Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  April 21, 2017 9:00am-10:01am PDT

9:00 am
it's going to be great. >> jon: we will see you back care one hour from now. >> jenna: "outnumbered" starts right now. >> sandra: ice is claiming responsibility after a gunman opened fire on one of the most famous boulevards in the world and now growing questions about how this could impact france's much anticipated presidential election. especially the most conservative candidate's chances. i'm sandra smith. here today, meghan mccain, dagen mcdowell, fox news legal and political analyst eboni williams and today's #oneluckyguy, newt gingrich is here and with all due respect, you are outnumbered. >> newt: very happily so. >> sandra: it's always good to have you in so much news to get to. >> dagen: you'll learn a lot if you just listen. >> sandra: i intend to do a little bit of that. let's get started. just days ahead of an already
9:01 am
tense presidential race, a gunman opening fire and police. one officer was killed, two others seriously wounded. the attacker was shot dead. the assault sending tourists into sidestreets and threatening to deepen the political divide. greg palkot is live in paris. >> you can see behind me, a very busy champs-élysees. last night, there is horror, there is terror. a man got out of a car, opened up his rifle point blank on a police van. one police officer was killed, two more seriously injured as well as a tourist hurt. round after round came from police, they took him down, they killed him. please today are identifying the man. he is 39 years old, he is a french native, but with a recor
9:02 am
record. he already spent ten years in jail for an earlier attempt on police officers and he was also in custody for making threats against police officers. he could have been radicalized in prison. he was on a terror watch list, but he got through that net. a handwritten note was found on his body praising isis. isis today claimed attack. this is on the eve of the first round of presidential debates. there was no campaigning today by most of the candidates, but there was some seizing up the opportunity including by one of the front runners. the national front candidate, marie and le pen. she called for a crackdown on terrorists in this country as well as on the border.
9:03 am
we talked to an american couple who is here with their three children who actually witnessed all of this. to give an americans perspective on this thing and an eyewitness perspective, take a listen to what they saw. >> we saw the shooter with the gun, and he started shooting bullets in the air. police were in the street. it was a very terrifying moment. >> had he shot the policeman already? >> we saw a man go down. >> he did this and i went this direction. when he did that, i could see very clearly the machine gun. i knew it was a terrorist event, i knew it was an attack. >> and another american weighing in today, u.s. president donald trump. and a tweet he said "another terrorist attack in paris. the people of france will not take much more of this. it will have an effect on the presidential election." a very early weighing in on the
9:04 am
political prospects here in the country. the impact of this attack -- >> sandra: the president made a prediction there that greg just read off to us, predicting that this attack will have a significant impact on my french election. do you see it that way? >> newt: it's probable. think a significant meaning -- the first round is deeply divided between four major candidates. france has many terrorists were able to get gun. this man shot policeman in 2001 so to say he was radicalized, he was shooting people before he went to prison. the idea of a watch list mates round to be something we all have to give up on. if you're on a watch list, you're dangerous.
9:05 am
if we want dramatically higher safety. what we get today is a sloppy system, everybody feels bad for two weeks and then we go back to business as usual. >> sandra: kellyanne conway was on "america's newsroom" this morning reacting to the attack. basically saying people are tired of politicians will not name us what it is. watch. >> people across the globe are tired of these random terrorist acts that take the lives of people and are tired of politicians who won't name it, want to dress it, and won't take a hard line against it. a spate we talked many times on the couch about how i had a serious problem when president obama wouldn't say it radical islamic terrorism. the fact that our president will identify it and address it is a change in summing that i'm appreciative of. a question i have for you, muslim community's are assimilating what the parisian and french culture.
