tv Cavuto Live FOX News October 8, 2022 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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of this nation to regard any nuclear missile launched from cuba or any nation in the western hemisphere as an attack by the soviet union on the united states requiring a full retaliatory response upon the soviet union. i call upon chairman kushaw to halt and eliminate that can december tine provocative threat
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to world peace and let no one doubt this is a difficult and dangerous effort on which we have set out. neil: 60 years ago this very month, we were on the brink, the closest the world had ever come to nuclear war. thereby a few other decision it could have been. now we're facing potentially the same predicament, what president biden calls potential armageddon given some of the retaliatory efforts and provocative moves on the part of vladamir putin talking freely about using tactical nuclear weapons of saying nothing of what seems to be daily missile strikes out of north korea, a couple of which just went over japan this past week. we're not even getting into china's provocations of the south china sea and presidents in anything taiwan, and -- new york, taiwan, south korea and on and on. some are criticizing the
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president for even mentioning the armageddon word and his massage was to let the -- message was to let the world be on notice and nothing to do with happening events here but what they're being threatened particularly by vladamir putin. lucas tomlinson traveling with the president in delaware has the latest. lucas. >> reporter: neil, 60 years ago the soviet ships that carried the nuclear warheads to cuba departed from ukraine. now 60 years later, the prospect of another nuclear conflict according to president biden speaking off camera at a democratic fundraiser saying "we have not faced a prospect of arm go ahead since kennedy and the nuclear missile cry >> reporter: i spent time with him and he's not joking about the use of bio-chemical or nuclear weapons and the white house secretary walked back those comments. >> we have not seen any reason to adjust our own nuclear posture, nor do we have
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indications they are preparing to use them. >> reporter: neil, russia a big advantage in these tactical warheads and those dropped in japans are ranging and russia's nukes are bigger, neil. their military doctrine is escalate to de-especially indicate la a situation -- deescalate a situation and using tactical nukes early. the low yield nukes can launch from fighter jets short range and missiles and caliber cruise missiles and same type of missiles that russia is firing into ukraine. the u.s. has only 200 tactical nuclear weapons in the army and 500 the u.s. and turkey. here's nicky haley's react to president biden. >> as a leader, what he should be doing is one, don't rile up americans and calm they will
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down and let them know you've got it under control. it makes me worry that he's ready for this. >> reporter: it's not clear, neil, what the u.s. reaction should be should russia decide to launch an attack in ukraine. neil: thank you, lucas. a little scary. go to lieutenant colonel bob mgcuiness. colonel, can you see vladamir putin making good on a tactical nuclear weapon threat? >> i can. last week, neil, he said u.s. created a precedent back in '45 with the attacks on hiroshima and nagasaki and that was from the ultimatum he gave days prior and putin has isolated himself and not listening to his ministers and reliant on his inner circle to advise him, he's very matter of fact.
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black and white. he said, look, i've taken tens of thousands of casualties in ukraine. the southern and eastern part of ukraine is the old part of the russian empire and i have every intention of resurrecting that and, oh, by the way, we just annexed four regions and if nato decides to stick its nose in there, that gives us the pretext to strike out at nato. i think the hyperbole and armageddon is not appropriate given the white house's walk-back, but this is not 1960 to the cuban missile crisis. mr. biden, it's not jfk and there's a lot of things that are really muddying the water here, but i do believe that putin under certain circumstances given the pressure he's getting
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would make that terrible decision. neil: i haven't thought till the outset of your remarks that putin could justify saying the u.s. did it twice in 1945. now of course the distinction was we're at war and he's thinking i'm at war too and dealing with ukraine. he would have to know that there would be a response and to assume otherwise, it would be more worrisome. >> jake sullivan, national security adviser to the president said yes, we'd respond but not necessarily in like kind. we wouldn't necessarily use those so many u.s. nuclear weapons that are in the region. likely what we would do is use economic means and some suggest that we would attack russian forces in crimea and the east. and already the ukrainians have
