to change a little bit. more police presence. you want the camera shot. behind trump you don't see many individuals, you don't see uniformed officers and i think the numbers have to be increased. what if there's a bum rush, a lot of people rushing, and it's unfair to put them in a vulnerable situation. they can only do so much. that bubble you saw, i mean, at the end of the day, that is the final layer of security. you get through them -- >> well, they did a magnificent job yesterday. fingers crossed they have a game plan. thank you. thousands of christians murdered in cold blood, but the obama administration refuses to call it what it is. >> i mean, you have to get the facts from the ground more than
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just -- >> mr. secretary, the whole world knows that christians are being slaughtered in the middle east. >> hillary clinton called it what it is. why isn't the administration? stunning new report that can force the administration to change its course. that's next. it's a fact. kind of like bill splitting equals nitpicking. but i only had a salad. it was a buffalo chicken salad. salad.
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a small business expert will answer you in about 30 seconds. no annoying hold music. just a real person, real fast. whenever you need them. great, that's what i said. so your business can get back to business. sounds like my ride's ready. don't get stuck on hold. reach an expert fast. comcast business. built for business. >> thousands killed, millions displaced since the rise of isis. but will the evidence finally be enough for the obama administration to label it a genocide? joinings us now one of the reports of the new report, vice president of the knights of columbus, andrew walter. good morning. >> good morning. >> so to this point, the obama administration has been hesitant to refer to the mass murder of christians as a genocide. why is it important do you think for them to start using that word, genocide? >> well, i think it's important for two reasons. first, it's the truth. it's very clearly genocide and
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second i think it's important because the rest of the world has said it's genocide. whether it's the e.u. parliament, the pope, angela merkel. there's a worldwide consensus this is genocide. the united states needs not block this consensus. they're asking that they don't block the consensus that's emerged around the world. the question for the administration now is do they want to stand alone on the world stage against congress, against the american people who by 20 points say they this is genocide, do they want to stand alone as the world's sole genocide denier. >> tell us why the terminology actually matters, the nitty-gritty on this. it would put the middle east on notice, i guess and let them know there are actions for consequences. why does terminology matter? >> when you use the word genocide it puts people on notice this behavior will no
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longer bel tolerated. if christians are excluded, it gives a green light to terrorists to go ahead and kill the christians there. if they're excluded it will green light more of what we saw with mother teresa's nuns. if christians are excluded then there's blood and then the question is whose hands is is that blood going to be on? i think we use the term that was invented for exactly this kind of a situation and we say, look, this is the worst kind of crime you can commit. and we are not going to tolerate this. the moral authority that comes with the word genocide tells every terrorist this will not be tolerated. it makes it very clear that the united states and the world stand against what they're doing. >> andrew, is there any kind of a downside for the united states
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to not use the word? or rather if the united states starts using the word is there anything they're trying to avoid? >> well, the united states has a very bad history of this. we remember 20 years ago with rwanda, we didn't use the word and this is something that is still talked about. we remember our dithering in the holocaust in terms how we'd handle the refugees in that situation. the united states has a bad history of dealing with genocides. this is documented in samantha power's book called "the problem from hell, america and the age of genocide." a notable exception was darfur where colin powell sent people to the area and declared it a genocide. but by and large, the united states has had a very strong reticence to using the term. it's a terrible term but the only term that applies here. i would point out that in this case, we have had the lawyers look at it. they're having the lawyers look at it. our lawyers wrote a legal brief
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and said, look, there's a low bar for this. it's probable cause. as one of the attorneys put it to me there's enough evidence on social media for a prosecutor to move forward on a probable cause standard. this is not complicated. >> yeah, i mean, even hillary clinton called it genocide after you and the knights of columbus released that 278-page report on thursday. andrew, thank you so much for your time today. we hope that we get some action as a result. >> thank you. so do we. all right. coming up, a fiery riot breaks out inside a prison and it's caught on camera by the inmates. the incredible details just ahead. turning junk into something brand-new for your home. >> that's it. back to you. >> i learn quickly. >> yeah. you're hired. >> yeah, that was me under that mask. i'll take you behind the scenes of the hit show "salvage dawgs."
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rest. it's that famous mobilizing sentence that works on you guys that i have been saying this whole time. so thank you, millennials, for lending your support to the biggest outsider jew in the race. hillary rodham clinton. there's a lot of work to be done and that is why i am sick and tired of hearing about my damn e-mails! >> it's better than i thought it would be. finally, bernie sanders did address not the e-mails but she's stealing all his lines. >> well, you know, hey, he's written the entire narrative and she's had to respond to just about everything from bernie sanders. >> including his hair. >> and dressing like him. >> i like the oversized suit. >> was that a brown suit or a black suit or charcoal suit? the internet will go crazy. 34 minutes after the hour. other stories we're following
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now in the headlines. hundreds of alabama prisoners started a riot in a warder and another one being stabbed. this started in a fire in the hallway of the holman c. correctional facility. it started with a fight and when the two got involved, they were stabbed. they're expected to recover. the prison was secured after several hours. wow. one of the busiest airports searched top to bottom after a pilot loses a gun. and now a janitor at the philadelphia international airport is charged with stealing it. the pilot left his bag in an airport restroom. that's when police say that the janitor took it. the authorities found it in the back of a storage closet. they said no one in the airport was in any danger. and a big scare at a chicago high rise when two window washers are left dangling from the broken scaffolding. st. patrick's parade goers could
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do nothing as they watched them dangle from 15 stories up. firefighters lowered the ropes to the men who were both pulled to safety. they were shaken but not hurt. the scaffolding company is investigating what went wrong. >> like spider-man. a couple of tough weeks on the campaign trail, hillary clinton is taking the edge off with a sip of guinness. you may remember a similar encounter during her failed 2008 campaign when clinton was caught on camera taking shots of whiskey. >> good for her. >> yeah. >> you know how hard -- >> have a nice cold snack. >> well, come on. >> just like you and me. >> it's st. patty's day. the national guard rescued 2,000 people. >> nearly two feet of rain has inundated the state over the past week. the historic rainfall is
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claiming five lives. >> another round of showers is on the way. rick rick mute has more. >> yeah, primarily arkansas saw so much rain and we'll continue to watch that today. temperature wise, tell you what, we're almost at officially spring, temperature wise things are looking nice out there. 49 in minneapolis. today another very mild day. we do have some rain though. we have that rain across parts of the south, that is now -- that high pressure holding back, breaking down in the spring, now pulling off to the east. get ready for scattered showers across the ohio valley, some heavy at times. i don't think we're talking about a flooding threat. maybe one, one and a half inches for some spots. now moving in to north florida and then the sunshine returns across texas. some sun across southern louisiana which is great news. the storms you see across arkansas that's a late afternoon
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and overnight issue. we will see potentially some tornadoes. look at the plains, 70 degrees in bismarck, north dakota. breaking all kinds of records again for high temperatures. out across the west, more moisture pulling on in. rain and heavy mountain snow. maybe four feet of snow in the sierras. >> thanks. it's hard to believe this bar started as a portico on a house. >> you will see it in a second. this is me on the road in roanoke, virginia. >> but you will see the things that the guys at black dog salvage do. you can see it on their show, "salvage dawgs." >> all right. i got it. that's it. okay. got it. i got it. >> yep. >> all of this stuff in this house was original. that is a sweet piece of dallas right there. >> this house except for the fact it's in the middle of
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nowhere on a cattle ranch it is definitely up our alley. >> i'm loving the fleur-de-lis design. >> the crazy duo of navy veteran, i got to see first hand how they preserve the amazing pieces so the next generation can enjoy them. let's take a look. ♪ >> we made it to roanoke, virginia, black dog salvage. i have seen this on the diy network. i can't wait to meet the guys and the doggies. two navy veterans are working to salvage things into something new. they have turned a lot of trash into treasure. let's go hunt for some gold. hey, need a hand? that's all, folks. even without the dogs, this place is a barrel of fun. the pups plus michael whiteside, robert kulp are the stars of
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"salvage dawgs." now in the fifth season on the diy network. >> one thing left to do, load the trucks and go. >> what's the process, how does this work? >>well, it's based on recycling. we started with house parts, everything you can think of. doors, lighting, plumbing, wood. any part of a house that's reusable. >> we're the savers of salvage. >> we're in between the wrecking ball and -- >> tell us about your service. >> i was in the four years in the service on the held squadron. >> i was in active service for five years. i'm an "o," he's an "e." >> i do the work, he carries the clipboard. >> now they're putting me to work. >> anna, the project today is swinging day bed. you can sleep or hang out on this thing. >> this thing has two stories that i can see right now. the wood that came from the house up at smith mountain lake. >> this came from the rising sun ranch in -- >> alderson, west virginia. >> probably 1880s. we pulled it off.
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>> how did they turn that into this? it involves a whole lot of tools. >> it's not a little bit -- a little bit of this paint comes off. we don't want it all to come off. >> right. >> that shabby chic look. >> right. we need to support this. we'll go to the welding shop. >> all right. pull the trigger. >> watch your fingers. >> yeah. pull. that's it. that's beautiful. couldn't do any better. >> i learn quickly. >> you're a fast study. you're hired. >> we'll punch holes into this. >> awesome. >> now we'll put and these brackets that you just made, we'll attach it to the bottom. >> pull that trigger. >> keep going. more and more. >> one more step, anna. got to sign your piece. >> how big? >> all right. awesome. that's one lucky -- >> the price just went up.
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>> way up. >> this is the finished product. what do you think? >> lovely. let's enjoy the fruits of the labor. >> cheers, everybody. >> oh, a rough day on the job there. speaking of cold snacks with your friends. you can watch the brand-new episode of "salvage dawgs" on the diy network tonight at 10:00 p.m. and 10:30 eastern. the gang will be living tweeting at black dog salvage. they're so much fun. i had a great time with them. >> what was the most unique item they retrofitted and put in a house? >> there were all kinds of strange things laying around. did you see the mannequin arms? >> that's going to be on somebody's wall. >> on the bottom of the swinging -- yeah. if you get that one, it will be worth a lot of money one day. >> very cool. coming up, one liberal group says moments like this are just the beginning of trump's troubles. >> hello, darling.
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go home to mom. go home to mommy. go home to mommy. >> they want more protests to silence republicans and shut down free speech. will that really work? and a group of hackers almost got away with $1 billion. the one mistake though that tipped them off to the feds. i jumped at the chance to take the dna test through ancestry and my results ended up being african, european and asian. it was great because it confirmed what i knew in my gut with a little surprise. ancestry helped give me a sense of identity.
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but i've managed.e crohn's disease is tough, except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems,
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serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, remission is possible. hey, friends, how you feeling, i hope you're doing well. quick money headlines right now. a big pay cut for chipotle's bosses. the company's top two executives took home more than $13 million last year that's about $28 million less than the year before. this comes after a series of food scares that sent sales plunging and caused several restaurants to temporarily close. and a typo worth a
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$1 billion bank heist. hackers breached bangladesh's bank system, but a fifth transfer for $20 million was held up because the word foundation was spelled wrong in the recipient portion. moveon.org taking credit for the violent acts that cancelled the trump event in chicago and yesterday the organization announced that this was just a precursor to more actions they will take to silence republicans and shut down free speech. joining us now the mayor of miami beach and a hillary clinton supporter, philip levine. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> mr. mayor, i want to read what move on.org is saying is saying, those who support trump and his hate-filled rhetoric should be on notice after tonight's event. so moveon.org, thanking everybody that turned out to
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chicago that didn't let trump talk inside and left some police officers bloodied outside. how exactly is that elevating the discourse? >> well, i can tell you as a mayor of miami beach and i think i speak for all mayors, one of our primary duties is maintaining the peace, the order and the safety for all of the citizens and residents of our cities. i have no time or i condemned the organizations like this that this disrupt and cause all types of social unrest. for us, people's rights to freedom of speech is most important. and of course the right to protest is very important. but i have to tell you as a mayor i condemn any organization that promotes such social unrest and potential situations where people get hurt. >> and does it look like to you as somebody who is tasked with keeping the peace where there are often big crowds that some of the protesters are pushing the limit of free speech like the person who just charged the
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stage yesterday? it seems like they're getting closer and closer to somebody getting injured. >> clearly, i agree with you. running on a stage like that is clearly -- there's a -- looks like it's a crime to me and something that should not be tolerated and putting the police and others that are protesting peacefully and coming to the political rally, it's disrupting their freedom of speech. i condemn those types of actions. i think i speak for most of my fellow mayors across the country who are charged with man taning the peace -- maintaining the peace and safety of our citizens. >> do you think there's a double standard because these protester, moveon.org protesters are cheered by the people on the left, but if the tea party was doing this, they would be called racist or intolerant? >> i'm not so sure.
