tv Fox News Live FOX News December 3, 2022 10:00am-11:00am PST
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>> final senate lead still up for grabs in georgia, election day tuesday between ralph warnock and republican herschel walker. the matchup remains tied as 1 million ballots are already in. welcome to fox news live i'm jacqui heinrich. griff: i'm griff jenkins, no appearance from president biden and former president trump on the campaign trail as both candidates have been pulling out all of the stops in the final days of the midterm elections. aishah hosni live in atlanta with more. hi, aishah. aishah: good to see you this
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meantime walker also seemingly avoiding someone here. former president trump will hold a telerally with hand-picked candidate but will not be in the state in person as both of these sides understand the appearance might be politically risky. remember about 200,000 voters here split their tickets last month voting for governor brian kemp who as you know has clashed with president trump and not voting for walker. >> do i think herschel is a great candidate, i don't. i would be completely honest but i do think the more republicans in office whether it'd be senate or the house, governor, obviously this seat is just as important to try to get. aishah: and griff, jacqui more than a million georgians have turned out to vote and it's all about turnout on tuesday. griff: quick follow-up and that
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is nearly 3 days away does it feel like an election is going on there or not so much? aishah: it does. i can tell you the last time i was here in the last cycle. it was talking with voters, they were over it and they wanted the bitter, bitter campaign to be done. the election cycle but you can feel that people are taking this runoff election very seriously and people have been waiting in lines for about an hour, hour and a half as some of the polling sites to make sure that their voices are heard. it's going to be a tight one. every single vote is going to count, guys. griff: indeed, aishah hasnie in the middle of it, thank you. jacqui. jacqui: elon musk is releasing new information on twitter went out of its way to censor bombshell reports on the hunter biden laptop scandal in the days leading up to the 2020 election. alexandria hoff joining me onset with the latest.
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alexandria, this is a big story and a lot of information that you have condensed into a report for us here. >> more to come because elon musk says the second round of this twitter drop of the documents is going to be expected for today and he's also going to do question and answer question with that. musk believes documents under prior leadership twitter worked with democrats and then candidate president biden's team in removing posts from users from the platform. he shared company communication with writer matt who then turned the information into a lengthy twitter thread. it was released last night. now included screen shots, extraordinary steps to remove reporting on hunter biden's laptop by marking the story unsafe and utilizing a tool reserved for extreme cases like child pornography. twitter disabled the counts that linked to the story with executives seen here justifying their action by saying that the contents violated the company's hacked materials policy. there's also some debate
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internally of whether that was appropriate or not. now, taibbi wrote that requests to delete or review tweets had become routine. one executive here in october 2020 wrote about to another one asking about handling of requests from the biden team that came directly in from them. now taibbi suggesting that democrats proof more powerful in the request due to leanings of twitter staff. elon musk added yesterday that round two of the files will be released today on that here is guy lewis. >> we are going to see over the next few days an probably next few weeks a series of explosions, bombs where he's putting out the tweets indicating that what the prior management did was just absolutely almost too hard to believe. >> lewis said there that's there might not have been anything
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illegal busy pressing reporting that pertained criminal activity. as jacqui, what we were discussing, what came out of this was that former ceo jack dorsey didn't seem privy to a lot of the censorship taking place. jacqui: that was interesting to me. the other interesting thing hack material policy that they were doing all of this over according to their own policy requires some sort of a law enforcement designation or finding of materials being hacked and that that didn't exist here or at least what we have seen so far. but a lot of this, you know, i was expecting, it's certainly interesting but a lot of it seems like just confirmation of things we already knew also. >> i think that's right. the fact that you had people lower-level twitter employees that were acting out of own political bias. it's something that we regrettably expect in situations like this. jacqui: we will keep watch for round two. thank you. griff. griff: alex and jacqui, let's
