tv Happening Now FOX News September 20, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PDT
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but i do believe we have to be honest about the nature of these conflicts and our international community must continue to work with those who seek to build rather than to destroy. and there is a military component to that, it means being united and relentless in destroying networks like isis which show no respect for human life, but it also means that in a place like syria where there's no ultimate military victory to be won, we are going to have to pursue the hard work of diplomacy that aims to stop the violence and deliver aid to those in need and support those who pursue a political settlement and can see those who are not like themselves as worthy of dignity and respect. across the regions conflicts we and that nations and proxy wars that fuel this order, because until basic questions are
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answered about how communities coexist, extremism will continue to burn, countless human beings will suffer, most of all in that region but extremism will continue to be exported overseas and the world is too small for us to simply be able to build a wall and prevent it from affecting our own societies. and what is true in the middle east is true for all of us. surely religious can be honored an upheld while teaching young people teaching science and math rather than intolerance. surely we can sustain our unique traditions while giving women full and rightful role of politics and economics of a nation. surely, we can rally our nations to solidarity while recognizing
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equal treatment for all communities whether it's a religious minority yamar or racial minority here in the united states and surely israelis and palestinians will be better off if palestinians reject insightment and recognize legitimacy of israel but israel recognizes that it cannot permanently occupy and settle palestinian land. we all have to do better as leaders in tamping down rather than encourageing a notion of identity that leads us to diminish others. this leads me to the fourth and final thing and that is sustain
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commitment to international cooperation rooted in the rights of responsibilities of nations. as president of the united states, i know that for most of human history power has not been unipolar. in the end of the cold war may have led too many to forget this truth. i've noticed that at times both america's adversaries and allies believe that all problems either caused by washington or could be solved by washington. and perhaps too many in washington believe that as well. but i believe america has been a rare super power in human history in so far as it has been willing to think beyond narrow self-interest.
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that while we have made our share of mistakes over the last 25 years, i've acknowledged some, we have strived, sometimes at great sacrifice to align better our actions with our ideas. as a consequence, i believe we have been a force for good. we have secured allies, we've acted to protect the vulnerable, we supported human rights and welcome scrutiny of our own actions. we have bound our power to international laws and institutions while we made mistakes, we tried to acknowledge, rolled back poverty yopped our -- beyond our borders not just within our borders. i'm proud of that. but i also know that we can't do
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this alone. and i believe that if we are to meet the challenges of this century, we are all going to have to do more to build up international capacity. we cannot escape the prospect of nuclear war unless we all commit to stopping the spread of nuclear weapons and pursuing a world without them. when iran agrees to accept constraints on its nuclear program that enhances global security and enhances iran's ability to work with other nations. on the other hand, when north korea tests a bomb, that endangers all of us and any country that breaks this basic bargain must accept consequences, and those nations with these weapons like the united states have a unique responsibility to pursue the
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path of reducing our stockpiles and reaffirming basic norms like the commitment to never test them again. we can't combat a disease like zika that recognizes no borders, mosquitoes don't respect walls unless we make permanent the same urgency that we brought to bare against ebola by strengthening our own systems of public health, by investing in cures and rolling back the root causes of disease and helping poor countries develop a public health infrastructure. we can only eliminate extreme poverty if the sustainable development goals that we have set are more than words on paper. human gives us the capacity to feed the hungry and give all of our children including our girls the education and foundation for opportunity in our world.