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i think overall anyone causing disruptions and putting people's lives in danger we have to condemn that. i don't care if it's from the right or the left. it doesn't make a difference. i of course -- you know, the freedom of speech is most important to important in our country. your freedom to protest. now do so in a peaceful manner where everyone's livelihood and safety is taken to account. >> just a quick question before you go. are you a clinton supporter. are you getting worried that she's going to be in a courtroom this summer instead of on the convention floor in philadelphia now that her server guru is talking to the fbi? >> no, not at all. that's -- once again, that's an old story you keep hearing about. secretary clinton is not concerned. matter of fact, i think it's wonderful that more and more openness can be brought to the subject so it can be closed down permanently forever. we all know that none of these emails were confidential. and having a private server was never illegal. it's happened with general powell and condoleezza rice. so once again, it's an old story that keeps coming up and brought
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about by her opponents. >> all right, mayor phillip levine, thank you very much. more coming up. >> thank you. their safe driving bonus check from allstate. oh. look at this. safe driving bonus. are you a safe driver? lucky little fella. only allstate gives you two safe driving bonus checks a year for driving safe. see how much more an allstate agent can do for you. call 877-644-3100. like in most families, dad's always the last to know. that's why accident forgiveness was the first thing he asked for when he switched to allstate. michael james! middle name. not good. get accident forgiveness from allstate and keep your rates from going up just because of an accident. find out how a local allstate agent can help better protect your family. call one right now. and if you're a safe driver, you can save up to 45%. just a few more ways the good hands are doing more than ever before. see what the personal service of an allstate agent can do for you. call 877-644-3100.
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hello, hello, president frank underwood has been trumped. the new season of "house of cards" is out on netflix. many viewers are bringing in the latest headlines and coming out of the real campaign trail. so as the energy election grows more and more unpredictable, is reality becoming more interesting thanphant me? >> here to walk us through how the fictional drama is playing out in real life is senior political reporter of lifeset.com, ashley, nice to see you this morning. i want to start with the american dream and idea of the american dream. here's frank underwood from "house of cards." watch.
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>> the american dream has failed you. work hard, play by the rules. you aren't guaranteed success. >> here's donald trump responding to that. watch -- >> you look at what's going on with this country, we're losing our jobs. and the politicians don't tell you. >> what do you see between the signed bites? >> donald trump has made economics his number one, jobs, china, trade. that is revensonating with democrat, independent, republican. you're seeing crossover appeal because the economy is the number-one thing on voters' minds. he knows that, like frank underwood trying to get back into the re-election cycle and knew if he put together an american works program he would be able to bring jobs to america and get voters on his side. >> not just republicans that you see parallels with. also democratic parallels. here is claire underwood leaving
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her husband, frank. spoiler alert. >> i'm not going to new hampshire. >> yes, you are. i'll see you in new hampshire. >> i'm leaving you. >> that seems like something that could have been said a few administrations ago in the white house. so what's the similarity between life and art there? >> well, i think the power couple in "house of cards" are frank and claire underwood. you could make the argument about the clintons. what we saw hands? of the distancing from hillary and bill, she brought him out on the campaign trail. many referred to him as her secret weapon. but really what we saw in new hampshire was that bill was more of a liability when it came to his indiscretions and all the history that was dredged up there. and honestly, he looked very frail and weak. something that frank underwood would not appreciate, right? it's funny to see how the parallels really do play out in a 2016 election. all the plot twists at every turn, i don't think the writers could have made that up. i think frank underwood would be proud of the clintons. >> we see it a lot with the
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endorsements, life imitating art, art imitating life, which is it? ashley pratt, thanks for your time. ahead, dr. ben carson who just endorsed donald trump will join us to react to the campaign trail theys on. how -- trail chaos. how would the peaceful dr. carson handle this? oh, look at you, so great to see you! none of this works. come on in. frodoers don't stop. wake up,
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common side effects were pain, redness or swelling at the injection site, limited arm movement, fatigue, headache, muscle or joint pain, less appetite, chills, or rash. get this one done. ask your doctor or pharmacist about prevnar 13® today. good morning. today is sunday, the 13th of march, 2016. i'm anna kooiman. donald trump taking his protes task. >> hello, darling. go home to mom. go home to mommy. you know what, folks? we're going to take our country back from these people. we're going to take it back! [ cheers ] he's a bad -- these are bad, bad people. >> who is organizing the left wing disrupters? we take a closer look. and we now know more about the man who created chaos at a donald trump rally. >> ho, ho, ho.
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[ booing ] >> we talk with the man who recorded this video of the disrupter being arrested. and a dad turns his 6-month-old into a leprechaun. >> give me the gold! >> just in time for st. patrick's day. the video has gone viral. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. that just made my morning. ♪ you guys remember one of the very first viral videos ever? it was the news report of the whole town looking for this leprechaun? >> yes. are you kidding me? that's my real house. >> hilarious. >> good morning, everyone. the lack of sleep, i hope you're getting over that now. if you've got kids in the house, chances are -- if you've got kids in the house, daylight saving time doesn't apply. they're on their own schedule. >> i think a lot of people don't notice because the phones that everybody uses as an alarm -- >> automatically adjust. that microwave oven -- does anyone still use a vcr?
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>> a who? >> no. those don't switch. >> what is that, you millennial you? we'll get to this fox news alert. brand-new details this morning on the man behind the campaign chaos. >> ho, ho, ho, ho! >> sit down! >> that's donald trump standing occupy stage. the secret service jumping up on stage after a protester rushed the stage at a trump rally yesterday in vandalia, ohio. >> we have more live from washington, d.c., on what we know about the protester's past. garrett? >> reporter: good morning. this protester is no stranger to the spotlight. he's a former child actor who's made headlines for protests before. here he is yesterday at a donald trump rally near dayton international airport. you see him jumping the fence and then rushing the stage, getting within a few feet of the republican front-runner before secret service agents wrapped him up and carried him away.
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he's since been charged with inducing panic and disorderly conduct. when he was younger, he appeared in several small roles on tv shows such as "yes, dear," "reno 911," and "house of payne." he's majoring in acting at wright state university in dayton. last year he made headlines for dragging an american flag across campus and then standing on it as part of an anti-racism protest that he helped organize. social security videos of the protester later were used in an alleged isis video. he jumped on trump yesterday calling out the protester. >> they bring them into a court, and they process them. and the judge lets them go. he was looking to do harm. this wasn't a guy that was looking to have a little fun. one of my people said, wow, they found his name. and it was probably isis or isis
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related. do you believe it? >> looking at a twitter account that allegedly belongs to d e s demasimo, he has been bragging about the incident since he was released from jail. safe to say, this is the most camera time he's had in years. back to you. >> thank you very much for the update on who the protester was. people wondering how is this so organized? moveon.org has sent out ieemail. and last night, protesters popping up all over. and donald trump saying you can keep popping up, but we're not going anywhere, watch. >> another bernie sign. get her out of here! out! that's a bernie supporter, folks. get the bernie sign -- were you nut here by bernie? get out. out. i got plenty of time. i mean, we're in no rush. anybody in a rush?
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[ cheers ] >> we're in no rush. i hope these guys get thrown into a jail. they'll never do it again. it will destroy their record. they'll have to explain to mom and dad why they have a police record and why they can't get a job. and you know what, i'm going to start pressing charges against all these people. then we won't have a problem. >> saying the consequences aren't strong enough, and they need to be in order for the chaos to stop. >> people keep blaming donald trump for these protesters that have been sometimes getting violent. it's not the trump supporters who are causing these problems. it's these people who are encouraged by moveon.org, which was created in the late '90s to get people to move on from the clinton impeachment. they've got to stay -- they say you don't see violence at a clinton rally or sanders rally or a rubio rally. they're importing these violent people. that is an old chicago-style trick. >> here they go -- "mr. trump
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and the republican leaders who support him and his hate-filled rhetoric should be on notice after tonight's event." bernie sanders responded yesterday to what unfolded. and he said, look, donald trump needs to be held accountable for his violent, hate-filled rhetoric. he wasn't backing down from saying you should be surprised. while we didn't organize any of our guys holding bernie signs going to your events, you shouldn't be surprised that some of our supporters are going to show up. >> it's not just bernie sanders saying that. the other gop contenders are doing the same thing. you've heard john kasich say that trump is creating a toxic environment. cruz saying similar things. rubio saying that trump is egging on his supporters and the protesters. poking the bear a bit. charlie black, a former senior adviser to reagan, george h.w. bush, pretty much been on every campaign since reagan for the presidency on the republican side was on "justice" last night and said this about moveon.org. >> there's no excuse for
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moveon.org, the radical leftist leninist group that's been in this country for years. by the way, the godfather of moveon.org is bill ayers. he and his wife, berna dean dorn, who got their start in the '70s by trying to blow up police, the pentagon and the capitol. in fact, might have allegedly killed a couple of policemen. so there's nothing new about moveon.org. these folks need to be disciplined by the police, by the secret service, whatever it takes so the violence does not disrupt events. >> haven't heard any of the candidates denouncing moveon. haven't heard on the liberal side hillary clinton or bernie sanders denouncing moveon. hillary clinton has denounced the violence and called for calm at the events. we spoke to phillip levine earlier. he's the miami beach mayor and a clinton supporter. even he is denouncing moveon.org. watch. >> running on a stage like that clearly is -- looks like it's a
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crime to me. it's something that should not be tolerated. and putting police in jeopardy and folks there protesting peacefully, folks coming to a political rally. it's disrupting their freedom of speech. >> what we're seeing is this huge double standard. there are people who don't like donald trump are saying people who want to protest donald trump have a right to free speech, but trump does not. they think it's okay to let him go and cancel events, black lives matter is in on this, too. they are tweeting out trump's schedule. they're asking people to plan to shut down his events. that's not the way that it's supposed to work. if you don't like a politician's speak e speech, you don't go or don't vote for them. you don't show up and cause chaos to cancel it. that's not part of the process. >> i'm worry thursday is going to get a lot worse. not just going to be a scuffle here and there. real bloodshed.
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>> right. >> i'm worried. >> if they'll do it to trump, rubio, kasich, and cruz, they're blaming him. if he gets the nomination, who's to say they won't show up at a cruz/rubio/kasich event and shut it down? it's about free speech at trump events. >> you aren't seeing it at the other events. >> i would like to say something about the secret service. these guys were amazing. you saw the secret service jumping on stage when others would have cowered and run away. they stood in the line of fire potentially, they get up and protect donald trump because obviously he has a secret service detachment as some of the candidates did a few months ago. we spoke to a form secret service agent on the show. she says something's got to change. they have this 360-degree area around donald trump. the backdrop where he's on stage. the opening behind him is something they wouldn't normally allow a president to have.
