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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  July 25, 2009 7:00am-10:00am EDT

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you. [captioning made possibl posbybñ
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sprayed with tear gas. they are on a noon to dawn curfew. >> secretary of state clinton called the move reckless and saying it would not help the negotiations. >> apparently no one knows where his nose is. michael jackson's prosthetic nose is missing. >> yeah. jackson wore the prosthetic to hide thects of surgery going wrong . looking into whether coroner's employees stole viewed by hundreds of staffers and companies could've been made. that's illegal. so that nobody knows without noses. let's turn to sports. doors new law allowing sports
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betting may be in trouble even before the first bet is placed. the four major sports leagues and the ncaa went to court to stop this law. they said sports betting would cause irrevocable harm to sports events and casting suspicion on the outcomes of the games. delaware officials charlie disagreed and said sports betting will be a huge moneymaker for the state and this thing is going on. congress is getting involved, the senate is getting involved, should they be allowed to gamble on sports, i said they're doing it anyway why not make tax dollars off it like you think this will go through. >> no reckless check with your regular eshrick reichmuth. >> nobody's ever out here but we have like two stragglers out here. where you from chicken to and from chico, california, michael diehl ; mcdonald, earle springs florida. select to have people living at
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home waiting for them to get their word in. when i start to the day temperature was except in phoenix it's warm and 83. warm and humid across the country. look at the satellite radar picture. a big band of storms moved across the northeast overnight bringing rain showers and across parts of maine for your morning. we have a batch of storms -- we will send this back in because i have the wrong picture up there. that is old. i don't want to talk about that one. back to you soon thank you, rick. so i think you stragglers soon thank you for consulting the stragglers. while davis pitching all be moving to vegas i pitching on the super pages contest. log on to superpages.com, find the most unique service or product center that offer dirty services stack our viewers are funny. e-mail us at foxandfriends.com and you could win this bag.
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>> of goodies to make a joke. coming up a group with links to al qaeda allowed to host a terror seminar at a posh london hotel in the states. are americans simply too politically correct? we debate you decide.
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>> an islamic group with links to al qaeda stepped up recruiting efforts at a hilton hotel here in the u.s. you might imagine people took offense but not enough to stop it from happening. the tenant colonel ralph peters says we are too politically correct for our own good. the morning sir. >> good morning. >> should people boycott the hilton hotel kitchen to make boycotting the hilton hotel is a personal decision. i don't believe in organized boycotts. it's a good idea because it lays into the hands of the left wing demagogues and besides which hilton did not break the law. the problem goes much deeper. problem is that although we live in an electoral democracy, we know that something of a dictatorship of ideas. for instance, this group, hp then held the convention in illinois, a preach government advocate establishing the
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islamic caliphate the domination of islam through any means necessary worldwide. distraction of israel, defeated the united states, tearing apart capitalism. that's protected speech. that's okay. but imagine if a christian group held a convention and preached a violent crusade to spread christianity throughout the islamic world. so we have to decide, do we really want to free speech, can we tolerate certain kinds of bigotry? for example the gates case come out with god and to the point of clinical correctness were everybody assumed the officer in cambridge was wrong. there was an automatic assumption. we -- it's really tough. we are so hypocritical and political correctness has put down such deep roots that we forgot what the first amendment is really about. >> asked for this islamic group, each t. you called them, if the hilton is not at fault, as the government? is that what you're suggesting to give what should the government do to prevent this
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from taking place to give. >> i'm not saying hilton is not at fault. i would stay at the hilton, that's my personal decision. i have no sympathy with the hilton folks. but what we have to do is recognize hate speech for what it is. we are so terrified of offending muslims that we hurt the average law-abiding muslim in america. i've seen this myself. a few years ago i spoke in the dc area at a shia convention because i will reach out to people if asked. everything went fine until i criticized muqtada al sadr who is killing american shoes at the time. and right there at all in knots. and we empowered the haters. so i could turn up -- ralph peters we appreciate your time this morning as always. >> are you making your kid a sandwich for lunch today to give if so, don't cut off the crust. why? it could prevent cancer running up. ah! that's fiber one cereal.
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frosted shredded wheat! yeah, but i'm throwing it away. why? you seem to really like it. i do. my wife wants me to. she says there can't be any fiber in it. (mr. mehta) it's got a third of a day's worth of fiber. it tastes way too good to have fiber! ten crunchy little layers frosted to perfection. i eat what i want. she's here, isn't she? she is. hey. (announcer) fiber one frosted shredded wheat. cardboard no. delicious yes.
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medicine universe including it. >> i love to bring theáñ?ñ? brd right here. >> tell us about thisrvñ? study. it was a european studyuuñ?ñ?ñ n what's in the crust. >> it's called a browning product. so when you take bread and you mix it and put it in the oven to heat creates this chemical that has tremendous antioxidant
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activity, and has been shown in this study to reduce your risk of: cancer. i very quickly, it mainly, the biggest concentration is in things like pumpernickel bread. things like that. and if you think about it, stuffing has so much surface area there's a lot of crust spec stuffing is good for you. i've been waiting for this discovery spec unless you bother it up with tremendously high-fat gravy, then it will kill you. it's an interesting study is an earth shattering? i don't know packy brown and examples of blogs here. we now know that stress can equal asthma in children. is this right to give back the study was interesting in that they took kids who were near a big highway that had a lot of exposure to pollution, and they had kids that were stressed, talking to the parents, and kids that weren't stressed. he kids that were stressed at a
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50% increase in asthma and asthma symptoms. even kids who did not have asthma to start with *custom .all households have stress gq or zip line to make if i were going to estimate my risk of asthma, i would be dead by now it is of the stress i have. >> in children it's different. >> stress is not good for anybody if it is continuous and it's a bad kind of stress. people have studied this, if it's aggressive angry stress it's not good. if it's the kind of stress, you love the adrenaline, it's okay to not give a stressful house it's hurting your kids stuart macinnes then we talked about this when it first came out. these electronics cigarettes that people can replace and use as an alternative to traditional cigarette. >> opposite work. >> this is a real cigarette. get a tight shot. this is an electronic cigarette. i can't puff on it on camera but what it has is a battery here, then you have a little device that heats up when you puff on
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it. in this tip lights up red, and it produces smoke because many of these products have something called propylene glycol or ethylene glycol, the federal government came out with, and these produce -- you notice that where there is smoke it looks like fog, like that. >> if they don't have the back of their healthier. what's the finding. >> we don't know. i say to the medical students at penn university, in god we trust the house show me the data. there is no data. someone needs to come up with data so we have an answer. >> the fact that the e. cigarettes may have cancer-causing chemicals in them that we don't know what propylene glycol does to you. and some patient in my practice, something like this might be appropriate, but again the feds and the manufacturers and the marketers are going to get into a big fight to decide whether this should be regulated or not.
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president obama has taken a strong stance on smoking. we need to get people to stop smoking and lose weight. i tell you that is the cure for the health care crisis. >> excellent point, dr. mike, thank you very much. >> disguise to stressed out. what's coming up. >> and national debate exploding or the arrest of a harvard professor in cambridge. does president obama need to offer a full fledged apology to king. >> governor mike huckabee will let in on healthcare reform and the role states could play just ahead. what's up, smart?
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it on good morning everyone, at saturday, july 25. at this hour president obama defenses but decision to get involved in a local police dispute. >> there are some who say that as president, i should have not stepped into this at all because it is a local issue. i have to tell you that that part of it i disagree with. >> alysin: that's not all the president is disagreeing with. is he apologizing this morning? >> dave: rush limbaugh goes on the record, what he thinks a president obama's healthcare plan. >> this is not about -- i know this sounds radical itself, undoing unnecessary surgeries and organ removal to line their
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pockets. i think that comment unremarked on by most so far -- >> dave: much more from the king of pop coming up. >> clayton: three young boys are cuffed and thrown into a paddy wagon. will he say the punishment fits the crime's but the boy's parents disagree. one mom is here to give her side of the story. this is "fox & friends" the best and healthiest one show on television. we eat the crust. practices phil mickelson and you're watching "fox & friends". it was great to meet phil mickelson yesterday defied -- >> clayton: did i say best? good morning, everybody. great to see you. we have so much to talk about. recently the latest developments and what happened in cambridge where that harvard university professor was arrested and president obama lead into the controversy on wednesday night
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so yesterday, a lot happened yesterday is the cambridge police came out and talked about how angry they were and how they have been depicted. the president of the acted stupidly wednesday night. they were still angry but it seems as though the president has been able to smooth things over this morning. >> clayton: this morning he is offering, and against the professor, to come to the white house to have a beer. he also extended the invitation to come to the white house to have a beer to the sergeant, sergeant crowley to come to the white house. they have both accepted the invitation and will come to the white house and boy, which must be a fly on the wall. >> dave: that would be a fascinating photo op is not discussion. let's get to the president's -- some say apology some say not so much. he stepped into the white house press room at it robert gates been talked about this issue.
