Skip to main content

tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  August 8, 2016 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

12:00 pm
used to benefit the mop can i and his community -- monkey and his community. have great afternoon. here's bill hemmer in for shepard smith today. this guy works a whole lot. >> donald trump making it all about your money, delivering a major speech on the economy, and if he gets his way you could pay less in taxes, but if some differences get their way he will never be president. a new mystery candidate coming forward to run for president. also, hillary clinton's campaign may be a little concerned about the cash that donald trump is raising. saying it's a wakeup call. we expect to hear from her this hour and their response to trump's economic speech. death on a waterslide, ten-year-old boy killed at a water park. how did this happen? that's ahead in this hour.
12:01 pm
i'm in today for shepard smith. donald trump moving his campaign back to an economic message with a speech in detroit on the economy. he could barely get through a paragraph without a protester stealing the spotlight in detroit. more than a dozen times. people in the audience created a noisy scene, forcing trump to stop mid-sentence and as accurate removed the demonstrators trump supporters tried to drown them out with boos. [shouting] >> i will say the bernie sanders people had farmer energy and spirit. >> in between the interruptions trump method his case for why he should be allowed to handle the nation's finances. among his proposals, letting parents deduct the average cost of child care from taxable income and says no business should pay more than 15% of it income in taxes. he proposed a temporary freeze on federal regulations, and also drove home a main theme of his
12:02 pm
campaign today, which is putting america first. >> it will be american hands that rebuild this country and it will be american energy, mined from american sources, that powers this country. it will be american workers who are hired to do the job. >> that scripted address in michigan comes after a tough week in the polls for trump and a new a poll shows hillary clinton leading the race, 46%. 12 points had over trump's 34%. third party candidates make up the rest in that poll. another troubling sign for trump white be voter enthusiasm. a survey found that optimism among republicans has dropped 20 points over the past year, 81, down to 61. enthusiasm among democrats slightly higher at 67%. and it has been mostly steady
12:03 pm
the past year. in a rollout shows trouble on the economy. that's an issue that had been one of trump's strong suits. abc news "washington post" poll shows that more voters trust hillary clinton to handle the economy, at 48% to 46%. a small margin but a shaft from last month when the same survey found trump and clinton tied on economic issues. even before trump's address today the clinton campaign call his proposal trump eknock makes, saying it means more tax breaks for the .1%. we should hear hillary clinton's response. she is in florida and we'll see what she has to say then. first, the campaign carl, live in detroit. carl good, day to you. what was new in the speech today from trump that even you had not heard before?
12:04 pm
>> well, he revised his income tax plan. donald trump has been saying for the better part of the last year and a half he would do away with the current income tax brackets, bulletly the highest one and his plan was to implement a 10, 20, and 25% income tax bracket for the american public. that today was revised to some extent upward. now his plans will be for a 15, 25, and 33% tax bracket, still significantly smaller than the largest one now at 39% and a fraction but revised upward. itself puts him in line with house republicans who have put together a tax relief plan that uses those numbers. so trump comes up a little bit and perhaps shows he can work with republicans. much of the speech, despite being at the detroit economic club, there was an awful lot of clinton bashing here and trump made the case that, while he has a vision as a businessman, she has record as a politician, and it hasn't been a positive one when it comes to jobs and the
12:05 pm
economy. watch. >> every policy that has failed this city and so many others, is a policy supported by hillary clinton. she supports the high taxes and radical regulations that force jobs out of your community. and the crime policies have made you far, far less safe. >> tough stuff and an illustration how he intends to set up the contrast and choice, arguing he is a business person with experience creating jobs and wealth and hillary clinton is just the opposite. >> have you heard some of the changes are an attempt to get more in line with traditional republicans in congress or not? >> reporter: well, he'd like to. like to unite the republican party but he has to maintain independence in order to have the sort of authenticity as a businessman willing to break the furniture and reform regulations elm the, talked today about trade. has been against the tpp.
