tv Fox News Live FOX News October 9, 2022 10:00am-11:00am PDT
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>> midterm elections are looming large and with the control of the senate hanging in the balance, democrats are battling rising prices, spike in crime while the white house works to downplay the troubling economic news. welcome to fox news i'm molly line, we have fox team coverage, charles watson following impact on polls. first lucas tomlinson live in wilmington where the president has spent the weekend away from
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washington. lucas: president biden lashing out at saudi arabia for slashing oil production this morning on fox news sunday secretary pompeo told the president to look in the mirror. >> this is a failure of american policy. joe biden is directly responsible in the place the world finds itself in policy. lucas: pompeo also taking issue with biden's comments in armageddon defined in the new testament as the last battle between good and evil on the day of judgment. pompeo called the comments reckless. price of gas is now more than 60% higher than when president biden took office. many republicans wished the president traveled to texas or dakotas last summer and not saudi arabia. speaking of texas, molly, the vice president flu to austin. >> the challenge that is the issue is ultimately been as the
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united states supreme court and its proponents, the proponents of dobbs have intended is being pushed to the states. and this is not a political event but there's an election in 31 days and it will matter. lucas: 30 days now. nbc democratic congressman alyssa asking if she supports. >> he's the sitting president. if he decides to run again, i'm going to support him and the party is going to support it. long history in the country. i have been vocal including with my own leadership in the house that we need a new generation, we need new blood period across the democratic party, the senate and white house. lucas: just this morning i spoke to young mother who said she felt safer in montreal, canada
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than nearby philadelphia. she won't go there anywhere she told me, molly. molly. molly: final stretch before the midterms. charles watson is live with the latest, charles. charles: good afternoon, molly, four weeks ahead of election night and republicans believe they have a winning message certainly when you're talking rise in crime and how it should be tackled, listen. >> stacey abrams said yes to defunding the police. abrams even joined radical antipolice group. lucas: georgia incumbent has made it key issuainst stacey abrams, highlighting the task force he's created as governor to target street racing and violent crimes in cities like atlanta where only burglaries
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are up than a year ago. >> the danger that he's put our families in is felt every day in every part of our state. you can't pick up a paper anywhere in the state of georgia without hearing of a new gun violence issue. charles: crime bus appear to be resonating according to latest monmouth university poll, 72% saying it's extremely or very important to them. republicans could be onto something with the latest fbi crime statistics showing the national murder rate jumped more than 4% between 2020 and 2021. hitting back at minority leader kevin mccarthy with ad highlights record on crime in his home district. take a look at this.
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>> bakersfield, the heart of your congressional district is now ranked at the top 10 most dangerous metro areas in america. charles: yeah, molly, so both sides republicans and democrats seeing how important crime is to the american public and both sides really trying to put forward what they can do and what the other side isn't doing. back to you, molly. mol mornings with maria charles watson, thank you very much. reporters there covering a lot of those hot-button issues a month before the midterms. let's bring in the political panel to talk about some of the issues. with us erin perini and vice president and former ted cruz communication's director and mark penn, democrat pollster and fox news contributor. thank you both for joining us here on a sunday afternoon. let's kick things off by talking about democracy. here we are just a few weeks to go, the fairness of u.s. election practices are being criticized, question really from
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both sides of the aisle and how each side approaches this issue often credit ebbing'ed anythingively by the other side. this morning on fox news sunday democratic candidate stacey abrams said this to host shannon bream. >> we need a governor who actually cannot be credibly accused of having overseen a racist system and brian kemp according to judge jones oversaw and helped architect a racist suppression system in the state of georgia. molly: governor kem p did refuse to overturn election results after biden's victory and abrams in rematch with kemp, she-to him in 2018. the issue of democracy, how elections are run, how people vote, access, tangle of rules varying widely from state to state and we are, of course, remembering that trump supporters echoed the accusation that the election was stolen and rigged, front and center for democrats the issue across the nation, is it an effective
