tv Fox News Live FOX News October 9, 2021 1:00pm-2:00pm PDT
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and kim foxx didn't bring charges saying they were involved in mutual combat. this is not a video game. paul: if you have your own hit or miss, tweet it to us. thanks to my panel, thanks to all of you for watching. i'm paul gigot. see you next week. sean: following three big stories this hour. let's begin with the humanitarian cry signs our southern border. mexican officials stopping three trucks filled with migrants. kamala harris is taking heat for not i terning the shy stakes meeting yesterday. but antony he blinken did. i'm eric shawn.
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hi, arthel. arthel: we are also monitoring two other big stories. president biden blaming the pandemic for a hugely disappointing jobs report. the economy added fewer man 200,000 jobs in september. it's less than half of what was forecast. prices keep rising and supply chain disruptions continue. there are new details in the gabby petito search. they are getting help in the search for her fiance brian laundrie. mark meredith in wilmington, delaware where the president is spending the weekend. but first bill melugin who is live in texas with the latest migrant surge. >> migrants from 150 countries
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from around the world have been apprehended at our southern border. they are doing pretty much anything they can to try to get here. take a look at this video, 650 migrants were apprehended as they were being smuggled in shipping containers in several trucks. the mexican national guard heard talking inside the containers so they did an x-ray. there were 198 unaccompanied children being smuggled. those are children who made the journey completely alone. all those trucks headed right here to the u.s. border. take a look at this video. we embedded with republican senator marsha blackburn. she was doing a ride along with the border patrol. they were going to the hotpots
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where we see family units crossing. they off be give themselves up because they believe under the biden administration they will likely be released into the country. she didn't mince any words. >> the border patrol will tell you they want to do their job. but we have an administration that is tying their hands and basically saying no we don't think we want you to do that. >> right thousand we are in la jolla, texas. hundreds of family units here every single day. you are looking at the incomplete border wall. it started to be built under donald trump's presidency. it's not going to be built any
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further. dhs announced they are canceling all border wall contracts. they believe the wall is ineffective. they don't believe in the wall. they want congress to find quote smarter ways to secure the border. all that scrap metal out there won't be used even though taxpayers are still on the hook for it. sean: president biden is trying to put a positive view on the dismal jobs report. the economy added 190,000 jobs far below the 500,000 analysts expected. inflation fears and supply chain shortages are rattling the economy and some say bringing down the president's numbers. reporter: president biden says
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the latest jobs report is proof that the government will have to spend a lot of money if they want to jump-start the economy. but republicans are arguing just the opposite. it could crush future economic growth if they spend more money. the latest jobs report shows 190,000 jobs were added in september. far fewer than the 500,000 that were expected to be added that month. house any north leader kevin mccarthy said democrats turned the economic resurgence coming out of the pandemic into a downturn. it's unclear how much of the in-fighting is impacting the president's poll numbers. it's not great news for the
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president when you look at his poll numbers. quinnipiac shows 38% approving, 53% disapproving of the president's job performance so far. this could be bad news for the democrats going into next year's election. mid-term elections are already usually tough for the incoming party. he says for the party to move forward they will have to get on the same page. >> we need to stay unified in -- in 2022. the question the american people will be asking is are we helping them in a substantial way. can we deliver for them. reporter: we are not expecting
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the president to hold any events while he's in wilmington. arthel: gabby petito's ex-boyfriend still nowhere to be found three weeks after his parents reported him missing. crews looking for him in at swampy reserve say the receding water is helping the search. steve harrigan is in north port beach. reporter: much of the manhunt for brian laundrie has taken place at the nature preserve 10 miles from here. the water is receding. it's really a home for water moccasins as well as alligators. 80 miles of hikable terrain. authorities say there has been no sighting of -- of laundrie
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and no campsites spotted either. this neighborhood has gotten tremendous attention over the past almost four weeks now since this event became a national and international story. yesterday there was a plane flying overhead with the banner calling for justice for gabby. there have been makeshift memorials popping up across the city. the largest one will be taken down tuesday. >> by the grace of god we haven't had a severe storm to destroy it or scatter it. it's the rainfall like we are having right now that is deteriorating the thing. reporter: gabby's family is working with officials to set up a more permanent memorial in the days ahead.