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decimated much of what russians have lost over the last, you know, couple of weeks. this is not a nice time. i think we could have averted this war back in january but we failed to do that and now we're adding tipping points to ukraine that killed more russians. if in fact the russians don't do any better in the near term against the ukrainians. then of course mr. putin feels locked 234 and desperate. it's domestic woes, he might. he might from his perspective use a 10 or 20kt nuclear weapon in the eastern part of that country against the urocranens to break up the -- ukrainians to break up the offense. that won't stop the war and ukrainian forces are feeling
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their oats and will been very aggressive. no telling where this will go. neil: let me ask you, colonel, about such a weapon compared to what was dropped on hiroshima. in the same league? >> not really. again, talk about it, i've been trained in the deployment of nuclear weapons years ago. we certainly have talked about these sorts of things in classified discussions. neil: would it do the same damage is what i'm saying. >> no really. a 10kt is much less but it would spoil the area much like -- but in an expanded way what happened happenhappenedin cherynoble ando zone for a long time. neil: you were mentioning what would trigger something like
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this. we're hearing of a key adviser criticizing vladamir putin and i'm told thom to the phase of tn of 300,000 reservists and almost gotten to their version of our vietnam war protests and so many protesters are trying to leave the country. it's gotten violent in some places. could the country turn on him? could he be over, you know, overturned? >> russian polling indicates that widespread anxiety and fear among the russian people and a lot of shock. his advisers are beginning to turn. he's not listening to a lot of those so he's holding the plans and this policy close hold. this is indicative of obviously not only fear on his part and lack of trust on his advisers, but he could make an erasional decision going forward, and i think here recently when he met with president xi of china at
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the shanghai cooperative organization in zuckerberg becke was probably counseled not to become to desperate and, which i mass not distanced himself from putin and we see a major almost global shift into a more aauthoritarian way of looking at things and saudi arabia in north korea and the like. neil: very scary world to put it mildly. colonel, thank you, very, very much for the read on this. there's been some destruction in the ukrainian bridge that links crimea and it was targeted by ukrainian soldiers and now it's rendered impossible and the russians have been using in to get supplies into ukraine and elsewhere of that bridge now destroyed. yet this could be seen as another sort of desperate move on the part of clad myrrh putin and how to respond and many are
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next. it's the case of one of those lands. now back under ukrainian control and he's been in the corner and that whole notion of what that wounded animal does when pinned in a corner is raising all this nuclear. scary stuff in this country and las vegas and we're learning more about the guy behind those stabbings that killed two, injured a number of others. he wasn't a legal citizen. after this.
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it seems like things are falling apart lately. the economy. the market... everything. but upwork lets you strategically hire talent to weather all ups and downs your business might go through. look at all that talent. ♪ are learning a lot more about that neil: we are learning a lot more about that series of stabbings in broad daylight along the las vegas strip, particularly about the guy potentially behind it. he's an illegal immigrant with a criminal record. alexandria hoff has more from washington. alexandria. >> hi, neil. 32-year-old yoni barrios is
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being charged with several attempts of murder and orange badded hand coverings on him indicates his poses some threat to himself or to others at that point. it was just one day after barrios allegedly went on erratic and deadly rampage stabbing eight people, a mix of tourists and residents on the las vegas strip. local station ktnv reporting that the suspect was set off with white chevrolet a group of show -- when a group of show girls refused to take a picture with him taking out his rage on them and others killing a 37-year-old and another maris mareen digiovanni. he's in the u.s. illegal with a criminal record in california already. clark county attorney said deportation is not the first priority here and instead this could be a death penalty case. >> this is a pretty serious
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case, and we look at all the facts and circumstances like any other case. we are going to give this serious consideration, but it's so new. it's so early on that whether or not we file the notice of intent to seek the death penalty will be a decision made in the next 30 to 60 days. >> bar rows will be formally a-- barrios formally arraigned on tuesday. neil. neil: alexandria, thank you very much for that . focusing on the migrant buss that keep coming and coming. some expected, some unexpected. in new york it's gotten to the point where the mayor is saying he has a state of emergency and a billion dollar crisis. he's calling out no less than the president of the united states. after this.