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>> she was saying he needs a clear way out, an exit strategy. >> when you go out for a campaign event, they go out many times ahead of time, the secret service. he's got three events to back to back to back yesterday. kansas city, ohio, cleveland. it's very difficult with a small secret service detachment, she was saying, for them to have that kind of staff to make sure that these candidates are safe. >> to get the sweeps done. >> it's interesting. something's going to change. if the candidates can call for calm maybe so this doesn't happen. >> i hope they do. these stories making headlines -- on the campaign trail, four contests held saturday. it was senator ted cruz winning easily in wyoming with 66% of the vote. rubio came in second with 19%. and the district of columbia, senator marco rubio taking 37% of the vote, just 50 votes ahead of john kasich who came in second at 35%. democratic voters going to the polls thousands of miles off the california coatline. in the northern islands, handing hillary clinton a victory. trump leads with 460.
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cruz behind at 370. rubio, 163. kasich, 63. on the democratic side, clinton well ahead of sanders, 1,231 to 576. horror in iraq after isis is apparently launching two chemical attacks near the northern city of kirkuk. the attacks killing a 3-year-old girl and injuring 600 others. several people had to go from the hospital there and are dealing infected burns and are having trouble breathing. the u.s.-led coalition said in the past that isis has used chlorine and a low-grade sulfur mustard gas. investigators are trying to figure out what isis used in the latest attack. at least 13 people are injured on a las vegas freeway overnight as a full passenger bus and another car collide. metro police think a toyota selica was speeding and cut in front of the bus, striking it and caused it to flip on to its side. the driver arrested on suspicion of dui.
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ten people were on board the bus. one passenger still in critical condition this morning. those are your headlines. let's go over to rick, standing by with the forecast this morning. >> you sleep? >> yeah. >> little bit. >> where's my blanky? >> let's -- >> yeah, you're not sleepy. [ laughter ] >> tonight, we catch up on it. we're going to get lots of light. take a look. if you can throw the maps up, that would be great for me. we have got some rain across parts of the east. we had all of the moisture that was coming in across parts of the south. now it's spreading out in the ohio valley, a wider spreading out storm instead of the solid funneling of moisture across parts of the south. there's one more piece of energy. you see the rotation coming up across the panhandle of texas and oklahoma? that is going to bring us severe weather later in the day across arkansas. take a look at all of the moisture coming in across parts of the west. a lot of rain, a lot of mountain snow. it's going to dump maybe four to five feet in a few isolated
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spots in the sierra-nevadas. that's the great news. here's the severe weather tonight. potentially an overnight thing. we'll watch for tornadoes across the areas of the south. after that, they're done across the south at least for a few days which is good news. >> thank you. 15 minutes after the hour on. to some stories we're following after the break. left-wing protesters continue to interrupt trump rallies, and trump is not backing down. our next guest says the gop should thank god for trump. we'll explain why when we hear from him. then, something completely different. did this soccer star just bite another player? >> a love bite. >> or hickey. hungry? pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently. only flonase is approved to relieve both your itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. complete allergy relief or incomplete. let your eyes decide. flonase changes everything. announcement: thisbiggest of the decade.the
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back. the opposition donald trump has seen on the campaign trail hasn't slowed his momentum as the front-runner. our next guest says the gop should thank god for donald trump. joining us to explain is conservative radio talk show host wayne alan root. also author of "the power of the relentless." nice to see you. >> how are you? >> do you imagine the establishment is going to want to thank god for donald trump? they hate him. >> they do. but they should thank god because the republican party is -- is in vogue again. we've got our mojo back. he's winning. i hate to quote charlie sheen, but in this case, donald trump is winning. you could tell. there's no protesters at rubio events. there's no one trying to interrupt cruz events. no one even knows kasich's name. donald trump is getting this incredible attack because he's winning. he's bothering the left, under their skin, and they know he's the one that could beat hillary clinton.
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and they've got to stop him. they've got to slow him. >> obviously he has a -- a lot of momentum. you saw the republican party is back. others would argue it's being ripped in half, torn to shreds, and stepped on. is the republican party back, and if so, what is this new republican party? >> well, i think it's very much like ronald reagan. i was the first commentator in the country who compared trump to reagan. i think the reaction is exactly the same, clayton. i was there. i was at columbia university, the center of the liberal universe, from 1980 to '83 when reagan was running in and then elected president. the response of the kids on campus and professors, exactly trump today. they're scared to death, we are winning, we're taking back the agenda. we're not punching bags anymore. we're actually punching back. and that's a good thing because i don't want to be a punching bag. it's been 7.5 years under barack obama where the republican party's been a punching bag
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under john boehner, mitch mcconnell, and even under paul ryan. i'm proud that donald trump is hitting back. >> there were people this week circulating old videos, of course, in the wake of nancy reagan's passing. people looking back at reagan and wondering -- i think there's even a "time" magazine cover showing the party, ronald reagan and nancy reagan standing side by side saying what happened to our party. would people who have been sharing these things virally, videos of ronald reagan talking about welcoming in immigrants into this country, do you think it's the same party? do you think ronald reagan would be pleased with the type of rhetoric that we hear from donald trump about immigration and other policies? do you think they'd agree? >> i don't think it's rhetoric. i think it's truth. i think ronald reagan was a man of the truth. at the time, it was the same reaction. they called him the same names. they said reagan was a clown. reagan was not an intellectual. he was a lightweight. he was extreme. he was radical. that he could never allow his finger near the nuclear button.
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it's the same type of hysterical talk coming from the left that i heard under ronald reagan because donald trump in many ways -- not exactly like reagan -- but in many ways reminds me of ronald reagan. he appeals to the middle class. he speaks to the working class. he's expanding the gop tent to allow in others besides the elite corporate ceos that seem to run the republican party. i wrote a book two years ago called "the murder of the middle class." that's what i believe is happening today because of bicycle and because of moveon.org and because of the gop establishment. nobody cares about the middle class and the working class. but donald trump speaks them. i said in the book, we need someone in the republican party who is not a pure conservative but rather a populist. and hopefully an entertainer like reagan, who gets his message across, who's a celebrity and to who speaks to middle-class people. those are the silent majority that we've been missing in the gop. because of trump, we've got it
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back. i think we're going to win this election. >> the middle class feels trampled upon and lied to by the establishment. >> if only donald trump instead of calling it a trump rally, if he'd call it a job fair, none of the liberal protesters would have showed up. they're scared to death of jobs. that's the division in america today. >> we're out of time. >> not black versus white. we always were told we were german. we were in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. so i just started poking around on ancestry. then, i decided to have my dna tested through ancestry dna. it turns out i'm scottish. so, i traded in my lederhosen for a kilt. we believe in the power of active management.management, by debating our research to find the best investments. by looking at global and local insights to benefit from different points of view. and by consistently breaking apart risk to focus on long-term value.
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most americans believe religion is losing its influence on politics. according to new research from pew research, 68% said so. >> that same poll also shows 40% of people don't think political leaders express their faith as much as they should. joining us to talk about this is father jonathan morris. what do you make of this? do we want our religion infused
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with politics? >> i would say yes and no. we want values infused in our politics for sure. i think we could look at it as a positive thing that people are not, we saw in this poll, people are not necessarily looking for somebody who is of the same denomination. i think it shows an openness that somebody could be a great leader even though they're not evangelical, catholic, whatever it happens to be. and they're -- i think society has changed more in the last 50 years than it's changed in the 500 years previous. things are rapidly changing. i think the poll shows that. >> we're talking about politics, but what about this politically correct culture that bwe live i? you can't say merry christmas. you have a holiday tree instead of a christmas tree. at easter, it can't be a cross, just a spring festival. >> i think this goes in waves. it will come and go. as society has changed in 50 years, i think with communication, technology, and an open society, that can -- you can see change toward a more
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open expression of faith. i don't see it all as bad. like, you know, this is -- we've all lost faith, we've all lost religion. and it's never coming back. i think with new technology, with new communication we're going to go in waves. we'll see people losing faith and say, hey, there's nothing -- what i've lost doesn't make me happy. you know, i need to go back and find meeting in my life. -- find meaning in my life. >> this cycle, is having a religious candidate, a candidate whose number-one priority are religious issues, is that the most important thing for the critical evangelical voters? >> in this poll, 40% of americans would like to see candidates talk more about their faith. i think that's a lot. that's a lot more than europe, i would say. but you mentioned whether or not people are voting, evangelical votes -- eight years ago, we kind of lost the catholic vote. nobody talks about the catholic vote anymore. right now, people are talking about evangelical vote. i think we're going lose that, too. when we see that evangelicals
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are not just going for their evangelical candidate. they're going for whoever they think is going to be best leader. i don't think it's necessarily a bad thing. >> it's interest ago we talked about this before. jfk running, had to assure people as a catholic that the vatican wouldn't be rulinging the white house if he were elected. that there maybe was a sense in the nation that maybe we weren't ready to have a catholic in the white house. over these 50 years, things have shifted quite a bit. >> i think so. we also want somebody to stand up for what they believe in. and to your point, anna, not to be afraid to say i'm an evangelical, i'm a catholic, i'm a christian. and to have policies that express what you believe. you know, checking your faith at the door of the white house is not something that i think's good. >> you don't want a phony candidate that's acting like their faith is more important to them than it is. in the critical away caucuses, for example, ahead of that all the faith-infused political ads you saw. now see them as often. you do sometimes -- >> i agree. it's great that there isn't as much of the phony stuff.
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i would say that i think religious leaders have to be careful continue to get too close to padres and candidates. i don't think it's healthy for religion, for faith to have pastors get occupy stages with political candidates and to raise their hand together or to say that i'm supporting, i endorse this candidate or that -- neither candidate nor party is so good that's going to represent faith or religion perfectly. i think we have to keep a little bit of a distance. speaking out about morals, values, but not wedding ourselves with any particular candidate or party. >> father jonathan morris, thank you very much for coming on. >> thank you. happy very early sunday morning. coming up, he tried storm the donald's stage. this disrupter was quickly taken down. [ booing ] >> find out what we've learn good him. and we'll talk to the man who recorded the video of the protester's arrest. and a dad turns his 6-month-old into a leprechaun.
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brighter denture every day. congratulations on your big win in michigan, senator. >> thank you. i want to thank everyone who voted for me and apologize to everyone else for maybe your facebook feed so, so annoying. >> how do you think you pulled off such an upset victory? >> well, tapper, i spent a lot of time in michigan. i don't know if you're aware of this, but they give you ten cents for recycled cans. [ laughter ] >> i made a fortune. the young people love me, tapper, because i'm like them. i got a lot of big plans and absolutely no idea how to achieve them. >> talking about underwear this time. >> i like that he pulled out an old "seinfeld" reference. neumann and kramer had the idea to drive cans to michigan for
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ten cents. >> the big bags of cans. >> they went after bernie and hillary in a lighthearted way. lorne michaels said most of the dhaems they parody can't take a joke. they don't think it's funny. obviously we've got good sports finally. moving on, it's a fox news alert. the man who nearly tackled donald trump during yesterday's campaign rally in ohio. he tried to potentially. >> ho, ho, ho! >> what we're learning is that that is 22-year-old thomas demassimo. a former child actor-turned-protester being dragged away after he jumped a barrier coming within feet of the front-runner. >> he made headlines last year after dragging an american flag across the wright state university campus and standing on it. according to news reports, the
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video was later used in an isis propaganda video. >> yeah. now he faces charges for inducing a panic and disorderly conduct. one trump supporter and his daughter had a front row seat. they actually captured the end of the chaos on their cell phone camera. watch. [ boos ] joining us, the man who shot the video, jim wampler and his 16-year-old daughter, chloe. good morning. >> thanks for having us. >> it looked like there was serious danger a few feet if you. did you feel safe yesterday at the trump rally? >> yeah, things were relatively calm. when you think of a trump rally, you think of people being really riled up. being so early, it was relatively calm. >> i felt safe. the secret service were right there. >> yeah. looked like it.
