tv Happening Now FOX News September 12, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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who knows what's behind door number two. martha: be careful what you ask for. happening now starts right now. have a great day. ♪ ♪ ♪ john: hillary clinton cancels trips to california after amp cane reveals she is being treated for pneumonia. good morning to, you i'm john scott. jenna: good morning, i'm jenna lee, diagnosis released yesterday after hillary clinton left memorial in lower manhattan. video capturing her stumbling before getting into an suv. at first campaign said she was overheated and doctor released statement she was diagnosed with pneumonia on friday and being treated with antibiotics.
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jennifer. >> hi, jenna, her communication director tweeted just moments ago, we could have done better yesterday, that was in response to criticism from president obama's former adviser david apelrod. hillary clinton's press secretary says she is feeling better today and will call in to the fundraiser in san francisco later today, her doctor lisa released the following statement last night, quote, secretary clinton has been experiencing a cough related to allergies on friday, during follow up evaluation, she was diagnosed with pneumonia. i have just examined her and she is now rehydrated and recovering nicely. video on social media showing aides helping her to the van. she lost a shoe we were told. her knees appear to buckle as she stepped forward and stumbled toward the vehicle cutting short
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her visit to the memorial. 90 minutes later she e personalled from her daughter's chelsea's downtown manhattan complex. she and her aides told her she had allergies and the cough caused to to interrupt the speech and later a briefing. >> every time i think about trump, i get allergic. >> this photo in february launched multiple theories that the campaign has worked hard to debunk, one a doctor carry to go stop seizures and she even went jimmy kimmel.
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>> take my pulse while i'm talking to you. [laughter] >> make sure i'm alive. >> oh, my god, there's nothing there. >> back in october the national inquire said i would be dead in six months. >> oh, boy. >> with every breath i take -- >> you have a new lease on life. >> a new lease on life. >> for 90 minutes yesterday the prez was kept in the dark, her aides were not answering phone calls, they kept the traveling press pool away from the incident as she left the memorial. 90 minutes later after press secretary put out a statement said she had become overheated even though the weather had broken in new york but not the heat wave that we had not been experiencing the week before. jenna: thank you. john: to mrs. clinton's diagnosis raising questions of
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the health of both candidates, donald trump at 70 and hillary clinton at 68. for more let's talk about the anchor of special report, bret, the campaign is trying to address this as it was pneumonia and dehydration and all taken care of but it is still raising some questions out there specially regarding mrs. clinton. >> yeah, john, good morning. i think there are calls now that are getting louder and louder for detailed medical records from both candidates. you heard donald trump on fox and friends this morning saying he's taken a physical and he's going to release some amount of data, we don't know how much of his medical records on the dr. oz show on thursday, of all places. i think that is going to put more pressure on hillary clinton to come out with some more detailed medical records or history.
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remember john mccain released 1200 pages for reporters to look at and an indpeent group of physicians to analyze and that's what's being called for by both sides of the aisle. january january john: what's unusual is tweet from axelrod. >> antibiotics can take care of pneumonia, what's the cure for pension for privacy. creates unnecessary problems and then the spokeswoman for the clinton campaign tweeted back, we could have done better yesterday but it is a fact that the public knows more about hrc than any nominee in history. if they're taking shots from, you know, one of the president's own people, former people, you know, still very tight with the
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obama folks, that's never a good sign? >> no, it shows you how serious this is. maybe less so about the health. we don't know yet definitively. as far as how the campaign handled this, that's an issue and even inside democratic circles like david axelrod. this is a problem for the campaign to have known on friday that she was diagnosed with pneumonia to keep her on the same schedule that she had. remember on friday she had a two-hour national security meeting and held a press conference and had a sit-down with cnn and had two fundraisers, one of which she had the line about the basket of deplorables. that's a pretty hefty schedule. the campaign and how it handled it is a big story and how far they two to protect hillary clinton's privacy keeping
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reporters at bay. john: as you might expect the trump campaign couldn't resist getting in the twitter battle. voters know more about hillary clinton than any other candidate. kellyanne conway treated this. she said, de, defense spelling it out, they know enough about hillary that they do not like her and don't trust her. is this going to put an end to it? i mean, she's going to sit out a couple of days of the campaign, we understand. she's going to call to the california fundraiser. trump is going to release medical records as you pointed out on thursday, is that going to put an end to the issue? >> we will see, we will see if hillary clinton follows suit, if there is, in fact, this release and independent study of her medical situation, i think that that will be the next, i think
