tv Happening Now FOX News September 19, 2017 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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warsaw and july and all trying to rally everyone to say take care of your on country and together, let's take care of securing the world. >> bill: we try and summarize the speeches whether it's 40 minutes or an hour and 40 minutes, sometimes it comes down to one headline much like the debates and the ip the headline going forward. there's a motorcade now with the president heading back to trump tower. >> shannon: we'll see you back here tomorrow, bill. in the meantime, "happening now" starts now. >> jon: we start with a fox news alert on president trump's first address to the u.n. general assembly, but that is not the only first at the worlds buddy today. coming to you, welcome to speech anyone. i'm jon scott. >> julie: and i'm julie banderas. the president pushes america first agenda while addressing the crisis points around the globe. benjamin netanyahu was in the room when president trump spoke making it the very first time he's been inside when a u.s. president has delivered his
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address. the president also faced kim jong un's north korea delegations seated right in the front row all he denounced that countries leader as a rocket man on a suicide mission and he also called on the nations in the world body to unite against the common threat posed by kim jong un's regime. take a listen. >> a small group of rogue regimes that violate every principal in which the united states is based. they do not respect the rights of their nations. if we do not confront the wicked feel, the needful triumph the forces of destruction only gather power and strength. no one has shown more contempt
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for other nations and for the well-being of their own people than the depraved regime in north korea. >> jon: joining us now, jerry seib, executive editor for the watery journal. i was struck by listening to that speech. in some ways, it was the most traditional of presidential addresses to their donations. in other ways, ed was off the rails different. what struck you? >> that's a good observation. ed was traditional, kind of an amish united nations to come together on the deals on which the unities was founded, but also sang in his vision of the world, it's not our job to project those values onto others, but to look out for ourselves. in the second half of the speech, it was the kind of speech i don't think anybody in that hall had probably heard before from an american president. i'll think i mean ways referred to a fellow world leader as a
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rocket man. he talked with the possibility of truly destroying north korea. this is blunt language that we've come to expect from donald trump, but in this setting, it's not exec lean and as you said, it will get the attention of people in that hal hall. >> jon: for those who might have missed it, we want to play that piece of sound the president had regarding north korea and kim jong un. here it is. >> the united states has great strength and patience, but if it is a force defend itself or its allies, we will have no choice but to totally destroy north korea. rocket man is on a suicide mission for his self and his regime. the nics is ready, willing, and able, but hopefully this will not be necessary. >> jon: again, those are words that we in this country who pay attention to what the president has to say, we for that kind of
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talk before, but many of those diplomats sitting in the room, that may come as a quote a surprise. >> donald trump being an unconventional president, obviously didn't think he needed or wanted to do that and i suspect he wanted to do the opposite, to get the attention of people by saying things in a blunt way he says things. it's interesting in that north korea passage that we just listen to, it's preceded by a call out not to north korea, but to other countries represented in that room by saying no decent nation should trade with a country like north korea. that was a direct message to china and russia first and foremost that you can condemn north korea, but don't sibley say those words, followed up with action and stop trading and stop providing economic sustenance to north korea. that was the context of that north korea passage. >> jon: it was george w. bush who coined the axis of evil
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phrase referring to iraq, iran, and north korea. iraq has a new government in place since saddam hussein was deposed, but we still deal with north korea and iran. see what he had to say. >> it is far past time for the nations of the world to confront another reckless regime, one that speaks openly of mass murder, allowing death to americans, destruction to israe israel, and ruin for many leaders and nations in this roo room. the iranian government has a corrupt dictatorship behind the false guise of a democracy. >> jon: you have to wonder what the iranian delegation there and the ambassador from around was thinking there as he heard those words. does that kind of talk, is it helpful? >> we'll see. the headline out of this will