12:06 pm
well renegotiate nafta and will walk away from it if he can't get a better deal he talks about carried interest, something that was known to be a great way for a hedge fund -- hedge fund winners, big money guys in wall street to profit and how he'll tweak that back. the hedge fund crowd have been trying to get trump to take that off of his agenda. it coming off. so there are some aspects he says he is going to be attacking wall street, which in this case, because hillary clinton is a democrat with binge, strong support from goldman sachs, puts trump on the side of main street. >> carl cameron, live in detroit. want to bring in david cassidy, reporter for u.s. news and world report. just to pick up on what carl was saying. he seemed to draw his strongest message today by painting his ideas as ideas for the future and hillary clinton's ideas of the past. >> that was his goal today. i think he accomplished that.
12:07 pm
a lot of anti-hillary clinton rhetoric within the economic speech. i think because of his disastrous last week and republicans from all corners saying, you got to get on message here. but frankly, the bulk of his economic speech is well within republican orthodoxy. there are a lot of elements that he laid out that republicans can rally around, a moratorium on executive orders, peeling back regulations, slimmed down tax code. although he did adjust it today a little bit. these are things that can unite the party. so i think that was the clear goal of the speech, you've night the party around economic ideas, mostly conservative economic ideas, and then take the hatchet to hillary clinton. >> the part where he probably straight from that the -- strayed the most is on trade. and he came down hard on nafta, which was expected, and also tpp. >> absolutely. this is an area where he does break -- you saw utah chamber of
12:08 pm
commerce put out a release before he went on stage, saying both major party candidates are out of step and wrong on trade because hillary clinton is against tpp as well. so this is an area where actually the two major party candidates in line, trump out of step with his party right now on this, but this is the more of the populist part of trump, appealing to the midwest workers who have been stripped of manufacturing jobs, frankly places like detroit, that is what they're betting on. that message sells in those met western industrial up toes that have been hammered after the last decade of so-so which he avibes to nafta and says tpp into cause more damage. >> this comes at time when the "washington post" had a very longpiece on hillary clinton's record, creating jobs in the state of new york when she was u.s. senator, and trump went right after the points made in that piece, and that sense his
12:09 pm
timing was perfect for him. >> absolutely. look, that was definitely an opening for him to point out. think it's going to be interesting to see what hillary clinton says later this hour in florida. she is going to come back a lot of what donald trump says and have her own ammunition about the jobs that he has created, and sort of his checkered, shall we say, business past. so there's going to be a lot of back and forth on jobs, and the economy, and who really created more jobs. the most important thing trump did was to pivot away from all the distractions from last week, on to a conservative economic message, and i think the question is, can he keep it going throughout the week? will we be talking about his tax plan and his plan to roll back regulations three, four days from now? he was pretty disciplined today, even with the protesters in the room. >> you're right. >> democrats are going to try to pull him out of that norm again.
12:10 pm
>> one more point on the "washington post." she promised 200,000 jobs for upstate new york and the jobs did not happen. that goes to manufacturing, et cetera. go. >> exactly. but look, it is very hard for any one senator to produce hundreds of thousands of jobs anywhere. it is just very, very hard to do. the clinton campaign is pushing back and saying we went through 9/11. she brought in millions of dollars of resources to rebuild new york city. there was a post recession -- or after the terrorist attack, recession writ made it tougher. this is a clear line of tactics, something she promised and was not delivered on. so it's fair game for republicans to go after her for it. >> just last point in a broad sense, and you touched on this, is this or was this an effective message for trump today? in terms of his candidate so i and campaign. >> yes, i think it was. it's getting him back on track. now, people are going to fuss
12:11 pm
with the details, my misstated some things, how many people are actually out of employment. the fact checkers will be going after this. overall the broad message, was a unifying one. so i think that is the right step forward. i think the biggest question for the trump campaign is, does he have the discipline to keep with it and then put in meat on the bones. he said he'll have details to come, to come. will he really follow up and put meat on these bones and flesh them out so they look like policy differences. >> david, thank you so much. taxes, energy, regulation, his three themes he hit. thank you very much. ahead in a moment here, mystery candidates show conservatives who they are supporting as an alternative to donald trump. question today, does this candidate have a chance at all? what is the state of the never-trumpers today? that's all coming up in a
12:12 pm
moment. you can run an errand. (music playing) ♪ push it real good... (announcer vo) or you can take a joyride. bye bye, errands, we sing out loud here. siriusxm. road happy. or building the best houses in town. or becoming the next highly-unlikely dotcom superstar.
