tv The Real Story FOX News August 26, 2016 11:00am-12:01pm PDT
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great to have you this week, gregg. >> it's been terrific being here. >> have a greet weekend, everybody. "aehq" starts now. hillary clinton taking a break from the campaign trail after a scathing speech attacking donald trump on the issue of race and telling voters not to be fooled by his sudden outreach to minorities. hello, everyone, i'm shannon bream. clinton accuses trump of taking racist fringe groups mainstream. the republican nominee hitting back, saying the accusations are a sign of a discredited
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politician. meanwhile tim kaine is in the battleground state of florida. senior political correspondent mike emanuel joinings s us liv from washington. >> reporter: hillary clinton says she's reaching out and asking fair-minded americans to repudiate donald trump's kind of divisive demagoguery. she wants to make sure americans are aware of her serious charges against trump. >> a man with a long history of racial discrimination, who traffic in conspiracy theories drawn from the pages of supermarket tabloids and these kind of white supremacist, white nationalist, anti-semitic groups, should never run or government or command our military. >> reporter: clinton defended herself on the big controversy this week over ties between the clinton-led state department and
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her family's foundation. she says she's sure there are no new e-mails or scandals that could derail her presidential campaign, shannon. >> all right, mike. so mrs. clinton taking the day off but she'll be getting some help from some democratic vips very soon, we understand. >> reporter: that's right, in critical battleground states. you mentioned her running mate tim kaine is in florida. on thursday, vice president joe biden will make stops on her behalf in the critical state of ohio. the clinton campaign announced president obama will campaign for the clinton/kaine ticket in philadelphia on tuesday. clinton's only other event was fundraising in reno, nevada wednesday, one of those states to watch in november. with the latest national poll in quinnipiac showing clinton with a ten-point edge over trump, her schedule is light here in the final days of summer. >> mike emanuel live in
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washington, good to see you. donald trump in las vegas as he tries to attract minority voters. the back and forth over race has been been fueled in part by trump's recent shift in immigration policy which was a centerpiece of his campaign. mr. trump now softening his stance and backing away from his original claims that he would deport all illegal immigrants. watch this. >> they'll pay back taxes. they have to pay taxes. there's no amnesty as such. there's no amnesty. but we work with them. we're going to see what happens once we strengthen our border. we'll have a strong border, strong as any border in the world. we'll have a real wall. but yes, we'll see what happens. before we do anything, i want to get rid of the bad ones. >> the shift isn't sitting well with former primary jeb bush who was hammered by trump for being, quote, weak on immigration. he was interviewed on radio.
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>> sounds like a typical politician, you get in front of one crowd and say one thing and then say something else in front of another cloud. all the things trump railed against, he seems to be morphing into, kind of disturbing. >> guest is a spokesperson for the trump campaign. people were hammered during the primary, especially jeb bush there, donald trump talking about how weak he was. now a lot of people, including eric cantor, "pleased to see jeb bush's immigration plan." is that what happened? >> the overarching buying items have not changed, it's building a wall, no amnesty, no pathway to citizenship. those are things that jeb bush supported but not donald trump. on those three things that has been abilities no inconsistent message coming from the trump campaign. sure, he said, we're going to
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work on an e-verify system, secure or borders, maybe then we can think about treating people humanely, but people have to leave the country and then reenter. >> people gave differing accounts about some said there was language he used that sounded like there was a way for people to be here that's legal. a lot of people say that's amnesty. >> buzzfeed hasn't entirely been fair to the trump campaign over the course of the campaign. that said, you have real social issues that have to be addressed if you even talk about deporting 11 million people. there are people who have children that are legal citizens that you can't snap their fingers and have their parents disappear. trump has consistently said we have to start by deporting the people here who are convicted or accused of committing crimes and then go from there. that's not inconsistent, and frankly you have to treat some people humanely. >> of course, i think we would
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all agree on that. but how is that so different from what this administration was criticized for doing all the time, they're giving people prosecutorial discretion, saying we're only getting rid of the worst of the worst, seconds out felons, crimes involving guns, those kinds of things. how is that different from what mr. trump has proposed? >> because trump says we're going to potentially deport all the people and then give people a pathway back in if they have not convicted. >> so everyone has to go? >> that's what donald trump has been saying since essentially day one. >> so what do you make of those who say there has been a morphing, there has been a change? a lot of people are left more confused than ever after that conversation with anderson cooper in which he said there's a good probability possibly that yes, that will definitely happen, something else. you understand why people feel like, listen, this is the guy we went with in the primary because we love his tough talk, we love his hard line on immigration, and now he may be backing off his position.