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probably be the north korea passage and rightly so, but if you're looking for a cleaner break from obama administration policy, you have to look further than that passage from the iranian regime. the whole obama approach -- let's negotiate with them and in that process, we will temper their behavior. that's not what donald trump wants to do. he basically said, therein lies beyond the circle of nations that behaved by international norm and you can't really deal with them. that is a much cleaner break. everybody has the same kind of rhetoric about north korea, not quite an donald trump tone, but the real break was when the policy toward iran. interestingly, he didn't raise a nuclear deal in this context, so he is approaching a decision about what to do under the nuclear deal with the obama administration negotiated the deadline is only a few weeks away. he edged up to that by saying you'll hear more about this, i'm
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sure, but by not tipping his hand there, he left open a question of what exactly they were going to do about the nuclear deal. >> jon: he was elected in part because each of people of this country he would be putting america first. he told the world leaders there an assembly to the united nations that putting america first and putting each other's self interests first is actually good thing. here it is. >> our government's first duty is to our citizens. to serve their needs, to ensure their safety, part to preserve their rights and to defend their values. as president of the united states, i will always put america first. just like you as the leaders of your country who always, and should always put your country is first. [applause] >> jon: he got some applause of that line, i can't imagine anybody in the room really
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disagreeing with that sentiment. >> that's what was interesting about that passage. it was an attempt to interpret america first which is the trump model after all to the people in the room who probably see it as either a threat to them or an attempt by the u.s. to back away from involvement and international affairs. the president was trying to put it in a different light saying america first only means my responsibility is assumed responsibility that you will have which is to look out for the interest of your own people first. that's all it means and in some cases, it means engaging with you and in some cases means looking for ourselves first, but it doesn't mean anything for me other than what you probably all think your first responsibility as world leaders are as well. i thought it was an interesting attempt to find what america first really means in the united nations gathering. >> jon: it was quite a speech, we'll see if it changes anything at the united nations. jerry seib, thank you. >> julie: fox news alert of another whether catastrophe
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looms with hurricane maria now a category 5 monster, slamming dominica. dimmick is prime minister saying that he had to be rescued from his house amid widespread flooding and damage. number he prepares to take aim at puerto rico and the u.s. virgin islands. about an hour ago at the start of his first united nation's address, president trump noted the devastation from hurricanes harvey and irma. >> as many of our citizens continue to suffer the effects of the devastating hurricanes that obstruct our country, i want to begin by expressing my appreciation to every leader of this room who has offered assistance and aid. the american people are strong and resilient and they will emerge from these hardships more determined than ever before. >> julie: janice dean is live
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in the fox extreme weather center. boy, the caribbean has been getting hammered. here's a store number four: weeks. >> we haven't seen two category category 5 in a row and this is unappealing to perhaps devastate puerto rico and again parts of the u.s. and british virgin islands which were devastated by irma. there's no good news out of this and the national hurricane center has just issued their latest bulletin, it's still a cadre 5 with a 106 to mile-per-hour sustained winds as a barrels towards puerto rico. i'm so concerned about this area because they could potentially be the worst core of wind with a storm surge upwards of 2 feet of rainfall and battering winds for a number of hours and you can see the wind gusts, you can see that well defined irate they're already getting the outer bands of the rain and the winds towards the islands, the virgin islands and then into
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puerto rico. hurricane warning in effect. prayers are needed for this area, perhaps the worst hurricane they've ever experienced potentially on their doorstep. then as we go further out in time, it will begin a little bit. we think it will go through some structural changes, but it will still be potentially catastrophic. that's the language that the national hurricane center is using, catastrophic, life-threatening. this could potentially devastate these areas and then they're going to watch it move perhaps age of the bahamas. we're going to watch ray category 4 and then the east coast, you cannot rule out the potential impacts next week. that rainfall could be devastating, upwards of 2 feet of rainfall across the islands and then puerto rico and look at these wind gusts. 106 miles per hour, 117 miles per hour, these areas were devastated by irma, so another hit. san juan, populated area obviously importer rico, 121 miles per hour.
