tv Happening Now FOX News July 14, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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martha: clint eastwood because i have an mc squared on my feet. hello empty chair. wow, this is kind of like clint eastwood. remembering the last time we did this whole thing so get on out here and have a seat and were going tohave some fun, cumbersome history and it's going to be great so we will see you soon. bill: i say eventually . see you martha. "happening now" starts right now. jon: we are going to try to make your day. heather: [laughter] very good . jon: is a field day for donald trump, 24 hours away from announcing his vice president. good morning to you on this thursday, i'm jon scott.
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melissa: i'm melissa francis in for jenna lee. by this time tomorrow know who will join mister trump on the republican ticket with the presumptive nominee promising to reveal his running mate at 11 am eastern on friday. jon: he and his team have been meeting with indiana governor mike pence, newt gingrich, alabama senator jeff sessions, new jersey governor chris christie. he's gearing up for a series of fundraisers in california before heading back to new york city for the big announcement. john roberts is live in beverly hills with more. john? reporter: might be, might not be. who knows? maybe this is an elaborate head fake to somebody we haven't thought of. could he come out tomorrow and say john kasich is my running mate? not unlikely. some news report regarding the republican national convention, we now know who some of the prominent speakers are going to be. while he's not on the preliminary list that was
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revealed early this morning i have it on good authority that tim tebow, former quarterback for the denver broncos has been on a mission trip to the philippines will be coming to speak at the convention. in addition, marcus l who was famously a rick perry survivor, rudy giuliani, michael flynn who was regarded to be one of the three people on the shortlist for running mate, dana white who is the president of the ultimate fighting championship and patricia smith who is the mother of sean smith, one of the americans killed in benghazi. we also know that newt gingrich , chris christie and jeff sessions are all on the speaking schedule so if you wanted read the tea leaves there, they would be on the schedule that they were going to be running mate. they could always be taken off the speaking schedule if they were running mate. there's one other belief that comes from a friend in indianapolis was a well-funded political, nate taylor who says pence will not be appearing at the
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release of the fiscal report next week with a significant, suggesting he may be somewhere else instead of indiana. as where we are, donald trump told brett there yesterday he got down to two people in his mind, those people are taken to be newt gingrich and indiana governor mike pence. as of this morning he had not heard, he would expect to hear sometime after 1:00 this afternoon but perry with donald trump may be a tough lift, listen tothe former speaker . >> i don't know if i should saythis . in many ways, donald trump is like a pirate. he's outside the normal system. he gets things done, he's bold, he's like a figure out of a movie and in a lot of ways my entire career has been alittle like a pirate. i've taken on the establishment of both parties. i've been prepared to fight the media. one of the questions he got away is do you really want a two pirate ticket ?
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reporter: do you really want a two pirate ticket? trump has fundraisers all day today, some at his residence in beverly hills, he will also be in newport beach then we believe he's taking a redeye back home for that announcement tomorrow morning. we are waiting to see if he's got a response as ruth bader ginsburg said she regrets her comments about donald trump from the other day that they were quote, ill advised. if we get a response we will let youon when you got your own plane taking a redeye it isn't such a bad thing. reporter: your own plane with two queen size beds, yes. jon: it is going to be a fascinating 24 hours and then some. john roberts, thank you. some brand-new numbers in the race for the white house and the latest poll finds donald trump and hillary clinton nationally tied. the percent each. but in the background state of colorado, fox news poll shows hillary clinton with a double-digit me area she's at
