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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  September 3, 2018 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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set himself last year. the veteran, a radio operator in world war ii has been diving 58 years and hopes to set a new record next year. hope he does, too, eboni. >> might as well. that does it for us. >> tropical storm gordon on the move after slamming south florida and the keys. the gulf coast now bracing for round two. forecasters say it could be near hurricane strength as it rolls ashore. on capitol hill a political storm brewing. lawmakers preparing to grill supreme court nominee, brett kavanaugh. everything, his stance on abortion to gun rights is fair game. already democrats are promising a lot of heat. a rare sit-down interview with retired general david petraeus about a hidden health hazard our troops endured in iraq. that's ahead on this hour of "shepard smith reporting."
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i'm leland vittert in for shepard smith. brett kavanaugh is ready for hours of tough questions. president trump nominated cavanaugh to fill anthony kennedy's seat in july. kennedy was a crucial swing vote on major issues including abortion and gay rights. right now the court is split four liberals, four conservatives. so cavanaugh could get the chance to give the conservatives a solid majority. but the president's pick has to get through the senate republican as they hold a razor thin majority and cannot afford to lose a single vote if democrats hold ranks and all vote no. that is a big if. republican senator lindsey graham says he thinks a handful
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of democrats will defect and vote to confirm cavanaugh. garrett tenney picking up the top story live in washington. let's talk about the questions first that judge kavanaugh might face first in the coming days. >> senate sources say that democrats will ask brett kavanaugh about his views from the separation of powers of the government to abortion, voting rights, workers rights and campaign finance reform. with the on going investigation by robert mueller into president trump and his campaign, both of the questions will revolve around presidential power since the high court could decide any challenges of that investigation. the goal of democrats is to try to derail the judge's confirmation either by forcing him to make a mistake or exposing something in his past. on the sunday shows, several top
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democrats said their smoking gun could be in the 100,000 pages of work related to the bush administration, which the white house is now claiming executive privilege over. >> they're suppressing these documents. if we're lucky, we'll see 6% of all of the documents that have been produced or could be produced to reflect on kavanaugh's true position on issues. >> i think that you could have some very interesting questions about these documents that i'm unable to say because i'm not able to make them public. >> lawmakers have received 500,000 pages related to the judge's record, more than any other supreme court nominee in history and another half million pages that senate staff have been pouring through. leland? >> things to be discussed, of course. what is judge kavanaugh doing to prepare the last couple weeks and the last weekend leading up to the hearings? >> a lot riding on this confirmation for judge kavanaugh and the white house.
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so over the last week, the 53-year-old judge has been going through intense mock hearings known as murder boards to prepare him for this week spending hours getting peppered with every question his team may face to make sure there's no slip-ups and to make sure lawmakers have no reason to vote against him. lindsey graham said he's expecting at least a few democrats will come around to judge kavanaugh. >> he will get my -- my belief is 55 or higher. he would be on the top of anyone's list. he's the one person that every republican president would see the most qualified of their generation. >> judge kavanaugh went through a brutal confirmation hearing when he went through the d.c. court of appeals. based on his performance then, administration officials say they're confident going into this week, leland. >> they call the prep sessions
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murder boards. garrett tenney in d.c. thank you. with that, we bring in david hawking, former senior editor for roll call. nice to see you. a foregone conclusion that kavanaugh is confirmed? >> pretty close to a foregone conclusion. there can be surprises in washington. this one is about as staged managed and orchestrated as it gets. unless -- the big surprise, the thing that would change that would have to be if at least one or two republicans changed their minds and went against kavanaugh. what lindsey graham was talking about is interesting. how many democrats will vote for him. there were three democrats that broke ranks and voted for neil cavuto a year ago. there's three of the democrats that are up for re-election this fall in overwhelmingly trump states. manchin of west virginia, donnelly of indiana and heitkamp of north dakota that will be
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interesting to watch. the only drama would be is if a susan collins or lisa murkowski went against him and there's no indication that will happen. >> especially with murkowski and collins, it comes down to roe v. wade. the general talking point from republicans is kavanaugh believes roe v. wade is settled law. there forethat murkowski and collins go with it. but many say kavanaugh is tough, the hard-nosed individualized one that we believe in. can we have it both ways? can both things be true? >> they can for the purposes of this confirmation hearing. and then brett kavanaugh's 53 years old. that means he's going to be on the supreme court his health willing and interest in the job long after you and i have probably retired. a lot can happen in those years.
