tv Americas Newsroom FOX News March 14, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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♪ >> it's a beautiful morning in tennessee, if you're in northeast, be careful, it will be stormy today. >> brian: that's a big chair. >> pay it forward, not back. >> bill: brand-new numbers on inflation, what they tell us about the state of economy, an economy reeling from the collapse of two major banks. i'm bill hemmer, live in snowy new york city, where it is always winter apparently. >> dana: the easiest winter ever. i'm dana perino, a few flakes out there, we have spring on the horizon. talk about the consumer price index, slowest rate of inflation
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in about a year and a half, still high. >> bill: that would normally mean another rate hike on the horizon, but the fed could be forced to rethink that. >> dana: the moves are designed to protect the u.s. financial system and make sure customers do not lose their deposit. >> bill: the president insisting this is not a bailout, some folks beg to differ. >> well, it is a bailout, we give a lot of support to banks. banks pay a premium for insurance, capped at 250,000. if we change the rules and give them more coverage than anybody else gets, i think that's a bailout. >> the think you have to understand is that what they're doing now with the bailout, printing money to solve the problem. and there is this inflation problem that started the whole thing and they're trying to fix a banking problem by printing
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money. that will make the inflation problem worse. >> dana: we have analysis, let's begin with grady. >> last week a rate hike was almost a given, now things are more complicated, the fed has to weigh bank collapse with inflation data, which came in at 6% from a year ago, where economists expected. category by category, food, americans are getting hit hard at restaurants and at the grocery store. food up 9.5%. eggs are slightly down from last month, but still paying 55% more than from a year ago. fish almost 5% more expensive. moving to energy, gas at the pump is down ever so slightly when prices were climbing one year ago. electricity up almost 13%.
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utility gas service, 14.3% and fuel oil up 9.2%. so the question is now what will the fed do next? >> there is that old saying that rates keep going up nothing something breaks, here is the first thing that broke. the question is, will they stop here? will other things break or keep going? >> as you know, dana and bill, the fed's inflation target is 2%, we're nowhere near that. it is a matter of whether holding rates will bring inflation down enough or if they'll have to keep raising rates when they meet next week. >> dana: thank you. >> bill: bring in charlie gasparino, good morning. what are you watching today? >> i'm watching what is coming out of the white house or from any federal governor about interest rates and the banking system. i'm not believing everything i hear from policymakers.
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i think the white house is spinning this trying to blame a tweak in dodd-frank, for excessive bank tweaking. they are looking at silicon valley bank. so you got to watch what the white house says. the fed is a little more reliable on information. i would like to know if they're going to pause here. 6% is better on inflation rate, but it is not great, it is horrible, in fact. tha means inflation is sticky. if jerome powell says we have a banking crisis, i will not raise rates and take a pause. guess what that means? the banking system is problematic, opposite of what joe biden just said. keep an eye on the fed and the markets and keep an eye on interest rates. >> bill: seems like we are at a
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bit of annige. >> dana: "wall street journal" saying the president offers markets don't believe and maybe you don't either. quote them, investors may see white house whose first instinct is to spend reality and hunt for political scapegoats, none of this will restore confidence, which is what is needed in know paic. do you think there is lack of confidence in the system right now? >> yes. i think that lack of confidence is based on good facts. we've never had the fiscal and monetary policy experiment we went through until recently. biden administration, even when he didn't have to spend, democrats controlled both houses and could get things through. joe manchin kept spending when they didn't need to. we were coming out of the pandemic the minute joe biden walked into office and they kept the gas pedal to the metal.