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they came right occupy the stage and managed to protect mr. trump. they jumped occupy stage, four or five -- jumped up on stage, four or fives of the secret service agents. what was the mood like in the crowd as this was unfolding? >> it was rowdy. afterwards, it calmed down some. >> i think it was the excitement. everybody was somewhat shocked and seen a guy tackled and taken out is definitely eye opening. >> yeah. we'll show the video you that were able to capture. what what made you pull your cell phone and start rolling? >> of course, at a rally r -- ts by the way was the first rally for both of us. we have cameras taking lots of pictures. his my camera. then when i saw them tackle him, i said i want to get this on
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film for our memory. it turned out good that i got a good shot. >> and there's been charges by some in the mainstream media, some of the other republican candidates that donald trump is riling up his supporters and making them violent at these rallies s. that what you saw? donald trump supporters acting out violently? >> no. everybody was friendly, nice, calm. a couple protesters inside were politely escorted out. most of the protesters were outside which i'm totally fine with. that's the way it should be. they were close enough to get their signs out and chant a few things, but not close enough to disrupt our rally. that's the way it should be done. >> i want to get your takes on the political process now. jim, you said you voted many times. you felt lied to over the years. is that right?
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>> yeah. in the last elections, '12 and '14, a lot of promises made. i don't think they've kept any of their promises. >> is your first foray to american politics in a crazy election cycle. what what did you walk away with yesterday? >> well, i mean, it was really interesting seeing how he was able to gather so much support. and he's a really good speaker. and yeah, i was just -- very something. >> did you pick up a souvenir, too? did we hear? >> oh, yeah. do not mess with secret service. you'll lose your shoes. >> that's a protester's shoe? >> that is his shoe. >> what are you going do with it? >> i don't know. it was laying, this and we
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thought, that would be a souvenir for the short term. we thought it was fun. >> he wasn't asking for it back on his way out, it didn't look like. >> no. i don't think he was worried about his shoe at that point. >> i'm sure this isn't the kind of branding that nike was hoping for. >> no. that's not -- you know, i never thought of that. you're right. they probably do not like that. >> jim and chloe, great to see you this morning. thanks for joining us from dayton, ohio. we appreciate it. your first campaign rally. >> thank you. cloudy said that was the best day of her life, by the way. it was great. >> excitement. thank you very much. we're following some other stories this hour. 7:39 the time on the east coast. tragedy strikes at the famous alaskan iditarod race. one dog is dead this morning and several more injured after a drunk driver slammed into two sled teams with his show tomobile. authorities say this doing -- snowmobile, authorities say this dog, nash, was killed. crosby on the left was injured
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and another knocked unconscious. the driver apologized on social media saying it was not intentional but says he blacked out from being drunk. one sled driver reacted to the tragedy. listen -- >> he missed me by inches at 80 miles per hour. and clipped the team as he continued and never stopped. >> the suspect is facing multiple charges including assault and criminal mischief. shots are fired at a party bus in california this weekend. now the search is on for the gunman. the limo bus was getting off the bay bridge in oakland when town home ii people in a neighboring car -- when two people in a neighboring car opened fire. the passengers refused to cooperate with the investigation leading them to think this was not a random shooting. in another controversy plaguing the soccer world, chelsea striker diego costa
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appeared to beat everen con's s.a. cup quarterfinal. this after a feud between the pair. he was alleged bee the alleged nipple felt the soccer star denies it was a bit. the average is 2-0. you may remember the barcelona star, luis suarez, was given a ban at the 2004 world cup. his third ban for biting during a match. why couldn't they tell somebody to get out their choppers -- >> you don't use your hand or mouth. let's give the guy behind these pictures the dad of the year award. he turned his six-month-old into a real-life leprechaun. he's a nervous baby in situations like spray painting the baby dog, turning the house green. they've gone viral on his website. >> i'm like, how is this stand
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like leprechauns. coming up on the show, we're two days away from the flare primary. super tuesday 2.0. what is set to win the sunshine state? we'll look at the polls next. and speaking of florida, dr. ben carson joins us live coming up. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like social media equals anti-social. hey guys, i want you to meet my fiancée, denise. hey. good to meet you dennis. twell what if i told you that peanuts can work for you? that's right. i'm talking full time delivery of 7 grams of protein and 6 essential nutrients. ever see a peanut take a day off? i don't think so. harness the hardworking power of the peanut. hi i'm kristie. and i'm jess. and we are the bug chicks. we're a nano-business. windows 10 really helps us
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expect to see flooding going on for a while. if we get more rain in the next couple of weeks, it will make matters worse. today, severe weather. we'll show what's going on temperaturewise. than bad. we're really starting to warm things up still across areas of the east to enjoy that. arkansas is going to be the target later on today. i'll show you that in a second. picture city across the mid-atlantic and northeast, we'll put this into motion. scattered showers coming from time to time. none will cause any major problems. across the south, we'll still see rain. notice by later this afternoon to the overnight hours, areas of arkansas, a heavy line of storms moving through little rock around 8:00 p.m. tonight. some of those could be tornadic. watch for that. could be dangerous weather going on. and finally across areas of the northern plains, warming up a lot across the high plains. we're going to be looking at varied temperatures, maybe another 20 to 30 degrees above average. back to you inside.
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hi, friends. good morning. 46 minutes after the hour. donald trump and hillary clinton come v commanding leads in the sunshine state ahead of super tuesday. can marco rubio close the gap? and how about a bernie sanders upset? peter brown is assistant director at quinnipiac university poll, joining us from orlando. thanks for being us. >> reporter: good morning. >> first up we'll look at the florida gop poll overall. with commanding lead, double digits, 45%. marco rubio in second at 22%. ted cruz, 18%. john kasich at 8%. do you think the numbers are correct? >> well, we certainly hope so. when they're dead on or not, what's clear in florida is that the sunshine state is good for the front-runners. mr. -- >> what do you think about what's happening the last few days for donald trump, the
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front-runner? over. ingly there in the sunshine state. the events that unfolded at his rallies. could that help him or hurt him? >> it's hard to know exactly. we won't know because it's too soon, even any poles that would try to determine that will take a while. it certainly is a question that is open. there may be some people who think it will make voters shy away from mr. trump. on the other hand, it might solidify some voters for mr. trump. a lot of it will depend on how much this continues. and if we see rally after rally disrupted, that could changes things. >> what about senator rubio? he's got to win his home state. he's saying he thinks he did, and that will change the face of the race. you say? >> if senator rubio were to win florida, it will be a very large spried. and that would probably energize
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his campaign. our poll is 20 points behind mr. trump. a long way to go and not long to get there. >> on the other sides of the aisle, let's look at the latest toll in florida for the democrats. hillary clinton almost twice social security far ahead as bernie sanders. 62%, 32%. woe. >> right. and as pbad as things are for te field trying to stop mr. trump on the republican side, there were senator sanders trying to stop mrs. clinton. yes, he came back from behind last week in michigan. but the size of his deficit at this point is just overwhelming. >> yeah. >> it would be not just a huge surprise. a mega surprise. >> winner take all coming up. >> for someone to make u that much ground that quickly. >> thank you very much. thank you very much for your time. stick around because peter's going to be joining us to talk about the buckeye state, ohio,
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next hour. stay tuned. see you in a bit. ten minutes until the top of the hour. hell is for sale. what's the asking price? the devil's in the details. we'll explain. daylight saving time messes with your sleep. did you know that it can take up to three weeks to get used to the time change? how to make up for the lost hour next. this little guy is about to make his first deposit. we'd like to open a savings account for him. yes yes. great thanks to mom and dad and their safe driving bonus check from allstate. oh. look at this. safe driving bonus. are you a safe driver? lucky little fella. only allstate gives you two safe driving bonus checks a year for driving safe. see how much more an allstate agent can do for you. call 877-644-3100. test.
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to three weeks for people to get used to the change? >> ingrid joins us with help us deal with the loss of an hour. you say we have to get on a schedule? >> you have a typical schedule for sleep, you need to stay on it for the next three or four days. if you lose track. >> stay on that schedule for at least three or four days. and also alcohol? >> limit alcohol four to six hours before bedtime, alcohol has been proven to disrupt sleep in the second half of sleep. >> so drink more at lunch. how about coffee? is there a time of day we have to stop drinking coffee and diet coffee? >> it depends on the individual. ideally not before bedtime. no chocolate, coffee or tea. >> what do you come on daylight
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saving time in general? are you in my camp that it's terrible? >> he's running for office. if i ran for this would be my policy platform, get rid of daylight saving time. it's completely disruptive. >> i agree. it disrupts the body both mentally and physically. it doesn't do anything for us but increase the amount of heart attacks that are occurring in the workplace especially the day after as well as a lot more stress. >> why? >> because people are getting less sleep. they are heightening the effects of sleep deprivation. >> you could run as an outsider candidate. >> what about exercise? that can help us, can't it? >> it can, as long as it's not rigorous. no vigorous exercise right before bed. that's going to stimulate you. >> what about children? they can't read the block yet
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and they are on their own biological rhythm clock anyway. how do we adjust that? >> depending on the child, if the effects typically effect them, you definitely want to make sure that you start working like a week before. bringing up bedtime about 15 minutes each day and about 30 to 45 minutes just a couple of days before the change. >> but if our friends at home didn't do that and it's too late, do what? >> hunker down for the next week, week and a half and really keep them on a schedule. >> put them in the backyard, and have them run around like crazy. keep going, keep going. ingrid, thank you very much. he just endorsed donald trump for president. what does another doctor, ben carson, think about the violence at trump's rallies? we're asking you. are you worried your kids are doing drugs? one company is allowing you to
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good morning. it's sunday the 13th of march, 2016. i'm anna kooiman. donald trump is done with protesters. >> we're going to take our country back from these people. we're going to take it back. these are bad, bad people. >> but who is organizing these left wing disrupters? dr. ben carson who just endorsed donald trump here to react in moments. new details on the man who nearly tackled donald trump during yesterday's campaign rally in ohio. >> oh, oh. >> he's got a checkered pass and he's being accused of having
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isis ties coming up. drug dogs for hire. how moms and dads are using drug dogs to snoop on their kids? you are not going to believe this. "fox & friends" starts right now. hey, everybody. >> good morning, everyone, on this daylight saving weekend. we hope you are resetting your clocks this morning. peter doocy in for tucker. >> if you run for office, that's going to be on your platform. >> i would end daylight saving time. that would be my only platform. >> tucker would get rid of the lottery. dr. ben carson is joining us. he came out and threw his support behind donald trump. thank you for joining the show. >> thank you. >> we want to get your take on the thing unfolding over the past three days. chicago, kansas city, dayton,
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ohio. her -- here is some sound from donald trump in kansas city last night as a rally was going on and protesters are popping up. >> get them out. it's another bernie sign. get out of here bernie. out! that's a bernie supporter, folks. get the bernie sign. were you put in here by bernie? i would love to run against bernie. we're no rush. you know what, folks, we're going to take our country back from these people. we're going to take it back. it's a -- these are bad, bad people and we're going to take our country back from these people. >> dr. carson, that was mr. trump. then bernie sanders fired back and he said donald trump needs to be loud and clear and tell his supporters that violence at rallies is what america is about.