9:06 am
that's a big platform, do you think will make a big impact? >> newt: it will in europe and the united states. the question is not are we unwilling to accept immigration? the question is are you willing to accept immigrants who refused to the country. part of this is brought on by the europeans themselves. they're quite comfortable putting immigrants from morocco and nigeria elsewhere of these little suburban places turning them into isolated bungalows. now they're discovering that that doesn't work. the real debate has to be you, if someone comes to your country, do they have an obligation to integrate into society? or are they able to be off on their own? that's a very major debate. you talk about naming things. recently in a shooting in the u.s., the associated pressure refused to print that the person said speedily five this whole elite effort to
9:07 am
refuse to confront how bad things are, it's almost like they're terrified of being honest about what the problems are. >> sandra: it makes you want to ask, are we safe here at home? do we have the policies in place to prevent this happening here? >> dagen: we have a problem with surveillance and identifying somebody who will willingly attack in the name of radical islam. you look at this the suspect, that he was questioned by police as early as february and he had been imprisoned in sweden. the attack in stockholm had been identified as a radical. it's not increased surveillance,
9:08 am
we need to figure out how we cannot better identify people who will kill in the name of radical islam. >> eboni: is the system that needs to be fixed. my issue, i was just in paris, i spent a week they're not one month ago. when this happened, i literally had the hairs on my arms stand up in a way know that i have before. it also had very close to home for me. here's the issue. it's not unforeseeable, these acts, these horrible acts that are leaving people dead, countries and ruin, and the world more afraid are not unforeseeable and that's a big deal to me. we have identified many of these people, we have detained many of these people and yet, they go free. where is the chink in the system that is affording this to keep happening? >> newt: there's an obvious core problem. we continue to apply criminal justice standards by which correctly, the whole process. if we don't apply the rules of law of war.
9:09 am
if you knew somebody was actively plotting against you, you don't have an obligation to wait. >> eboni: i think you're missing a very important point. we have due process and may use the standards, but ultimately, due process is balanced by public safety. it always has to be balanced by public safety. if we keep on ourselves, absolutely we have to deviate in a proper circumstance. >> dagen: we are trying to do in this country under president trump something that europe did not do and that is control the influx of immigrants and refugees into this country. if we don't have a decent way of identifying them if they're going to be radicalized. i use germany as the example, allowing millions of people into the country and they didn't do identity checks on many of them. there was the truck who drove
9:10 am
into the crowd and berlin. he had been under surveillance. authorities stopped surveilling him because he had started drinking and using drugs. another trying to reassess how they identify potential terrorists. >> sandra: bring this back to the timing of this attack and what may happen politically with these french elections. will you see a push for a more conservative candidate? >> meghan: this nationalist agenda that helped elect president trump has been happening globally. i do think -- there are poles online that say she doesn't have a great stance. i think she has a much better shot than people are giving her credit for, but this isn't going to end. globally people feel unsafe. as newt gingrich just said, there's a difference between wanting to become part of a culture and wanting to be an american and people who are just coming here and not assimilating and there's a difference between every other immigration wave of
9:11 am
the past 100 years versus what's happening today. people have legitimate cause for concern and it's a big reason why we have president trump right now. >> eboni: as much as people try to emigrate and do so and assimilate culturally, i do think country that takes on immigrants should do their part to make sure they're not isolated and doing those things. to your point some of the summation with the travel ban. paris is in on that list. france is not a country on president trump's list, so doesn't really make us safer? >> newt: i think it's deeper than that. the guy that shot the french policeman was french. you have lots of people that are in fact born in the country, have grown up in the country, people who are on the subways in the '90s had all lived in public housing, had all gone to public school, had all gotten jobs. the challenge we have, this is
9:12 am
why trump's willingness to radical islamic terrorism or i was he was islamic supremacists, if you are engage in that pattern, we are going to isolate you. that is whether you are a mosque and you're preaching this stuff, we're going to close you down. these are the few that are on the websites, we are going to come after you. in the process kamal we want to challenge the rule of war. innocent people do get hurt because you overreact. innocent people get caught up in it. i think the longer this goes on, the more it happens around the world, the tougher the system will get in order to protect people. >> sandra: no followed over the iran nuclear deal. president trump now warning that the regime is not living up to the spirit of the agreement. what should be the administration's next move when it comes to the islamic republic? plus, a new study finds the mainstream media's hostility towards president trump has reached epic levels.
9:13 am
nearly 9 out of 10 stories on the broadcast networks nightly news have been negative. it was a much different situation when president obama took office. we will talk about that you don't let anything
9:14 am
keep you sidelined. that's why you drink ensure. 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. aleve with direct thertens device, a relief from lower back pain. i put it on my back. i feel this electrical pulse grabbing at my muscles. it was more powerful than i was expecting it to be. it worked. i believe aleve. learn more and read reviews at aleve.com. ♪
9:15 am
♪ i'm dr. kelsey mcneely and some day you might be calling me an energy farmer. ♪ energy lives here. tbut with lightning fast shifts instant. and dynamic track-tuned suspension, what the road demands, the gs delivers. experience high performance through high technology, in the lexus gs 350 and gs turbo. experience amazing.