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what was also notable this morning was when donald trump was asked about it, his tone and tenure was different than perhaps he answered. we all hope she gets better and we will see her at the debate. so, yeah, i don't expect that trump campaign to be saying too much about this. they're going to, i believe, just let it kind of fester. john: then there's the ongoing battle between them over the remark where she says half of his supporters could be lumped into a basket of deplorables. you pointed out that's not the fist time she has used the phrase. >> no, she used it as an interview with israeli television station. she used it at past fundraisers. the problem was for this particular comment at that fundraiser in new york, was the half, half of all of the supporters and she apologized or at least walked back that half,
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half is roughly 47% and that tracks with mitt romney's 47% comment that got a lot of attention in 2012. we will see if it has that affect but the trump campaign is out with a new ad this morning and running in ohio, pennsylvania and north carolina, among other swing states. john: yeah, half, i mean, with the race this tight, half also works out to about i don't know 20, 25% of the voting population, assuming that, you know, clinton and trump are splitting the vote right now. one of them is going to end up being president of all of the people of this country, if you take 20 to 25% and you call phobes what is your duty down the road? >> any time you talk about voters in general, that's not a good place to be as a candidate. if you're talking about your opponent and specifically, you know, what your opponents do,
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that's fine, but if you're talking about the voters themselves, that's usually not a good thing specially when you're talking about millions of people. she said she generalized, overgeneralized but this will be used by the trump campaign to rally his base, it's probably not going to rally that many middle of the road democrats or independents. john: there are reports, whispers the democrats are concerned about the overall campaign, might be looking for a stand-in? >> i think it's far-fetched. the fact that it's being mentioned at npr by people who, you know, like roberts who is not a right-leaning commentator saying that this is being talked about in democratic circles, i think is to be noted but far-fetched at this point. >> bret, we will look at you at special report tonight. jenna: regardless of who wins in
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november the next american president will have to deal with north korea. south korean officials say the country could conduct another nuclear test at any time. as you might recall the north korea carried out fifth test, concerns that the country is making progress with missile technology. greg in london with more. greg. >> you are absolutely right. officials in seoul saying there's a blast, calling him foolish for ignoring in the words of the anchor north korea's strategic as a nuclear
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state which does not sound different than obama administration critics that stated policy, strategic patients -- patience has allowed kim jong un to develop a series nuclear threat. a development of nuclear war head which we have been watching in the past year also stepping up, the administration there, long and medium-range missile tests, we saw three medium tests last week. finally, one proactive move by the united states was rained out today, 2b1b bombers capable of carrying 24 nuclear war heads each said to be flown from a u.s. base in the phillipines to south korea today. bad weather forced pilots to change plans and try again tomorrow. jenna: a story we will watch, thank you. john: new questions about white house transparency centering on
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the treasure troll of documents. we are live with an update on that, plus a guy arrested for putting an ied in someone's car and police say he's got a history of violence. also we want to hear from you. do you think hillary clinton and donald trump should both release complete health records? our live chat up and running now. go to fox news/what is if you have medicare
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(climbing sounds) when kevin jorgeson needs light, he trusts duracell quantum because it lasts longer. ♪ (duracell slamtones) i don't think john right now crime headlines we are following. an autopsy on the remains of a 13-year-old found near pennsylvania river just days after she disappeared. she was last seen friday heading out to shop, police have not released any cause of death or named any suspects. in tennessee police just arrested a 41-year-old man after they say he placed an explosive device inside another person's car. they safely detonated the ied
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but the suspect had a violent history and wanted on a felony warrant in virginia. back to pennsylvania and a double stabbing with one man dead, another woman in critical condition. police say they don't believe anyone else was involved but say the investigation is just beginning. jenna: new information on the treasure troll of documents found in the raid that took out osama bin laden. the white house isn't bees transparent about what's in those documents. our chief intelligence correspondence is live in washington with the story. katherine. >> well, thank you, jenna. committee telling fox news that the administration has deliberately put the brakes on releasing document covered by the navy seal. in addition to killing the al-qaeda leader who lived in pakistan, the navy seal recovers cd's letters as well as personal thoughts.