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it's going to potentially devastate and even higher than that, 130 miles per hour gusts. looking at the computer models as we go for the running time, the u.s. obviously the east coast is wondering if we are going to feel the effects of maria, there is a potential, yes as we get through wednesday and thursday as it comes close and whether or not that bermuda high builds and come out will that push these storms closer to the east coast? it's still not out of the questions let's buy we're watching maria. real quick, i want to touch on hurricane jose, still off the coast of the northeast bringing high waves and some rough surf and rip currents so people need to be alert. we could get some nor'easter type of wins tomorrow and through wednesday and thursday so watch hurricane rose, but julie, maria is just a disaster waiting to happen for the islands the lesser antilles and print ricoh tonight. back to you. >> jon: we heard
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president trump reiterating his tough stand on north korea and front of the u.n. general assembly where he put the kim jong un regime on notice. threatening to totally destroy the rogue nation if the u.s. is forced to defend itself. what history can teach us about this kind of showdown. we'll go in-depth. >> it is time for north korea to realize that the denuclearization is it's only acceptable future. ...it starts a chain reaction... ...that's heard throughout the connected business world. at&t network security helps protect business, from the largest financial markets to the smallest transactions, by sensing cyber-attacks in near real time and automatically deploying countermeasures. keeping the world of business connected and protected. that's the power of and.
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impose sanctions along with all of the other members of the security council. thank you to all involved. we must do much more. >> julie: president trump rate they are thinking two of north korea's biggest benefactors, russia and china for voting to put tougher sanctions on the rug regime while not mincing words when it comes to the u.s. defending itself against north korea my threatening to annihilate it which neither china or russia seem to want. kevin per rhyno is the author -- he joins me now here in studio. thank you so much for talking to us. russia and china are two major players here, now for the first time they are going to be imposing the toughest sanctions. however it almost seems that kim jong un is empowered by this. are these sanctions, is this pressure put on by china enough to get him to finally listen?
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>> i think some of the rhetoric that we could totally destroy north korea, they were named so much a north korea, they were aimed at trying to get china to take action which is the last thing china wants which is north korea to be totally destroyed. that's something i touch on on my book. it's one of the historical lessons that you can't separate policy, these two countries are looking at each other all the time. in 1949, north korea was watching china very closely. i think young is watching beijing. >> julie: we confront or engage with china? >> that's the big question of the debate about the rhetoric, there is a debate about whether you confront or engage beijing and is not selling that just started, it summing that's been
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going on for 70 years or more. it's something they tried to figure out. >> julie: you mention this is been going on for 70 years or so. the missile tests is a blatant slap in the face of the entire world and i brought this up yesterday and coincidentally today the u.s. is considering shooting down these missiles that are necessarily targeted at u.s. territory, but nonetheless shooting them down to send a message to kim jong un, he cannot continue to ignore the pressure on him ending his new glare weapon program. it is not a good idea? to shoot them down and send a message? >> i think secretary mattis said the danger and mistook elation being very high. shooting on a mess alike that is the kind of thing that could lead to a miss calculation and that's one of the lessons of the first korean war is that both sides were always misunderstanding each other. they were never quite on the
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same page and that's the kind of thing they could lead to the danger and miss conch elation. nobody really wanted the korean war except for kim jong un and no one wants another one because donovan great powers wanted it. this was right after world war ii. they weren't interested in foreign conflict. >> julie: general mattis said they're trying to push as far as they can. speak out intentionally doing provocations that seem to press against the envelope for just how far can they push without going over some kind of a line and their minds that would make them vulnerable. >> julie: if we were to go ahead and do this, the problem is putting those at risk of
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losing their lives if north korea would bring a counterattack. the military is prepared to attack against any casualties. it doesn't necessarily go into detail. how would we go about that? >> i don't know when i don't think anybody knows. part of the rhetoric of the speech today, the president frames it as a problem to be solved in one of the quotes i like from the secretary of state, foreign policy problems owning headaches. you can't take a pill and i'll go away. kim jong un is that kind of pai pain. it's summing that will take time and it will not just be resolve resolved. >> julie: kevin, thank you for coming on. >> jon: we will continue to monitor reaction from president trump stop talking speech to the u.n. assembly. also had on speech anyone, the georgia text campus, who set
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this police car and fire and why? plus luther strange is still legging in the and alabama's runoff election. could president trump help him gain the support he needs to wi win? country. later, gary' i have a motorcycle! wonderful. ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ ♪ i'm goin' up the country, baby don't you wanna go? ♪ geico motorcycle, great rates for great rides. i wanted to get new blinds, about what kind i should get, and she mentioned i should visit blinds dot com. great quality for an incredible price, that's where i got my blinds. (vo) with blinds dot com, you get a free online design consultation, free samples, free shipping, and a 100% satisfaction guarantee. i give the customer confidence by being there every step of the way. we make it really easy.