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but we have to put our money where our mouths are. and we can only realize the promise of this institution to replace the ravages of war with cooperation if powerful nations like my own accept constraints. sometimes i'm criticized in my own country for professing a belief in international norms and multilateral institutions but i am convinced that in the long run giving up some freedom of action, not giving up our ability to protect ourselves or pursue core interest but binding ourselves to international rules over the long term enhances our security. i think that's just not true for us. if russia continues to interfere in the affairs of its neighbors
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it may be popular at home and fuel national fervor for a time but over time, it is also going to diminish its stature and make borders less secure. in the south china sea a peaceful resolution of disputes offered by law will mean far greater stability than the militarization of a few rocks and reefs. we are all stakeholders in this international system and it calls upon all of us to invest in the success of institutions to which we belong. and the good news is that many nations have shown progress when we make commitments, consider what we have accomplished here over the past few years. together we mobilize some 50,000 troops for un peace keeping, making better equipped, better prepare today deal with emergencies, together we
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establish an open government partnership so that increasingly transparency and powers more people around the globe. and together now we have to open our hearts and do more to help refugees who are desperate for a home. we should all welcome the pledges of increased assistance that have been made at this general assembly gathering. i will be discussing that more this afternoon but we have to follow through even when the politics are hard. because in the eyes of innocent men and women and children who through no fault of their own have had to flee everything that they know, everything that they love, we have to have the empathy to see ourselves. we have to imagine what it would be like for our family, for our children if the unspeakable
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happened to us and we should all understand that ultimately our world will be more secure if we are prepared to help those in need and the nations who are carrying the largest burden with respect to accommodating the refugees. there are a lot of nations right now that are doing the right thing but many nations particularly those blessed with wealth and the benefits of geography that can do more to offer a hand, even if they also insist that refugees who come to our countries have to do more to adopt to the customs and conventions of the communities that are now providing them a home.
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let me conclude by saying that i recognize history tells a different story than the one i've talked about today. there's a much darker and more cynical view of history that we can adopt. human beings are too often motivated by greed and by power. big countries for most of history have pushed smaller ones around, tribes and ethnic groups and nation states have very often found that most convenient to define themselves by what they hate and not just those ideas that bind them together. time and again human beings believe that they finally arrived at a period of enlightenment only to repeat then cycles of conflict and suffering.
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perhaps that's our faith. we have to remember that the choices of individual human beings led to repeated world war. but we also have to remember that the choices of individual human beings created a united nations so that a war like that would never happen again. each of us as leaders, each nation can choose to reject those that appear to our worst impulses and embrace those who appeal to our best. for we have shown that we can choose a better history, sitting in a prison cell with a young martin luther king wrote, human
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progress never rolls on the wheels of ene -- inevitable and comes of men being to be coworkers of god and during the years as i traveled through many of your nations, i have seen that spirit in our young people who are more educated and more tolerant and more inclusive, more diverse and more creative than our generation far more empathetic and compassionate to fellow human beings than previous generations, and, yes, some of that comes with the idealism of youth but information about other people and places, an understanding unique in human history that their future is bound with the
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faith of other human beings on the other side of the world. i think of the thousands of healthcare workers from around the worlds who volunteer to fight ebola. i remember the young europes i met who are now starting new businesses in cuba, the parliamentarians, girls who brave taunts and violence just to go to school in afghanistan and the university of students who started programs online to reject the extremism of organizations like isil. i draw strength from the young americans, entrepreneurs, activists, soldiers, new citizens who are remaking our nation once again who are
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unconstrained by old habits and unincumbered but ready to seize what ought to be. my own family is made up of the flesh and blood and traditions and cultures and face from a lot of different parts of the world. just as america has been built by immigrant from every shore. in my own life in this country and as president i have learned that our identities do not have to be defined by putting someone else down but can be enhanced by lifting somebody else up. they don't have to be defined in opposition to others but rather by a belief and liberty and equality and justice and
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fairness and embrace of these principles as universal doesn't weaken my particular pride, my particular love more america, it strengths it. my belief that these ideals apply everywhere doesn't lesson my commitment to help those that look like my or praise allegiance to my flag but expand imagination and recognize that i can best serve my own people, i can best look after my own daughters by making sure that my actions seek what is right for all people and all children and your daughters and your sons. this is what i believe that all of us can be coworkers with god and our leadership and our governance and this united nations should reflect this