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sean: for more on the search for brian laundrie. let's bring in former homicide detective ted williams. brian father chris is apparently helping cops in the preserve nature trails. does that mean anything? >> i question that portion of the search, eric. you are bringing the far it in three weeks later and he will -- you are bringing the father in three weeks later and he's going to show you certain trails? when i heard he was going to in the preserve, are they going to give him a megaphone and holler brian, come out? if brian is in that reserve, is he alive. as you have been reporting, there are all sorts of
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alligators, water moccasins. i'm from louisiana, i can tell you a water moccasin is one of the most poisonous snakes in this country. sean: do you think this is a red herring by the family and maybe he's on the appalachian trail or skipped the country. >> he could be anywhere. we have had several individuals who believe that they have seen brian. but just think about it. when a virus atmosphere at this time, so you have a lot of people wearing a mask. it's more likely than not if brian is out there he will be wearing a mask. sean: that wouldn't be suspicious in this day and age. a lot of questions about the
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laundrie family, cooperating with police and having a lawyer there when the police showed up. what's interesting is the car. brian supposedly drives to the site. then a few days later the family goes and gets the car. if he was in there, wouldn't you leave the car thinking maybe he could come back out and use the car? what's behind that? >> you know, eric, that to me sounds terribly ridiculous. you reported him missing to the police four or five days later. you go to the carlton reserve. you find the car, you leave the car, you come back later and pick the car up and there is no brian. there is something smelly about that. i would have to believe the family know more than they have told about brian going missing. >> as for gabby's family, laura
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engel did an interview with gabby's family and the mother said she believes brian is still alive. do we have that? i guess we don't have that. maybe not. in the clip, nicole schmidt who is gabby's mother said she does believe brian is still alive. >> it's more likely than not that he's alive. if he's in that reserve, one of the things you have is buzzards. it's been very hot in that reserve. and they are able to pick up a dead squirrel. they could pick up a dead body
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in that reserve. it's unlikely he's alive in that reserve in light of the fact of all the animals in that reserve. sean: nicole, gabby's mother, let's listen to what she says. >> i am not certain but i'm anything he's in the appalachian trail or a campgrounds where he can live off the lands base had those skills. >> do you believe he's alive and in the country? >> i believe he's alive. but i have no idea. sean: what type challenges for law enforcement if you have these survival skills, you can be out in the wilderness. you can have nose provisions to -- those provisions toy live off the lands. >> those are tremendous challenges to overcome. if he's in one of these campsites and he knows what he's
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doing. he can survive there for some time. but i believe if anything he's probably with a relative or friends if he's alive. i don't think that he could survivor even though i understand he may have some skills in some of these various areas for so long. sean: he will probably somehow make a mistake at some point it seems they so often do. how do you think this will play out? >> i think you are absolutely right. if he is alive it's more likely than not that sooner or later he will contact with family members and i'm sure the fbi is focused on some of these family members. and i think he will be caught soon were rather than later if he's alive. sean: gabby's family says he should give himself up.