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>> this is a -- this is going to take a national coordination and it should be handled at the border. should be handled at the border. the far right is doing the wrong thing. the far left is doing nothing. immersion the silence, i don't believe the silence that i'm hearing. neil: all right. in new york mayor eric adams calling a state of emergency in new york right now. he's got a lot of migrants to deal with, as many as eight more migrant buses arriving today and making ther more than 17,000 ill migrants arriving in the big apple and tens of thousands more across the country and not even including the ten times that number that have made their way into this country and planned out all over the country courtesy of the president of the united states working in conjunction with ice. be that as it may, it is the
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crisis very much that adams is relaying but not much progress here and anyone doing anything to alleviate that. griff jenkins at eagle pass with more. griff. >> reporter: good morning, neil. and mayor adams is continuing to get the buses from texas governor greg abbott because abbott's border towns like eagle pass where i am in the del rio sector are continuing to be overwhelmed in an unprecedented way. neil, in the one week i've been here, there's been more than 10,700 migrant encounters. in the last 24 hours, there was 1,583. now, yesterday governor abbott was touting what his texas dps operation lone star has been doing, here is a bit of what to give you a sense of. he says since it began last year in april, operation lone star had 311,000 apprehensions and busing more than 12,000 migrants to cities just like new york,
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dc, and chicago. and he says there's been 20,500 criminal arrests of which 18,000 were felonies. now, they also on the drug front because remember, the deadly fentanyl seizures, which is off the charts, is part of this. he says they've seized some 337 million lethal doses of it. we spent the week with texas dps troopers and one of them says there's no end in sight until something changes. take a listen to what she said. >> until something changes from a federal aspect where there are actually consequences to coming in this country illegally that are real and valid and somewhat scary like you're going to face some sort of legitimate con defense, this is going to -- consequence, this is going to get worse. >> reporter: meanwhile, neil, human smuggling is surging in a dangerous way and this is in hidalgo county in the rio grand
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valley. call from a citizen came into the sheriff's deputies there and they rescued 84 migrants in a trailer. those migrants much luckier than the 53 that died in that trailer in san antonio back in june and finally, let me just show you one last startling piece of video. this, neil, is a tiktok video. it was verified by texas dps. in it you see an advertisement seeking a driver to drive from mccallen to houston offering $70,000. that is how the cartels are absolutely continuing to use social media to take advantage of this situation. since i've been on the ground, i've been here since october 1, that was the beginning of the fiscal year. in just this sector alone, neil, in del rio, there's been more than 75 smuggling attempted far thwarted but don't know how many got through. neil: 70 s 70,000 is a very
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attractsive offer for truck drivers to get them through. >> reporter: there's no end in sight and that's why governor abbott says those buses will continue to roll because he wants to keep the attention on what's happening down here on the border, perhaps mayor adams wants to come down and see it for himself all day long. ^ neil: grief, thank you, very, very much. my next guest has a message for mayor eric adams. mayor, it's now a crisis, a state of emergency according to the new york mayor. i'm sure those in other locals that have been dealing with migrants including some they didn't count oncoming from the administration are beginning to say the same. what do you think? >> it's an issue that we've had since 2014 so it's nothing new. welcome to our world. what we have when you work with the northern areas, we've had for quite a few years and we keep on telling them, of course,
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administration, do what we have to do. we know that nothing's going to happen. we're at midterms but what we have right now fortunately for us it has shifted a bit to del rio and eagle pass area, but we still get 100, 150 asylum seekers a day and illegal entries or attempts anyway are out of this world. it's incredible what's going on and something has to be done. neil: mayor, if you can explain the process to me. once they seek asylum and they're in your state, you can't force them back contraindication ; right.explain the process. >> what we do here in mccallen is the city has been working with an ngo and they come and -- neil: a nongovernment organization you're talking about there? >> correct. but we transport them and we're fortunate that at least the asylum seekers go through the process because they're free to do whatever they want to do, but