12:13 pm
and us, we'll be right there with you, helping with the questions you need answered to get your brand new business started. we're legalzoom and we've already partnered with over a million new business owners to do just that. check us out today to see how you can become one of them. legalzoom. legal help is here. because while some other guys use frozen beef from far away. that's 9,429 miles away. wendy's only uses fresh beef from ranches close by. so we don't have to freeze it. then add six strips of bacon, cooked fresh in an oven never a microwave. topped with plenty of... (all together) cheese! without a single veggie to get in the way. proving once and for all... that only wendy's has the bacon and the ator to make the baconator. 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.
12:14 pm
it was a buffalo chicken salad. salad. when this busy family... ...got a cracked windshield... ...their dad went to the new safelite-dot-com... ...and scheduled a replacement... ...in just a few clicks. with safelite you don't have to miss a thing. y'all did wonderful! thank you. (girls sing) safelite repair, safelite replace. (announcer vo) you can go straight home. (howard stern on radio) welcome to show business. (announcer vo) or you can hear the rest of howard. bababooey! (announcer vo) sorry, confused neighbors, howard's on. siriusxm. road happy. no the never-trump movement has a new candidate for the white house can one who is just entering at the race now. his name is evan mcmull lip, former cia operative who work as policy director for house republicans and is announcing an independent bid for at the president. he already missed the deadline to get on the ballot in a lot of states but analysts say he could
12:15 pm
make a difference in key battleground states. aaron for the "washington post" good afternoon to you. >> hi. >> who is he? >> a good question. he was a former cia intelligence officer. he was most recently an aide at the house republican conference, which is a leadership, within house republican leadership. a pretty unknown guy. he is from -- rather, he within to school at brigham young, university, a mormon candidate so there's some thought he could have an impact on the race in utah, especially given how unliked trump is in that state. this feels like a last gasp effort from the never-trump movement which never really found the okayed -- candidate they wanted and final hill thigh have a candidate who nobody knows and can't get on the ballot. >> you said a couple things in there why utah? what is going on there?
12:16 pm
>> so, in utah -- he lost 69 to 15 in that state, even as he was winning by big margins elsewhere. there's just something about utah that doesn't like trump. the polls that we have seen in the general election basically have him in a tie with hillary clinton, with both around 35% of the votes. we have seen gary johnson, the libertarian candidate taking the excess vote in that race. so, the addition of a brigham young university grad, mormon on the ballot, could take some votes from trump, complicates things in one of the smaller states on the map. other than that he won't be on the ballot in a lot of swing states. the deadline to get on the ballot in texas passed months ago so this is not anything more than a campaign to be a spoiler -- >> sounds like a hail mary.
