tv Happening Now FOX News September 13, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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. . martha: see you then. bye, everybody. john: the race for the white house ramping up today with one candidate still off the campaign trail, good morning, to you, i'm john scott. >> i'm heather in for jenna lee. hillary clinton resting at home for a second day today as she recovers from pneumonia while donald trump heads to iowa and then pennsylvania this afternoon. bill clinton will fill in for his wife in california while president obama campaigns for former secretary of state in an event in philadelphia. this unfolding as the hearing
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continues right now on capitol hill over hillary clinton private e-mail server. republicans on the house oversight committee want to hear from those who set it up and then deleted thousands of records, john. john: of course, we just escaped from that hearing. if you like to continue watching, it is streaming on fox news.com. in the meantime donald trump is going after hillary clinton for calling half of his supporters deplorables. we have fox team coverage. we begin with senior national correspondent john roberts who is in des moines, iowa. >> donald trump has a rally here in a couple of hours, just a few minutes ago he stopped at a polling place because today is republican primary day for assembly members and local politicians and he heads out
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here to iowa and tonight he's going to make news policy speech about child care, policy his daughter ivanka had a lot to do with and very much involved in crafting the policy and among the things that he's going the talk about is tax deductible child care expenses for up to four children for middle and lower-income americans, rebates per child for people who do not have an income tax liability and deduction for stay at home parents as well. all of this caps out at $250,000 yearly income for individuals, 500,000 for a couple. we will also create depending care savings account, the contributions will be taxed deductible, not only used for child care but also after school education and tuition. family based and community child care solutions and give incentives to employers to create workplace child care programs. this is a big one too for people who are not covered by an
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employer program, he will under the current unsured employment insurance scheme allow six weeks of paid leave for maternity women. that's tonight in pennsylvania. in the meantime here in des moines donald trump to go hard on clinton that half of the supporters belong in a basket of deplorables. basically what she said the other night should exclude her from becoming president. here is trump from last night. >> well, my opponent slanders you as deplorable and irredeemable. i call you hard-working american patriots that want a better
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future for all the people. >> a lot of the supporters are kind of wearing it as a badge of honor. many people that i talk to referring to themselves as the adorable deplorables. [laughter] >> only in a presidential election, john. >> they're going to sell t-shirts, aren't they? >> oh, yeah. buttons. john: yes, indeed. >> let's two to capitol hill and the showdown is underway with the oversight committee and the group that set up the private e-mail server in the basement and wiped it clean even after congressional order was sent to preserve those records. peter is following this for us, he's live outside the hearing room on capitol hill. peter, good morning, what are we learning from the hearing so far? peter: heather, it got off to an interesting start this morning because four people with intimate knowledge of clinton server setup got subpoenas
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dropped off by u.s. marshalls to appear this morning and only three showed up. two from the server company and were excused and one from bill clinton's office, he's in there talking given extraordinary answers. the missing witness was former state department staffer who set up hillary clinton's server and lawmakers are threatening to hold anymore in contempt as democrats and republicans argue as to whether or not he was required to be present for this hearing. republicans say he was, democrats say he was not. >> the gentleman has constitutional rights under the fifth amendment whether they are violated by the fbi or violated here in congress. >> but as the gentleman from massachusetts knows the fifth amendment -- >> cannot be required to be a witness against himself. >> doesn't protect you from nonincriminating answers.
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>> they say that, quote, any effort to require mr. pagliano to publicly appear and assert his fifth amendment rights inquiring about the same matters, benghazi committee, transparent effort to publicly harass an humiliate our country for unvarnished political purposes. we are hearing from the only witness who showed up ant wanted to talk, justin cooper, used to work for bill clinton and he just said that he always had access to the server even though he didn't have a security clearance. >> did you have a security clearance at the time? >> no, i did not have security clearance. >> after you left the white house early in -- when did you leave the white house? >> 2001. >> 2001. did you ever have a security clearance at any level after that? >> no, i did not have security clearance.