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irreducible truth. thank you very much. [applause] jenna: president obama speaking for about 45 minutes there in the last address before the un as president saying america is a rare super power in human history and also saying the world is too small to simply build a wall. there's a few comments from him as we take a review of his speech that was really a sweeping speech, covered quite a lot of different topics and addressed the world assembly who next year will be receiving a new american president at the same time. interesting time certainly and a lot to take in here. david, senior politics writer, he has been listening along with us. what sticks out about you, david, about what the president had to say? >> i think what stood out most
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to me was the divide between the democracies in the world and the rise of regimes and president obama calling on the responsibility of these democracies to be back autothor -- and the world is stronger cooperating and not going to it alone. this is all with the backdrop, you know, obviously thorny foreign policy situations around the globe in syria and libya, obviously across iraq and afghanistan that have plagued this president's entire two terms in office, so there's a backdrop of things that he didn't talk about as much. obviously wanted to go out on a optimistic note. jenna: difference between the
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two it often defines a leader. it took 30 minutes to mention specifically isis and syria and mainly focused on the refugee crisis. what about those comments, how long it took for him to get to that top snick. >> i think you're seeing online and you will see throughout the day republican and conservative critics of that saying that isis and terrorism should have been at the forefront of this speech, that it is the global threat of our time, of our era, even hillary clinton, democratic nominee might have prioritized those topics higher specially in the light of a terrorist attacks that occurred in new york, new jersey over the weekend. this is now a pressing concern and it is even more urgent, i think, for the american public, obviously this was a global audience today but for the american public the threat of terrorism isn't only over in syria and iraq and afghanistan, it is now here and i think those events, the events of last few
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days over the weekend underline that and you will have considerable critics of the president saying that he glossed over those challenges and highlighted different parts of the world where he considers he had more success. jenna: while the president was speaking the attorney general was also speaking, u.s. attorney general loretta lynch, she spoke to a group in kentucky today and there's active, ongoing investigation on terror attacks. she was addressing the terror attacks while the president speaking at the un. before we change to another topic, david, what did you make of the comments like the president said, the world is too small to simply build a wall, he mentioned wall several times in his speech. is that indirect reference to donald trump without actually calling trump by name? >> absolutely. absolutely. hi know that is we are about -- under 50 days from a presidential election. i think he feels a new urgency that he wants his presidency to be succeeded by a democrat, that he has already said that he
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would see it as a huge setback if hillary clinton is not -- does not follow him in office. so i think he made that comment. i think he also spoke at the end where he said, we don't have to denigrate each other, we become stronger countries of lifting our counterparts, colleagues, partners around the world. i think that was also a direct swipe at donald trump and some of his tougher rhetoric that he has used throughout the campaign. jenna: we are going to talk a little bit about that after a quick commercial break. interesting to know. exactly 15 years ago to the day president bush said something to the country, we are going to play it to the viewers, when we get back get your thoughts, we will be right back with more happening now.
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jenna: welcome back to hang now. next time we see a u.s. president speaking at the un will be one of the two candidates that we speak so much about. national security is the prime focus in the wake of new york, new jersey and minnesota. both sides have a different take. take a listen. >> these are sick evil people that want to destroy this country and the way we cuddle them and the way we are afraid to say anything or afraid to say what the problem is and who they are, they don't want to say radical islam, they don't want to say radical islamic terrorism. >> i am prepared, ready to take on those challenges, not engage in a lot of, you know, irresponsible reckless rhetoric, you don't hear a plan from him. he keeps saying he has a secret plan, the secret is he has no plan. jenna: the wall street journal today, david, calls on both
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sides to up their game when it comes to talking about terror. in your opinion, what would that look like? >> look, i think it would look like more specifics but i don't think either candidate has a ton of specifics on how to deal with the threat that is really come ashore in american cities. i think both of the candidates think they are play to go their advantage on this issue. donald trump is trying to tie hillary clinton to president obama, almost a policy of weakness, policy of appeasement, political -- putting political correctness over the actual threat meanwhile hillary clinton is saying that donald trump doesn't have the temperament, doesn't have a competency to handle this threat and that really he has no details. hillary clinton has put out more details as far as a specific plan, she has gone as far as saying she won't put troops in syria and iraq, that goes
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further and is actually a much less hawkish policy than president obama that promised us to get out of the middle east entanglements. you definitely have seen the country move back and forth over these last ten years given the rise -- you know, given the time between the wars and then the rise of this new threat of isis, but if you look at the polling, you do get the sense that both candidates believe they're on offense here because if you ask americans who do they trust more to handle terrorism and national security, very divided with slight edge to hillary clinton. jenna: both candidates don't have enough specifics. again, interesting because of the timing. if you look back 15 years ago today president bush made a historic speech to to the country. i want to play it, david.