9:16 am
9:17 am
>> meghan: president trump slamming around for not holding up its end of the nuclear deal brokered by the obama administration, at least in spirit. >> as far as iran is concerned, i think they are doing a tremendous disservice for an agreement that was signed. it was a terrible agreement, it shouldn't have been signed, it shouldn't have been negotiated the way it was negotiated. i'm all for agreements, but that was a bad one. they are not living up to the spirit of the agreement. i can tell you that. we are analyzing it very, very carefully. >> meghan: iran's foreign minister responding on twitter. we'll see if the u.s. are prepared to live up to the letter of the deal, let alone the spirit. so far it has defied both. should i use my highlighter again? this after rex tillerson ordered -- iran is the largest
9:18 am
state sponsor of terror. a very difficult position for president trump. what should he do? >> newt: first of all, the obama administration said iran a state-sponsored terrorism. you can imagine how obvious that evidences. rex tillerson said something that i thought was very profound, but poses a huge problem. he said we're not going to have strategic patients because strategic patience means we do nothing while the bad guys get stronger and then our successors have to deal with an even worse problem. certainly in the case of north korea, clinton could have solved this problem. they insisted on cutting a deal with the north korean. obama had the same pattern. all these left-wingers live in this fantasy world where there is nothing real. they can say the iranians are going to be our friends, this is a great moment, which is insane. the iranian regime is dedicated to the destruction of the
9:19 am
united states and says it openl openly. they have death to america day. even when obama was there. they have -- at some point, you think is there a message here? i'm really glad and i give president trump tremendous credit for this. when you pick general mcmaster and then you pick general matti mattis, and general kelly, that national security team is as good as we have ever seen and they were being very methodical. these are not guys who shoot from the hip, they are methodically looking at this, whether it's in syria or it's in north korea or dealing with iran, and i think they will work with the strategies that are very tough and will execute. we are seeing a very dramatic change. congressmen who just came back from the middle east said every
9:20 am
arab that he talked to said how glad they were that trump fired a missile in syria and they all said america is back. what they're saying to the iranians is this ain't going to be like dealing with john kerry. this is a real adult who knows how to be tough. >> sandra: he's clearly not sharing with us the evidence to say iran is not living up to the spirit of the agreement. >> newt: first of all, they're starting from a terrorism side. i think, this is partly jared kushner's personal passion about this, they would really like to find a way to create a real dialogue between israel and the palestinians. hamas is deeply funded by iran. until you cut off the iranians, you can't get it done.
9:21 am
you look at syria. it's a rainy and funding. what they're saying is this is clearly a regime which is in violation of every civilized norm. i don't know the details in terms of a nuclear program, but my hunch is that they are reaching a deeper feeling which is much more terrorism driven because obama, and a moment of total idiocy, is giving a iranians $150 billion while his own state department says there is a leading sponsor of state terrorism. >> dagen: 1.7 billion and cash cash. >> newt: it will likely blow weapon five it looked like lethal weapon five. here's the point. this is literally idiotic. >> meghan: is the damage already done? >> newt: what these guys are saying is -- i don't think we can go and take
9:22 am
the cash back. >> dagen: what we can do is keep the restrictions in the deal in place permanently, even though iran is not forest. they deactivated it for a while. they're allowed to develop new technology, they are allowed to test listing muscles. they could go back in there and start changing that. problem is, now you have those sanctions relieved and you have businesses far and wide going into iran. >> newt: given till her son's knowledge, you can also, when there's -- you can cut off all oil and cut off their supply of money. >> eboni: that's what we would need to do and that's what i would hope. fundamentally, you can't deal with someone like a ron because they are in opposition to our country. it does not take a rocket scientist to find this out. unfortunately, to your point about clinton and carrie and obama, you're right. i hate this deal.
