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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 26, 2009 7:00am-10:00am EDT

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selection we expect from citizen too. >> dave: move over tiger woods. there's a new king on the golf course. take a tour of justin timberlake's very own version of a country club. our slogan comes from chip blair and ashton, pennsylvania, to get to the news from start to and from your hometown to round the bend, this is long, the true and honest words to send come from the mouths of "fox & friends". sue when that's nice. >> dave: thank you. roll it. >> announcer: xbox and friends find speak very the people outside of your don't actually understand the shows going on. >> dave: they don't understand we're working here. >> alysin: what was that larry wheeler missing speaker we opened a coffee shop around the side over there so we get some of the overflow for people enjoying a coffee.
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>> dave: it's what happens when the medicative is filled in for rick reichmuth through when there's a lot of excitement in the studio. that's true speech we wanted a big stories in the morning what happened in cambridge massachusetts with the fallout from dates gate, henry louis gates, of course, arrested and out on the front lawn of his own property after breaking into his own house, and of course surgery crowley responding to that. the president weighing in on this whole thing. it appears as if gates is ready to move on. it seems like everyone is ready to move on. he says in the end this is not about me at all stew and the reason they're ready to move on is because there is a near summit plan. apparently beer can fix everything. that's the teachable moment i've taken away. this had reached a fevered pitch. if he saw pictures outside professor gets home, people have left big black and white placards saying you played the race card, how do you introduce race. in cambridge it doesn't seem like it has gone away but this morning sergeant crowley of the
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police and prof. gates and president obama are planning to have a beer together to discuss the larger issue here and is there something ever but can learn from this experience. >> dave: what we can learn as we don't rush to judgment. here's another quote from prof. gates. >> dave: an interesting piece in the boston herald posed the question, what kind of beer will they drink it does bear some at? opinions of range all over the map from sap atoms, my personal favorite, it is massachusetts. have to have a sam adams speaker and a big fan of sam adams, guinness is on the book. i love guinness but the point the boston herald makes is that it takes well to port and a while to drink it too when that's good because the how long discussion. but guinness is like a meal. has a lot of vitamins.
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i may be voting for that one also. one bartender suggested the cambridge elk, because obviously the geographic significance of that speaker with your personal tech. >> alysin: it's a teachable moment you have to go with otherwise her. ha ha. that's what we will all be after. >> dave: very clever when i even lose day before manager. >> dave: the master of the pundit mike that one speaker on going to go after show hometown pride dealings under america's oldest brewery. >> dave: there's no pennsylvania tied to this speaker you make a valid point. >> dave: i actually do *speaker16 i was hoping you would say coors light. >> dave: that would be my choice but not in this particular instance. it is to water down for this serious subject to one good point. you can say we're making light of this but you know the white house is actually debating all this is every single thing they do is symbolic or significant so
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they are choosing this carefully speak to you of "fox & friends" viewers that you have to do german beer or a belgian beer. i said there's no way the white house will choose a foreign beer >> dave: but it's not budweisers now belgian beer. there's a lot of thought going into this i promise you doing, not blog what beer you think would be appropriate. speaker you need to turn that on first. >> alysin: i will. >> dave: there is a lot of movement on capitol hill were help to reform is concerned so where does the bill steffen now. season tommy joins us live from washington this morning. what's happening with dr. this morning. >> a lot. this is the beginning of the last week before congress goes on its august break or at least before the house goes. at one point it was the deadline set by obama for a health care bill to his desk to be passed by both houses, but clearly that's
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not going to happen now, and get health care reform is not exactly on life support. it is churning along behind the scenes, a lot of talk going on a lot of high-profile and -- high-profile posturing are republicans going to plan a disaster and even by some democrats who say they need more time to find the right solutions. one idea on the table is to charge an excise tax on health plants that exceed a specific value. possibly a value type to the average benefit received by federal workers. some key members of the senate on both sides of the aisle said this may be a way to pay for alth care reform. they include autos republican senator chaka grassley and immigrant john kerry. the president who has waged a city campaign to keep health care front and center on the national agenda, has also said the tax on so-called goldplated cadillac insurance policies may be an approach that doesn't put an additional burden on the middle class. he said he is to look at the idea before making a final
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determination. since then a top administration official was told politico the president believes this is an intriguing idea so it could be a point of compromise. the president also made health care the topic of his weekly radio address and his internet message yesterday, and he blasted republicans who he says are trying to torpedo both care to score political points. >> some have even suggested that regardless of its merits, that care reform should be stopped as a way to inflict political damage on my administration. i will leave it to them to explain that to the american people. >> here's where we stand. the senate said there's no way they will have a built in to this week the house could come up with something. we have to wait and see. back to you. >> dave: thank you, steve. that's an interesting point he reads about taxing the cadillac health-care benefits. that's something that became during the campaign proposed taxing health care benefits, and president obama, then a candidate, less of him for it.
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that'll be adjusting going forward to see if he changes direction on that. >> alysin: here are your headlines at this hour. we begin with a "fox news" alert. four men are in custody in connection with the killing of a u.s. border patrol agent, robert grosses. police said the men were armed and part of a immigrant something rang. >> the senate judiciary committee is expected to vote on the song at sotomayor supreme court nomination on tuesday. that word comes from the top republican on the committee, jeff sessions. sessions about for her? he said he made up his mind but he won't tell anyone what is lotus. two other republicans, john cornyn and orrin hatch said that although against sotomayor selleca was a diverse nightmare. but he ain't bad mix from georgia became wedged in a pipe after he was hit by a car. amazingly the dog was barely scratched from the car accident, as owner 12-year-old eric mendoza placed food and water in front of the type in hopes of
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getting body out. but after three hours of digging, but he, come on buddy. we see them. his owner was very happy this morning. and a great plan. if you put like food and drink outside of someplace i was wedged, i would crawl into it my way out. it was a brilliant move. >> dave: that so we get you out. >> alysin: it flushes me out. speakers go down to raleigh, north carolina, as a city councilman or has heard complaints for years. he's tired of this. people complaining all of the time about neighbors parking their car in their front yards. but this is something a lot of people do. they decide they don't have a grudge that i have a driveway, they don't use a street they just pull up and park in their front lawns. and he says look. >> dave: sometimes mistakenly like you do at night to the thread pool my mini cooper up and actually park. he said he is going on the
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offensive now. anyone who puts their tires on the lawn, a new ordinance. all of this. in fact let's listen to tom crowder, the councilman. >> have a lot of areas where the grass is being denuded out of a storm water runoff that's washing into the street and into storm gutters. >> dave: a fellow councilman and rally said this is on borders association on steroids. i don't know, it seems like it's your yard. i'm not saying it's good or bad thing but it should be for the homeowner to decide. as associations there, it's your grass coming about it you own it to accept it's an eyesore. >> dave: i said different in your driveway seal in some communities have regulations. you can't just put up any sort of better, you can't just -- >> dave: is a homeowners association. >> alysin: some neighborhoods want to keep an aesthetic, a pretty aesthetic for the whole neighborhood to visit raises everybody's real estate prices
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if the entire street looks good. so that's the point of the city council member wants the car off the front line. but the proponents said the homeowner association on steroids and also its government control. you can do something on your own property 2q which is at? i would be interested to know what you all think. c-3 not everybody has a homeowners association. my parents neighborhood doesn't have that. if somebody wanted to work on their car -- one of our neighbors used to bring on a windsurfing fanatic, there was no light anywhere near us but he would lay out these big trucks on his front lawn all day, and he would work on them constantly. and he would work on his old cars on this one, though his car up there. it looked a little off. >> dave: domenica davis, went in on this. you think marketing online. is that all right to cube to mega site on the property. that's what i rent. see when you have a car or a line. it's not a problem to ask if i
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win that battle to cuba two worry about. >> dave: this is grass. >> this is chris you speak of. we have plugged watches and warnings to talk about better for the northeast today. scattered showers and a few thunderstorms will pass you by. we're not looking at an all-day rain. this will begin a pattern of unsettled whether throughout the week. so you will have from time to time some scattered showers. a better ring to move to new york with a batch of rain pushing to the new england area right now. today that's what you look at that lease or the first part of the day. otherwise it is going to be warm and muggy. you can see the showers are moving off to the coast. it's an upper-level low that spending so even on the radar and looks like there's nothing behind it but the heat and humidity will have enough to form scattered showers by late again in the afternoon. down through the ohio valley putting in a strong wind sponsor. it is starting to lose its punch but we did have a few thunderstorms issued this morning through parts of eastern
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portion of kentucky. this line will push off to the east as well and then just lose its steam and we will mainly look at him as the system starts to move into the virginia beach area. 101 in dallas, 109 in phoenix, 87 in seattle. we have red flag -- let warnings in washington. highs will getting to the 90s. washington and oregon will see triple digits during the workweek. so someone whether headed that way. >> dave: some crudely sticky whether i'm sure two. tank you, domenica. that coming up, the american medical association and be throwing its full support behind resident obama's healthcare plan that the president of the group warns of disaster the details. he joins us next to spinal those details are. welcome to the now network. population: 49 million.
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do what we were susu should vers and doctors health care system best they've announced their support for reform to when president obama of course pushing for healthcare reform and announcing which medical associations are behind him. our next guest is the former president of the american ethical association, but he warns of disaster in the details of president obama's healthcare plan. dr. paul donna summer is now a spokesperson for the coalition to protect patients rights. thank you for being a this morning. >> it's a pleasure alysin. see when the ama used to run has endorsed the president's plan. what are they missing that you think could be disastrous to
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cube ; the ama but they made a mistake in endorsing this plan. first off we want to have the patient and control of the policy. we want the patient on the policy. and we want government out of the examining rooms and operating rooms. the ama has strong policy for medical liability reform among our top advocacy items. we also have the right to properly contract where you and i as patient and doctor can agree on a fee. whatever the government would pay would be a defined contribution and we would agree less or more than that that that is prohibited in hr 3200 the tri-committee bill. this is a central right of liberty, the right to properly contract. it's a hallmark of the free enterprise system to one when you say medical liability reform is that another term for tort reform. >> that is one that's not in this build. >> it's not. if the president doesn't like proven reforms such as california and texas, he doesn't
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like those reforms and come up with alternatives but don't say oh well, we're going to look at that. we don't want some of you looking over your soul the shoulder. we have to get rid of the generalities. eloquent generalities don't cut it. we need the american public in charge of their own life treated with a doctor as trusted consultant stephen tell us what you think this plan in the house will hurt patients inequitable due first of all is eliminate the so-called public plan, the government plan will eliminate the private insurers. they are the umpire that will set the rules and eventually there will be no insurers. then we have a government. what we ought to do is take a deep breath, but everybody read the bill, understanded.com up and let everybody in congress get on medicaid for a year and get an idea of what government controlled medical care can do. what happens is by rationing prices they end up -- no doctors in the area to take the patients to want me because if prices go
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down, the just price doctors on the field altogether to match her son doctors can't afford to practice medicine of their pain these owners insurance costs each year. i know doctors who pay more and more in malpractice insurance every year though their sellers don't go up to mac that's true. think of gulliver's travels. you've got the giant of medicine all tied up with rules and regulations and price fixing and so the doctor can't operate on the patient. soon what is the solution to mac the solution is number one to let the patient on the policy still in right now ishrough your employer. is that different. >> you can do any number of ways but the main thing is that the tax subsidy or the tax credit or the defined contribution, and everybody gets the same benefit. if i as a solo practitioner, you as a solo practitioner, if you didn't work for fox, you would get the same tax credit. if you spend $5000 on your insurance you would get a credit -- sorry a credit against income tax every year.