12:17 pm
utah, do they like hillary clinton? do they prefer her? >> no. it's a very heavily conservative state. so she is only about 35% of the vote. but if there are these third-party candidates in the race, if evan mcmullin can take 10% of the vote, gary johnson can take 10, 20% of the vote, that could lower the threshold for victory in that state to the point where hillary clinton could pull out a win and deprive trump of what should otherwise be he electoral votes republicans are entitled to. >> aaron, here's a map of the country, filing deadlines for 25 states between august 5th and september 9th. it seems like it is a last-ditch effort, and i'm wondering, at what point do we stop talking about this? >> well, it is a last-ditch effort, and it is also unlikely to catch on for that very reason. i think that there was certainly a large, never-trump effort that
12:18 pm
would have latched on to a credible third party or independent candidate but i don't think a lot of those types are going to want to throw money at kind of a effort to get a victory out of this campaign and play spoiler for trump. they can support gary johnson who has a major party nomination in these states. so, i don't know how far this is going to good. this does seem to be kind of the last ha raw for this -- harrah. >> trump could always win them over. 98 days in politics is a couple of lifetimes sometimes, away. >> yeah, and we might very well see that. there's still some hard feelings from the primaries. the convention didn't go great for republicans. there is going to be something as we get towards the election the which people realize that
12:19 pm
donald trump is the only way they can get a republican president in office and that can lead to a rallying effect but it's cleared with the many defections we have season from the republican establishment, people signing letters to never support trump. a certain segue optment of the party will never come around to this guy. >> thank you for your time. nice to talk to you. stranded at the airport. thousands of people, all over the world. stuck for hours, because of a computer glitch that rippled throughout the entire system. that and a lot more politics coming up here. picking up for kyle.
12:20 pm
12:21 pm
here you go. you wouldn't put up with part of a pizza. um. something wrong? so when it comes to pain relievers, why put up with just part of a day? you want the whole thing? yes, yes! live whole. not part. aleve.
12:22 pm
a major meltdown at one of
12:23 pm
the world's largest airlines causing huge problems for thousands of travelers today. delta reports it started around 2:30 a.m. eastern time out of atlanta, georgia, quickly became a global computer outage. planes could not take off so the airline had to cancel at least 400 flights and delay more than a thousand others. still going on in fact. things have been slowly getting back to normal but many stranded passengers have been expressing their anger on social media. who can blame them. jonathan serrie is live in atlanta. what is happening now? >> reporter: the lines here are not much longer than what you would normally expect on a monday afternoon, delta sending in additional personnel to open up additional kiosks to help move the flow of passengers and reroute passengers whose flights have been either cancelled or delayed. this afternoon delta's ceo posted an online video statement to customers.
12:24 pm
i apologize for the challenges this has created for you with your travel experience. the delta team is working very, very hard to restore and get these systems back as quickly as possible. >> reporter: delta ceo described the effort to restore service as all hands on deck. >> how long until things are back to normal? >> reporter: as of early afternoon the da had to cancel 451 flights scheduled to leave today. they're still warning passenger with flights throughout the day there is the of additional cancellations and delays and it may even go beyond today. delta blames the problem on a power outage at their main operations center that occurred around 2:30 this morning. that forced them to ground outbound flights for several hours and del tase warning custom -- delta is warning customers to expect more cancellations and delays and for
12:25 pm
those customers who are severely impacted delta is offering waivers so they can request full refunds or reschedule their flights anytime over the next four days without penalty. >> what a mess. thank you. let's get them flying again. hillary clinton getting ready to hold a rally in florida. a live look now at st. petersburg where she kicks off a two-day trip through the critical swing state. let's see our she ponds to donald trump's big speech on the economy and what she would do at president. that's coming upped in the fox news deck on this monday afternoon.
12:26 pm
12:27 pm
i'm lea gabrielle with the fox report and more headlines. the cleanup effort underway are after rain causes deadly mudslide outside mexico city. 40 people died. forecasters blame what is left of hurricane earl. they say some places got a
12:28 pm
month's worth of rain in 24 hours. in california, officials say a major forest fire that broke out yesterday is growing rapidly and is nowhere close to being contained. hundreds of firefighters are trying to control the flames. it's happening in the san bernardino national forest east of los angeles. the fire has forced dozens of families out of their homed. in florida, wildlife officials have a message for people who like to paint. a turtle is not a canvas and it's illegal to paint their shells and it can cause health problems and bright colors make it easier for predators to spot the turtles. the news continues after this. l! squuuuack, let's feed him to the sharks! yay! and take all of his gold! and take all of his gold! ya! and hide it from the crew! ya...? squuuuack, they're all morons anyway! i never said that. they all smell bad too. no! you all smell wonderful! i smell bad! if you're a parrot, you repeat things.