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i guess gibson. robert gibbs. the president in his own words on this inflammatory issue. >> i want to make clear that in my choice of words, i think i unfortunately then gave an impression that i was maligning the cambridge police department or sergeant crowley specifically. i could've covered those words differently. i told this to sergeant crowley. the fact that it has garnered so much attention, i think is a testimony to the fact that these are issues that are still very sensitive to america. and to the extent my choice of words did not eliminate but rather contributed to mark media frenzy, i think that was unfortunate. my hope is that as a consequence of this event, this ends up being what is called a teachable moment, where all of us, instead
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of pumping up the volume, spent about more time listening to each other, and try to focus on how we can generally improve relations between police officers and minority communities. and instead of flinging accusations, we can all be a little more reflective in terms of what we can do two contribute to more unity. >> alysin: what's interesting there if you listened closely as he said it was unfortunate, he didn't calibrate his words accurately, but he never said i'm sorry. it's to the point where i have almost begun to believe he has gotten research handed to him to an advisor, never to say the words i am sorry, because it is hard to dance around i'm sorry. >> clayton: when residents get up in front of a audience and say i'm sorry, the american people respond to that. they listen to that. or whatever reason present still like to do that.
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later in the morning secretary gibbs was asked that question about whether or not he said i was sorry or an apology and secretary gates had this exchange with a reporter. you listen to it sounded like he made an apology to the officer. when it be fair to characterize it as that? >> steve, i think he understood that as he told you all, his words contributed to this being ratcheted up. i think there is a reason the news media is on the sergeant's -- i think he wanted to make sure will to let him know that the word choice was not one that he thought was probably in hindsight not the best choice. >> were you in the room during this? and you hear him issue an
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apology to cube we are not asking to parse this -- >> hit another person. you can quote me and you can quote him. i feel comfortable with the answer just gave, steve. i am not going to get -- if the president doesn't want to characterize a conversation he is having with you all, i'm not going to get ahead of him. >> alysin: what is wrong with saying i'm sorry to keep what are those bad words. >> dave: the new york times said there were several advisers urging him not to apologize. so clearly it was the strategy going into the press conference. he did not want to issue that. it doesn't make you look weak. it just makes you look like you've acknowledged a mistake here and the teaching moment should be him learning from this. he said the media blew this out of proportion. what happened is, pete into his homework and he issued an opinion on something he didn't know. that's the learning lesson to be taught. >> alysin: he also said in the
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apology that was a non-apology i unfortunately give an impression that was maligning the cambridge police department. no, he was maligning the police department. he said the acted stupidly. >> clayton: that's like the apology were people say i'm sorry you interpreted it that way. >> dave: kind of like the david letterman apology on serotonin. it wasn't i'm sorry it was giving excuses. >> clayton: on twitter people are saying something is being missed in all of this is the reaction by the police department. it underlies a problem police department across the country have to face which is that moment, that breaking point that they have to ignore insults being lobbed at them all the time. as greenpeace i would encourage you to read this on the new york times this morning talking about and highlighting the travails please departments go through when people are insulting them, when they're trying to do their job as we read in the police report is what gates is doing going at this police officer sang you can talk to my mama.
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>> dave: is not black and white and that's what this points out. there's no rule about when you have to arrest someone. it's subjective. every officer has to decide what that moment is for he or her. that's a tough issue. >> alysin: here are your headlines at this hour. the hunt is on for several suspects after a u.s. border patrol agent is kind of down in southern california. police in mexico arrested one suspect they're looking for two others. the fbi is not confirming that information. the men are accused of killing robert rose is responding to a border disturbance at the time of the shooting. >> we're learning that in 2002 president bush considered sending u.s. troops to the buffalo, new york area, to arrest members of an al qaeda cell there. the move was pushed by vp cheney who argued that the president had the power to use the military on american soil if national security was at risk. president bush ultimately decided against it. the fbi wanted arresting me luck
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on a six and they pled guilty to terrorism charges. >> if you're making minimum wage congratulations to just got a raise. the hourly wage jumped $.75 two $7.25 an hour. not everybody is celebrating. the minimum wage for tipped workers has not budged. even the people -- people getting to still have a base pay of $2.13 an hour. that's on it as a waitress. >> $2.10 21 daly city boost will cut into their bottom lines. it is controversial batman wage. >> clayton: you are a waiter? >> dave: i was for many years. i know you believe i never worked before i arrived on the couch. i worked as a waiter for many years for $2.13. as a local place in denver the other will -- >> clayton: the start of an attack to ozone that. >> dave: at red robin.
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>> alysin: i love red robin. those cheeseburgers. >> rick: my ears perked up. >> clayton: i got back from san diego for couple hours ago all the major stars in hollywood were there by the chance to meet a childhood idol, the creator of spiderman. >> dave: chewbacca cuckoo ? r2-d2? >> clayton: the cocreator of spiderman he makes his cameos in different marvel films and he was there promoting a new project he's working on, tying jumper. i have a chance to sit down with stanley. i had a chance to talk to them about creating spiderman and whether he thought it would blow up the way it did or did take a listen to it the funniest thing, they wanted me to put on larry king suspenders, and put on kind of horn rimmed glasses, and say to tony stark, why don't you get
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on the show or something like that. i don't quite know why they wanted me to do that? but i'm like a robot. what are they tell me to do i did. so did the line. i can't wait to see how it ties in with the movie. >> clayton: i am so sorry i set the wrong sound bite. he became a cameo in and then to a has to deploy larry king in a movie. >> alysin: i've never seen a more animated or excited. >> dave: meeting the spiderman creator. >> clayton: i were a batman t-shirt i said your virginity stanley, you can't wear a batman t-shirt. >> dave: that's like wearing a rolling stones t-shirt to the concert. he can do that, can't see what a cool easy style p7 your childhood hero was this cocreator. >> clayton: one of my childhood heroes, jesper did speak at their space on it couldn't be the major source $6 million man?
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>> clayton: he created fantastic four, iron man, spiderman. >> rick: that's impressive. here you go as you wake up this morning warm temperatures across the central part of the country. cooling down i'm a front that will pull off toward the east and bring rain showers tomorrow to the east coast. enjoy today. very nice. this is a problem, a front that stretched across ottawa, kentucky moving toward west virginia and some of the storms could produce wins it may be around 40-50 ounce power, and behind that a few of these cells popping up could produce hail with this. we're watching across the four corners, moisture is that we will see it especially in the afternoon as thunderstorms fire up once again. we watch things heat up in a big way. here are the storms, not that that this morning with daytime heating that will heat up. eighty-four today in seattle and by tomorrow pda. we could push 100° in seattle by
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the time we get to tuesday and wednesday. big-time heat going into the northwest. could be all-time record-breaking temperatures. soon seattle has never seemed 100° i can say that. it's usually renting space of that's true. >> clayton: people in the chat room want to know house where my spiderman under ruse. >> dave: and your spiderman sheets at home. >> clayton: now. i'm wearing them out. >> dave: coming up, posted a mark of healthcare reform goes through? will you be forced out of your private plan? governor mike huckabee is your answers coming up. >> clayton: nobody high-tech swimsuits that set all of the records in beijing last year? they have been handed. what he wants a certain fox reporters wearing them in the future, thankfully divided not been banned from reporters just rumors c-3 is wearing his glasses soon they should be banned from reporters. cat.
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>> clayton: resident obama said he will keep your healthcare plan if reform passes. is that through? governor huckabee is with us this morning speech and good to see you, clinton. >> clayton: as a former governor you have this sensitivity on the states rights issue. governor perry says this about states rights. i want your response.
