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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  November 11, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PST

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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ martha: and so begins the
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annual ceremony at arlington national cemetery. you saw president obama lay the wreath as he does every year as remembrance of that soldier, the tomb of the unknown soldier and this is one of the things that the president does every
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veterans, although, it is important to point out that memorial day is the day that we celebrate those that have, remember those that have sacrificed their life for our nation and a day that we like to celebrate those who have served in the post 49/11 era, more than 3 million veterans coming off of those wars. so certainly a lot of folks probably in your own communities and certainly a lot of in my family and in john's family as well that we remember on veteran day. what happens after the president lay it is wreath, then the whole program will start to begin and we will hear from the president in about 25 minutes and normally that speech is a speech that's memorable won, jon. told different stories of service and nice morning off of a very busy week.
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jon: with just a little more than two months left in barack obama's second and final term, every event just about becomes his final one and, of course, this will be his final address at arlington national cemetery in honor of veteran's day, 21 and roughly half million military veterans in the u.s. population these days. 7.3% of all living americans but roughly only about 1% of american families have someone who has recently served in the military and that's one of the reasons that it is so important to honor a veteran on this veterans day. jenna: we will continue to watch and there will be state by the va secretary as well robert mcdonald, he was a ceo of big company that creates household goods and brought in
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the time where there was chaos in the veterans administration and there's still questions as to what has been solved in that. it's a reminder today too that president elect trump will soon become the commander in chief and that is the role unique to the president and when also considered today. we will move to other news but come back to the cemetery as well. president elect trump is moving forward. he will be making big decisions, among decisions is a look at the va as well. he's talked about veteran aaffairs. hello, i'm jenna lee. jon: made it a center piece of the campaign, take care of our veterans. i'm jon scott. mr. trump sitting with president obama, the first of many, many steps in the transition of power, one of them is to assemble a cabinet. among the most powerful conditions really in the world
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not only the white house. a name floated for that post is republican national committee chairman reince priebus. here is what he had to say about that idea on fox and friends. >> number one, that's not my job, number two, i don't have any updates for your on transition. i'm sitting here at the rnc and it's a great job and that's the one -- >> if the president elect calls you, asks you to be the white house chief of staff, yes or no? >> it's not something that i'm talking about right now. jon: peter ducey not being considered -- jenna: you never know. jon: he's live in our dc bureau. >> right. we do. the president elect is at his office in manhattan trying to fill out his cabinet.
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mr. trump tweeted out, busy day in new york, will soon be making important decisions on the people who will be running our government. while there has been a lot of buzz about giving the chief of staff jobs to either reince priebus, the first sitting member of congress to endorse trump is now adding another name to the list. >> i think the third person to throw in there is social -- son-in-law jared. clearly a position filled this weekend. trump was all over capitol hill yesterday with the republican leaders who will make him campaign promises into reality and the three things he says he spoke to senate majority leader mitch mcconnell are immigration, health care and job, big league jobs trump says. senator mock connell told us that he wants to get started very quickly in january and the speaker of the house paul ryan the most notable change right after trump's swearing in will
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be economic. >> i think about just the regulations. think about the auto coworkers and timber workers in the rest and think about the ranch workers, all the regulation that is obama is plan to go roll out that's putting dark cloud on the economy. it's being lifted. >> another part of trump's transition phone calls with allies, a wire just crossed that trump and french president françois hollande had a productive conversation about terrorism, syria and the iran nuclear deal. jon. jon: lot of big issues on the incoming president's plate. jenna: even president obama offers cooperation. glen hall were the wall street journal. we talked last friday. it feels like tuesday was a long time ago.
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>> so much has happened. exactly. there's something like 14200 executive level appointments trump needs to make now between now and inauguration day or son thereafter. getting chief of staff which gets in right away on the 15 cabinet members you want to propose. jenna: what do you think is on the top list. let me rephrase. what are you watching for, glen, what do you think are the most important positions that mr. trump has to fill and will set a tone for his presidency? >> well, i think you look at things like the homeland security and you look at the treasury and secretary of state and the attorney general. those are the ones that, i think, many people are focusing on in terms of how he sets his agenda globally and domestically. those are a lot of important positions and we are seeing names already start to go push forward as the transition team gets into place. jenna: any notable name that you think are raising a flag as mr. trump is heading?