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the thing about settled law, legal scholars say that's a bit of a trick answer. sort of -- settled law is saying it's done until it's not done. it's settled unless they want to re-visit. the real answer that they're looking for and the democrats will try to get him to say is was that a -- was it correctly decided? that's a different question than is it settled law. right now it's settled law. that doesn't mean that brett kavanaugh when he gets on the court could resettle it a different way. >> imagine a lawyer giving a trick answer to a question. never happened before. you put this in the political context though. how important is this for republicans in the run up to the mid-term? >> oh, it's the whole ball game, really. this is going to be the most consequential thing this republican congress does this election year. as you said at the top of the hour, and you said a minute ago, brett kavanaugh really appeals to the base. one of the reasons that the
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republican conservative base stuck with donald trump in 2016 when donald trump was not all that consistently conservative in his views was that he made very clear that he would appoint conservative judges. if they get this guy on the court, donald trump will have fulfilled his promise not once but twice. he will have done his bidding on this twice and be a huge win. we should note that it's very different than when donald trump was running for president. back then, the democrats had filibuster powers over these things. now they don't have filibuster power anymore over these judges. so it can be a party line muscular all-republican move that they can boast about. >> certainly the arm-twisting has been going on all summer over murkowski, collins and we know senator rand paul got a little hard sell on this one. all right. appreciate your time, sir. thank you as always, especially
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on a labor day. >> thank you, leland. >> we have seen these confirmation hearings before with lawmakers grilling the supreme court nominee. our senior capitol hill producer chad pergram explains the hearings themselves are relatively new to their democracy. >> you won't find the words confirmation hearing anywhere in the u.s. constitution. the constitution gives the president the right to nominate whoever he wants and up to provide the senate advice and consent. there's nothing in the constitution about forking over reams of paperwork about the nominee. nothing about paying courtesy calls with senators. a requirement for an up or down vote. the senate never held any hearings until 1916. louis brandice was the nominee. the supreme court had a nominee
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in 1925 with judge stone. frankfurter showed up to listen but refused to speak. the first modern confirmation hearing was in 1955 for judge harland. every supreme court nominee since then has fielded questions. television honored in a new model. it culminated in october 1991 with dramatic wall-to-wall televised hearings for clarence thomas. anita hill accused him of sexual harassment. cbs debated whether or not to show the baseball games or the hearings. cbs showed the hearings and the ratings soared. chad pergram, fox news. >> the president is going on a tweeting spree. in just the last few minutes, he's going after republicans whom he picked for his own
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cabinet. president trump's latest shot at jeff sessions next. these digestive issues can start in the colon and may be signs of an imbalance of good bacteria. phillips' colon health caps have this unique combination of probiotics to help replenish good bacteria. get four-in-one symptom defense. also try our delicious new probiotic gummies.
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>> leland: president trump at the white house this labor day. minutes ago launching new att k attacks on jeff sessions. he says that jeff sessions is to blame for a couple republican
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lawmakers running into legal trouble. peter doocy live at the white house. hi, peter. >> the president is lashing out at jeff sessions because of recent cases brought against two members of congress. chris collins from new york and duncan hunter of california. the president writes this about the potential political impact. he says two long-running obama era investigations of two popular congressmen were brought to a well-publicized charge ahead of the mid-terms by the jeff sessions justice department. two easy wins now in doubt because there's not enough time. good job, jeff. the president has said that sessions will stay at the doj until after the mid-term. something else on the president's mind, he's pushing back at the head of the aflcia, richard trumpka after he said that the president's plan to cut canada out of nafta work head workers. the president said that richard
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trumpka represented his union poorly on television. some of the things he said were so against the working men and women of our country and the success of the u.s. itself that it's easy to see why unions are doing so poorly. a dem. it appears the president caught a clip of this trumpka interview. >> our economies are integrated. it's hard to see how that would work without having canada in the deal. >> but trumpka does seem to agree with the president that nafta can be improved upon. leland? >> leland: so what is the latest on the trade talks with canada? >> president trump wants the u.s. congress the stay out of those talks. we got a warning where he says there's no political necessity to keep canada in the deal. canada will be out after abuse. congress shouldn't interfere with the negotiations or i will terminate nafta entirely and we will be far better off.