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44 percent to trump's 34 percent in colorado. clinton also needs trump in the battleground state of virginia but not by as wide a margin at 44 percent, trump 37. joining us now from virginia, larry sabado, director of the center for politics at the university of virginia. larry, thanks for being with us today . >> thank you john. >> you got to hand it to newt, he's always got something interesting to say. >> it takes at least two pirate to run a ship, i don't know what the problem is but anyway that was an interesting quote. jon: it was an interesting quote and it's going to be a fascinating 24 hours. so hillary clinton to have dropped some in the national polls area what you ascribe that too? >> she took a real hit. it's not every day that the direor of the fbi dresses down a presidential candidate. i don't ever remember anything like that in either party so i think it was a real hit. it cost her nationally, it's
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cost her in some of the key states and we will have to see whether it is a temporary phenomenon or whether it has had a permanent impact, only time will tell. jon: she didn't get indicted, i guessthere's that . >> there's that and she's not a pirate either to the best of my knowledge so you never know. look, can i just throw this in john? it's so important for people to remember as we have had 14 or 15 holes nationally and in the states in the last 48 hours for people to remember that we haven't had either convention. we haven't had the announcement of either vice presidential candidate, haven't had either convention bump and it's going to be mid august before we get a real sense of the lay of the land for the fall. jon: let's take a look at some of the state polling. donald trump has said he can turn some traditionally blue states read. in pennsylvania, at least at
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this moment and again it's a snapshot in time, mrs. clinton holds a nine point lead in pennsylvania, 45 86. that's according to the latest fox news poll. when you look at ohio, mister trump and mrs. clinton are tied among registered voters, 39 percent each. let's start with those two and take it from there larry. what you make of hillary clinton's lead in pennsylvania? >> in a sense it's expected because the last republican to to carry pennsylvania was of course george hw bush in 1988. that's a long democratic street beginning in 1992. however, frankly, i think it's closer to that in pennsylvania. not criticizing the pole, there's the margin of error and all the rest of it but i tend to think it's closer than that in pennsylvania.
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in ohio, you know what interest me about ohio? the great bellwether date to quote the book title of my colleague kyle condit who had a great book about ohio, i have to give him a plugger i can't work with him the rest of the day. the great thing about ohio is the only state so far that all of these very different polls have agreed on. every single pole has had tied, absolutely tied or within a small margin of error and i think it really is that close and it's a state we are all going to watch as we always do all the way to november 8. jon: we know how important it was. think back to the bush versus gore election and the lawsuit of the same name pretty much that came out of it. florida is incredibly important and now donald trump leads 42 to 39 in florida. ohio, there you see it once again tied at 41, 41. pennsylvania, 41, 43 according to the quinnepiac university polling so again
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the poll's are a little bit over the map but ohio very tight. what about florida larry? >> john, florida is critical. i think for both candidates. it's actually a state you would have expected hillary clinton to do better in and she was for a while. again, it's on poll. you don't know whether it's representative and we talked about the problems with polling but if she is behind in florida, that's something they got to work on and work on hard because the large minority vote there is one that you would expect to put hillary clinton over the top if she's going to win nationally so it's mid july, we will see. jon: the question is, is she at a low point or can't she dropped even further? donald trump has assertedthat he hasn't really started his campaign and won't until he comes out of the republican convention in cleveland . >> if this is at all typical
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and nothing has been this year but i'm going to go ahead and assert history anyway. if this is at all typical you would expect donald trump to get a ball out of his convention. well, if the race is tied as the cbs poll said, you would expect him to be ahead. i don't know what the margin would be. then she's got her convention the following week. if history holds, you would expect her to get a convention bump and maybe she would go ahead again and that's why i say you've got to give the bumps time to dissipate and by mid august i think we will have a real reading on the race. jon: of course she will have president obama campaigning on her behalf and he's got a pretty big megaphone. larry sabado, university of virginia center for politics, thanks for coming on. >> thanks john, enjoyed it.
