tv Fox News Live FOX News November 19, 2022 1:00pm-2:00pm PST
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against racial preferences. paul: it may be the attempts to get out ahead of the supreme court ruling. if you have your own hit or miss, tweet us at jer on fnc. that's it for this week's show thanks to my panel and thanks to all of you for watching. i am paul gigot, i hope to see you here next week. ♪ >> the mystery deepens and the brutal killings of four university of idaho students, even as we learn chilling details about the victims final hours. hello, i am arthel neville. eric: i am eric shawn. police asking for the public's health. the brutal killings captured the nation. the community there on edge demand justice hoping the savage killer will soon be caught. we will go live to moscow idaho where christina coleman is
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reporting on this the first the biden administration under pressure to secure the southern border after judge blocks the use of title 42 used to expel two and a half million migrants but observers expect after the ruling the crisis is set to get worse. let's begin with bill melugin live on the border in new mexico with the latest from their. >> good afternoon. earlier this week we heard secretary mayorkas insist again once again the border is closed and secure but that's not reality of the situation on the ground here. we will show you what we witnessed. look at this video, within two minutes arriving, we started to see illegal immigrants who crossed over the border wall and repelled down and were running into new mexico toward residential neighborhoods. as we were following a couple of guys i saw two more run out in
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front of my car, men who repelled down the wall illegally entering the u.s. and running toward residential neighborhoods. no border patrol agents anywhere and we followed them ten minutes and they were never taught or apprehended and they are presumed getaways. in october alone cbp sources tell us there were more than 63000 of these getaways at the southern border. elsewhere, look at this video this morning in eagle pass, texas, we have a drone team right now, they witnessed a single enormous group of migrants crossing illegally into eagle pass, it plays out like clockwork every morning in the eagle pass area. it's a massive drain on border patrol resource agents as they have to show up to process the polls agents elsewhere off the front lines but that wasn't the only group this morning. look at this second video, an hour after the first group we
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had another group of approximately 250 cross illegally in eagle pass across town, you will see a local ambulance local resources have to be used for migrants who need any medical attention. in the last 24 hours alone in the del rio sector, there were more than 1400 illegal crossings. look at this mug shot of a child sex offender arrested in the tucson arizona sector, mexican national named daniel -- he is a previous conviction of child rape in the state of washington from 2004, he was arrested by agents trying to reenter the united states illegally. this is in new mexico part of border patrols el paso sector, the busiest seeing a lot of getaways moments before i shot, you can see the wall behind us, a group of men using a hook and ladder trying to climb over the wall and get into the area. a border patrol agent who
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responded with lights and sirens he stops them from cutting over and they got rid of the ropes so constant game of kat and mouse. eric: they will just move down and wait half an hour to do it again. thank you in new mexico. arthel: in the meantime, texas governor greg abbott is sending armored personnel carriers to the southern border. days after he declared an invasion after homeland security secretary alejandra mayorkas testified before a senate panel thursday lawmakers pressed him on the trump era title 42 po policy. >> the plan for dealing with mass migration, illegal immigration post title 42 of. >> what we are doing is what we announced we would do, searching resources to the southern border
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including personnel, technology, capabilities and transportation. a tremendous hemispheric challenge. we are encountering of the border changed dramatically. arthel: former border patrol chief and former acting ice director ron pattillo. secretary mayorkas says the administration surged resources to the servant border. have you seen evidence of that and has it helped? >> they are sending additional agents. if you talk to an agent on the northern border for example, every 30 days they are down on the southwest border helping with the search and go home 30 days and they are sent back, it's a difficult scenario for men and women who live on the northern border with canada% every 30 days to the southwest border they put additional resources in augmented facilities but the one thing they need to do, they have not admitted as a crisis may haven't
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put anything in place to help the policy to try to recharge some of the flow. arthel: why did governor abbott declare an invasion of the southern border? what you think he's hoping a declaration would trigger? >> all resources in texas are overwhelmed including border patrol, department of public safety of texas, they had national guard deployed but the flow continues unabated the declaring invasion allows the government to deploy resources from his national guard in a different status to help the situation down there so more boots on the ground more eyes and ears and assistance to his own authorities in texas as well as border patrol. arthel: how bad has it gotten? how is the problem affecting border cities and communities? >> the cities and towns are overwhelmed, we saw the video from the border with bill melugin, eagle pass is