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you have jerome powell who kept saying transitory inflation, kept printing money. when you do both things, you will have people with know tos of cash, with nowhere to put it, but crazy investments and when you boil it down, i could get into the intricacies of what silicon valley bank did. i have sources that work there and know what the loan portfolio looks like and what was on their books. they took excessive risks, the government incentivized with low interest rates. >> bill: big banks today look to buy pieces of the bank and maybe this goes through. >> that is what they did at lehman brothers. >> bill: you mentioned blaming other people. joe biden came out, dana and i were sitting here and blamed donald trump. elizabeth warren writes, silicon valley bank is gone, we know who is responsible, congressman fed
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done their job and kept it in place, svp and signature are gone and washington must act quickly. 17 senate democrats voted with republicans, 33 house democrats. >> two tweak the dodd-frank law, if you have assets below $200 billion, you are 23409 considered systemically -- bank. they blowup the economy, we want bank examiners focus doing stress tests on big banks, the j.p. morgan's. does that mean first republic, signature, silicon valley bank had no bank regulation? absolutely not. if the fed sees them taking resque, they have the option to do stress test. here is the question i have, why didn't the fed see the risk on the balance sheet my sources told me. this is not a bank that gave
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loans to aunt milley and construction companies, it was extending risky loans to venture capital firms. why didn't the fed say, whoa, we're giving deposit insurance to a bank that is a hedge fund. elizabeth warren, this is all posturing. if you print this money, which she is behind, you will distort reality in markets and plumbing in the markets, if not crypto, it sam bankman-fried. housing will come down, memestocks, symptom of that. >> bill: thank you, charlie, see which way it will go today. >> dana: thank you. president biden angering progressives by approving $8 billion oil drilling project in alaska. the willow project will create
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jobs and ease pressure on u.s. energy markets. environmentalists are pushing back and jeff paul is live in the west coast bureau and has more this morning. hi, jeff. >> jeff: the president will travel today from san diego to monterey park in the l.a. area. he pushes gun control at the site of one of the latest mass shootings, he's making headlines for a new oil and gas drilling project here on the west coast. it is a scaled-back version going from the initial five sites to three sites, the white house approved $7 billion willow drilling project in alaska. this is huge for the state, which relies on oil production for revenue. state lawmakers says it will generate billions of dollars and create hundreds of jobs, but environmentalists are not happy about it and point to past statements by biden who claimed he would end fossil fuel and there would be no more drilling on federal lands.
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>> i think he is trying to appease the alaska delegation and fossil fuel cronies in congress. the arctic is warming four times the rate than the rest of the planet and that is only going to continue to happen if we continue to build these massive projects. >> back here in los angeles, we're expecting the president to arrive just before noon local time. he is expected to sign executive order that focuses on more background check for gun purchases and travel las vegas later in the afternoon. >> bill: a vicious attack caught on camera. the suspect is still at large, we need to find this man coming up. >> dana: plus president xi will have a conversation with
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president zelenskyy, what we expect from that. >> dana: stunning claim from president of mexico, he says his country is safer than the united states, this size cartels take to social media to fuel chaos at the border. >> this is part of a plan of the cartels, upon tras-national organizations that get rich because they overwhelm the border and border patrol and president biden is not prepared. >> instability around the world, market disruptions, we faces challenges never seen before. the market disruptions, we face challenges never seen before. the
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in two weeks, another atmospheric river drenching the water-logged state after storms left two people dead and it cut power to thousands. they are soaked. >> bill: make it stop. police in houston searching for a suspect who viciously attacked a woman. during a robbery in front of a shopping center, the brutal assault is tauf to watch, disturbing stuff. the suspect picks up the woman, body slams her to the ground, that is concrete. leaving her paralyzed before he takes off from the scene. casey segal live in dallas with a follow-up now. casey, when will they get him? >> that is tough to watch. police hope they get their man behind bars soon. houston investigators say the woman withdrew cash from the atm, but the robber waited to make his move and he followed her some 25 miles to a shopping
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center and that is where the attack happened and it was caught on tape again the warning, the video is vicious and disturbing to see. crime stoppers released the tape with hopes someone knows the suspect and will be able to identify him and report him to police. meantime, doctors say the victim may never walk again. she is a 44-year-old single woman with three kids. >> it's been pretty bad because we have to pay rent and stuff and she's the only one who can work and help us. so we don't know what to do. >>-- my mind is messed up thinking about her, worrying that nobody is going to watch out for her. >> get this, the robber made off with $4400. she had just taken out of the bank. money she was saving to go to vietnam, a trip to see her
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family for the first time in six years. doctors say her chances of walking again are about 50/50. the suspect is said to be a black man in his early 20s, no other description other than that. houston police want to hear from you. bill. >> bill: good day when they find him, i hope it is soon. casey, thank you. casey from dallas. >> president biden: united states safeguard stability for decades through enormous benefit 've nations throughout the region. we're showing how democracies can deliver, how security and prosperity and not just for us, through the entire world. >> dana: president biden standing shoulder to shoulder with members of the united kingdom yesterday. announced nuclear submarine deal. joining us now is former defense secretary mark esper.