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bring in star political panel, republican strategist and senior adviser to governor kemp codey hall and former obama communication adviser and author of patriots, two nations, spencer. we clearly have more to learn on this but in the previous hour, senator mike rounds had this to say to jacqui, take a listen here. >> i think congress will have a series of investigations but it goes back and reconfirms what a lot of us have thought that twitter was manipulating what information people were seeing. griff: and we know from the incoming oversight house committee chairman james comer that hearings are likely coming. let me start with you, cody, would you be advising the republicans that this is where you start a new congress? >> i think it's very important but, look, i think if this election told us anything is that voters want us focused on bringing down inflation,
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reducing crime, making sure that the border is secure, so i think it's an important conversation to have but it has to be had in context, right, we have to focus on what the voters elected a new house to actually do which i think is those kitchen-table issues that i just mentioned. griff: yeah, good point and we know obviously a deep dive into the border crisis is not only coming but overdue. spencer, let me ask you about the twitter thing obviously a lot of democrat influencers in this suppression, no indication that there was anything illegal done but your reaction? >> i agree with cody. i welcome any investigation that's conducted in any spirit of legitimate inquiry and, you know, would never suggest that the department of justice is some kind of political organ going after political enemies, for example. and i agree with cody that voters have pretty clearly shown in recent midterms and continue to shown that they would believe it or not really prefer it if
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politicians of both parties focused on trying to make voters' lives better instead of stirring them up with the latest panic of the day and creating the latest scary monster to distract them from things that would actually make a real difference in their lives. griff: well, let's turn to the voters then in the state, cody, where you are in georgia, we've got 3 days the runoff race coming. fist before we dive into warnock and walker, how do you see it going? governor kemp is certainly thread of the needle between president trump, former president trump coming and not coming, being influencing, how do you see the race shaping up? >> yeah, it feels like it's always election season down here. [laughter] >> i think this is going to come down to obviously turnout on tuesday. obviously early voting numbers have been strong on both sides but i think herschel needs a good election day turnout among republicans and i think he can do that but, look, it goes back to what i just said. i think that voters are going to
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be asking themselves, who is going to go up to washington and fight for us and i think that when you look at raphael warnock's record he voted with joe biden 96% to have time. you were to walk in any restaurant or grocery store in georgia and you ask a voter if they agree with joe biden 96% of the time, i think you'd be hard pressed to find the one. i think that that is going to be playing obviously in herschel walker's favor. the other thing i would just mention is that everyone down here has been seeing a lot of tv ads. well, the spending advantage that raphael warnock enjoyed in the run-up to november was actually about 4 to 1 advantage and in the runoff the advantage has been cut 2 to 1 spending advantage for warnock. so the knack he's not spending as much as he was in relation to how much money herschel is spending but that he only came in first by about 35,000 votes. i think herschel has a lot of room for optimism. griff: spencer, howie: do you size it up? >> well, early voting numbers indicate that it's very, very
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strong and i never predict the future. we just cannot know what's going to happen but it's looking good for raphael warnock i think for very good reasons. he's the real deal in terms of moral character and demonstrated that through conduct of his life as very accomplished minister who is the child of two ministers. and i think that as the republican party used to emphasize contractor matters and herschel walker is obviously completely unfit for public office let alone the office of u.s. senator and i don't think most voters, i hope most voters are not going to choose to have somebody just put in that seat, talk about voting with biden to basically just do whatever he's hold unfortunately. griff: spencer, what do you make of warnock not wanting president biden to even show up? >> yeah, well, i think that we see that with former president trump as well with walker campaign, of course, and people make the political calculations.
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on the other hand, reverend warnock has been very happy to have former president obama show up and anybody who has seen those clips with president obama is reminded of what a brilliant political communicator he is and he cuts to the heart of the matter frankly like when he talks about, you know, the debate that walker apparently had with himself to be aware wolf or vamp ire, yeah, i had the debate myself when i was 7. i think athis is unfair to walker as well. i don't mean to just mock them. i don't think he -- i think he's being exploited. he's being taken advantage of and unfortunately through him the voters of georgia. griff: well, jon. cody, last word to respond. >> yeah, i think it's going to come down who is going to go to washington and fight for georgians. if you look at raphael warnock's voting record it is wildly out of step where georgians are. you can take, for example, his street in favor to have so-called inflation reduction act. the ev tax credit provisions in that bill are directly disadvantaging over 7500 new jobs here in georgia.