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that would be one thing. ever two, the patient would have the right to moderate of choices to choose the insurance. they can make prudent choices like health savings accounts with money stays in every year if they don't spend her head have catastrophic for coverage over that. we need to have any decisions on quality but the specialty societies give us the guidelines. but we're going to end up with these mandates that cause long lines, rationing. we have experiences in canada, we have experiences in great britain. when president obama talked the night and said doctors make the choice of doing a consular committee, as they get more money than the medical treatment, gee whiz, give us a break mr. president. let's trust the doctor. the patient certainly do so when dr. thank you for coming on and helping at making understandable. ask a much sooner thank you very much see one vice president, joe biden, said he needs to set the record straight when it comes to the $787 billion spending bill.
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he says it's being misconstrued and misunderstood. even wrote an op-ed piece about it. we will fill you in on that next. chloe is 9 months old. she is the greatest thing ever. woman: one little smile, one little laugh. - honey bunny. - ( coos ) we would do anything for her. my name is kim bryant and my husband and i made a will on legalzoom. man: it was really easy to do. - ( blows raspberries ) - ( laughing ) robert shapiro: we created legalzoom to help you take care of the ones you love. go to legalzoom.com today and complete your will in minutes. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side.
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swiffer cleans better or your money back guaranteed. ♪ don't you want me baby? specie welcome back to "fox & friends". his president obama using the ama to gain support for healthcare reform to cube you for joining us as attorney and fox contributor jamie kolbe. we just heard from the president of the ama. why is the ama supporting this bill and is the president, as clayton asked, using the a.m. page. >> i think the president was delivered in his decision to speak to the ama about what he wants which is really not healthcare reform, it's a healthcare overhaul. it's interesting to hear the former president of the ama because what he wants is something completely different
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than what the ama actually said speaker i'm sorry. this is what the ama president says, we support the passage of hr 3200 and we look forward to additional constructive dialogue is a long process of passing a healthcare reform passes. we are committed to passing health reform this year consistent with principles of pluralism, freedom of choice, freedom of practice. you said it's different than what will be happening. >> absolutely different. here's what's not in there. what universal care, i don't know a doctor that doesn't want to take care of a patient that needs help. oliver they said fort reform is essential, and there isn't a tort reform proposal in any part of the healthcare reform that's being discussed. the important thing for the public to understand, because i think they put a lot of credibility in the american medical association, if the ama says it's good that must be safe it must be right for us we better sign up. the point is only 20% of practicing physicians belong to
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the a.m. page and the great majority of theh@ membership, which was 70% in the 60s of doctors, not 20%, art residents and medical students. it's the only organization that can get into. later when they go into clinical practice and they become members of the college of surgeons and other organizations. what the ama says is what we have what's being discussed and obama care. you won't be able to choose your doctor. you will be able to opt out once you sign up. you may be denied care if you are a certain age and has decided it is not cost effective to give you the medication that will save your life. so on our show later in the 11:00 o'clock hour would have a physician who started an impressive grassroots effort to teach patients what obama care means, and tell them what the letter he has on a website, safe quality healthcare to work, that they can go and actually make a difference. you have to get involved. it is life or death.
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so at fox would have been really detailing what it means. and as you guys were talking about yesterday, i believe, the 46 million people are uninsured, it's not really 46 million. it could be as low as 4-6,000,000 because they're at least 50 million people that are qualified now who don't sign up. another 12 million who can afford it don't ensure because they don't want to pay for so the number +10,000,000 illegal aliens who qualified. >> dave: as an attorney i have to ask for reform is something you touched on. that's confusing term. not practice insurance cost doctors a fortune in this country. why are we not seeing this as part of the bui real quickly to cube. >> at the amount of malpractice coverage the taxis that we're looking at america, and the doctors won't be able to be doctors anymore. >> dave: what would they go into this 'tort reform and my lawyer friends out there will hate me for this, but the ama might have
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gotten that part right, that if there isn't a limit or cap on recovery of frivolous lawsuits, doctors are not going to doctors anymore speak your democrats wouldn't get anywhere near close if they brought in for reform. thanks for joining us jamie kolbe. at 11:00 am -- >> starts at 10:00 am. but this particular guest at 11:45 am lundberg is very interesting. c-3 speaking of the president's health care reform plan, there is concern it could drive sarah palin as noncitizen parent. she's officially sanctified as governor of alaska today. but what politician in her future? we will discuss. first used america. >> we're looking at scattered showers along the east coast along with muggy and humid conditions that will settle in for much of the week or had out to the west of big warm-up on the way. you could see record-breaking
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accu-chek® aviva. born in the u.s.a. =*speaker3 and back to "fox & friends". i'm clayton morris, then that is don johnson. >> dave: thank you very much.
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>> dave: is any group hanging out. it is bright in hear. it's a nice summery day and a nice summary suit i sold it from red patent oceans 11 c. when you look great, tom wolfe. >> dave: joe biden might not wait as he probably wouldn't pull it off. >> the new york times coming up in their sunday edition. what was not in the sunday edition is that joe biden's op-ed piece you can read it. we're just getting at now are reading this. he wants -- the vice prefoident wants to set the record straight on what he says people might not know about the recovery process. he's not talking health care specifically his talking recovery act. >> alysin: we know it as the stimulus. the $787 billion stimulus. he is growing frustrated with all the criticisms of the stimulus bill. you heard it. on employment has only gone up since the service was passed. that is being discussed at a low
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rate. that went to pet projects rather than the infrastructure things. there was supposed to be sure ready projects. some of them won't have until 2010. he has grown frustrated with the criticisms speed. >> dave: he is wearing that suit suing unc have the same thing i. >> dave: how ironic. of all the ironing here is a quote from that good-looking suit wearing vice president. >> dave: the problem is, critics have pointed this out, only 10% and some say that's generous, has been spent on this stimulus. >> alysin: he said in this article that they -- and this
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op-ed at a quarter. >> dave: i read that actually 8% has been spent on projects. >> to be specific about what he sang, he sank 95% of working amicans see their taxes go down. he's talking fire departments and police officers. he said 14,000 teachers in new york city alone have had their jobs said. firefighters, police officers and preventing state budget gaps are growing wider. this is what he says. >> dave: you don't have to go further than the first sentence in this op-ed to get the whole thing. he wants to blame the past administration. the first line in this op-ed, six months ago when president obama and i took office we were confronted with an economic crisis unparalleled in our lifetime. we know, we get it, we have heard it 1000 times. move on. own this economy. we understand this whole country knows what they inherited. >> alysin: i think he feels he
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has to put in context. >> dave: does he at this point? >> alysin: some people blame the current economic mess on the current president, so you can imagine that the president and vice president take every opportunity to say please, that is remind you we were hemorrhaging jobs when we came in at 700,000 jobs a month. with the stennis plan they have stemmed that hemorrhaging, now, although critics point out the unemployment rate has gone up. they promise of the semester passed the unobservant rate would go down to friday said it would go about it. >> economists say why did you say that because signs pointed to a growing about ten budget about and say that. never over promised and under deliver. all the congress said it would probably go above nine. the president said if it passes, it won't move about nine. i put this on footer, read the op-ed and weigh-in this morning because we will talk about it.
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she make a big day and i'll ask as governor sarah palin except this morning. this will be her last day in office as the governor of alaska. yesterday she was outside on the grass, going around to a number of techniques. she was in her hometown of wasilla. a reporter caught up to her asking her what her future plans are. she tried to run away a little bit. she didn't want to answer. take a listen. >> on monday? i will be finding good avenues to keep working hard for alaskans. >> she did not answer the question. >> dave: that was her final picture -- picnic in anchorage. she finishes up this morning in fairbanks. thousands of supporters have been turning out at the spec mix, most of them are pleading with her to run in 2012. we still have no idea what's next for sir palin. in fact her dad and one of these area picnics set i have no idea what's next for the now governor for the next couple hours for less good.
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david letterman took up the subject of tried and it is on the top ten. things you might hear at sarah palin's going away picnic, if you will. number five, where can i check my health? number four, bad news the new governor just quit. number three, please accept this gift from all this it lenscrafters. ever two, dancing with the stars called, bigotry resume. stewart and the number one thing we want to hear -- >> the number one thing is i haven't seen you since he fired a letterman rally. c. when she apparently got a lot of parting gifts that are picnic. within 1000 people turned up at the one in wasilla and people gave her a big, huge, stuffed moose doll to take away, and also a copy of the best-selling book liberty in turning a conservative manifesto. she's probably already read it. supporters are yelling to her we want you to be our
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commander-in-chief. so there's still a huge groundswell of support for her. is this the smallest version of the most. >> summer just through a moose at me. a new york moose or did. >> dave: why does someone make a new year -- any of moose. >> and kay sybers worried about stealing us thing, property is to be obedient. >> dave: -- what about -- what are you like. any are wondering if serbia will run in 2012. the washington post abc news poll suggests former governor of arkansas, mike huckabee would be the favorite for the nomination. he came in ahead of mitt romney and in third place was sarah palin. there was a shirt that said sarah palin 2012-2014. >> a few tudor about joe biden
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there is no gas in the article so someone else must've written at. the op-ed he says is a complete spin piece. someone else writing about this suit, ask dave if they make that suit in amman style. i don't think even hillary would wear that suit. >> dave: while. >> alysin: i will let you recover well into headlines because i'm out. jackie from coming. >> alysin: meantime in the news the crew onboard the space shuttle endeavour and the space station had a classic wake-up call this morning. ♪ >> that'll wake you up. >> alysin: today the crew will be performing operations. i must begin as lower tone. the crucifix and final space lock is scheduled for monday.
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and check this out you looking at a new picture of the atmosphere debris after that large object the size of several football fields plunged into jupiter. several football fields or the size of earth. it is believed the object that hit jupiter was either a comment or asteroid. back to regular news. black harvard scholar, henry louis gates junior, has accepted an opera from president obama to sit down and have a beer with the president and sergeant james crowley. that of course is the white police officer who arrested him in his home last week or it gates said it is time to move on. he is hoping everyone can learn from experience. >> the exiled president of honduras will be in washington this week for further talks aimed at restoring him to power. this comes as hundreds of his supporters rallied in nicaragua near the honduras voter. so let calls the cool -- the cool illegal.
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the current government of honduras threatens to arrest him for treason if he returns to the country. let's go to tom wolfe. >> dave: thank you so much, sunshine. an unbelievable golf shot. lee full something off the par three ball lands and actually hits another player's ball. wait for it. and right into the hole. can you believe that? i've never seen that in my entire life. it happened that the canadian open. olson who made less than 20 grand in his pga career that of a brand-new bmw for his lucky shot. that is tremendous. but sitting in. he's bringing sexy back to the links. justin fair lakes new golf course officially open to the public. the singer remodeled the course or his hometown of memphis, tennessee.
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>> it's amazing to something to give back to your community a place that you grew up in. right over there on the tenth tee was where i had my first golf ball ever. >> dave: justin timber and play some golf. considered one of the worlds finest eco-golf course it uses electrical cords and advanced edition techniques. i think justin timber lake might pull off this suit a tad better than i. >> you did wear a hat to dance on stage. the stock about this. an interesting study out recently, and it is happening here in america just as it's happening in england, according to a new study, one in three men under the age of 40 is still living at home. they are either graduated from college, not graduated from college and stay home. it reminds me of a movie. take a look. >> ahmad pop. you knock? >> charm, she is snoring like a rhino.
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in this music got started. oh, height, you must be mounted. >> melissa. >> all, it's melissa. ha ha. melissa. okay. our eye. you will have a good time. >> you live with your parents to give. >> is that a problem for? >> apparently not for a lot of people thought matthew mckay has not done on suffering from this. at least because of rent prices people can't afford to move out from their parents home. but also there are some perks that come along with it in with your parents. not the part about the interacting a date, but to get your meals cooked for you, you get your laundry done. in italy there is even a word for these guys, the money, they call these mama boys at home because it's so popular it's a phenomena. we don't have a word for it yet in the states but it's happening stateside the shop -- shocking
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part is we saw happen in the uk. but then we got numbers from the census bureau. here in the united states fully one third of young men ages 22-34 are still at home with their parents. that's a 100% increase in the past 20 years. you know what i thought also interesting in this is then are a bigger problem than are women. why is it that we can't let go of living hall at home or did another more fiercely independent. >> alysin: maybe because we cook and clean for ourselves already. >> would love to come home and get the home-cooked meal for mama. let us know what you think about this. e-mail us if you know someone who's living at home with their parents. perhaps you are and you assure your story c-141 under. >> dave: if you like living at home -- >> it's like thomas family, you live with naomi in the basement vaticinal as well.