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that's not too much of the issue anymore. now we have just the illegal entries and it shifted from asylum seekers to illegal entries trying to come regardless of any law. neil: so, mayor, it's always amazing to me we can't track them down in many cases, but it seems the drug cartels can. they know where they are and they're expecting them to do things for them. that's very scary proposition right there. >> it actually is and they may have a little more teeth than we do over here. they organize and do what they're supposed to do. i guess south of the border, once they come over here to look, what we currently have, how do we enforce it? as municipality, we have no authority and it's up to the feds. neil: if the feds don't do anything and they have this policy right now. it gets different reactions and we're all for keeping it consist
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here, mayor, if you're going to complain and some sanctuary cities are about buses or planes that make their way filled with illegal migrants, but they haven't said much about those, far more of them that the administration, you know, ships and planes more to the point all over the place. oftentimes in the middle of the night without any sort of warning or heads up to local authorities. that's the definition of out of control. >> it is. what we have right now is people complaining about what's going on with what governor abbott is doing and how we see for south texas is doing something beneficial. what they're doing is sending the asylum seekers to the general area where they want to be and that's exactly what we're doing over here too. logistically that's what we're doing. last year when we had an excess of 1500 a day, that's what we were doing. it's nothing different if that's the general area, they where
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they want to go, that's where they should be sent. neil: at this point, and the number being what they are and more than 2 million getting through and hundreds of thousands of got aways here and we're looking at illegal population that is more than 5 million we're told in this country. that's a lot of people to process and handle for guys like you. not that you handle all of them but that number keeps exponentially doubling. >> it does and that's kind of one of the things that we think about. and judges or something and working and it's not. neil: mayor, thank you for taking the time. we appreciate it and we'll keep showing the numbers like on our website and asked for it to be included on the fox business as well and big economic issue as well as emotionally totaling
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personal one and it's not a crisis that fox is fixated on and a psoriasis the country -- crisis the country should be fixated on. meantime, fixation with electric vehicles unless you have a power outage and you can't use them or you have floods and you can't use them or you have serious floods and the batteries start lighting up on fire. oh, yeah, and if you have utility structures like they do in california where you have to sort of conserve your use of them, big push you might want to slow down on after this.
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neil: all right, this is a tough week if you wanted cheaper oil prices. jumping over the past 18 days after we were going through 99 days of straight decline and gas price on the rise, oil on the rise, and right now you have the added sort of wound in you will of the saudis leading opec and opec+ countries on a 2 billion-barrel a day cut in production. that was not greeted too favorably by the white house. kelly o'grady with us from the white house. kelly. >> reporter: yeah, neil, on my way to work and i had to be here for your show and needed gas and i paid $6.93 a gallon and the
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falling prices are a distant memory and gas prices rising 17 of the last 18 days and national average today is $3.90. that's already 10-cents higher than a week ago and i want to point out roughly 40% higher than when the president took office. that'll get worse largely because of opec's planned production cut of 2 million barrels per day and expecting roughly one and that was a big shock and many calling the announcement a slap in the face after the president visited saudi arabia recently. already in the last week, oil price haves risen nearly 20% and they're hovering right now at roughly 92 per barrel. >> obviously what opec did the other day is not helpful but it really proves we have to be less dependent on foreign energy. >> but rather than produce here, reporting indicate the biden administration may be turning to more foreign energy. this time venezuela. in response to a reportedder question on the matter this week, the president admitted there's a lot of alternatives
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and they've not made up their minds yet. another alternative in consideration is taking even more oil out of the strategic reserves and reserves stocks and bonds be used for disasters likr disasters like hurricane ian and at their lowest. this won't just be felt at the pump and the diesel prices and grocery and that drives prices and you happen those go up, neil, so does the likelihood of progressive rate hike. neil: thank you very much, kelly o'grady. kelly point-blank layupsed out that's the best of environments of electric vehicles and problems of electric vehicles lighting on fire and warnings from the state don't park your vehicle in the garage. could burn your house down.