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melissa: pain and tears in dallas as the community mourns five fallen heroes. funeral services for the five officers killed in last week's massacre again yesterday and will continue tomorrow and saturday as we get new information on the investigation. the pentagon now trying to determine why the gunmen received an honorable discharge from the army after he was accused of sexually harassing a fellow soldier. casey siegel is live outside police headquarters in dallas with more. reporter: melissa, good to see you. sergeant michael smith worked for the dallas police department some 28 years and over the course of that story career, he received some 85 various awards and commendations area today his wife and two daughters will say goodbye and will bury sergeant michael smith. police departments from all over the country have converged on dallas to pay respects red utah, california,arizona, new york just to name a few of the states we've seen badges from and look at this site from
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the air . on more than 20 mile long procession of mostly police cars following a hearse area that was after yesterday's service for senior corporal lorne ahrens and dark officer brent thompson. thompson white who is also an officer with the same department. >> though i am heartbroken and hurt i'm going to put on my bad and my uniform and return to the streets along with all my brothers and sisters in blue . to the coward that tried to break me and my brothers and sisters , you know your hate made us stronger. reporter: the shots were fired one week ago today so the investigation rolls on. right now the u.s. army looking into the gunman's voluntary record. remember he was an ardent army reservist for six years received an honorable
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discharge after being accused of sexual harassment, something that apparently confused the shooter's own lawyer at the time so now the pentagon is investigating why he wouldhave received that discharge in the first place . as this immunity pulls together and continues to mourn. melissa. melissa: casey, thank you for that report. john? jon: john kerry is trying to find common ground with russia on a host of global hotspots. our next guest, a former supreme allied commander of nato will discuss this high-stakes diplomacy. >>
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conflict in ukraine and moscow's recentaggressive military moves but the alliance is also facing new challenges that go beyond its original mission of defending your . now extending to the ongoing civil war in syria and the fight against isis. retired general philip breedlove is the former supreme allied commander of nato forces in europe and the former commander of the us european command. i can't think of a better person to talk to about all this. it is an honor to have you here today. let me ask you as the to get together, what's going through your mind? >> well, good morning first melissa and thanks for having me aboard. what's going on in my mind is the alliance as you know for some time has wanted to establish clear, transparent dialogue with russia on only forward so is this the first step? and i think it's important to remember that the alliance wants to have these conversations from a position
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of strength, completing what we agreed to do in wales and also now what has agreed to in warsaw and looking to russia for some good behavior area some cooperation in some of these areas where we have distinct problems. melissa: you picture secretary kerry going in there in a position of strength? what would youwant him to say and how much strength is he exuding aftermarket. >> i think we need to refer back to the alliance and the alliance started in wales , making adaptations to bringing a structure to higher readiness and responsiveness and the commitment that whales have all been met and now the heads of nations have met in warsaw and set some new targets so the strength of the alliance is the unity they have shown and the dedication to making these changes thatthey need to make and i think that's the basis for the conversation . melissa: respectfully sir,
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your steering the conversation toward this idea of emphasizing the importance of nato. do you feel like that importance is being doubted and undermined on the world stage? >> well, i think for two summits in a row now the summit and the leaders of our nation's have been emphatic in their unity, their support to article 5 defense so the message coming from the alliance both in speech and indeed as they have adapted their forces is one that sends this confidence of that strength. melissa: should nato be taking a greater role in trying to deal with isis? that's a question that some people have asked qwest . >> before this summit, all 28 nations of nato were involved in the coalition but the actual nato alliance was not. at the summit if you read the communiquc and the documents coming out of the summit,
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nato has agreed to start taking some steps as an alliance, first and most visible is the contribution of the nato awacs to the command and control situation for the fight against isis. melissa: what is nato missing right now? what would make it stronger or you know, reinforce its role and the importance of the group around the world right now? >> i wouldn't use those words what is it missing. it's what is the work that has yet to be done? in wales, we started that change. we made a commitment. the alliance made a commitment to this spending target, to raise readiness and responsiveness of all the troops and they set a rather long target area as you saw in warsaw, they have moved up that target date so there's more commitment now and between wales and now, many of the nations have stopped declines, several nations have increased their spending. it's not perfect and we have
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a long way to go but what we see is a commitment by the alliance to do the things necessary to raise the readiness, responsiveness and capabilities of our force and that is important cause that is what makes them relevant around the world. melissa: that is important because i've heard the criticism that not everybody is stepping up and you say they are. thank you for coming on. general philip reed love, we appreciate your time. john? jon: taking to the skies in style, an american museum giving visitors a taste of old-school radiation including the oldest flying aircraft in the country. >> for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you. perfect driving record. until one of you clips a food truck. then your rates go through the roof. perfect. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates
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jon: of a battle underway in britain, the us against most of europe. the farnborough air show, aircraft manufacturers show up there to show up and this is what boeing isshowing, his new dream liner wide-body jet doing some fancy flying. boeing is america's biggest exporter so in a way we all have an interest in what they sell their . not to be outdone, airbus built by a consortium of european companies but it's 350 model up in the sky and quickly eyewitnesses described its takeoff as near vertical. of course, you can do that kind of thing when you don't have a couple hundred passengers, all their luggage and 140 tons of fuel on board. we will see after the air show which plane buyers like. competition is driving big improvements in passenger aviation and if you want to see how far airplanes have come in the blink of an eye, there's a place in upstate new york which offers flying proof.