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>> clayton: what you say about this? is a states rights issue? speed and we have government involvement in health care to the tune of about $800 million in the form of medicare and medicaid. people don't understand there are 87 billion people on combined medicare medicaid. about a third of the united states population is arianna government health plan. the question is, if government reshapes his health plan, you hear the government particularly the obama administration saying we will pay with us for savings from medicare medicaid. if you're one of 87 million people on medicare etiquette, one of three americans, does
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that mean you'll lose health benefits to give it to the uninsured? of the uninsured keep in mind a lot of those people are uninsured because they choose to be. some are eligible for government programs they just ever bother to sign up, and some 12 million are illegals, and i'm not sure we should sign him up for free health care. >> clayton: that was a measure just shot down by house republicans in this new bill which was left out. this is something americans need to know which as they tried to add this color amendment to this bill which would require illegals to be checked make sure they are not receiving this healthcare coverage. so we are paying for illegals to have healthcare coverage. the democrats shut it down took the amendment of the bill began the reality is if someone is in this country and get run over by a car or there is an emergency you will get treatment and we will check for green card. are we going to provide an ongoing permanent type health care arrangement? the other factors not discussed, we don't have enough physicians and united states to put everybody in the healthcare system. the very administration which says we need to have everybody seeing a doctor is doing things only get more and more difficult
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for someone to be a doctor is if we start making it so they can earn a decent living, a doctor comes out of that school with $140,000 of debt on average. that's what he gets out of school. he has been in school for 12-15 years to become a doctor and the owes the world. sacramento how bad it is. doctors will earn a penny for every dollar oprah made last year. >> clayton: another side of this is the speed to which we are rushing to healthcare. i said the system is broken and we need to fix it. the congressman from georgia, nathan deal, had this to say about congress pushing us down her throat so quickly. >> the decision as to major reform of how americans get their health care in this country, deserves at least as much time and the liberation as it would take to select a puppy to reside in the white house. it took the president six months to decide how long and which puppy he was going to have and to expect congress to do something on major healthcare
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reform in six days, it is totally irresponsible. >> clayton: taking up onto bigger puppy and was time to pick a care plan c. ten commerce and deal is on the energy committee dealing with healthcare a very astute person in terms of healthcare issues are no people listen to him. >> clayton: governor huckabee, stick around or if we will ask this man is the commander in chief should also be playing the role of police chief. that, when we come back. welcome to the now network. population: 49 million.
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the expiring thing,resh. i feel so much better. live with roots, or get a boost? root touch-up by nice 'n easy. your right color. >> there are some who say as president i shouldn't have stepped into this at all because it is a local issue. i have to tell you that that part of it i disagree with.
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the fact that this has become such a big issue i think is indicative of the fact that race is still a troubling aspect of our society herded. >> alysin: the president commented on this we're back with governor huckabee. should have said that? speech and the president of the united states has to be very careful because everything he says will add weight to utter the topic is. this is a classic example of walking through the pasture not looking where you are going stepping in it and it just smells a lot worse and you carry on your shoes for the rest of the day. at some point you've got to say i should not have stepped up there. the president really wanted a place he should not have walked and when the reporter asked the question the smart play would be to say prof. gates is a personal friend of mine it's better not to comment and that's a local matter i'll leave it to them. this wasn't that big of an issue
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until the president of the united states, in prime time, makes a big issue. >> dave: as a harvard law grad, and is a friend, you don't know the facts he don't make a comment. but then he doesn't truly apologize. as a governor, isn't this the moment you can stand up and say we can get everyone to understand that he is a human he made a mistake apologized. >> mike: the hardest thing is to flat out say i was wrong. the night ends at. but it has been interesting. this president does not have the capacity, seemingly, two just say three words, i was wrong. he will apologize for america goes to europe, but he cannot apologize for himself. he will apologize for the previous administration. he will apologize for the republicans and what they've done wrong. he cannot accept you might've done something wrong. she can see the splinter in the eye of the others. he cannot see the team and is on. >> dave: great metaphors today.
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>> clayton: they will meet at the white house and have a beer together all three of them. >> mike: i probably need a lot of them to release some of this down. >> clayton: what should he do do do this or something has to say to sort of calm tensions here? >> mike: i think he believes the symbolism of him and fighting the two people there is probably going to take care of it. that might. >> alysin: they have set up well. they feel better today just for him having sent the invitation. i want to run one thing faster. people have suggested despite this controversy, it helps the president, he does when he talks about race, people listen and history outcry. so it follows that it might even help his healthcare -- >> mike: that's nonsense. this distracted the healthcare argument. it shows he is not invincible, he's not made of platinum, and i think it also shows that race shouldn't be -- this is not an
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issue about race. it was to prof. gates, but this is about low-carb if somebody is at my door, even if it's me looking like they are breaking in, i want the cops to come. i set off the alarm in my own house before. when the police show up i don't say hey, what are you guys doing here. i say i'm so sorry, please forgive me for taking your time. take you for coming. i could've been a burglar. >> clayton: here's my id and i live here. >> dave: he talked about what dan quayle, a manly have not heard from, you'll get into that tonight and here's a little bit of what dan well said about this controversy regarding the president. >> i was very surprised that he would entertain the question. very surprised that a president would want to get involved in what is obviously a local issue with the local police and local citizens. >> clayton: that's huckabee turned tonight at 8:00 pm on "fox news". catch his interview with vp dan quayle. great to see was always.
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>> mike: thank you. >> alysin: 30 million, 50 million, the numbers we're hearing about uninsured people in this country. our research showed the numbers actually much lower. we will explain. >> dave: rush limbaugh is taking on the president's prescription for health care. he says everyone has covered already when they enter the er. you listen. >> people get treated. you can walk into the emergency rooms by law have to get treated. people get healthcare in this country. whether they have insurance or not. >> clayton: more from russia matt and sarah palin coming up.
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>> clayton: welcome back to fox and trends disputable saturday morning in your city. i'm clayton morris, that's alisyn camerota, and that's the lovely and talented dave briggs. >> dave: thank you very much. rush limbaugh was on greta van cistern and wanting the way down was served him and anyone certainly the republican nominee in 2012 because the latest poll according to the washington post abc news as the man who just exited here at mike huckabee the leading candidate ahead of mitt romney and sarah palin. >> clayton: an interesting insight is governor veilance unfavorables not looking good for her as she left office. but here's what rush had to say about sarah palin on greta.
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we don't have it just yet. we will hear from him in a moment about that. he also talked about what's going on in the economy area asked about whether what president obama is trying to do a healthcare is a right course for the country and moving the country economically forward, we now have the sarah palin sound bite. let's play it. >> i'm looking right now can win and who excites crowds and i also think, greta, that the state run media and the democrat media will go a long way in telling us who they are most afraid of. and i don't think they are afraid of mike huckabee isn't never talk about him. i don't think they're afraid of mitt romney much, although if he surfaces they will go after his religion again. but they are trying to destroy sarah palin. they are literally trying to destroy it not her career but her reputation. now if they're not worried about sarah palin, why do this?
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i think they, the democrats are telling us who, right now they are most afraid of. who they think can beat obama. >> dave: interesting times for sarah palin. she leaves the governor's office tomorrow. what is ahead for her? will this help or another she is out of the spotlight and doesn't have a political type to speak from gq will she be on tv eq read this book? who knows. >> alysin: her death from the ethics charges against her were accusations is following her. we will get into some of that in the news. being timeless or what rush said about his take on the economy. >> when it comes to his jobs plan, the stimulus plan, lying through his teeth. we're bringing the deficit down to cuba we are creating jobs to cuba we are saving the economy? this is difficult for me to say because it is drastic, he is doing things like the opposite. president obama and the democrats are destroying the
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u.s. economy. they are purposely doing it i believe. the real reason he wants healthcare is because when he gets it, that is the single greatest power the government will have deregulate every aspect of our lives and that's what obama is and that's what the liberal wing of the democratic party today is total control. these people want as little liberty and freedom for the american people as possible, and healthcare insurers it. see what let's talk about healthcare for a second. it seems to be a moving target when it comes to exactly the number of americans who are uninsured. you're all sorts of different numbers. the official number i think is 45.5 million. some rounded up to 46 million which they then round up to 50,000,000 feet pole. it's a staggering number. what researchers have shown is that it is not 50 million for the course of the entire year. if someone is in between jobs, but there is a day they are
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unemployed or even an hour to go into the deep million. the static member is more along the lines of 18 million. still a very high number. still a number i think clark's emergency rooms and drives up costs for everyone, but it is not 50 million. >> clayton: what you're saying is, so we're all clear, is for the entire year. that number, even if somebody loses their job in there without health insurance for a week, that then becomes part of the yearly statistics. politicians can take that number and spin it anyway they want and that's exactly what's happening behind the number you don't here about is of this 50 million uninsured, 30% have actually been offered health insurance or their employer and have declined to insurance. here you see the breakdown. 17% make 300% over the poverty line. 18% are eligible for medicaid but do not enroll in it.