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he says my supporters are not inciting violence and we're not organizing this but donald trump has a responsible to talk down all of this rhetoric. what do you say to bernie sanders this morning? >> i say that the leaders in both parties should be speaking loudly against this. we're talking about the constitution, the bill of rights, first amendment rights, and, you know, if you read some of the left-leaning writings of people, you understand exactly what they are doing. this is part of the plan, and we -- all of us, democrats and republicans, should be appalled by this. you know, there's this feeling that the ends justifies the means and if i'm right, i can do anything i want. you see this on college campuses all over the place, and they are not really teaching them, you know, about our constitution and about the foundation of our freedom. >> dr. carson, do the other gop
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candidates have a responsibility to defend donald trump? what they have been saying coming out, kasich has said trump is creating a toxic environment. marco rubio is saying he's creating this environment, that's egging them on, creating like this powder keg-type environment, do they need to be saying that or is that an opportunity for them to try to win and prop up their own campaign? >> the last thing we should be doing is encouraging these people who are trying to disrupt free speech. it really doesn't matter whether it's on the left or the right. although, you don't really see this from the other side. >> i guess what i'm asking, though, is donald trump, is he encouraging this? environment and should the other gop candidates be speaking out against him or should they be coming to his side to defend the first amendment? >> i think they should be coming to his side to defend the first amendment. i haven't heard anything that he has said that has encourage
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people to engage in violent activity or to engage in obstructing other people's rights, and the left is mad because he's standing up to them. that's what the problem is. you are supposed to submit to them and be a nice little meek lamb and that's what they do not like. >> dr. carson, now you are on the trump team, after having a successful campaign for a few months yourself, are you getting worried about all this talk that at the convention the so-called gop d.c. establishment might try to wrestle the nomination away from mr. trump and just hand it to somebody else? >> well, that's the reason that i came out with my endorsement when i did, to see if we can avoid that. because if we get to that point, it will absolutely create so much division and dis -- dissenction it will affect the
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election. we must coalesce behind the people's choice. whoever that happens to be, if somebody happens to be that person, we ought to coalesce behind them but not fall to the traditional tactics to the left say you guys are wonderful, you are principle people, you won't vote for anybody you don't agree with you, and go back and home. >> marco rubio switched his position, saying that he had once before on the debate state say he would probably align behind the gop candidates. now he said he didn't know anymore. are you disheartened to hear the gop candidates, governor kasich saying donald trump has sowed the seeds of hatred at these
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ralli rallies? >> it's funny, because the gop always seems to find a way to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. no matter how good the situation looks, we find a way to mess it up. we have got to understand that this is not about us. it's not about our feelings. it isn't about any individual. it's about the future of the country. it's about our children, if we can't -- understand at this time, i don't know if we will. >> if kasich or rubio says they might not back donald trump if he's the nominee, doesn't that mean they would be backing hillary clinton instead? >> that's exactly what it means, because it will encourage a lot of people not to vote and when they are not voting, they are voting for the other side. that information must be disseminated to people and particularly a lot of people in the faith community. they believe that god has it all under control, but the way he controls it frequently is through us. we have to be active. we have to be informed and take
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responsibility. >> dr. carson, many see this election cycle as 2016 the year of the outsider candidate. you were an outsider candidate. donald trump is an outsider candidate, but the two of you have very different deliveries when you are trying it 0 get your message out. tell us about donald trump, your friend, the man that you endorse. >> well, interestingly enough, you know, he is a person who is actually quite reasonable when he's off the stage, but he has a tremendous stage presence. he understands how to use the media and to use the stage effectively, and this is a time in our country where that is necessary. you know, we're at a place where we like loud, we like brash. we don't particularly identify with calm, and it's okay. i think we're moving in the right direction. we will get where we need to be, and he happens to be at the place where we are right now
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that resonates and we republicans need to understand that, get behind it, and tush it because he's brought tremendous numbers of people behind the party, people who were not involved before, he's got crossover appeal and that's the problem with some of the other candidates, they don't have that same kind of crossover appeal and the demographics of the country have changed very significantliful we have to change with it and again we're talking about our future. if we get somebody in there who is a progressive leftist and they get two to three supreme court picks, forget about it, our country is going to be forever changed and not in a good way. and after marco rubio and john kasich, what do you think should happen to them after super tuesday 2.0? >> they ought to make their own decisions. the reason i got out is because i didn't see a path that would lead to the nomination and what
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was really the point in continuing to stay there. i don't know what their thinking is, but let the process play out, and they can do whatever they want. >> dr. ben carson, thank for joining us this morning from beautiful, sunny florida. >> thanks, dr. carson. ten minutes after the hour, other stories making headlines on a sunday. horror in iraq after isis launch two chemical attacks near the northern city of kirkuk killing a three-year-old girl and injuring 6 hundred others. investigators are still trying to figure out what chemical was used. a u.s.-led coalition said in the past isis has used chlorine and a low-grade sulfur mustard gas. a police officer is shot and suspect killed when a car chase ends in a shoot out in philadelphia. they tried pulling over a car that reportedly was stolen. the threem people -- three
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people inside the car wouldn't cooperate. they fired on one of the officers hitting him in the arm. despite threats from north korea, the u.s. and south korea move forward with a major military exercise. troops stormed a simulated beach as part of the eight-week exercises between allies. they took part on the assault on south korea's east coast. the north denounce the drill as nuclear war moves and threatened a response. hell is for sale. it is on the market for $900,000. the mini metropolis has several
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attractions. one liberal group is planning new protests to silence donald trump. is this how the political process is supposed to work? chris wallace here to weigh in next. remember this incredible video. a cliffside neighborhood falling into the ocean. what is being done now to protect the seaside. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like bill splitting equals nitpicking. but i only had a salad. it was a buffalo chicken salad. salad. then your eyes may see it, differently.ave allergies. only flonase is approved to relieve both your itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. complete allergy relief or incomplete.
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roar at another donald trump rally warning this is just the beginning to silence trump and the gop but do his fellow candidates have a responsibility to defend trump and his rights? we're going to ask right now, fox news sunday host chris wallace. good morning, mr. wallace. >> good morning to you, peter. >> do kasich, cruz and rubio have a responsibility to come out now and tell these protesters, hey, let mr. trump talk? >> well, look, first of all, it's not my job to tell candidates what they should or shouldn't do. obviously the protests wouldn't be happening if the protesters weren't there but there are also seems to me legitimate questions about trump's rhetoric. that has been criticized by the candidates in the past, some of the inflam tory things he's said about illegal immigrants and muslims and also the rallies where he's talked about punching
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them in the face. there's blame to go around both sides. >> it sounds like they are rallying around bernie sanders's on this issue. he fired back donald trump has to take responsibility for his rhetoric, talking about punching people in the face, that's what ted cruz has said and they have aligned themself on this issue. >> that's a simplistic way to look at it. the rallies wouldn't be take place if the protesters weren't there. there is the question of how trump has handled it. there are two sides to this equation. we don't see those rallies, disruptions is far too mild a word for it with any of the other candidates on either side. yes, there have been some bernie sanders supporters but there have been a lot of people whether or not, and, you know, i don't think you can lay this all at the foot step of bernie sanders, who incidentally we should point out has disavowed that his campaign has anything to do with the fact that some of
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his supporters may be at these rallies. >> sure, but don't be surprised that you'll see them there. >> and chris, the protesters and disrupters that were in chicago and silenced donald trump said we won, we shut down donald trump, move on.org that says they are behind a large number of these protesters. saying way to go, less do this again. in all your years covering politics and experience, what are you concerned next? are you concerned there ls something serious unfold and serious blood shed? >> sure. i'm old enough i remember vietnam and oftentimes lyndon johnson when he was president couldn't go to public rallies out in the streets. he often had to go to closed venues like military bases to give speeches. richard nixon when he was campaigning, you get people who feel strongly the other way and
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they do try to shut it down. yes, they are trying to abridge the first amendment rights of people. yes, you have a right to protest and rally but you don't have a right to prevent somebody else from talking. this is nothing new in american politics. anybody from the vietnam era knows it can get a lot worse. anyone who remembers 1968 in chicago knows you can get blood shed in the streets. what are the topic of discussion people will see in 40 minutes? >> at the top of the hour, we'll be talking live to donald trump. obviously, we'll talk first of all about the violence and his answer to a lot of your questions, which is does he bear any responsibility for it? is he going try to do anything differently to tamp it down? almost getting lost in this we're at a turning point in the republican race.
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we've got five pig primaries, two of them, ohio and florida are both winner-take-all and also the home states of marco rubio and john kasich. if jump were to win both of those, good chance that rubio and kasich will be forced from the race. we'll be talking first of all about the disruptions but also about the political debate and the state of the race coming up top of the hour on fox news sunday and, of course, with john kasich, big issue because if he does lose, he says he will drop out. >> if he does win, what's the road ahead look like for him? what's the next battle plan? chris wallace, good to see you this morning. the video is unreal. a wrong way driver jumps a curb, watch this, hits a telephone pole and slams into this bus. we'll tell you what happened to the driver and if everyone is okay. drug dogs for hire. moms and dads are using them to snoop on their kids. the owner of the company and one of the canines will join us live
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on their devices. order up. it's more than just wifi, it can help grow your business. you don't see that every day. introducing wifi pro, wifi that helps grow your business. comcast business. built for business. welcome back to "fox & friends." quick sunday morning headlines. look at this insane video out of new mexico. a car jumps a car, take out a light post and slams head on into a passenger bus. the driver says he took cold medicine and block out and doesn't remember anything and no one was hurt. one of the busiest airports in the u.s. searched top-to-bottom after a pilot loses his gun. now a janitor at the
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philadelphia international airport took it after finding it. when you think about canines we think of them sniffing out narcotics and bomb sweeps. these billboards started popping up in the kentucky and indiana area saying our dogs find drugs for only $99. the owner joins us. i'm wondering, you certainly saw a need here in order to start the business and fill the niche. what was that need? >> the need tofs help clean up the war on drugs and what i mean by that is we nded -- needed to find a new system to help clean up the drugs in the children's hands, they are infested the school systems and teenagers's
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homes. where i live, there's an epidemic especially with heroin. >> i got to ask you too. i know it's a costly program for you to train these dogs for 18 months and they have to continue training until they are retire. do you have to pass the cost along to parents or what's the price tag? >> the price tag is extremely affordable. it is $99 and for $99 we bring a narcotics detection dog to your home. we locate the narcotics inside of your home and we sit down and discuss where to go from there. if therapy is needed, narcotics anonymous could be one of the advices that we give to parents as well. where overdoses are occurring, we give the parents a way to go to doctors for help instead of putting their system in the -- their children in the legal system. >> how often are you finding drugs in these homes when parents give you a buzz? >> our statistics are at about 90%. the parents calling us are
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parents dealing with children very at risk. >> is this often their last resort? >> it is and what we are trying to establish is that this becomes a very proactive approach, instead of it being the last resort. that it comes to a point where parents feel comfortable enough to contact us when they feel the issue is there, if their into a situation is telling them that the issue is there. if they smell narcotics in the home, we would rather they come to us. we're not law enforcement. we help them find a way to face the issue. >> you don't want to damage the relationship between parent and child. what do you encourage parents to do before you actually bring the dogs to the house and do this sweep for drugs? what kind of discourse or conversation should they be happening? >> we want to sit down with them together. a lot of parpt -- parents don't
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know how to deal with the issue naturally. we give them a way to do it. we want the parent to tell them what's going on. we don't want it to be a surprise. some parents contact us and they want us to do this program while their children are away at school or while their children are with a friend. instead we want them -- the parent and child to be in the same room with us together. that way we can -- i'm sorry -- >> that way, you can hopefully put an end to drugs in america and i know that's your ultimate goal. >> yes, ma'am. >> it's a tal tall order but you are doing what you can. thank you so much to ms. oakley and michael davis owner of the last chance canine service. appreciate your time today and what you are doing. >> thunk very much. new detail on the man who nearly tackled donald trump during yesterday's campaign rally in ohio.
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welcome back to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. weid have some election results last night and frontrunner donald trump, though, did not winnie of those contests on saturday but he picked up a few delegates. senator ted cruz wind 66% of wyoming. descroict of -- district of columbia took in 50 percent.