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that's not voting with georgians, that's voting with joe biden and chuck schumer. griff: great discussion, go dogs by the way, cody. >> thanks, go dogs. griff: shannon bream sits down with mike pence. the must-see interview on fox news sunday tomorrow. she will also have interviews with republican senator from iowa and on media buzz howie kurtz will look how the media is covering president trump's meeting with kanye west. that's tomorrow 11:00 a.m. eastern right here stay tuned. jacqui: we are learning new details where the home of 4 university of iowa students were
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found brattly -- brutally murdered. christina coleman on the ground in moscow, idaho with the latest. hey, christina. christina: hi, jacqui, the latest and new update from moscow police, there was a six person on the lease of the house where the students were brutally attacked but that say the person has been interviewed and they had moved before the school year started so they do not believe they were at the house in the time of murders and do not believe the person is connected to a crime. also in a new interview yesterday with idaho police i asked them about clarification on whether they believed this attack was targeted an they told me that they do. here is their response. >> we do believe this is a targeted attack and that's based on the information that we have provided all along that there did not appear force entrance and two survivors and physical
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evidence at the scene itself. what we are really clear to articulate, though, we are not sure at this time, we have not yet determined at this time if that target was the residents and/or occupants inside the residence. christina: we are also learning some new details about the 6-bedroom three-story off-campus home. the victims were found on the second and third floors of the homes and the two surviving roommates were on the first floor. one of the big questions at the start of this is whether anyone heard anything during that attack. well, a local business owner who says he used to live on the first floor of that home back in 2019 provided some context to fox digital, he said unless the roommate had tv on loudly on the second floor, he typically heard nothing from the second and third floors. also yesterday at a celebration of life ceremony, service for the victims, the father of
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20-year-old sana broke down as he explained how much he's going miss his daughter. >> she taught me a lot of stuff. she taught me how to be a dad and i didn't know that until she was gone, you know. it's like you taught me something. i didn't know that. christina: just heartbreaking to hear those words from that father. also moscow police has a private security more monitoring the home where those students were killed but moscow police still have full control of the crime scene. jacqui: you really feel for those families after the horrible incident. griff: rising covid rates in la county are prompting officials to consider reinstating mandatory mask mandates. the county is currently
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reporting more than 3,000 new covid infections and any covid deaths per day. charles watson is live with the latest, hey, charles. charles: yeah, hey, good afternoon, griff. la county director of public health hasn't definitive i will said a timeline in terms of when if a mask mandate will be restored but she says that the department is looking very closely at rising covid cases as well as hospital capacity to help the department -- to help guide the department rather in their decision-making and so far the director says they are seeing troubling numbers. take a look at this, la county averaging more than 3, 3,000 day covid infections. it is a 44% increase from the week prior and more than 3 times the cases the county was reporting at the beginning of november with those numbers public health officials say la county is currently in the medium transmission area and
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they say if that continues on the same trajectory, they do expect the county will reach what's considered high transmission levels by late next week. that said, that's not the only metric that public health officials are looking at in terms of restoring a mask mandate. they are also keeping close eye at covid hospital admissions which cdc guidance needs to reach 15% capacity before an area is considered high transmission. if they do get to that level which could happen in late december, the director of public health says she does anticipate masks will return. >> we are aligning with the cdc guidance on this. we would ask for universal indoor masking and those unfamiliar with that, that is wherever you go indoors we ask that you keep that mask on. >> folks there would have to return to wearing masks in public indoor settings like restaurants, gyms, grocery stores, for example, if those