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>> julie: violence or updating on the campus of the georgia tech campus. following a vigilant -- police say that student scott schultz called about a suspicious person on campus carrying a knife. then advanced on responding officers with the knife. witnesses say the vigil for schultz under quietly in a separate group started to protest. two officers suffered minor injuries, three people under
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arrest. >> jon: we are one week away from the state election that will test president trump political clout, a runoff the republican nominee for the open -- for an open u.s. senate seat and alabama. president trump is heading there this weekend to support senator luther strange who faces off against roy moore. senator strange is temporarily filling jeff sessions former senate seat which he gave up when he became attorney general. jonathan serrie is life for us in birmingham. >> a one issue special election get out for the vote efforts is going to be crucial. here's what luther strange had to say but the president's visit. i'm so honored that he's coming out and i think that says something to voters. >> for people who've already made up their minds, challenger roy moore challenged his
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endorsement and would sway many votes. >> i don't know if it hurts. i don't know if it helps luther strange at all. i think you will know me, they know i'm not running against donald trump, i have supported things that donald trump stands for. >> indeed, many of moore's supporters remain loyal to president trump, now the eventual winner of tuesday special primary runoff will take democrat doug jones, here's what we can expect. >> alabama is one of the most conservative republican states in the country, so you have to assume whichever one wins the primary is the one to take the seat. democrats hope that more wins because they think their candidate will have a better chance. >> in the red state, it's going to be a long shot for democrats and the general election, so really, the battle for alabama's senate seat is not so much a battle between democrat and republican, but a battle among
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the various factions supporting president trump. >> jon: jonathan serrie, keeping us up-to-date from alabama. thank you. >> julie: a longtime lawyer for president trump behind closed doors on capitol hill, so what do senate investigators want to know from attorney michael cohen? plus republicans making a last-ditch effort to repeal obamacare with a new bill now being floated in the senate, when it's arty facing some tough opposition from both parties. our panel will weigh in. >> if there was summing that i thought was better to get west virginians a healthier and take care whether needs are right now, i'd be looking at it in any way possible and i've done that. i just don't see that pathway under the gramm/cassidy bill.