9:23 am
i don't understand what america got out of this deal besides a slight good moment, but it's not new. unfortunately, america has been doing business with iran since president reagan. in this moment, for me, is not particularly partisan, it's let america get on the same page of stopping the delusions so we can have an agreement with the country like this because we just can't. >> meghan: it isn't going to go away unfortunately. the president is pushing congress to help keep a bigger campaign promise. repealing to place obamacare, but can they hammer out a deal and do it within mr. trump's first 100 days and does the timing really matter? the georgia congressional seats that is getting so much attention, that president making an urgent call for donations to the republican candidate and a runoff. who is better to wait and that the man who used it to hold that seat? that's up next
9:24 am
this is the schmidt's yard. and, oh schmidt, that's a lot of dirt. but there's plenty of time for scotts outdoor cleaner plus oxiclean to work it's magic. all while being safe to use around plants and grass. guaranteed. this is a scotts yard. yeah, i just saved a whole lot of money by swhuh.ing to geico. we should take a closer look at geico... you know, geico insures way more than cars. boats, motorcycles... even rvs! geico insures rvs? what's an rv? uh, the thing we've been stuck on for five years! wait, i'm not a real moose?? we've been over this, jeff... we're stickers! i'm not a real moose?
9:25 am
give him some space. deep breaths, jeff. what's a sticker?!? take a closer look at geico. great savings. and a whole lot more.
9:26 am
9:27 am
9:28 am
>> meghan: let's try it again. that's what president trump is saying to house republicans my efforts to repeal and replace obamacare. >> it took obamacare 17 months. i've been negotiating this for 2 months, may be less than that. this is a continuation and the plan gets better and better and better, and it's gotten really, really good. a lot of people are liking it a lot. we have a good chance of getting it soon. i'd like to say next week, but i believe we will get it.
9:29 am
whether it's next week or shortly thereafter. >> sandra: very optimistic president there. democrats are blasting the g.o.p. is updated plan. nancy pelosi, saying in a statement, trump care is a moral monstrosity that will devastate seniors, children, , and hard-working americans. republicans have decided to make it even worse. republican desperation to keep trump care alive has making it even more expensive and cruel for senior americans and hard-working families. i'll let you respond. >> newt: your kidding. it's like responding to the ayatollah. nancy pelosi's words are a lie. this plan does nothing to medicare. how does it hurt seniors? you have to understand on the left today, they're still in catatonic shock from the failure of hillary to win. they just vibrate.
9:30 am
>> sandra: the president sounded very optimistic, as we've heard paul ryan be optimistic, but we are 91 days end. is the timing realistic? >> newt: no, it shouldn't be taking seriously. when i was a sophomore in congress, we did the reagan tax cuts which was giving away money, and it took us until august and we were just giving away money. even giving away money took until august. it took us 18 months and 92% of the country favored it. there's an increasing appetite, but what i'm not sure the white house fully understands yet is health care is life and death and it is 1 out of every five dollars in the economy. you have to be able to answer or not these macro big questions,
9:31 am
you have to be able to say, i've had a liver transplant, am i covered? my child has autism, is he or she covered? they have not done the groundwork yet among the members. this is why it was deeply opposed to bringing it back. they haven't done the groundwork for the members to understand what's in the bill, how to defend the bill, and frankly, if there are weaknesses, fix them. that's the whole point of the legislative process. >> dagen: again, it's like fixing social security and medicare. one is moving money around, the other is messing with somebody's health. and their well-being. that's the one thing i never could understand. they make the argument and president trump makes the argument, we need the savings and the spending cuts from the health care to fund the tax reform. not really. >> newt: if they are patient, they're going to get this done.
9:32 am
trump is a good manager who listens much better than people think because you don't see him listening. let's watch 30 minutes -- the truth is, he listens to everybody. i've been on conference calls with him on this issue, i know he's listening to all sorts of different people. we're going to get there, but we need to get there -- when people worry about their health or their parents health or their children's health, they asked really specific questions and is not just some macro policy deal and frankly, the republicans who occasionally got these blind alleys, i would never reform health care to get money for a tax cut. i would reform health care to get better health care for the american people. >> dagen: thus the message reset here on this couch and listen to paul ryan trying to explain it and people were pulling their hair out. >> meghan: it got a lot of pushback and i think the public
9:33 am
agreed that it was boring. what does a speaker ryan have to do to get the moderates and the freedom caucus to come together for the good of president trump and repeal and replace? >> newt: i think you slow down. the model we used was listen, learn, help, and lead, in that order. in some cases, you learn to do smarter, better things. if we can go out, for example, we think there is $110 billion of the fraud annually. people don't mind saving money from crooks. this might seem obvious, but again, it's the same idea with iran. we have breakthroughs coming down the road that are extraordinary. we have a program now with the national institutes of health that will replace the opioids with a nonaddictive painkiller. focus on health, then come back to cost.