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numbers continue on the same path. now whether or not people or cities within la county would follow such guidance is another question. when the county try today reinstate a mask mandate in the summer officials in places like long beach, pasadena and beverly said they would not comply and that could be the case as more and more americans put the pandemic in the rear mirror. la county are making sure that hospitals are not overwhelmed so we are hearing them really try to urge folks to make sure that they are vaccinated and for those folks who are vaccinated, they are making sure that they are updated on their boosters, rick. griff: charles watson, tracking the latest for us, thank you. jacqui. jacqui: millions of ukrainians are dealing with frigid cold weather, no heat or electricity: weather, no heat or electricity: we will talk with a kyiv
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valley, california. >> so i think again, you know, we are trying to do everything we can but we are also, you know, part of an alliance that's all in on this and i think our -- our allies and partners can help us with some of these systems. and i would also say, you know, i've been really pleased at the norwegians have helped with the training in many cases we have been really compressing the training programs. you know, my understanding is traditionally training for nasams is several months and shrunk it down to a month and another variable, if you will, that we can adjust. >> senator ernst, how concerned are you about the windling stockpiles and are you worried about what it means if something were to happen in taiwan, what are you seeing from your situation? >> what i hear from constituents they do bring this up and we as members of congress are concerned about that but the fact of the matter is we need to continue supporting in whatever
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manner we can and continue to develop systems to procure them even use from allies and friends. i think that there are many options available to us but, again, going back to the point that we need to continue to support ukraine, very, very important. there are other measures that we can bring forward. one proposal that i have has been to employ the great eagle in ukraine. >> explain the gray eagle. >> unmanned aerial vehicle to gain air superiority over the skies of ukraine. we know that the iranians are your fitting the russians with their own drones and so we can overmatch in this area and i think it's very important. so there's a bipartisan push in congress to do this. we have excess capability so we
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can employ this capability and it will give us the ability to maintain a dominance the eastern part of ukraine very. >> but the biden administration doesn't want -- >> jacqui: being interviewed by jennifer gr griffin. top of mind for these discussions is the ongoing war in ukraine. the mayor of kyiv telling residents to stock up on water and food amid fears of major blackouts coupled with below zero temperatures this as happening as ukrainian forces continue counteroffensive in the east. jeff paul live in kyiv with more on this. hi, jeff. jeff: jacqui, a sense of tension here in kyiv especially for the folks that call the capital city home left wandering when the next attack by russian forces can be. it's been more than a week since
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the last one which impacted power grid in and around kyiv region and air radio sense in the last couple of dais and the people who live there every time they hear that, they are wondering when the next one could be especially considering we've had multiple ones over the past month nearly each week but out in the east it's a much different story, that's with fighting continues to be very intense especially in the town of bakmut in the donesk region and russian forces are trying to surround the town and capture it. russia is using a lot of resources to take a town that really only offers advantages. if bakmut were to fall, they could use launching pad to strike on larger urban areas to the north, however, ukrainian forces on the font lines say they are digging in for the long haul. >> the enemy intensified activities including electronic
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warfare and there's drone grave ward by our drones hit by us and our drones. >> in kyiv looming threat coupled with ever intensifying winter has officials warning of a, quote, trying few months ahead. urging folks to stock up on anything they need that could help them get through this winter including food and water. he is worried that russian forces might once again target critical infrastructure and now with these harsh winter conditions it can make things here only worse and when you look at other areas even like kherson. jacqui. jacqui: you to marvel resilience of the ukrainian people. jeff paul, thank you. griff. griff: jacqui, for more on the resilience and the situation on the ground joining us live from