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the president has already struck a new trade deal with mexico. as for the canadians, they aren't tipping their hand as to whether or not comments like that are bringing the u.s. closer or pushing them further apart. >> i'm not going to negotiate in public. what i will say is the negotiations with canada are not complete. we continue to negotiate with the united states. so that is why we're coming back next wednesday. we're going to continue to talk until we reach a good deal. >> today the president emerged from the white house residence in golf clothes. he walked towards the motorcade. before he got in, he turned around and he never left. we asked the white house about it. they said it was so the president could concentrate on calls related to trade and other issues. leland? >> leland: you have to look at all of this in terms of how the
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mid-terms shape up and the president makes his closing arguments. any ideas on what the next two months for the president looks like for mid-term travel and for trying to stump for republicans? >> yeah, he plans to travel a lot. multiple day as week, particularly in states that he won where there are democrats currently representing that state in the u.s. senate. so expect more trips to west virginia, indiana, north dakota and montana as the president tries to get his base excited about things that he has going on that are not focused on so much here in the beltway. leland? >> leland: yeah. the president wants to talk about the economy. perhaps michigan and missouri to that list as well. more with the political panel, peter. more on this, too. just two months to go before voters decide whether political party will control congress. democrats are already putting out a playbook for next year. so will it sway anybody either way?
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we'll take a look at their sales pitch-and-run it by our political panel. with uncontrolled moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis, you never know how your skin will look. and it can feel like no matter what you do, you're itching all the time. but even though you see and feel your eczema on the surface of your skin, an overly sensitive immune system deep within your skin might actually be causing your eczema. so help heal your skin from within. with dupixent. dupixent is not a steroid, and it continuously treats your eczema even when you can't see it. at 16 weeks, more than 1 in 3 patients saw clear or almost clear skin, and patients saw a significant reduction in itch. do not use if you are allergic to dupixent. serious allergic reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you have new or worsening eye problems, including eye pain or changes in vision. if you have asthma, and are taking asthma medicines do not change or stop your asthma medicine
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brian's back? he doesn't get my room. he's only going to be here for like a week. like a month, tops. oh boy. wi-fi fast enough for the whole family is simple, easy, awesome. in many cultures, young men would stay with their families until their 40's. >> leland: the sprint to the mid-terms kicks off tomorrow. we're getting a glimpse of the sales pitch democrats have been cooking up for voters on what they will do if they take control of the house. axios reports nancy pelosi is behind the new platform known as "for the people." according to axios, democrats will promise to lower the cost of healthcare and prescription drugs. there's also a $1 trillion
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infrastructure plan and to crack down on lobbying. we have alana with us roger. roger, start with you. is this a nancy pelosi version of gingrich's contract with america? >> i think it's important to have a unifying overall message. the difference between the contract with on america and this particular cycle is the democrats are allowing the districts to drive the look and feel of the races. they're letting those local candidates run in a way that really fit and speaks to and listens to the voters. it's not a top down we know what is right kind of approach. it's a binding kind of harmonic legislative vision, but still leaving room for local candidates to run local races. >> alana, you think about how
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republicans can spin this as we look at the bullet points. any time you want to talk about healthcare, republicans will say that is medicare for all, socialized medicine. $1 trillion in infrastructure spending. o.g., another way to pour money into shovel-ready programs that don't exist. and pointing to the fact that you have nancy pelosi, steny hoyer and john cornyn, their combined ages of that of the republic. so is this sort of a dream for republicans? >> i think it is a good opportunity for republicans because it shows that this plan is no different than what they've done in the past. they're talking about cutting costs in healthcare and reforming healthcare. they had eight years to do that and it was disastrous. look at the problems we have from when they were in power. they don't have any new ideas to