12:29 pm
it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. squuuuack, it's what you do.
12:30 pm
hillary clinton set to take the stage any moment now. she is at a rally in the critical swing state of florida. that's a live look. bill nelson on stage now. the democratic nominee picking off a two-day tour of florida. we'll see if she responds to donald trump's speech on the
12:31 pm
economy today. the clinton campaign releasing a enemy know accusing trump of having, quote, an agenda that experts across the political spectrum say would lead to recession and cost millions of americans jobs, end quote. the clinton team trying to step up fundraising, the campaign is sending a memo to donors called "wakeup call" saying they have to redouble their efforts after trump raised $80 million in july, beating the clinton campaign expectations. mike emappal with the clinton -- emanuel with the clinton team in florida. what else does clinton have planned for this florida tour? >> reporter: it's interesting, in this part of the i-4 corridor as it's known in florida, there's been a huge inflection of puerto rican voters.
12:32 pm
christians to is talking about what she would do to help small businesses. clinton on her way over here stopped at a local brewery and the brewery is known for using equipment produced locally and also known for basically producing a special edition beer every year at veterans day, and after her tour, clinton took a swipe at donald trump. >> that's what trump has done, time and time again. it would be like you get a big order from one of his resorts. that's exciting and people would work really hard. and then they wouldn't pay you. or maybe they'd say, we'll only pay you 50-cents or 30 cents on the dollar. can't imagine. know what it would mean to my family. i can imagine what it would mean to any family. >> no surprise on the trip to florida she is take something swipes at donald trump. she is also going to miami to talk about the zika virus and what she called a serious public health threat.
12:33 pm
>> what is her -- the thinking win the campaign about her level of support in florida? >> reporter: all indications are it's going to be a close race. the latest polling has -- from suffolk university, 48-42 clinton over trump but with a four-way race it's tighter with clinton having a four-point lead over donald trump when you consider the their-party candidates. there's 29 electoral votes up for grabs in the state of florida so hillary clinton is investing a lot of time and energy here. she was here to launch her democratic ticket kaine and is back spending two days and will spend a lot of time between now and election day and as you can hear behind me on stage, she is starting to fire up the crowd, trying to get them to turn out big for her in november. >> a raucous room. thank you. mike emanuel. we'll keep half an ear on this and see what comments are
12:34 pm
relative to what donald trump was talking about earlier today. florida obviously a key battleground state for the clinton and trump team. analysts say her team is not ruling out trying to flip some red states to blue. lisa layer with me now. how are you doing? good afternoon. >> good afternoon. >> i want to show what a map that came out earlier for what her main targets are. a lot of this stuff, frankly, is predictable. think about florida and ohio, colorado, iowa, michigan, on down to pennsylvania, north carolina, virginia, wisconsin. is anything on this map a surprise? this is where the election is won. >> right. we're looking at the same set of battleground states at play in 2012 and 2008. what has happened in some of these states us they have moved a little bit demographic include. so, virginia, the clinton campaign is feeling comfortable
12:35 pm
about virginia. of course, he running meat, tim kaine is from the state and also paused their advertising there which is an indication they feel happy with their standing in that state right now. that was a state that was a much tougher climb for democrats in 2008 or even in 2012 that now maybe because of the demographics feels much more in the party's reach. >> you saw this poll from georgia last week. the newspaper out of atlanta. "atlanta journal-constitution." if this is what happens in three months, this election is a lanslide. have you been able to get a gauge as to whether or not that is how it is truly moving in georgia today the sense has always been that georgia is a state that could turn democratic. people aren't sure whether that would happen this cycle or not. but as you point out, certainly is a really interesting bell weather. if hillary clinton wins georgia, wins arizona, wins these other states, that democrats like to
12:36 pm
talk about changing in the future, it's a sign that she is doing pretty well. the question becomes whether the campaign is going to spend money in georgia. obama's campaign looked at whether to spendly and just ended up concluding they didn't have to. if you're running a campaign you're looking for the most cost effective, fastest way to get to 270, and so if they don't feel like they have to play in georgia, they're not going to spend money there. they could spend some money there or send sect clinton down there as a head fake to try to get the trump campaign to spend money down there but he is not spending money on ads anywhere. not on the air waves. do you think the speech in detroit puts pressure on her when you think about his message. he was trying to paint a vision for the future. suggesting that she is part of the past. how did you hear it? >> he was. that's exactly his argument.