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kyiv is foundation for united nations sdg ambassador. christina kataratas. thank you for taking the time. you heard jeff paul's report, mayor of kyiv, klitschko telling to stock up. what can you tell us about the realities on the ground there? >> thank you for having me. i'm right now in nearby restaurant called the sanas and the reason is that we are out of light and the sanas has the generator. even though there is a generator i'm sitting with lights and giving this interview but the situation is really dire. people do not have electricity for long hours especially during the daytime so the lights go on usually at night. and that's when you change your pattern and start washing and doing things at night rather than in the daytime and now the light in the daytime is very
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short because we are in the winter season. so, for example, in our house we are relying on electricity only for heating and what not. so, you know, we had to find other options, for example, to use the gas hatters, to use the gas cookers, to use rechargeable lights, have a power station which is available to charge -- >> griff: yeah. and difficult conditions, indeed, christina. your stream was locking up just a little bit. let's see if we can get the stream. i want to ask you if i can, christina, if we can address -- this is now ten months of this war. you're heading as you mentioned in the winter, conditions the humanitarian situation difficult. are the ukrainian people are losing some resilience or losing some of their will? >> well, actually i think it
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just makes them stronger. so, you know, the spirit is incredible, ukrainian people are unbelievable, are amazing and they are guarding solidly with their lives the rest of the world and i do hope that the world will react because now russia a terrorist state and not doing anything to stop it, not acting upon it, not stopping the terrorists is height of hypocrisy. i as an american and my family and my 7-year-old child are here and, you know, we are supporting these people from the first day of the attack and we are not leaving that because if everybody will leave, who is going to help, who is going make the difference? maybe i'm naive but i believe that we stand for democracy. griff: christina, we have to leave it there, i applaud you and your family for being there and given us the latest on the ground and talk about the will of the ukrainian people, so
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griff: 263,000 jobs this past month despite aggressive inflation from the federal reserve. action that is from the federal reserve aimed at cooling the economy this according to labor department latest report. lucas tomlinson is live outside the white house where president biden is touting the labor market even as inflation remains high. hi, lucas. lucas: hey, griff, the u.s. economy lost 25 million jobs during the pandemic, jobs that were recovered over the summer but some context there from what president biden said here
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yesterday. >> we've now created 10.5 million jobs since i took office. more than any administration in the history at this point in a presidency. for months, you couldn't look anywhere without seeing headlines screaming gas prices at the gas pump are up. but look, folks, gas prices are down and you are barely hearing anything about it. >> remain more than 40% higher than when biden took office earlier this week the federal reserve chairman signaling interest rates will continue to rise to fight inflation. some other troubling data. more americans are leaving the workforce for third straight month, griff. the retail sector lost 30,000 jobs. personal savings rate is the lowest in over 15 years. long-term unemployment also continues to inch higher. steve forbes says that another job's number is not being discussed enough. >> if you look at the household survey which better indicates what small businesses are doing that was down 138,000 jobs, gets
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no publicity and it was down the month before. so that indicates trouble ahead. lucas: here is the new shake-up in the democratic nominating calendar knocking iowa off. south carolina leads things off in february 3rd, new hampshire and nevada on the same day, february 6th, georgia and then michigan and the changes will not be fully approved until the dnc votes early next year, griff. little turn there. griff: lucas tomlinson live in the north lawn. jacqui. jacqui: we are joined by cap it willist pig founder jonathan hoenig, thank you so much for joining us on a saturday. >> great to be with you, jacqui, thank you. jacqui: the jobs numbers that came out, seems like something of a good news could be bad news situation because, you know, it came in higher than expected. unemployment rates staying the fed meaning that the fed interest rate hikes have not had the effect on inflation that we all hope to see. so my question to you is are you