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help us. they talk about getting rid of lobbying and corruption. they're just as guilty of it as they have ever been. so i don't think either one of these ideas is that effective. >> leland: correction there. nancy pelosi, steny hoyer and joe crowley. is this a risk for democrats to be painted so progressively as these talking points allow? >> no, it's not. you can look at the obama cabinet that was involved in for both administrations. there was nothing near the corruption that we've seen from the pruitts and the zenkes, the people in this cabinet. nothing within 1,000 miles of it. frankly, anyone that had the issues of these cabinet members have had, for example, secretary devos never would have passed the intern vetting so the
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compare the obama cabinet and the trump cabinet are apples and oranges. >> leland: we'll get alana in on that. what is the defense when you start seeing the ads about pruitt and his private jets, price and his private jets, zenke and his professional behavior what is the promise to drain the swamp? >> we are draining the swamp in a lot of ways. you see a lot of this behavior in both parties. you look at not necessarily the cabinet of obama, but you look at other democrat leadership, senate leadership. they do the same things and they've been called out on it. look at claire mccaskill and the terrible things she's done with her own travel. you might not have that directly or have not been exposed in obama's particular administration, but i think this happens on both sides.
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>> leland: certainly though there are republicans from conceivably dark red places that are at least perhaps in trouble. ted cruz, which won texas by 16 points in 2012, now the president is promising to campaign for him, this is the a.p. quote from the profile on beto o'rourke. roger, you think about his platform positions. gun control. he supports players that took a knee. that don't go over well in texas. medicare for all. is he running on a national platform for 2020 or is he running in texas? >> i think it's very clear that he's running in texas. he spent the last 35 days doing 100 events around texas. whereas his opponent, senator cruz, hasn't had even a fraction of that number of events. neither has he made them open to the public or the press.
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so he's very much running as a texan. i think he has a great case to be made. he's optimistic, he's forward-looking. he's being very transparent about what his agenda is. he's not trying to play it cute as if he's trying to sneak an agenda by a red state. he's very transparent. >> leland: alana, something for republicans to exploit? >> absolutely. it does appeal more to a national race. i don't think this is texas at all. i lived in texas for many years. texans are patriotic for their country. they see a person that is not relating to them as a texan. i think -- >> leland: conceivably beto o'rourke is coming up fast enough that president trump has to go for a rally. >> i'm sorry. >> leland: conceivably beto o'rourke is gaining enough that president trump has to go down
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there for a rally. >> you know, cruz is smarting in doing that. these races are competitive and you shouldn't take any of them for grants. it's still a good idea trump is going down there. >> someone is getting an interesting bit of support from president trump. a tweet in the president just in the past couple minutes. i see that john kerry, the father of the now terminated iran deal, is thinking of running for president. i should only be so lucky. the field currently assembling looks really good, capital letters, "for me." >> my 20s and 30s were spent working for john kerry. i'm proud of that. and then i worked with barack obama. john kerry has a lot to offer. he's been part of public life for a long time. he was chair of the senate foreign relations committee. he has personal relationships with world leaders. he's led on many domestic issues. he deserves to be part of that conversation just as anyone else does. >> alana, do republicans wish
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that they just kept bringing back more of the old democratic nominees, biden, hillary and kerry? >> that would be par for the course. they brought those candidates back before. didn't work. the country is even more to the right, more to the left than it used to be. we're even more divided. you bring somebody in like kerry who has been in the media, been in the spotlight. it's not going to work for them. they need a candidate like barack obama to come around. i don't think that is john kerry. >> leland: now people are comparing beto o'rourke to barack obama. so history seems to rhyme, not repeat itself in the words of mark twain. we bring the conversation to a close. thanks. coming up ahead, a u.s. service member dead in afghanistan. the pentagon now calling it an insider attack. first, a hurricane watch on the gulf coast. the very latest on tropical
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for what you love most. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪ >> leland: tropical storm gordon taking aim at the gulf coast. meteorologists say they expect it to slam into the shoreline not once but twice. gordon right now off the west coast of south florida. it made landfall near the southern tip of the sunshine state this morning. rain drenching some areas on the labor day holiday. this video from miami's south beach. forecasters say tropical storm gordon is moving quickly in the gulf of mexico and will grow stronger making second landfall near the louisiana-mississippi border sometime tomorrow. a look at some of the storms, warnings and watches out right now. forecasters telling people to watch out for flooding, strong winds and with so many storms possible tornadoes.