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>> it's interesting, mixed loyal trump supporters like rudy giuliani, former new york my your and those who weren't necessarily supporters such as representative who actually supported ted cruz during primaries but he's been a vocal opponent of all of the banking regulation that's been going on so he could be a potential secretary of treasury that we are hearing which aligns with the vision that for reducing amount of regulation. jenna: what kind of leader do you think donald trump will be? >> a lot of speculation about that. what we do know from people who have worked with him over the years is that he's a very decisive leader and the kind of person that wants quick summaries from people he's delegate today look into the issues and he makes his decision quickly on that. we also saw, though, i should note during a campaign trail while he may quickly make a response to something, he also over time may shift his position as new information comes in and that's sort of the deal-maker in him. i think you look at a guy who is more pragmatic and dogmatic.
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jenna: we were speak to go an adviser of mr. trump yesterday and one of the things she said that he really listens. what you see on television is one thing, but behind closed doors he's really listening to those that he is consulting with. the title of his best-selling book and i know he mentioned it many times, is art of the deal, glen, do you think that's going to apply in washington, d.c.? >> ic you're going see him do his best to do deal-making on the hill and trying to get agenda through by working with dnc. a very different kind of president coming on than we have seen in many years. jenna: just a quick reflection as we go back to the live action in arlington. mr. trump, he will be commander in chief, he will be the top commander of our military.
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any thoughts about that today? >> well, i think it's important for people to know that there's a different side to donald trump and we saw that yesterday in his meetings with president obama. these guys were very animated against each other during primaries but he showed his ability to be professional and presidential and how to handle that kind of a situation. so i think there's a sobber side of donald trump that we didn't see when he was out there campaigning and fighting to rally supporters. jenna: we look forward to get to go know the new president elect trump over the next several weeks and, of course, inauguration day january 20th. glen, great to have you in the program. thank you. jon: another night of protests across the nation over the election of donald trump. oregon appears to be the epicenter, police in portland 4,000 protestors flooded the streets in what officials describe as awry yacht smashing store windows, lighting fire crackers, starting fires, police with grenades.
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other cities saw demonstrations but mostly peaceful although few arrests. protests prompting president elect trump to tweet, very unfair, he then seem today walk that back a bit this morning when whr trump tweeting that he loved the passion. jenna: returning the page a little bit, we will see. donald trump surprised election win has every media outlet saying that they got it wrong. how did the media handle this election season? what did we learn from this? we are going to discuss it. iraqi troops struggle to deliver mosul. a center issue for mr. trump. we are going to meet a former -- we are going to meet a former u.s. soldier who is putting his life on the line to save ores that that deadly battle zone. we want to hear from you as we
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jon: iraqi troops are slowly moving to mosul in the liberation of that nation's second largest city from the grip of isis. this as the united nations says it has evidence that terror group used chemical weapons. meanwhile americans are joining in like one former marine who is using medical skills to save lives on this veteran's day. senior foreign affairs is live from iraq. >> hi, jon, the u.s. is helping in many ways to help defeat isis here, air strikes, mine clearing, support and logistics, but one young american man among others made it personal mission to help deal with the atrocities coming from the militants. take a look. >> meet pete reed, the guy with the blond hair, 27-year-old bordentown, new jersey native
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was a ski instructor and learned medical skills and saving iraqi soldier and civilian lines in the iraqi front line. >> at the end of the day they are just people and they are getting torn up bad. we are just trying to make it so a few more people come home, more kids live. >> set a field hospital on the side of the road in neighborhood next to mosul. little more than a few cops, medical supplies and a lot of care. the terror fight never far away. isis rocket shells landing a hundred yards away. >> this is it. stop them here. you don't want them coming home. you don't want to worry about stop them here. >> you're helping out? >> we are doing the very little bit to a very big battle. >> he think it is battle is