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>> alysin: you said 30% of the client employer coverage. but a small business owner and he said why would someone decline? he said a third of my employees don't take insurance. and they are young and it takes 30 bucks out of your paycheck and for an 18-year-old or 20-year-old adds up, you can buy a used car paper to rent so that popped not to take it. though it's offered. >> clayton: so when businesses 6d >> alysin: the irony is, we talked about thish@ñ?ñ? yesterdr
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those of us who are lucky enough to have health insurance, we don't go>iñ?ñ? to the emergencym because we know they're%ñ?ñ? go. the other day, a few months ago my daughter fell and split open her chin. i was arguing with my husband not to go to the emergency room. i said this would be a five hour ordeal. let's go when the doctor's office opens. finally i called the doctor on the phone because again i have the luxury of having a doctor who said this is a little girl who will have a facial scar, alysin. i think you should go to the emergency room. >> dave: at a typical doctor's appointment people in power two hours. imagine with 20 million the lines were talking about the kind of starters in mind. it's tough to imagine what it will be like. was not a rush of more doctors. we have too few now. >> clayton: the amendment just pulled up by the democrats to republicans put and which would
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limit the amount of healthcare given to illegal aliens. that was pulled out of -- pulled out the latest round of healthcare negotiations. >> alysin: so much to talk about. the intent here are your headlines because we have a "fox news" alert. there is intense violence in afghanistan this morning. taliban fighters attacked government buildings in the city of hosts. they used ak-47s and rocket propelled grenades. at least three bombers blew themselves up in the attacks. the number of casualties is not known at this hour. it is not clear if american troops are involved in this fighting. then -- meanwhile nato says a soldier was killed in afghanistan. they only said the victim was not american. we will keep you posted. >> with three transit crashes in the past few months, the government may make a major push to get pilots and train drivers screen for sleep disorders before they are hired. investigators find fatigue is
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increasingly behind these transit crashes. sleep apnea is believed to be the major cause of detroit accident in boston last year and a tour bus crash in utah. maybe joss causes the problems heard. >> two months after craigslist vowed to remove erotic adds the site is still selling sex according to several law enforcement officials. cook county sheriff is suing the website calling it the largest source of prostitution. he also said some ad still show scantily clad women offering suggestive beside us. craigslist is it's a publicity stunt. your member they removed their erotic services section after a masseuse was murdered when she posted her services on the site earlier this year. >> dave: one of my favorite stories of the day. the high-tech swimsuits we talked so much about michael phelps made famous, reporters like griff jenkins were even wearing it in times square. these swimsuits, these high-tech
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performance enhancing suits are getting the boot. the governing body of swimming voted to ban the body suit after the world championships the lcr racer has been likened to doping on a hanger, if you will. 130 records have been broken since summer started wearing the polyurethane suits. michael phelps won his eighth gold medals were in it. and these things actually trim your time and that's what so many records fell wearing these specific suits. i think rivkin still wear his. >> alysin: does is call into question michael phelps records? >> dave: everyone wore them but would his times and then as fast? probably not. >> clayton: they studied the sharks and studied the scaling of that shark spotting in the skin and the mimic the way fish swim to create the science behind the suits to streamline them. it's like wearing sharkskin while your something.
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>> dave: more skin in the next olympics because they can wear -- were you just thinking of you. rick reichmuth and with the weather. his outside. >> rick: and more skin in the olympics. it is a beautiful start to the day across much of the east coast. it'll be a nice day across the east. enjoy your day today if you want to get out, go to the beach, picnic in the park. from lots of nice. the satellite radar picture shows us the eastern part of the country looking very good. we had big storms move across the northeast and the overnight hours. across the mid-atlantic as well. the next cold front is pushing through parts of michigan, ohio and kentucky and heading toward west virginia. that will be in your weather tomorrow and will cause problems. remus stretched across parts of missouri and towards nebraska and kansas today. that will and by the afternoon. behind that front beautiful conditions, dried not human in, an across the soda. chicago a gorgeous day for you.
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the four corners, the moisture thereby afternoon looking to they will have thunderstorms. there is a rotation across the pacific northwest. that will pull out of there and a big ritual building and with the temperatures we will see temperatures exploding across the pacific northwest. here are your house today. very warm across a central plains. tomorrow you will see things around seattle gift for the upper 80s. we'll get to the upper 90's this week. portland you could be around 100-105. these are the highest pictures you have seen possibly ever across the pacific northwest. nice day today across the east. >> alysin: can you tell mutinous bag of treats you have next to you to queue. >> clayton: i was told earlier it's a bag of swag. i was saying swag. that's a different terminology. all of our producers were laughing at me and they just let me keep saying swag. >> dave: we were laughing with you. >> clayton: gets a bag of swag
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with lots of goodies including fox paraphanalia. >> alysin: did you or your kid to comic con. >> clayton: there are flip-flops in hear, a sweater, and we're showing you this because of our super pages contest. go to foxnews.com, log onto superpages.com and find the most unique item or service -- that's what you have to do. >> alysin: our audience has been doing good with this. they have come up with oddball products. >> clayton: we need to keep things clean. so friends of foxnews.com, send us your suggestions you could witness bag of swag. >> alysin: speaking of kids, how young does a kid have to be to be inappropriate to handcuff them and throw them into jail? we have three kids who this happened too. seven, eight, and 11 all after a
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neighbor and plant it taken things out of his yard. dave, you have a debate about this coming out. you get to talk to the kid. >> dave: will hear from the kid and here from his mom. again, eight years old, cuffed, coming up.th this is a history of over 50,000 crash-tested cars... this is the world record for longevity and endurance. and one of the most technologically advanced automobiles on the planet. this is the 9th generation e-class. this is mercedes-benz.
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from post party sickness syndrome? there's a revolutionary cure. it's called cascade all-in-one actionpacs. and it's like adding the ultimate button to your dishwasher. because it has the power to pre-wash... dissolve... and rinse the whole mess away. so in the morning your dishes will feel like new again. and so will you. cascade complete all-in-one actionpacs. for money-saving offers, visit theultimatebutton.com. >> dave: boy, has this story inside an outrage across the country. it happened in all the more were three young boys, ages seven,
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eight and 11 were actually handcuffed, placed in a paddy wagon, and taken to a holding cell by the baltimore police. this after simply stealing from their neighbors yard. the boy's mother said the cops went too far in the punishment did not fit the crime. we're joined by twitter goodson and her son eight years old. good morning to both of you and thank you for being here. >> good morning, thank you. >> dave: can you tell me we want you to acknowledge you did steal a bike from your neighbors. is that what happened? >> not a bike. big go kart. >> dave: you know that is wrong, correct? >> yes. >> dave: you are handcuffed by the baltimore police. how scared were you as you are handcuffed, put in what they call a paddy wagon and taken to a cell with 17-year-old kids. how scared were you?