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getting more worried that we see a recession in 2023? >> well, look, jacqui, great to be with you. the job's number was good but one sparrow does not make a summer and although this number was quite resilient and beat expectations, the economy is slowing and as you said inflation is the reason. they are not keeping place with inflation which is a cpi running about 7%. so this number was good but there's still a lot of indications that a full-fledge recession is in the thing for 2023. jacqui: one of the big question marks here is the consumer sentiment on all of this. i know that there's a debate among experts on what all this means. spell it out for us. >> well, consumer sentiment tends to be a contrarian indicator and consumers pessimistic and e indicator for the economy. jacqui, there's a lot of talk
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that consumer spending fuels the economy, it's the opposite. it's investment that fuels the economy. although consumers are spending, they are going into the more, more to do that. we are seeing the savings rate as was mentioned at 15-year low, more consumers tapping into their home equity line of credit, wrapping up credit card debt and investment that powers the economy and investment that's been killed by this biden-related inflation and that's what worries me moving forward, jacqui. historically when inflation is above 5%, it can take ten years to get back up to 2%, unless spending stops at washington, i see no long-term solution to the inflation that's affecting the whole economy. jacqui: are people on wall street starting to talk like that, ten years might be a number we have to start getting comfortable with? >> well, look, that's the historical measure. think about it, inflation that really peaked in 1980, early 1980's, it started a decade earlier and it was exacerbated by so many of the policies throughout the 1970's. i think that the biggest issue here, jacqui, investors had to
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diversify, they are having to cut expenses. we know every american's life curtailed, higher expenses but the inflation started in washington, can't be fixed by wall street, it has to be fixed in washington, deregulation, cutting spending and the more favorable federal reserve. jacqui: everyone is feeling it. i want to pop up on the screens here, as you mentioned earlier wages are not keeping up with inflation, hourly wages up 5.1% but cpi is up 7.7%, your money is not going where you'd expect it to go and it's also affecting christmas trees. christmas tree sales are 71%, tree growers are expecting prices to jump 5 to 15% compared to last year. and, of course, we have been seeing this for months. there's no sector of the -- what you buy that hasn't been touched by inflation. how do people, jonathan, get smart with their money in this economy, what's the best advice? >> the irony is individuals are
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getting smart with their money, they are going into debt to pay for christmas expenses. by in large individuals have cut back and it's government that hasn't cut back and the government spending public schooled the inflation. it's being taken out on the backseat of everyday americans. washington would never pass a team increase, 7% on everyday americans year after year after year but that's exactly what is going on with the inflation and looking longer term the reagan recovery, 1980's recovery, the tech boom was only possible because the 70's inflation was taken care of. that's the real risk not just we might get one bad or good job report but the long-term, the systematic inflation affect it is economy and offers no hope over the long term. that's real fear. jacqui: no hope. we will end it right there, i suppose. griff. griff: brilliant images of hawaii's volcano forming new land right before the eyes of
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griff: lava flow from historic eruption of the world's largest volcano appears to be slowing down easing immediate threats however possible hazards still remain on hawaii's big island. that's where we find fox weather max gordon live on the island with more. hey, max. reporter: well, the weather has moved in and crowds shroud but amongst the clouds lava continues to creep down this volcano. luckily it has slowed down since hitting flatter terrain and now it's only 2 miles away, though, from the main highway that divides hawaii, the east-west highway that connects hilo and kona. it is making minimal progress, though, and at this hour the highway remains open. this has been a historic
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eruption. manaloa hasn't erupted since 1984, since then lava has been spewing drawing visitors and locals to see the awe inspiring glow of lava. scientists say they don't know how long the eruption will last. currently volcanic smog is a concern for folks, caused by the gases that are being admitted by the volcano and can potentially be harmful. officials are monitoring air levels and while the highway could be in the path of the lava no evacuation orders needed to be issued and no homes currently threatened, relieve to hawaii's mayor that said he initially had concerns when the volcano began erupting for. >> there was a little bit of fear of residents that live down slope of the other side of where it's coming. seeing where it's at now, i just feel relieved that we are not going to be jeopardizing anybody's homes. people will be able to, you know, go about their business.