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motivator, mark, let's start with you? mark: on the issue of democracy. i think it is motivating some of the democratic base. ic pretty much president biden layed that out, you know, as a central issue that he views what's going on as a threat to democracy. look, i don't think that elections really are turning as much on that. i think these are base issues that drive supporters one way or another. i think the election turns on the court issues that are affecting people's everyday lives and as stacey abrams knows she lost the court state challenging the georgia law and surging turnout including minority turnout up 22%. i don't think that's the biggest issue. i think it drives the base. i think the big issues are inflation, immigration, crime and abortion. molly: erin, i want to bring you in there, issue of democracy. mark suggesting that there are a lot of things that are top of
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mind for democratic voters. >> well, it's true not only democratic voters but the key group of swing voters, independent voters, yes, you have seen that democracy and abortion solidify the democratic base and bolster approval rating and still remains under water and definitely under water with key group of independents. they care about the economy and about crime and when you're talking about crime you see states like wisconsin and pennsylvania where they have senate candidates running aggressively on the republican side against democrat counterparts on message of crime. in wisconsin where they had the kenosha riots it is resonating and ron johnson taking lead in polls and in pennsylvania you have seen the polls tighten on the message that john fetterman is soft on crime. those things are top of mind for voters and what's going to make an impact in 30 days. molly: mark, i want to get your thoughts on that. we just heard charles watson
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murders according to fbi increases and some democratic cities received a lot of criticism for soaring crime rates there. republican candidates have hammered democrats on this very issue slamming soft on crime policies, defund the police rhetoric, bail reform, all sorts of things related to that. is that working against democrats? should they be very concerned ahead of the midterms? >> absolutely. i think the biggest changes we've seen maybe in the last four weeks has been that a, abortion has become a real issue for democrats but, b, crime has become an increasingly salient issue and republicans have about a 20-point edge on that issue and, you know, really in the 1990's it was an enormous issue. it fell off the radar screen almost completely and i think the republicans have so far been very effective, you see it operating particularly i think in pennsylvania where the fetterman-oz race has closed and
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oz has effectively in the last few weeks hit the crime issue. molly: sort of wheel house to presidential pardons and pot. president biden has granted pardons to thousands of people for prior federal offenses of simple marijuana possession. calling governors to do so in the state leverage. the timing here, some republicans are calling it pandering. is this all about the midterms, erin? >> so is release of oil from petroleum strategic reserves and so was the student loan bailout that joe biden put forward and attempt by democrats who don't have a strong economic agenda. they don't have an agenda to run on right now and sell to voters about how they have succeeded on the issues that worry them the most. so instead they are trying to distract because they think distracting divides the country and it'll help solidify their base but, again, they are not talking about what matters most to people. the cost of goods and safety in their communities and so when you're off message, you're not
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winning and that's what democrats are facing, the heads winds going into the final stretch here. molly: mark, your thoughts of the timing of presidential pardons regarding marijuana? >> obviously you have seen the president make strong effort to try to have a comeback for democrats, you know, he gave his speech on threats to democracy to the nation and he did student loan efforts and he did the pardons and clearly all part of an election campaign and say, hey, we are the party who is going to provide -- provide for you in all of these key areas and so, of course, it was -- it was part of the election campaign otherwise it wouldn't have been done right now. i don't think anybody would debate that. molly: swift final thoughts on this issue. parental rights, this was really hot several months ago as parents were pushing back against critical race theory in schools but a number of issues are still on the table transgender youth, how that's handled in school and sports, sex education, mask wearing, parental rights top of mind.