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overwhelmed, all resources dhs has, even if augmented, they are overwhelmed. when there are thousands of people across the border and locations like eagle pass normandy and yuma, arizona, border patrol is overwhelmed, they had to be taken care of in a specific way and put in the system and overwhelms the workforce and doesn't allow them to find drugs, rescue people, save people from being trafficked. they have to do the work and take care of the people in this administration refuses to do anything to make it stop. arthel: and where are they being held while processing? >> they have a brief state with the cbp and families are released into the united states coming to a neighborhood near you. they are incentivized to come because many are being released is encountered at all. arthel: if the democrats have
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been derelict in their duty, you think a republican the house beginning january could begin to fix the problem? what is the fix and who can help? >> they have been derelict, is white house torn down all the rules that existed. it only stopped two ways, through migrant protection, allow people to have due process and let them wait in mexico or provide sufficient detention resources so people could be held until they see a judge and whenever judge makes a decision they are released to go back home or released under the immigration law. they refused to do that call the surprises and that's why we are in this situation. arthel: when the secretary says it's a hemispheric challenge, explain what that means. >> i don't know what he's trying to talk about but the problem is the southwest border, nobody sees 7000 people every 24 hours coming into the country. they transit through columbia, most of mexico, south america to
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get here because the incentives in this administration has no desire to control the border and that's why they are coming here. we are doing this to ourselves, a choice to make and we are seeing it, seven to 8000 a day when we were getting 1400 a day under obama administration, a humanitarian crisis. what to call now? illegal to cross the border without the government letting you in and the administration is turning a blind eye to it. arthel: you say they are encouraging it, we don't have them here obviously but you also said you think it would help if they just admit it is a crisis. would you like an official statement from the border cz czar -- what are you expecting or hoping for? >> it is absolutely crisis, they
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are overwhelmed, cities and towns and local authorities are overwhelmed. it's a crisis by any definition and they refuse to say it. if you don't identify the problem, how are you going to fix it? arthel: we will keep talking about and reporting on it and hopefully we can get resolution down there, the crisis of the southern border. thank you very much and thank you for joining us today. >> thank you. eric: investigators in moscow idaho seeking the public health solving gruesome murders of the four college students in an off-campus house last sunday. a small town remains on edge as police have still not determined or identified if they have any suspects or persons of interest. in this horrible murder case that script the nation, a focus now is on who may have driven two of the victims back home from having their night out. christina coleman live with the latest on this case. >> for the latest, we just learned local law enforcement will have a press conference on this case tomorrow afternoon
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around 3:00 p.m. local time and hopefully they can release more details on this, a lot of people say they are terrified, no idea but would drive someone to brutally murder for college students so people want to know what happened and why. look at this, we have video from a fox news drone, we shot this in the past few hours, the forensic team appeared to be getting measurements of tire marks in the street in front of this house where the quadruple homicide occurred. it is unclear if authorities identified a suspect vehicle in this case, they've not released any more information at this time. for the victims, officers say madison kaylee went to a food truck you the idaho university campus around 1:30 a.m. sunday morning last week, they received a ride home from a private party
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is unclear who gave them the ride what could have been discussed during the right or whether the driver has been interviewed by investigators. also, kaylee's sister told insight addition that she made six calls to a friend between 2:26 a.m. to 44:00 a.m. and logan tried to call the same friend the night they were murdered, this would be less than an hour before they were attacked. they did not answer their calls. i spoke with a spokesperson for the state police to try to get details on this and they are not releasing any more information at this time. as i mentioned, residents are deeply concerned over this unsolved brutal crime. there's not been a murder in this close-knit committee for at least seven years. >> i hope to catch the perpetrator quickly because the uncertainty in the rumor mill is rampant. it's like a jigsaw puzzle, the
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pieces are adding up. you can speculate for hours. people are speculating and the pieces just don't add up. >> moscow police put out a map the pieces together a timeline of where the students were hours before they were murdered. they were in downtown moscow, they believe they went to a bar and stopped by the food truck while ethan was out of fraternity house before they returned to the home. the coroner said the victims were likely asleep they were attacked and authorities believe it was a targeted attack. two other students were in the house of the time of the quadruple homicide and cooperating with law enfor enforcement. there was no forced entry into the three-story six bedroom home, a murder weapon not recovered. authorities believe all four victims were stabbed to death between 3:00 and 4:00 a.m. early sunday morning.