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the allegation is -- the documents show that bin add lean -- bin laden and al-qaeda has a more significant relationship including bin laden's surviving son. >> bin laden told his followers not to attack the iranians and i think as we begin to comb through the documents we are going learn a lot more about bin laden and it was not going to be what was presented by the administration. >> the documented releaseed today showed it was not in charge of the global network. >> and, you know, originally they came out and released 16 or 17 documents that created a false narrative about what was actually -- what bin laden was actually doing. >> the administration has said that it's work to go release the
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bin add lean documents as quickly as possible and that this relationship between iran and al-qaeda is simply being overblown, jenna. jenna: the only way we had access to some of the documents has been court cases. the government is trying to prosecute alleged terrorists? >> court cases and also the release through the counterterrorism center at west point but the argument is that thousands of documents were recovered from the compound but just a couple of dozen have been made available to the public and what we are seeing is a narrow window into his thinking and it doesn't really speak to the fact that bin laden was engaged at the time of his death and really in command of what had become a global network at that point, jenna. jenna: very interesting. i encourage u viewers to access documents. they're very easy to read and give you a clear picture, some of what was being discussed. thank you very much. >> you're welcome. john: tesla's model s gets an upgrade months after a deadly
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crash. the update that probably could have saved the life of that driver. also 20 years after the mysterious murder of john ramsey, new interest could bring new light, still that unsolved case. n their windshield got cracked... ...but they couldn't miss the show. so dad went to the new safelite-dot-com. and in just a few clicks, he scheduled a replacement... ...before the girls even took the stage. safelite-dot-com is the fast, easy way to schedule service anywhere in america! so you don't have to miss a thing. y'all did wonderful! that's another safelite advantage. (girls sing) safelite repair, safelite replace.
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technology when his model s crashed into a truck in florida. martha: this december will mark 20 years since the mysterious death of ramsey and the anniversary is bringing more coverage and new questions about her unsolved murder. several new documentaries on the cold race and some questioning key dna evidence, joining me homicide detective, still a lot of questions on this case. a lot of questions on the investigation and that's why we don't really have a resolution, tell us more about that. >> that's right, it's been 20 years now that this case has been looked at by the investigators, the interesting think about this case is the viewers know there's been over 1,000 interview that is the police have conducted with people who supposedly had information about this case, the case still remains unsolved. there's been over 20,000 emails and tips that have come to the police department, the case is
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still unsolved. what went wrong in this case and why hasn't it taken so long for the case to be solved. i can tell you quickly, jenna, any time specially in murder investigation if you miss the critical evidence early in investigation you may never get a chance to go back and get that evidence. right now the critical evidence that everybody is talking about is the dna but there was dna taken back then but the problem was there was dna samples found that the police could not attribute to any one individual and that's what the real hold-up was with this case. jenna: 20 years later is there any new technology that could be applied that could bring us closer to what happened? >> you know, i don't think there's any new technology. that's an interesting question. i don't think there's any new technology, why? with the technology that we have had over the past 20 years, something should have shown right now what really took place that night for -- where the little girl was killed.