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cops in california said a man pulled out a gun outside an ice cube concert was angry he couldn't get tickets to the performance. this happened in delmar outside of san diego. deputies returned fire and injured the suspect. jeff paul is live with more. this is a popular concert, i guess? >> yeah, with it being the holiday weekend, the delmar fair grounds were packed. some people captured video of the gun fire. all of this happening when there was a race going on as the nearby horse race track. >> there's gun fire at the track! >> now, this is video of the suspect. 22-year-old daniel herrera. after he was told there were no more tickets for the ice cube show, he started an argument. the sheriff's department responded at some point they say
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the suspect raced a silver plated semiautomatic handgun. deputies returned fire and ending the situation before anybody got hurt. >> we hear one shot go off and everyone is talking. right there, dead in its tracks, the conversation stops. the next thing you know, pow, pow, pow! six or seven shots back to back. it was terrifying. everybody was hiding behind stuff. >> the ice cube show went on as planned. investigators say the suspect is expected to survive. the last day of the race is at delmar today and will go on as scheduled. leland? >> leland: jeff paul in los angeles. thank you. a u.s. service member killed in afghanistan in what is described as an insider attack. lucas tomlinson has more. >> it's the second time in two months a u.s. service member has been killed likely by the same afghan forces he was supposed to protect. this time in eastern
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afghanistan. u.s. officials say the wounded service member is in stable condition with nonlife threatening injuries. six u.s. troops have been killed in afghanistan this year. in a statement announcing the latest casualty, the new u.s. head of forces in afghanistan says the service member that volunteered his service has suffered a tragic loss. the mission is now stretched for two decades. yesterday general scott miller is the former head of special operations command responsible for leading elite commando units, delta force, seal team six. the alleged insider attacks comes one day after miller took command. >> the world recognizes that afghanistan cannot be a safe haven for terrorism. the world recognizes we cannot
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fail. i know this has been a long fight and it has been generational. >> today 15,000 american troops remain. down from a high of over 100,000 during the obama administration. so far from the first half of this year, over 3,500 bombs have been dropped across afghanistan against the taliban and an isis affiliate. more than double the number from the same period a year ago and more than five times from the same period in 2016. >> leland: america's longest war continues. thanks. former defense secretary leon panetta says he's concerned about north korea months after the president's historic meeting with dictator kim jong-un. >> i'm very worried about the situation. frankly, i think we have a failed summit on our hands right now. there's a long list of failed efforts throughout history. this may be another one of those. >> panetta said the summit was
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doomed failure because it was all about show and the proper prep work wasn't done. last week the president said he cancelled mike pompeo's trip to north korea because pyongyang had not made enough progress towards getting rid of their nuclear weapons. in july, you might remember, president trump said that great progress was being made. gordon chang here, author of "nuclear show down, north korea takes on the world." almost feels like deja vu all over again. great fanfare by the clinton administration, the bush administration and the obama administration of progress with north korea. and now boom. >> yeah, goes back to the administration of george h.w. bush that talked about basically trying to get rid of the nukes and safe guards agreement with the international atomic energy agency. this goes back a number of administrations, which have made mistakes. president trump is making new mistakes. the one thing that you can say
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is, he's been the first president in a very long time to put north korea at the top of the list of priorities. he gets credit for that. you have to remember, we've had eight years with the strategic patience where they tried to forget about north korea because they were more concerned about iran. actually, should have been the other way around. they should have been more concerned about north korea rather than the ayatollahs. >> you listen to the administration and president trump, yeah, there's not been enough progress but there's no new tests or any missile tests for a while. is that a success? >> it is somewhat of a success. we have to remember that back in the bach administration and the bush administration before that, there were long-periods of no new tests, no missile tests. what needs to be seen is dismantlement of the nuclear program. kim jong-un has to make a decision to give up his weapons. what president trump tried to do is create this friendly atmosphere so kim would feel