12:37 pm
shees old establishment politics and he is creating something new and pushing something new. we don't have a lot of specifics on the policies in these speeches. the thing that got a lot of people excited was his plan to subsidize childcare for families weapon don't have details on that. certainly the clinton campaign is going to respond. she has a speech scheduled in thursday for detroit, and they have been happy because in some polls, we have seen recently come out, that -- for a long time trump led when voter's asked who they felt would do better with the economy. that gap seems to be some shrinking so the think this is an issue they're making gaposises voter seem to have responded in the primary. >> with regard to hear -- going back to the chris wallace interview and you think about how she answered that question on friday afternoon. at the convention for hispanic and african-american
12:38 pm
journalists. it's a story that continues to move, to churn, and you wonder at which point -- how does she clarify this? does she hold a press conference where it's been more than 250 days or does she ride it out until the first debate at the end of september? what do you think is the smartest money? >> well, she has had an awfully hard time clarifying this. whenever this topic comes up she gives these reel legalle legalistic answers etch. the what what voters want to hear. a campaign is not a courtroom. public opinion is not jury so she needs to find a way, certainly before the first debate, because this topic will certainly come up then -- to give an answer that satisfies voters on this. now, given where trump's numbers -- what we have seen postconvention none of this may matter in the election. she could have this issue dog her and still win in november but it will continue on. it speaks to her greatest
12:39 pm
vulnerability, which is her trustworthiness, and that is something that even if she does win in november, will be a liability that will follow her into the white house. >> does it continue to gnaw at her or have you seen the numbers stabilize? >> i think we have seen the numbers stabilize. what the clinton campaign believes this arorschach test for where voters. of if you don't like hillary clinton this is a major problem. if you are inclined toward her you see this as more evidence of republican attacks against her. so it's not necessarily moving voters but it does play into this narrative that she is struggled with this entire campaign, and really for a good portion of heirs career, she is not trustworthy, in it only for herself and that is a problem for her. >> thank you from the spoken spoken. good to see you -- the "associated press." thank youor your time. >> we're listening for the speech in st. petersburg and have not gotten to the relevant
12:40 pm
remarks pertaining to donald trump. when they happen we'll drove in live. death on the waterslide in the mid of summer. a young boy is now dead and for some reason nobody seems to be able to say exactly what went wrong. we'll get to that in a moment. and the "pokemon go" gamer gunned down as he played that online game live. that is next. can a toothpaste do everything well? this clean was like - pow. it felt like i had just gone to the dentist.
tv-commercial
12:41 pm
it just kind of like, wiped everything clean. my teeth are glowing. they are so white. crest [hd]. 6x cleaning, 6x whitening. and at two weeks superior sensitivity relief to the leading sensitivity toothpaste. i actually really like the two steps! crest [hd]. step 1 cleans, step 2 whitens. it's the whole package. no one's done this. crest - healthy, beautiful smiles for life.
12:42 pm
across new york state, from long island to buffalo, from rochester to the hudson valley, from albany to utica, creative business incentives, infrastructure investment, university partnerships, and the lowest taxes in decades are creating a stronger economy and the right environment in new york state company's tomorrow- todaye. at business.ny.gov i thodid the ancestrydna toian. find out i'm only 16% italian.