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>> people who believe that immigration is a high priority for the next administration or people who believe that immigration is the biggest issue going into this election should still rest comfortably in the fact that don't will be tald tr hard on immigration reforms as opposed to hillary clinton who wants amnesty. >> when are we going to get the formal rollout, what will his participants be for a hard, fast, 25-point plan? >> the campaign has said they will come out with a plan and give it in the same style as some of the policy speeches he's given. i'm sure he'll do it in the coming weeks. >> you're saying those worried that he's backing off the position he took that appealed to them in the primaries, they have nothing to worry about now? >> again, there is a clear difference between the donald trump immigration plan which is about building a wall, not offering amnesty, not offering citizenship to people who are here illegally, and hillary
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clinton's plan, who wants to issue a blanket amnesty to everyone who is here illegally. if you're a person who cares about the issue, there's one choice for you. >> how do you define amnesty? >> staying here with the blessing of the government. >> with some kind of legal status? >> potentially not. you could defer someone's deportation while they make arrangements for their children that's things you have to work out after the election. you're going to hear a more detailed policy proposal by donald trump in the coming weeks. you can't expect presidential candidates to hammer out any detail on every hypothetical situation that will come up. >> we look forward to the speech, we want to know more. everybody is looking for clarity after the events of the past week. joe, good to see you. the family of kayla mueller says the president, they say, broke his promise to donate to her charity. mueller, a humanitarian aid worker, was killed last year in
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syria after spending 18 months in captivity with isis. her family says the president promised to make a donation to her charity. the white house says the president will live up to his promise but hasn't said exactly how or when. a race time against in central italy has crews hunt for survivors in the rubble of the devastating earthquake. john huddy is live there with more with less than positive news, john. >> reporter: shannon, behind me is one of the main relief and aid camps. this is where the firefighters and search and rescue teams that have been helping in amatrice and some of the other central italian towns that were hit, this is where they're based out of. they've been rotating constantly 24/7. it's an exhaustive process, obviously because of the
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magnitude that wednesday morning's earthquake, the damage, the magnitude of the destruction by the 6.2 magnitude earthquake, but also because of the logistical problems with the consistent and ongoing aftershocks and tremors. there was a 4.8 magnitude aftershock around 6:15 this morning that just caused even more damage in these already devastated towns like amatrice. and also it's caused damage, significant damage to some of the roads, critical roads and access points into these villages and towns. that's made it very difficult for the heavy equipment and these teams to get into some of these hard-hit and difficult -- places that are difficult to reach already, okay? so that's an issue, an ongoing problem for these crews as they continue to search for survivors. but obviously, shannon, we talked about this yesterday, as the days -- we're in now the third day here, as the days and the hours continue, that decreases the likelihood of finding survivors buried in the
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rubble. there remains hope that more people are found, we've heard stories of survival, a 10-year-old girl pulled from the rubble. but time is running out. at this point 267 people confirmed dead, many more missing. obviously the search very much continues, shannon. back to you. >> john, thank you so much for keeping us updated on the ground. new accusations in hillary clinton's e-mail investigation suggesting she and the state department were aware that what they were doing when they deleted thousands of e-mails could get them in trouble and that they used special software to make the files nearly impossible to recover. plus a gruesome murder in mississippi, the victims a pair of devoted nuns. now the hunt for the killer is on. >> i don't think i feel too safe if something happens this close to home.