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final thoughts on that issue. erin, you first. >> you have seen republicans talk about this and republicans champion parental bill of rights making sure they are protected in say of children's education. in wisconsin is a salient point. that's too young of a group to have that conversation with so while last year you saw the start of what people saw the red wave with youngkin winning on that issue, it's not as salient. molly: what about on the democratic side, mark? mark: right now i do think on the democratic side voters are being motivated by what they see as an assault on the rights -- right of the -- of the community here and various communities that really feel that sexual preference is under assault right now and so i think that's -- that's where the democratic turnout is being stimulated in
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this direction. i don't actually think this is as big an issue in this election as it really was in the youngkin election. i think crime, immigration, inflation and particularly abortion on the social issues don't underestimate the power of the abortion to i think increase democratic turnout among key swing voters. erin parini, mark penn, that was great, we covered a ton of ground. >> thank you. molly: kanye west is now locked out of both twitter and instagram after making threatening posts against jewish people. this happened late last night. in a tweet which has sense been deleted for violating twitter's policies, west said he was going to go, quote, deaf com3 on jewish people in what appears to death con alert used by the military. west turn today twitter after first being suspended in
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instagram for making remarks for sean diddy combs. vice president kamala harris attending mega donor event in austin, texas but avoiding trip to border despite humanitarian crisis there this as more migrant buss from texas arrived in new york city. this happened this morning. we have fox team coverage with david lee miller at the big apple and let's start with griff jenkins in eagle pass, texas. griff to you. griff: hey, molly, good afternoon, and vice president harris would have been here in eagle pass she would have witnessed, take a look at the images, guatemalan man illegally in the country smuggling four
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migrants in a dodge charger late overnight. troopers pursuing car over 100 miles an hour, he crashed into the ditch and no one were injured and four migrants were rescued. we also can show you a little bit of footage from the migrants coming across and i want to show you one video we shot this morning, molly, you can see migrants literally running on the mexican side of the rio grande from the mexican officials, then calmly crossing and walking into the custody of the border patrol. that is something i normally have never seen out here. migrants running from the mexican officials and calmly going into border patrol custody meanwhile as you mentioned vice president harris decided to go to austin instead did not come to the border, in fact, in her remarks at the fundraiser not once did she even mention the border. we did get a visit here yesterday from republican
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congressman tony gonzales that represents the eagle pass area. here is a little bit of what he had to say about the vice president's visit. >> he doesn't have to visit me, i'm a republican, i get that. guess what, henry cuellar is a democrat and vicente gonzales is a democrat, veronica gonzales is a democrat, she can visit anywhere along the border the fact they put their head in the sand and have abandoned us along the border. griff: molly, let me send you up to our drone as it races the rio grande river, 240-mile river in del rio sector, over 67 migrant apprehensions across the entire southwest border, 3500 of those accounted for in just the del rio and el paso sector. that is why so many in these border communities hope that this administration specifically the border czar vice president harris would come and see it firsthand and begin to change policies to try and get it under control as we head into this new
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fiscal year, we are soft from last year which we all know was unprecedented, molly. molly: incredible reporting down in the border and drone pictures are enlightening but i was watching yesterday when you were on air and people literally crawling over the barbed wire that you were feet away from. give us insight into what you're seeing over the course of the weekend as you return to border for another trip? griff: you know, that's a great point, molly. what we witnessed live yesterday were 3 nicaraguan migrants that had been trying to navigate the dangerous currents, the river was strong yesterday, they successfully did so fortunately and as they came across the river they crawled over the razer wire that the texas officials have put up here and the one migrant got on his knees and began to pray thankful that he had made it. it's obviously a senate shot of
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the humanitarian crisis and that's why border officials say border officials have to realize that their policies are inviting more migrants to come and putting their lives at risk and causing them to make this dangerous journey. that's a big message they want to do fortunately those migrants you saw in our live shot yesterday made it safely and were taken into border patrol custody and processed. molly. mollie: griff jenkins, thank you so much. our eyes on the border for right now. we appreciate it. more migrant buses are going from the southern border pulling to new york city just days after mayor eric adams declared a state of emergency over the migrant arrivals. david lee miller live in new york with the latest on this. david. david: as bus load after bus load arrive in new york the city's ability to cope with the crisis is only becoming more dire. just two days ago after declaring emergency to assist in footing the bill, at least six more bus as lived from texas, 5
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from el paso and one from dallas despite new york's plea that it can continue to provide support services for the migrants. officials in texas are not backing down. el paso officials say the migrants have chosen to go to, new york city and no one is being forced where they don't want to go. meanwhile the federal government sent two planes of unaccompanied teenage asylum seekers to upstate new york. many of them were later sent to new york city and other locations, the local county executives says he fears for their safety. >> they are age 13 to 17 men -- boys and girls and we are concerned are they being trafficked, are they going to be sponsored. >> they going to be reunited with their family, parents, so far they have been relocated to kingston, poughkeepsie, new york city. >> more than 1700 migrants have been sent since april.