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>> dave: catholic hospitals provide huge service but the residents health-care plan could end up closing those facilities if it passes. that story is coming i up. but shipping. shipping's complicated. not really. with priority mail flat rate boxes from the postal service shipping is easy. if it fits, it ships anywhere in the country for a low flat rate. that's not complicated. come on. how about...a handshake. alright. priority mail flat rate boxes only from the postal service. a simpler way to ship.
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spewing catholic hospitals serve more than 92 million patients per year that some provisions in president obama is reform plan could force these catholic
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facilities to close. >> dave: joining us as father jonathan morris who by the way it likes my suit. suing is a snappy dresser. >> again jealous because i can never wear white. the. >> dave: what would happen to these catholic hospitals for treatment millions of people if this passes. >> return member this is not a catholic thing. another were cesar hospitals that are serving their communities. it's not like that's your credentials before you come check in and make sure you went to mass on sunday. these are hospitals, especially both income members of our society, these hospitals serve them. when the president said he would support the freedom of choice act, remember that bill did you the bishop and hospital officials said we will be put out of business because apple ca will require us to perform abortion or not receive any federal aid. now apple ca is not a priority
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now but he says what this reform helped out, there will be the obama administration will be determining what basic health care is, and hospitals will be punished with taxes and individual companies will be also taxed. and individuals who don't take basic health care insurance. it's a very serious thing. >> alysin: so the problem is, as i understand it, there are 1000 of these catholic hospitals in the country and they take federal funding. >> medicare, medicaid, funding for research. hospitals that serve the poor cannot survive if they just accept cash from people coming in bring an end. they cannot survive. if there is not a conscious protection put in place that right now the obama administration allowed to expire that president bush and his administration put in at the end, the hospitals are saying we are not going to force our employees and we're not going to be involved and it is not just
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abortion, its sterilization and other things that are ethically questionable. >> dave: they are punished by not getting federal money if not performing abortions. >> when you have public hospitals getting all this money competing against any private hospital -- not just catholic -- they won't be able to survive unless there's very specific amendments would into place to protect one's conscience. this is a bigger thing than just catholic hospitals. it's about what the government is able to do to our society area or that they are going to damage the private sector including all those religious and ethical beliefs that make the private sector build itself, right? that gives us the initiative and reason to build a hospital based on our values. >> alysin: will keep an eye on is to see if an amendment to balance. >> a lot of amendments are needed. a lot. soon thank you jonathan morris. there's a stunning showdown. congressman dennis kucinich accuses the federal reserve of -- listen to this -- paying off banks to not loan money.
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the doesn't make sense at first blush, but easier to explain it. >> dave: yes numbers to back it up. >> how can dance and continue to urge china to read as they approach their wonders of 12 and about or had we offer six great tips that will make tagging out at the barnes and noble cool. i'm in. we do that all the time. >> alysin: we too. my name is chef michael.
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and when i come home from my restaurant, i love showing bailey how special she is. yes, you are. i know exactly what you love, don't i? - [ barks ] - mmm. aromas like rotisserie chicken. and filet mignon. yeah, that's what inspired a very special dry dog food. [ woman ] introducing chef michael's canine creations. so tasty and nutritious it's hard to believe it's dry dog food.
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>> wake up the kids for this. a lot of focus has been put on teaching children to read, but how can parents encourage you love of reading is just going to tweens and teenagers doing here is author of when you wish a
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novel for teens and a new novel for women, italian for beginners. i can't wait to correct that at the beach. kristen, thank you for being here tonight thank you for having me. i appreciate it. >> alysin: we all read to her children who are sixers will than under it when kids become adolescents, how do you keep stoking interest? >> it is important. there's a lot of campuses on getting young kids to read because as big basis of everything i do in school. but it's important for teenagers to read. there is a strong correlation shown between reading for pleasure and doing well in school. and not just in reading in school. and things like math and science and history sue hecht extends over the place of. >> absolutely. >> this is great. don't force our niger kids to read. make sure you comment them. >> that's true. the point is to get your child to develop their own love of reading. if they are reading because you make them more force than they will read to please you and won't develop their own passion
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for it. >> alysin: this is something my mother didn't and it has come back academic own adult life. it's a sudden example by discovering your own love of reading. i remember my mom and i in the summer sitting on the sofa at night reading a book and it's sort of something i want to emulate now see that that's nice to hear. i completely agree. studies have shown that children who have 100 or more books in the home to up to 30 points better on tests in math, history, science across the board than children with fewer books. but i think so often today transferred it to read. there are some and other distractions and things to do. i think showing her children that books are fun as the first step toward getting them to read stack talk about fun books that fit your child's interest. if they like science having read about science. >> that's why think the twilight and harry potter books have been helpful to the kids to enjoy reading for the stories. and there are always good messages tucked into these books
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>> alysin: i like this one make a casual stop at the library or bookstore with your child. oh look where we are. symantec army of its own turn exactly. >> is loving back to the children's section. >> there are fantastic young adult sections of bookstores. and it's great to talk to a librarian or bookseller about what might interest you. >> this has nothing to do with books but if you are at the dinner table or a newspaper story to discuss with them. >> it's all about getting them interested in reading. even if you come across an interesting story on the computer when you're at the office it might be something nice to discuss together see when the next one is kind of juicy say buyout subscription to a magazine suited to your child's interest. >> honor, people, bring it on. >> alysin: for a young female teenager that would count. >> it's all about reading reading -- learning reading can be fun. anything that her centrist and raining helps.
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>> in your book because he became so passionate about getting teens to read you wrote the book when we wish, and you have something special for our viewers who will tell us about scenic because i am passionate about this i would love to talk to anyone's teenagers i want to talk to me about reading. if you want to read when you wish and e-mail me or talk about reading in general that might give them incentive to pick up a book soon i'll put your e-mail address on my blog spec takes a much. >> alysin: great tips. 'you go to my website you can win a copy of when you wish and italian for beginners the information is there.el >> thanks kristen. coming up the president's poll numbers were sliding his health care reform to blame? newt gingrich is here and has his own six-point plan to rescue health care is different than the six-point plan for reading. >> alysin: plus her favorite meal could be loaded with extra calories. we tell you some of the worst offenders. they areom very tricky what's iw your veggie sandwich. ations to run at the same time. - ( thunder and rain ) - millions are using the simply everything plan.
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when you add ultra downy with renewing scent pearls. you get 3x longer lasting freshness so you feel more connected. which can turn a sweater into your sanctuary. downy...feel more. and get up to 33% more loads from a single bottle. >> alysin: good morning everyone and is sunday, july 26. this is what's happening right now. wolf in supporting any health insurance bill being pushed -- health care bills being pushed by democrats in congress. we'll tell you about it. >> dave: the president's orall approval rating falls below 50% for the first time ever. former house speaker, newt gingrich, is here with his take. >> they're getting creative that when he sees this.
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this brightest taking a plunge, a new winning trend called trashing address. our slogan comes from john and eileen smith of ocean acres, maryland. my, oh my, how time flies. can you believe it, clayton, that sort of the last sunday in july. i can. that wasn't the slogans much as a comment. >> alysin: it was an e-mail to you accidentally read aloud. >> my own life, clayton, i had cheerios for breakfast this morning. that was another one. that was the second one that didn't make it through a good morning everybody. it's great to see you. we have so much to talk about this morning. mostly the health care plan. it is heating up. will house people to pass it by their august recess to do one of the things that the house and democrats were really hoping for
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was the congressional budget office would crunch these numbers and come up with a conclusion that yes, this health care plan would save americans and the government towns of money over the next ten years. that has not happened or had contact yesterday it got a set back. >> the point from the cbo the congressional budget office found out that it would actually save you money over ten years. this is a huge setback. >> alysin: it would save $2 million. >> sable a most no money over ten years. take 2 billion out of $1000 virtual leave no money saved in this. >> dave: this has to do with a specific aspect of the plan which is basically having an independent panel overseeing medicare spending. under direct quote, the direct quote from the cbo is in the cbo's judgment the probability is high -- probability is high
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that no savings will be realized. >> alysin: with one second. here's a direct quote. but, there's a chance that substantial savings may be realized. >> dave: in the long-term. what we're worried about in this country is the next ten years. we are in financial dire straits with our financial officer and the cbo, this is a nonpartisan group that you pointed out, the first thing the cbo said is this would not save our federal deficit, it would actually add to it, the overall plan. this is very bad news for a bill that's already having trouble getting past the blue dog democrats. >> it's a mixed message because your oars access on his blog this is an important piece of the plan that would save us money probably the most important piece, the cbo coming back and saying a high likelihood it would not save us any money at all.
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the president of course responded on his weekly radio address to some criticism about whether or not he has made this a personal mission for him, and listen to what he had to say. >> i know there are those who are urging us to delete reform. some of them have actually admitted that this is a tactic designed to stop any reform at all. some have even suggested that regardless of its merits, health care reform should be stopped as a way to inflict political damage on my administration. i will leave it to them to explain that to the american people soon as you were saying clayton, the budget rector came out on his blog yesterday to respond to the cbo's mixed message and then saying that it would not save a lot of money this independent panel. so he is saying we shouldn't have looked at it for savings,
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except that the blue dog democrats, those are the two discrete conservative democrats in the house have been looking for savings. they don't want to sign off on this. they are the sticking point. they don't want to sign off on the houseplant until they can bring the cost down. so the cbo says the cost will come down substantially, who knows what those blue dog democrats will do this next week. >> dave: karl rove had an interesting piece a few weeks ago he called it moving the goal posts. they continue to move their goal. first it was about saving money in the short-term. now it's only in the long-term. we keep hearing changing goals. this is an interesting article by terry keenan on fox business today that it is ironic that criticism when you go back to how president bush was criticized for rushing into the war in iraq, after they are rushing healthcare before the august recess. it seemed ironic this week to hear the president and play the same tactics that his supporters
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so detested coming out of the bush white house. the new rush to war is of course healthcare and the question is why would we rush this thing through? this will affect generations of generations and $1 trillion is at stake. why rush this. >> you rush it because you want people to read it. if you read it you might find what was in there. our own dr. marc siegel discovered this on page 389 of the bill. i don't money but has read this. and the bill that refer to a hospital or nursing facilities were immediate care facility -- and this is the quote from eric about, not by words" for the mentally retarded. " that is the word that dr. siegel pointed out has been used in 30 years is considered offensive to many and certainly considered offensive to my family is what my mom does as a job, and it harkens back to a quote remember president obama making a just about the special olympics, but democrats putting this language in the bill and on
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a seen this stuff. no one even pointed this out she won dr. marc siegel thinks that's indicative of a larger problem with the bill which is that it does rely on obsolete thinking. as much as that term is obsolete, that some of the points in the bill are also outdated, he finds, because he's actually coming through as peter johnsonh@ junior, with people on staff who are making a point of reading the 1018 pages that politicians are admitting they don't have time to read. so he discovered this poncho. the service. jackets on page 389 of the bill, and it really underlines the fact that nobody is reading this bill. how could you read through this bill and i find this term. and it's part of a larger problem with the hospital that i've discovered that it is kind of diminishing. so when you heard what he said to make people are weighing in on footer. one woman wrote and sent him a hearing that right? i just heard that the word mentally retarded is in the health care bill.