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>> this is not a repeal bill, this is been going to take obamacare, replace it with obamacare and will give states more power and how we spend it, but will keep the taxes and keep the spending. >> jon: that's republican senator rand paul saying he will vote no on the g.o.p.'s newest build to try to repeal obamacare saying it simply doesn't go far enough. senators lindsey graham bill cassidy are pushing that measure with replacing obamacare spending with states. vice president pence flying back to new york to support the measure which looks like the g.o.p. last shot at repealing
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obamacare. let's bring in john goodman. he likes the sound of the proposal -- he does not think much of this proposal. gentlemen, let's try to each make your best case without stepping all over each other. john, why do you think it will work and cure what ails obamacare? >> because under obamacare, there are a million people who are uninsured is going to stay that way for a long time because obamacare is trying to force them to buy insurance which is inappropriate for the health and financial condition. the workers at fast food restaurants all over the country are being told by their employers that if they want insurance, it's going to cost them 10% of their pay and $7,000 deductible. it won't cover their families
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unless it's a $13 deductible what this bill doesn't give the states and power to to liberate these people, with them use the obamacare money to subsidize group insurance which in these days is a lot better and a lot less expensive than the individual insurance. >> jon: do you disagree would work that way? >> i think all this is is a smaller version of obamacare. it takes obamacare and strips a lot of the money that goes to low income people and it hermetically reduces the cost and does a big shift from blue states to read, so i have a hard time understanding how republicans in new york and california are going to support this bill. most people in america would like to see a bipartisan bill. i think senator alexander and jackson are trying to being people together.
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most people say they're tired of the back-and-forth of one party to another and they would like to see alexander have his shot and getting a bipartisan bill done. >> jon: john, you mentioned that a lot of people are offering policies that are inappropriate to their medical needs. you're saying that young people are being forced under obamacare to buy insurance they don't need. >> young, healthy families are being forced to buy insurance with unlimited coverage, so if they have a 3 million dollar premature baby, the hospital gets the $3 million, but this party has a $13,000 deductible and insurance won't pay for 95% of everything happens to it. we need to do is let families decide what best meets their needs and sin of the government taking those decisions. >> jon: sticking with you for a moment, what do you say to auntie's points of this is a republican bill and it may be some kind of bipartisan solution that may be in order?
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>> i know senator cassidy has reached out a lot of democrats and there's no reason for democrats not to support a lot of these changes. for democrats to come on board, may be some small things would have to be changed, but we have to stop the debt spiral, we have to stop the race to the bottom of the quality where people don't have access to the best cancer doctors and the best cancer facilities and we have to stop trying to force a low income working families to buy insurance which is totally inappropriate for their station of life. >> jon: that is part of the problem. people throw these numbers around about millions of people who don't have insurance or wouldn't have insurance, but a lot of those people are people who are choosing not to buy it because they don't like the dea deal. >> americans say overwhelmingly that they don't want to go back to the days of swiss cheese policies. if we want to do it john says and strip out benefits, the only real benefits you can strip out to reduce the cost will be pharmacy.
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pharmacy is about 20% of the benefits. everything else in there are things like mental health, that people don't know if they're going to need, but they also are not very expensive. people want to know that when they get a policy, they can rely on it and senator alexander -- i think we should let senator alexander run with it and at the end of this if we get to a place where both parties are committed to making this thing better, will be better off. >> jon: single-payer is what democrats want. the government pays for everything, do you like that? >> idling us what we should be debating right now. i understand that there are certain democrats that would like to see us march towards universal coverage. there are not just the bill that came out, but senator brian schatz from hawaii and others who could release more moderate bills which would give people more options. i don't think the bill released
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from senator sanders is material right now. >> jon: john, you think this block to grant proposal is the way to go, at least for now. >> absolutely. we have a real problem with the race to the bottom. sidney answered and in houston is our best cancer treatment facility. our best facility takes no insurance and the obamacare exchange. this is a race to the bottom and what this bill will do as it doesn't require the states to turn this around, but it gives them the opportunity to liberate the market from very, very perverse incentives. >> jon: good discussion, we'll see with the senate decides on this proposal. john goodman, andy, thank you. >> julie: from capitol hill, the senate has decided to postpone questioning president ups attorney michael cohen after he read an opening saving behind closed doors to the panel
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investigating the inferiors and the 2016 election. catherine herridge is live on capitol hill to explain. >> thanks, julie. we are live the office building outside the intelligence committee meeting room where we were anticipating that the president's personal attorney michael: would meet with investigators for about three or four hours in the make out the announcement that the committee had shut down the meeting, they were postponing a question and answer session and in response to a question from fox news, go: >> what were you doing here today? >> i'll be back and i look forward to giving a full explanation. >> he was able to provide a four-page prepared statement for committee investigators and it reads in part, limit be clear
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that i am let me also say that i never saw anything but a hint of anything that demonstrated his involvement in russian interference in our election or any form of russian collusion. here's his attorney. speak out statement was factual, it was accurate, it was respectful and we stand behind that statement. >> fox news has contacted the committee leadership every public and senator richard burr as well as the raking democrat senator warner to ask them what was the basis for postponing the hearing that have been in the works for several weeks and as soon as we get that statement, we will bring it to you. >> julie: catherine herridge, thing you very much. >> jon: that massive aqua fax data breach affects nearly half of all americans, but it turns
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out it wasn't the first time the agency was hacked. what we are learning about another breach at equifax. in blade runner is behind bars for killing his girlfriend, so why do prosecutors now want the judge to extend his prison sentence? >> the sentence that i imposed on the accused will be murder of the deceased. six years imprisonment. whoooo.