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going to get much worse as it gets into the densely populated center of mosul and also said that that could go on for many months. unfortunately, jon, it looks like that jersey boy is busy for many months to come. god bless him. back to you. jon: absolutely. he is showing the best of america. thank you. jenna: we call today veteran's day in our country but other parts refer to november 141st as armacist day. in australia what you're seeing now the famous sidney oprah house lit up and more than 60,000 australian troops lost their lives during the four-year war and more than 53,000 americans died. the iconic red grew on the battlefield and came to symbolize the end of the world and sacrifice of brave soldiers we lost. jon: just about every poll and every prediction had hillary clinton winning the election and
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that leaves pretty much everybody eating a big fat serving of humble pie. where did they go wrong and what role did the media play? we will get into that, plus president elect trump's distrust in the media affect how americans view those who gather and deliver the news, all of that coming up next
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sweet, washington bureau of chicago sun times. why, lynn, did almost everyone get it wrong? >> well, there's a lot of reasons we don't know for sure why. we are going to go into a very heavy period of self-reflection for people in the political reporting and polling business. we got it wrong and i don't know why. i wish i could say it was a simple reason that no one picked up the enormous support that donald trump had. so we don't -- i don't want to -- i just don't want to guess right now on what went wrong except that organizations that had vast resources you have to look to them and say, let's have less reliance on reports on polls since these organization
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that is rely so much on them also had the vast resources to send reporters across the country and dig into issues, dig into candidates' histories and a lot of trump's history didn't go reported until after the primary and late in the game. so we are in a period and i'm sure we will have more answers but just not today. jon: i'm not sure i agree with you on that one but we will save that for a second. in the meantime, take a look at this, judy, talk about over confident, newsweek magazine put a special edition madame president was on the cover. i mean, they printed up thousands of copies of this, they were so sure that hillary clinton was going to be into the white house. >> look, lynn is right. we all got it wrong. we have all said that but i
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think that there are obvious reasons for that. first of all, news organizations have been hard-hit by declining circulations, declining advertising, they have been shutting bureaus not only in foreign areas where i work because i cover foreign affairs and national security mostly but they've been shutting bureaus in the country. it's not enough to just send out a reporter to knock on a few doors every now and then when we have an election, you have to be there and have to understand what people are feeling, you know, people like the blame the media for donald trump's victory and i don't buy that. i think there was a huge, huge populist up rise in this country that cut across race and gender, that's why we saw so many hispanics voting unexpectedly for donald trump and he got more black votes than romney did and i think that you couldn't have predicted this just as the brits didn't predict, british polls didn't predict what happened there. this is america's brexit moment.
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yes, we gave him a lot of -- donald trump a lot of free air time but we also dug into his past, we looked at the fact that is he hadn't paid any taxes, federal taxes for the past 12 years and many, many, many stories, people didn't want to hear them. they were so angry at washington, they didn't want to hear what the reporters were saying. jon: to the point you made earlier, there was awful lot of coverage of donald trump that could not be described as positive. trump university got a lot of coverage, the tax situation, covers of his tax returns to the new york times. that got a lot of coverage. you know, the whole access hollywood thing. >> that came late in the game and my guess is a lot of people had their minds made up and one thing i never -- i never underestimated is how much people don't like washington. they don't --
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jon: you work there, lynn. >> i know. i understand that -- i usually see it as a distinction between not liking government and not liking the people in government because if this is true, there has to be some organized way of figuring out how to run your building or your country, so you kind of can't hate your condo board, you can't hate congress as an institution but i don't want to sound like -- like somebody who doesn't get that if you don't think your institution is doing anything, you want to throw everybody out. everybody didn't -- pardon. jon: one of the statistics will i never forget 2008, 2009, 2010 the whole country is in a terrible dive, virtually the only place they did not crash was suburban washington, d.c. because the federal government doesn't ever feel the effects of, you know, economic downturn,