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>> dave: as dr. siegel pointed out this page 389. it is clear members of the house have not read this bill. it is well over 1000 pages and the people haven't gotten 400 pages in, and what's going on here? they clearly would've missed that term. they would've stopped had actually read it sooner go to the blog in progress is the one i'm having a problem with the blog. i check in on there. >> is a user error? >> alysin: it probably is. meantime here are the headlines. >> would begin with a "fox news" alert. four men have been arrested in connection with the killing of a u.s. border patrol agent. robert rosas died thursday after responding to an incident solo. police in mexico said the men were armed and allegedly part of an immigrants modeling brain. >> syrup and resigns today as alaska's governor. she will give a farewell speech and transfer power to the lieutenant governor, sean
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connole, at the annual picnic in fairbanks. yesterday palin had about hotdogs at a picnic in anchorage or she received words of incurred from from hundreds of well-wishers. joseph had one in wasilla. >> opening statements in the trial of wisconsin father who believe that prayer and not medical care would heal his dying daughter. dale newman faces reckless murder charges for not seeking medical help. prosecutors say newman saw his daughters... a test of faith and refused to take her to the doctor. even as she lost the ability to walk, eat and speak. the 11-year-old madeleine died in march 2008 from diabetes. her mother has already been convicted of reckless -- >> it's a running of doubles ernest hemingway style in key west florida. look almost hemingway look-alike. getting together for a lighthearted and much safer so that to the famed annual event in pamplona spain. this is a unique way of honoring the american literary giant who lived and wrote in key west throughout the 1930s.
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they spent time in spain. that looks like fun. >> we have some e-mails, pushers and blog posting. the story we did yesterday some of the worst job interview questions. be going for a job interview and the interviewer asks you questions for us? careerbuilder.com put together fantastic ones but our viewers have their own version. in fact here's one from paul bass tonight he was asked if we did background checks and if so the applet said he could explain a criminal record and jail sentence. he volunteered that information. not such a good thing to say unless they are infecting the search. >> alysin: rate chatman one of our viewers says in a job interview i was once told by vitamin several mondays and fridays during the year. how many can i miss without getting into trouble. that someone who's just planning ahead. >> this is one of my favorites.
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we try to weave a seinfeld reference and every show. dave and i were rapping about this morning about as he had any famous job interviews that didn't go so well. here's one where he went in for a brought in her view. >> dave: brought salesman. >> basically, george, the joggers quite simple. selling bras. >> that interests me very much. dimension eight check and they were sold at woodside before? >> no, but i have a very good rapport with women. very good. comfortable. from the first time i laid eyes on a brassiere, i was enthralled. >> dave: that qualifies as a strange thing to be heard in a job interview. he did not get the job, do you like? because he touched someone's fabric of her dress in the hall. a little sugar for you this morning. see what we have good examples and we will read them throughout the show.
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dominica davises and for rick this morning to tell you about the weather. >> is not too bad out there. it is lucky. we are getting into the real summer heat and muggy conditions that will be in the northeast through much of the week along with scattered showers. here's the radar and what were dealing with is a cold front pushing to the east. it did bring severe weather yesterday to parts of the ohio valley and even parts of western new york where he had just to the north of rochester, and actual use on tornado touchdown. he is system rolls off to the east end is weakening significantly but we could still see a few thunderstorms pop up this afternoon over the lower ohio valley and then parts of colorado, and new mexico, you could getis passing by this afternoon and into this evening. otherwise we are looking at 80 for new york, 85 in raleigh, 91 in atlanta. very warm in the south. 101 in dallas. eighty-seven in seattle. temperatures will warm up
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significantly through parts of washington and oregon over the next few days where we could see some triple digit heat for it but are listening at red flag warnings in oregon and washington as well. so the heat combined with those warnings, it'll make for a little bit of a busy weather week up there. we'll keep an eye on them for you. so i thank you. coming up, newt gingrich will be here to talk about his own comprehensive -- he has a six-point health care reform plan and we'll find out why his is so different from president obama is. introducing new tums dual action. this tums goes to work in seconds and lasts for hours. all day or night. new tums dual action. bring it on.
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>> dave: let's talk to democratic congressman dennis q. senator manuel. he said a single-payer healthcare system is the best choice. good morning to you, congressman >> good morning. >> dave: a single-payer healthcare system. it sounds a bit like socialized medicine to a lot of people. explain to me how it's not. >> well it would be medicare for all. right now we have a for-profit health care system which leaves 50 million people without any insurance because people can't afford it. more than half of all liberties in america are connected directly to people not being able to pay hospital bills. so the real underlying question here is, is healthcare right in a democratic society or is it a for-profit business days on an ability to pay. and that really is what the debate should be about instead of coming around the edges and trying to find ways for the government to further subsidize
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the insurance industry. >> dave: under your plan, would everybody in the country have the exact same healthcare? >> they'll have access to a universal standard of care, dr. choice, whatever their needs are the basic healthcare needs of the covered. >> dave: according to the president's former doctor, dr. shiner, this is exactly what president obama would prefer but knows he cannot get. as for the current bill being pushed through the house, what do you see as the biggest problem? >> first of all, how do you know you can't get something unless you try to get it. there has been no effort of the administration to go toward single-payer. they don't want to do it. they say it can't happen. it can't happen unless you try to break the old insurance countries have in this country. the current buildings 70 million americans without coverage. it has the government subsidizing insurance companies, which is something that needs broader discussion, and it is not quick to control costs. the only way to control proud
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that control costs is to get the for-profit situation out of the equation. >> dave: would you also got a $2.3 trillion healthcare industry would that be disruptive to our economy? >> the fact is we would be getting the insurance industry about put them on the side. let me tell you how this works. right now america spends 2.4 $800 million or one out of every $3 every year goes for the for-profit insurance industry. it has nothing to do with healthcare. for corporate profits, stock options, executive salaries, marketing, the cost of paperwork. when you consider all that money that's going not for careut for the for-profit system, if you took that money and put it into healthcare, suddenly you have enough money to cover everyone. it would be good for our economy, good for business, it puts it be for money, they would have the care they need, reduce costs and have access to everyone for everyone.
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>> dave: we never hear about tort reform. for people that sit at home and on what that is, not practice insurance cost doctors in this country a fortune. why do we not here more about that you can certainly not in the plan is going to the house right now. >> you're absolutely right. fact of the matter is that under hr 676 the bill i wrote with john conyers, it's self insuring it means doctors are going to have to worry about practicing defensive medicine which drives the cost. doctors are taking a hit if they don't have the question of malpractice coverage. but in the bill hr 676 the single-payer bill that's taken care of as well because the system is self insuring. g5 much more with dennis q. such a moment. we are changing topics next to park money. the conference is the federal reserve is actually paying banks not to loan money to you. we will ask them to explain that assertion would come back.
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33 back to "fox & friends". we're back with democratic management from ohio, dennis kucinich, and he has accused the federal reserve of not paying the banks of the loan money not moaning all the money they need under tarp. i respond, what to say about this? you say you have numbers that prove this? >> the average daily excess reserves at the fed last year was about $2 billion a day. and get this. the first two weeks of this month, the average was $743.9 billion. so this money is money that comes from tarp and other
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sources that were aimed at improving liquidity in the economy and getting credit out there two businesses and others who are trying to get the economy going. instead it's part of the fed and the fed is ensuring it will stay there because they're paying these banks i interest rates to keep the money there. so i'm asking the question what's going on hear with these funds sue on your not the only person asking this question because let's are mine people at the point of the tarp, the point of the bailout money was to grease the wheels of credit and lending so that people could once again by cars and homes. is that not happening? >> not only is it not happening but look at the underlying problem. first, $700 billion was boasted both to keep people in their homes then we were told they did a bait and switch on that we were told well, we will use it to help the banks stay afloat and to help the credit markets.
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but that -- that's not happening. what's happening is the money is staying there. what i'm wondering since the banks can leverage that at about ten :1 that means as much as $8 trillion in the quiddity is being suppressed or held off the market. it looks like a weekly set up for another boom-bust. >> dave: congressman, why? why would the fed not want banks to loan us money? tonight i'm going to ask that with my domestic policy subcommittee because when congress comes back after the break we're going to be calling both the head of the fed and the head of the treasury in to give an explanation. when you consider we have these credit needs across the country that are being unmet, when you look in cities across the country, all these businesses that are closing. boarded up in some communities, and you ask well why can't they get access to money, when there's this huge pool of money in part that the federal reserve and the federal reserve is encouraging banks to do this i paying and high interest rates. get this. acer being paid not to loan
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money, and they're making more profits by not loaning money. there is something wrong with this. >> dave: row quickly, is that what's at stake here? do they want these profits from the banks to look better? could that be behind this? we've seen huge numbers from bank of america, oldman sacks, citibank, could this cook the books and make their profits look better? connect that's the concern we should have. if you think about this, that the change the accounting rules a few months ago so the toxic assets could be upwardly valued so all of a sudden it looks like people have portfolios that are worth more money but in fact the underlying value still isn't there. the profits could be padded and then you end up with a situation where investors get sucked into a market where there is still these underlying problems have been addressed the three unbelievable. congressman dennis kucinich, please update us after you bring these guys and ask them these questions. thank you so i think you
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congressman. >> dave: thank you congressman. >> alysin: the president's poll numbers are taking a major hit. but healthcare reform be behind the major drug? we will talk to dennis -- we will talk to newt gingrich. to make it wet and wild ride for a bride. find out why she's getting drenched ahead. wwww
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willa@ you welcome back. rear shot of the morning. it must be your hair because this dog does not like governor ryan below average. as part of a three-day art show dedicated to indicted governor called brian, blago run. and the hair is so hard to ignore as is the tracksuit. >> alysin: he looks like a character out of greece. that's a strange depiction of him. but he keeps showing up. the three president obama's approval ratings have slipped. his worst week of the presidency so far and we know he is about to take a vacation. could this all be tied to health care. let's bring in former speaker of the house newt gingrich to weigh in on this. goodnight to you mr. speaker elect a morning speech or let's throw these up on the screen this is the restless and paul. take a look at these numbers. or all approval rating 49% right now.