12:43 pm
so i went onto ancestry, soon learned that one of our ancestors was eastern european. this is my ancestor who i didn't know about. ssoon, she'll be binge-studying. get back to great. this week sharpie singles now twenty-five cents. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. police say they're now investigating how a ten-year-old boy died on a waterslide in kansas city, kansas. the son of a lawmaker from the state. no word on whether or not he fell from the ride or died while he was on it. the water park advertises the slide as the largest on the planet, calling it insane. 17 stories high. riders reach speeds of 70 miles-per-hour. according to our local fox station the slide opened with an age requirement. blocking nip under the age of 14 from riding but that restriction
12:44 pm
no longer appears on the park's web site. police called the death an apparent accident. a spokesperson for the park said, quote, we honestly don't know what happened. we have a defense attorney to handle this for us today. >> good afternoon. >> you say in all these cases, personal. >> the test who is is negligent. >> right. >> what can we say bat that now. >> we don't note what happened but with negligence there has to be a case that someone owed someone a duty. the amusement park, you have people paying to come into your establishment you have to make sure they're safe and if that duty is breached and causes damages there's liability, and in this clearly something went wrong but they'll say there as assume of risk. the signs state anything can happen. you get on these rides knowing -- >> as the defense attorney the
12:45 pm
assumption of risk falls on the person who is willingly climbing onboard the ride. >> exactly. because they can't guarantee that nothing will help. sometimes people have heart attacks on these types of rides, and then we don't know what the child did while on the ride, if he did not adhere to the rules, don't put your hands outside the rides or if there any type of -- say hi parents allowed him to get on know he was not big enough. >> sometimes these rides have a height qualification, minimum standard for height and if you don't measure up to a certain height, you should not climb onboard the ride. is this as awful as this tragedy is, is this something that falls on the family or the participants who decide to get onboard? or is the investigation so early that you have to look at the ride itself? >> well -- >> and understand whether it was
12:46 pm
operating properly. >> what the family -- say they said he met the requirements that were listed outside of the ride. then the amusement park can't blame them for allowing hill. sometimes you have ride operators that will kind of see the child as not exactly what is required and still let the child get on, and in that case the amusement park with would responsible. >> perhaps the straps are loose. thank you. we're waiting on this moment here and i want to break away for a second because hillary clinton is now responding to donald trump. >> really well for people already at the top. we're going to turn that upside-down. we're going to make the wealthy pay their fair share in taxes for a change. [cheering] and i, i have said through this campaign, i am not going to raise taxes on the middle class, but with your help, we are going to raise it on the wealthy
12:47 pm
because that's where the money is. [cheering] you know that old movie, follow the money. well, one insure tenth of one percent has gotten 90% of the income. [chanting] hillary, hillary, hillary, hillary. >> now, here is the other thing. here's the other thing i want you to know because i want you to tell your friends, don't let a friend vote trump. so here's the deal. he can't escape the math. you know, math can be kind of inconvenient if it doesn't add up the way you want it to. and economists, left, right in the middle, all say the same thing. that trump's policies would throw us into a recession. the last thing we need.
12:48 pm
he would undermine the growth that we have had since the great recession. one independent expert actually the economist who advised john john mccain in 2008 -- so not somebody that has any predisposition toward our side -- but this economist did a study. he said, under trump's economic plan, we would lose in america 3.5 million jobs. now, he compared it with what i have proposed. and he said, in comparison, my plans would create at least 10 million jobs in the first four years for the economy. >> now you have the reaction from hillary clinton returning serve on her ideas for the economy. this on a day where donald trump delivered a speech in detroit, michigan. that was interrupted repeatedly by protesters, and he repeatedly
12:49 pm
went after hillary clinton and her ideas. so now the game has been joined and hillary clinton will be in detroit later this week, on thursday. let's break away from here. an american kidnapped in afghanistan. what we know about the victim and what we're learning now about the suspects. that's next.