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>> so hearing from mr. cooper in the hearing room right behind us is a very big deal because as we have seen for months, a lot of the people who are from the clinton orbit that knew what was going on and knew how things were set up, just will show up and say that they don't want to talk. mr. cooper is talking potentially a lot of new information from this appearance. heather. >> peter, thanks. >> i just didn't think it was going to be that big a deal, like a lot of people i thought i could keep going forward and power through it and unfortunately that didn't work out so well. john: hillary clinton calling cnn last night where she is recovering from pneumonia. clinton's health made headlines while seeing stumbling leaving 9/11 memorial on sunday. after doctor revealed diagnosis
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and bill clinton said it's not the first time it has happened to her. >> she's been -- frequently, frequently, rarely on many years same sort of things happened to her when she got severely dehydrated. >> carol lee, first characterized as frequently and backtracked that it rarely happens. what are we to believe about her situation? to go back to what hillary clinton said, it might not have been a dig of a deal if they have handled it different. the problem that the campaign now has is they did not discloses her illness up front and then it took them sometime between when she was seen
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leaving leaving the ceremony on 9/11 and when they decided to come out an say what had actually happen, her narrative which is her biggest weakness, perception that hillary clinton is accessibly secretive. you also had donald trump in recent weeks making her health an issue, raising questions about her having a cough and, you know, she was very dismissive about that and she wasn't up front and when she was diagnosed on friday with pneumonia and so that's played into his narrative of maybe perhaps everything isn't okay. john: when she was asked on cnn how often this kind of thing that is happened, she had this response. listen to this. >> oh, i think really only twice that i can recall. you know, it is something that has occurred a few times over the course of my life and, you know, i'm aware of it and usually can avoid it.
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john: kind of interesting there. he uses the phrase, that i can recall because that's one of the criticisms leveled at her by donald trump because she told the fbi so many times when they were asking her about the e-mail server and all of the developments that followed the benghazi investigation and so many things that she could not recall. i just found that it was interesting that she brought that phrase into the current discussion. >> right. it's a phrase that is not decisive, you know, again, feels into this narrative that she's not being entirely forthcoming. i think people would believe if you were sick a number of times you would know how many times you had been sick, but overall this has taken her off message and off the campaign trail and that is not a great place to be less than two months from the election and the campaign is going to release additional documents about her health,
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she's having to, you know, obviously go on and answer all the questions rather than talk about her message and what she's going to do if she were elected president and various pieces of platform and i guess if there's a silver lining for her is she has high-profile surrogates and they can come in and step in for her, president obama and bill clinton was out talking about her and he will do fundraisers, joe biden even yesterday was out defending her on this. john: even washington post calls it perhaps the most damaging cascade of events for her in the general election for her. carol, white house correspondent. >> they have up the ancy once again. we have some details of the story you will hear first on fox. plus, she's just 14 year's old
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and she says she wants to die. why this teenager is fighting to end her own life and the group that's trying to stop her. we will be right back. you drin. you drin. with 9 grams of protein and 26 vitamins and minerals. for the strength and energy to get back to doing... ...what you love. ensure. always be you. that's a good thing, eligible for medicare? but it doesn't cover everything. only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. so consider an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, they pick up some of what medicare doesn't pay and could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call today to request a free decision guide to help you better understand waarp medicare supplement planh
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>> welcome back, quarter past the hour and right now it is first on fox. new warnings coming from iran threatening to shoot down navy spy planes in the persian gulf. this happened over the weekend. you can see that one on the left and the ep3 on the right, they were flying a mission in the straight of hermuse and oman and were 13 miles off the coast of iran which is considered to be international waters. threat to shoot down the planes a latest confrontation in that area with iran's navy harassing u.s. navy warships and the persian gulf several times last month.
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joining us now executive director for the foundation for defense of democracy. great to have you here with us. so tell me why is iran continuing to badger the united states and what are they getting out of it? >> they continue to badge the united states because the obama administration is not responding to these provocations and, in fact, since the nuclear deal the administration has green lighted tens of billions of dollars of cash to the regime to give them the money they need in order to increase their malign activities in the region. provocations, no response, the iranians have a dynamic that they like. >> the u.s. ship last week when they came very close and forcing us to take evasive measures, there were shots fired. get your planes out of our area even though we were international waters and we stayed on course. is that changing the equation? >> well, you know, heather, iranians have taken u.s. navy
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sailers at gunpoint and threatened our ships and threatening our planes, test firing missiles capable of carrying war head and taking u.s. citizens as hostage and support for terrorism, those are provocative actions and remay be getting tougher but we are doing nothing to push back against these activities and until the next president does so, the iranians are going to continue. >> so do you think we will see this now and the next president takes office? >> i think the obama administration ceded a long ago in giving iranians billions of dollars and not keep to go commitment they made to congress to use it at a minimum, none nuclear sanctions to push back against iranian aggression. they see this and created a terrible dynamic for the next president. >> do you think they want to provoke us in some sort of action. this can only happen so many times before something could eventually occur. >> they are testing our will and see whether we actually have any red lines and, yes, they will continue to test us as they have
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for decades. this is part of the iranian ammo and continue to act provocatively and the united states will do, quote, unquote, not a damn thing. >> all right. one official told fox news as we were reported this that the incident over the weekend was considered not to be unsafe and that there were no missile launchers in the area that's why it was not unsafe and just called it unprofessional. your reaction to that. >> well, they're trying to be measured obviously in their response, iranians have gotten something called the f300, sophisticated system from the russians, that also has offensive capabilities, surveil our planes in the gulf. so they're going to be more aggressive and sophisticated as they get even better technology and i'm concerned about what the future holds. >> thanks so much, we will see you again real soon.