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a manhunt is under way in mississippi after two nuns were found stabbed to death in their home. police came across sister margaret held and sister paula merrill after they didn't show up to work at a health clinic. the church's diocese says there were signs of a break-in and their car was taken. loved ones described the sisters as earthly angels who were devoted to helping others. a federal judge ordering the state department to speed up the release of newly discovered hillary clinton e-mails. some of them could involve benghazi.
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nearly 15,000 recovered by the fbi which clinton never turned over to the state department but, remember this. >> i responded right away and provided all my e-mails that could possibly be work-related, which totaled roughly 55,000 printed pages. >> and she and her team erased tens of thousands of e-mails saying they were private. but they didn't just hit the delete button. instead a special program made them disappear, apparently forever. >> we don't use bleach bit for yoga e-mails or bridesmaid e-mails. when you're using bleach bit, it's something you really do not want the world to see. >> the council for the american center for law and justice, great to have you with us today, jay. >> thanks, shannon. >> a lot of people are looking at this in the context of a political campaign. that's why we are now. there are some real issues that could be legal issues for hillary clinton whether she's
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elected president or not. let's talk through some of these. first of all, this latest judge's order to the state department directly, on a number of requests to turn over e-mails. what happens now? >> the judge said you have to turn them over in two weeks and expedited the state department's planned disclosure date. you have a situation where the state department for some reason doesn't want to move on this. shannon, from personal experience, we're in federal court right now with the state department on another matter that was involving your colleague, our friend james rosen, and his discovery of the video where they edited everything out that they viewed was inappropriate, which was of course when the negotiations with iran actually started. we had to go to federal court now to get the answers to those questions. the state department is under a slow roll. friends of judicial watch have done an effective job of getting these released but the state department doesn't want it out there. then you have the situation that
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trey gowdy mentions, the idea that she used a particular software to get rid of these e-mails raises a whole host of questions. one thing i've been thinking, shannon, the fbi and those agents must be just perplexed at how james comey determined that this was a case not to move forward with the recommendation towards prosecution. every single day as the data comes out you just wonder what is really going on here. >> you and i watched him as many americans did, as he laid out the case before announcing there would not be a prosecution and it sounded like somebody giving their opening statement as a prosecutor. that didn't turn out to be a case. peter schweitzer is the author of "clinton cash," speaking on fox today about how this is all tied together like puzzle pieces that we're now seen falling into place. >> when you're engaging in pay to play on a global scale as you were with the clinton foundation, you need a means of communication and e-mail is the
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way to do it. you can't do that on the official government network because it might be detected, people can file freedom of information act requests. so you need to set up a private server. these two scandals are connected. >> but it worked, and there's nothing, jay, that's illegal. whether it may be questionable, there's nothing illegal that's been found, what difference does it make, as someone has asked previously? >> it begs the question whether there was actually illegaltivity here. the clinton foundation in and of itself is entitled to raise money from foreign individuals and governments. one of the principals of the clinton foundation happened to be the secretary of state and is now the democratic nominee for president of the united states and may end up being president of the united states. as these e-mails come out, as there's more concerns raised as to what was going on with access to the secretary of state, it's as if the government affairs office of the charge inton foundation was the department of
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state under the reign of hillary clinton. and that would be problematic legally, seriously problematic legally. there's a whole host of not only regulatory violations that could be engaged in. this idea of pay to play, there are governors serving time in jail for allegations much less. >> we'll watch as new information continues to surface. as it does, there are more questions, if not answers. and we'll stand by and keep looking for those as we know you will too, jay. >> the hits keep coming. thanks, shannon. an altercation involving a weapon outlawed in many states. what was found in a suspicious package. the surgeon general is sending a letter to every doctor in america warning them about a crisis of unprecedented reach. >> we had this whole generation that grew up without any concern for these pills.