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molly: at least 17 people are dead and dozens more are wounded following series of russian missile strikes on the southern ukrainian city of zaporizhzhia, that is a territory that vladimir putin annex just last week. the strikes came hours after an explosion destroyed part of the critical bridge linking crimea to russia's mainland. trey yingst live in kharkiv ukraine. trey. trey: we are learning more today following explosion that partially destroyed the only bridge between russia and crimea. what we are learning is about the russian response. president vladimir putin ordering posture and sending
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divers under the strait to look for more evidence on who was behind the attack and putin on monday holding security council meeting to hold responsible responses to the explosion. as ukrainians they are not commenting on the explosion but ukrainian president zelenskyy oversight said it was cloudy and warm in crimea almost poking fun that it is very clear that ukrainians were in some part behind this explosion that took place destroying a critical piece of infrastructure for the russians, a bridge that they used to supply their southern offensive as this war in the east rages on. now there was a response last night it's unclear if it was a direct response to the explosion but in the city of zaporizhzhia where at least 17 civilians were killed following russian attacks. remember, this is a territory that vladimir putin claims as his own and gives you a sense of what the russians are doing in this conflict. they are claiming ukrainian territory the and slaughtering the civilians that live there.
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molly. molly: trey yingst. thank you very much, for more on the situation on the ground in ukraine joining me in the studio eastern europe chief voice of america and veteran ukrainian journalist marisolva, thank you so much. long journey to get here. we appreciate you taking time out for us on sunday afternoon. you have a unique story. long-time journalist, extremely experienced covering the conflict and have from the beginning and you also, your husband killed 20 years ago. you came here to america as a refugee, raised your children, tell us a little bit, i want to give the viewers of who you are and what you've seen since the beginning of this conflict? >> oh, wow. first of all, i have to say that i'm very happy right now that i have an ability and possibility to be there right now with my country that i left 21 years
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ago. i'm happy that voice of america decided to send me there and to cover this horrible, horrible war. ukrainians fighting for its independence since 30 years ago and actually hundreds and hundreds of years ago but particularly this time around it's very difficult and right now we have to understand that ukrainians fighting war for independence, the war for existence. ukrainians are sometimes people ask like why they are so resistent, why they are so courageous, why they are doing what they do and they are doing what they do because they understand that they don't have other choices. they have to defend themselves, they have to defend their family and they have to defend their future as ukrainian nation and ukrainian identity at all. particularly about me i left ukraine because my husband was murdered and my kids grow up here in the united states. the united states is my second home and i now trying to serve both countries ukraine and
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united states. molly: i want to get your insights as you've come have been recently from over in europe and ukraine and the surrounding countries. what is your assessment of what's happening in the ground as ukrainian forces have regaining all of this territory? >> thanks to american support and american weapons, ukrainians were able to actually gain their abilities to -- to build their army and what we see effective counteroffensive operation on their side and it's irreversible at this point in time. ukrainians are pushing russians out but talking about the war in the war situation it's about courage and logistics and looks like ukrainians are better and they know what they are fighting for and they have a much better
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logistics. molly: we are looking at images on the camera of some of the territory that the ukrainian forces have reclaimed and challenge to cover as well. very dangerous as journalists. we lost fox team members, veteran photographer and young ukrainian journalist working with our team sasha as well and you know some of the journalists that have lost their lives as well. >> yes, the first casualty of this war was my friend from harvard. i wrote about it and you showed the pictures of mass grave just now and i was there two weeks ago and it's very, very difficult to be there, to experience and specifically for person like me, like ukrainian not just a reporter, i have a personal feelings about the space, but the country -- like some of the cities are destroyed
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85%. the ukrainians are trying to find a way to rebuild to get normality to their lives and i have to say that i was impressed personally even that they are, they are very strong and very resilient, ukrainian nation is very strong and resilient. molly: we have witnessed the resilience for sure and as americans understand a freedom fight. we understand the value of freedom our hearts are with you, thank you for coming to share your story and what you've seen. myroslava, thank you very much. >> thank you very much. molly: southwest florida residents pulling together after devastation of hurricane ian, more on the recovery efforts there after the break. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
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in southwest florida are coming together to help one another recover from the storm. nate foy live in fort myers with more on this. nate, to you. nate: hey, molly, the rebuilding process is overwhelming but the grief is equally or more overwhelming with the number of people killed during hurricane ian unfortunately going up and where we are in centennial park in fort myers there's a memorial to hon or those lives lost. this went up immediately after the hurricane, one of the two men that started the memorial has donated to the city of fort myers. there's a table with paint, paint brushes and people have been coming up and writing messages on bricks, making crosses, many of the messages are for individual who is lost their lives during hurricane ian and other messages for fort myers and southwest florida but unfortunately the number of victims continues going up and on fort myers beach search and