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keeps on hiring, the jobs go field. congressional staffers did not get laid off and that speaks volumes that happened to the rest of america that washington did not see. i want to turn to another thing, president elect trump has yet to allow journalists to travel with him on the airplane, americans can kind of know what their leader is saying and doing regarding policy discussions. i suppose judy, you are not surprised. >> i am not surprised neither one of these very unpopular candidates likes the media, nobody like it is media and that will be including the public it seems, but i'm really worried about donald trump in terms of his targeting of the media because he -- if you remember during the campaign, he already tried to ban the washington post and other news organizations that wrote bad things about them, bad, very sad from covering him and he's already said he's going to try to change
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the liables law for making easier for people to sue us. he will try to shut down critics, i fear and the press has to be prepared to fight back. jon: he did give us a thumbs up in the suv, lynn. >> i was at the white house yesterday and a lot of reporters were concerned about not having any communication from the trump campaign about the joint meeting. it would have been nice, in this one i will give him the benefit of the doubt that hicks will figure out a place to deal with reporting, even getting schedule each day for the transitioning and into the house. jon: lynn from the suntimes and judy miller. >> thank you. jenna: he says the election of donald trump was in part a backlash against political correctness and social justice movements like black lives matter. he explains next
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jenna: we are going to bring
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you down to washington, d.c. -- actually arlington national cemetery where we see the secretary robert mcdonald speaking now. his remarks will be followed by remarks by the president. it's worth noting that this secretary of veterans affair is himself an army veteran. he actually went to west point and served in the army, went and become ceo and you know huge
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household goods company. he managed that and in 2014 he becomes secretary of veterans affairs. he's had to deal with a lot of that, you know, the big issues regarding health care for veterans and there's no question about whether or not we have made progress in that area. we are going to go ahead and listen in on secretary mcdonald. he's going to be speaking for a brief moment and then he will introduce the president who has his own remarks here on veterans day which we will also listen to. let's go to arlington cemetery. >> he needed to see corey. corey had made a miraculous progress in the trampa va trauma unit so this time with help, corey, stood, saluted and said what you'd expect, ranges lead the way, sir.
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corey is the epitome of that rare combination of qualities that characterizes the best among us. sense of duty and courage and plain american grit. president obama admires that in corey. he admires it in all american veterans. it's why he loves them. ladies and gentlemen, our honored guest, the commander in chief and the 44th president of the united states barack obama. [applause] [cheers and applause] >> thank you. thank you so much. thank you very much. thank yo much.
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thank you. thank you very much. please. thank you. thank you. please. thank you. distinguished guests, most of all our extraordinary veterans and their families, the last time i stood on this grounds on memorial day, our country came together to honor those who have fought and died for our flag. a few days before our nation observed armed forces day honoring all who are serving under that flag at this moment. and today on veteran's day we honor those who honored our
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country with its highest form of service. you who once wore the uniform of our army, navy, air force, marines, or coast guard. we owe you our thanks. we owe you our respect and we owe you our freedom. we come together to express our profound gratitude for the sacrifices and contributions you and your family made on the battlefield, at home, an at outpost around the world. but america's gratitude to our veterans is something always grounded and something greater than what you did on duty. it's also an appreciation of the example that you continue to set after your service has ended.
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you're an example of citizens. veteran's day often followses a political campaign, exercise in the free speech and self-government that you fought for. it often lays bare disagreement across our nation. the american instinct has never been to find isolation in opposite corners, it is to find strength in our common creed. unity from our great diversity and sustain unity even when it is hard. and when the election is over as we search for ways to come together, to reconnect with one another and with the principles that are more enduring than transitory politics, some of our best examples are the men and women we salute on veterans day.
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it's the example of young americans, our 9/11 generation who were first responders ran into towers, then ran to a recruiting center and signed up to serve. the example of a military that meets every mission, one united team, all looking out for one another, all getting each other's backs. it's the example of the single most diverse institution in our country. soldiers, sailers, airmen, marines, coast guardmen who represent every corner of our country. every shade of humanity. immigrant and native born, christian, muslim, jew and nonbeliever aligning all forged in the common service. it's the example of our veterans.