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what we should be looking at the brother, the brother was 9 year's old at the time of the murder. as you recall he was in the home at the time. guess what she is 29 year's old now. he is talking for the first time. i've always thought from watching this case, jenna, if many years that the brother could hold the key to this case. the brother can't remember anything that's going to be significant, the unfortunate news this may wind of being a told case forever. >> it's frustrating because we know somebody knows what happened to this girl. you mentioned the brother, one of the first times we speak out about his sister's death. those interviews are airing this week, one of the reasons we are talking about it today. how useful to talk to somebody after the event, rod, what challenges come with that? >> a lot of challenges, why? people forget things over time. i've always said with this case, many seasoned investigators have
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always said the brother should have been interviewed a long time ago when this took place. the brother was never interviewed by the colorado investigators when the body was first found. you can interview somebody that young. it's going to be difficult to get anything of substance from the brother at this time although i have seen some case where is that has happened, information has come forward so i think that the case can possibly still be solved but i think it's going to take a whole lot more work but i think it's going to take a whole set of fresh eyes to look at this as well. jenna: sometimes we see in cases when there's renewed media attention because of a certain time frame that sometimes there's a break in the case. what would you be looking for? if you could look for one piece of evidence or someone to speak with, what clue would you be trying to piece together, rod? >> you know, if this was my case, if i was investigating this homicide, i would really
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zero in on the father, obviously the mother passed away years ago. the father holds the key and some kind of way i would get that guy to talk. i don't think in this case -- and i think a lot of viewers would agree with this, jenna n this case the father has never come 100% clean. the police investigators have felt the same way and i think the father and the brother right now are our two best options in terms of trying to get closure with this case, jenna. jenna: how would you approach somebody that for 20 years has been answering questions about her daughter east death? >> the only thing that i have seen over many years, sometimes there's a form of hipnosis that you can use and sometimes use that to help a person recollect incidents from many years ago. the problem is that the father would have to voluntarily consent to that and i tell you this something this guy will not want to do texas colorado investigators have felt that the
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parents had something to do with the girl's death and i agree with them. i'm just not for sure they will be able to solve it. >> we know there was an innocent little girl in all of it and we could just want justice for him. it's maddening sometimes. you wonder where is the justice for her. >> that's right. she may never get justice in this case, unfortunately she lost her life but again i have to always go back to the police investigators on the initial crime scene, jenna, real quickly, that is so critical in a murder investigation. the witness statement that is you get and to be honest, that wasn't done years ago, now 20 years ago in the case involved jonbenet ramsey. jenna: great to have you on the program as always. >> good talking to you, jenna. john: to politics ahead, donald trump is weighing in on hillary
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clinton's health problem, what he's had to say and why her campaign is under fire, also how reporters have covered it all, our media panel weighs in and you can call it a technical fumble after a fantasy football app crashes on the first sunday of the nfl season. we are live. at gives 35,000 fans a cutting edge game experience. or the network that keeps a leading hotel chain's guests connected at work, and at play. or the it platform that powers millions of ecards every day for one of the largest greeting card companies. businesses count on communication, and communication counts on centurylink.
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donald trump's reaction to hillary clinton scare. members of the media panel say he played it smart. also a dallas area fire captain found shot to death inside his truck. who police just arrested. shedding new light on ancient history. jenna: now information on technical issue on the first sunday of the nfl season with one of the most widely used apps crashing. cheryl casone with the fox business network with the story. cheryl, you were on the app while it happened? cheryl, no, i wasn't guys. espn's fantasy sports app was not. the app crashed for 7.1 million unique users and, of course, fans went to social media to express their anger. this is one of the nicer ones.
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if ever there was a definition of bone head at espn nailed it with week one fantasy fumble. #nfl kickoff. of course, there was more. espn is saying, look, we are sorry for the issue but took almost three hours for them to respond to all of the anker out there for espn sportsmans. quote, we continue to work hard to resolve today's technical issues, we appreciate your patience. we apologize for the inconvenience. they have not explained what happened with the app. that's the big question right now. there's more to this. this company now says by 4:00 p.m. another run of games began and the app was partially functioning but still rough timing for digital strategy. the network has been losing viewers and the parent company of espn, revenues of espn television, a major concern for
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wall street analysts, jenna, so all of this combining yesterday with social media outraging just made a lot of the fans really angry. jenna: there's anker and some issues for the parent company as well. that's a story we will watch. cheryl, what about amazon making some headlines today? cheryl: all right, here is what's going on with amazon, they are taking it offline. the company is going to move by going offline and into shopping malls. according to business insider, am done is going to have a hundred pop-up shops in mall. they already exist in new york, texas and california but now looking at cities like miami, hartford, connecticut, think about this. amazon can't sell everything in a mall, even an entire mall, but what's interesting the devices are ways to shop on the site of amazon obviously in an attempt to compete with apple and microsoft.
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specially when they come to apple, they've had a lot of success. jenna: another reason to go to the mall. cheryl, thank you. john: hillary clinton's came under fire for handling of health scare this weekend and fail to go discloses that she had pneumonia. donald trump reacting to the news this morning on fox and friends. >> i hope she gets well soon. i don't know what's going on. i'm like you, i just -- i see what i see. the coughing fit was a week ago so i assume it would have been pneumonia also. something is going on but i hope she gets well and gets back on the trail. john: joining us now alan combs, kelly, commentary writer for the washington times. i think we ought to have a fox news alert here because alan is it true that donald trump handled this right? [laughter]
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>> at the time i said that this morning i really did believe that but then he goes on cnbc and he says, wait a minute, this is different than what we heard a week ago when she was coughing and now raising doubt. he said exactly the right thing on fox and friends this morning. i thought he handled it above board. he raised doubt in a subsequent interview, typical of donald trump. i wish he hasn't done that, bad idea. john: remember when she had the coughing fit and jokingly ex jokinglyplained, when i think about donald trump i get allergic. >> a joke. john: kelly, what do you think about the way he handled it? >> i thought he did a fabulous job on fox and friends today. he went against what the media wanted him to do.