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supreme court has agreed to hear their appeal of his sentence in november. the story -- he says he thought she was an intruder. >> jon: some new information now on the massive equifax hack. we learn to may not have been the first data breach at the agency. there are reports of a previous unrelated hack that first breached compromised personal information of more than 140 million americans. deidre bolton live in new york with more. >> some industry watchers were speculating that maybe that first hacked back in march was an attempt for hackers to see if they could get away with a second one, that big when you're just talking about that affected 40% of americans. equifax is saying that's not the case. what equifax is saying is after that march hackett, it hired an outside service equity firm which also was there to help
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with that may-july data theft and that's the big one. equifax says they looked into the details and found no evidence, as you stated, that the two hacks were related. it's worth noting that they have to climb to comment so far, so at this moment, we are taking equifax statement. the bigger picture is that this march hack showed more evidence that the equifax executives should have realized how vulnerable their company was. this hack also casts strong doubts on the claims of the three high-level execs who say they had no knowledge of the data breaches when they sold two main dollars worth of stock the summer. the experts say if you believe the three higher ranking executives didn't know about one breach, it is even less believable that they were unaware of two breaches. but a permanent justice has opened a criminal probe for possible insider trading at
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equifax. experts say that none of the data from either hack, the march hack or the much bigger summer one is on sale on any hacker forum. the hackers broke into equifax to get money exchange for all of our social security numbers, birth dates, names, addresses, all of that data would be floating around for sale. some experts see the lack of commercial activity as an instance that the state-sponsored group is behind that big may-july theft that affected 40 million americans. the theory is a hack that big and sophisticated must be the work of a governmental organization. >> jon: that's not exact the welcome news. what are people supposed to do? 140 million americans, that's a lot of folks. >> it certainly is pure and was really frustrating is in many cases, you didn't even sign up to be a customer of the equifax or any of its peers like trans union or experian and you apply for a car loan, chances are they
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have your data. you can go to the website of equifax if you think you've been affected and you for your credit. normally that takes money, a couple dollars per month, but rightly so, equifax is offering this credit freeze for free. i didn't yesterday, it was a relatively painless process, they give you a pin number that you have to then give back to them in three months' time when you're ready to unfreeze. under normal circumstances, you have to contact separately. it appears trans union and experian, it seems like it didn't work for me, but in some cases, they're offering to consumers to reach out to those other two peers to freeze your credit. that's the only way at this point americans can protect themselves. >> jon: they're asking you to trust them, which at this point -- >> it feels very spooky but you re-put in your social security number because the danger of this hack as we been talking
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about is basically your entire identity profile. it takes a lot to show you that you are you. >> jon: deidra bolton, thank you. >> julie: when we come back, why pruden is escaping u.n. meetings and why it's got some nato members uneasy. plus testimony on capitol hill following two naval collisions that left 17 u.s. sailors dead. jennifer griffin has a live report from the pentagon coming up. maybe, you could trust he wouldn't leave the upstairs water running. (woman screams) or, you could just trust duracell. ♪
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like any of these types of plans, they could save you in out-of-pocket medical costs. call unitedhealthcare insurance company today to request a free decision guide. with these types of plans you'll be able to visit any doctor or hospital that accepts medicare patients. join the millions who have already enrolled in the only medicare supplement insurance plans endorsed by aarp. and provided by unitedhealthcare insurance company, which has over 30 years of experience behind it. apply for a medicare supplement insurance plan any time you want. so don't wait. call unitedhealthcare now to request your free decision guide. >> sandra: coming up on "outnumbered," the president finishing up his first speech to the u.n. general assembly laying out his america first agenda and