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hopefully there will be justice. ted williams, always good to see you. arthel: the family of a missing new jersey woman, therm renewing calls to find the missing woman. she was last seen june 2 state walking away from her home in yucca. she was staying in an airbnb with family and her former boy friends. and 27-year-old raja mcqueen. security cameras show a bullet hole in the door of her car on june 26, the day she went missing. police in fewland -- in fruitland, oregon say they got information from a witness about
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a car that could be helpful with the timeline in the case. eric: we must pray and think all the missing. coming up next on fox news, one day after that deadly suicide bombing in afghanistan. u.s. officials are meeting in qatar. a live report on any progress straight ahead. hi susan! honey? yeah? i respect that. but that cough looks pretty bad... try this robitussin honey. the real honey you love... plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? now get powerful relief with robitussin elderberry. (judith) in this market, you'll find fisher investments is
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sean: china's president xi jinping called for a quote peaceful reunification with taiwan which beijing considers a breakaway province. that's after the chinese air force sent bombers and fighter jets into the taiwan defense zone. the democratic island has been beefing up its defense. officials say the, a sovereign democratically elected nation and they angrily reject
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beijing's. arthel: that qatar officials are meeting about containing extremist groups in afghanistan. this is the first such meeting after the u.s. with withdraw from afghanistan. this comes after a bombing in a mosque north of london. reporter: they planned to go ahead to discuss the latest on evacuations before the bombing happened. but this brought the issue of isis extremists to the forefront and whether the taliban regime can get a grip on the extremists and keep them under control. it killed at least 46 people. they had been attending prayers in a busy mosque there.
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more than 100 people were injured in that attack. the taliban insists it can take on isis insurgents and it's telling the u.s. it won't cooperate in a joint effort to tackle the problem. they claim to have carried on an operation. in the past it was u.s. airstrikes that kept the extremists under some kind of control. but as part of the doha peace deal the u.s. agreed not to initiate attacks on its soil. there are serious questions emerging about how much influence the taliban would really have. there are fears there could be more violence ahead if the extremists take advantage of the fact that nato troops have
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withdrawn from the country. sean: more and more store shelves seem to be empty with cargo ships waiting offshore and in some cases unable to dock. supply chain problems pushing prices higher. remember the 1970s? some fear that could happen again. what this means for your pocketbook and politics straight ahead.
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arthel: here is a look at some top stories we are following for you. a court reinstates the fetal heartbeat abortion ban in texas. it outlaws abortions once physicians can detect a fetal heartbeat. three wealthy parents are accused of buying their children's way into school. they were found guilty after a jury in boston deliberated for 10 hours. california governor gavin newsom signed a bill that will require high school students to complete
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an ethics studies course to graduate. some critics are against the move. sean: investigators say the ruptured pipeline in california leaked tens of this to of gallons of oil on to the beaches. now it may have been damaged months before the spill. claudia? reporter: this oil pipeline disaster appears to have been months in the making with the anchors of numerous cargo ships causing it to crack spilling thousands of gallons of heavy crude. the pipeline just off huntington beach was likely snagged by a cargo ship. and other anchors may have
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struck the pipe later drag it along the sea floor causing a rupture sending oil into the ocean and on to california's beaches. >> it has deflected 105 feet over the course of a year. >> experts identified a 13-inch crack they believe may have allowed oil to slowly trickle out under low pressure without triggering a shutdown. the beaches have been spared a potential catastrophe but the impact on an malls isn't known. the total amount spilled is a bit of a question mark. the coast guard says it's
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somewhere between 25,000 up to 30,000 gallons. all those hundreds and hundreds of barrels are unlikely to be recovered. eric: we are thankful it wasn't worse. arthel: it's a 1-2 punch mitting --hitting the economy. the shortages are fueling higher prices we are seeing on store shelves. add it up and economists are warning about the potential return of stagflation. here to explain, john busy from the "wall street journal." if there is a slowdown in the global economy and inflation you end up with stagflation. are we there yet and what does that mean to the folks listening to it. >> that's right. you saw it in the late 1960s
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into the 70s and the early 80s before there was an attack by the fed on inflation and they brought it to heel which caused a recession in the 1980s. the economy fund amount alley is pretty health -- fundamentally is pretty healthy. there is a lot of household wealth that has stacked up and a lot of desire to buy goods. but the virus is still causing disjunctures around the world. you are seeing factories shut down temporarily in asia that make microchips what other products. you can't get raw materials. this is resulting in all sorts