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>> very scared. >> dave: toia, tommy what your reaction was as a mom when you find out what happened? >> at first i thought they were going to maybe just handcuffed and taken to the district and do the paperwork and have us pick them up. i feel that would've been adequate punishment, scare tactic, you know, but in correction to what you asked, they were handcuffed and taken first to the district, kept handcuffed for two 1/2 hours in a cell, then transported them to juvenile justice and put in it so with young men twice their age. now, my outrage is my son's health and safety was put at risk. anything could have happened to my son in that room with those bigger boys, or in transportation to the places
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inside of that big paddy wagon it's all metal in there. my son could have hit his head and been unconscious, anything. i think they went too far with it. when they came to get the children, all of the parents were home. why couldn't they just stay in our custody and we all went to the district -- anything but what they did. it was just too much and my son really experienced something terrible there. i don't think it should of went that far. >> dave: you said whether they are seven, 17 or 70, the police department has an obligation to hold people accountable for their actions. but does this make sense to you? seven, 17 or 70 2q shouldn't there be different actions with almost different ages? >> exactly. the one thing that really, really -- i don't really understand, is that they are not saying that children -- children do things. they mess up. they make mistakes. we as adults are supposed to
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teach them. i mean to just harm, that's not a form of teaching and punishment to let them -- put them in harms way. that's just not right. and like i said, it's not like when they came to find us about the situation that the parents weren't home or you know, we were all right there. so it could've just been handled a lot different area someone made a statement, a commissioner made a statement that they are sorry, they don't have rooms with teddy bears and flowers. i was not asking for that. i was just asking that my son be housed safely. that's all i wanted to try thank you so much. we appreciate your time this morning. some punishment should have been told i'll put this seems extreme. we appreciate you both for being here. "fox & friends" will be back in a couple minutes. quality and reliability...
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>> alysin: the president is pushing for healthcare reform. our next guest has his own analysis of some of the president's key points in his healthcare plan. he is fox legal analyst dieter johnson junior. he will break down what the president is claiming about healthcare and whether the claims hold water. this is your specialty, health care. >> i do healthcare litigation and have done medical malpractice representing insurers and people against insurance companies and the more i read this bill and read the congressional budget office comments and on the president's comments over the last two days, there are a lot more questions than answers. i said let's see what the president is saying and what holds water and what doesn't. the first thing to talk about is this notion of rationing. people are afraid that if this plan goes through there will be rationing. this is what the president has
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said. >> you accept the premise that other than some tax increases on the wealthiest americans, the american people have to give anything up in order for this to happen? >> they're going to have to give up paying for things that don't make them healthier. >> alysin: i'm not sure what that meant. were you able to separate fact or fiction? >> i don't know what it means either but what the president talked about is the notion of coordinating health-care benefits. coordinating the type of care that you need. now coordinating is a euphemism for another word for rationing. so a lot of folks, including me are concerned are we going to a world war ii system with gasoline or you have a b. and c. stickers, or you get one cat scan for you, one mri for you. you have enough blood pressure medication for the year. you had one mammogram. you don't need another one until a year and a half. there was a lot of concern that coordination is in fact
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rationing and if you have to spend as little as they say it will cost it covered so many people, you have to ration. >> alysin: the next immediate analyzes what the president said health care would cause a deficit. >> let's look at that. >> i pledge that i will not sign health insurance reform. as badly as i think it is necessary, i will sign it if that reform and even one dime to our deficit over the next decade, and i mean what i say. >> the president is an earnest man and ambiguous to do good for our country but there it has to be a higher deficit or higher taxes or if the congressional budget office has organized the proposal in a letter to commerce and charlie rangel have the house ways and means committee, and they have said at the very least we're talking about a 250 so fact and the stand are a
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little bit afraid that it will continue to analyze as the days go on studio b. here every day to make it interesting and important. it's all people are talking about. good to see you do in the present, the professor and the cambridge police. has the president handled the situation correctly take you charlie for our band rick santorum joined us for the balanced and fair debate ahead. 
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>> alysin: good morning, it is july 25, saturday. at this hour it is hard for him to say he asserted. president obama stuffing short of a full-fledged apology to the police officer and police department who he said i could stupidly. >> to make clear that in my choice of words i think i unfortunately gave an impression that i was aligning the police department stealing is the commander-in-chief becoming a police chief as well? more straightahead speed by the recent minimum wage hike sounds of a good thing for all workers, but will it end up costing businesses so much that let's people and of getting hired in the first place? we earn our paychecks tackling this hotly contested issue. >> clayton: usually drinking alcohol on a consistent basis is a costly habit. beat the man who's getting paid
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five figures just to blog about sipping wine every day. alysin's dream job. this is "fox & friends" the best morning show on television. her gut. >> announcer: it's "fox & friends". >> clayton: we are trying to break down the amount of wine. >> alysin: camera for comments at don. >> clayton: camera for don't be shy so down here on the couch so until camera for. this is as close as we've ever been. thank you for joining us. if so much to talk about. the hot topics are health-care reform. will it be done before the august recess. and of course the controversy in cambridge. >> clayton: told reform. no recess until these congressmen have to work straight through the night and apparently that's what they're
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doing. nancy pelosi pushing for a vote on the floor before resident obama is august deadline. steve santani has a report. >> president obama keeping up his steady drumbeat for healthcare reform today by pointing to a new white house study on the high cost of health insurance for small business owners. in his weekly address on the radio and the internet the president said small businesses pay up to 80% more to provide health insurance for their employees. this largely due to higher administrative costs and a lack of bargaining power. as a result he says fewer companies offer insurance. it's a disparity the president says is unsustainable. and the president took aim at republican critics who he says are trying to delay or derail healthcare reform as part of their political agenda here it. >> some have even suggested that regardless of its merits, health care reform should be stopped as a way to conflict clinical damage on my administration. i will leave it to them to
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explain that to the american people. >> the senate will not beat an original deadline of next week to pass a health care bill guaranteeing the issue will be carried over into the fall. republicans dismissed the new white house report on small business thanks small business owners would be hurt by health-care reform and jobs would be lost. and they say the plan won't help american families, either. >> it's a prescription for disaster. one that will put washington bureau cracks in charge of your families or small article decisions. medical decisions that are some of the most personal decisions you will ever make. >> and ignores roger says it is important that to just fix healthcare but to do the right thing. of course there is debate about what that is. >> clayton: here's an unbelievable sidebar to the story. this is something that probably won't get reported as much as it should be. democrats, yesterday, while we were winding up our week, democrats voted to allow illegal
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aliens who have part of this healthcare plan. 12 million illegal aliens. and they defeated a move by the republicans to make sure they are citizens first before they would give them health care coverage. >> dave: the hell are commended from the republicans would've prevented these 12 million this is one of those things that if they go home and on this recess, it will hear from their constituents. you imagine people are going to voice their opinions. this is why the president wanted that deadline before the august recess, it does once he skies go home, senators and congressmen start to hear from their people, hopefully they will make noise about ensuring 12 million illegal aliens for free on our tax dollars. >> alysin: you already heard rush limbaugh talk about this. they were to get free healthcare. nobody asks you at the door to the emergency room, are you hear legally? can i see your citizens card?