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>> the airplane is many things. a weapon of war. a critical tool for battling wildfire. a 500 ton vessel able to carry hundreds of humans halfway around the world in a handful of hours. it is a time machine, shrinking the globe. so travel now back in time a couple of hours north of new york city to an age when airplanes were a brand-new invention. unfamiliar, rare and wondrous to behold. this is old reinbeck aerodrome. >> in a lot of places, these planes would be hanging from the ceiling and everybody would point at them and say look, this used to fly. you actually fly these things. >> right. >> every summer weekend june through mid october, staffers at old rhinebeck and countless hours dancing up old fenders and washing wings
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that first flew in some cases more than a century ago. >> it's a pusher because it moves behind you, so all your troubles are behind you. glenn curtis who does design this was a motorcycle racer. early designers to know how you could would control an airplane so he thought you would lean into a term. we to the left, lean to the right. there you go. that moves the aileron. >> is amazing aircraft still fly today because of one man. palin. >> i got infected with this disease called romania. >> a lifelong aviation buff, mechanic and pilot he saw how rapidly the airplane developed. in fewer than 50 years, these fragile, handmade concoctions of wood and cloth give way to multi engine metal behemoths and jets for even rocket powered ships flying faster than sound could travel. palin found tragic that the earliest flying machines were no longer valued and being
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hauled off to dumps or left to rot in farmers bards. >> they weren't worth a lot, nobody wanted them, they were considered old technology and dangerous and nobody wanted them so coal is a visionary and a pioneer and he was able to save a lot of these old aircraft from total destruction. >> payment purchased a small collection of early planes from a long island airport about to close and then a plot of land area and eventually, old reinbeck aerodrome was born. the old reinbeck show is family-friendly. a touch of melodrama wrapped around an air to air dogfights, the kind you may have seen when these newfangled issues took to the sky during world war i. >> this is 1918 folk or the eight that was the most advanced warplane of world war i and anything about it is the engine. in this case, it was an air cooled engine whole engine was bolted to the propeller and the neat thing to see is that the propeller and the engine all together.
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it's all one piece. >> not every craft is original. this reproduction of world war i germany strike plane flies here because the originals are long gone. >> there aren't any original try planes still flying. >> that's right because the few that were left after world war i were in museums and world war ii, those museums were bombed in world war ii. all the try planes that were left were bombed to smithereens so the reproduction of the try plan allows us to fly here at the aerodrome the problem was it was small, compact and maneuverable but you couldn't see anything out of it . >> and what looks to my i like the venerable hypercom. >> taylor,? >> it was before the paper company was formed. it was the first call, it's called the taylor e2 so if you look inside you will see this oil pressure, temperature gauge and rpm. that's it.
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the most basic flight you could ever have to. >> the pilot in me wonders where the fuel gauge? >> you see that? it's on a float so when you are full of fuel it goes all the way up here and went empty it's all the way down here. that's it. that's your fuel gauge. this is a 1929 curtis robin, this set many records in the 30s. set the record forendurance and it flew across the atlantic , a really neat historic aircraft. >> there's another 1929 airplane still flying, a new standard be 25. strap on helmet and goggles, check. because like the barnstormers of a century ago, this one still takes paying passengers into the sky to experience the thrill of flight. an incredible rush you won't
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get on any airline. >> that's fun. >> almost everyone working here is a volunteer from ground crews to pilots, they love their slice of aviation history. and give their time to share it with the rest of us. >> this is a 1980 curtis j and for each jet and there's only two of these flying in the country in the world so 15 years after the wright brothers flew, this was already the plane they were building.>> yet. people would fly these across the country, lindbergh did barnstorming here. >> charles lindbergh became a world hero flying another aircraft. >> peter jacobsen was here a couple years ago, the curator of the smithsonian and they have the original spirit of st. louis on display. obviously they don't fly that we have a reproduction. you can see what the spirit of st. louis look like,
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smelled like soap it's a neat experience. >> ironically cold palin who started all this bought his first airplanes when roosevelt field was closing. roosevelt field is now a shopping mall on long island. where lindbergh took off. next hour, we show you what the spirit of st. louis flies like. melissa: you were like a kid in a candy shop, you should have seen him flying the one i love airplanes. we will back be back in a minute. constipated?