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>> our war on terror begins with al-qaeda but it does not end there. it will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and [applause] jenna: september 2001, president bush uses word on terror for the first time. one has to ask the question, the terror threat remains, our political system or tone seemed to have changed and more partisan than ever and one wonders who the impact is on that in our ability to achieve victory. >> you know, above all else the problem is that president bush back then identified it out as al-qaeda, now we have scenarios in an environment where it is lone actors where the threat is defused and dispersed and not necessarily organized.
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someone that has radicalized can be inspired by something online and take action which is to few other people in the region of our country. two major party presidential candidates are struggling with this threat. look, you have seen -- donald trump had a lot of inconsistencies over what he would do as far as deploying troops, whether he would use air strikes, how he would exactly do this, hillary clinton, i think, in part because she had a very tough primary and the democratic primary electorate is much less hawkish than the rest of the country. she has moved to the left and said that she would only use strategic air strikes and cooperation with other nations to defeat this threat ruling out ground troops. so you definitely have a stark opinion on hillary clinton's side. i think there's more frustration on the republican side on exactly what donald trump would do because as secretary clinton has said in the sound bite,
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trump doesn't want to show all his cards because he -- jenna: good. someone said we talk too much and perhaps he would present a change that a lot of voters are looking for. it'll be interesting a week away from the first debate. we will see what takes place and specifics we hear. david, great to have you on the program and thank you for working through all of that. we appreciate it very much. >> thank you. >> the themes he touched on and those he did not coming up and the legacy he leaves behind in the global stage. bombs in the streets of american cities, we have lived through a time when terrorist bombs skilled americans, is that troubling trend now back? the son of a terrorist bombing victim that hit new york in 1975 tell us if we are witnessing a return to that era.
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i have a lifetime of experience. so i know how important that is. >> we just saw president obama wrap up his final address to the united nations general assembly before he leaves office. the president reflecting on the progress made over the last eight years but telling world leaders that they need to do more to bridge the gap between the rich and poor nations. >> for the small fraction of
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what we spent a war in iraq, we could support institutions so that fragile states don't collapse in the first place and invest in emerging economy that is become markets for our goods. it's not just the right thing to do, it's the smart thing to do. >> bryan joins us, former head of the un affairs of the state department. he accompanied george w. bush for his final speech at the united nations. thank you for joining us. the president as we heard target democracy, globalism and reject fundamentalism and referring to islam and exportation of extremism like we are facing now. do you think that was enough? >> his -- this speech to the un reminded of the other seven speeches to the un, long on rhetoric and short on substance. reminded me of john lennon
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addressing the un. he like to ask member states to imagine a totally different world. there's a quality of standing above the world and admiring its problems and not really recognizing his role in contributing to a lot of the global instability and violence that is really taken place in his watch over the last eight years. >> what should he have done instead? >> the policy premised on the idea that concessions transform adversaries. it's an experimental foreign policy and it's really outside of the bipartisan tradition of american leadership in world affairs. i think his biggest mistake is he spent more time cuddling adversaries than supporting allies and that's always a losing strategy for the united states. >> those weren't the words we heard in the speech just now but are you saying those were the actions during the tenure? >> when you look at the record, he strikes -- when he goes to the un general assembly he
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strikes the pose of being fairly aloof and when you hear him talk about the world, it just sounds detached from reality. there really isn't any region of the world right now that is more stable or more prosperous than it was eight years ago. he has a tendency to admire the problem and contribute in many ways whether it's iran deal, stronger russia, stronger cuba and does not have a record of american leadership. >> you just mentioned iran, at one point the camera cut to iranian delegation, he took credit for the iranian nuclear deal and sign of progress and success. >> it's astonishing, he said in his speech that he has resolved the iran nuclear issue which is pure fantasy and when you look at the protestors outside the un, they have a right to protest. they should be disappointed.