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that's a big day. this is all tied to health care, mr. speaker? >> no, i think you three things going on. verse of all, it's the economy. when you have over 9% unemployment and the federal reserve saying it's going to go about 10% unemployment and that we may have no net new jobs for the next five years, people want their government to focus on getting the economy growing again. and i think they are appalled. the second point of the energy tax increase, the health tax proposals, the automatic tax increase next year, every time they turn around this new tax idea of the liberals in washington. so i think that is hurting him. and third, i think the health fight has not been handled well. he is trying to sell the country on something it doesn't want just as they try to sell us on an energy tax that the country doesn't want. and the more you listen to him the other night on his press conference, the biggest oriented upping his mistake over the cambridge police, the fact is none of his convincing people to
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trust his health proposals through. >> alysin: mr. gingrich, give us examples of where other presidents have been six months in. this is much worse feedback it's a little worse. i think he ranks tenth out of 12 in postwar presidencies but i wouldn't overstate that. ronald reagan at one point in 1983 dipped pretty low as he was in the worst recession since the great depression. we are now in a worse recession, one that is almost a mini depression if you read the federal reserve report. if we get stuck at 9% or 10% unemployment for the next four or five years as the federal reserve warned last week, the president will have a hard time getting his numbers back up because people really believe that for america two war, americans have to be working. i think they are very disturbed that this administration has no clear plan to create jobs in the private sector and to have people go back to work
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permanently skewed by the health plan, mr. speaker, not going well. you have your own six that led to better healthcare. we will put all six steps. first i was number one. stopping the crooks. two, move from a paper-based to electronic health system. three is textured form. four is created health-based help system. live is reform our health justice system. six, invest in scientific research breakthroughs. if there's one thing you could change about the current bill in the house, what would that be? >> first of all i don't see could change one thing. i think they need to scrap the current bill and start over. this is a 1000 page the government monstrosity that will not work. to start with our first point. you're going to start a petition mile at the center for health transformation saying first, stop the fraud. jim approve a are senator brewster book called stopping the crooks. it outlines with the help of 13
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experts between 70 billion $120 billion a year in fraud in medicare and medicaid because the government is such a bad manager programs. when i say fraud a dentist who filed 982% is a day. but dr. who filed for four colonoscopies on the same patient, which i hope is fraud. the five pizza parlors in south florida that filed as hiv transfusion centers and works up to by the medicaid program. as hiv-aids transfusion centers, even though they were peter parlors. we're talking lots of your tax money because the government is such a bad administrator being given to crooks. so he said he really wanted my money, to help cover that assured, quit paying the crooks who are defrauding the government. we think that would save between 70 billion $120 billion every year speech or one of the points you point out is the health justice system. that's clearly missing from the democrats bill about fixing pork
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reform and actually getting to the heart of the malpractice issue in this country we have seen doctors fleeing certain states to move to other states because malpractice insurance is through the roof. >> our center for health transformation, dr. john gill of dallas, texas, was leaving a health justice reform proposal. in texas they passed on about practice reform. the result is the doctor's premiums have gone down, the amount of defensive medicine has gone down. about 4000 doctors per year moving into texas. parts of the rio grande valley that used to have no doctor had doctors helping people. it's been a dramatic reform. i was very supportive when president obama went to the american medical association. he did not include malpractice and other litigation reform. that's a key part of effective health reform. >> alysin: part of your plan that seems obvious this book from a paper system to
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electronic system. isn't that also part of the president's plan? he talks about coordination as well connected as part of his plan. it is something i worked on a bipartisan basis with congressman patrick kennedy, with senator hillary clinton senator john kerry. there is a buy-up partisan group can work in-house, senator and z. in the senate, but we believe that the first step toward stopping the fraud is to go to an electronic system. if you think about your credit card, the average credit card company has less than 2/10 of 1% from. the new york times or present said new york state medicaid of his about 10% fraud. that's 50 times -- it's an amazing difference in a lot of fraud because it's a paper-based system in the crooks move faster than the bureaucrats. >> dave: we saw on saturday the president cannot and criticize the republicans forestalling this thing. but doesn't he have the numbers keep you why does he continue to blame publicans for this thing not getting through? >> i think that's been one of
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the most disappointing things about the first six months of the about the administration. he was elected in something was going to bring us together. i think he has the potential to bring us together. but he can't bring us together he turned over the legislature to nancy pelosi and harry reid as they are hard-core left-wing democrats. i believe that the president would reach out to john boehner the republican leader in the house, and to mitch mcconnell, the republican leader in the senate, i believe they could both in august during a break, they can both shape a real economic growth bill such as we developed that american solutions, and they could develop a health reform that didn't ration care, didn't raise taxes, create the government, but did very dramatically reform and improve the health system. i think both mcconnell and john boehner would be willing to sit down with the president and try to develop a genuinely diverse and i'm =*speaker3 isn't this one of the realities washington? i remember president bush is the
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compassionate conservative would bring everyone together again to any legislature but then he admitted hitting the realities of the sea. is that what he is hitting her? the realities ofa@ the cpq. >> i don't think so. my wife and i recently did a movie called rod -- bob reagan, a rendezvous with destiny. if you watch president reagan, he was very disciplined. he might fight with tip o'neill during the day but the get-together after 5:00 o'clock to have a drink and chat and tell jokes. president reagan understood because he had governed in california with a democratic legislature, and he knew if he couldn't find a way to reach out and work with people on the other side the aisle, you couldn't get things done. when i was speaker working with president clinton will we worked on welfare are not bipartisan basis, we passed the first tax cut in 16 years, all that require the republican house and the democratic president work together even if we disagree on the issues.
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>> alysin: speaking of having a drink with someone across the aisle. stick around want to talk about the upcoming beer summit at the white house. >> okay sue and stick around i want to tell you which headlines are at this hour. we start with remember this infamous choke or president obama will send it to the mentally disabled? >> i bowled a 129. [ applause ] sue hecht is very good coming out. >> it was like special olympics. savannah guthrie good. so when we now learn the healthcare insurance bill proposed in congress they have an echo of this and it includes some offensive language referring to mentally disabled us quote mentally retarded". we thank dr. marc siegel of fox for finding the language on page 389. >> air making meme started the
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revolution -- they're marking the start of her illusion that took power in cuba in 1953. thousands of cubans are taking it to the streets today. estradz brother raul addressed the crowd asked for more sacrifice from fellow cubans because of tough economic times speech or how much more sacrifice can provide? >> alysin: the congressional budget office dealing another blow to president obama's healthcare plan. this time the cbo says the plant -- a panel assigned to cut medicare costs would only save $2 billion from the one to another program over the next ten years. the obama administration was counting on savings to pay for health-care reform. here comes the bride. not counting i'll die waterside. this is all part of a wedding trend called trash the dress. ladies, you'll be happy to know she's not wearing a real wedding dress, she just borrow this one for the photo shoot of the event. she will pull out the real trustworthy official in an august 1. you'll need to treasure wedding dress, you need to trash the bridesmaid dress.
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okay? there should be parties devoted to that. recommended by? *speaker6 redisplay tamargo hand-in-hand, something about that doesn't work through and you're right about that. >> dave: i like it smacked wife and water, that's an automatic with t-shirt contest. >> dave: you're getting a spy. well done america. i need to get to that. >> let's go ahead and take a look at what's happening. we still have clubs around. some scattered showers along the east coast. not the best of days but yesterday was nice. but we are settling into really an unsettled pattern. from the ohio valley to the east coast. scattered showers throughout the weekend and it will be born and muggy. on the flip side of things, we do have the heat that is getting out to the west that is only going to get higher. through parts of washington and oregon. we see the red flag warnings there up they go from everett all the way down to tacoma?
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and even further south in that? that's quite an increased risk that fire danger is through the week because high city will be in the 80s in that part of the country but upper 80s and then by monday and tuesday, a ridge of high pressure will settle in and that will start a little of a warm street. you can see a big jump in the temperature tomorrow. 94°. but even have a few hundred degree readings around the area. so we will that that record-breaking high temperatures for the pacific northwest over the next couple of days. that is the latest from hear, back to you don johnston. speaker thanks, dominica. dominica sue hecht look good. >> dave: somebody out they spoke site look good. soon was at your mom? *speaker16 jamie kolbe said this is a suit you should never wear socks with his suit. >> dave: stop picking on me. can we get back to the speaker of the house? newt gingrich is here.
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the former speaker weighs in on the henry louis gatesnd controversy. if the president should be offering more of an apology. speech or he will lay it on your suit as well. your favorite restaurant meals can be loaded with extra calories. we'll tell you some of the worst offenders. you don't want to miss this. he is not that. the calorie counts and these things will blow you away. my mother made the best toffee in the world. it's delicious. so now we've turned her toffee into a business. my goal was to take an idea and make it happen. i'm janet long and i formed my toffee company through legalzoom. i never really thought i would make money doing what i love. robert shapiro: we created legalzoom to help people start their business and launch their dreams. go to legalzoom.com today and make your business dream a reality. at legalzoom.com we put the law on your side.
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>> there are some who say as president i should not have stepped into this at all because it's a local issue. i have to tell you that that part of it i dagree with. >> alysin: despite some sharp criticism, president obama insists it was appropriate to comment on the rest of his friend, prof. henry gates. was he out of his element or could his comments be a good distraction but are not from the growing concerns over health care overall. let's bring in newt gingrich asked him about this. so mr. gingrich, does the beer summit on the plant at the white house between the president and skip gates answered your colleague the arresting officer, does this make it all go away? >> it doesn't make it all go away, but i think it's frankly pretty classy on the president's
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part. he made a mistake. it's pretty clear he knows he made a mistake or did i think that when you get a call from the president of united states faces look, why did you come to the white house, let's get together, i think that's a pretty nice way to say that he is sorry for having focused on the sergeant, and i think we have a new president, who has come from state senator u.s. senate to the presidency in four years, he is going to occasionally make a mistake. and the faster he can recognize it and can back off, i think the better off it is for the country and the better off it is for the future of his presidency speak three what's wrong with just coming out -- i don't understand is what politicians and help me understand this because you spent a lot of time in washington and you know it. what is so difficult for a politician to say, i am sorry. i screwed up i'm sorry, instead of this sort of mixed message apology.
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would like this from every politician not just our president. >> that's right and frankly a number of times when i was speaker i had to do just that. i once wrote a book called lessons learned the hard way as their mistakes i made, some of them very public or did if i would do them over again i would do them differently. i think you both have -- she's going to get attacked either way. if he said i'm sorry, he probably would be attacked by some people is that now he has admitted it. if he only reaches up and doesn't say i'm sorry he gets attacked for not sending it. the fact is he should not have said anything about an issue he did know anything about. and he said that at the beginning of his answer. he said i really don't know the spirit and one of the good lessons for him to learn this, if you don't know the facts, don't say anything. >> dave: especially when he admitted in his first admit that skip gates he says a friend of mine. then he added i don't know the facts. those are two reasons you should inform an opinion on it. come monday though this will be
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a subject on today's talk shows that this is over monday we're back to their first thing monday, aren't we? >> were never quite left healthcare. this is a story that just came out in politico that they are proposing another tax increase to try to pay for it. they are desperately trying to find a way to get this bill through the house next week. i think it's a huge mistake. i think they should stop, rewrite the bill from the ground up, accept the fact that this is not popular with the american people. and i think they should move pretty dramatically to get us back inh@ a situation where we could start writing a bill on a bipartisan basis. they probably will try to ram something through the next week just to see if they can do it. my guess is right now they're going to lose because the bill is increasingly unpopular with the american people. >> alysin: what is your production for the next week. something like that happen in the house or the blue dogs went to stall at?
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>> it depends on whether they think the margin that they lost is pretty close. if they are within ten votes they'll try to pass it. but i someone estimate on friday that there are 100 votes short. if there are 100 vote short, they in the end cannot possibly take this to the floor speech really could be repeating what happened to have in the 90s all over again. thank you. >> dave: check out his book real change and get the ronald reagan dvd. *speaker16 the worst foods could possibly order at your favorite restaurants. it may surprise you. we will tell you what they are and how many calories they really have. we are talking thousands, not hundreds, and it may shock you but really. >> dave: finally breakfast after three hours sleep three you can eat this. one hundred potato chips, or one hundred pringles.
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both cost the same. but only the new pringles super stack can makes everything pop. the choice is yours. one hundred these, or one hundred pringles.