9:34 am
don't focused on cost because you can't manage a system inside an accounting book. >> eboni: a fundraising email from president trump is urging conservatives to get behind karen handel as she is to score off against democrat jon ossoff. neither candidate was able to win a majority of the vote early this week. slating to be what could be the most expensive race of its kind. it's already passing millions, president trump writing to supporters "now that we have a republican nominee, democrats will stop at nothing to tear down karen handel in georgia. please make an emergency contribution --" first, can you imagine how much tension the seat and george is getting? >> newt: it's important. it's the first moment after the
9:35 am
clinton disaster. they thought very briefly they might when in kansas. this is a new barometer. they raised $8.2 million in the initial round. they didn't live in the district. they had little embarrassment, 9% of the money came from outside georgia. as a hollywood-based, left-wing candidate, he did remarkably well. no republican should relax. this fight is going to be a real brawl because the left smells an opportunity to win my seat, tom price's seat, three people in a row have held this with the some standing. plus they're desperate to do anything they can to hurt president trump. republicans are going to have to go in there and be very aggressive. as the district comes to know speech went one better, i think you'll start to shrink. there are enough hollywood stars and money to prop them up over the long run, i don't think so.
9:36 am
what the election if it were two weeks earlier, he would have one. what was happening, they're all shooting at each other, the republicans, he's up here with millions of dollars. all of a sudden, they are saying you better turn out for the republican base. >> eboni: to that point, got very close, but ultimately, they're going to do a runoff. at this point, is the republicans are going to win this. tell me why you think it's not a safe bet for the g.o.p.? >> newt: you put in $8.2 million, he turned out a 91,000 votes which in a special election is a stunning number. that's almost a presidential year number. he's in a position where if he can find 91,000, this is going to be in mid-june, everybody's at the beach or the mountains, why are you bothering me about
9:37 am
politics? republicans better go out and start getting their in now. until you have something, you're not allowed to go on vacation. if he turns out his votes and we don't, he's going to be the congressman. this is a very serious race. no republican or conservative should take this lightly. >> eboni: what about moving the ball with each one of these one-off opportunities? if the republicans do in this seat, it's another in the face adding insult to this loser momentum up there on or should they just play more straight shooting politics? >> meghan: the reason is that his base is hollywood and beverly hills. hollywood actors are dumping money.
9:38 am
until they get someone with that kind of message, i think it's a tmz, media phenomenon that they are so in dire need for a win. >> dagen: i want sean penn to show up and start campaigning for him so the republicans can stop them photos. look what all these celebrities dead. you had been athletic and tom hanks and leo dicaprio raising money. >> eboni: we all want sean penn to stay away from everything. so much for a honeymoon period. a new study shows just how biased the mainstream media is against president trump. the numbers that you won't believe. stay with us raises your rates... maybe you should've done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates
9:39 am
due to your first accident. liberty mutual insurance. due to your first accident. ♪ everything your family touches sticks with them. make sure the germs they bring home don't stick around. use clorox disinfecting products. because no one kills germs better than clorox.
9:40 am
i hafor my belly painking overand constipation.ucts i've had it up to here! it's been month after month of fiber. weeks taking probiotics!
9:41 am
days and nights of laxatives, only to have my symptoms return. (vo) if you've had enough, tell your doctor what you've tried and how long you've been at it. linzess works differently from laxatives. linzess treats adults with ibs with constipation or chronic constipation. it can help relieve your belly pain, and lets you have more frequent and complete bowel movements that are easier to pass. do not give linzess to children less than six, and it should not be given to children six to less than 18. it may harm them. don't take linzess if you have a bowel blockage. get immediate help if you develop unusual or severe stomach pain, especially with bloody or black stools. the most common side effect is diarrhea, sometimes severe. if it's severe, stop taking linzess and call your doctor right away. other side effects include gas, stomach-area pain, and swelling. talk to your doctor about managing your symptoms proactively with linzess.