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in 2009 in the green revolution he did nothing to support the people who are rising up against the clerics and people holding up signs asking if the united states was on the side of the people or the regime. >> the protest on going right now by the national council of resistance of iran against jihad and extremism, you will wonder if their voices will be heard inside the general assembly. thank you for joining us today in fox news channel. >> thank you. jenna: breaking news on alleged terrorist from new jersey. his father speaking moments ago about his son. take a listen. [inaudible] >> we don't know yet. >> why did you not call the fbi?
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>> he's doing bad. he hurt my son and my wife and i put him in jail four years ago. >> what son -- [inaudible] >> what happened? >> for no reason. jenna: just to set the stage for you, the father was speaking about a domestic dispute that apparently happened in 2014 where there was some sort of fight rahami and his brother and his wife. the father's wife apparently that's what we are hearing. and he, the father said he called the fbi, now, what we are hearing from "the new york times" is that the fbi did open a case on the son but where it went from here, we are not sure. steve rogers is a former member of the fbi joint task force and joins us now as well. lieutenant commander u.s. nay -- naval.
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>> if there was, in fact, a phone call, the fbi needs intelligence before they actually pursue a long-term investigation on someone. they get thousands of calls like this but there is an intelligence gap and that gap is simply this, what the fbi needs to do is share critical information like that with local police. in new york city and the largest cities it's being done but in smaller communities it's not being done. the local cop on the beat knows the who, what, when, where in his neighborhood and i can tell you if that information was given to local police, they could have their local intelligence units watch these people for a while. jenna: you have a feeling it wasn't sure? >> i don't believe for one minute that it's shared with the street cops. i know there's a joint terrorism task force and they will send some information. you ask any local cop on the street patrolling the neighborhood, he don't have a clue. he does not have a clue. now, i know that there's a lot of concern about information is
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secret and classified but there is a way that you could declassify some of this material to have local police departments look into this. jenna: of course, we know there was disputes with local police departments. you're familiar with new jersey, of course, having worked there for so many years. speak to go a law enforcement expert yesterday, new jersey is a key spot for terror, has been since 1970's, why is that? >> we are close to airports and sea ports. it's an easy way to get to new jersey but on the good side of it is -- i can tell you in new jersey, what the governor has done and law enforcement agencies have done through county terrorism task force they keep an eye on a lot of things. this alert that we got yesterday, this is all new. this is very significant and will help us win the war against terrorism. jenna: it is interest to go know
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that if the fbi was flagged to the son that does lead to questions and doesn't take anything away from the good law enforcement work but leads to question how we flag individuals but yet they go onto commit acts and that we can't stop it before it happened and i know there are some case that is we do, but obviously some get through. >> unfortunately it's man power intensive, it's money, but like i said, let's start sharing that critical information with the local cops. they know what's going on in their neighborhood. jenna: it is interesting to know as well the technology that's involved in trying to talk down this terrorist, alleged terrorist, of course, as he's going to be charged, but at the end it was fingerprints, old fashion police work that led the connection to this individual. talk to us a little bit about that because we can't forget some of the basics. >> you have good police work. it was a fingerprint that led to the connections but i have to tell you, you have said it and we have all said it, if you see something, say something.