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d. call now or go to lifelock.com. ♪
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>> dave: some of your favorite meals contain thousands of calories. >> alysin: matt is here with deep is not bad and joins us with some of the worst meals in america. that goodness you're here. i may tell you something at the vb veggie sandwich sounds like what you should order if you're trying to be healthy. what's the problem sang the problem here is 100006 calories and this one veggie sandwich. thirty-three g of saturated fat. that's equal to eating three strips of bacon. >> alysin: what's going wrong. >> multiple chips -- multiple strip searches, and they crunch upgrade is about in the senate. this is absurd. that's the supreme part of the sandwich the mediterranean is for hundred 40 calories, we make
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that swap once a week you save 10 pounds this week. >> dave: i'm a big burger fan. i.e. berger similar to this. until i saw the fat grams in this thing. >> this is a chilis smokehouse helping of bacon bigmouth burger. first of all when food becomes a tongue twister you know it's a serious problem. it has 1690 calories, 120 g of fat, 4050 mg of sodium but that. >> dave: your daily intake should be about summit county 300. this is equivalent to eating 101 salting wreckers with assault and one male doing is saving this instead. >> this is an old-timer, the cheeseburger menu is gloated to soak up the calories in half and get a splash of --/the sodium in thirds. >> dave: if you were shocked by the veggie sub how about a salad? i know i ordered this for a salad at california pizza kitchen because i thought it was healthy is that scripture
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cannot. >> grilled chicken, some shredded carrots and cucumbers the problem here is 2115 calories to one wait a second. this is a -- >> is the worst selling america. it's like going home and getting an entire pan of homemade lasagna. when i see a mommy, i see avocado, what is so bad. >> a toxic sludge of dressing on this. they're these crunchy rice sticks, there's a couple of different fried ingredients in hear that are hidden in the description. >> dave: it was a toxic sludge to act not technically california pizza kitchen, don't have a heart attack, but the great news is that what you should be eating his pizza. his original bbq pizza, resources for $545. they could swap once a week you'll save 23 pounds this week defied no one would've thought that. >> eat the pizza instead of salad you save weight this year the five record rates, which i didn't think was healthy, but i did not understand the actual
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caloric intake. tell me the comparison here, record and a sweet potato. >> sweet potato and how salad is a grams i will bounce about with sweet potatoes and how salad. this is 3690 calories, the worst meal in america. see lance outback steakhouse sue hecht that's like eating 60 macs in a single setting. it's like he displayed once in un. >> alysin: this right here is 60 macs? so you go to outback instead of getting the baby back ribs -- check out prime rib. with fresh vegetables 690 calories, you'll save a pound in one meal. sex symbol slops quick weight loss. >> dave: this is all wonderful information. we appreciate you being here, matt goulding. >> alysin: i am never eating a salad again. i'm just going to give a huge pizza instead. >> coming up, harvard professor henry louis gates is ready to move on following his arrest, but if president obama handled
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the situation the right way to cute. >> dave: say goodbye to sarah palin. the alaska governor formerly steps down -- formally steps down today. what does the future hold for citizen palin to cute we ask dick morris, next. cat. specially formulated to promote hairball control and healthy weight. friskies indoor wet cat food. feed the senses. "what do you mean homeowners insurance doesn't cover floods?" "a few inches of water caused all this?" "but i don't even live near the water." what you don't know about flood insurance may shock you. including the fact that a preferred risk policy starts as low as $119 a year.
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a simpler way to ship. call or go online now to get started. there's that mr. clean magic eraser thing again. clean freak. [ bottle #2 ] whoa... is he better than us? uh, i mean, i mean i feel like it took you like three times longer to do whatever he did... dude, dude, he's got...these -- like -- microscrubbers... yeah, i guess... magic man. he's a magic man. what? i just want to be squeezed. [ male announcer ] remove three times more grime per swipe and get this unbeatable clean guaranteed or your money back with the mr. clean magic eraser. captioning by, closed captioning services, inc. >> alisyn: good morning everything it is sunday -- july 26th and here's what is happening, hillary clinton ted to pass health care reform
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during her husband's first time term and it failed and president obama is trying to pass something similar or is it different, have we seen the warning signs that the president's plan is in trouble? best-selling author, dick morris who remembers the first time in around, joins us. >> dave: and sarah palin is now citizen palin, officially saying good-bye as governor of alaska. but, will politics and a run for the presidency remain in her future. >> clayton: forget broadway and the yankees i went to the coolest show in the world. it was comic-com in san diego, our slogan comes from kreesh yeah, from birmingham, alabama, helping me to eat this, not that and helping me slim down and lose the fat. >> alisyn: instantly. >> clayton: we love, karisha. >> time to get up with "fox & friends"! it is safe, natural and effective! >> dave: time to get up! and it is time to get up and apparently time, to have a beer,
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if you are sergeant crowley, if you are professor gates and if you are president obama. they are going to get together at the white house, to sit down and chatt and have a summit, a kumbaya after the incidents in cambridge. >> alisyn: the professor accepted the president's invitation to the white house and he said also that he felt it was time to move on. and we are hearing from you this morning, you are also saying... >> clayton: move on, please. >> alisyn: it times to move on, though i must say yesterday, as lates as yesterday -- late as yesterday there were signs outside of the professor's home, big black and white placards posted outside of his home, that said, you are the person that started the race conversation, and the racial baiting in the. people are angry at least in his neighborhood, and they have not dropped it yet, but, perhaps, the meeting it's white house will taing change the tone of
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that. >> clayton: and professor gates weighing in and he says, look in the end it's not about me at all. saying it is a larger issue but is happy to accept the beer proposal at the white house, but the boston herald raising an interesting point, which beer will be at the white house and people weighing in on -- based on the beers the boston herald put there, should it be guiness, if they pour that, they say it could take a while, it takes a while to pour and drink. >> dave: and they'll have a lot of chatting to do to resolve the issues and might need a beer that takes a long time and basically they have to go with an american brew, sam adams has to be the pick, a boston beer. >> alisyn: what about the geographic significance, the cambridge ale one of the bar tenders suggested in came britain. >> dave: that would work, too. >> alisyn: ready more my wornout joke i'll use for the third time -- >> clayton: everyone has ta laugh it wasn't funny the first two times but -- >> alisyn: i'll say it until
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somebody out there laughs. because this is all about cooler heads prevailing, and about it being' teachable moment i believe they should drink bud-wiser! thanks, guys! [laughter]. >> alisyn: thanks, guys, thank for the authentic, authentic laugh. >> dave: not playing for me. >> clayton: i'm sorry. i was listening to a feed of seinfeld, i'm sorry. >> dave: when i watch a movie two or three times it's funnier. >> alisyn: only if you are drinking. last time i'll do it. >> clayton: we'll see if they move on and of the beer summit and they'll have it amidst all of the discussion about health care and staking center stage at capitol hill. >> dave: where does the legislation stand now and for that we go to steve centanni, in washington with the latest. good morning, steve. >> reporter: good morning, dave, clayton, alisyn, time is running out before congress takes the august recess and it is now looking like the president's original deadline might pass
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without either house passing a health care reform bill but, discussions are still under way on capitol hill, an idea gathering momentum is to pay for the plan with a tax on so-called gold plated cadillac insurance policies and chuck grassley says they are looking at that and democratic senator john kerry floated the idea, but the senate has said there will be no bill before the august recess, and, things don't look all that promising in the house, either. >> certainly the speaker and i both had the hope that we would be able to pass the health care bill, by the time we left here on the 31st of july. my view is at this point in time, that may the not be possible. >> reporter: now, the president meanwhile kept up a steady drum beat for health care reform and is said to be intrigued by the idea of the tax on the highest value insurance plans and is weighing the political risks of -- or the political benefits of
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joining democrats to push a plan through congress with little or no republican support. he faces of course an uphill battle to get many republicans on board. if yesterday's g.o.p. assessment of the democratic health care plan was any indication. >> it's a prescription for disaster. one that will put washington bureau contracts in charge of your family's personal medical decisions. medical decisions that are some of the most personal decisions you'll ever make. >> reporter: so the house goes on the august break the end of the week and the senate august 7th, we'll see if we get anything in the pipeline before then and if not we'll look toward the fall, back to you guys. >> alisyn: thanks for the timeline, in the meantime, let me tell you if i may, your headlines, at this hour. bass we begin with a "fox news alert" for you. four men arrested in connection with the killing of u.s. border patrol agent, who died thursday, after responding alone to an incident. police in mexico say the men
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were armed and allegedly part of an immigrant smuggling ring. severe storms swept through wisconsin, washing out road and knocking down trees and power lines, and the city of platville got 3 inches of rain and hail the size of tennis balls, and mudslides, also closed a highway, stranding motorists, meanwhile, texas has the opposite problem, they have a severe drought, cities across texas are urging residents to cut way back on water usage, it is so bad, that police are looking for people illegally watering their lawns. the crew aboard the space shuttle endeavour and the international space station had a classical wake-up call this morning. this is soothing. ♪ ♪ [opera playing]. >> alisyn: i'm going to sing along now to accompany this... in my own operatic style. >> dave: clayton, join in. >> alisyn: he's doing it
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dramatically. i silently, and i'll speak today the crew will perform robotic rations, meanwhile the crew's 5th and final spacewalk is scheduled for monday. and check this out, are looking at a new picture of the the atmosphere debris after that large object apparently the size of several football fields plunged into jupiter and this -- >> dave: what is the -- >> alisyn: it was the size of earth originally and it was a comet or an asteroid. would you like to be famous, your chances are not good, your chances avenue getting hit by lightning are bertz than your chances of ever becoming famous. andy a gentleman writing for "the new york post," came up with interesting numbers and uses the company who tracks 4,763 celebrities and that is the number of celebrities that your chance of becoming as famous as lindsey lohan is 1 in
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1,574,633. does everybody have their pen and pencil out? >> dave: i feel good about that, lindsey lohan was last seen endorsing i kid you not a milk shake, her biggest project in the last month. and she got a milk shake named after her. i'm okay with the odds. >> clayton: a cash cow! >> alisyn: and here's more numbers. your chances of becoming as famous as stephen baldwin is just one in 572,596. your chances of being him are much better than lindsey lohan. >> dave: which some might be happy with. >> alisyn: of course, go on a weird reality show. >> dave: i'm a celebrity, get me out of here. one of those. >> alisyn: those are your headlines. >> dave: an interesting study, speaking of that... >> clayton: if you want to be famous not living in your mom's basement the best chase, but a sudden says one in three men under the age of 40 still living at home in mom and dad's basement -- maybe note basement, still living at home i have a vision of mama's family, that --
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>> dave: where you live. >> clayton: where i live, i have a tapestry hanging up that separates the bathroom down there and reminds me of a movie, "failure to launch" seen living at home and if you had to teal with terry bradshaw as your father. look: >> come on, pop! >> whoa! >> don't you knock. >> what... your mom snores like a rhino and the music got started. oh, you must be melody? >> melissa. >> it's melissa. ha! melissa. okay! all right. y'all have a good time. >> bye, pop. >> you live with ur parents? >> is that a problem? >> dave: exactly, not exactly a good thing on a date, roughly 100% increase in men 22 to 34 that are living at home with their parents in the country. and it is dramatic. >> alisyn: in europe, the numbers are higher, did a study
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of 3,000 men and women between 20 and 40, and found a quarter of all of them are living at home, because of the economy, more and more people, in the past year have had to move home with their parents. >> clayton: let me challenge this, it's not necessarily the economy, and they are finding there is at a better relationship between men growing up and women growing up, too, out of college with their parents and have a closer relationship than years ago called a boomerang kids, helicopter parents, some argue that is bad but finding covet in coming home after college instead of trying to go into the real world, get home cooked wheels and i'm not condoning it and come home and get their feet on the ground and decide, all right what, do i want to do with my life, reconvene for a few years and go out -- but not until you are 40. >> dave: i love my mom and dad but no way, gina says, our son, 24-and-a-half moved out three months ago and i begged him not to go. because, my husband declared the whole house his naked room.