9:42 am
9:43 am
>> dagen: a new report finds president trump getting more hostile treatment from the broadcast networks than any other american president ever. the media research center tallies opinionated statements made by president trump during the evening news on abc, nbc, and cbs from january 20th-april january 20th-april 9th. ed found that 1500 or 89% of statements made by experts, voters, and the networks on reporters were negative. fewer than 200, 11%, were positive. report also found most of the coverage on the president were on the topics of the travel ban, russian election meddling, obamacare repeal, immigration, and those wiretapping applications. they found statements made by the president of of the stories were at least 93% negative. does this matter? >> newt: it does matter, but let me say that a great civil
9:44 am
war historian wrote a paper for me and doing a paper in understanding trauma. there is a section in there where he compares trump to lincoln. it's very much like the lefts coverage of trump. it was vicious and hostile. in matters in a sense that it creates an environment. a normal person not that involved in politics, you get 93% negative coverage and somebody calls and says how do you feel about trump? in an election cycle, when you're getting information, you love trump. in the middle of this noise -- the other thing it's doing is driving the left further to the left. they're getting crazier. the ley that they had a term and they lost the '87 election. >> sandra: is there a way that the administration could have controlled the message
9:45 am
differently or more? when you look at trump's push to invigorate the economy, within 18 minutes of coverage in the first 100 days of the networks, less than 1% of all airtime devoted to the administration. >> newt: they're not going to do it because of whatever reason. what they should do is clean out the white house press room might totally change how they deal with the press, explained openly to the country that we are at war, these people hate us, they want to destroy us. why would you like "the new york times" or "cbs news" in the white house press room? >> dagen: they deserve some of the blame for the messaging, because you mentioned the reporting on the economy, but his economic agenda is not getting pushed ahead. whether it's reforming health care, tax cuts. those elements, some of what he's done, like the rollback regulations have helped, but the big agenda items are going nowhere. >> meghan: you know how frustrated i've been with
9:46 am
sean spicer. president trump has amazing surrogates and then he has not so great surrogates and i think they should only be putting the best of the best of the best in front of the camera, people who really understand messages, understand how narrative works and quite frankly, can rank all the liberal press that is so intense and out to get him. when you see gayle king on vacation, there's not even a veneer of pretending that you could possibly cover president trump in any kind of unbiased way. part of the problem is, especially the obama administration, it was so egregious and so intense that when you have people that are so for people in the left, it's hard to even find journalists to put in front he would consider unbiased. >> eboni: sometimes two negatives equal a positive and i think on this issue, that's the equation. i think president trump and his base for certain, they relish in this type of stuff.
9:47 am
i think this is a very clear adversarial relationship with the mainstream press and it does nothing but work on the president's favor. there's nothing more unpopular than the united states congress right now, no disrespect, the media. i don't think this hurts president trump at all. i think it helps them be able to paint and run with the narrative that says he's the hero here. >> dagen: we can counter with the broadcast networks essay via twitter. one public university are now able to buy the morning-after pill from a vending machine. the same way you buy a candy bar or soda. should tax funded colleges do that? we debate ♪when you've got...♪
9:48 am
♪...nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪ here's pepto bismol! ah. ♪nausea, heartburn, indigestion, upset stomach, diarrhea!♪
9:49 am
9:50 am
9:51 am
on a perfect car, then smash it into a tree. your insurance company raises your rates. maybe you should've done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch and you could save $509 on auto insurance. call for a free quote today. liberty stands with you™. liberty mutual insurance. >> sandra: let's get to jon scott and see what's coming up on the second hour of "happening now." >> jon: we are 9 minutes away. we've got the very latest on that paris terror attack. what impact it might have on this weekend's election. plus some interesting details leaking on what the white house wants the next budget and how they would pay or not pay for
9:52 am
any tax cuts. many americans are plagued with sleep problems. we've got some new advice from one of the country's most prominent sleep experts, how to get yours these, coming up next on "happening now" ." >> meghan: the university of california davis has become one of the first colleges in the country to install a vending machine that sells the morning-after pill. emergency contraceptive cost 30 bucks, that's less then at most pharmacy. it also sells, tampons, and pain relievers. >> ed is promoting, go and have unsafe because then you have a backup option. >> meghan: supporters say it's a cheaper option for students and they're hoping it becomes a trend. >> it's a great thing for women. >> i think every college should have this. >> meghan: nothing make me feel older than watching that video. i'm 32, but it makes me feel