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recovery missions continue. take a look at this video, florida task force continues scouring the island, they confirmed with us their cadaver dogs are picking up new scents this week, however, they have also pulled people off the island alive, some of them by rescue and some of them decided that now it's time to evacuate but the people who escaped with their lives often lost pretty much everything else. their homes, cars, we spoke with a physician's assistant who lost her practice on boulevard and fort myers beach and she's helping others, listen to this. >> i've been driving around, that's how i met some of these people is just been driving around and some of the places that have the worst damage just checking on people making sure that they, you know, don't have really bad wounds, a lot of people need tetnus shots because they have small wounds that aren't infected. nate: the resilience here is overwhelming, that woman telling
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us she has no plans of leaving fort myers beach and wants to continue serving her community and now hoping to get a fema trailer so that he can continue doing that. a lot of pets displaced during hurricane ian. local shelters damaged or destroyed so the naples humane society stepped and now pets on flights to northern states so they can find new homes. listen to this. >> we will be running, staging animals at the shelter and loading them to our vehicles and running them to load up into jets. nate: molly since hurricane ian the naples humane society has shipped over 500 animals to northern state where is they'll be up for adoption, hopefully they can find new homes. they're had 4 flights so far. they have another flight planned for this week. we will send it back to you. mollie: hopefully they will find a lot of welcoming homes, so many different kinds of logistical challenges nate foy, thank you for your reporting. my next guest is helping those
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in southwest florida recovering from wreckage left behind by hurricane ian. bill is the captain at offshore naples, joins me now from naples, florida to talk about relief efforts there and bill, you sort of just personified the heart of community. you're a guy that got to work in the aftermath of the storm, climbing really out of your own rubble and just helping other people meeting whatever needs you see. tell me about how this storm hit you personally and this kind of volunteer effort that you're spearheading? >> well, as you can see behind me, that's what's left of my house. so i work out of my house. we are on the water here so, you know, that's where i work out of. as far as, you know, the relief effort, we have helped out during dorian and also irma and now this is right in our backyard so i just really tried to use whatever connections i can to help other people. there's elderly people sitting in their homes that still have
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not taken anything to the curb. we are going through neighborhoods and trying to find those people and send crews in. molly: that's one of the most heartbreaking parts about this, how many elderly people were left in need that lost their homes and have suffered sort of the devastating consequences there. what are you doing and what is unique about helping those older folks? >> well, a lot of people coming in with ma man -- manual labor d they want to help and don't know where to go. we have plenty of supplies the community has outpoured hundreds of thousands of supplies, just donated. people are coming from the east coast so it's really nice to see that. as far as elderly people, you know, we've had people come up to our warehouse and say there's people in dire need with medical conditions. so, you know, we are trying to get crews out there, bring them generators if they need to run medical devices and we really
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are just trying to help the worst of the worst right now. molly: there are big organizations that are helping down there and here you guys, the little guy, how is the operation run, how do you make it work? >> so initially it started with me and a buddy of mine and someone else that came up from the east coast, they also helped with dorian so we already kind of had a little tinny base and we just kind of took charge, my neighbor had a warehouse that you're seeing there and he opened it up to us and then a few other organizations that are like, you know, just the same thing i'm doing teamed up because we need a place to put all of this stuff so people started hearing about it and snowballed from there and i can get anyone anything they need right now i just need to know what it is and where to bring it. molly: part of the organization but they posted about you guys, veterans organization, they are focused on bringing veterans together building commodore and
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we are happy to give them a shout-out as well but if you were telling people what to do to help, what would you say? oh, it looks like -- >> really at this point we need -- >> molly: we lost bill. oh. we did lose bill, sorry about that. bill fantastically work and hopefully people can help aid him. incredible story. that's happening in florida. two years after decriminalizing hard drugs, oregon is struggling with one of the highest addiction rates in america. a psychologist weighs in on controversial measure. that's next.awso ♪ ♪ ♪ and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget,
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hoping that would help more addicts to treatment. department of health show it is state experiencing 20% in fatal overdoses in the last year with deaths related to fentanyl and other synthetic opioids raising by 83% from 2020 to 2021. for more on this stanford professor and former senior policy adviser for white house office of drug control policy keith humphrey joins us. thanks for talking about this issue that has struck so hard in american homes but when oregon passed recovery act the aim was not only decriminalization of hard drugs and personal use amounts but to shift the effort, energy away from prosecution and penalties and move it into this protreatment world. is it working, why or why not? >> yeah, so far it's not