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democratic voters in the northern mariannea islands with hillary clinton winning. trump leading with 460, ted cruz, 370. clinton well ahead of sanders, 1231 to 576. >> we could sees though delegates numbers change after winner-take-all. we're learning more about the man behind the campaign chaos yesterday. watch, donald trump rally in ohio. >> oh, oh, oh! >> protester jumping a fence and rushing a stage at a donald trump rally in ohio. >> what we now know about this protester's past. what can you tell us?
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>> good morning. this protester is no stranger to the spotlight. he's a former child actor and has a long list of protests on his credit, but here he is yesterday at a donald trump rally near dayton international airport, jumping the fence and getting within a few feet of the republican frontrunner before secret service agents got him. when he was younger, demassmeo appeared in several shows on tv. it's safe to say that yesterday's incident is the most camera time the 22-year-old has now in years. he's now majoring in actoring at wright state university in dayton. he made headlines for dragging an american flag across campus and standing on it. videos of that protest were
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later used in an isis propaganda video. dimassimo has no ties to the terrorist group. >> they bring him into a court and they process him and the judge let's him go. he was looking to do harm. this wasn't a guy that was looking to have a little fun. then one of my people said, wow, they found his name, and it was probably isis or isis-related. do you believe it? >> the protests at trumps rallies seem to be growing in size or frequency. at one point, the secret service agent says that will likely lead to changes in campaign security at the events. >> because of the level of violence we're seeing, the strategy going to have to change a little bit. more police presence. what if there is is a bum rush,
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could those agents handle all that. >> we'll have plenty of opportunities to see if those changes are put in place at trump rallies in illinois, ohio, and florida. peter, anna, clayton. >> here's the front page of the new york post this morning, saying mad libs target trump rallies. you see all the secret service agents protecting trump. >> they acted quickly. we were being told that 360 degree crowd that you had around donald trump which really invigorates the crowd and it's great for everybody to have that access to him, she said that may not be the safest thing to do, that they thought to have one area that's open for an exit. and the left wing active visit group moveon.org is encouraging people to go out and try to stop these trump rallies.
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it's something that black lives matter is doing too. good job, you are disrupting, stopping. look at how close that person got. we don't know that much about what exactly brought him to the rally, but as these very liberal-leaning organizations motivate people, get these anti republican activists all riled up, what happens if somebody gets close are than he got on to a stage? they are taking credit right now for screwing up for some of trump's timing, are they going to take credit if god forbid a candidate getting hurt? >> or the officers getting hurt either. >> good job in chicago, outside. we didn't have anything inside the arena, but outside, that was us. from the video that we played all morning all day outside is where the police officers left with bloody noses, right? >> yes. and they were saying this is one person, if this was multiple people we would have a real problem on our hands.
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if they are going to multiple events throughout the day, kansas city, dayton, ohio, chicago, all of those different spots have an advanced team going there ahead of time. if you've got mult campaign events, the small contingent he has is not a lot. >> trump, kasich, and rubio, saying it's trump's fault this is happening at his rallies. how is it his fault? if one of them figure out a path to the nomination and gets it, this is going to happen at their rallies too? >> we don't know that. >> it's already happened. remember, hillary clinton's rally interrupted by the black lives matters protested. bernie sanders had his microphone taken from him by black lives matter protesters. >> you haven't seen the violence. that's what the gop contenders are saying. there's this environment that donald trump is creating. this culture. and he should be making a call
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for calm and you are starting to see donald trump act more presidential, though. >> let us know your thoughts. friends@foxnews.com. that's what dr. carson said. we should be calling for calm. doctors may have been prevented that german wing pilot from crashing a plane into the french alps killing all the people on board last year. a private doctor recommended that the spielt seek -- pilot seek treatment at a psychiatric hospital two weeks before the disaster. new safety guidelines now being pushed for all pilots to help identify threats concealed by medical confidentiality. and a mumps outbreak spreading to three indiana state college campuses. several employees became ill.
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confirmed cases include 12 at indiana university, 21 at butler university and three at iupui at indianapolis. as the virus spreads, doctors say the risk of exposure is low. and in an apartment complex even -- teetering on the edge of a california cliff now on its way down safely. crews demolishing the building after it became too dangerous to sit on the rapidly eroding cliff side. take a look at this remarkable footage taken off the coast of hawaii. a humpback whale captured upside down with its tail in the air calf swimming feet away. it's called tail-sailing. they are getting rest, feeding their young or keeping cool. >> that's how i float when i'm getting some rest. the national guard rescuing
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2,000 people from the widespread flooding in louisiana. >> two feet of rain in the state. rick reichmuth is tracking it. >> when you think of all the hurricanes that have come on shore across parts of the deep south, this has brought so much rain than those storms. this is the 129th -- 12th major flooding event in the south. the ground is saturated. we have more severe weather across the area. do not only the rain but where you see that little bull's eye across areas of arkansas and mississippi valley, it could be seeing some tornadoes. once the sun goes down, be on the watch down there. temps not that bad across the mid atlantic. we will cool down tomorrow significantly with rain showers moving on in. down to the southeast, rain showers moving across parts of
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florida and the carolinas. we clear out a lot across texas, a spectacular day. it will be windy though. watch for fire danger. and the far northern plains, 70 in bismarck, 68 in scott's bluff, across the high plains. back to you. coming up here on the show. we're two days away from the ohio primary. donald trump is now leading but can john kasich come back to win his own state? we'll break down the polls next. d
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win in ohio is peter brown, the assistant director of the quinnipiac poll. good morning, peter. >> good morning. >> on tuesday in michigan the polls were historically bad and bernie sanders pulled off a very surprising upset against clinton. any chance that we see that in either of the two big prizes this tuesday, ohio or florida? >> in ohio, the republican race is close at six points and getting closer. toward the end of the week, we started seeing polls, some published, some private, showing the race narrowing over the weekend. what exactly happens, we won't know, but it's certainly possible that governor kasich could catch mr. trump. on the democratic side, the 9-point margin for mrs. clinton is substantial, but again she
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had a substantial lead going into michigan. kasich looks to be in a little better shape than sanders because he's closer, and he seems to have momentum going in. >> and trump is already accusing marco rubio and his team of rigging the vote in florida. is there anything that you are seeing to suggest that there's any kind of funny business going on with the early voting? >> hardly -- i wouldn't know, to be honest with you but florida has been running early voting for many years, both presidential and congressional and gubernatorial elections and they haven't had problems with it. >> peter brown, thank you very much. >> my pleasure. coming up, we've been showing you a clip all morning of a protester rushing the stage at a donald trump rally. peter johnson, jr, this proves trump and the constitution is at risk. he explains next hour. and it's a monday str movie -- monster movie sequel
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nobody knew was coming. >> don't open the door! >> will 10 cloud coverfield lane get five stars. kevin mccarthey will tell us next. there he is. pet moments are beautiful, then your eyes may see it differently. only flonase is approved to relieve both itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. when we breathe in allergens our bodies react by
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hotcakes. this place has hotcakes. so why aren't they selling like hotcakes? with comcast business internet and wifi pro, they could be. just add a customized message to your wifi pro splash page and you'll reach your customers where their eyes are already - on their devices. order up. it's more than just wifi, it can help grow your business. you don't see that every day. introducing wifi pro, wifi that helps grow your business. comcast business. built for business. john goodman is back in the very creepy and very suspenseful movie 10 cloverfield lane. j.j. abrams was quick to say this is not a sequel. >> will it live up to the hype? kevin joins us now with his
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take. >> 10 cloverfield lane. this is not a sequel in 2008. it was an incredible movie. this film is now directed by a guy named dan trackenburg who made a movie that's a throwback to the hitchcock style of film making. we're inundated with horror films and they are all about gore and violence and these haunted house type scares. this particular film is all about building tension and keeping you guessing the entire time. the storyline is you have three characters who are in a bunker and something is happening above ground. we don't know what it is. it could be monsters, it could be aliens, but the idea behind the film is that old hitchcock style where you don't know what's going to happen and john goodman is so fantastic in the
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role. it's the great film. >> that's what it's called a mcgive youen -- mcgufen. >> it's a throwback to psycho. the film does give you a great pay-off. it's not worth seeing in i max. they are charging an extra couple bucks in i max. i gave it a four out of five. this film really delivers a great tension. >> we saw the captain america civil war trailer that came out the other day. who makes an appearance at the end of the trailer, none other than spiderman? what do you make of this? >> i can't wait for this. this year is the year i'm so excited to see these battles in the superhero universe, you have
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batman versus superman and captain america civil war. the scene with speed -- spider man at the end. my favorite shot is hawkeye shoots the arrow. that scene is so awesome. >> after this trailer aired, 18 million had watched it on youtube. not even 24 hours later, 18 million people had watched that trailer. >> clayton, i had nerd tears streaming down think face. you have spiedy at the end. andrew garfield plays him previously and now you have this kid named tom holland stepping in the role. >> and the spidey cost assume is the best. they have finally nailed it. >> people like to say these nerdy films.
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this is the mainstream now, kevin. >> i agree. >> kevin, great to see you this morning. >> thank you so much. coming up on the show, we are just a couple of days away from super tuesday 2.0 so why does ben carson think trump will win? you know your kids get report cards, one state could require teachers to grade parents as well. is that a good idea? fair-and-imbalanced debate coming up. at ally bank, no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like grandkids equals free tech support. oh, look at you, so great to see you! none of this works. come on in.
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but who is organizing these left wing disrupters? young americans are sure feeling the bern but do his young supporters even understand what socialism is? stay tuned. if you are waking up and wondering where did the time go? daylight savings time took effect over night and we'll tell you how you can catch up. >> is that you? >> oh, it's rick under there. >> rick almost didn't make it to work this morning. the alarm didn't go off. >> "fox & friends" hour four or maybe it's three starts right now. good morning, everyone. these people didn't sleep in. >> look at that. >> they are trump supporters or maybe undecided voters going into a trump rally in
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bloomington, illinois to find out what the candidate has to say where winner-take-all states up for grabs and many delegates. >> this comes on the heels of the chaos that happened in chicago and ohio and missouri. >> and that goes to show that the people in trump crowds are waiting a long time to go through security. for the most part everybody there really wants to be there. >> that's absolutely right. how many tickets are handed out, though? it will be interesting to see. how many of those -- hopefully we don't get any more blood shed like we saw the other night in chicago. donald trump was in kansas city last night and he was interrupted once again by a number of protesters who showed up. take a listen what happened as donald trump waited patiently. >> here's another one. here's another beauty. oh, bernie, bernie, it's another bernie sign. get out of here bernie! out. that's a bernie supporter,
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folks. get the bernie sign. were you put in here by bernie? i would love to run against bernie. i got plenty of time. we're in no rush. anybody in a rush? we're in no rush. you know what, folks, we're going to take our country back from these people. we're going to take it back. these are bad, bad people, and we're going to take our country back from these people. >> you know, trump opponents are all taking great delight that he's being interrupted so many times. this could end up helping him because late deciders are so important and you are sitting there trying to figure out who you want to vote for and you want to vote against the protesters who won't even let him talk, who think their first amendment right is more important than his first amendment right, wouldn't you vote for trump? >> or also getting all the attention and air time. looking at the rallies over the past few days in coverage a lot of these other candidates, the
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oxygen has been sucked out of the room. >> even if you think about the rally that was canceled in chicago, to your point, the thousands of people that he would have reached, compare that to the millions of people that donald trump has been able to reach his message about preserving the first amendment, you know, all day yesterday, all day today, likely, and all of friday night. >> and bernie sanders fired back at those comments, by the way, donald trump calling them bernie signs oh, we got more bernie people here today. bernie sanders firing back we did not encourage anybody to go out to these rallies and disrupt but you shouldn't be surprised, mr. trump, because some of your rhetoric lately on the campaign trail, inviting people to punch others in the face, that is why maybe you are going to get some kind of attention from some of your rallies. >> we did have dr. ben carson on the show who recently came out in support of donald trump and he says both parties need to come together and call for calm and preserve the first amendment. listen. >> the leaders in both parties should be speaking loudly against this.