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slamming north korea's rogue nuclear regime. now reaction pouring in, what supporters, critics, and the world is saying. >> harris: literally the world is talking. hillary clinton after expecting her seat, saying she would not rule out challenging the integrity of the election results. what does that mean? and why that has some democrats worried. >> sandra: i can't wait to hear what senator mike huckabee has to say about that. outnumbered at the top of the hour. >> julie: blood right. is probably the most notable absentee from the u.n. general assembly, opting instead to attend war games. a spokesman for the kremlin says he's skipping out and it should not raise any concern adding that putin has not always gathered at the general assembly. however some nato members have an uneasiness over moscow's intentions with these war games. the exercises expect it to run until wednesday in several areas
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throughout the nation. >> jon: the senate armed services committee today hearing major testimony from richard spencer and john richardson on collisions involving navy warships that resulted in the deaths of 17 sailors. jennifer griffin is monitoring and she's live now from the pentagon. >> that hearing is still ongoing, but just before the hearing began, fox news learned the outgoing head of the navy surface forces tom roden sent a new message to the fleet recommending all navy ships keep their automatic identification systems on while operating at a shipping lanes. while it would alert potential adversaries to the location, the system can force merchant ships on autopilot to change course. he also recommended getting rid of five hour watches in the navy and having better crew standing
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the same watch every day. the chief of naval operations admitted many sailors are working 100 hour work weeks. six navy leaders have now been fired after charles williams and jeff bennett were fired yesterday. williams is the commander of the navy's largest operational better for us. captain bennett was in charge of that destroyer squadron. angry lawmakers directed tough questions of the navy's top officer admiral john richardson asking why 17 sailors drowned into recent ship collisions during routine operations. he admitted that changes to training my people of the problem. in 2003, the navy closed its surface warfare schoolhouse. >> we thought we could achieve the aim entry and service junior officers with a computer-based approach combined with on-the-job training and we found
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that that was woefully inadequate. >> jon: >> both destroys or cabf shooting down north korean missiles. the decision to close the hatches, leaving some sailors to drown had left unthinkable psychological wounds within the navy. according to a government watchdog, one-third of all navy warships have expired. ten of the >> jon: what a sad chain of events. senator griffin, thank you. >> julie: knew next hour of speech 11, tough talks from president trump to u.n. general subway today can narrowly about north korea, but about iran as well. what will the israeli leader say when he speaks to the general assembly a little more than an hour from now? plus hurricane maria not pummeling the same areas irma literally just devastated.
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>> julie: will see you back here in an hour. >> jon: "outnumbered" stretch right now. >> sandra: fox news alert, not holding back. president trump lowering the boom on north korea's rocket man and his first address to the united nations general assembly. warning the u.s. is prepared to destroy the rogue nation. this is "outnumbered," i'm turner smith. here today, harris faulkner, cohost of after the bell on fox business, melissa francis, read adjust and fox news contributor lisa boothe and today's #oneluckyguy, the former governor from the great state of arkansas and fox news contributor mike huckabee is here and he is outnumbered. governor, welcome back and what a great day to have you. >> governor huckabee: is a terrific day and there's little bit of news going on. an amazing speech, i thought
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