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a toronto man facing murder charges in the deaths of three people shot with a crossbow. police found a man and two women lying in a driveway suffering from serious wounds with a crossbow nearby. the suspect was arrested at the scene. it may have been a domestic dispute. the names of the victims have not been released but an autopsy is scheduled. a dramatic and disturbing spike in overdose deaths caused by the drug that killed prince,
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raising alarms from coast to coast. now the surgeon general is getting involved. trace gallagher is live with more. >> reporter: hi, shannon. the common denominator is these drugs are all opioids. but you have to break this down into two categories. prescription painkillers like oxycontin and street drugs like heroin. painkillers kill tens of thousands of americans each year. the cdc says in 2014, the last year numbers are available, some 28,000 americans died from opioid pain relievers, and here's why. the government says in 2012, health care providers wrote 259 million prescriptions for pain medication. that's enough for every adult and most kids to have a bottle of pills. now for the first time ever, the surgeon general is reaching out to every single doctor in america, warning them about overprescribing pain meds, saying, quote, it is important
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to recognize that way every at this place on a path paved with good intentions, but the intentions of course have gone horribly wrong. the surgeon general says too many doctors still don't realize that opioids are highly addictive and now his push is for doctors to, quote, start low and go slow. in other words, smaller doses for shorter periods of time. some believe more states need to follow massachusetts by passing laws that severely limit opioid prescriptions. and then there's the heroin problem, right? in 2014, more than 10,000 americans died from a heroin overdose. right now both indiana and ohio are on high alert because of a rash of heroin overdoses. more than a hundred in just the past week alone. authorities believe a super charged form of heroin is to blame, saying they believe the drug might be laced with fentanyl, a synthetic opioid,
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the same drug that killed prince, as you said, shannon. >> so many of these problems started with good intentions. we'll see if we can turn back the block on that now. thank you, trace. a close call for the head of germany. an assassination attempt stopped before it could be carried out. where it went down and what we're learning about the attempted killer's motives. clinton foundation getting less than stellar ratings. we'll break down where the foundation's billions of dollars end up as hillary clinton takes more heat over her e-mail. >> when you see that hillary clinton has not been prosecuted for more than a hundred classified messages that she has exchanged including ones that bear classification labels. me i. i'm raph. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, and we've got your back.
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police that you thought an assassination attempt against german chancellor angela merkel. the man apparently planned to enter her motorcade armed with handcuffs. the clinton foundation raising $2 billion today. how much actually reaches the people in need? turns out a lot of the money goes to salaries and overhead expenses. liz mcdonald has experience with this, she's here from the fox business network. he know how to investigate and break this down. what can you tell us about what kind of ratings they have as a
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charity? >> it's very hard to rate them as a charity, even one of the watch dogs said we can't because they're unlike any other charity. they don't act as a conduit where it raises money and passes it along to other charities. it has its own staff of 2,000 workers and these individuals work on charitable causes, doing things like agricultural in africa or working on hiv drugs for those in need. when we break down the expenses, that's where things get kind of curious and opaque, shannon. for example, the numbers out there, nearly 90% of its expenses for the foundation goes toward, quote, program services. that sounds great, but when you look at it, you have to say to yourself, what are those expenses? $34 million in salaries, about $8 million spent on travel for these workers, meaning it could be bill clinton going around the world. nearly $13 million in annual
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costs on conferences, conventions, and meetings. so the bottom line is it's very opaque. it has passed along a little more than $5 million in grants. so the question is what are these workers doing. they do do a lot of good in the world. but again, it's very hard for watch dogs to grade this one. >> yeah, and that's what people mostly seem to want is transparency, especially since there are so many questions about links between the foundation and the state department while mrs. clinton was serving as secretary. >> yeah, that's right. and also between mrs. clinton's 2008 campaign, there were workers there who then went to the clinton foundation and then went back to the 2016 campaign. the other point to be made is that, you know, the foundation was saying we're not going to take money from foreign governments while mrs. clinton was secretary of state. but you and i were talking during the break, a lot of foreign governments run non-profits. it would be easy for those non-profits to give money to the clinton foundation. >> thank you for breaking it down for us. >> we'll get back to you with