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we're talking about the constitution. we're talking about the bill of rights. we're talking about first amendment rights. and, you know, if you read some of the left-leaning writings of people like sal lulinsky, you understand exactly what they are doing. democrats and republicans should be appalled by this. there is this feeling that the ends justifies the means, and if i'm right, i can do anything i want. you see this on college campuses all over the place, and they are not really teaching them, you know, about our constitution and about the foundation of our freedom. >> what a double standard, though, because here is a frontrunner for a party's nomination for the presidency being blamed for these outside protesters who are being sent in chicago-style to stir up the crowd, can you imagine if these tea party linked protesters
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going to a clinton rally? can you imagine? that's what this is. these people do not want donald trump to be able to just speak and that's not the way that it's supposed to work. black lives matter is saying they should -- they are publishing trump's schedule, they are saying if you can, go and stop his rallies and moveon.org, they thank everybody who goes to these things even when tends up that some police officers have bloody noses at the end of it. >> to be fair, hillary clinton's rallies were interrupted by black lives matter protesters back in november and the fall, so was bernie sanders. >> when black lives matter stop a rally. >> bernie sanders. they got up and stole bernie sanders's microphone from him. there's an organization behind this. >> moveon.org is saying we were successful in shutting down the rally in chicago on friday night and we ought to continue this. in fact, they have a statement
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put up. mr. trump and the republican leaders who support him and his hate-filled rhetoric should be on notice after tonight's events. >> they are encouraging more of this. and black lives also encouraging more of this to disrupt this. at the heart of this is the american debate we should be having and shutting down public speech like that is not a defense of the constitution. it's a violation of it. >> think about how moveon.org started. they started in the late 90s as a liberal organization that was trying to encourage lawmakers to move on from the clinton impeachment. they could have -- this could be part of a larger thing. you know, they have been aligned with clinton for 20-plus years and they don't want to let her primary competition talk. that is not consistent with the first amendment that they say they say they care so much about. >> if hillary clinton's defense, she denounced these proceed
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testifiers. >> hillary clinton defounsed people protesting donald trump rallies? >> she came out and said we need to have calm and we need to stop this. bernie sanders says i'm not inciting this. >> there is a difference between holding up a sign and being a disrupter and storming the stage like we saw yesterday. it seems to be more bold actions, i'm frankly concerned that something bad is going to happen. >> we talk to a secret service agent earlier on the show. she says there's concern because of all these rallies unfolding, usually a presidential candidate or a presidential kd running for re-election, there are advanced teams, i remember when i was covering the george w. bush campaign in hamilton, ohio, you had secret service guys on rooftops scouring areas. they have got a small answered team. they have got a small contingent
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of secret service agents working on this. they don't have the resources to deal with the crowds like this. >> you can bet our bottom dollar we don't want our frontrunner, any of the candidates to go into a location, where they are holding a rally or some sort of campaign event where the secret service haept been able to go and sweep the area if they feel that's something that's necessary. also, the agent mentioned that 360-degree crowd that we often see around donald trump which is great for boosting enthusiasm but it can pose security problems. she suggested having one area that could be clear for an exit, and suggested that we may start to see some methods of operation change while out on the campaign trail. >> look at this podium right here. there's people not behind the podium. >> and to anna's point, the trump campaign is getting word
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there is a lot of extra security after what has happened for the first two days of the weekend. >> there you go. live bloomington, illinois, awaiting trump's rally. we'll bring it live here. on to other stories making headlines. four contests were held on saturday with senator ted cruz easily in wyoming. rubio came in second. descroict of columbia, senator marco rubio took 37% of the vote, just 50 voets ahead of john kasich who came in second at 35% and on the democratic side, voters going to the polls, thousands of miles off the california coast in the northern mariana islands handing hillary clinton a victory there. trump leads with 460, cruz right behind, 370, rubio 163, john kasich, 63. on the democratic side, clinton well ahead of san ters, 1,231 to 576. also developing this morning horror in iraq after isis
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reportedly launches two chemical attacks near the northern city of kirkuk, killing a three-year-old and 600 thundershowers people -- people. they are trying to figure out what chemical was used. in the past, isis has used chlorine and low-grade mustard gas. a former va nurse gets five years in prison. she admitted to changing medical records of a 76-year-old who died while under matthews care at the miami va medical center two years ago. he was avoiding responsibility for misconduct and poor quality of care. get ready to fill out your brackets, march madness begins today. it will be announced on cbs and for the first time ever, the show will run two hours. if you are not near a tv, you
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can live stream it on march madness's live app or on the ncaa website. this year's final four will be on april 2en. the national game will be two nights later on april 4th. >> every year, peter seems to win the office pool. you can have a much better about what's going to happen than shorter people, we'll say. the weather has been a big deal across a lot of elect this far. here is tuesday's forecast of the voting states and overall, they are looking pretty good, north carolina, florida, you are great. ohio, you are fine. missouri, you are fine. illinois, that's the one trouble spot that we're going to be watching, and we'll put this into motion. look what happens throughout the day. this is a future radar perspective here and everybody is fine but you see that a little bit of green there across areas of illinois. we could see a little bit of
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severe weather, possibly tornadoes, certainly some very strong winds across the area. we'll watch that really closely. today, around parts of south, drying out a little bit but get ready for severe weather coming across parts of arkansas later this afternoon. 12 minutes after the hour, the republican establishment has been fighting trump for weeks. what don't they understand about the frontrunner. dr. ben carson's former campaign manager is here to weigh in. the lep rechaun photos going viral this morning. pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies.
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another big rally today in bloomington, illinois. the trump campaign telling the press he's going to have additional security on hand after several incidents earlier this weekend. >> moments ago we heard from dr. ben carson explaining his decision to support the frontrunner, donald trump, and what the establishment doesn't understand about the frontrunner. >> he happens to be at the place where we are right now that resonates, and we republicans need to understand that, get behind it, and put -- push it because he's brought tremendous numbers of people into the party, people who were not involved before. he's got crossover appeal, and that's the problem with some of the other candidates. they don't have that same kind of crossover appeal. this is not about us. it's not about our feelings. it isn't about any individual. it's about the future of the country. it's about our children. if we can't understand at this time if we ever will. >> what does this tell us about what voters really want, joining
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us is now is barry bennett, former campaign manager for dr. carson. now, kasich and rubio are saying they might not support him if trump is the eventual nominee? when some of the competition is saying that, if they won't back the eventual republican nominee, does that mean the hillary clinton? >> in the heat of battle, they change their view later. >> the establishment wants someone who will pull the levers of government in their favor. all the public is interested in is someone pull the levers on a bulldozer. they want a wholesale change.
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we're 19 trillion in debt. we were promised a wall that's not there. >> they believe donald trump will do that. >> absolutely. the establishment guys think that they are voting for donald trump because they, you know, for some reason, you know, his manners are important or whatever, they don't care. they are aligning with donald trump. they are saying he's the best person on earth. >> we often see in exit polls, shares my values. he doesn't score high on that. >> he's talking about blowing up washington. that's what they want to happen. >> you mentioned the establishment guys. rubio is a lot the establishment guys are lining up behind. he doesn't think he has a chance in ohio. his campaign says if you like rubio and you live in ohio, vote for john kasich. >> yeah. >> what's the impact of that? >> it's kind of a mutual assured self-destruction. if marco rubio doesn't win 85% of the delegates on super
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tuesday, he's mathematically eliminated, that would include ohio. so he's out. there's no chance of him being the nominee unless they can somehow get it to a brokered convention and their twisted theory is a brokered convention is somehow everyone will vote for marco rubio. which is crazy. >> if they have this brokered or contested convention, you see these crowds that are supporting donald trump with their signs, make america great again, it's almost like saying your vote doesn't matter as much as mine does? >> it's crazy. pennsylvania, since january 1st, 48,000 democrats have switched parties. in ohio, that's bigger. the crossover appeal is bigger. the establishment is not going to go easy. >> what do you make of kasich and rubio and cruz blaming donald trump for these protesters coming in and interrupting donald trump? >> marco rubio said we needed to be more politically correct.
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talk about, you know, tone deaf. that's not what people are looking for, right? they do not donald trump shy away from building a balance -- wal, balancing the budget. all these protests are on the left, even the ones protested hillary clinton and bernie sanders are all lefters. >> the good part is there's passion in the political process but how do you stop it from going over the edge? >> passion is a good thing. it's what turns people out. if you look at what turns people out at all the primaries, it's two to three times than we've ever had before, which is amazing. passion, anger, violence, it condition get to violence. that's crazy. >> barry bennett, thank you very much. >> thank you guys. we're watching live pictures out of bloomington, illinois, where donald trump supporters are lining up eagerly awaiting
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his return. some have been waiting since 11:30 last night. one state could be requiring parents to grade -- teachers to grade parents as well. is that a good idea? fair-and-balanced debate coming up. learn more at myusps.com when a moment turns romantic why pause to take a pill? or stop to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use is approved to treat both erectile dysfunction and the urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medicines, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take cialis if you take nitrates for chest pain, or adempas for pulmonary hypertension, as it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. do not drink alcohol in excess. side effects may include headache, upset stomach, delayed backache or muscle ache. to avoid long-term injury, get medical help right away for an erection lasting more than four hours.
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what do you like about it? >> i think this is one of the least controversial plans in american education. every piece of research that we have coming out of academic institutions or think tanks has always agreed that parental involvement in student education is key for students to thrive and have academic success. >> so there's a few points here we want to get out. each report card for students in kindergarten through great 12 which includes a section where teachers grades parental involvement. is it a deep analysis or is it parents are involved, they are helping them with their homework? >> what they would see a satisfactory, unsatisfactory or my favorite, needs improvement. this is not the way to bring parents to the table. we should bring policies that encourage parents. not penalize them. >> how do they figure it out? what is their melingtdology. >> they look at whether or not
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the parent goes to parent-teacher conference. we wouldn't have all the information to provide a grade like this. say, for example, you have a parent who is working two jobs and gets home at 9:00 at night but spends an hour every night helping their child with theirm a pta meeting because those help at 6:00 p.m. this parent would get an unsatisfactory grade with this law. >> what's -- that's a good point. >> this is a republican-passed bill in the senate and the house. it's a republican majority, and so i think that what's interesting about this bill is that the state of mississippi more than 50% of schools last year got a c rating or below. so education and policy makers have come together and said how can we encourage a better dialogue between parents, students, communities, and schools, to help students
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thrive? >> the purpose of this act so provide information and tools to parents of students to help them have a positive impact on their child's educational success. clearly a slap on the wrist. they are just saying this might actually help your child. it doesn't sound like a bad move. >> i understand mississippi wanting to take drastic measures to improve their schools. mississippi is ranked 49th in the u.s. for education quality. we need to look at what's going on in the ground level. if you are a parent in mississippi and you are unhappy with your local public school, you don't have a lot of options. there are only two charter schools in the entire state of mississippi. dr. patrick wolf at the university of arkansas found that parents one they have more options in their child's education, they start to become a lot more involved. we should be empowering school choice options for parents. not giving them symbolic grades such as satisfactory or unsatisfactory. final word. >> i understand what she's saying and i think it's a great point. i still believe, though, in terms of this measure, it just creates a wonderful dialogue between students and parents and
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teachers to come to the table and try to discuss what would help a student thrive in an academic environment. >> all right. we appreciate you both joining us. we love to hear from our viewers this morning. head over to our facebook page. did the soccer star just bite another player? i think he's kissing them, which is kind of strange too. a. a protester rushing the stage at a donald trump rally. we take a look at these live pictures at bloomington, illinois, where another trump rally is about to get under way this morning.