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911 call place for an unconscious person at this house hours later before noon and police have not identified who made the phone call. detectives motioned local businesses to find out if a fixed blade knife has been purchased recently in the area part of this ongoing investigation as i mentioned, i chatted with a spokesperson for idaho state police and asked if they had more information sensors concerned right now but they said they do but they are not releasing it at this time because they do not want to compromise this investigation. eric: one can only hope traffic cameras may have identified the vehicle and left messages on the cell phone so if they were alarmed, they took them home. christina coleman, thank you. arthel: brighter days in d.c., it's a big weekend in washington for president biden. his granddaughter got married
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today in a ceremony at the white house and the president celebrate his 80th birthday tomorrow. all this tips administered and turns to the supreme court to save president biden's student debt relief plan. lucas tomlinson is live with more on the details. >> weakened of celebrations here at the white house, first the wedding of the president granddaughter naomi this morning 11:00 a.m., new photos to show you. they just came in. the white house says 250 people attended the service on the south lawn to see the president's first lady saying it's a joy to watch naomi grow, discover who she is and carve out an incredible life for herself following the ceremony the president and first lady hosted a lunch the wedding party in the dining room of the white house and dancing will take place later this evening. the president claimed he has other good news to share, prices are beginning to decrease.
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>> inflation of the grocery store on a gun slightly and prices for things like clothes and television and appliances are going down as well. as we head into the holidays. gas prices are down but will take time to get inflation back to normal levels. >> not just reducing inflation on the christmas but getting student debt relief on track after federal appeals courts blocked biden's executive order. critics and judges called biden's plan unconstitutional, the white house filed an emergency request the supreme court open it can resume student debt relief plans. will before celebrating of the white house as we set off the top, president turning 80 tomorrow, the oldest u.s. president in history celebrating the occasion with a low-key brunch with his family. arthel: you cannot be the white house as a backdrop for a wedding, though. >> only 19 of them ever held here at the white house. arthel: of course you know that.
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[laughter] thank you. eric: that's for sure. former president trump slamming justice department decision to appoint the special counsel. to oversee to criminal investigations into him even though federal statute call for that to prevent a possible conflict of interest. the former president saying he would quote not partake in the process. days after he announced he's running for president again in 2024. merrick garland appointed veteran official jack smith as the special counsel. as a result of trump's announcement. smith is a longtime prosecutor former war crimes investigator who lead to investigations now into the key aspects of the departments january 6 probe in the handling of the trove of secret intelligence documents found in mr. tom's home at mar-a-lago. prosecuting public corruption and violations of u.s. intelligence laws including
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getting conviction of top cia official who had intelligence documents and convicted of obstruction of justice. arthel: children's hospitals are calling on president biden to declare a public health emergency over rsp. cases surge across the country but not just kids at risk. we will have that and more coming up next.
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to law enforcement agencies of the potential threat against the jewish community in new york city. this breaking just today. nypd arresting two men today after officials said they arrived there. one identified as 21-year-old christopher brown and the other on the 22-year-old nephew mayor, of long island and new york c city. police say they were armed with knife, glock handgun, ammunition, one was a swastika armband in his possession. he's charged with making terroristic threats allegedly making statements about attacking a synagogue in new york city. federal investigations discover the threat yesterday and moved quickly to get a more information. the mayor booked on the weapons
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charge and will bring you the updates on the developing story, potential threat against the new york city synagogue allegedly by these two men. arthel: thank you. children's doctors urging president biden to declare emergency over rsp as a respiratory virus spreads at an alarming rate among infants and toddlers. it's coming on top of covid and during flu season in pediatric hospitals are now reporting and overwhelming surge in patients. lauren green is live with more on this. >> experts are saying the surge could be one of the unforeseen consequences of the covid shut down and urged the government to have similar response. pediatric hospitals are overwhelmed by unseasonable increase in rsp cases in flu, three quarters of the beds are full and seven states, 90%. according to the cdc, infant six months and younger are getting hospitalized with rsp seven