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this is number one, stats on virginia class nuclear submarine. crew 132, then tomahawk missiles and tubes and can go 25 knots. somebody like me, i kind of understand that, why should americans know this is good deal and good for national security? >> it is a good deal, dana, attack submarines are probably the most important asset platform we have in the indopacific and to deter the chinese. so much so in 2020 when i was secretary of defense, we put forward a plan for future navy that called for increasing number of attack submarines from 70 to 80 because of how important they are. we are behind right now, if we can get allies putting attack submarines into the indopacific, that is a good thing.
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>> dana: what does that say to china? >> that we are rising up to meet the threat, you will not dominate the indopacific. the problem here, we have to build them and it takes six years to build an attack submarine and the navy is building one and a half to two a year, it will take incredible -- to workers and i don't see a plan to do that right now and that is the big issue. we cannot provide aussie subs at risk of sacrificing our own numbers. >> dana: maybe headed in the right direction. if you can't build them, it doesn't matter. >> we haven't seen a plan to build them. >> dana: president xi is parentally going to speak to zelenskyy today for the first time since the ukraine war broke out. the conversation will likely
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follow the chinese leader with russia's putin next week. chinese put out sort of a piece-deal one pager couple of weeks ago. this is the chinese following through. do you think this is good or bad? how should the administration, the white house respond? >> i think it is good they talk. zelenskyy wants to talk to president xi, the 12-point plan is dead on arrival, there are some things we can agree with. another thing like ceasefire completely unacceptable. what will be interesting to see coming out is what xi jinping will tell president zelenskyy about one of his points, that all countries should respect each country's integrity. diplomatically i think what xi is to shed that diplomacy and portray him and the chinese communist party as some piece
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broker around the world. >> dana: do you think it might prevent china from arming russia? >> no, i don't think so, i think they are willing to do both at the same time, they are providing significant assistance to russia, drones, buying a lot of russian energy off the market. they have not made the step to provide lethal aid and i think that will be a big moment. if they do, it could change conditions on the battlefield in way that is favorable to russia and could hurt ukraine aspirations, that will be on the table, as well. >> dana: our own tucker carlson, on prime time on the east coast, he asked each candidate on the republican side for 2024, potential candidates, their thoughts about ukraine and the u.s. involvement in ukraine and these candidates could decide to send in their answer on the questionnaire. ron desantis, governor of florida, not a declared candidate, on book tour visiting iowa, new hampshire and all
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signals seem to be heading in that direction. this is what desantis said, u.s. has many vital national interests, securing our border, readiness in the military and checking the economic cultural and military power of the chinese communist party, entangled in dispute between ukraine and russia is not one of them. this is getting some reaction and let's add yours to it. >> look, only two countries in the world present a threat to the united states, one is china and the second is russia. if you have a country called ukraine defending their sovereignty and they are knocking down the inchoo, they have all but decimated the russian army, that is good for us. it doesn't mean border security and building up our military are not important, they are very important. we can do both, i think it is the right approach to defend
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democracy and support our friends and allies and sends a critical message to china and helps with regard to our longer term struggle against the communist party. >> dana: mark esper, thanks for joining us today. >> bill: thanks, sir. today, march 14th marks one year since the russian blast in ukraine seriously injured our correspondent benjamin hall. the same blast killed fox photo journalist, pierre zakrzewski and ukrainian journalist, sasha kuvshynova. they were traveling together in the same car. benjamin hall is now telling his story in a new book called "saved," it is out today and he joins us next hour, we'll talk at great length about that. we are honored to have benjamin on today. look forward to it. >> dana: he is a ray of sunshine, this past week and a half he has been in the building, if you have a chance to see him. viewers are responding in kind, this is a well-written book and
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a page turner, you will stay up late reading it. hope you get it today. >> bill: we've been working him hard, too. might say bye-bye. >> dana: hope not until after today. >> bill: kidnapping of americans in mexico, the numbers are staggering, why so many head north to the border for treatment despite dangers. if you can make it in new york, you can make it anywhere. aaron rodgers put that saying to the test, that would make an amazing story for the "new york post," would it not? ♪ ♪ all across the country, people are working hard to build a better future. so we're hard at work helping them achieve financial freedom. we're proud to serve people everywhere, in investing for the retirement they envision.