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working. oregon is number 1 in the country and the proportion of people who use elicit drugs and number 50 in treatment access. they did budget a lot of money for treatment but as the, you know, people who run the oregon health agency themselves admit the rollout was really badly bungled and a lot of the money was not sent out and so there weren't services available. molly: one of the great challenges digging out of crisis is the availability of treatment. it's a nationwide challenge but if more people should be seeking treatment, even if they are not inspired to do so, what are the options in oregon? is that a challenge just having the places to go, the people to help? >> so oregon has a lot of talented people, leaders and national leaders in addiction medicine and there's residential care, outpatient care and medications that can be very help for people addicted to opioids but the money as i said
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didn't get sent out correctly and there's been a lot of disorder in some places that didn't have money to have their staff and that created shortages. the other thing they depended on a system whereby they would write tickets instead of arresting for drug use and instead ticket was 100ed but you could get it waved if you called toll free number but only 1% of the people got the ticket ever made the phone call, so that also did not work. molly: what have they learned since then? is there a shift in policy about to take place? are they learning from what has yet to work? >> that's a good question. they are at a moment similar to say where seattle was at a couple of years ago. seattle was a very liberal city, only 8% of voters voted for donald trump and two years later 55% voted for republican city
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attorney who pledged to crack down on drugs and a lot of dissatisfaction with the situation and there's a chance that it can come out in political ferment. people are compassionate and want to help people that use drugs but when there's a lot of disorder, when there's a lot of crime, robberies, loss of neighborhood amenity eventually people tend to push become, the voters do and that's why it's really important for oregon to fix this and get it working. molly: one of the greatest challenges is what would motivate someone to seek treatment and if jail is not on the able, then what about the penalty, the ultimate penalty? fentanyl has become -- people as you mentioned, you're not seeing the flood of people rushing into treatment. what would motivate? >> right. ththis is the heart of addiction is continued use despite
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negative consequences. you think any rational person, my god, why would you do that, because it feels extremely rewarding at the moment that you are doing and you keep taking the risk and as you do it over and over your brain adapts to it as if it's reasonable but doesn't seem that way to you because you're addicted. so most people who seek help are there from pressure. sometimes it's family, sometimes it's from work and sometimes it's from the law and oregon right now there's really not much pressure. there's no legal pressure. culturally it's a pretty libertarian part of the country. not a lot of cultural pressure on people and a lot of the folks particularly out on the streets are detached from families and from work, there's no pressure there either. you have situations where -- >> molly: one we are seeing play out in the country and potentially there could be ramifications in a few weeks. keith h humphreys.
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>> thank you. molly: we will bring you the latest on the other side of the break. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ science proves your best sleep is vital to your mental, emotional, and physical health. and we know 80% of couples sleep too hot or too cold. introducing the new sleep number climate360 smart bed. the only smart bed in the world that actively cools, warms and effortlessly responds to both of you. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per night.
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sacked her event. christina: only native american coffee shop in portland and police was targeted after owner advertised she was hosting coffee with cup event. at least 6 people bashing windows and doors with hammers and crowbars early wednesday morning and blasted white paint all over shop splattering on native american art work and guzmán is having bullet proof glass installed for protection. >> it's bullet proof glass or i put up bars and stuff and, you know, that's one thing that was really saddening. my customers were like i don't want you to have bars and some of my customers were like really crying, they were so upset. christina: since vandalism there's been huge show of support and they boarded right away guzmán held event as planned and portland police helped clean up and doubled
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amount of customers that they usually get each day. >> i've had people call from all over the united states, you know, like saying, thank you for standing up for what believe and thanks for doing the right thing and not being scared. i'm like, i mean, how are we going to make a change if we are scared. >> they've had enough. they want to hear from each other. christina: suspects in the case are still at large, mayor said upon arrest he would advocate for prosecution to the fullest extent of the law including potential federal hate crimes. molly. molly: christina coleman. thank you so much. fox news sunday with shannon bream is next. i'm molly line, thank you so i'm molly line, thank you so much for watching. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ new ies incredible - meatballs, fresh mozzarella and pepperon-
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how close the world could be to. the president says of putin is not joking about the possibility of major escalations as russia's war on ukraine falters. an oil origination/production the white house new help to bring down gas prices. correct a lot of alternatives we have made up her mind at records and bring former secretary state mike pompeo on how the u.s. should respond to russia
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