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when that picture went out be on the look out for went out and people saw that picture, it was a phone call and a local cop, i go back to that situation, a linden police officer saw this guy and knew who it was and took care of the situation. jenna: great to have you on the program. eric. >> the weekend terrorist bombings, echo another one in 1975, lower manhattan. that's where george washington said fair well to troops n. that attack 50 people were wounded, four were killed, including his dad at the hands of terrorism inspired son to speak out against terrorism. his son joins us next why he said the bombings in new york and new jersey reminds him so much of what we face when his father was killed. medicine. i talked to my doctor and found a missing piece
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american cities, americans are on edge after radical islamic terrorism in new york, new jersey and minnesota. the brothers struck in boston and now allegedly ahmad rahami. one of them in 1975 was frank conner, he was 33 year's old and having lunch in lower manhattan when that was bombed by puerto rican terrorists of the group flan and one of those little boys on the left is joe conner. >> sure, thank you. eric: back then we had faln terrorist that took your father's life. the bombing of the laguardia airport killed 11 people in
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1975, thousands of bombings on the street of new york, do you fear that they could be back here now? >> if you look at the time back then, we had lost a war and left a vacuum, shown ourselves as a weak country and that's what we saw with the flan. 130 bombs in the u.s. we are moving in that direction. we see cops being killed like we used to see in the early 70's, it's a terrible thing, parallel, that's what it looks like we are headed. we have to stop this. we are getting pissed off as a country. eric: unbelievable, killed 43 people, 2014, there are actually 642 bombings in our country that killed 24 people. so when you talk about getting pissed, what do we do, how do we stop this because it seems to be increasing? >> we have to allow law
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enforcements to talk to each other. we have to be able to surveil the mosques, we know where these things are happening. back in the 70's we had the same issues, they could suspect terrorist but unless they caught them doing something, they weren't able to follow up on it. we are getting back to that. we need to be much more focused and direct. i can't believe that this mayor in the city has taken down some of the great things that giuliani was doing. eric: de blasio, what about constitutional rights and that sort of thing? >> when you suspect people -- my mom grew up in ireland. she knew who the ira were in churches. they know. that's where the hatred is being fermented and we need to go in and face it. you know, we are politically correct and that used to be a nuisance and now it's a news. we can balance that.
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we balanced it in the past. i don't know that anyone has been charged with violating anybody's civil rights. we are all for civil rights but as they say it's not a death pack either. eric: thank you for your insight, we are sorry for your loss and thank you for speaking out. >> any time. jenna: eric, there are have been numerous accusations that russia is trying to meddle in upcoming elections, hillary clinton and donald trump striking very different tones on russian president vladimir putin and putin himself speaking out as well. what do everyday russians think of nominees and does putin have an influence on them? we will take a closer look next. "day to feel alive"♪ ♪jake reese, "day to feel alive"♪
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elections in 2011. she expressed concerns about voting irregularities which there were many. clinton's recent branding of russia this way did not go unnoticed. >> the grand godfather of this global brand of extreme national system russian president vladmir putin. reporter: jenna. this against a backdrop of anti-americaism, which polls put at 60% of population. that is apparently down from 80% last year but it is far from a perfect picture. however that said, when you go around and talk to russians on the street. , you get a sense they would like relations with the united states improve be it with hillary clinton donald trump. jenna? >> jenna: a hollywood story, breaking news making international headlines and will do so as far away as russia.
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jenna: this just in as the president was speaking at united nations, interesting headline out of hollywood, we cover all the news as it was happening this is the headline. angelina jolie has filed for divorce from brad pitt. that news is breaking in hour. the megamovie stars, tabloid favorites have been together for 12 years. they did marry officially as you recall two years ago in france in the private ceremony. they have six kids together. jolie's attorney, said was made, for quote, the health of the family. wee leave that where it is. we're not here to speculate. >> she was goodwill ambassador and promoted to envoy. she does a lot of great charitable work for the united nations and refugees. i wonder if jennifer aniston is not available anymore. >> you are stirring trouble. i'm off the market 100%. >> can't help you brad. jenna: we'll leave that, it is
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what it is. a lot more news to get to. >> see you back here in the hour. she what "outnumbered" says. jenna: "outnumbered" starts right now. harris: fox news alert. we are awaiting donald trump at a rally in political battleground state of north carolina. he is expected to talk terrorism and to go after hillary clinton and president obama over what he calls their quote, unquote, weak leadership when it comes to keeping america safe. we have the new details about the man accused of planting bombs around new york city and new jersey and his possible radicalization overseas. this is "outnumbered." i'm harris faulkner. here today, sandra smith. radio talk show host meghan mccain. republican strategist, lisa booth. today's #oneluckyguy, former ambassador to the united nations. ambassador john bolton is here. he is outnumbered. glad to have you here. >> glad to be with you. harris: we have big day.
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