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times the rate before the covid-19 pandemic in 2019. 2018, rather. children hospital association asking the biden administration to declare health emergency saying these unprecedented levels of rc helping with growing blue rate, ongoing hydrate. serious workforce shortages stretching pediatric care capacity at the hospital and community level to the breaking points. rsp is a common virus usually causing mild cold like symptoms, running those, decrease in appetite, coughing, sneezing, fever and wheezing but it can be deadly serious for infants and the elderly. spike in cases like we have residual effect of covid isolation. >> when you suppress mother nature, you create an immunity kat many you've reduced imm immunity, the basic virus bacteria normally we are exposed
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to in our immune systems are primed and we built up defenses when exposed to various viruses and bacteria especially a problem for new forms born during the pandemic or before the pandemic. >> rsp can lead to more problems like bronchitis, pneumonia. the cdc recommends talking to a health provider before giving children nonprescription cold medicines. arthel: thank you. eric. eric: to learn how to protect yourself and your family from rsp. fox news medical contributor. how do you know if it's rsp or winter flu or potentially covid? >> you don't and it's really important place to start. when you look for as a young child not behaving properly or lips turn blue or congested or not breathing properly or a fever, then you can do a couple
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of things to figure out which because covid you can do a rabbit test, repeat rabbit test, for flu we have rabbit tests that aren't as good but no way to test for that. rsp and if you are worried, you have to bring them to the hospital. to add, emergency rooms are getting overwhelmed and a lot of states because of this and we are seeing 171 out of 100,000 kids under six months with rsp and the reason is as she was hinting at, kids were exposed to the virus is because of the pandemic lockdowns and masking and lack of exposure and usually kids are exposed to rsp by the age of two so i urge parents to be on the lookout for all three of these and do the test they can to rule out covid. eric: what should parents knew exactly? your infant or child is coming
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down sick, what you do first? >> look around the house, who else is sick? if somebody has covid or the flu, that's about a third chance the kid is catching the same thing so who else is sick and who have they been exposed to? the younger they are, the more i'm worried about rsp because the tiny airways of young children get clogged and that's where they end up in the emergency room, and icu. the younger, the more concerned i am. the older the child, the less concerns, usually is mild. a very young child, be on the lookout for rsp and get them to
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the hospital right away. for flu and covid, i want to know who you've been exposed to in a rabbit test. eric: what age are you most concerned about? >> for flu, for flu under the age of five. we are seeing hospitalizations for flu under five. for rsp, under six months. the very, very young infants most concerned. eric: can it spread to adults? can adults get it? >> that's something we are under reporting, they not only get it, they are getting plenty and older adults and up in the hospital also being hospitalized ten times the rate than we saw before and another thing, you can have rsp and get it again but what we lack is the immunity blanket we see from having been exposed previously. very old, very young and most important thing if you're middle, revised young kid or another health condition, we worry about you but two thirds of the children getting hospitalized don't have an underlying problem so don't think i have a healthy infant, it can't happen to them, it can happen to even a healthy infant.
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eric: watch out for rsp, get your flu shot and protect yourself this winter. >> we've been saying for a while now you have to wash your hands for covid because it only spreads this way, rsp does spread on surfaces and so does flu. wash your hands for rsp and flu. eric: we know what that's like, go back to that great to see y you. arthel: pay attention because winter is here. and buffalo now buried in as much as 6 feet of snow, more is on the way, historic effect paralyzing western and northern new york. blinding snow. kathy hochul says hundreds of people had to be rescued but could have been much worse had not heated storm warnings. >> sound like chicken little the sky is falling before the first snow came but if we knew if everybody could pay attention
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and hunker down in your homes, get ready for three or four days, possibly five days of food and battery and everything in your home, they listen to us. arthel: that's good because the sky was falling. officials say they may be able to lift travel bans on new york's freeways by tonight but winter weather advisories are still in effect for the buffalo area through tomorrow. eric: can you imagine 6 feet of snow? outside your door and sadly three people have died from that so please take care. buffalo to las vegas, the road to the 2024 presidential nomination through sin city. which potential candidates are stepping into the spotlight and why it's shining there. we will tell you who's in and who could be out as fox news
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into the sudden collapse of crypto exchange pocket ftx. the crash wiping out billions of dollars in investments. top lawmakers who got campaign cash from founder sam brinkman breed may soon be questioning him under oath. charles watson is live with more. >> ahead of the house financial services committee hearing scheduled for next month democrats are trying to distance themselves from disgraced ftx crypto currency exchange founder sam thanks and freed spent a lot of money rolling democrats during the 2022 midterm elections.