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cvs for find that six in 10 americans say race relations are getting worse. an article in today's paper reading quote, racial discontent is at its highest point in the obama presidency and at the same level as after the riots touched off by the 1992 acquittal of los angeles police officers charged in mister king's beating, that's rodney king of course. all this parking reaction on the campaign trail. hillary clinton calling on americans to have an open dialogue. >> we do need to listen. to those who say black lives matter, too many black americans especially young men feel like their lives are disposable. we need to acknowledge the five latinos who also lost their lives in police incidents last week. their stories get national media coverage but their families and communities are morning also. and at the same time, we need to listen to the dedicated,
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principled police officers working hard every day to rebuild trust with the communities they serve and protect. melissa: let's bring in angela mcclellan, fox news political analyst and santina jackson, fox news contributor and radio talkshow host. thanks to both of you for joining us. angela, let me start with you. are things getting worse? >> are things getting worse. melissa, i believe that racism has always been here but people have been more covert. now it's more overt and i fold our leaders on the left and right for stoking the flames. what we need now are leaders that will have an open dialogue. we got to stop the blame game, we got to stop with that and a lot of liberals, santita, utilize race baiting for votes.
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melissa: i think back to what the president said in 2004 when he's made that great speech and said we are not a black america, were not a white america, we're not a latino america, we are the united states of america and that's when it felt like he was trying to bring us all together and i think a lot of people feel like it hasn't been like that since then, that in some ways he's dividing us to read is that fair? >> i think it's unfair. the fact is, these historical tensions were not made in a day and they won't disappear overnight. they must be worked out over time. look, jesus even said i'm going to come back. let's let you work this out and it's going to take a couple thousand years. it's too heavy lift for one person to make it on time. these have been with us since the founding of our nation, on through savory, on through jim crow and what's so unfortunate melissa and angela, that the people who made these laws never had to deal with the fallout. if the people and the police so you got 26 police officers
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killed in the line of duty and 518 citizens killed by the police i believe as of this weekend and that's got to stop and i agree with angela. i can't believe this but i do agree with you. we have to have an earnest conversation but let me ask this area we cannot avoid race and i think there's enough responsibilitythat needs to be shouldered on both sides . >> melissa, speaking of jesus, i'm from the school of jesus where all lives matter. not just black lives, all lives matter and what we need to stop doing is the race baiting. we need to talk about the issue, yes but don't utilize it for votes area. >> stop that, no, no. [overlapping conversation] [overlapping conversation] >> what is the difference between talking about it which you both agree we need to do and using it as bait? using it in a negative way because that's also talking about it but it seems like
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it's a fine line, i'll ask each of you, santita you first. >> melissa, when i hear black lives matter, they need to add, too. black americans are five times more likely to be shot and killed by the police than white people and black people are not saying black lives matter only. they're making an appeal like when you hear i am somebody. when you hear doctor king talk about i have a dream, he's saying we matter to unlike any other people in america. it's the truth. so for her to put that thing in there, that's not right. >> i can say what i want to say, how i feel. [overlapping conversation] melissa: angela, go ahead and respond. >> santita, we had victimhood vendors going into our neighborhood, promising this and that. let me say it, i did not interrupt you.