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secure enough to give up his weapons. this was the one shot opportunity that president trump said he would give kim. he's given him that. now he needs to go back to maximum pressure. >> leland: you say to go back to maximum pressure. listen to the administration. they say it never ended. we're still doing it. we haven't lost anything. >> at the end of may, they let off on the north koreans. that's when we didn't sanction 36 front companies of russian and chinese and other origins. kim changes his front companies all the time, leland. if you don't go after the new ones, you're giving them complete sanctions relief. also, we allowed the chinese and russians to violate sanctions. it got so bad, the south koreans got in on the act, too. it was open season on the u.s. sanction. >> open season, open season for the north koreas to have the boot off of their neck and get more fends. >> correct. >> leland: take a look at the main players. you have putin and abe of japan
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and the president of south korea. we're at the beginning of september now. u.n. general assembly is a couple weeks away. how important are all of those leaders coming together in one room? >> i think it's important, but we've got to make sure that president trump puts the pressure on them. it's not just our adversarieadv. it's president moon. he wants to get more money in the hands of the north koreans. his most recent initiative is a sanctions violation. it's to open up a liaison in the dmz. the trump administration has been leaning on him but we have to do more. >> it seems as if the chinese are using this as an opportunity. >> stick it to up. >> leland: thanks, gorden.
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tens of thousands of military personnel are getting sick because the military burned trash close to where they slept. we sat down with retired general petraeus one-on-one with one of the people that was in charge while all of this was happening. interview next. what does help for heart failure look like? ♪ the beat goes on. it looks like emily cooking dinner for ten. ♪ the beat goes on. it looks like jonathan on a date with his wife. ♪ la-di-la-di. entresto is a heart failure medicine that helps your heart... so you can keep on doing what you love. in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. it helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb.
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so you can... breathe easy, there's therabreath at walmart. >> leland: welcome back. more than 140,000 active and retired u.s. service members are now claiming that exposure to toxins from burn pits made them sick. some military bases in the middle east used the massive open-air pits to burn trash like chemicals and medical waste. we just sat down with the man that was in charged while this was happening. so what does david petraeus have to say? >> leland, as you say, general petraeus dedicated years of his life to the wars in iraq and
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afghanistan. he returned to lead the surge in iraq. he recalls what troops were dealing with while deployed during the wars and what it was like seeing the burn pits first hand. take a listen. >> in 2007, general david petraeus took hold of the coalition forces in iraq. to defeat the enemy, he launched robust counter insurgency campaign. there was another threat. exposure to burn pits. >> at that time we weren't worried about burn pits. we were worried about getting enough water for the troops in the hot summer. we were looking forward to the time where we might get real food. >> the general recalls how burn pits were used on military bases to crudely incinerate everything from trash to medical waste. early in the war, even human
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waste. >> as you and i know, burn puts were used to dispose of chemical solvents, medical waste, human waste. all of this was thrown into these. sounds like you were aware of this while you were in command and something that had to be done. >> it was something that had to be done for a long period of time. a certain point, it set in that perhaps there's a better way of doing it. a number of us surfaced the issues. incinerators were brought in. there were problems that getting them to work. >> i know you're aware of the huge number of veterans that believe that after being exposed to burn pits, they became sick. many of their claims have been denied by the v.a. a lot of them said the same thing. they don't regret the service their did for the country but now they feel like they're being abandoned by the government. what should be done to address the concerns now? >> we should meet our obligation to our veterans, this and many other cases as well. it's an issue of trying to
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determine with some degree of scientific rigor was there an effect because of the exposure to the smoke from the burn pits. if so, again what are the symptoms of that. what can we do to mitigate the risk of what could transpire from this. >> general petraeus has thrown his support behind the campaign to improve assistance to veterans. he backed the burn pit accountability act. in the letter he writes "i know that you share the sense of obligation that virtually all americans have to those that have stepped forward pat a time of war." leland, i worked with our investigative unit, one of our producers and i have an article on foxnews.com that goes in depth to the issue. we've heard from the veterans and the issue is ongoing and they're still being exposed to
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burn pits. >> leah, thanks so much. great reporting. ahead, scientists say there's been more shark sightings this year. it's true. be afraid! in some parts of the northeast. but this shark boom isn't bad for business. we'll explain that next. come here, babe. ok. nasty nighttime heartburn?