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john: donald trump promises to release new details about his health as hillary clinton is still sidelined with pneumonia, critics fire back, what about his tax returns, so how does the candidates much up when it comes from transparency, we will have a debate on that. plus, more fallout from the wells fargo phoney account scandal. a senate committee set to grill top executives of that bank how thousands of employees were able to create fake customer accounts, a scam that's prompting all kinds of outrage. >> for five years 5300 employers were involved in ripping off customers. they have to pay 185 million-dollar fine and nobody is being criminally investigated? come on.
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john: fox business alert on a story we followed. several wells fargo executives are on capitol to face questioning on scam that led to firing of more than 5,000 wells fargo employees. adam shapiro live in new york city with that. adam. >> john, this problem is only going to get bigger. the wells fargo executives are briefing members of congress right now about the 185 million-dollar settlement the bank accept today settle a cause of fraud following a consumer financial protection board investigation. the bank admits its employees created 2 million accounts without customer knowledge and in some cases those customers were charged $25 to cover account fees. the bank has fired employees and refunding money to customers who may have been caught in the fraudulent account scandal. it appear it is employees were trying to meet the banks' sales
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goals for new deposit and credit card accounts. wells fargo ceo tells fox base the bank has eliminated product sales goals for retail bankers and he added this, we want to make certain our customers have full confidence that our retail bankers are always focused on the best interest of customers. but the senate banking committee intends to question next tuesday. richard says the agency does not see problems at other banks like those discovered at wells fargo. fox business contacted large banks asking them if they have sales quotas or incentives for banking employees, we are waiting for their response and another question that may outrage a lot of people, there was an executive at wells fargo, she's retiring and will receive a roughly 125 million-dollar parachute as far as her retirement.
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she oversaw the portion of the bank at wells fargo where the problems occur and now will the bank try to claw back some of her pay. john: some were opened in customers' names without their knowledge. >> it's not an allegation. the bank is paying the fine for that very issue. they were charged $25 and never gave the consent to have this done. john: wow, wells fargo, what a story. thanks very much, adam shapiro. >> last week i took a physical and i will be releasing when the numbers come in, hopefully they're going to be good. i feel great, but when the numbers come in i will be releasing very, very specific numbers. >> there you go. donald trump yesterday saying he will soon release more of his medical records as concerns mount about health of both candidates. trump is plan to go reveal some of the specific this thursday with dr. oz on his television program. the republican nominee is 70
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year's old, mrs. clinton 68 year's old, two of the oldest candidate ever to run for president. joe, campaign manager and fox con tribe -- contributor, joe, let's start with you, you say this is a good idea to release it to dr. oz for donald trump to do so, why is that? >> it's a safe place for him to do. i don't think he's going to get a whole lot of tough questions from dr. oz. it's a lot like the letter he had drafted by his doctor that said that he was going to be the healthiest president ever elected. dr. oz, i think it's a great, you know, sort of reality tv thing for trump to do but i doubt we or any of the voters are going to find anything real about his health on that kind of a show. it's not -- it's not chris
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wallace probing him. that makes sense. >> can we find anything real? we like dr. oz but can we find anything real? >> they're going to be interpreted by dr. oz. it's better than dumping the documents to speculation. you're going to have a doctor sitting with donald trump asking him questions about what was done. the results, the test, what did his doctor say to him and dr. oz can interpret as a medical physician what is to be made. >> you know, brad, i wonder if it plays to hillary clinton's narrative and the democrats narrative that donald trump is a big reality show because he will be releasing his stuff on a television show. >> , no i think that's wrong. here you have the candidate sitting with an independent doctor. hillary clinton did a document
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and it's not the records that count. it's what she actually has. she was diagnosed and refuse today tell the public until there was an incident but for the video, we would have never known about it. >> let's talk about donald trump's taxes and he hasn't released his taxes yet. you know, joe, he has long said, look, it's under audit. i'm not going to release it while under audit. if you're donald trump, why would you release it because there's a whole lot that people could just pick apart and any one's taxes for that matter? >> that's the reason he's not releasing them. the irs has these documents. they've seen them and going through them. only people who haven't seen them, quote, because of the audit is the american people. hillary clinton released 40 years of her tax returns as has romney and all kinds of people have done nit the past. trump believed when romney did it it was a big mistake because exactly what you're saying, heather, because people can go through and find facts and put