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of disjunctures. so when you have demand, people are willing to bid on short supply, and you get inflation, a rise in prices. >> you have that part of the predicament that you just outlined for us. but also, you have got labor shortages. is it that people are having a change of heart about what they do for a living. how much they are getting paid doing it? and are we too dependent on the made in china label and elsewhere in asia. is it a combination of some of this or all of it? >> it's have much a combination. in the labor force you are seeing some women not get back into the labor force. they are concerned about childcare at home. they may have kids they can't put back in school because of the coronavirus. you saw some boomers say i think
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we'll retire early. if they had spurred early retirement, they never came back into the workforce. eric referred earlier about the ships stacking up in the ports. last thursday our reporters have a story about this. 497 ships at ports around the world, it used to be if a ship arrived in say i peninsula to the u.s., it was about 13 hours before it got into port to offload. that was 14 hours. now it's 13 days. there is also some labor shortages at the ports. there is not enough truck drivers. it's not a 24/7 operation. that's why you have rising prices. arthel: and you have drivers who
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are there waiting to get their truck load and they are waiting longer and longer. and you mentioned not having 24/7 operations at the port. maybe that needs to change. guess what, we are shopping 24/7 online. so we are adding to that clutter. how do we detangle the knots in the supply chain? >> that will require customs inspectors, truck drivers, unions working together. you have ports in other countries that do work 24/7. but are there enough drivers to take the stuff from the ports to their destination? employers can't find enough people at the moment to work. stagnation plus inflation. it's the worst of both worlds.
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you saw that in the 80s. the fed is saying this is transitory. it's because of the virus. the system will work out the disjunctures and we'll get back to a normal flow of logistics and supply around the world. but so far it seems in part of the economy to be getting worse and not better. so the feds will have to step in at some point and address inflation by trimming its efforts to keep interest rates low. >> the residual effects of the pandemic we are still in continue, they persist. john bussey, thank you. sean: former president trump back in iowa tonight at the fairgrounds. reporter: the sounds track is the same, the crowd is here. the stage looks the same.
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it's the former president's first trip since the 2020 election. he's back here in des moines. a number of folks have been waiting hours for him to speak. a lot of it has to do with getting the president's endorsement. the 2022 mid-terms. and there is the question about 2024 and whether the president is going to run again. >> it's an incredible job we did. and we have been given snow credit. but the people know. we got 76 million votes, the most in history and 12 million more than we did in 2016. reporter: the setup looks like the traditional trump rallies we have seen across the country. iowa will likely be the first nome nateing contest in 2 oh 24.
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the presidential's favorability in iowa are higher than they were during his presidency. among republicans that number is more than 90%. but other republicans have been visiting iowa. the former vice president, mike pence, who is scheduled to speak at the university of iowa. behind me while we wait, we have a major event going on, the iowa-penn state game. sean: a lot cheering for that game. arthel: critics are slamming new york city mayor bill deblasio
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for announcing he will end the gifted intelligence program in the city's elementary school. the mayor and others claim it discripple naits against black and hispanic children. critics say it will punish gifted kids. sean: covid and children. pfizer asking for the fda to approve its vaccine for children. dr. jeannette. hind neuriva plus. unlike ordinary memory supplements, neuriva plus fuels six key indicators of brain performance. more brain performance? yes, please! neuriva. think bigger. ighting for one goal, this one
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hospitalization. average out of pocket cost of a hospital stay is $20,000. sean: covid and children. pfizer and bio tec petitioning the fda to use their vaccine for children ages 5-11. it suggests a smaller dose is safe. right now the vaccine is authorized for people older than 12. will that soon change? dr. janette nesheiwat is with us. a medical doctor and fox news contributor. do you think they will green slight shots for kids 5-11 years old? >> i do. on october 26, pfizer will
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present their data set to the fda advisory committee. a week after only november 2 it will go to the cdc. i think by thanksgiving many children the age of 12 will have the opportunity to get vaccinated. i think it's important. we have 27% of the covid cases among children. we have more the past few months than we did at the start of the pandemic. the risk of complications and death is extremely low. but they can still get sick, spread the infection and die from covid. sean: is there a difference between the adult? watered down? a smaller dose? is that all there is? >> that's a good question. the adult dose over the age of
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12 is 30 micrograms. the pediatric dose will be a fraction of that. only 10 micrograms. it's expected the side effects will be similar to the side effects we see in adults, sore arm, fever, headache. but it only lasts a few days and is easily treatable with tylenol or ibuprofen. but the issue we need to look at, is it safe? what are the risks? i think it will get the green light. but we need to educate americans and parents on the risk versus the benefits of a vaccine for their children. sean: school is in and the kids are all together in school. ebb some places they have masks.