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more. >> there's a lot there. great to see you. alan colmes and lisa booth, welcome to you both. >> hi, shannon. >> alan, i love spending my friday afternoons with you and lisa now too as well. you have this premier charity rating, navigator, who says we can't rate the foundation, but they say it's so opaque and confusing as liz told us about, they can't figure out what's going on. >> if only we can find a scandal here, we're looking hard. >> or find something to exonerate them. >> i don't know what you mean by we can't find anything to exonerate them. another charity watch organization called charity watch in fact gives it an "a" rating. the one that does rate it gives it an "a." as liz points out, 89% of its
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dollars go to help people, and liz mentioned all the works they did. i know, because republicans have a failing presidential campaign, they're desperate to find something on hillary clinton rather than talk about what plans they have to move the country forward. i'm waiting to hear what the scandal is. >> let's try to keep this to the clinton foundation for purposes of this conversation. because there are growing questions, lisa, we see e-mails that are now surfacing that weren't supposed to exist, they do exist, and they show questionable potential connections between staffers at the state department, staffers at the clinton foundation, issues of access, and, you know, if nothing else it raises questions that i'm sure the clintons are not comfortable with in the midst of a presidential election. but that's on them. >> absolutely. i mean, there's no question why she took the unprecedented step of setting up a private server then tried to delete tens of thousands of e-mails so forensics couldn't recover them. 90% of the spending as liz pointed out went to staff-related expenses and travel.
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further, hillary clinton failed to disclose these foreign donors in the first place. if you remember, going back about a year, that's when we found out. also, back in 2009, she testified under oath during her senate confirmation hearing that donors would not get special treatment while she was at the state department which hasn't been the case. the associated press reported that 55% of the non-government meetings and phone calls were donors. t "the international business times" reported donations from foreign governments increased under her watch. "the new york times" reported about uranium 1, a deal she approved as secretary of state that gave issue 20% of the u.s.'s u auranium. >> alan, the ap, "the new york times," not last time i checked part of the vast white wing
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conspiracy. >> the ap story had nothing in it. it quoted a presidential medal of freedom win and her a nobel prize winner. there was no evidence of quid pro quo. >> they took numbers and looked at the people -- >> wait a minute. here is what the problem with those numbers. they cherry-picked people. they didn't include people that worked for government. >> they were saying aside from people that would be with her anyway. >> no, they cherry-picked. they did not include a whole array of people, as if she only met with 85 people during the entire time she was secretary of state. the ap story has been largely discredited. tell me somewhat the something is. there's no evidence. >> we've got to leave it there. i want to make sure we ask you, the ap stands by the story, by the way, donald trump trying to expand his minority outreach, meeting with hispanic leaders in las vegas. his son donald jr. trying to clear up harsh words his father made about deportation and immigration earlier in the election cycle.
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>> you know it's a process. you can't take 11 million at one time and say, boom, they're gone. nobody even knows if it's 11. it could be 30. it could be five. nobody knows what the number is. >> if somebody committed a crime, will they be deported? >> we know who the bad ones are. the drug cartel people. we know the gangs and the heads of the gangs. >> that was not donald jr., clearly. that was the donald. trump said on twitter, i'm proud to have brought the subject of illegal immigration back to the discussion, such a big problem for our country i will solve. lisa, he was hard core about this in the primary. now some of the very people he took out like jeb bush are saying, you look like you like my plan, so the people who voted for you over me on this issue, did they get skunked? >> i think donald trump is in a lose/lose scenario. if he goes with his original comments regarding mass deportations he will be labeled
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inhumane, as a racist or whatever the democratic party wants to throw at him. then if he flip-flops on the issue, that's a massive flip-flop and he'll alienate his core constituencies. he's in a little bit of a bind here. regarding minority voters, what donald trump needs to do is not equal hillary clinton a bigot but state something he has previously stated, that hillary clinton views minority voters as a vote and not human beings worthy of a better future. what he needs to focus on is if you look at the economic measures, minority voters are not doing better off under president obama, they certainly wouldn't do better off under hillary clinton who would just be a continuation of those failed economic policies of president obama. >> as a matter of fact, african-american employment rate went from 18% to 9% under barack obama. >> workforce participation is down, house ownership -- >> forgive me for speaking. frankly, if people listened to lisa, he would be a lot better off, but he's not listening to anybody. and he says there's a