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according to open secrets, he made me nearly 37 million in campaign donations to democrats, eclipsing to $40000 he gave to republicans among those who benefit is your congressman jeffries waste to succeed house speaker nancy pelosi as next house caucus leader. he's received 5800 axonal campaign contribution by law and he's not alone. democrats who sit on financial committees with oversight duties of the crypto space got campaign cash from brinkman breed including your congressman she boris, foxbusiness hillary gone he donate the money to charity while insisting the donations from brinkman breed have no effect over his her colleagues judgment. >> republic and who received from his business partner.
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>> 90% of his money was spent for democrats. >> that contributed to the republicans, i'm confident in the ability of congress to conduct oversight. people will see the hearings and cross examination and judge for themselves. >> he's extradited from the bahamas to answer to a class action lawsuit named ftx and's celebrities. shaq and larry david all promoted ftx and commercials like the one you see here. we heard from one who says he lost $2 million in this alleged scheme. >> this was a con man, he fooled everyone. he was the closest to being regulated by anybody else but was intentionally done, a calculated plan for crime has taken place. >> there were questions about nearly half a billion dollars in user funds ftx possession that
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mysteriously disappeared. we heard from the security commissions in the bahamas who said they transferred the funds to a digital wallet in the security commissions control for safekeeping. they say it's expected to help customers of ftx as the company goes to bankruptcy proceedings. arthel: what a shame. charles watson in atlanta, thank you. eric: midterms in the books, republicans looking ahead to 2024. some of the biggest presidential candidate names addressing republican jewish coalition in las vegas being held this weekend. among them, former vice president mike pence and florida governor want to send us. alexandra hoff is live with the latest on the lineup in the event. >> former president trump wrapped up his address to the collision, he did it virtually from mar-a-lago and the only
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declared candidate right now, the rest of the speakers fault and not really get out category as you might call it but we heard from senator cruz short time ago, he asked the crowd to support his 2024 senate campaign and could perhaps indicate he may bypass a run for president. >> i can tell you 100 u.s. senators, there's no senator, the democrats want to be more than yours truly. >> speaking with reporters afterwards, crews did not wholly discount run for president but reiterated the focus remains on retaining his senate seat. former president trump marks, the middle of other potential primary challengers who made speeches as well and they said midterm losses proof the party needs to go in a new direction but the former president said he's what's needed to reverse the policies. >> we have to push back hard on
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every overreach and call out every single failure of which there are so many and then take back the white house in 2024. >> this evening we will hear from nikki hailey and perhaps trump's biggest current political rival, florida governor ron desantis. former vice president mike pence stage last night. >> we as for republicans and elected leaders must do more than criticize complain. we must unite our party around bold optimistic agenda that offers a clear choice and lasting foundation for victory in 2024 and beyond. >> the field is wide open for republicans still but in terms of venues where you need to
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impress, this is the first to do so. arthel: the keynote speaker at the event. thank you. arthel: we are going to turn to the war in ukraine, nearly half the electric grid has been destroyed by russian forces. means of people bracing for complete loss of power as subfreezing temperatures settlement. we are live with more coming up.
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nearly nine months now and putin's punishing unnecessary war in ukraine. officials won the capitol of kyiv could face a total loss in power from the russian attacks ukrainians resolve have not dimmed at all. greg is live in kyiv with the latest. >> there's hope for better ukraine but the situation regarding the power supply is
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getting dire. the latest high-profile visitor to kyiv who promised more british military aid to be both anti-missile air defenses after another punishing week of russian attacks bringing locals closer to a perilous lack of energy. look what we have been seeing and hearing. >> president zelenskyy afternoon uk prime minister honoring those who lost increasingly, bitter war with russia is. >> millions without electricity this week. moscow's this is in front, defeats on the battlefield. most power plants of the private utility have been damaged as well as transmission lines. workers raised to repair a sign
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of the dangers times today we interviewed ceo, we ended up in a bomb shelter amid air raid. >> to find a solution to keep it heated and keep our people in the country. >> more on the missile in poland tuesday, earlier reports you might recall claim it was russian, the u.s. saying it was probably every ukrainian air defense missile. kyiv seems to be edging toward that but still the desperate fight continues here. eric: all right, thank you. arthel: putin's war on ukraine spilling into nato teller toy. missile strike earlier this week killed two people. poland and nato secretary general hans stilton -- the