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♪ i'm gonna hold you forever... ♪ ♪ dshield, and recalibrate your advanced safety system. so automatic emergency braking and lane departure warning work properly. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ >> bill: 9:31, markets have been open one minute now. inflation is stubborn, consumer price index shows 6% increase
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year-over-year. it hasn't gone down, that is a problem now for us, for you, a problem for consumers and the fed because you wonder what they will do now with interest rates. >> dana: yeah, that is what charlie was saying. he's watching what the white house says today, also what the fed says. everyone is wondering will they pause on rates? can they? >> bill: i don't know with two banks down and maybe more to come, maybe. up 300 at the open and there is optimism among investors at the moment, see if that lasts. >> dana: okay, paying attention. >> mexico is safer than the united states. there is no issue traveling safely through mexico. that is something the u.s. citizens know, like our fellow mexicans that live in the u.s. >> dana: mexico president 10 days after foreign americans were kidnapped just over the border. two were shot and killed
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reportedly seeking cheap medical decisions. alexis, tell us what we need to know. >> mexican tourism brings in big money for mexico. americans might get discounts for surgery, just crossing the border can be deadly and going under the knife in a mexican clinic can nearly take your life, too. >> justine rodriguez was nearly 400 pounds and made the decision to get weight loss surgery. >> i was nervous about it. >> her insurance wouldn't cover it, she went to tijuana surgery. the surgery coast $5000, left her with major complications. >> the infection went to my brain. >> mexican tourism is a booming
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business, million americans cross the border to save 70% on procedures like dental work, cosmetics and weight loss surgery. >> in mexico, there is less regulation, do your homework. >> crossing the border is dangerous and can be deadly, four americans traveling for cosmetic surgery were kidnapped, two killed by the cartel in matamoros, mexico. >> we got used to patients being 100% safe when they cross the border. as long as it is cheaper south of the border, americans will take the risk. >> the money is not worth it, not worth your life. >> officials warn of cartel violence that we talk about just over the border and cdc is reminding americans the risk of medical tourism because out of country clinics are different than the united states.
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you can get infections that are resistant to antibiotics. >> bill: want to bring in dr. marc siegel. a million americans per year, they do it because it is cheap. there it is, they can save money, doc. >> dr. siegel: they advertise. not only 50 to 70% cheaper, they advertise. south of california is called molar city, known for dental procedures, they advertise and have one-stop shopping. you go there, get the procedure, your pharmacy is there, your after-care is there. i absolutely don't like it for multiple reasons, one of which was mentioned. infection, resistant infecti
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tubercrulosis type infection. bariatric surgery, you may have to stay for a few days. i don't network there, i might know the doc, but not the anesthe anesthesiologist. people go there because they can't get the procedure in the united states. i might not want to do knee replacement on someone too overweight, there are issues i look at when i pre-op clear somebody. i worry about this. >> bill: keep an eye on it, topic number two, you write a piece. this spring break fentanyl could be the not so silent killer. here are numbers from 2021. estimated number of deaths 70,000.