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reporter: mayor says they have plans to shut down the highway if the lava does get too close and if the highway is overrun, they will wait for it to cool and clear away new rock or just rebuild the highway right over the lava flow, griff. griff: incredible images of the lava flow. max gor den in the by thing island of hawaii, thank you. head to coverage fox weather.com and you can find updates as well as nationwide weather reports on fox weather app foxweather.com. jacqui: just in time for the holidays, we will tell you about a great organization helping thousands of america's heros transitioning to civilian life. that's coming up next. ♪ ♪
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jacqui: for many of the nation's heros, life after military service can be difficult but organizations like the call of duty endowment are doing what they can to support veterans and finding high-quality jobs after their service. joining me now is the executive director of the call of duty endowment dan goldenberg
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appreciate it. you guys are doing amazing things for a very good cause and one of your biggest fundraisers for this is an event coming up here soon where you pit military gamers against civilian gamers, am i correct and people can watch and stream this? >> yeah, the way to think of it is it's almost the army navy game for the video game generation. all service branches from the u.s. and uk compete against each other in call of duty. call of duty, most folks know about that, it's the world's most popular video grahams, largest entertainment in the past year. the call of duty endowment which is supported by activism blizzards, $60 million in donations and continue do that. code bold is what helping us create more awareness in support for continuing putting vets in
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great jobs. jacqui: really important cause because having jobs after service is one of the biggest challenges. 1.2 million veterans living in house olds that participated in snap, food stamp benefits 2017 to 2019. unemployment numbers have improved a bit since november of 2020 going from 6.2% down to 2.7% last month, but according to feeding america drivers of food insecurity among veterans include the high cost of living that veterans are dealing with, financial commitments, low income, physical and mental illness, all big challenges that you're helping with. >> yeah, so, i mean, for sure, these are all real and important challenges. at the end of the day, a high-quality job means all those other problems start going away and we think the biggest problem that most veterans face is actually under employment according to penn state data, 60% of veterans are
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underemployed or unemployed and that's a real problem. we get much better outcomes and better outcomes means the veterans stay there longer and make better salaries and the employer is happy and the veterans are happy and those insecurities around food, housing, health care, those start to diminish a lot. every transitioning service member who is going to become a veteran needs a job. jacqui: the code bowl does a lot to help the cause. we appreciate you coming onto talk abit. if people are interested in watching, call of duty endowment.org. dan, thank you for joining us. that's all for us this hour, fox news live with eric and arthel.. i'm jacqui.. heinrich.when griff: i'm griff jenkens, thanks for watching.wi ♪ ♪ ♪ thheir the way you need it.
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monthly premiums and prescription drugs. with original medicare you are covered for hospital stays and doctor office visits but you have to meet a deductible for each, and then you're still responsible for 20% of the cost. next, let's look at a medicare supplement plan. as you can see, they cover the same things as original medicare, and they also cover your medicare deductibles and coinsurance. but they often have higher monthly premiums and no prescription drug coverage. now, let's take a look at humana's medicare advantage plans. with a humana medicare advantage plan, hospitals stays, doctor office visits and your original medicare deductibles are covered. and, of course, most humana medicare advantage plans include prescription drug coverage. with no copays or deductibles on tier 1 prescriptions, and zero dollars for routine vaccines, including shingles, at in-network retail pharmacies.
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in fact, in 2021, humana medicare advantage prescription drug plan members saved an estimated $9,600 on average on their prescription costs. most humana medicare advantage plans have coverage for vision and hearing. and dental coverage that includes two free cleanings a year, plus dentures, crowns, fillings and more! most humana medicare advantage plans include a silver sneakers fitness program at no extra cost. you get all of this for as low as a zero-dollar monthly plan premium in many areas; and your doctor and hospital may already be a part of humana's large network. there is no obligation, so call the number on your screen right now to see if your doctor is in our network; to find out if you could save on your prescriptions, and to get our free decision guide. humana, a more human way to healthcare. vehicles come in all different sizes. yet ordinary windshield phone holders are one size fits all. does that make sense? no. but this does. the adjustable
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windshieldfone from weathertech. it extends and retracts for a perfect fit in any vehicle. plus, a quick release tab for easy one handed in and out. and for kids, use it in the back seat too. comes with short, medium and telescopic arms, to fit any vehicle. order the american made windshieldfone at weathertech.com. even makes a nice holiday gift. arthel: twitter ceo elon musk pulling back the curtain on how the social media giant went out of its way to block the "new york post" story on hunter biden's laptop just weeks before the 2020 election. musk says he will reveal more even later today. hello everyone arm arthel neville in new orleans welcome to fox new life. eric: i'm eric shawn here new york thanks for joining us today per head of last nights regroup big reveal elon musk tweeted wednesday that twitter has quote
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