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not a grade nationwide push to go this route. an issue i raised with pete buttigieg earlier this week. take a listen. much of the power was out across half of the state of florida for awhile and much has resumed, sir, but it did make folks think, boy, these electric vehicles being pushed between what happened in florida and the grid compromised in california to the point where governor newsom wanted people to cool it how often and when they charge their evs. does this remind folks that evs are not ready for prime time? >> well, actually i think is a great example of one of the many benefits of those tools. in an extreme event from a neighborhood resiliency perspective, they can work basically like a generator. except that you don't have to have a diesel ready for them. what they're doing is using the battery capacity to power a home and in that sense could be very useful in the scenario like
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this. look, i don't think anybody thinks we're ready and signature here in 2022 for a scenario where overnight there was some instant transition to electric vehicles. neil: all right, i heard discussion as well about using batteries in these cars as generators for a home, that is if they don't light up on fire and that's a problem in some areas of florida where they've been smoking out of control so much so that the state put out an advisory if you own an ev. might want to take it out of your garage for the time being and any one of these affected areas we're flooding has caused a new unusua un-phenomenon heree nation-wide push for this and we have capitol market strategist with us. steve moore and former adviser to president trump. let's begin with you. what do you make of that. i get what the transportation secretary is saying and evs are certainly attractive vehicles
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down the road, i get it. i don't think ready for prime time here and these incidents over the last couple of weeks over the utility problems in california and power outages in california and we've got to rereassess this. what do you think? >> i think you're both right. on the one hand there's a lotted more work to be done to get electric vehicles to get ready for prime time and at the same time this is the way of the future. this is something that we have to focus on and that's energy dependence and if the power goes out, it's going to be hard to pump gas because those gas stations are not just mechanical. it's electrical pumps that pump gas out of the tankers and bring it up to the nossle and if the -- nosle and if the u.s. and
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reaching out from places like putin's russia and iran and the past four weeks seen a brutal crackdown on human rights and we'd have a lot more options on the table and every day billions of dollar goes to the pockets of people like putin and they limit and they restrict our foreign policy and national security decision makes. now, imagine a world a few years from now where taking action albeit in intervention, sanctions, diplomatic isolation against russia. against venezuela, against the islamic republic of iran would have a lot less consequence -- neil: i agree with what you're saying but we're complaining that the saudis are leading other countries to curtail production and we need those and
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it didn't used to be that way. >> it's frustrating with the oil and gas production. we'd be about 3 million more barrel as day if we just stopped with the trump policies and now people are saying, oh, >> we're dependent on russia and iran and venezuela for oil. there's no reason we have to be. we're not running out of oil. we have 250 years of oil and 300 years of nap rale gas. i'm not -- natural gas. i'm not against electric vehicles. i think electric vehicles could be part of our transportation infrastructure and now only five or six percent of the cars sold in america are electric vehicles. a lot of americans don't want electric vehicles and one thing, neil, americans don't want government to tell them what kind of car they can buy. neil: you know, catherine, full disclclosure here, i own electrc vehicles and they're pretty neat and let me decide that and the market and not the government. your thoughts?
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>> well, that's every mother's worst nightmare. i live in florida for example. if you have several children, i have five, you're trying to evacuate miami or south florida and migrate to georgia or north carolina and a cat 3 or 4 is encroaching quickly upon you and your electric car dies. same thing with oil; right. i mean, oil evaporates. gas pumps dry up. there's a dirth when everyone is looking for the same thing, scarcities loom. there's no reason we should be knocking on the door of venezuela or iran or saudi arabia when we've closed the dakota pipelines and keystone pipelines. the u.s. could be enormously energy indent and we had so -- independent and we had so much capacity and we've handicapped ourselves into forcing oil prices higher. it's a real tragedy and germany encountered the same situation making themselves wholly vulnerable to russian energy and
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now they're firing up the coal factories and, look, both things can coexist. my tesla's due to arrive in november so i'm excited about it, but oil prices don't need to be as high as they are. the u.s. should be independent and self-sufficient and if we invest in ourselves and don't handicap ourselves, neil, we can be and oil prices will be lower. neil: jo just don't let that tea get flooded and don't park it in your garage. but that's a serious point and serious questions you all raised and a point we have to address as a country. together, i want to thank you all. in the meantime, we mention what's going on in florida, still going on and big recovery efforts and the rescue efforts too. they're still searching for potential victims here. better than 100 dead in the state. we'll have more after this.
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the rebuilding efforts continue to go on and across the state so to the rescue efforts here. herculean task to put it mildly and will nunly with the very latest. will. >> reporter: neil, good morning. we want to highlight some efforts on the ground helping to rebuild at this hour. what you see behind me is operation blue roof. this is a partnership between the u.s. army corp. of engineers as well as federal government agencies with fema that are essentially supplying homeowners here with a emergency cover on their roofs at no cost. this team just arrived here about an hour ago already you can see the progress they're making and they're hard at work. this is just meant to be a temporary patch but it could take weeks or months for people to get people for their roofs. those with minor damage that can be covered, that's what this is designed to.h i had a chance to speak with a homeowner here, miss barbara and road out the storm in this home and says
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she'll never do this again. but she's happy to have this help. >> it was like it was a tornado. it was whooping in and then come to my front door and hear that pop. i was praying to the lord, please, keep this door. just got to work together to get everything back to help get things back to normal. >> reporter: just got an update from the u.s. army corp. of engineers exactly how many roofs they have to do in the area. this is one of 17,000 people that are signed up for this free assistance so far. there's still time for others to sign up as well. you can go to foxweather.com and we have resources there. if you have neighbors in the devastated areas looking for help here with operation blue roof. neil. neil: will, thank you very, very much, my friend. a floridean trying to rebuild her home days after getting rescued from it. after this.