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go to 72,000 in september of 2022. i want to read one line for audience here, doc. the pandemic has spawned a mental health crisis among our country's teens and pressure for freedom is only increased. this expression is often reckless and drugses are frequently involved. what about that comment and what can be done? >> dr. siegel: cdc found out 60% of female teens have considered suicide or been deeply depressed over the past year. it is because they were locked down, learning remotely, they want freedom and may be reckless. they go to areas with spring break, drugs are flowing in. get this number. 389 million fentanyl pills of a lethal variety, that amount confiscated by the d.e.a. last year alone, that is just tip of
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the i'm going berg. 389 million pills, often disguised as xanax, or adderall. somebody hands them a pill, could be laced with fentanyl. there is anent dote for fentanyl, narcan, the problem is, that is terrific, that wears off in an hour or two and the fentanyl can last days. you may not know you are getting it. the cartels are absolutely advertising. we talked about advertising with medical tourism, the cartels are actually advertising in high schools and colleges near the border to get people to come to the border and bring the pills up to be used. this is extremely dangerous. >> bill: panama city, cops set up crime cameras and canines on the beach, that is where it has come to.
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marc siegel, thank you, we will talk later in the week. thank you, doctor. >> thanks, bill. >> dana reads sports. >> have you heard this? lots of speculation over aaron rodgers future, the future hall of fame quarterback is a free agent, analysts believe he will leave the packers are if the jets. a mysterious tweet last night, slll, with multiple emojis. former teammates claim they took his phone to get laughs. >> bill: free agency yesterday was nuts. players moving so quickly. but last night env n.f.l. netwo
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said what about aaron rodgers, nothing. packers or jets, no one was talking. >> dana: my instincts tell me it is true, if everybody is quiet, thatten moo means it is true, i think. >> bill: here is this now. >> it does show a pattern that the biden family was receiving money directly from china. the question i have, what were they doing in return for that money? >> that is james comer, his job is oversight committee, members reviewing 14 years of documents they receive from hunter biden bank records, james comer coming upstanding by with what he expects from that investigation. huge bail reform fail is reversing policies. ultimately the solution to get a handle on rising crime, we'll check it out. >> when criminals know they are not held accountable for their
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>> dana: senate majority leader mitch mcconnell discharged yesterday from the hospital. he took a bad fall last wednesday while attending a dinner at a dc hotel. his office says recovery is proceeding well. we wish him the best. >> bill: republican-led house oversight committee expanding its investigation into hunter biden. stacks of documents dating back 14 years are now under review, chairman of the house oversight committee james comer out of kentucky is with me now. thank you for your time and
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being here today. i want to clear up matters, you were on with sean last night. you received through bank of america thousands of records going back 14 years. one includes an associate by the name of rob walker and you said two months after joe biden left the office of the vice president, january, february, what? march of 2017, i'm guessing. around that time, he received a $3 million wire from two people directly associated with the ccp in beijing. what is that all about, sir? you made the claim, what did you do? >> we discovered a $3 million wire two months after joe biden left office and then the very next day, from that account, that walker account that appears to be a pastoral account, started wiring money to biden family members, plural, three
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family members received a cut from the $3 million, including new biden family member never before included in any of the investigations. so our question is, what exactly did they do to receive that money? what was the purpose of that $3 million wire? that is just the first wire we've actually been able to obtain bank records on, there are many more. >> bill: you put your finger on it a second. you said, what were they doing in return for that money. do you have an answer? >> i do not. the media says this is a hunter biden investigation, this is an investigation of joe biden. we are investigating the biden family and again, after this new batch of information, it expands, there are more family members involved than just the president's son. they said this was for business, we can't identify any business,
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it appears it went to personal accounts. if china is investing with a business, we can't find anything, they don't manufacture or sell anything, they don't own real estate. my theory, it is influence pedalling, what we call a foreign agent, there are rules who can be a foreign agent and you have to be registered. the question is, what were the bidens doing to receive massive amounts of money from china. we have the first wire and traced it from china to the biden family members and we have many more to obtain. >> bill: two more points in the time we have left. another name popped up, whose name is that? are they a relative tied to the family? >> they are a biden. i'm not going to disclose the new name, that really changes things because what we assumed this was just about the