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they wanted him to go on twitter and say i told you so. hillary clinton didn't have the stamina. he didn't give them any of that. i thought the cnbc interview, i didn't think he stumbled too badly there. the fact of the matter is that the press should be asking these questions, there should be questioning whether the pneumonia diagnosis was real or not real. >> here we are waiting doubt again. >> a video footage showing her stumbling to show she had pneumonia. why didn't they do that at the beginning to have day when she left the ceremony. they're being more advocate for hillary clinton's campaign than they are asking questions. john: she has pneumonia, apparently, isn't something that the press should have been told? >> absolutely. they've said that they wished they had done it. the lack of transparency is troubling. they should have announced on friday when she was diagnosed
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that this is what it was because it comes back to bite you. you have to get ahead of the story, for the right and trump supporters to raise doubt, maybe it's something else and it's really a wrong -- >> the media should play it right down the middle. >> the media is. >> no they weren't. last week the washington post said isn't it time to put hillary clinton's health to rest. >> it was. >> she clearly had pneumonia. john: you can't have it both ways. you can't say that the media are right to say that the health records aren't important. >> i did not say they weren't important. when she was diagnosed on friday they should have release it had information. you have people on the right who have been for years or at least weeks and months suggesting that there's something else wrong with her, unqualified physically to be running for president and that's just not true and this
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feeds into that narrative. >> she suffered blood clots and concussions. she couldn't recall 40 times. in 2012 -- it's in the fbi records. >> up until now she has released more health info than donald trump. >> it's still less than her husband did in 1992 and 11996 that john mccain did in 2008 and barack obama did. she needs to release more and i agree with you donald trump needs to release his. >> donald trump ought to release his taxes. he's the least transparent candidate we've had. she's been investigated -- the most transparent candidate in terms terms of the numbers of years investigating and we are still investigating benghazi. they find donald trump untrust worthy too. you're ignoring the high
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negatives of the donald trump. >> i agree with you, alan. john: she dodged her press pool, the press that follows her lost her a couple of times yesterday during the whole health episode. >> that should be transparency on health, absolutely. john: we are going leave it there. thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you. jenna: tim kaine just arrived at the richmond international airport. it is his first day on his own plane and he will be traveling with the press core for the first time today. tim kaine is on the campaign trail despite hillary clinton taking a few days off for her health. we are just noting it as the campaigns really hit into full gear as we move closer toward november 8th. in the meantime, police making an arrest after fire captain was shot on the road who was
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conspire to go kill him. plus raising new questions about ancient history. why some believe it depicts alexander the great. start yours with philips sonicare, the no.1 choice of dentists. compared to oral-b 7000, philips sonicare flexcare platinum removes significantly more plaque. this is the sound of sonic technology cleaning deep between teeth. hear the difference? get healthier gums in just 2 weeks vs a manual toothbrush and experience an amazing feel of clean. innovation and you. philips sonicare. save now when you buy philips sonicare.
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surround yourself with healthy advantages at aarpadvantages.com/health. jenna: remarkable new discovery revealed by national geographic, may depict a legendary meeting with the alexander the great. excavation director for national geographic and professor. she's the one that started this big discovery. jodie, i'm curious about that. you got interested around age 12 be the girl scouts. what is it like from going from the girl scouts to archaeology? >> nothing has compared with the discovery of this mosaic.