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she actually -- [laughter]. >> dave: wanted her son to stay at home, to keep her husband's clothes on. >> clayton: the chat room writes writes, marking off sides in the fridge and labelling food and stuff, what you have to then do when you have someone living there. >> alisyn: i like your warm and fudzy analysis, because everybody loves each other more, but at 40 when you leave the nest finally -- >> dave: 40. >> alisyn: do you know how to do your own laundry and crook for yourself, domenica, i ask. >> i do, you know why? because my parents, we went to college and then it was like, don't come home! we'd ring the bell and they didn't answer, they moved, never told us where they went! that took care of that! i don't think the parents want the kids to come home. why would you? here's a look at the satellite and radar and we do have scattered showers moving off to the east coast, a chance we could see a few strong thunderstorms move from the northeast down to the mid-atlantic and again down
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through the south and we have a low pressure system spinning there, over parts of new mexico, and into the texas area. otherwise, highs today will be sticky along the east coast and warming up along the pacific northwest we'll look at record highs today, not today but as we get into the work week, through oregon and washington. and flash flood watches and warnings from new york, up to boston, mr. rourke, back to you, you know who you are, mr mr. rourke, get that. >> dave: i getty and i getty lot of things telling me the suit look good, my wife and i like your suit, looks fantastic. >> alisyn: from your dad. >> dave: no, al, i don't know al. >> clayton: we're out of time, hillary care versus the president's plan, will the same issues sink obama's ship? we'll ask former clinton advisor, dick morris about his thoughts. >> alisyn: and speaking of ships, a rematch, dave versus clayton. these guys are going to have a -- another kayak face off, just
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ahead, would you weigh in on who you think will come out on top this time, e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com and last time dave won. this time... >> dave: dave will win! >> clayton: we have to tell them what is happening, it's in a videogame, that is why. >> alisyn: clayton will finally stand a channels. m entrees. just twenty bucks-every day. -- stand a chance. pa paefpaef dú?ú?ú?ú?ccú?÷y÷y
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>> alisyn: is history about to repeat itself in hillary clinton as you all will remember tried to pass health care reform while her husband ran the white house. well, now ast it is president obama's turn and is this brighting on the wall, are we seeing similar warning signs, the president's plan is also,
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doomed to fail? fox news contributor dick morris is a former advisor to president bill clinton and coauthor of the book "catastrophe" and you remember what happened when the clintons tried to pass their version of health care reform and it was a colossal failure. what is different now? >> well, the plans are basically the same. and, i think obama's plan, right now is on the edge. i would say it is more likely to fail than succeed. but, it could still side, he has 60 votes in the -- succeed, he has 60 votes in the the senate and the plans followed totally opposite trajectories and hillary's plan started off as cost containment and by the time it was defeated it morphed into universal coverage and obama when he campaigned touted it as universal coverage, and, now, is seeing the polls are moving, he defines it as cost containment.
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but, they both suffer from the same fundamental problem. which is, the public understands increasingly, that if you cover 50 million new people, and don't have any new doctors, you will have to cut care for somebody. and, the somebody inevitably are senior citizens, will be the ones that will be told no, you cannot get a knee replacement, heart transplant, you ken gate bypass surgery and they'll -- can't get bypass surgery and they'll get the nos. >> alisyn: the "washington post" has an article, the ghosts of clinton care and it says obama's reluctance to follow clinton's example is understandable, few sledge slative failures have been as cat trofk as clinton's on health care reform yet there are aspects of her approach that could and should inform obama's evidence, and not just as amples of what not to do. and -- examples of what not to document were there things she
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did rie did right that obama should take a page sfloom i like their use of the word "catastrophic" dovetailing with my book. >> alisyn: yes! >> and look the big difference is hillary, basically, concealed the high cost. and the clintons proposed no taxes to cover hillary care and said, savings would take care of it all and obama is more honest in saying we need new revenues and just has not been honest in telling us what they'll be and the budget office told us it clears the savings he projects will not happen. but, when you get down to it, fundamentally, this is a program, to cut medicare. the point we make in our book, "catastrophe" because there are only two ways to cut costs, you cut the incomes doctors get or cut the care patients care and if you cut medical incomes which he'll do with the medicare board he wants to set up, that means you are going to get fewer doctors and if you cut care to the elderly which the medicare board is going to do, that is a
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catastrophe, if you will. so, i really believe that fundamentally, this will be sunk but, be sunk for a different reason, alisyn, hillary care was sunk by middle class, middle-income people that were worried about losing their coverage and this will be sunk by old people worried about losing their care. >> alisyn: okay, dick morris thanks for weighing in on that and we want to talk to you about more stuff in the news because you will stick around and talk about sarah palin, who is saying good-bye as alaska's governor and what does the future hold for sarah palin in ? fiber one. i'm looking for some fiber.
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this bar is an excellent source of fiber. there's no fiber in this. tastes too good. there is fiber. [ chuckle ] no. i can't taste the fiber in this chocolate. they have 35% of your daily value. hmm. oh, samples. hmm. autobahn. wackenschdol. fiber one chewy bars. cardboard no. delicious yes. finally, good news for people with type 2 diabetes or at risk for diabetes. introducing new nutrisystem d, the clinically tested program for losing weight and reducing blood sugar. hi i'm mike, and i lost 100 pounds on nutrisystem d when i was first diagnosed with diabetes, that first step was more like a giant leap. till i discovered nutrisystem d.
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>> she's a step ahead of people, look it: regardless what her plans or,
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politically, inclined or if she wants to earn money -- political, her opponents, are all down here in the lower 48 on television every day. and they are making speeches everyday. she's up in alaska, she's can't compete with them. >> dave: sarah palin no longer the governor of alaska as of today and does everyone feel the way rush does, does it matter that she resigned, back with contributor and author of "catastrophe" dick morris, and dick polls are all over the map on her, because she is so controversial and one poll we saw, abc news/"washington post," had mike huckabee and mitt romney and sarah palin as the likely republican nominee in 2012. is she the most dangerous person to the democrats, should she be the person. >> let me say i have been a sarah palin fan for a while and i believe she helped mccain tree men dells and gave him the month of september and when you look
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at the results in '08 versus '04. mccain ran 11 million votes worse among white men but only 5 million votes worse among white went and the difference was sarah palin. and i think she really hurt herself with the resignation. particularly, with the speculation that the reason for the it, is that she wants to escape the flak that she is -- has received and now the media has been positively car never russ in dealing -- carniveruos with her but you have to take it in politics and that is one good thing about hillary, she will not wilt and julius shakespeare wrote "ambition should be made of sterner stuff." >> that is true to the poll but let's look at her approval rating, 40%, and disapproval at 53%. and bill o'reilly interestingly talking about it and saying -- >> that is among republicans. >> clayton: right. but here's the problem, is it a problem, though or is it favorable for her, and let's flip it the other way and take it the opposite way, which is,
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if she has unfavorables among democrats, isn't it good for her, doesn't that prove maybe she's sticking in their craw and is hitting on a nerve the republicans need to use to launch a national campaign? >> oh, sure she is and the reason that she has been so successful in running for vice president was that she -- you know, democrats thought, if you are a woman you have to be for us and here this woman who is very typical of many women in the u.s., resonated with them, empathized with them and represented them and really took votes away from the massively -- sure, she was a threat and i think she was the front-runner until he resigned but when you resign you resign, you resign and what she should have done is said i'm resigning so i can go to the lower 48, and fight against his health care plan. or fight against his economic program. but, she didn't say that. she just said i'm resigning and who knows if it is a book deal or a scaal over she's worried
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about the flak -- >> alisyn: not exactly, dick. i mean, she did say i'm going to go to the lower 48, and help fellow republicans campaign for the causes that we believe in. >> including cap-and-trade. >> alisyn: including cap and trade and furthermore, dick and i want you to comments on it, she didn't say she was resigning because of the media flak and suggested she was resigning because of the frivolous ethics complaint against her and didn't want to put alaska through that. is that fair. >> well, that is kinds of the same thing. i think that her resignation statement was like a rorschach test. you can the not tell what she is saying and read it and take whatever you want and that is the problem. by the way, i wanted to mention that romney, i think is also -- has been hurt lately, because the plan obama is pushing is essentially the plan romney enacted in massachusetts. there is no difference. and, you don't hear mitt romney attacking the health care plan. so, i think the beneficiary of all of this is fox news's mike
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huckabee! >> dave: right. and we're getting ahead of ourselves talking about 2012, because sarah palin's own father says, i have no idea if her plans in through 2012 or what she is doing and if in fact politics are her plan and how does she get back the independence, that is what she would need to get the nomination and get elected, clearly. >> the massive, massive vacuum of the leadership of the republican party, there is no leadership, really. the nearest thing we have is newt gingrich and, you know, he's been there for a while. and, i think that if sarah palin really was vigorous and aggressive in taking the president on, over health care, and much -- in much the same way cheney took them on on national security, i think there is a vacuum to fill there. and when i first heard she was resigning i thought that is what she was planning to do. but, it doesn't sound like she is leading a crusade, it sounds like she wants to retire to private life for a while and lick her wounds and with -- when
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the health care system is threatened with destruction this isn't the time to lick wounds. >> clayton: the bikes called "catastrophe" and the author, dick morris, thanks as always for joining us. >> thank you. >> alisyn: a disturbing phrase in the democrats' health insurance bill using outdated and offensive terminology when referring to the mentally disabled. we'll tell you what that is. >> dave: plus, his favorite time of year. clayton morris leads a loonie all-star cast the at comicon, and bill bring us a sneak speak into the wildly intriguing get together -- comic-con, coming up. ( drop plinks ) brita-- better for the environment and your wallet.
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>> clayton: welcome back to the big show, earlier in the year, dave and i took each other on in canoe, kayaking, dave beat me -- he was actually -- i cheated, it was an actual physical sport on the plaza and today the rematch, because nintendo is launching the wee sports resort and launches today and there is a kayaking version and you have to use the wee to do it, that's right, over there and dave and i will take each other on, coming up shortly. >> alisyn: a virtual sports game, you stand a chance. >> clayton: i think i might win. >> dave: physical side of this, i got him but he does have the lead on video games. >> alisyn: weigh in on who you think will win in the big kayak
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competition! >> dave: you can barely contain yourself. >> clayton: you have to be the referee. >> alisyn: okay. you, mean while we need to talk about the health care plan, a good thing somebody is reading this 1,018 page health care plan, and, the person who read it and found something, very offensive in it is our own drs. marc siegel -- dr. marc siegel on 389 he found a surprise in the health care bill. >> clayton: he actually found a phrase that has been outdated, outmoded, offensive to many people, mentally retard and the phrase is -- mentally retarded written into the health insurance bill on page 39 which is -- 389, unbelievable in a phrase, that is offensive to many and offensive on many levels, what my mom does for a living helps people with mental disabilities, and get them jobs an rehabilitated in the workplace and the phrase has been outlawed in my family, something you never say and get a snide look as a child and as a
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kid, you don't know better and the fact it is written in a congressional bill is shocking to me dark and here is dr. marc siegel who discovered it, here he is earlier this morning. >> page 389 of the bill and underlines the fact nobody is reading the bill and how could you read through the bill, and not find the term, and it is part of a larger problem with the house bill, it is kind of diminishing dark and here's what is interesting, again as he said, that is page 389 and how many people in the house have read the bill? it is not as if it is on page 1,000 which it far exceeds. so, clearly no one read the bill and if they have, they have not paid attention to it. and, yet, here we are trying to rush it through. it is -- >> clayton: not like this end of the first act of the book, it is this first act of the play before it gets there and my mom wrote in earlier and says, the phraseology has changed now, and, of course, you know, maybe getting into political correctness and says the phrase
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is intellectually disabled. the going phrase, that is the way we use to describe people with mental disabilities these days. >> alisyn: and intergli about that and marc siegel made the pointed there seems to be outdated, outmoded thinking in the bill and this is an example of it, that, if you were consulting experts like your mom, you would know we have even progressed to intellectual disability and there seems to be some, you know, anachronisms, in the bill, in terms of coverage and how you talk about patients. >> clayton: weigh in this morning and go to twitter, clayton morris on twitter and go to the blog and e-mail and let us know what you think about this. first, headlines. >> alisyn: we have a "fox news alert," a southwest airlines jet was forced to make an emergency landing, flight 693 has landed safely, and we can tell you at macarthur airport on long island, new york, heading from hartford, connecticut to orlando, this morning, and we have not confirmed, yet, what prompted the pilot to divert the
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flight and we'll bring you more information as we get it into our newsroom. news just coming in, french president nicholas sarkozy got sick this morning while exercising, reports are there is no reason to think it is serious, at this point. but he is undergoing examinations by his doctor. we'll update you as we get further developments on his health. well, they are mack -- marking owe started of the revolution that brought castro to power in cure ba in 19536789 thousands of cubans are taking to streets today and his brother, raoul, addressed the crowd, and calling for more sacrifice from fellow cubans, because of the tough economic times. and dave tell us about this. >>ave: a frightening story, pay attention, formula one driver fill liam pay massa remains in a coma, following the accident in the hungarian grand prix, in life-threatening but stable condition and fractured his skull in this accident and a
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loose car part his his helmet and twent went through the shield causing him to lose control and slam into the barrier and something came off of the car and the most frightening thing about the crash, he was hurt so badly, and couldn't each steer the car any longer, a frightening accident, people are praying for his full recovery this morning. >> alisyn: the dashcam video is really intense. >> dave: and this thing came out of the car in a blink of an eye, and that is scary. >> alisyn: lighten it up for us, please. >> clayton: i just got back from comic-con and today is the last day in san diego, california, all this big stars were there, from twilight, iron man-ii, was big and james cameron from avitar, his new movie, 14 years in the making and anybody who is anybody was there and i got a chance to preview everything coming up, take a look. ♪ ♪ >> clayton: from obscure to famous anybody who is anybody in
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the nerd world was here like the voice behind moman from the marvel kid's show. >> he sounds like us, i must get in the front of the fractile. >> clayton: the stars of "battlestar gallatica" and artists of spider man and batman. >> when ne draw batman, most important, really is the menace. >> i'm bat money... >> clayton: to the greenieians from "star trek," how long does it take to get the makeup off, any way. >> two hours. >> clayton: to web stars, felicia day from the guild. >> we are promoting videos and meeting fans and help -- someone flew from brazil, a number one fan is helping us in the booth. >> clayton: the original suits from the iron man movie, check this out. let's work on your vocabulary. booth babe, definition, hot girl who dresses up at a booth.