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nobody asked that so they get free healthcare. the point is -- the democrats who voted for it would say by a 80-11 margin. maybe we ought to have a clinic where illegal aliens could go and not be an emergency room. allowing the emergency room to have real emergencies for car accidents, because there are to going there and getting free healthcare. >> clayton: this is what's ridiculous. it wasn't getting rid of the fact that illegal aliens get health insurance, all he wanted was an eject system which would have electronically checked to see whether or not they are qualified for government health insurance. subsidized health insurance. just in the check. >> alysin: the emergency room says no then what happens to cute. >> if someone is hurt in the -- mayflies fine writer this morning -- if they're hurt and going and unable to speak going into the emergency room care taken care of. that's what we do in america. but what happens on the other
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side of that, they come out and have to answer or verify whether they have government funded healthcare. it goes to that the check system. we all have to do that. we have had them the cards come why shouldn't they take you see when i thought clinton was getting fired up. he was actually tried to get a fly. >> paul: we have too. >> dave: will talk about how plan with geraldine ferraro was not only a vice presidential nominee but a cancer survivor. what she says about this healthcare plan. also rick santorum on the other side. >> clayton: let's talk about what happened yesterday with can we call it dates-date? i think that's appropriate. aggregates and the controversy surrounding the cambridge police department and the president's remarks there. there is the update. we know this morning that man, henry gates, will join president obama alongside sergeant crowley was then arrested him, came to his house and home healed that on his front lawn is full racially charged incident now,
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after the president drew attention to it and called it out, they're all going to the white house to have a beer and davis reminds me of one of my favorite beer sucks. three guys get together to have it? >> dave: that would make a great beer ad. >> clayton: they'll have a beer and discusses. >> alysin: it's amazing what beer will solve. yesterday the cambridge police department came out they held a fairly angry press conference in cambridge were they said they didn't think the president should avoid it on a local matter. they were not happy as you can imagine about saying their department had acted stupidly which is the quote the president used at the press conference. they were angry and they wanted an apology from the president, which they did not get. but the indication to come and have your i think seems to have smooth everything over. >> at the end of the conversation there was discussion -- in my conversation
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with sergeant crowley, there was discussion about he and i and professor at is having a beer here in the white house. we don't know if that scheduled at. but we may put that together. >> dave: in response to this whole mess, mr. gates wrote an e-mail to the boston globe sang" my entire academic career has been based on improving race relations, not exacerbating them. i'm hopeful mike spirits will lead to greater sensitivity to issues of racial profiling and terminal justice system. " he went on to say this is a learning lesson we hope can be taught. he is talking race issues. i think the lesson is something the president should learn but then my sleep, we put out was also there. he was an african-american president who you seen that photo of the rest was taking place. that is him on screen right. he was there on the scene when this arrest took place. he said he stands by sergeant
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crowley 100% and that mr. gates reaction was more bizarre than it should have been. he completely stands by the arrest of prof. gates. >> clayton: one thing being overshadowed is the response by the police department. how they on a regular basis have to deal with incendiary remarks from people, yelling at them while they're trying to do their job. butcher softened the sgt.'s shoes. he hears two men are breaking into a house he doesn't know it's going on. he knows this is a report somebody saw people going into a house. he goes up to the house wants answers once than to show id. this is the sort of thing police officers have to deal with all the time, insults being hurled at them, at what point do they say you know what? you're coming down, me. it's a shady area is the one they all have a breaking point and we saw it yesterday for disorderly conduct. >> here are your headlines in rest of the news. you remember the al qaeda cell
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busted outside of buffalo new york? we are now learning president bush considered sending u.s. troops into the city to arrest this group. the new york times says vp dick cheney was advocating for the highly unusual move which has not been used since the civil war. president bush ultimately decided not to send u.s. troops. fbi made the arrest and the lackawanna six they are put guilty to terrorism charges thank you obama administration is not ruling out sending it to the detainees to the u.s. the pentagon's top lawyers tells congress that some terrorist might be transferred to the u.s. for prosecution or long-term incarceration. but he assures congress that no detainees will be released from congress -- will be released once inside this country. the administration is still trying to figure out what to do if he to hundred 29 prisoners who remain at gitmo. >> warren buffett has a new financial cartoon for kids. >> mr. bowles underinsured.
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>> with you kids think about the candidates is? >> everardo scanty. >> this meets one important criteria of a good investment. people use them on a companies product. the art of making candy is not significantly altered with time. stoney cocoa and you still need "milk". >> clayton: that's when things kids love its economics. >> alysin: i would like to see the rest of the cartoon. _ lessons in there. the cartoon is called the secret millionaires club the project teaches kids the natural essence i can't avoid that. the dvds will hit stores this fall. >> clayton: we should learn this in school. remember the class we learned to write a check? you balanced your checkbook and go through the check writing process. where we put a college doctor credit card. don't fall for that. >> dave: i never learned to balance my checkbook. it's good to rick wright notes with a check of the weather this morning the seven-member schoolhouse rock which is the best? i think all education should be done that way.
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it's stuff you remember. >> clayton: can redo your weather to music too cutesy seven will you how much do it? palm go. >> clayton: look at that weather local it's an east coast *notenote it's writing at the new york double *notenote . >> dave: well done. he tried. >> rick: that you get a lot of points for that. if you can do that. >> i was hoping him to play music under me. >> there was no need. see seven you are right, there is whether headed towards east coast. for tomorrow. but not today. today we have storms across parts of the ohio valley. it will be severe at times. there is buffalo pittsburgh across the ohio valley dealing with it. that mind tapering off another line forming behind it so more is to come. across the west before corners dealing with norms. not that bad in the morning but that they will heat up and the storms will fire again. get a big story to watch this week is the big heat developing
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across the west coast. today, 84 in seattle. marzook on a few degrees but we will push 100° in seattle tuesday and wednesday. for the navy over 100. we could be dealing with record heat across the northwest. still warm across the southwest with temperatures in the triple digit ranges. >> dave: there it is. a little late. coming up the controversy in cambridge and i'm not singing, putting the race debate in the spotlight. geraldine ferarro and rick santorum have strong opinions to share in a fair and honest debate. >> clayton: will just combine there and balanced color balance debate. i think i'll go with the preferred package.
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>> i want to make clear that in my choice of words i think i unfortunately give an impression i was maligning me cambridge police department or sergeant crowley specifically. i could've calibrated those words differently. i told this to sergeant crowley. the fact that it garnered so much attention, i think is a testimony to the fact that these are issues that are still very sensitive here in america. and you know, to the extent that my choice of words didn't illuminate but rather contributed to more media frenzy, i think it was
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unfortunate. >> dave: the president made a surprise visit to the briefing room after speaking to sergeant crowley on the phone, the president using the word unfortunate but refusing to actually say i'm sorry. was everything to do? we are joined by "fox news" contributor and former vice presidential candidate geraldine ferraro, and former senator rick santorum. the morning to both of you. >> the morning, dave. steve i went indecently say i'm sorry? >> i would bet the political people including gibbs and the white house is saying all my god you stepped on the main story and the story was healthcare and it was this last question should just have avoided talking about it at all. the other piece of it is, when you come down to it, and i stopped on the way and to speak to some cops sitting outside fox, and i'm a former prosecutor. it seems to me this is really standard operating procedure at cops. they check to see whenever
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burglary they check to see who's there. if indeed they had walked away without actually having proved that he was the person who lived in the house, just what they did, they were concerned about, which was the basis of the arrest i understand, if they had walked away, filed the report and the person was not prof. gibbs and they had emptied the house, well, they would've been subject to disciplinary action and i suspect that prof. gibbs would've been more than angry that that had happened. >> dave: back to the apology or lack thereof, prick, you like the way the president handled this from the start you cute. >> absolutely not. in my political career, and geraldine has said the same thing, we have all had to eat our words sometimes and make an apology. there is a standard format, i screwed up, i made a mistake, i should have said what i said, i was wrong and i'm sorry. none of those things the president said.
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i could've calibrated my words. the bottom line is he stood up and said what the cambridge police officer did was stupid, what he said was that this was racial profiling because he said these things happen in america. we latinos and blacks. he affiliated himself with this. we are used to this stuff. the president is the one who created this controversy. this was a story that was a week old story that was percolating out there under the radar and the president decided he was going to make an issue of this to try to ingratiate himself, again, to this group of people he continually can't get away from. it is not helpful to this country. he is not being a transformative president on the issue of race, is exacerbating the problem tonight i don't think for one minute he thought let's take an issue of this. i think it was, as it was, an unexpected question at the end of this, and the way he
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responded was you look at the facts up here, and that's all he had was coming up, there was some sort of racial profiling. we got down and spoke to sergeant crowley and spoke to prof. gates he realized it wasn't. so smart so much an apology. what should have been is what he did. let's move ahead. its premise to conclusion. let's sit down and have a beer together. >> dave: the beers are coming up and this willing or until at least sunday if not next week or it you guys hang out because coming up we will debate health care reform. geraldine ferarro is a breast cancer survivor and she thinks it's a good idea. senator rick santorum does not agree. we'll have a debate right after the break. i never thought it could happen to me...
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to be one big debate over healthcare for some americans questioning i plan that may not only be costly but
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one that could put their health in the hands of the government. that's the criticism. >> clayton: we're joined once again by charlie perl, a cancer victim herself not a breast cancer survivor but cancer survivor snack right. >> clayton: and former senator rick santorum. geraldine starting with you think he -- senator santorum you think this is the greatest threat to the future of all americans. what do you say to those who say on the republican side b. current courseware on is unsustainable. that the health insurance premiums have doubled over the past ten years. what do we do to fix this? >> we have to address the problem. there are two major problems in the biggest one is cost. what do we do to reduce cost. there are all sorts of things to put in place to reduce costs and make it affordable. never when we can go after the issue of medical malpractice and liability. a fact that we haven't an incredible amount of defensive medicine practiced in this country because of our work
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system. we can do something about state regulation. one reason small businesses -- i saw steve sometimes report earlier. one reason small businesses pay more than anybody else is because state regulation and it's all these things that have to be covered in an insurance policy. you can't go out and buy an insurance policy design to fit what you're concerned about, to cover the can coverage as you are concerned about gift to cover everything the state plans. the reason erisa plans bigger plans a more affordable is they're exempt from state regulation. that's another big area. the third is medicare and medicaid are horrible players. with a system called this proportionate share payments and the federal government that are paid to hospitals who have a disproportionate share of medicare and medicaid patients. by? because i don't pay. they don't pay enough for the hospital to survive so we have to give them extra money because we know we don't pay enough. the huge cost shift to the private sector.