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jenna: why is that? >> a nonbiblical story, a story that does not occur in the hebrew bible or old he'sment and the -- testament and it's also amazing. jenna: we want to get to that reason why you think this is alexander the great, there are those who might think it's something else. take us back a few steps. how did you even find the mosaic? >> i started this excavation in 2011 with the goal of excavating a synagogue building because the kind of synagogue is not typically decorated with mosaic floors, when we reached the floor we discovered that there
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are mosaics and we discovered different scenes in the mosaics depicting biblical hero samsung and over three different summers we brought to light the extraordinaria mosaic that we are talking about new. jenna: they look like they are in remarkable condition? >> they are. my husband is a professional photographer and he has pictures showing us standing around watching as our site conserver who is the one who cares brushing back the dirt so that for the first time in a thousand 600 years the mosaics were brought to light again. jenna: that might have been an incredible moment for all of you. so we are seeing them. we are not archaeologists. tell us why do you think it's alexander the great and what does that tell us about ancient history? >> right, the mosaic is a panel
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that's divided into three horizontal strips that get bigger as you get towards the top and very typical, it's telling a story that is meant to be read from the bottom up and culminates in the top strip or register which is the biggest one with the meeting between two large male figures who are bigger because they are more important than anybody else. one figure dressed all in white pretty much all agree has to be a jewish high priest and another large male figure who is younger but also bearded and that male figure is dressed in a very elaborate military outfit and has attributes of a king, he's wearing a purple clothe and accompanied by all sorts of figures that indicate that he's a greek king, greek military formation next to him, battle elephants.
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so really it's got to be a meeting between a jewish high priest and either alexander the great or one of his successors. i think it's actually telling the story of the meeting between alexander the great and the jewish high priest. jenna: i only have about 30 seconds but why would that be significant? >> well, this was a story that circulated a lot but probably never occurred in the centuries following alexander the great's death, the jews thought to associate themselves with alexander and stories began to circulate. jenna: fascinating. we know this site has been the site with a lot of different discoveries. thank you for sharing a little snapshot of it. thank you. >> thank you for having me. john: fascinating mystery. congress is hope to go pass a short-term spending bill to keep the government up and running,
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why it could leave to a lame-duck session later coming up. (announcer vo) that's right, keep rockin'. siriusxm's free listening event might be over, but now you can turn us back on with packages starting at $5.99 a month, plus fees. just call 855-874-7743 to keep hearing all the things that make you love taking the long way home. ♪ so call 855-874-7743 or visit siriusxm.com/getsxm
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john: outnumbered coming up at the top of the hour. >> we are waiting for donald trump to speak next hour and expect him to recall hillary clinton's calling his supporters deplorables. would he talk about his health? >> new polls showing hillary still leading but suffering an enthusiasm gap. how worried should she be about this? >> the nfl national anthem protest continue even on the day marking 15 years since 9/11, is this another black eye for the league? >> all that plus our luckiest #lucky guy outnumbered coming
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back at the top of the hour. john: looking forward. see you then. jenna: congress is trying to avoid a government shutdown. senate majority leader saying he's planning government till december 9th which could mean a lame-duck session. doug. >> republicans have dorn avoid shutdown to which they have taken the blame in the past. if it would happen again it would fall and have consequences on the gop. three-month spending bill that could fund till december and six-month omnibus, supporters
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say avoid some of the pitfalls of a larger bill which is wasteful spending that goes unexamined because of all the time pressures. >> i want to see us go till middle december to give us a chance to try to put together passable minibuses to try to enact many appropriation bill that is we run through the happening as possible. >> the house freedom caucus, conservative-wing of the party is oppose to the three-month spending bill which enhances tremendous power to democrats. >> everybody is fairly friendly. we all yell at each other but we all like each other, and so we are reasonable in the same place on some of the issues, but you don't know what's coming at us in the lame duck. no one knows. john: late today president obama
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is set to immediate with the bipartisan leadership with house and senate and look for a consensus into the stop measure into december. jenna: doug, thank you. and we will be right back with e more. of energy-related carbon emissions. the challenge is to capture the emissions before they're released into the atmosphere. exxonmobil is a leader in carbon capture. our team is working to make this technology better, more affordable so it can reduce emissions around the world. that's what we're working on right now. ♪ energy lives here.
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>> we'll be back in one hour. >> "outnumbered" starts now. ♪ harris: let's get this week started with a fine monday this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner. here today, host of "kennedy," fox business's "kennedy." from fbn co-host of "after the bell," melissa francis. dem strattic strategist, julie roginsky. today's #oneluckyguy, the furious, the fierce on twitter, editor of "the national review" jonah goldberg is outnumbered. melissa: he is never furious. harris: good to have you. >> clarification. rich lowery is editor of "national review." i'm the lay about that sleeps on
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