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next vocabulary word, cosplay, people who dress up in costume creature tours, in five minutes i'll see how many i can find. ♪ ♪ >> clayton: remember the show, "v", they are bringing it back with lost star elizabeth mitchell. >> i love science fiction and always have, i love it because as a teenager, it was a way of finding strong female pre-tag nisz in a book which i was intrigued by and as a too large you are looking for anything possible, a strong woman and someone you can identify with and i fell in the love with sci-fi at an early age. >> clayton: i childhood dream to meet the creator of "spider-man," stan lee. >> clayton: did you ever think when you cocreated side "spider-man" it would be at this point, with this character. >> i never thought that far ahead. when we started "spider-man," and all our strips, the only thing that was on my mind was, i hope people will like it. i hope it will sell. i hope it will continue to sell, so i can keep paying the rental
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and i will not lose my job. ♪ ♪ >> iron man-2, i understand you are playing larry king? >> the funniest thing! they wanted me to put on larry king's suspenders, and put on horn-rim glasses and say to into stark, why don't you get on my show or some line like that. and, i don't quite know why they wanted me to do that! but i'm like, a robot, i mean, whatever they tell me to do, i did and i did the line and i can't wait to see how it will tie in with the movie. how it will work out! >> clayton: that this is great stan lee and i had a blast out there, comic-con. >> alisyn: great, looks like one of the best days of your life. >> dave: and the guys have influence and my young son and i goth got home yesterday from work after talk with comic-con and my son is wearing clayton's spider man shirt and how do i cleanse this from my child, and
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get him back on track? i mean, e he is set for comic-con future. >> alisyn: he looks like clayton including the pacifier there in the mouth! >> clayton: where is mine? >> dave: how do a get him back on track. >> alisyn: i don't know, do you have a ramone's t-shirt. >> clayton: or go to -- >> alisyn: rock & roll -- get him a guitar. >> clayton: do you want him to be a nerd intsd leck tulle or a bad boy, somebody with -- alisyn would be attracted to. >> alisyn: do that one. >> dave: maybe i'm go with the comics, make it's not a b thing. >> clayton: you wanted him to be the high school dropout or a nerd. >> dave: the next clayton morris. >> alisyn: those are the choices and domenica davis is here for a look of weather. >> get him a matching don johnson suit, dave! a little blue one, like -- cool, just like dad! >> dave: darren says you dress the best of any fox news anchor! please don't change! >> oh, please change! we beg of you, please change.
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>> clayton: thanks, darren. >> his pants have pleats in them, too, thought i would point that out, we have people behind us this morning, they have been waiting here. and, the clouds, are around today unfortunately, on and off showers, along the east coast, and, down to the south, we'll see a few showers fire up as well with moisture streaming -- gulf striefr streami gulf moisture, through texas and new mexico and colorado and all the same place weiss ss we saw yesterday and out west, a big warm-up is coming into play, monday and tuesday, temperatures are going to be getting in the upper 90s and even over the 100-degree mark in some areas. 87 for the high today, in seattle, and by tomorrow, jumps well into the 90s and, tuesday, we could be seeing some triple-digit heat, so, record-breaking high temperatures, to the pacific northwest, and, also, that means we have red flag warnings in
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that part of the country, so, some fire threats, through the beginning of the week, as well. that is the latest from here, you guys, have a great morning, and, dave, don't you ever change! >> dave: thank you, dear. >> or change immeately, if not sooner! >> dave: we'll change in 30 minutes, thank you very much, domenica. the hidden victims of president obama's health care overhaul. we'll tell you who the president's plan could hurt the most. >> alisyn: and the big rematch you have been waiting forks dave versus clayton, these guys will have another kayak face off, just ahead. >> look at him cheating. >> alisyn: you'll weigh in on who you think will come out on top, dave is defending his tightly an clayton trying to redeem him selves, e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com. >> clayton: a virtual contest this time.
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>> alisyn: welcome back, everything a "fox news alert," we have political news, breaking right now, house speaker nancy pelosi made news this morning saying that she will not support a second stimulus, and remember there was talk about that and she says she does not support it. and meanwhile, nancy pelosi is also trying to sell her versions of the health care reform. listen: >> for the american people, america's affordable health choices act will mean a cap on your cost but no cap on your benefits. a cap on your cost, no cap on your benefit.
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that represents real change. >> our next guest says nancy pelosi is either delusional or disingenuous, john fund, author of "stealing elections" and columnist for the "wall street journal." and there, she said, but, who will pay the price, both literally and figuratively? with this new health care plan. >> by the way, i like nancy pelosi and i'm from san francisco but she is sounding like one of the worst pitchmen in the infomercials you see where you cannot believe -- >> clayton: sham-wow. >> and she says no cap on your benefit, is that true. >> well, if you are a young american you have to pay more in health insurance premiums and your costs will the not be higher because you will not be -- you will be charged the full freight while people who are older and wealthier than you will be getting to pay much less and if you are a medicare advantage patient. that this is private sector version of medicare, 22% of medicare patients are on it, you will get massive the cutbacks. you may have to pay between
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2,000 and $4,000 a year more and if you are pushed back into tradit aional medicare because they are squeezing private medicare advantage and then, if you are a small business you will get whacked with an 8% way roll tax and that will apply, even if you are -- if your employees pick a health insurance plan but not the one want. and then if your health savings account holder, 8 million americans have them, for catastrophic health care coveraged build up medical -- coverage and build up medical money in the savings account, those plans will be phased out and will not meet the federal government's definition of adequate insurance. >> clayton: the president got hammered on for mentioning and no politician wants to touch is end of life care, something not brought up because some of the people can be squeezed pretty harshly in the plan and no one is talk about it. one of the hidden victims here? >> the administration was very clever and went to everybody in the health insurance industry and said if you run and ads that are salary to the harry and louise ads that sank hillary care in 193 you'll loser seat at the table and what they didn't
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tell them is, yes, they get to keep their seat at the table by not running ads warning people about the perils of health care reform but they are on the table because they're on the lunch menu and that this is the problem and normally you have the groups that are affected running ads and also bought off aarp and i don't know why aarp signed ton 0 medicare cuts -- signed onto medicare cuts and medicare advantage will get whacked and they've decided it is better to get a national health care plan rather than to protect -- >> and you talk about young people in the dark and don't know their premiums would go way up with the plan, are these people currently anyone insured? -- uninsured. >> yes. the young people many think they are in destructionable and don't think they need it, and if there is a federal mandate you have to get health insurance you will basically get a plan that is not age-adjusted and young people only accounts for 20% of the health care costs of an older person, but you will have to pay over 50% of the cost of an older
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person, even though you cost 20% in terms of what you add to the costs. >> alisyn: good know. >> dave: a fellow comic-con lover. john fund loves it as much as clayton morris. >> clayton: and thanks, john, appreciate it. >> thank you. >> clayton: some say the greatest rivalry in sports this is sox versus the yankees and others say it is ohio state and michigan and fox and friends we say briggs versus morris, the wet and wild rivalry, returns, virtually with the new nintendo wii sports resort when we come back. %%%%%%%%%%%%%%
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>> alisyn: this is a "fox news alert," house speaker nancy pelosi making news this morning, saying she will not support a second stimulus. she says, quote, i would rather just stick with the initiative that we have, get it out faster
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if we can but not worry about doing another stimulus package. some democrats said more stimulus is needed in addition to the $787 billion spending bill, passed in january. all right, let's go over to the guys for the big competition! >> clayton: thank, that's right, they've done the it today, and nintendo releasing wee sports resort today an promise mis to bring the beach to your living room and allows you to play 12 activities from archery to wakeboarding in the comfort of your own home. >> dave: here to tell us about it is nintendo of america spokesperson david yuck, good to see you this morning. >> thank you. >> dave: i'm a big fan of wii sports. >> it takes the wii sports and brings it up to a new level. and, it includes the new accessory, the wii motion plus and when you add it onto your wii remote, it brings a whole new level of motion control. >> dave: and i had a chance to see it at e-3. >> clayton: and i didn't try
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this game out and if you remember, this is the first time i'm doing it. dave and i had a competition, kayaking competition on the plaza and dave won and i tried to cheated and he pulled it off, a physical activity and at the end he fell into the water and i laughed glee fully and today as part of wii sports resort there is an activity we can do, canoeing is involved. >> exactly right, one of the sports activities is canoeing and you guys are ready to go. >> clayton: give thus e demo. >> your wii remote becomes your paddle and hold it and hit on both sides of your canoe and you are going to slow, easy motion is the way to go. >> clayton: that is my paddle and you'll set us up. >> here you go. >> clayton: alisyn wants toeb a pa -- to be a part of it. >> alisyn: i want to judge it. >> dave: am i red or blue. >> clayton: good question. all right, and go! >> alisyn: which one is blue.
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>> which one am i. >> alisyn: clayton is winning. dave -- >> one point, you have to go through five barriers. >> clayton: i'm blue. >> dave: wait you told me i was -- okay. now we have -- >> alisyn: dave is red. clayton is blue. >> dave: would have been helpful. >> alisyn: 1-1. and the pressure is on, everybody! >> we'll find out... >> watch out for the barrel and look, he has 2. >> dave: come on! i'm working up a sweat. >> alisyn: clayton are you red or blue. >> clayton: i'm red, baby. >> clayton keeps crashing into things and clayton is winning. >> dave: i think i'm red. >> who is going backwards. >> dave: i think you are blue! >> alisyn: who is capsizing. >> dave: i am red here, buddy. i don't know what you are talking about. he's trying to make -- deceive me by telling me i'm the other guy and it isn't close. >> alisyn: clayton, dave is
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right. >> dave: i am right. okay. >> alisyn: once again. >> dave: that is me. it wasn't close and yes, i'm red! >> clayton: i think i'm red, is that right? i'm red, we'll be right back we'll get to the bottom -- yes, i'm red, okay! >> alisyn: two minutes, we'll be right back. >> dave: you were blue! >> clayton: i've red! paefpaef
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>> alisyn: the shocking results for you. >> clayton: wait a second. >> alisyn: dave won yet another athletic competition against clayton. >> clayton: i'm not usually a sore winner but when i d

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