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we need to address cost and this bill doesn't do any of that so i geraldine, i'm sure that there are a lot of things you would like to counter. can we hear your personal story? yet lived with multiple myeloma for ten years. how would your healthcare change to the president goes plans go through? >> i hope not. i hope the president he says if you have health care you can keep it. and when you believe that. >> s. we'll get 40 million people who are not insured, which rick do not address, they would be covered. i've been very vocal about how i'd since it became public with this actor was diagnosed. i'm getting calls from people around the country. i'm doing well. i have 3-5 years and here it is 10.5 years. you know, a lot of people in this country are not. i've gotten calls from people who say i can't afford that medication and they have died. you turn around and say that's not fair. is it fair i'm able to afford it and they are not?
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>> clayton: you say you hope your coverage doesn't change. the president says your coverage wouldn't change. he would have the choice. >> that's a lie. it's an outright lie. the hospital is very specific about private insurance would be ended. you have to go through this government system which again mandates certain benefits to be covered. the bottom line is cancer survival rates in america are the highest in the world. places with socialized medicine are lower. >> i'm holding up a comparison of senate and house health care reform bills. it actually gets changed -- it has changed this was june 9, it was changed again later on. it keeps on going on. none of these people say you can't go into your private insurance. every single one of them provide him every single one of these bills the democrats have put it provided. >> alysin: but will they be priced out of the government takes over at lower cost to cube. >> actually not. i represent a large insurance
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company. their part, this is the first time the insurance companies and pharmaceuticals have been sitting down and having input into these health care bills. they're not going to ipod insurance companies, for goodness sakes. that doesn't make sense. but what they will do is make sure that they are competitive. >> clayton: senator tommy get the final word. >> have to compete against the federal government does not make a profit and they can fix prices and not win and demand that to hospitals and doctors. you can't compete effectively in the private insurance market will be wiped out. so even though geraldine ferraro says she doesn't think so, we will leave it there. ask for the debates and will talk about this for many weeks to come. >> clayton: coming up on the show it is called sin city but has las vegas been back listed by the federal government keep you explain straight ahead. should
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it. >> dave: welcome back to "fox & friends". time for your shot of the morning courtesy of this staff sergeant who took a photo of a lifelong army officer celebrating his retirement by eating a ration he saved since the vietnam war. >> alysin: what? >> dave: no joke. colonel henry thought popped open a pound of cake at a ceremony took a bite pronounced the cake good, even a little moist suet must've been made of a 20.
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>> clayton: would you do that? >> dave: not a chance. >> alysin: i would if i were hungry enough. about now. >> dave: anyway haven't been on rations send the mouse and select. >> clayton: let's move onto vegas. vegas is sin city where ever he goes to their conventions. everybody knows their conventions in las vegas. that's hardly glitz and glamour is. if you want a convention for dog shows to you name it it's all there. in fact a lot of the federal government agencies have held a different activities there. the irs, the social security ministration they were in arizona going to lavish resort there at the biltmore. now the governor of nevada is saying that president obama is taking him off the list for destinations. charging president obama with this idea that you will kill las vegas by refusing to let agencies send their employees there to celebrate and have lavish getaways through on a memo sent to government employees said to stay away from any vacation destination that
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seemed lavish or it's a like vegas or palm beach where the biltmore. >> dave: reno is another choice. >> alysin: this is where the government would like them to take conventions. they'll lock you, do i hear takers to cube st. louis. >> dave: just went there for the all-star game store these are great cities. >> dave: and under a phenomenal city. >> alysin: they are not considered the happen in hot vacation spot because in this time of the down economy it is just unseemly, basically, to be seen going on a lavish vacation. >> dave: senator kerry reid of nevada said the state spec to the bush administration. don't blame president obama here. one of the problems is the city of las vegas, the state of nevada in general is being crushed by this because they depend on tourism. you point out that vegas,
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believe it or not and this is not my tourism ad, is probably the most affordable of all the cities mentioned because there's so many hotel rooms in their anti- listen to it on -- i will get online and find out. >> clayton: i will back you up. i was. >> alysin: you cannot lock as well. milwaukee called me this morning. >> dave: do they have a convention space? now. >> clayton: i was therefore ces a little while ago. when i flew in the cabbie says that the consumer electronic show? thank god no one has been to her city. all of these cabbies are losing their jobs, out of work because there's nobody to pick up. they're giving away free meals, hotel rooms and other things. i will go with you on the affordable side but with alysin's point it is unseemly to have members of the social security ministration corporation members of the irs who are doing with insolvency by the way when you talk about the social security ministration, be going on these lavish vacations by taking their wives, their spouses and friends and so forth and having dance parties afterwards to want anybody is allowed to go on vacation.
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it's a convention where it is all paid for and you can bring your spouse and you can go to one of the fanciest hotels, that just seems like a doll and inappropriate. >> dave: i googled it and listen to this, 50% two 70% off vegas hotel rooms, several, even though one of the nicest places in all of las vegas, $159. one of the nicestm]c3 two stories. >> clayton: the story is obama and his family are going oneqñ?? vacation arguably the worst week of president obama'sçñ?ñ? administration since coming to office six months ago, going to martha's vineyard, renting a place called the blue heron farm
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called the 20.5 acres on martha's vineyard with a tri-state of about $40,000 for the week. soon that's what they say and equivalent properties would cost. i don't think the president has said how much you will pay to buy this vacation. >> clayton: these are based on past rental prices. >> dave: the president said he is payingxñ?ñ? market rate which falls in that category we just showed you, and again this is a $20 million compound. he said he is paying his own way, but is this right in the times in which we give? again, it's about perception. >> alysin: i put up a flipside which is maybe the worst week of your presidency is the exact time to go on vacation to get away. task congress is trying to work out the healthcare plan, he can't do anything until they present the bill, maybe he needs to be compressed and martha's vineyard as a hotspot. but here's what's interesting. he is going to the town of show
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mark deemed the most expensive small-town and all of america by businessweek back in 2007. and i can tell you from having recently visited martha's vineyard, the islanders are not pleased about this development because this is a tiny little island. it's very remote and the idea that this entourage, this presidential entourage is moving in, everybody is holding their breath because they know there'll be traffic on a remote little island. >> clayton: the president can do whatever he wants for his vacation. he is spending of his own money but arguably the taxpayers pay his salary, but why not go to a small town they could use the boon of light tourism. she won the lucky? the government -- the government suggested we go to bloc in st. louis on vacation baby they should go to the lucky. >> clayton: people would come out and support local restaurants. just an idea. i don't know. there's a little bed and breakfast in des moines that
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they could go visit. >> alysin: i've been there. >> dave: this next tour is interesting. we have some of the craziest responses, craziest answers and questions ever heard in job interviews. have you ever said something really off the wall or as a manager have you ever heard anything very bizarre. there were interesting answers including this. the question is, why did you leave your last job? the reply to cube i was fired because they were forcing me to attend anger management classes. only not the best answer to give. >> clayton: these come from her builder.com. here's another one. why should we hire you? the answer, i would be a great asset to the events team because i party all the time. >> alysin: i agree with that. you do need to showcase your credentials. when you're on a job interview -- >> dave: that came from you, in fact she won no, i never applied to be an events planner. if you're a party consultant, but a child.