12:50 pm
12:51 pm
12:52 pm
five gunmen kidnapped an american man and australian in afghanistan. officials say the attackers wore afghan military uniforms and took the two men from an suv last night. happened on a main road near kabul and the american university. officials believe the two men are employees of the school. no group has claimed responsibility. in the past year, kidnappers took three other foreigners in
12:53 pm
kabul and released them. but in april someone abducted an australian woman and she is still missing. greg palkot is live in london with more now. >> reporter: we have been going to kabul, afghanistan, for the last 15 years by definition it's a dangerous place and looks like it's not getting any better. these two were nabbed in the area of southeastern kabul, near the american university of afghanistan. pretty certain that the american and the australian were professors. the gunmen were dressed as soldiers or police people. they were shattering the side window of the suv to get to the two. they nabbed the two. they left a body guard and a driver behind. as you say, there's no claim of responsibility. there's not even a demand of ransom yet. but, yes, kidnapping is becoming
12:54 pm
more and more common, both inside kabul and across afghanistan. there was another attempt on an american earlier this year. that's why again today the state department issued a warning that it cannot guarantee american security anywhere in this country. crime, it could be just part of an adding insecurity mix in that country. >> islamic state seems to be growing there as well. released some pictures of u.s. gear it claims to have. what is it? >> reporter: amazing stuff. this coming out online. posted by islamic state earlier over the weekend. it purports to show u.s. military gear, sensitive stuff, rocket launcher, grenades, ammunition, radio, another communications equipment as well as an american flag. probably most disturbing, though, the image and documentation of a just soldier. now, we have been speaking to u.s. military officials. they
12:55 pm
deny that the american has in any way been captured by isis but admit this soldier is involved in anti-isis operations and they admit some of the equipment was used in that operation and there have been clashes between the u.s. military, afghanistan military, and isis. the latest word we're getting from the spokesperson is this equipment was lost. so a dangerous scene. >> thank you, greg. a lot to report on there. two terror groups taking responsible for a suicide bombing that killed at least 70 at a hospital in southwestern pakistan. islamic state's news agency reports an isis fighter blew himself up there. but earlier today a militant group tied to the taliban claimed its fighter shod -- shot and killed a prominent lawyer in afghanistan and then blew up
12:56 pm
others who gathered to mourn his death. happening 80 miles from the bored wife afghanistan. witnesses say people were screaming and bodies were everywhere. back in a moment here with a look at a landmark day for every kitchen in america, and it happened on this day in history. constipated? trust number one doctor recommended dulcolax use dulcolax tablets for gentle overnight relief
12:57 pm
suppositories for relief in minutes and stool softeners for comfortable relief of hard stools. dulcolax, designed for dependable relief
12:58 pm
12:59 pm
on this day in 1899 the u.s. government awarded a pat tent for the first home refrigerator. people have been cutting and storing ice for thousands of years. in fact during the 18th 18th century engineers began experimenting with artificial refrigeration. some warm winteres caused a shortage of ice and an inventer in massachusetts secured the right to build the first refridgation machine. allowing companies to ship foods and changed the american kitchen forever, 117 years ago today.
1:00 pm
perfect for the month of august. >> i'm bill hem ever in for shepard. see you tomorrow at 9:00 a.m. eastern time. until then "your world" with charles payne in for neil today. >> very well planned out. >> donald trump laying out his economic plan as protesters try to shout him down. welcome everyone, i'm charles paine, this is "your world." trump laying out his plan despite the protests as someone who helped develop the plan is here. but first to blake berman in detroit where it went down. blake? >> reporter: donald trump had four different parts 0 this economic speech today as he laid out his vision for the economy going forward. it was taxes, trade, and energy, and regulation, but the main headline coming out of his speech at the detroit economic club this afternoon was on the tacks front, as he