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president's son and two brothers, but now a new name emerged. they are a biden. we have got a problem here with respect to trying to determine what exactly this family was doing to receive these transactions from china. i think every american should be concerned, this is an issue of national security. >> bill: let's see where it goes, been five years, long time investigating. parentally you found suspicious activity report and assured by the bank they will give that information. what that revealses i do not know. jamie raskin says this, i feel this widely overbroad subpoena appear your interest is not informing public legislation but conducting dragnet of political opposition research on behalf of former president trump, meaning you are doing work for president trump potentially as a
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candidate, what would you say to your fellow congressman jamie raskin? >> i'm disappointed raskin would issue that letter. he issued it late sunday night in conjunction with the white house. this is second time the white house has pulled a prank late at night. i don't even know who donald trump's attorneys are. he accused me of working with donald trump's attorneys, that is not true and jamie raskin owes me an apology. the purpose of the letter was to leak to the press i subpoenaed bank of america two weeks ago, he just threw in a bunch of other false accusations. it is disappointing jamie raskin would stoop to that level and that is one reason we don't take ranking members seriously in our quest to get to the truth of what the biden family was doing with our adversaries in china. >> bill: james comer, thank you
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for your time. it's rather incendiary, we'll see if you are on to something. again, five years investigating, nothing just yet. james comer, thank you for your time today. dana. >> dana: crowd of thousand migrants trying to force their way into the u.s. over the weekepstein, how mex cal drug cartel proprompted this. and stunning collapse of two banks, o'leary joins us on whether taxpayers should be left holding the bag. >> i think we can say with safety and assurance the treasury and federal reserves are being run by amateurs, they should have seen this coming. and your enflamed eyes are so watery, they need windshield wipers, it's not too late for another treatment option. to learn more visit treatted.com. that's treatt-e-d.com.
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♪ inner voice (kombucha brewer): if i just stare at these payroll forms... my business' payroll taxes will calculate themselves. right? uhh...nope. intuit quickbooks helps you manage your payroll taxes, cheers! with 100% accurate tax calculations guaranteed. >> bill: we continue our series how america is failing our teenage girls with a look at sexual violence. cdc says young girls experience assault at three times more than
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their male counterparts. gillian is live with more. >>-- sexual violence including rape in the last year alone, the number surged. government officials call it a crisis now. the major driver of this surge, according to derek gordon, teen girls, like everyone else, living more of their lives online. >> it is easy pickings, if you will, for the pedophile, he can look at a significant amount of potential victims and hone down the one he wants. they are pretty much a dinner menu for predators. >> 94% of women who are raped experience ptsd and 33% consider suicide. >> sexual exploitation or abuse
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can be traumatic and in my experience, many young people don't want to disclose this is happening. >> why don't teen girls want to disclose what is happening when they are sexually traumatized? take a listen. >> we live in a world that blames the victims for what is done to them because of everything they could have done and your mind is filled with all the things you shouldn't have done. >> the cdc tells us that teen girls age 16 to 19, in particular, are nearly four times likelier than anybody else to be sexual abused. >> when i look at the differences between boys and girls, it is sexual violence that was particularly alarming. increase in girls forced to have sex. >> only now experts are uncovering the scope and scale of the consequences the girls face, they are dropping out of
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school, failing, turning to drugs and alcohol and committing suicide at alarming rates. >> bill: disturbing stuff, we look forward to seeing your series tomorrow tomorrow. gillian turner, thanks. [screaming] >> dana: a wild scene at the southern border, thousand migrants rushing over a bridge from mexico on sunday to get into el paso, texas. cartels played a role in getting them to make the move. welcome to a brand-new hour of "america's newsroom." i'm dana perino. >> bill: i'm bill hemmer. forcing u.s. border agents to set up physical barriers to push everyone back. the incident was sparked by
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