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if this was so important from both sides, why did they not start their debates off talking about people dying? as for waxing killed by white police officers, there's a lot of black on black crime . where was black lives matter in chicago. >> ?where are they and i'm a victim of that myself and it wasn't a white man who beat me down when i got mugged, it was two brothers so the fact is santita we're being selected here. we're being selected. >> let me say this to you but a couple weeks ago you said there's no such thing as black on black crime. >> i did not. i did not say that. that did not come out of my mouth. >> angela, crimes are interracial. the fact is 86 percent of white americans who are murdered or murdered by white americans and a seven percent of african-americans are murdered by african-americans. don't put that into the mix. melissa: always a passionate debate and i remind people that you guys are goodfriends as well .
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>> not on this topic though. >> we disagree but we know how to fight and we also know how to go away and be friends area. melissa: thanks to both of you. john, over to you. jon: the mainstream media has been accused of bias against law enforcement and that recent criticism of police tactics has gone too far? for a fair and balanced debate let's bring in alan coleman's, host of the alan coles show which is indicated by fox news radio and tammy bruce, radio host and fox news contributor. open to both of you. is the movement, the black lives matter movement, is it getting to ... is the media putting its thumb down on the side of the movement. >> i think it's clear. you have a dynamic where that's an exciting image. it's an easy narrative to explain. it's the most rheumatic imagery that happens.
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it's also the preferred narrative of the left. the left narrative is while you have liberal cities that are collapsing, they like the distraction of being able to say it's because lives in the inner-city are so bad because everyone else is racist area did it's a simple message, it's on the democratic party is moving. you heard hillary clinton earlier and what it's doing is also dividing us and its politics, its politicians not wanting a good crisis to go to waste but the other issue is and i think even alan might agree with this, is how the media is presenting information because it's easier versus the nature of the real facts on the ground that are not as dramatic, not as exciting. jon: most of the police officers chart in the death of freddie gray are black and most have been found not guilty by a black judge. >> a lot of people don't agree with that verdict and we know there's also the light of blue which sometimes supersedes whether it's black or white. this idea that the media is some monolithic entity that
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marches in lockstep and conservatives hear the word media and they think liberal. media is therefore bad because media is liberal. you've got rudy giuliani saying black lives matter is racist and that's race baiting. you want to define an entire movement and smear it and single it by saying i've done more for blacks than black lives matter and he gets all this attention and platforms to say this stuff and you ask blackson new york that i grew up in during the giuliani in menstruation, ask lacks in new york if they think he was a healer inblack-and-white relations in new york city, i think you'd be surprised they do not agree area . jon: hold that thought becausewere going to come back after a quick commercial break with more on this topic . the media and the movements just ahead. >>
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when you call the experts at one reverse mortgage today, you'll learn the benefits of a government-insured reverse mortgage. it will eliminate your monthly mortgage payments and give you tax-free cash from the equity in your home and here's the best part... you still own your home. take control of your retirement today! jon: talking about the black lives matter movement and how it is portrayed in the media. once again, our guests, alan colmes and tammy bruce. you wanted to respond to what allen's said. >> alan point was that african-americans in new york disagree with rudy giuliani
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saying he did a good job for black americans in new york city. that's part of the problem is that there's emotions and feelings based on what media is presenting to people or what social media is presenting, clips on the internet that versus the facts on the ground about the economy, about jobs, about the safety in your neighborhood, about not having to worry about your kids, your kids learning something in school. is it is an effort to improve the quality of people lives and when you're looking at black lives matter, my column in the washington times which is available online is about the fact that after ferguson people were being paid and they argue they were being paid who were educators for black lives matter by renamed chapters of acorn. my agreement is that black lives matter is not a new dynamic, it is not newly sprung organically. it is a remake of acorn. the democrats application and organizing tools that is still happening and it is all political and the contrived dynamic.