9:53 am
much older. what do you think? >> newt: i think we go through cycles of stupidity and we realize it doesn't work. what about sexually transmitted diseases? the idea that the secular world tries to say, there is an easy way to have without any emotional involvement without any planning, the next day, you can get the morning-after pill. were you safe from diseases or not? probably not, because after all, we're treating you to be absent of responsibility. >> eboni: i think it's going to decrease condom usage which is very important in the use of hiv and aids. i hate that narrative that birth control is the simple answer. >> dagen: as a practical matter, who is going to go and the lunch room there and feed bills into a machine to get the
9:54 am
morning-after pill? >> newt: it probably takes the visa card. >> sandra: i think students should be more embarrassed about buying a snickers bar out of a machine. i would love to hear what a doctor has to say about this. something like that is only supposed to be used occasionall occasionally. >> dagen: it was under president obama that the morning-after pill was available to everyone over-the-counter. >> eboni: it can have a place in certain women's lives in certain cases of rate and other things that we are not considering here, but we are not designing it to use as active birth control. >> newt: it also puts the burden on the woman. that guy doesn't have to use the condom. the total number of sexually transmitted diseases in this country is a very sobering reality. we ought to be more open and honest about it. >> dagen: women are tougher and they'll speak up.
9:55 am
>> sandra: what happens to your recruitment when you walk by that vending machine and your parents see it? >> meghan: at columbia, they had a bowl full of. i feel like i'm with it in a lot of ways, but it's not teaching young women that everything is just so casual. as you said, there's a lot more to than just having. there's emotions involved in a sound crude, but women should be careful about the things they are doing in college. >> dagen: i'm going to sound really old, that's what bothers me a lot about one of -- the social media apps and their willingness to take photos of oneself. i'm not talking about a selfie and send it over snapchat and the like. >> newt: you are who you are.
9:56 am
>> meghan: more "outnumbered" in just a minute umbrellas!! you need one of these. you wouldn't put up with an umbrella that covers you part way, so when it comes to pain relievers, why put up with just part of a day? aleve, live whole not part. tell you what, i'll give it to you for half off. manait's a series of is nsmart choices. and when you replace one meal or snack a day with glucerna made with carbsteady to help minimize blood sugar spikes you can really feel it. glucerna. everyday progress.
9:57 am
(announcer vo) there's a moment of truth.etes, and now with victoza® a better moment of proof.
9:58 am
victoza® lowers my a1c and blood sugar better than the leading branded pill, which didn't get me to my goal. lowers my a1c better than the leading branded injectable. the one i used to take. and better than that diabetes pill i used to take. (jeff) victoza® works with your body to lower blood sugar in three ways-- in the stomach, the liver, and the pancreas. and while it isn't for weight loss, victoza® may help you lose some weight. non-insulin victoza® comes in a pen and is taken once a day. (announcer vo) victoza® is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes, and is not for people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza®
9:59 am
or any of its ingredients. stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck or if you develop any allergic symptoms including itching, rash, or difficulty breathing. serious side effects may happen, including pancreatitis. so, stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have severe pain in your stomach area. tell your doctor your medical history. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are headache, nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. now's the time for a better moment of proof. ask your doctor about victoza®. >> thank you so very much to the former speaker of the house newt gingrich, there to have you today. >> always fun. >> you made me laugh.
10:00 am
>> i do but i can. >> we did a lot of listening today as we promised. where back on tv monday at noon eastern, thank you so much for joining us, "happening now" starts now. >> jenna: we begin with a fox news alert, president trump that you sign new executive orders a short time from now and we are getting previews of what to expect. >> jon: reducing tax burdens and rolling back regulatory requirements known as dodd-frank, also to change with the stroke of a pen. recovering all of the news "happening now" ." gunfire on the shop facilities -- as peers deals with another terrorist attack. >> chaos and panic with all of the people here on the street, a few falling down. >> jon: what the police knew about the gunman before he opened fire. plus as north korea prepares for another military parade, one former defense secretary says pyongyang is more worried than it has been

230 Views

1 Favorite

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on