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neil: last week she had to be rescued from her home and today kimberly penny is trying to rebuild it. she's joined by her husband. guys, welcome to all of you. >> thanks for having us. neil: you didn't waste any time saying last week it was a disaster. but i want to rebuild. i mean, maybe you can tell us what happened last week having to be rescued and where you home stands right now. >> yeah, we were sleeping and got woke up and saw pillows floating past us in the living room and decided -- he told our son to mark the wall and we measured it in&in 30 minutes
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it'll get us out of here. >> assuming pictures of your home doing from your home right now. >> delivered from north carolina for us to use. >> we don't have flood insurance at all so. >> they're saying that pretty much they'll cover it if it's not flood related but if it comes through the door, if it's water that comes through the door, backdoor, it's a flood,
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which i really don't understand how a hurricane causing ought this and is not flood. it's a flood but not a flood. neil: how much can they cover in that evented and what are you going to do if they can't? >> we have to come out here [inaudible] neil: we're having some audio difficulties with you. johnny, i wonder if it's better with you. maybe not. if they don't cover or cover nearly to the degree you need to rebuild your home, what are you going to do? >> yeah, they're not really -- entire content of the house that they gave us $700. neil: that doesn't help. >> for our things and, i mean, we lost everything we have fridge ray torr, stove -- refrigerator, stove, dishwasher. every piece of clothing i own
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and she owns. >> a lot of people stepped up and helped us out as far as, i mean, we got good family support and stuff like that, but all we really care complete the catch g out alive in that moment. when you see your daughter floating by on a bean bag and we're thankful to be alive at the end of it. i can rebuild the house, i can't rebuild our life. neil: no, you certainly have your priorities right, guys. i'm wondering what you were saying, johnny. many of your neighbors are in the same kind of situation. they didn't have the flood insurance. they had other types of insurance but you don't have the flood insurance and this becomes a flooding problem with the hurricane and all this, you're stuck. i'm told thousands of florideans are in that position. have you heard back from anyone what they're going to do about that or do they tell you that's your problem? >> that's our problem. >> pretty much it's our problem. we lost everything from both of
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our vehicles were submerged under water and i think it's pretty much just for us like you'll figure it out, kind of. you're on your own. good luck. the the support networks is what we have to do. >> our daughter has a rare jesgenetic disorder, and it's terminal and she's at the end stages of her life and she requires a lot. we were very lucky and called our pediatrician and they had a thank. they were there and came in our doors and we're the police and we're here to save you and had us in that thing and down that road and her with every machine she needed and us to feel safe. it was amazing. the community since -- neil: i don't doubt the community and you're probably hearing this already from state authorities, they're going to say you had the chance to get insurance. we know it's expensive, you
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didn't do it. it's on you. what do you say and why didn't you get insurance? was it that expensive? >> it's not. flood insurance here -- i've lived in the house 14 years. it's $500 a year. >> it's not explained correctly. every insurance for natural disaster, the normal person that has a hurricane happens, you don't think you've got to itemize things out. that's lignin, that doesn't -- lightning, it doesn't count. that's wind, doesn't count. neil: a lotted of exceptions. keep us posted, guys. we're watching and your beautiful daughter. you'll get through this. what a ride. i want to get back to you and talk to you again. maybe next week. little more after this.
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family. our producer breanna given. giffen, she's the glue to this broadcast and so many big events like this and the super bowl and so much more. a great life ahead of her, i'm sure. very lucky guy. i'm sure she keeps her mine in the forest. he doesn't need to be reminded. alicia: a massive fire ball engulfing two sections of the kerch straight bridge and destroying the only direct road connecting rye mia to the russian mainland. russian officials claiming a ukrainian truck bomb was behind the black. welcome to fox news live, i'm alicia acuna in denver. molly: four years after russia seized crimea from ukraine. we're on the groun
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