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the cdc says getting a covid-19 vaccination can help protect your child from getting covid-19. and it can help keep tremendous from spreading covid-19 to others. help protect your whole family by getting yourself and your children 12 years and older vaccinated against covid-19. as dr. nesheiwat notes could be by thanksgiving. more than 700 children have died from covid-19. what would you say to the parents watching now. those who are sceptical and have not been vaccinated and have resisted the vaccination for themselves. what would you say to them about vaccinating their children? >> i would first tell them i understand their concern. and remind them, there is more data on this vaccine than any other vaccine in history.
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it's been proven to be safe and effective. if you look at the deaths and hospitalizations a majority are among the unvaccinated. in children, if they become exposed to a classmate infected with covid, your child if they are vaccinated won't have to quarantine. they won't miss school. they will help reduce the spread of the infection. it will benefit the child, the family and the entire community and put us one step closer to ending this pandemic. it does seem to be on the decline and we want to continue that as we approach the winter months and holidays. sean: kids get vaccinated for all sorts of things. but it seems there is an added concern when it comes to the coronavirus.
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and what would you say to those who say absolutely you have got to get vaccinated as you say, you need to be vaccinated if your health calls for it and children should be vaccinated? >> one thing we need to remember, there is something called long-hauler syndrome. recent data has come out that even those who have not been hospitalized for covid, you increase your risk of heart problems by 30% and embolisms a year later. and increased risk of neurological and psychiatric issues. even though your symptoms may be mild if you pick up covid. you don't want to have it in the first place. do the right thing. protect yourself. the best way to do that is by getting vaccinated.
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especially if you haven't had covid in the past and you don't have that natural immune and natural protection. >> thank you for the work you do in protecting lives here in new york city. i know you have had covid patients who have gone through this. we'll see you in portland. the fda does approve it for younger children. hopefully this will end. arthel? arthel: those supply shortages we mentioned earlier, they are hitting schools and hard. how our nation's children are feeling the pinch in cafeterias. michael: more than 100 years ago. simi: two branches of our family split apart. david: but now, ancestry helped connect us to our ancestors and each other. michael: find their stories. gigi: at ancestry.
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sean: house speaker nancy pelosi meeting with pope francis at the vatican today. she said the meeting was spiritual, personal and an official honor. some have criticized her for supporting abortion rights. arthel: the pandemic has been squeezing supply chains grinding transportation of much needed goods to a halt.
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molly line is joining us in boston. molly: all across the country they are facing unprecedented challenges when it comes to getting healthy meals in front of children. the head of food nutrition services says a variety of shortages from workers to supplies to foods have left program staff scrambling. >> when the deliveries come in we are hoping it's what we order but sometimes it's not. and we have a great resilient staff that's creative and they will make meals from what they have or they barter amongst themselves. molly: they report districts across the nation are not receiving the foods they ordered, forcing a frantic hunt for new suppliers. >> they are short on labor and
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raw ingredients to prepare the items they promised for the school year. and they are hearing from distributors short on warehouses and truck drivers to get the items out to the schools. molly: the department of agriculture is announcing $1.5 billion in assistance for schools. arthel: school lunches are often the only hot meals students have access to. thanks, molly. sean: that does it for us for now. we'll be back at noon tomorrow on the fox news channel. and new- you gotta refresh to be fresh! hold up, false start on the spokesperson. save big. order through the app. ♪ to make my vision a reality my varilux progressive lenses
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