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hardening -- or rather, a softening of his immigration plan when he speaks to sean hannity, when he speaks to anderson cooper, he speaks of a hardening. he's got a problem in his own party. his positions are in incomprehend -- incomprehensible. >> alan and let of lisa, have a great weekend. voters in florida going to the polls next week to select a democratic candidate for the u.s. senate. two representatives are running. so far the primary race has not been pretty. phil keating is live in miami with more. hey, phil. >> reporter: hi, shannon. primary day in florida is democrats are in fact going to be able to pull off retaking control of the u.s. senate in dc, florida's seat held by republican marco rubio is considered a critical must-win. three-term congressman from
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orlando, alan grayson, is running to do just that. he's one of the more liberal members of congress, famously ripping republicans during the health care debate, belittling the gop plan as, quote, don't get sick and if you do, die quickly. he's also been the subject of ethics investigations and domestic abuse claims by his ex-wife in a messy divorce which grayson staunchly denies. >> 26 grayson hills passed the house, passed the senate, were signed into law by the united states. i don't think patrick has passed a single law in the house. he's been a legislative zero. i think i've been a legislative hero. >> reporter: political fact check verers have called his cl, quote, inflated. two-term congressman patrick murphy is also hoping to change chambers. he's won the support of president obama and senators harry reid, chuck schumer, and basically the party elites.
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murphy has been accused of inflating his resume and buying his way to congress with family money. >> i'm proudly of my voting record, proud of what we've accomplished, proud of being able to work across the aisle to solve problems because ultimately every voter i talk to just wants washington, dc to work. whether that's preventing cuts to medicare, whether that's passing a flood bill. >> reporter: also running, pam keith, raocky de la fuente, but all are polling in single digits. this week a poll showed murphy pulling in 54% on tuesday, and rubio pulling in 69%, putting them up against each other in november. and in fact for the past week or two, murphy and rubio have not even been talking about their primary opponents, but they've already been campaigning against each other. >> sometimes they just want to
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speed up that calendar. we'll see what happens. phil, thank you. when storms whip up, our next guest goes out there into them. we're tracking the next tropical storm headed to the florida coast with high tech aircraft called, i love this, miss piggy. stick around. the right things working together can give you an advantage. like trubiotics with immune support advantage. its unique formula supports immune health in two ways. with probiotics that work in your gut. and antioxidants that work throughout your body. trubiotics from one a day. that inactive satellite radio of yours is ready to roll. because the siriusxm free listening event is on right now! just hit the sat button in your car and listen free thru sept 6. that's right, two glorious weeks of commercial-free music,
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i'm harris faulkner on the fox news desk. the secret e-mail server with hillary clinton has just taken a turn. word her team used special software to wipe clean that secret server so no one would ever be able to recover whatever was on it. remember when reporters asked months ago if she had done anything like that, she joked about it, using a cloth to wipe it clean is what she said. now we know what she really used. the question is why would anybody want to erase every trace of their conversations potentially with other powerful
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people? chris wallace will join us to talk about it at the top of the hour on "shepard smith report g reporting." tropical weather is brewing in the caribbean and it's catching the attention of millions of people right here at home. right now the u.s. air force is using a reconnaissance plane to study the system known as invest 99-l. the model has the path moving on several courses but most of them show it moving towards florida's coastline. thanks for joining us for what is a very busy time of year for you guys. >> absolutely. it's my pleasure to be here. >> whenever i hear this, i think, so you get in planes that actually fly into these tropical storms or as they turn into hurricanes, how does that work? are you ever nervous about doing that? >> we're never nervous. we have a great team of
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mechanics and technicians that really take care of the airplane and a great group of skilled pilots that have thousands and thousands of hours of training and actual experience flying through hurricanes. we but in with a really good plan and execute our plan in the best safe manner that we can. >> i've got to ask you, because i don't live flying, i'll be flying today, what is the turbulence like in the middle of a hurricane in that plane? it's a good-sized aircraft. >> yeah, the turbulence, it is there, it is present. sometimes it can be quite violent at times. i kind of equate it to when my big sister used to put me at the top of the seesaw and let me drop and hit the bottom. you'll get that repeatedly. other times it's more like a roller coaster with soft, gentle ups and downs. a couple of jolts in there as well. it can be quite a ride.