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the campaign it -- is telling us, it's adding additional security the latest in dayton, ohio, yesterday when a protester jumped a barrier and stormed the stage. that's 22-year-old thomas dimassimo, a former child actor and professional protester. how do you get that job becoming a professional protester? >> dimassimo, he made headlines, after dragging an american flag across the wright state university campus and standing on it. that video was actually later used in an isis propaganda video. wow. >> he now faces charges for inducing panic and disorderly conduct. >> right now, peter johnson, jr is joining us. he's saying not only are they
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putting trump at risk, but also our constitutional rights as well. >> the constitution does not protect or allow coercion, intimidation or threats, so this morning, i not only have concerns for donald trump's safety based upon what moveon.org and others are saying and doing but in the greater picture for our constitution. the first amendment does not protect you going into a rally and attempting to disrupt it because not protect you trying to climb up on a stage and assault a presidential candidate. that is not part of our discourse and i believe that there is a pattern of voter intimidation in this country and the right of assembly of americans is now being affected. they want to shut down rallies like this that we're seeing right now. >> let's talk about the first amendment. >> yes, please. >> we've been talking about it all week. this is at the heart of this whole discussion. explain to us first of all what the first amendment actually says and does.
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>> in terms of the first amendment, obviously there's a right to free speech. donald trump has a right to say what he wants to say. some believe that it's inflam tory. some agree, some disagree. i disagree with much of what he says. my remedy under the law and constitution is not to disrupt or invade his rally. my remedy is to have a counterprotest somewhere, based on time, place, and manner restrictions that the law says is available. my remedy is to do what univision has done says we're going to register 3 million hispanics in the united states, buy television commercials, come on "fox & friends," my memory is to use all peaceful means. my means is not going to his rally and stop it, if you do
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that, you are disrupting a american constitutional system and become the worst south american country, the worst east european country. donald trump's rhetoric is inflam tory according to some but according to some so is bernie sanders, a marxist inspired rhetoric. does that allow me to say i'm going to shut it down and stop free speech in this country because i don't like what he says people died in afghanistan, iraq, korea and vietnam and in germany and japan and in the pacific and in world war i because we wanted to stop authoritarianism and fascism, and marksism, are we succumbing to that since we don't like what he says should we jump on a stage and assault him? look what happened yesterday. that's one of the most
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devastating image that i've seen in american political life in my lifetime. bar assassinations and why isn't american leaders and the president on down, he said something yesterday, i'm not quite sure what he said, condemning, why around they condemning it? >> they are saying it's trump's fault that someone is trying to take him out at his own rally. >> gop contenders have said, ted cruz has said this is his own rhetoric has led to this. governor john kasich said these are seeds he has soed -- sown. hillary clinton said we need calm. bernie sanders also pointing the finger at donald trump for this type of rhetoric. >> it seems to me that political ambition is trumping the constitution and common sense in the future of our country. well, listen, in essence, he serves what he gets, because i
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disagree with what he said. that's essentially un-american and for them to say that, they say well i've got an election coming up, he's in a bad position, let's shut down his rallies. let's him make him look like the racist and misogynist that we say he is. let's step over his body. have we lost any sense of sievity or -- civility or fair play? it has to start everywhere. it has to be civil. moveon.org organize has to be civil, the opposition has to be civil. we can't be in a situation in this country in my view where we take physical conduct in our own hands and invade a space of people who want to be heard. >> i want to ask you about the legal side of this. talking about the right to assemble. donald trump has now thrown around -- >> the first amendment as we just talked about. >> this idea that i'm now going
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to press charges. he hasn't done that. what would that be and what would that mean for the future of the protests? he says now that will stop you from protesting because i'm going to start press charges. he hasn't i guess to this point. >> the truth is, if you go into a rally and you seek to stop that rally by violence, by yelling out, by destroying campaign posters, by causing tumult, by inciting others to act in a way that's criminal, then that is a crime. >> it doesn't even matter if he wants to press charges. >> it has nothing to do with his pressing charges. the police have an obligation to act. the fellow who jumped out of this crowd and almost passed the secret service he's out open bail and he's on twitter and he's daunting donald trump on twitter. >> the consequences aren't strong enough. >> the law is the law. we don't want an authoritarian society in any way.
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but at the same time we don't want to descend into the depths of fascism, fascism, the tyranny of opinion that is popular. >> and peter, you want to talk about popular. look at the size of this crowd. what about the right of all of the people there to hold a sign, to listen? >> all of us have that right and all of our rights should be respected. i know donald trump. i represented donald trump. i disagreed often and often publicly with donald trump and i'm sure he's not happy with it. but he has the right to speak and his adherents have the right to listen to him and for him to be heard and they don't have an obligation to put up with being molested or intruded upon by people that want to go there and do violence and do harm.
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if you want to do harm to his message, then do it in a civil, legal way. the moveon.org -- >> peert, what is the best way to do that? tapping into this passion, this is incredible, the voter turnout is incredible, the in number of people coming out, people who have never voted before, democrats becoming republicans, independents who are switching and following donald trump and the passion that they have is incredible, but how do you channel that and make sure it doesn't go over the edge? >> we have to channel it in terms of the media. we have to regain our senses in this country. we need to restore calm. we need to restore civility. we need to restore a sense of balance. we need to talk about what the constitution really says. the constitution is not a matter of convenience and you don't use the constitution only for your own purposes. we can't be invading each other's space. if trump had something to say and his people want to hear it,
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let him say it. if kasich has something to say, let him say and it and hear it, the same for hillary clinton and bernie sanders. but we don't need to shut each other down because that is the path to tyranny. we have too much to lose and too many americans have died for our liberties and our first amendment rights in this country. we need to restore this country to sanity today! today. >> well said, peter johnson jr, fox news legal analyst talking about our first amendment. we appreciate you. as we continue to keep our eye on these live pictures outs of bloomington, illinois this morning, there is word on twitter that there are protesters outside this event vowing to cause disruption at today's event at blooming, illinois we'll talk about that. >> we're talking about young americans really feeling the bern this cycle but do sanders supporter even understand what
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benefiber healthy shape. this, i can do. find benefiber healthy shape in the fiber aisle. good morning, everyone. we are live in blomg ton, illinois, right now, where donald trump supporters have been lining up since 11:30 last night to hear the gop frontrunner speak. the trump campaign telling media it's adding additional security after several incidents earlier this week. >> last night, donald trump blamed bernie sanders for sending his supporters in to his rallies to incite some of that chaos. >> some represented bernie, our communist friend. so he should really get up and say to his people stop, stop. not me. >> young voters coming out in droves to support bernie sanders and his socialist views but do
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they understand what socialism. we're going to ask maria bartiromo. do they understand? >> i don't think so because i think that it's really fascinating to talk to people who have lived socialism about socialism, and you know, the idea that redistribution of wealth will help an economy is just -- it has not been proven. in fact, it has been proven that the reason that the ussr collapsed for example is because it could not compete and capitalism is very different. it can be noisy and messy because the whole idea of capitalism there will be winners and losers. there will be income inequality, but there's competition. you will not find two guys in a garage to make the next apple in an environment of socialism. >> it seems like these people who live by socialism are almost insulted by these sanders supporters.
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we want to live like that in these failed states. >> gary gasparov is on my show in the next hour. he lived with socialism. without competition, an economy cannot thrive. i'm interested in having the conversation. i spoke with somebody who lived through the mao revolution. even down to the same hair cut. it didn't matter if you had any special skill. it doesn't matter if you are this tall and you are a fantastic basketball player. everybody is a basketball player. you are not going to get bettpa better because you are so good at it. >> what are young voters are attracted to? >> they are attracted to similar things that people are attracted to donald trump on a different
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level. the fact is they are angry. this capitalist system hasn't worked for them, certainly when you look back at 2008 and the financial collapse and they want to blame somebody. they say, you know what, it's got to be some system of capitalism. we should go to a system where everyone is treated the same. the problem is they don't understand the implications of that. look at china, russia, look at how the ussr collapsed and understand that without competition and a free market, a lot of things get lost and to that's what he's talking about in this op-ed. it's fascinating that so many people have looked at this message of hey, here's free college, free health care, let government get bigger as a way to let government pull you out of this, which we know in the past has not done that job. >> it seems wright and -- bright and shiny to them. they are young, just gotten out of school, maybe having a hard time of finding a job, if they have a job, they are saddled with debt. this is like an oasis in the desert for them but do they
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understand just how some of his plans could not work in a country the size of the utilizes? >> -- united states. >> i really don't think so. >> i don't know if you caught saturday night live, the snl skit saying i'm exactly like all my supporters, i've got these big dreams and no idea how to pay for it. that's basically what you are seeing. we're going to talk about it. we're talking about this rallies, we're waiting for donald trump to come out and we're going to talk with carly fiorina who issen 0 the other side and supporting ted cruz. talk to her about what we're seeing. of course, we've got about the north carolina primaries and florida and ohio which are so important. >> fascinating to see, "sunday morning futures" starts in about nine minutes. maria bartiromo, always great to see you. >> we'll have much more out of
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bloomfield, illinois where protesters are taking to social media outside of this event. they plan to protest as well. re. could be bad. could be a blast. can't find a single thing to wear. will they be looking at my hair? won't be the same without you bro. ♪ when it's go, the new choice privileges gets you there faster. and now, stay two times and you can earn a free night. book now at choicehotels.com
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as we wrap up fleet week this morning we're tackling daylight savings time. >> yeah. my least favorite time of the year. here with some tips to overcome the effects of losing that extra hour of sleep is a pediatric and adult sleep consultant. nice to see you this morning. welcome back. so some things we can do to get back on track because i think daylight savings time is a tragedy, we shouldn't have it. it's terrible. sleep schedule. you say we need to keep a consistent sleep schedule.
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>> go to bed at a typical normal time so you can get consistent sleep for the next three four days. >> we need to pay attention to what we're putting in our body. >> you want to limit the amount of alcohol you're having to about four to six ounces before bedtime because it does stir up the second half of the night. >> how does being outside help you fall asleep. >> you like to go out and take a brisk walk and the daylight helps your biological clock. that will help. >> does daylight savings time throw everything out. we're extending the daylight into the evening when our body produces me la to anyolatonin t sleep. >> we're not extending time. we're making a shift. our mine set believes we're extending the time. in physics it's not happening.
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>> talking about how our body naturally produces melatonin. >> it should be taken just because it is a natural type of supplement. you actually want to make sure you talk to an m.d. about it. >> do you guys also hate daylight savings time? yeah. see if i'm going to run for office some day -- >> hey we just lost an hour of sleep. ask them tomorrow. >> don't rob my constituency here. >> thank you. we have more live trump pictures. big crowd in illinois right after this. from the moment they wake up, doers don't stop. every day is a chance to do something great. and for the ones they love, they'd do anything. sears optical has glasses made for doing.
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rally there in bloomington, illinois. look at the crowd starting to pull in. >> protesters on social media say they are outside of this event and ready to protest. >> disrupters are trying to make the crowd smaller. they haven't done a very good job of that just yet. >> see you next weekend. good morning, candidates kicking their campaign into another gear. two days before critical primaries. in florida and ohio. hi, everyone, i'm maria bartiromo. welcome to "sunday morning futures." former presidential candidate carly fiorina now backing ted cruz will tell me how the texas senator hopes to gain ground on donald trump this upcoming tuesday. how political analysts hack into decisions voters make at the poll. a focus group on what they are hearing. isis carries out another atrocity in the middle east just days after
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