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them out there in a damaging way. that's the reason donald trump is releasing his taxes. i don't think he -- i don't think he will between now and the election day. i think, you know, everybody would like to see them, but i don't think he's going to do that. >> if you were advising him, what would you suggest for him to do? >> i would have suggest long ago that he release seven years of tax returns. that's what he should have done. he's not going to release the tax returns right now and the american people are going to have to factor that in in their decision. if he were to release them, it would be absolute chaos because we don't have enough time to be explained properly, but, yeah, i agree he should have released tax returns a long time. >> a lot of questions that voters will have that certainly need to be asked between now and the election. joe, and brad, thank you so much. we will talk to you real soon and more on the health stuff
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throughout the show. >> good to be with you. john: wisconsin teenager with debilitating disease fights to end her life and how they're trying to stop her. donald trump on stage with supporters slamming hillary clinton for what she said about the people who support him. our political panel weighs in on the controversy. >> you can put half of trump supporters into what i call the basket of deplorables. [laughter] >> right? d... ...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.
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job john alert on an important supreme court opinion in ohio called golden week and it's important to you because ohio is so critical in determining the president each year. ohio rolled back its early voting program that it calls golden week, it's a time when you can register to vote and vote at the same time. ohio has rolled that back, democrats challenged the law, took it to the supreme court, the supreme court refused to hear the case, in essence, shooting down the democrats who argued that golden week allows their supporters better opportunities to get their votes registered. supreme court disagreed, there will be no golden week in ohio this year.
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that's a defeat, i should say for democrats in that state. we will keep you updated here on fox. >> i was thus deeply shocked and alarmed this friday to hear my opponent attack, slander, smear, demean these wonderful amazing people who are supporting our campaign. she divides people into baskets as though they were objects, not human beings. john: that was donald trump speaking during the second hour of happening now yesterday during which he took on hillary clinton over her comments about his >> you could put half of trump supporters into what i call the basket of deplorables. the racist, sexist, xenophobic,
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islamophobic, you name it and unfortunately there are people like that, and he has lifted them up. john: joining us right now republican pollster, jessica a democratic pollster and senior political strategist. hillary clinton tried to walk back those comments, jessica, but she didn't exactly apologize, should she? >> well, i think that she should apologize for attaching a number to the statement. i think that what she's discussing is darker force that is exist in the trump campaign is an important point to make. and as we remember the speech she made, was extremely well received and important for democrats and a lot of independents to hear from her. true is statistic bare out what hillary clinton is saying.
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76% favor the muslim ban. you have donald trump himself who has retweeted white supremacist. mexican who is come across the border are rapists. so while i think it is a mistake to ever insult the american voter, i think that this is an important step that she's taking to make clear that democrats and republicans in this race have different values and that trump voters, a certain subsection of them are not the best in america has to offer when you harbor those views. john: kristin, 25%, these two candidates are pretty close to tied in the race, 25% of the american voting population is xenophobic, racist, homophobic, et cetera. >> i think jessica is right to
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assign a percentage to this insult that she was lobbying because now there are a lot of folks who maybe supported donald trump, they think he's refreshing and a little different. they don't agree with everything he says but now they think hillary clinton believes they're a part of basket of deplorables because they're considering voting for trump. she's closing the door to ever win those folks back to her side. from a strategic perspective alone, the reason why you say that if you're hillary clinton, is you want to energy your own base, terrify them, really make them think that the stakes here are high, heaven forbid to allow that quarter of america to run the show, but at the same time if you're going to put together an majority, nonetheless don't want to be part of what candidate who thinks they are deplorable.