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patriots who when they take off fatigues put back on the camouflage of everyday life in america and become our business partners and bosses, our teachers and our coaches, our first responders, city council members, community leaders role models all still serving the country with love with the sense of duty and with valor. a few years a middle school student entered a contest about why veterans are special. this is what he wrote, when i think of a veteran, i think of men or women who will be the first to help an elderly lady across the street. i also think of someone who will defend everyone regardless of their race, age, gender, hair color or other discriminations.
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after eight years in office i particularly i appreciate that he included hair color. [laughter] >> but that middle schooler is right, our veterans are still the first to help, still the first to serve. there are women like the retired military police women from buffalo who founded post in her community and now building a safe place for homeless female veterans with children. [applause] >> there are men like the two veterans from tennessee, one in his 50's and one in his 60's who wrote me to say they would happily suit up and ship out if we need them. we might be a little ode, they wrote, but we will be proud to go and do what we were taught to
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do. whenever the world makes you cynical, whenever you seek true humility and look at veteran. irving was born in chicago and served as a bombadeer as army air corp. flying dozens of missions during world war ii. when he returned home, irving did what a lot of veterans do, he put his medals away, he kept humble about his service, starting living his quiet life. one day walking in chicago and a stranger stopped him and said thank you to your service and handed him a ticket to play the cubs play in the world series.
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[applause] >> it's a good thing irving took that ticket because it would be a while until his next chance. [laughter] irving worked hard and got married to a sergeant in the women's air corp. no less. on june morning many years ago, another one of irving's daughter's carol called to check in, her mother answered, she was in a rush. we can't talk, she said, your father is being honored and we are late. carol asked, honored for what, and the answer came for his heroism in the skies above normandy exactly 50 years earlier. you see, irving's children never knew that their father flew over
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french beach heads on that day. he never mentioned it. now, when they call to check in his children always say, thank you for saving the world. and irving sharp as ever at a hundred year's young always replies i had a little help. [laughter] >> whenever the world makes you cynical, whenever you doubt that courage and selflessness is possible and stop and look to a veteran. they don't always go around telling stories of their heroism, so it's up to us to ask and to listen, to tell those stories for them and to live in our own lives the values for which they were prepared to give theirs. it's up to us to make sure they always get the care that they need. as bob mentioned when i announced the candidacy for this
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office almost a decade ago, i recommitted this generation to that work and we have increased funding for veterans by more than 85%. we cut veterans homelessness in half and access to health care and fewer are unemployed. we helped disabled veterans afford prosthetics. [applause] >> we are delivering more mental health services to more veterans never before because we know that not all wounds in war are visible. together we begin this war, together we must continue to keep that sacred trust with our veterans and honor their good work with our own knowing that our mission is never done. it is still a tragedy that they take their own lives. we have to get them the help they need. we have to keep solving problems
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like long wait times at the va, keep cutting disability claims backlog and resist any risk to outsource to any help owed to veterans. [applause] >> on veterans day we acknowledge humbly that we can never serve our veterans in quite the same way that they served us, but we can try. we can practice kindness, we can pay it forward, we can volunteer, we can serve, we can respect one another, we can always get each other's backs. that is what veterans day asks all of us to think about. the person you pass as you walk down the street might not be wearing our nation's uniform today but consider for a moment that a year or a decade or a generation ago, he or she might have been one of fellow citizens
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who was willing to lay down their life for strangers like us. and we can show how much we love our country by loving our neighbors as ourselves. god bless all who served and still do. and may god bless the united states of america. [applause] [cheers and applause] jenna: final round of applause to the commander in chief who gave his final address as commander in chief on this veteran's day. president obama speaking there at arlington national cemetery and the -- the celebration of the day will continue. again, just to note, veteran's day anyone that served our