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>> leland: a labor day weekend and we're glad you're watching tv with us rather than say in the ocean. especially here in the northeast. last month massachusetts had its first unprovoked shark attack since 2012. that happening off of cape cod. shark sightings in that area on the rise. scientists say one reason is the growing seal population. laura ingle here to explain.
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first things first. what is the latest on the man that was attacked and somehow survived? >> this was a brutal attack. it's a miracle that this man is alive. he's still in the hospital in massachusetts. good news. he's rehabbing right now and able to talk about the frightening ordeal. listen. >> this shark is actually trying to turn me over. so a lot of whitewater thrashing. as a resulting the whole head of the shark is above water. my arm was above water. i was able to get a good smash on the gil. >> yeah, remember this advice from the old days. bob them in the nose, get them in the gills. a 61-year-old was bitten in his arm and torso in massachusetts. he was airlifted to a boston hospital. he's gone through eight surgeries and has more expected. so far in 2018 according to tracking shark.com, there's been
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three shark attacks. in 2017, there was one shark white in the region. shark attacks are very rare. you're 47 times more likely to die of a lightning strike than a shark attack. this is the first shark attack in massachusetts since 2012. still, it happened and makes us all leery about going in the water. >> leland: sharks are more fun to talk about. in cape cod, how are they handling this? people want to be on the beach? >> yeah, but it affects in a way you might not expect. businesses are embracing what has happened in massachusetts. businesses are selling things like shark t-shirts, souvenirs, shark-themed ice cream. i spoke to one hotel where
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guests can charter a private vote and they can watch the sharks get tagged in the water. you can pay to do this and follow along from the safety of a bait. >> leland: you'd have to pay me for that. thanks very much, laura. appreciate it. coming ahead from the shoreline to outer space. nasa scientists waiting for one of their veteran rovers to phone home. to most people, i look like... ...most people. but on the inside, i feel chronic, widespread pain. fibromyalgia may be invisible to others, but my pain is real. fibromyalgia is thought to be caused by overactive nerves. lyrica is believed to calm these nerves. i'm glad my doctor prescribed lyrica. for some, lyrica delivers effective relief from fibromyalgia pain... ...and improves function. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worse depression, unusual changes in mood or behavior, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives,
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blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or blurry vision. common side effects: dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain, swelling of hands, legs, and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. with less pain, i can do more. ask your doctor about lyrica. if you're eligible, you could pay as little as $25 a month.
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suffer from a heart attack.s it can happen anywhere, anytime. but during a suspected heart attack, immediately calling 911 and chewing bayer aspirin can help save a life. carry bayer aspirin. help save a life. >> leland: in space, a race for nasa's longest living rover on mars to phone home. scientists have set a deadline to hear back from the opportunity rover. it's been exploring mars for 15 years. nasa lost contact with the rover in june after a massive duststorm surrounded the red planet. once the dust clears, the rover will have 45 days to respond to pings, otherwise nasa will stop trying to make contact with the
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rover. meantime, you can try to help the rover wake up by sending it a postcard at mars.nasa.gov. i'm leland vittert in for shepard smith. "your world" with charles payne. >> two months through the mid-terms and as the battle over capitollism is heating up, is your money at risk? the economy is going gang busters. growth up to 4.2%. but with more democrats pushing socialist ideas, are we looking at bigger taxes? bernie sanders calling for a 40% hike in the corporate tax rate. he will face ron desantis who supports tax cuts. all of this as the fox news poll shows 46% of registere