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john: she was making the speech to very wealthy donors. >> absolutely. john: they are laughing. they are laughing and tittering with a long with her and goes to that -- >> absolutely. john: suggest that her -- her voters, you know, have all this money and don't really know what life is like in the rest of america. >> well, the reality actually is that her voters, if you look at the fact that it's the minority base supports her. donald trump is pulling 2% of the african americans, obviously more with latinos but in no way is he on course to winning the majority, he said joking that in 2020 he would have the african-american vote. her voters are not in the fundraisers. yes, that was an lgbtq fundraiser and those people are going to back her defending the right in that community, but the truth is that her voters are poor in a lot of instances, he
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actually has elites and she has the base of america who are not wealthy. i agree that it was wrong to probably have done it generally and framed that way and certainly the number but it is important in this election to talk about the virtue that is either side and kristin are totally right that there maybe people on the fence and won't like that kind of jargon. donald trump voters are more enthusiastic about candidate than hillary clinton. she needs to get people to the polls. john: the race is getting tighter. there was a fox news poll that said 74% of americans, three quarters of americans aren't worried about whether hillary clinton is strong enough, whether her health is good enough to handle the job, but the questions about secrecy that come up from this recent health episode, that is the thing that seems to be damaging her campaign right now. >> it was so bizarre to watch the reaction from the clinton campaign unfold over the course
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of the weekend because if they come out around noon on sunday shortly after she got in that van and said, look, on friday she wasn't feeling great, she went to the doctor, she said she had pneumonia and on antibiotics. she will be fine. the story might have blown over. instead as is always the case with the clintons, the cover-up is worse than the crime and they almost seem incapable of not making the stories a bigger deal because of that desire to hold everything very secret. it just reinforces again and again the same narrative that you're not quite sure what you're getting with hillary clinton and her strongest strategy would be to make people feel that she is someone who is transparent and you know what you're getting with her in contrast to a donald trump who is maybe a little bit riskyier but for a lot supporters that's a feature and not -- john: thank you both. >> thanks, john. >> right now a wisconsin teenager says she has made a decision to end her life but
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does the child have the capacity to make that kind of decision? it's a controversy unfolding right now in that state. our senior correspondent is live for us in appleton, wisconsin with both sides of the debate from disability activists and also this girl's family. mike. >> you cut to the heart of it. is a 14-year-old capable of making a life and death decision if it involves her own life? spinal muscular type 2, endured more than 30 surgeries. she's often in great pain. earlier this month they made decision to go off of breathing device which would ultimately end her life. she said the gesture made her heart explode but now disability rights group has asked child protection thowrts to intervene. a 14-year-old does does not have
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a capability for a decision like that. >> if any other child, any other 14-year-old said i'm -- i'm unhappy with my life, i don't think my life has value, i think i should die, we would not be applauding and cheering that decision which is what is happening here. >> now, wisconsin law considers a 14-year-old to be independentent. it is significant that her mother supports the decision. it appears that she needs to be in worst shape to be relevant. you look at a decision disability rights versus the university of wisconsin health system, it says in the absence of persistent veght -- veget vegetative state. >> it's a moral question with legal implications because if mom or someone else acts, there could still be potentially legal
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consequences to those choices. >> an executive director of the disabled parents right organizations says she has many quality years ahead of her with proper treatment. heather. >> we will have to leave it there. mike, thanks so much. we will be back in just a sec. t. ...of whatever flavors are calling your name. seriously. like new garlic sriracha-grilled shrimp. it's a little spice... ...a little sizzle... ...and a lot just right. and try new parmesan peppercorn shrimp. helloooo crispy goodness. and the classic... ...handcrafted shrimp scampi... ...you can't get enough of? still gonna floor you. it may be called endless... ...but that doesn't mean it'll last.
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>> welcome back, new information on the space race between two american types of industry, blue origin, a space company john bez os, it'll be space ready by the end of the decade. a fascinating competition with the leader of new space industry e loan musk spacex, the company had a recent setback. its falcon 9 rocket exploded in cape canaveral.