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>> clayton: electors for alysin. you have any questions? before we let you go to heaven questions? >> clayton: and yes, i do. what you want me to do if i can't walk to work if it's raining. in fact, can you pick me up to cube. >> dave: how about this next line. this would work in reverse. if you are the interviewer and use the interviewee. go. so it okay. if this doesn't work out and i call you sometime to go out to cube speaker you were supposed to ask the question. >> dave: follow the game. >> clayton: alysin, before we let you go, but we have concluded the interview, deal questions for us to cube soon i do. >> clayton: when you background checks for candidates to things like public drunkenness and risk them up to cube. >> alysin: i love that one. >> dave: we have so much more. get them in hear and we will try to help alysin out reading us.
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friends of foxnews.com. >> clayton: alysin asked the question does it show cocktail bother you that i have before the show. >> alysin: i said you ever press charges t#káwq%gj a lot of the country dealing with this we7yñ? have heat out e and rough weather across the center part of the country.xñ?ñ? as you wake up this morning it's warming up across the east coast. it'll be a=zñ?ñ? hot day acrosse east and humid but it will be sunny so it is a nice beach day and pulled it across the east. tamara not so much because we have storms moving in. the satellite radar picture shows that. one batch of storms exited the east yesterday.
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we have a break in the next batch of storms is across michigan cutting through ohio and in towards kentucky and west virginia. that will continue to be on the move tomorrow ringing the rain eased. the southwest is warm and humid. rain showers across missouri may be southern missouri dealing with severe weather later on. across the western things are going on on of which is the monsoonal moisture so the afternoon will heat up and will see thunderstorms fire again. a bit of a upper level disturbance will pull out of the pacific northwest. as it does it will be replaced by a big area of high pressure and things will work out this week. temperatures today not bad across the pacific northwest. eighty-four in seattle. tomorrow you want into the upper 80s. by the time we get to tuesday and wednesday areas from portland to seattle could have temperatures above 100° and flirting with all-time record temperatures. a heat wave, when we had to
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check in on people and if you don't have air-conditioning unit to get somewhere with a habit we don't want to see someone get ill or die from heat. one hundred in dallas today not 109 in phoenix tomorrow. >> clayton: thank you and our children weighing in on putter, he will go on vacation but won't get rid of the camera. >> dave: a primetime press conference from arthur's then you -- vineyard. >> a minimum wage hike may mean maximum problems for small businesses. we'll higher cost which is an increase in unemployment? >> alysin: and maybe the best job in the world. the lucky winner of a job that pays five figures per month. to drink fine wine in view of old northern california. i can't wait to talk about this. announcer: how 'bout a laundry day you can look forward to?
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>> clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends". the new wage hike might sound like good news for many american workers that could end up
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costing jobs to cube open smith joins us to break it down. the morning *custom -it is not even that new. this is the heard year. it started in 2005 and this is the third leg of it. there are two ironies here. one is the whole minimum wage thing was struck down as unconstitutional in 1923 tsa said it was against the freedom of a person to set their own wage. but it has become a fact that it peaked in 1968 in terms of time power. on a relative basis at $4400 a year extra. the real question is, as an employer at the margin when you are in a recession, you cut back hours and you cut back people from full-time two part-time and secondarily to get rid of people. our numbers show about 400,000 jobs will be lost over the next 12 months. on the math. >> clayton: this is then argued for 50 years on these economics and during the clinton years
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they cited three economists in all this were largely our july is in the process saying look, this has no effect on unemployment whatsoever. if anything it might affect teenage employment working at mcdonald's for summer jobs but largely this won't get people. what do you say to that? >> ironically, if you will, the person that gets the most is the illegal alien. if you look at the percentage of people earning minimum wage were not waiters and waitresses getting tips, but actually earning minimum wage, some statistics say 30, 35% are illegal aliens. revenue strategy. you want to get rid of the illegal americans, raise it to the point where americans will take the job or they will be laid off. teenagers have the highest unemployment rate, 15%, clearly they will get hammered. >> clayton: this is a problem in minority communities, some of these jobs this might disproportionately hurt members of minority candidates who want some of these jobs were the
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minimum wage goes part and parcel. this is an argument for republicans saying look, you liberals want to talk about helping people who can't help themselves in this way, now you are doing it disproportionately with a drum wage hike. is that true? >> again, this is the unintended consequence. out of the goodness of your heart you pass a law to raise the minimum from a dollars $.15 two $7.25. the consequence of that is you raise labor costs at that level 30% or 40% so what you did automatically is take people at the margin out of the labor pool because the employer, never where mandating the wage but not the job, so the employer who has a cost that he or she needs to maintain, lowers the amount of labor to stay within the profit margin of their business. that's economics. that's where bleeding good hardness turns out to her to not help. >> clayton: and you reward good work with higher wages. that makes sense in a capitalist
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society. >> ding ding. >> clayton: stick around for the story to open. to actually get a one-shot get paid five figures a month to talk about wine. good to have a job to cube. >> i'm in the wine business in california. the greatest time -- you don't make a lot of money but you're happy all day long. so who cares. >> clayton: tobin smith think you for joining us. check out olson bears. we appreciate it. >> good to see you. >> clayton: usually costs a lot of money when you enjoy fine wine but you will need a man who gets $10,000 a month to drink a blog. first come here's what's coming up on the cost of freedom tobacco money to you. national healthcare stalls as taxpayers revolt and stocks soar. is wall street and main street sending washington a money message it can't ignore? white house as he surpassed all politics to push health care? that's what vincent, a.k.a. johnny says and he is here and only here.
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>> and summit county why we're spending millions of dollars on stimulus bad for jobs on ham and cheese sandwiches to cube. >> buildout companies using our money to lobby congress for more of our money so they can lobby congress. is it any wonder taxpayers are angry to cube all of that and stocks are so good our gang just bought them themselves. the cost of freedom kicks off at the top of the hour. see you then.
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>> dave: 10,000 bucks a month what a lucky guy gets doing for doing what he loves most, inclined. it lasted over four months 2000 applicants finally murphy winery in california found their man. >> alysin: heart he wollaston knew my stuff correspondent joins us along with murphy good winemaker dave reddy junior. acerbate here.
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heart he -- while a sunny start with you. how did you beat out these other 2000 people to get this team job? >> there are a lot of fantastic people in the process. i just went with it with all i had all my heart, all my energy on one guy doing what was the job interview like? select a job interview started with a six l of cabernet sauvignon red diamond gullet. >> clayton: dave, when you look at these candidates, i looked at these videos because when we covered the story went on the first time we were interested to see how this would unfold and there were some fantastic candidates. why did you choose the wall is? >> you are right. it was amazing. party just a lot of grass roots movements in atlanta georgia when i came out to visit, and is a guide that is incredibly wine passionate. he is knowledgeable about wine.
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he knows how to talk about it to where to a broad audience and may be able to understand or is coming from, and he really is the right guy speak five wallace would joke you're getting paid 10,000 bucks a month to drink wine but what does the job entail? >> the job entails of course consuming great quantities of wine hopefully but it is really communicating the murphy good story, indicating the story of sonoma county, it's sharing that joy and passionate story with everyone other online into getting back and forth with those people joined wallace, do you need an intern? spec absolutely. >> clayton: this goes to show you the power of social media, dave. people jump on it said i don't understand this twitter thing, i don't know how it works. you did an incredible thing. the new york times covered the story, we covered the story and thousands of people are checking into murphy good spec it really was an incredible experience. not only for her feet good by
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the applicants. and honestly the power of social media is really incredible and we look forward to really delving into it with hardees help and just making it a better place for regarding. >> dave: wallace, what will you do in the six months is over man. you had the greatest gig on the planet drinking wine. >> i don't know. actually my goal is to be as good and as great as is position is possible but. me six months is a start. if you can deliver enough wine to bring enough people that are following and communicating with murphy good, i hope they want me to stay. i don't want to leave the house, it's beautiful. >> clayton: let's test it out. i putter you only have 140 characters to make your point. i have a bottle of hershey good cabernet sauvignon. describe it to me if i'd don't know what it is.
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>> it's going to be these crazy, beautiful, almost menthol, minty decease this great berry flavor but it's got little bit of a punch, a little bit of structure. to me it's a blackberry train on traffic tracks coming right at you. >> alysin: give me a straw. >> dave: i don't know if that was 140 characters come august. soon it was great, guys. >> clayton: thanks much from murphy good wind we appreciate it. we will be back in moment with her super pages contest winner next. . f ♪ ♪ i got troubles, oh ♪ but not today
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