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country, memorial day we celebrate those who made the ultimate sacrifice, there's interchange between the two but it's important to point out today. we will continue to watch news from arlington national cemetery on this important day at the end of election week and we will be back with more coverage on happening now
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jon: here we are three days after the election and pollsters and pundits were wrong about many things when it came to the vote that day. but our next guest says he had a sneaking suspicion there were problems for democrats and he said so in print way back in june in a new york post editorial titled trump is a voice for the victims of the social justice warriors. it reads in part, quote, trump is doing what democrats have long claimed to do by giving voice to the voiceless and as
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much as trump might alienate and appall his iconic classic campaign aligns with what many across america are already thinking. it's a stark reading of the nation social barometer that clinton ignores at her own, party's parrel. that was a pretty gutsy. >> three words, basket of deplorables. the clinton campaign was investingvestingvesting in denying classic people. we are now calling the white working class or the white rust belt folks. they were so committed and investing and denying voices. the real claims for them that they missed what was going on. what inspired the piece with
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data is that talked a lot about race, not racism, but race. the idea with that, folks who supported clinton, who supported trump were likely to feel some sort of racial injustice when it came to white supporter trump would like to feel racial injustice, essentially white people that felt that they were having less because black and brown people were having more, whether or not we agree with that opinion, that was their opinion and those opinions were very much valid to them and what happened, i think, during the last few years, particularly the last year, a lot of alienation, a lot of shame, folks were told that they were told they were wrong and they were told that they were racist and immoral and suddenly here comes trump and says not the case. i support you, i validate you. i'm going to give you a voice. ultimately what it came down to and we talk a lot about safe spaces, the ultimate safe space in this election season was and
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or place found safe space. working-class america? >> also a slice of america. not just whites that voted for america too. it was a group of people who felt that they are not being listened to and not just that, it's not that they are not being listened but their opinions are being invalidated, denied and they are being shamed into it's a silence and they feel silenced by what we would call the left. jon: people can still read the column. thank you very much. we we will be back in just a moment. >> thank you s.
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medicarerx walgreens plan insured through unitedhealthcare. it features $0 copays on all tier 1 prescription drugs filled at walgreens, one of our lowest monthly premiums, and the convenience of more than 8,000 walgreens nationwide, including duane reade. so if you're on medicare call unitedhealthcare to discuss your prescription drug plan options. you can enroll right over the phone or if you'd prefer, enroll online. but don't wait. the open enrollment period ends december 7th. the aarp medicarerx walgreens plan provides coverage for the most commonly used generic drugs. and when you fill your prescription at a neighborhood walgreens you could really save money. get $0 copays for tier 1 prescription drugs and a $0 annual deductible on tier 1 and tier 2 drugs.
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call to see if your drugs are covered, and get help understanding your drug plan options. we'll send you a free enrollment guide, even help you enroll right over the phone. or you can enroll online- it's quick and easy. remember, open enrollment ends december 7th. at unitedhealthcare, we're committed to helping you find the medicare part d plan that fits your needs and budget. that's why we offer three plans. like our new aarp medicarerx walgreens plan with one of our lowest monthly premiums and $0 copays for tier 1 prescription drugs when filling at any of the more than 8,000 walgreens nationwide. call unitedhealthcare today to learn more about your prescription drug options and find the plan that's right for you. ♪ jon: vet veteran's day, fly your
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flag and thank a veteran. jenna: absolutely. we're very grateful. "outnumbered" starts right now. kennedy: this is a fox news alert, president obama honoring our nation's veterans, laying a wreath at the tomb of the unknowns just a short time ago and making formal remarks at the final ceremony of his term. a little later in the hour we're going to talk about the hope veterans have in president-elect donald trump after he made taking care of those who serve one of his campaign's top promises. ♪ ♪ kennedy: this is "outnumbered," welcome on a glorious friday, i'm kennedy. here today, co-host of "after the bell," melissa francis, also our co-worker, dagen mcdowell and fox news political and legal analyst ebony williams is here today. and today's #oneluckyguy, we

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