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it's a tough thing to watch. galaxy of questions on space flight. tom jones joins us now. tom, thank you so much for joining us. i want to ask you about this. this is fascinating because we knew that jeff bezos was working on something but did you have any idea it would be this big? >> well, he's often said that he wants to move thousands if not millions of people and get them working and living in space and he wants to see the migration of humanity and industry and energy production into space to make earth a better place to live. this is a vehicle, maybe not in his generation but 21st century. it's a big leap from where he is right now. >> you know, americans have been, at least some of them disappointed in the nasa space program. we are all seeing the money and energy and effort being pour intoed the private sector, can
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we do more with the private sector than we could with nasa researching these types of things of putting people to live in space? >> they're both were usable at least partialable. laboratories, factories and so on. in that way it helps nasa by decreasing the cost of getting spacecraft and even astronauts even space some day. you might see international spacation replaced by a commercial space laboratory. >> i have a friend and colleague over who who wants to be the first to go on space, scott is going to weigh in on this. >> i was an astronaut wanna-be as a kid. we just had the graphic up of this new rocket, the new glen,
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in that bezos has designed. it's also like the apolo astronauts to the moon and back but one thing to put a design in paper but quite another to actually launch a rocket? >> as elon musk is finding out. he has plans of heavy launcher himself called the falcon heavy, depends on the falcon 9 which was lost in the explosion a couple of weeks back. there are problems in bringing bringing the big designs, ambitious designs to reality. i think 2020 for jeff bezos and the new glenn rocket is optimistic. in the end we will see technology moving forward and moving as bezos says at an airline than rocket. nasa will have competition from providers because they are
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expensive built-government rockets may cost too much in terms of space exploration. >> thank you so much. fascinated by your career and your expertise on this. we will talk to you again soon. we will be right back so stick around, we have a lot more coming up. medicare supplement e plan whenever you want. no enrollment window. no waiting to apply. that means now may be a great time to shop for an aarp medicare supplement insurance plan, insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. medicare doesn't cover everything. and like all standardized medicare supplement insurance plans, these help cover some of what medicare doesn't pay. so don't wait. call now to request your free decision guide. it could help you find the aarp medicare supplement plan that works for you. these types of plans have no networks, so you get to choose any doctor who accepts medicare patients. rates are competitive, and they're the only plans of their kind endorsed by aarp.
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john: right now a new drug danger to tell you about and comes in rise of heroin cartel that is are smuggling across the border, but this isn't run of the mill heroin, it is with a powerful narcotic, adam housely live on the u.s.-méxico border in san ysidro crossing. >> they could be facing their toughest challenge yet.
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>> federal agents are worried about spike of heroin. >> we are not just talking heroin, let's make that straight. we are talking opioids and all prescription pain killers, we are talking heroin, we are talking manufactured fentanyl which is coming over from méxico. >> identical to heroin but up to 50 times more potent and more likely to cause an overdoes. >> it's coming from china into méxico where they will make it into fentanyl, comes in pills, powder and the threat is real and literally everywhere. >> the demand is only growing for the cartels there's never been an elicit drug more lucrative. it can be marked 3,000%. >> this is something that carlos escobar, this was beyond their
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wildest dreams for profitability. >> that's forcing agents to protect themselves and rely on surveillance in méxico. >> every single day we come up with different plans, ideas to be unpredictable. >> to give you an idea of how we are talking right there, i don't know if you can see it on camera, that's enough to cause an overdoes. john. john: unbelievable. hases off to the border principal agents. adam housely, thank you. >> coming up next on the next hour of happening now. donald trump returns to iowa for a rally there. what would he say as questions swirl about both nominees' health, we will talk about that one when we come back
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it's a very specific moment, the launch window. we have to be very precise. if we're not ready when the planets are perfectly aligned, that's it. we need really tight temperature controls. engineering, aerodynamics- a split second too long could mean scrapping it all and starting over. propulsion, structural analysis-
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maple bourbon caramel. that's what we're working on right now. from design through production, siemens technology helps manufacturers meet critical deadlines. i think this'll be our biggest flavor yet. when you only have one shot, you need a whole lot of ingenuity. is >> that was fast. >> yes it was. >> see you back here in an hour. >> "outnumbered" starts right now. ♪
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>> welcome, everyone, that is "outnumbered." i'm sandra smith. here today, there she is is, harris faulkner, fox business network's elizabeth macdonald, radio talk show host meghan mccain is here, and #oneluckyguy, co-host of "america's newsroom," bill hemmer. outnumbered after a busy morning. so nice to join us. >> i feel outnumbered. good to be back with you. good to see you all, thank you. nothing going on. >> it's a light day. sandra: but you love every minute of it. let's get right to it. she is saying no big deal. hillary clinton down playing that stumble on sunday that jolted her campaign, saying although she was sick with pneumonia and under doctors orders to rest, she just wanted to soldier on. >> i didn't think it was going to be that big of a deal. kind of th
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