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>> there is no evidence that acorn and black lives matter are related. he was arrested in baton rouge for walking down the street, they said to him, the police said to him get on the sidewalk. there was no sidewalk. he was taken and kept in a cell every night. he's on the ground, new yorkers were here during the giuliani administration. they were on the ground, they were reacting to social media, they were here. jon: let's hear from rudy giuliani, former mayor of new york. he had to say on foxand friends monday . >> i understand the other side. i don't mean not to talk about the other side of it but because the other side is the only thing that cbs, nbc, abc, the new york times, the daily news, that's all they write about. the american people get the wrong impression and black lives matter therefore puts a target on the back of police. jon: the point is that his police force when he was mayor tried to save everybody's life. >> you have situations like abner louima who was violated. you have out duly although,
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shot a number of times. you had serious incidents in your community, they would stop and frisk which made young black men feel so vulnerable they could not walk down the street. they were stopped by the diblasio administration. that's the dynamic taking place in the community. >> those are dramatic individual cases the world knows about and then there are millions of other lives that were improved like stop and frisk but those communities of color were made safer because gangs were being taken off the street so those don't make the news as much and this is what we are talking about, they want you talking about black lives matter as a group as opposed to democrat policies that have destroyed cities like chicago and baltimore and are in the process of destroying new york i don't think black people need white people to tell them how they feel about how politicians have treated them. jon: all right, the discussion goes on.
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tammy bruce, alan colmes, thank you both. melissa: the summer heat wave it with a vengeance, scorching temperatures, baking the east coast. that's next. only glucerna has, to help minimize blood sugar spikes. and try new glucerna hunger smart to help you feel full. it'sand your doctor at yoto maintain your health.a because in 5 days, 10 hours and 2 minutes you are going to be 67. and on that day you will walk into a room where 15 people will be waiting... 12 behind the sofa, 2 behind the table and 1 and a half behind a curtain. family: surprise! but only one of them will make a life long dream come true. great things are ahead of you when your health is ready for them. at humana, we can help you with a personalized plan
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jon: let's get the get what's ahead on patrick zamarripa top of the hour, >> countdown to the countdown, 24 hours until donald trump needs his running mate as he changes his suit bit about getting attacked for vice president so who should he pick? >> plus, the fbi having new sign deal about hillary clinton from facing charges over her email scandal as we learn investigators were sworn to secrecy and a lie
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detector test. >> ruth bader ginsburg says judges should avoid public comments on candidates for office. works. that's because after her comments criticizing volatile got attention, now she tells us. >> how convenient. all that plus our hashtag one lucky guy, "outnumbered" coming up at the top of the hour. >> i just work here. jon: we will find out who's attached to that hat coming up. melissa: heat advisories and warnings now up along the east coast with the summer heat wave bringing blistering temperatures. melia molina is live in the box extreme weather center, tell us what to expect. >> hi melissa and you're right, we are expecting that to continue across parts of the eastern us and also across portions of the planes so a widespread area that's going to be dealing with the heat, not only for today or even into this weekend but we are talking even through early next week so an extended period of time dealing with excessive heat and you see some of the numbers, you have the index values and this is accommodation of humidity and
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also current temperatures out there and this is what it feels like as people have out the door. it feels like 94 in raleigh, 98 in charleston and because of this heat and humidity we have a number of heat advisories in effect stricken from the carolinas to parts of the tri-state area. also some excessive waaround po and here's the forecast over the next few hours because it's going to get worse out there. in dc it's going to feel like 102 degrees, 100 in philadelphia later today and the same goes for you across parts of the carolina and those actual temperatures should be in the middle 90s as we head into friday but other areas across the plains reaching the upper 90s by friday and again take a look at the forecast. it all continues here as we had into early next week. we are tracking storms out here melissa and there is the potential for isolated severe weather that we will keep you updated on that threat as well. melissa: thank you so much, john? jon: new next hour of "happening now", pokcmon go becomes an overnight hit for nintendo but could the gaining sensation also spark accidents and lawsuits? plus, part two of our visit
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>> we'll be back for more fun in one hour. melissa: i know i am. >> good. "outnumbered" starts right now. harris: fox news alert. fewer than 24 hours from now we expect to know who donald trump's running mate is. this is "outnumbered". i'm harris faulkner. we have host of "kennedy," kennedy herself. dagen mcdowell. and host of "justice with judge jeanine" pirro. herself. #oneluckyguy, hope up a five, baby, author of new book, "wake up america." on the cover and on the couch. eric bolling outnumbered. >> great to be here. >> you want me to
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