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strike was not a russian attack but a likely ukrainian air defense missile. while it's called a tragic accident, could make tensions between nato and russia even worse? is bringing jim false, security expert at mit with the security studies program. tell me, what you think is the most potentially inflammatory aspect of this missile strike? >> this particular one was handled well. the dutch and american authorities with the identified it was not a russian missile. had it been a russian missile than immediately you have conversations about should nato respond? should poland respond? we would be in a different place. the fact that officials were able to identify it was inerrant ukrainian defense missile was
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really good. the fault is russia's, let's be clear. ukraine would not be firing defensive missile if it wasn't being attacked by russia's missiles so even though it was ukrainian is, they are doing and response to russia and to your question, i think the reason we have a problem is ukraine is on nato's border, war is messy and we are going to get other incidences in the future, it's the nature of war. arthel: and it is russia's fa fault. let me read a partial quote from the editorial board, at minimum, poland is within its rights to invoke article four of the nato treaty. it allows any member bring issue of concern or discussion by north atlantic council, poland they be under quiet diplomatic pressure not to do so because officials want to avoid searing up public fear so nato nations
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acted carefully but swiftly. article5 was not enacted by what does putin take away from this? >> i don't know that he takes anything in particular except as we look down the road to the future we should keep in mind it's possible he will conclude rather by mistake or error it might be in his interest to be provocative at the edges on the margins with poland and the idea of in his mind dividing nato unity or increasing pressure. arthel: seven he didn't see it, 45 seconds, you said he didn't see it, they are going to act with the if i do anything if i cross the line, he doesn't see it that way. more provocation, i don't know.
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>> what happened this week shows it's a possibility. if he loses the war and get desperate, he'll be pushed to get leverage of the margin and it might include dodging. arthel: out of time, thank you very much.to we'll be t right back. sorry. sorry. sorry. pret (fisher investments) no. we structure our fees so we do better when our clients do better. that might be why most of our clients come from other money managers. at fisher investments, we're clearly different. cityserve, started rescuing women, children and the elderly. and as winter approaches, they need our help
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soccer fans around the world rejoice as a world cup kicks off tomorrow. alex hogan live with the latest on the games. >> the night before world cup ticks off fans or hear from all around the world, 1 million people are expected and many of them are celebrating starting celebrations of the van festival dancing away the night and this is where people can watch the matches if they don't have tickets and it's where people can buy a beer because yesterday the government announced last minute change beer can no longer be sold at the stadium's despite
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ultimately dollar associate with budweiser drinking in public places is illegal but the law was supposed to be lifted to host world cup. another big concern having the event here was the temperature. world cup takes place every four years in the summer but temperatures here at that time of year could surpass 110 degrees fahrenheit. today the high climbed to nearly 90, all stadiums will have air conditioning powered with solar energy. we see teams getting here early to acclimate not only to the time zone but also the heat. we saw more people in the evening today because of cool temperatures, not as many as i think people expected the night before the world cup kicked off. eric: alex hogan at the world cup, good to see you. arthel: awesome assignment.tr
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we'll be baciek tomorrow noonpr oteastern. hope you can join us then. right now the big saturday show is up next. mckenzie: being a first time parent is hard, you know? but then learning that your child has cancer is unbelievably hard. brennon: that's not something that we woke up that morning planning to hear. just hearing that she had cancer, it breaks you. mckenzie: eliza is diagnosed with bilateral retinoblastoma at four months. it's cancer of the eyes. it's aggressive and it's fast growing. and as a mom, hearing that, i still cry because you want to take away all of the pain
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and you don't want your kid to be sick, obviously. brennon: you kind of get tossed in the fire and you have to figure certain things out. and with what we've been going through, i don't know how we would have made it without st. jude. - st. jude children's research hospital works day after day to find cures and save the lives of children with cancer and other life threatening diseases. mckenzie: we do not receive any bills from st. jude. and that is, it's a huge weight lifted off. we only have to worry about eliza. we are so thankful that there are people out there who care and who give to st. jude so that we can care for our baby girl. - you can join the battle to save lives by supporting st. jude children's research hospital. join with your debit or credit card right now and we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt that you can proudly
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hello everyone i'm nicole safire, shaun duffy and jimmy. welcome to "the big saturday show". here's what is on tap today, and eat at. quickstart new details and the murders of four college student killed while asleep in their beds. the information that could reveal more about a possible killing. >> the bad blood between taylor swift fans and ticketmaster after that huge a ticket de
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