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>> i've got to ask about the plane that i think you're using for your next round of flights. miss piggy. i would love to know how she got her name. and what can you tell when you actually fly into these storms, what kind of data that you can pick up that you can't get without making these flights? >> i can't speak too much about the names. the names have been there longer than i've been there. there's lots of legacy about how they came about. i'm not sure what the correct rumor is. i'll stick with what we do when we're out there. so we're collecting all sorts of information, all the data that the national hurricane center is interested in, and that the models are interested in. we're interested obviously in the wind speed and wind direction, what the central pressure is, what the lowest pressure is. that's one of the things driving those winds. the temperature profile. all these things are really important to get to the national hurricane center and to kind of give the models a good idea of what the structure of the storm is. that's the information that we're going right through the
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incoming freshmen a letter making it clear the college does not condone safe spaces or trigger warnings. here's jeff with the details. >> reporter: on the beautiful sunny campus of the ufc. many places like colleges and universities robbed the country have implemented safe zones and trigger warpings, warning people of things that may upset them. not this college. look at the letter from the dean. he says members of our community are encouraged to speak, write, listen, challenge and learn without fear of censorship. this my challenge you and cause you discomfort. they had incidents here and like the one at cal state l.a. where ben shapiro, the conservative journalist, was -- they tried to block him, protesters tried to block his speech. his speeches were cancelled at other universities.
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they don't want that to happen on the campus of the u of c. the student body, though, firing back today,, in the person of te president of the student body saying, and i quote him now, incoming freshmen should be invited to participate with their whole selfs and are being told they must check their compassion and experiences at the door. he said a trigger warning is designs for someone who has become subjected to rape if the subject of rape will be discussed the the classroom. they get warned. that's all it is. but interesting that usually you get the faculty and students kind of aliving together against the administration. not so on this case. take a look at the survey that came out, surveying educators across the country on the subject of trigger warnings. 62% of educators said that would have a negative effect on academic freedom, just 17% said it would be positive. the culture wars go on. >> they do.
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and may not have trigger warnings but apparently they've got some construction going on. so thank you for reporting through that. it's great to see you. a big dose of adorable. not only is today, friday, but it is non dog day. -- national dog day. we have the staff to show off pictures of their furry friends. don't want to miss it. stay tuned. t golf t golf for as long as i can. new patented ensure enlive has hmb plus 20 grams of protein to help rebuild muscle. for the strength and energy to do what you love. new ensure enlive. always be you.
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the possibility of a flare was almost always on my mind. thinking about what to avoid, where to go... and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions,
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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. raise your expectations. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. today is national dog day and to celebrate we asked or staff to share pictures of the pooches. kelsy's chihuahua is in a charlie's angels. this is brian's kids and dogs, adorable. here's julie's dog sporting a patriotic look. and is this the puppy monte taking in the sights in new york city. lauren's bb and her new brother, toney. i can't stand it. and ashley's pup, hazel and brew
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know. matt's wally. there he is, and look at the cute tongue. and patricia's dog wants a puppy play date with these two guys. tried to get dogs in the studio but didn't work. here's -- >> going an hillary clinton for branding his campaign racist, doubling down on his claim that clinton is a bigot. now the tell creak nominee is responding -- democratic nominee is responding, and how hillary clinton's team really do wipe her server clean, like with a legislate or something? funny, not even close. a congressman tells fox news how far the hillary clinton campaign team went to erase her e-mails and keep them secret. >> a murder mystery in the south. who would kill two nuns who spent their entire lives helping other. today police are revealing clues. we
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